Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT)

 - Class of 1970

Page 1 of 318

 

Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1970 Edition, Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collectionPage 7, 1970 Edition, Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 318 of the 1970 volume:

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I . eff'-f Jw ' 4 nw M ef- is fltiibq ..- Nia YQ Q' -.. -:ww-I -iw- if ' 4 xv' L 4 P I 2 i IS iw P ..-J 4 +- cademic Reform: The Birth WM' pix-lx.-xl up tlxx' pmgxuxxxx lmxxx txxl.xl xxxxxxxlmx-x' ul' on-xlits xxlmln Vlll txm xlx-x-lmlx xxntu tln- lil.. .lllx-1' tlxx- XXl.xx'. Xu um- rxuxllx .xxmmxxxxt ol lr.-1-4-lx-xxtxxx-N .x stxxxlvxx! x'uxxlxlx'lxxmsx- 1x1lxl.xxr- l'l'llIllll2lllllll'liltklNlllK'1'lll1'll.N lIlllQlllN1'1lllx'.lllHll. Dr. Xllm-vxxt lluxxx.xx'lx. VX-Nl'L4l'4'l.ll'l l'mtlx ll4'IJ.ll'llllx'lllN l'x-wlmxxxxxlx-xl In tlxx' xxntx'x'xwlN ul llxx' xxl tlxx' Cfxxx'x'xx'xxlxxxxx Cluxxxmittvx-. vx- Nlll1ll'llllNNll.'l,ll1'l,llllUNHl3lIl lJl'll.ll'lllll'Ill. gxmlx-ml lxx :tx pl.xxm'xl tlnx' plxxluwplxx ul xI1x-lm-x.-1.x- xlx.xxx'xxx.xxx. Dr. .lUSl'lTll hxnxxsx. xxlm lx.xxl slmxxg. In-x'wxx.xl lx x'x'lux'xx1x-xl .xxxxxlx-xxxxx' pmgxnxxxx. 'WM' xxlx-.xx .xlmxxl IIIIIJHJXIIIQ lxix ill'Il.lIlllI1'IIl. xuxxlxxxmwl lu x x. lWll lxll '-1l 'fl'A l'-O 'll ZIUHLI dll x'xlIlx'.xtiuxxf'. 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'lllxx-xx' clxw-xx tux' xmxnxxtvx, .xml t.xl.xxxg .ulx.xxxt.xg1x' ul .x xx'x1f.xlxfx fl mlxxx .1- L'flflL'lNI'llN lruxxx fll1'NtllCl1'llfNL tlxx- xuxxxwx-N .xx.x1l.xlxlx- xxxxxx- txxvxx.xl Imfnlxxx. lu-lat :xx xtxxrlx- xxxtll llI1'fll'lll-llIllN lux lmvxtx- p.xrm'lxi.xl lxx xuxxtrxnt .xml xlx-lxxx-rx, .xml tlxvx x'x'px'x-wxxtxwl .x xxxxxxt x xxrrxx xllxxxxx x lx.xxxL1+w. YI As departmental alterations were occurring, the students met to endorse a phamphlet of seventeen demands, among them reduction of core requirements, student votes on the Curriculum Committee, and student advisors in the Academic Council. Inherent in these demands was the concept of tripartite governance, a con- cept long since in the works, and one which in other areas, was to lead to a student strike in the spring. Meanwhile the Curriculum Committee continued to plot reforms. There was no attempt to get a statement defining a liberal arts education, Dr. Rosivach said. Everyone intuites what it means. The curriculum has to he considered as an on-going process. Our reform is in no sense ideal, hut a first step. To some degree we will play it hy earf' 22 The establishment of five areas of study, implementing a reduction of core requirements and restricting the numher of credits acceptable in a students major, achieves two goals. One is philosophic, explained Dr. Rosivach. Rather than impart the bag and baggage of what a student should have, the experience ofa discipline is hrought into focus. The student can see things through the eye of a scientist or an historian. He added, This is not to say that specific knowledge is eliminated. But the student can now confront a variety of leaming experi- ences. The second point of the reform as stated by Rosivach was, No longer is someone going to say take this and only this. A student can design his general education. Tliv Curriculum lfmiiiriittm- ln.ul lvs no imxins finislrcal its work lip thi- i-ml ul' tlu- in-.ir. Still llllk'l.lL'lsll'tlXVK'l'l'5llL'llL'Ullk't'l1l'-.IN vlmu- liaitinn ol' vstiiimtvs .ilitvr tln' lirst svrrivstvi' ul l-rcslun.ui nur. linllillrnvut ul iuliirix-:iii-rits in the' um' mxirly in ilu- llnir sr-.ir pmginiiir. vs- taililislimcirt ul' .1 puliq tmumls .ruilrts. llvxr- liilits' ul' liiml 1-x.uiiiii.itions, .mil in rr-xx ul tlu- tlircv crmlit sf stvm llwr .ill vmiisvs. Acgulviiiiv l'l'llll'lIl sms not .ur isulatml rnmv- mvnt. lts rsh-ru.il r.unilic.itimrs xx 1-rv .is ilu-li als its ro-Q-x.rlii.rtimiultln-1-rliif.rtrmr.rl liiugigiiii at tliv l'iiiu'rsitx. ln .ui .ulrlrvss L-.rlli-il 'l'ln- :Xrt of .Xc.nlviiiir- lllllll'll5llll7-i rlulrx i-ri-il lar l r. Xlulliilvs to ilu- ummm-.itinii ol- ilu-ulty .it tln- stairt ulitln- sr-lmul in-.ir. lu' s.iiil, 'l'liis institu- tion lms In-cn ilu-pls rlix ull-rl .xml lrigim-rntml by thi- vu-nts ultlri- lust sr-lmnl yrxir. In sur-lr QI clinmtv ol' distrust. simplr- mn-ds lu-umm' explosiu-sg rnutiws .irc mslily qin-stimn-clg gl virgin- ll-.ir ul' iiiipi-ruling u.it.rstmplu- lligs in soim' minds .iml lu-.u1s. Ylliilc .iuulviiiiv I1-lhi'iiis wi-rrtlri-:ul tliv im- pvmling stomi. it xx.rs .i xu't-nursv tu thi- strug- gle for trip.u'titism. ln rclcivriu- to tln- Clelllillllls lkir ix-llmrru pn-si-ritcrl lui' tliv sturlcnt lmcly. Dm-.ui ull Stunlvnt Sclwiu-s Xlilligim Scliimpli s.ricl. 'l'lir first all-m.urLl. thi' cs- tnlmlisliim-nt of .1 lmimling triprirtitv is tln- lwy' to thi- rcm.iining sixtu-ii. XYitli thi- sucu-ss Ul'AlL'LlLlUlI1lL' rcliirm. thr- lock was jiniinia-al ln-liirc thi- ki-sr was iimdc. .gk Core Curriculum Required For All Studcntso I. Nlritln-rnaitics 6: Natural 2 2 or l Nlrrtlwrniitiu 1 lngic ll. llistury 61 Sm-i.il sL'll'lll'1 - I 2 2 Ill. Plrilusnplri G 'Ilia-ulugy .Q 2 IY. l'1ll1LllSlIGl llll','xl'lN -S 2 Y, l'.Ul'l'l1llll..lll1Lll.l1l1' 2 nr S lli!1'l'rm-clr.ul1- 1 UllllN'll'lIl x 'numbers ra.-pri-writ courscs Q. if -2' fm' J' -' v ,v 1 .,. , 'Q :J 26 'Q Y 5, Film critic Judith Crist feels that movies will go wherever the creative people take them. She also im- plied that box office receipts are an accurate indication of American taste in films. 28 Adolfo Odnoposoff, who has performed in over 300 concerts in Europe, Latin America, and the United States, dazzled a huge audience in the Oak Room. His per- formance ofthe electronic piece Synchronismus by Mario Davidoff provoked a lengthy dialogue between Odnopo- soff and the crowd. His explanation of the technique and content of the work demanded another recital of the piece which was received with intense concentration. -.D - .4 dir' WL: . A A A.: Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow Creeps in this petty pace from day to day, To 'thelast syllable of recorded time, And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. Out, out, -brief candle! Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player That struts and frets his hour upon the stage And then is heard no more. It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing. W -Macbeth Q. ff., vu. n ' .. nl . R L--1 4 . 'x .'! ot' !'v2 ls 1 .uvli x . w X - v A 5 . K 1 ok 5 , Env ..' . , sv4f-u. n ' . .. .,,u . . ' '. 5 -up . 5--'vf . Nl s '.! ' ' I a' , - . 1 'v Id v vt x'1a .,'5. .4 'r 1 ', ,, v V ..f. ,. , v V. . .' ,fs a . x Q J.. ,., -,Vo , O I Q . 1 O f A .vv K we sf? 34 T RN THIS COR ER Headlong into a cloudy morning wearing jeans and sneakers and a soiled din- ner jacket with a sprig oflilac in my lapel and you on my arm chewing spearmint what did you say your name was we turn this corner with glib memories gossiping in my ears my pockets filled with syntax and conjugations and Spiro T. Agnew tatooed on my left eyeball but thats all right I'm wearing a black patch my one brown eye will get me where lim going Cambodia or a commune-l'm weighing the alternatives but turn this corner there's a diner across the street I see the neon sign the color of bruised flesh my spelling is bad but I'm tuned in to signals from a shrewd pulsar I eat potato chips and raw hamburgers and sometimes have visions my agent intellect turning somersaults my ailing superego shortcircuited by my id here is my newest vision shaped like an elm blooming with prickly pineapples cut open this pineapple I'., 1'- -4 .E Y ', Aff! 4 Hesh from the supermarket and gaze at the core I see three billion people sitting crosslegged at the equator a holy circle eating canned anchovies it isn't much but better than war and a good deal better than smog ifyou aren't allergic to anchovies so turn this corner headlong into morning and yesterday is a vague itch someplace between my shoulderblades I carry my past in a canvas bag crumpled underwear, apple seeds a shrivelled olive from my first martini and pages torn from stolen books Marx, Freud, Pseudo-Dionysius all my learning was occult compensation and found not a little wisdom in a peanut-butter sandwich but turn this corner I am finding my way, thumbing a ride are you still with me carrying protest signs in my hip pocket nobody picks us up Newark, Detroit, Song My, Biafra all part of me, coded in my cortex K 4 EEO 4:1 ins' IMT L- if ,Lf?'i.1 , Q -. 5 A-Q C :AW G W: fig. . R 'K :Q A H c': .'l 'I sz- 4 39 so many gargoyles in my crosseyed past so many stuttering hunchbacks tum this comer there's a bus waiting if we can catch it we didn't let's walk, we'Il get there anyway with lung and Aquinas xeroxed on my shinbones and Margaret Mead on one of my ribs and saw jesus one night he was loping across campus on his way to seize a building jesus you're O.K. when I went to touch him he was a magnolia O.K. anyway but turn comer, on to the waiting beach the surface ofthe water is calm I would like the world to be this calm but under the surface the blueiish are eating mackerel and the snails are digesting whatever algae they can End so maybe I don't want the world to be this calm let's hypnotize the blueish and have steamed snails for supper we tum this final corner your june eyes are green with promises and here is the lilac from my lapel' inhde the aroma don't be shy before the next bus comes along. 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'Q 11 Y - I '. 11 ' 1 - 1 Q 7-35. ig., D- A I . . -A. 9 f' ' .- 33 ' sb - .Q -9, 7 . :Q 9 ' .-no QQ' ' - - o 1 O -. ,nu 'A 1 '- l - 9 1- 1 .-A 6 Q .' D? 1--1 ' 11 ,- it 1 - 41 -o I t cu' 3 un- . ' - ' . ' I 8 0 a In Y 0 kg lk.. , XC .Q. S . -in iQi 2' 1 kg Q -In Q - il 0 '- 1 r.- Q 5 in. f 'L 1 C 94 .ea- 'fin' I ., it 33'-1 J'--an Qt fi A - I 1 3-- 3:1 Q- 4 Qin: . ui- igt r-l..'E 2.311 L B'- glgu -T2 Q 1 I JL'- zr ' ,-.ras 1 1 Ugg, I -- lofi ani it L l Q -1 i J ' i'-Q l ' - 1 QQ, L 1 I PLED! --. +0 'fhe flu i, of Ameri 5... for whic UI inclivig and 5 . 5 1 2 -l- I ALLEGIANCE If Ihe Uni+ed S+oIes and To Ihe Republic sionds, one nofion G O D 0 . 5 wuI'h Iuber+y rice for ,jg 1, 1. II: nn Ix I ll I mp: X xIm1-x 1 I rl. II xx: I I I 4 , xr:I1ItIv-II'mxxlm1IlIxxIunr -Q tl. x rum nr 4lI4.l1II Ix Ilm II I 11 I I Ix Kid, get the hell out of here, vou're trespassing on private prop- ertyf, Get lost, you Communist! On October 15, students partici- pating in Moratorium Day, a pro- tcst against the war in Vietnam, learned that the Silent Majority had a solid hold on the temper of Fairfield, Con- necticut. lt was the Hrst major anti-war rally ofthe year, and for many people the renewal of a strong moral and rational opposition to the fighting in the Far East. XYhilc much criticism was leveled on the peace march by businessmen of the community, Fairfield students 'H 1 l 9 4 F 53 7 S E i v J 48 found empathy among citizens of all ages who had enough reason to oppose the continued killing in Viet- nam. The Nloratorium mobilization centered around the idea ofbringing the war issue to all levels ofthe American so- ciety. It became apparent that the problem was nearly as blurred within the University community as it was in the local area. Attitudes about the war ranged from the politically pragmatic to the morally opposed. Rev. james Bresnahan of Fairfield University explained the latter position in a long comment printed in the University papei'. He wrote, The contemporary expression of moral protest in the continued page 51 F gist . - ww' ' i', 3 l l . 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' A , - .1 YJ E . . 5 ya '- 'M Q-1, an Eff, '-L A ri!. i.,,g9awo' -. W-ei-if X .gl- .--- sl EHEREE BE E 52 REE TH DRAFT PHYSICAL THE COMPLETE, OFFICIAL LIST OF DISQUALIFYINC PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOLOCICAL DEF ECTS AVOIDING THE NEW, 2 5 AC T1 ON ARMY 5 Ol er of, l 3 Q I -X' 4 4 Q 1 ,F r:1ffN'f'1H 'f Nfllll' wx 1ff1w11IM1'm .mff Mlm num ' LH N?1,:'f'V.'.'. I7.Lf1LH'lN 'rf f'fVI!-X' .xl f!lH1fl'lYl XY rf' N mf-ru M fy? lm IIIIEJ' nffmg 1 'Hlfllrll' 171111: ,' N'Y IX' N'I'.Iv' 5XN Y1l M !flfQf1 'ffYuv,1,f -17' -'T PIN f!1l71'i 11'Iv if Uflllllflx N1I'I1' lIl'!l'1 XX 'M' N'IH'N IN f,:'!' Hr 'nl' ' .' .x.'. xl' Is' XX 'LEW '.'. N -IFN ILLI' IH 'I ,. 'PJ '.'. Furl' N' HIM! 'I 1 v, E' 4 Y'-l'Px'f'i' WIHI' 'lvl' 'lx' 'rl 'I11Y1f!X 1 'FN XN5 bl!! 1 1' '1Lf'lE'!. ?1'1f lf. , ' X' ' H '-1' - '-'Ivy' '- I . K 1 I :ivf !1'Q,.Tf:H'f,i1 X ' 1' ifllllll liz' 'fl 11 I' 1 If 'lVlIIl'I1' I1 ,ln HMI XX' I ' ' 1 'f '1- 1 W mf In L' fd' IIIH1 till' 1' lu I11M'+1'l1:!11 anilln Jlirflu 'X dence. The lottery system, hailed by its proponents as im- partial and conclusive, only transforms conscription into an American Sweepstakes in which the first prize is an all-expenses-paid trip to Southeast Asia with no guarantee of returning alive and intact. Those of us whose unlucky numbers were mulled from . I the Pentagons fishbowl are faced with the dismal choice of either acceding to the armyis demand for one more body or refusing to become absorbed by the military jug- ernaut. The Jrice of refusal is outra eouslv hi h. If a l , 1 , . . . n candidate for the draft Hatly ignores his induction orders, he is re arded as a felon and is usuallv im Jrisoned for a J- , l I proximately thirty months. Similarly, if a student decides that opposing the draft boards authority over his life and cea i c oes no warran a 'ai - erm, an i e conse uen 1 rl I t t J I t d f h tl exiles himself abroad, he may never again return to his 56 native country, if, for some reason he does return, he will discover that his penalty for refusing induction has tripled. The final alternative in declining the Armyis too- formal invitation is for the draftee to somehow maim him- self either physically or psychically. This is the most com- mon avenue of escape, but it, too, is filled with risks and repercussions. To receive a 4-F classification, it becomes necessary to treat the body and mind as though they were no more than chemical jig-saw puzzles in urgent need of re-arrangement. The draft does provide one legal alterna- tive for conscientious objectors. So far, however, neither the congress nor the president has seen fit to extend con- scientious objection so that it applies to non-religious dis- senters or to those who are morally opposed to partici- pating in a particular war. As it stands now, the chances of receiving a deferment on the grounds of moral opposi- tum K-wall .nr lmxglllx ixnf-Inxmlru' H-.ml N - 'H' M -'l'l'lf' I N ' 'V P-' Y' fm' -N'1'W ' H INF! IIIUNI -if IIN H11 il!-H114 Ill NT an xiI.Lff flfII.L1YlNE1XlM' ' 'NX f A'lI 'LAM' IX '11 ' ' 1 I XJ V x MU-H WNW' 'All' XI, lllvflx ll Xl.1!xX nf Hx ll.1Xx luv' Xu' UI Xxx' ,H 'zm'lnv1Iu' fM ' 7l ! X:l ,'1l'l 1' N V A X 'l ' 1 'I xxlun Vvmmfzxxg J1.1x1w:1x.111xftum!H1-f1,.x,mmm V- Il Ml N' 7 -K7 M'-'5 '1 lk' ' IW 'I 'V 'l !l7 l' l 'A Hn M11 L'lrIYlxt'!I1!:t.lIX wfxximk Nfl!!wstxnxrzlll-.J,l1an1 N' U1-if fy MX' N Y H N' ' HW k 1'i' V '-'W L ylxwuluxlH.liylyl:Xxl?,!l5,941 lllmlvxxgk ,IliRlX5,1x1'H3N , 'YI'lll!i'! lYlN1lXl1' f 1I1,k!ll.,x!1'!M-HL 'Rl :MMM '. lil! 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' 4 K . -Q 0, f I - p t 'h , 1 lu Q0 - Us .C2' b J,-5 0 s A Q s 4 W 1 .egg un k ' V'.Av+.5,- Ov I A I, 4-Q -' ,X jf 1 - wiv St.. 'au vb' ' Wi-.Q2,t'i'f '-N 'X ns Zi., grw 21' 'if flaw 4 Q A L , au. M A I wi' ,, iw , at ---'a srmww. Viral!! K' .1:!'YC'.f' C5 -. tt s, I .4 QI' kr nf . ff ' 4' 5-if ,f ,V '-1 r 1 X 3 , 51.5 80 Bl BERLIN WAHI. UI 0150 1922150 ANEMW Q UQ MN RON RTAIN HI 0150 EOMMUNIST wAu.s F HAME U Q . . .. A . u W Q 82 J ir 0 'J 4 , I at on YS, 9-Q' ,Ja L.- 1 . 1 F1 F95 'ff -3 ,'W??' H' zf2?539i 'Jf4.'?Q f J! f52f?,s1'.g,aq.. ,' 'Q !.g.1' ,Lp , 151.151 Af' M3F:g-vfff if czyx- 'N an 1 -3 ,3.:,-iyxynri., W-Iva 1,5 T- i 1. was-2,5 I Q f.y4jf',2 , 4 ,gg . , , 'un f , 1 ' -. K V . Q x : ' ' 'S W7 v P. 'A Three Heads Are Better han ne l Im lam xv 3? . 'Q A 5 1, 51. 1 N 4 ' 17: A ' I ' 'll -nb' Y .ll f',:p xlg 0 1 Th e Life: Tripartitism llllll1'Nlll'lllQUl l9XmS,.1t.11111-1-t111g11ltl11'l'11-x11l1'11tN -X1 lIl4lllX lim. M111 XX llllillll Xlc-I11111-x s1111lw .1l11111t 11.11111 111.1t11111 111 tl111 l 11111 INI . 1 N 1'1'. f.l.1xx ul U5 ll1'Nl'lll .1l llll llll 1 lllll' 11111111111-tI11-1111-111IM-x4Nl11I11111-111.1111 .1111llw11t1!.1l1x1 .11111111' l1 Ill l1-g1sl11tf11's .1111l 111 x.11'11111x .11lx1s111x l111.111lx11111.11111111x lIIl1lll'l.lllUl 1963. l'l11l111 ll1m1-.tl.11111111w11l111t 11ltl11 xt111l1 11t lx 1J1'1fw11t1-cl .1 ILllJl'l'. s11l1x1-11111'11tlx x1'f111-1l ln l'.1tl111 Nl1l11111N ., A lllfl llllllN1'll. XKllll'll Wm ll11- l1.1N1N l111 tl11- l lllxfllxllx f1111111 ll tl11 lllNl lllll 1111lx t1A11J111't1t1- l111.11'1l .1t l'.lll'll1'lll C.1111N1Nr111 11l1111-111l111x l111111 tl11' .11l1111111sl1u1t111111 tl11' l.ll'llllX .lllfl tl11 Nllllll 111 l1111lx tl11 l111x1f1s11x c,Ulllll'll l11111-t111111'1l llll lll'.lllX .111 .11,11l1 lllll X4 .11 .11 111 1x11l111.1tf11x l1r1.111l N1-.111 l1111g l111 .1 1 111111111t1111 lll Y11 t1111.11t1t1N111 lfx x.1x flllllll tl11'11111l11111t lll1lllN 11l tl11 N111111 11l l'lf1'f '11l11'11Yl11 - ' 5 ltx llllllx 1x1111l11l 1Nt111l111t Nt11lx1 11111 tl111x1 lll lI lll l lllXl'l XUlX AN 11' 1 '1 ' . 11l111111l.11111l.11xx1tl1ll11-l111x1'1x1txl,11111111l l11-11 111 f'IllNlfl' 1 ll! lllIJ.llllllNlll1lNlll4'lllHNl1'll1'illXl'XK.lX l1v111111111Xu1111l11.11!111 11.1t11111 ln rl11-1111'111l11'1w1l rl11' l llIX4 lNIlX 11-1111111111111 I l111l1'w111 l'.llll lJ.1x1N lJ'lllllN lJ111111x.111 fl.1v1 A 1l fl lllfl U1 l11l111ll.1111111 lllNKlX .1111111111!1 1l ll11X11Nl l..1.11111 fl11 lll-llfll 111111111 lllllllx ul f1111.11t1t1N111 85 Tripartitism at aCrossroad: The Constitutional Win? W T I H , Q 5 Q, , V 3 . fg 'gf X, ,b ' Ji: A 153' fgaj' . + Q' 6 . -4 'I , fi ' 3, A 4 X 86 rl , . i 1 1 I i i 'W ' , .Jon entlon ill? to nn-ct Lllll'lllQ tln- snmxnvr to clraiw up i't'coiiiim'iicl1itions for ti It-gut ti'ipaii'tit1' lioclv. tlorsrcltln'op1'r1ltioiiatlpl'ou'cllil't'ol'i't'sitlt'liu'lialllcolincils wliicli wt-nt into 4-tlk-t-t iiinm'cliutvlx', tion. Tin' llicultv would not not on tht- rt-solutions until it constitution was worltvtl ont. tutionail conxvntion. clvfim-cl, policy -mnlaing clvcisions us tripnrtits- rnlt- lwtort- tlu-i' wvrc- 4-ltuir iiliont its vntiri' ii.itiirtz So it NHS tlialt in l:t'lll'llitl'Y ol 197011 constitiitionail c-onvi-iitioii int-t to writt' .1 clot-nnn-nt ol triIi.ii'titisin. 87 Mitt-r tin' stutlvnts' rights strtigglt' in tin' spring ol' 1969, tht- l'iiix't-rsitx' Council nm-4-in-tl support from tin- .-Xcgulcinic Council. ttn-1-xt-L-titiw airni oiitlic l'iiivc'rsitx' lltciiltv. Tint-ii' tlivtnni to tlit' l'iiix't-i'sitx' Council win Tlu- L'iiix'crsity Council paisscclst-x't'i'z1l rt-solutions tlnit sinninvr uncl pix-sviitvtl tlivin to tln- lfrtiitivltl l'ni vvrsity connnnnity' on Scptvinlwr 113. 1969. Tlivst- rvsolntions L-oiit-1-i'iivcl tht- uit-its ol grin-i'ii4iiirt-, tit-Quit-in in-s. .tntl social litk-. Tlicy' inc-orporaitt'cl niaiiw iclcais sta-inining from tlit' agitation in tliv pn-t-mliiig spring l'nix'crsitx' govcriiniiu' was not dm-pls' vxplorvcl. Auntie-iiiiv issnvs wt-i'v tn-utr-tl strivtlx' tis i'm-oiiiiiivii- tl ations. ln tht- tart-ti ot' social litk: rt-ll-rrinq to tht- inaijor issin' oi'cloi'initorx' lili: tln- l'iiix'vi'sitx Cfonnt-il vn- Tlic stnclcnt body tipprovccl thc Sm-ptvinlwi' 153 rcsolntions. Tin' aicliiiiiiistixitioii snppoi't4-tl tln-in in prin- tiplc, lnit lookvcl towards cluciclaition oil tripairtitisni in tt-rins oi lziruling and It-gnlity. imxniiiig il 4-onstitn- lt w.ns qintm- cl:-gn' tlmt tln- stntlt-nts wt-rv willing to an-u-lit tripnrtitisin sight-nnst-1-n 'ilu' elm-niainrl lor in voiu- in tin- goings-on oiitlii' l'iiix'z-rsits' ilu' oiit-wtdglivcl ann knots tlmt iniglit it-t lu- iront-cl ont ut gi consti Tht- ticlministrution. possililj loi't'sm'iiig tlit' tricky' usp:-cts ol' It-girl t'XlSlitlIL'l' lor tin- l'lllX't'l'Nllw sincl tlu- position of tin- trustt-1-s not-ortliiig to tht- stutv clmrtt-r, wisln-cl tlmt any ti'ip4ii'titv c-onnvil ln- tlistint-tlx' Ttn-t1wnlty.witIi its own svpailliti- prolilvlns. 4-onltl not colin-1-ivzililx' support sonit-tliing .ts nnlioi't.int in A-aa The presump- tion is that . . . decisions should ' be sharedf, , . -sw W' LZ... W The presumption is that a university involves all segments of the university, and decisions should be shared, said Dr. John Barone. As one looks through the literature of tripartitism, it is clear that in most places tripartite boards act in an ad- visory, representative capacity. There is no equality in the main bodies, nor is there binding power. No one has gone all the way on tripartitism. It is usually wedged into the present structure. Although Fairfield is trying to go all the way with a governance based on shared responsibility, equal votes in the Univer- sity Senate for faculty, administration, and students, and voting power according to degree of competency on lower level boards, the theory of tripartitism goes beyond the establishment of a few boards on a formal basis. A university must learn to live with tripartitism, explained Dr. Barone. Were talking about tripartitism on a day-by-day basis where people will work out ofa concept oftrust by participating in all kinds of decisionsf, The lofty ideal of tripartitism in this sense motivated the constitutional convention through grave difficulties. On the other hand it became an ominous spectre haunting the success of tripartitism during the strikes at the University. The student body, burning with the desire to participate in molding its own University, believed that in several issues the spirit oftripartitism was being violated. The meetings of the constitutional convention were open to all members of the University community. But with the inten- siiication of the war issue and the reactions by men in important positions to the events of the final weeks of the semester, the future of the convention and oftripartitism at Fairfield was not at all clear. 88 XYc'rc talking about triparti- tism on a clay-by-clay basis where people will work out of a concept of trust . . QQ- . 5, ' A 1 89 I I uf cv ' J' wiv-NGK 4 ,,w.n-f4 '5' , , Wd illwwf-uv' ' .-e- ' V ,gtfrpdx V J-'ff-, M MNH: ' ,,:rf?'5i5yfg M 'Q 5 4' K if 1 nl' - 1 ...gf . .4 1 9.26.1 ar 1 H Warwmwwlvfk ,.,,-or 1 1' -I 11 .J mmmm qv 6 Q -lr -4' lf' -il r qv Q tg .1 - , 1. 0 V , 1 X i s uv Q S 4 1,5 I . 1 ganna naman 1 cans Vllli 'funn rncumncc or :Jon PERCENT IIE ZIP CIMRTILE COIITRINC 21 CQCEC YIELC IIC 0 PEICEIYRCE OF 33.3333 PERCENT TIIE 389 CUHRTILE CDNTGINS 34 CRSEC YIELD IIC 0 PEICEIITDCE OF 53.8603 PERCEIIT 'IIE QTII IUQRTILE COIITOIHS 0 CGSES YIELCI IIC 0 PERCEIITDCE OF 12.6904 PERCENT ll 4 LL! '4 Avi- n X ' .Qt . I lu , 4 I ., 5? u . V K .P ..-- 'N' --.,s ! L, U l ! P I f .- i i 1 I .llL ul I 00 'ij' 1 4 .u 1' Q gl fit. ff, 5,1 Q' 4. np.,. , . 1.51 51.3-1' 3. 12,6 . A.. 'M vb -, 51 ,:.-0, ,Fug 'vf' - . V 5 -'16, ..y -'Llp OW , 4- ,v Q ,s . 1, . I ., 0 L., 9 U - ' wb-5 ' -In ., .f-'L-h r 9 1 4' 9 A ,t 3.2 . -F? J, 4, in K 4' . 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Iiuxl-lllI.lIlI. l1r.llIll.ltillg tIllx xl-.lr xx'ltIl Ilollorx Iruln IIN- pr:--llll-lI prul1l'.llll.Il.lcI this to my .llmllt tIll- Illfllfl' of KIIIIH IuutIl.lII. It rl-.lIIx IIt'l71'lNIN4JlI Ilflxx IIIIIKII tlu-x XKQIIII il, II llll-x Iml-A tlwx xxllII Il.lx4- tu xxul'Ix IlIx1'Ill-II InIx1'1'ptIl1'g.llll1'ullullllllllx Hut II flu- Il'-llll xx.llltN lt Il.lcI 1'llullgIl. tIll-x c.lll Ll-4-lm IuutIl.lII Il4'l'4' XXIII UI' Im:- , V .mf -f-'+Mw-w,,,,. -Q11 , n13,53,,,,,,.,, ..,,x-,J twvwskw- VW-. g.w , , X ' . , 1. 'V , ,g,,gf',f L, 'MKNW4 ,A 1' gulf' , . .-.rf V 5, 1 7, Q, v ' .xg'7f'.: f ',4i .ww af 'e if Q'-s f 'A' K -' i f 1.. 'VJ-'riv ui. 71,--,,r,..3r,13.w .i,,1.Llf fgiijnfv- 7 A I v ,. gy-Qin... ,Aw 6 4 1 T ' 1--,a:ff.ff'w 'f-.A-uf r 4' , ,,,,g ,,. v ' ' ' ' ,, - , ,4a,-mp'xJ4i'lr 5iw'5H' I, ' v. ,,,n.-. - -. TV ' 4 nA 1 M , le. A , Q , W . JJ., . ,givin ' -4 Cx' H ,, '- ' , asv' QUM1, ' -3:--4 100 1 V ' 4 N 6 v--in s.Q i '. lOl n A .sociological study c'onflut'ted by jaiizcfs' Honey- eutt. '70, cli.st'i1.szse.s' the role of inusic in the youth .s'ul2t'ult1n'e. By .selecting two distinct groups of n1u.s'iz'ic1n.s on C'llII1pll.S'. Mr. Honeyclltt c'ontru.stCfl their uttitutles and opinions on tweiity-iiiiie earcjiil- ly .s-elected que.s'tion.s. His lzypotliems- stczted that rock music supports sulicuiturul LTCIIIIUS by profiti- ing ll pseudo-religious experieiice. Some of his c'onelu.sion.s' are to bejoinicl in Rockin, Religion The glee club musicians are stronger than the rock musicians in associational ties to their churches because they see no contradiction between subcul- tural youth movements and the sovereignty of their traditional religious forms. They see Rock music as essentially wholesome and not antithetical to the status quo. As a group the glee club members give some in- dication of communal interaction, but interest in their music is not nearly as strong as in the case of the rock musicians. One reason for this difference is that the purpose and the meaning of music in their lives is not the same as the rock groups use of itg there is a functional diiierence. Nlusic for the glee club musicians serves not as Nlr. Chin, Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National Assembly of China, suggests, ' '... a weapon for class and rev- olutionary strugglef' but rather strictly for its own sake. Being a glee club musician is one of the many roles which has its own intrinsic values and does not affect any of the other compartmentalized roles. such as citizen, Catholic, etc. ln effect. these indi- viduals do not combine their music with their mo- rality except when it supports the status quo. For the rock musicians, music is not only a means for expressing morality, but it is a structure used to support their ideology as well. The rock musician, although having no associa- tional ties with religious institutions, has great com- munal ties. These communal ties exist in terms of the youth counterculture and are reinforced by sub- cultural institutions. 102 -F 4 A eb! n 104 if M XV, also scc tliait tlic rock musiciims wcrc coiisistcutly icouoclastic towards tmclitioiml norms amd vnlucs. lfwc could point to tmy of rock music-'s limctious, it would prolialuly lic its support of tliis attitudc as well as sustaining suliculturul ideals, wliicli rock musicitms arc lixmlx to admit arc liopclcssly iiimttnixiulilc. For tlic mcmlicrs of tlic suli- culturc, music lius ti rcligious function as wcllg rock music rcplaccs the tralditional rt-ligious ccrcmom' witli Ll cultic ccrciuony ol its own amd lcgitimatizcs tlic sulmcultural collcctivc cousciousucss. 106 N l Qfqx V I , T ki ,QR x ! . V 3 '? fi I , 1' N . I, LN, '-I X. 1. '-YZ .41 1 1 Rx x s. wil 'us ff' 15 , , W. 4,,AvM wx Z, WFT I fha f r,xl, . .f.' 'vw'-an-vylwY'! Tv lil Q N31 -5 N1 1-I 109 if if 110 - ,-o z OC ,.. . ,,.. af ,-Ps, j--fu' -I . H .. an -Q Arc'-5 ,J ' Q...- ' 'z---ev ' ' 4- - 1 - I ' -, kvlp, 'vin' -. ' -KA' J- . ' ., qv . . H, . .. , H 4-,,nl'u '.' Qf-Rr- ,gs . 'v .. . V Qvx ' Q. 1 N 0 '. l . ', b --. - , , Hr- sgr-.,-.'n. . 'S '5 . L wb' '-L., 4 -' Q0 v. u 0 ' J - ' ' D ' it ' 6 -... - 4 1 'y-fff--. lll 112 X A C PW Q C - 1- 7 fi -...H K On Iuiiiiairy 22, 1970. tlic US. District Court for tlic District of Connccticut liczircl tlic closing ur- gnincnts in tlic Tilton U. Finch cusc. At issuc was tlic constitu- tionnlitx' of cliurcli-rclutccl collcgcs in rcccixing govcrnmcnt grants for construction unclcr tlic lliglicr Education Fucilitics Act of 1963. Two stutcincnts inuclc ln' tlic CS. Suprcinc Court wcrc luntlumcntul in tlic procccclings. Tlit- Snprcinc Court luis clcclaxrctl, Tho estalzlislzinent rj Religion cluusc of' tlic First Anicnclnicnt inn-uns ut lcust tliis: . . . No tux in any Qnnount. lurgc or sxnull. cun lic lcviccl to support any rcligious nctivitics or institutions, wliutcvcr tlicy nizu' lic cullccl, or wlmtcvci' lroin tlicy nizn' adopt to tcucli or prac- ticc rcligionf' Tlic Suprcinc Court also clcclurctl, Tlic tcst nun' lic stutccl its follows: wliut arc tht- purposes and Pl'lIULil'f' cflk-cts ol- tlit- cnuctincnt? ll' citlicr is tlic utlxuii- ccnicnt or inliilmition or rcligion. tlicn tlic cnuctnicnt cxccctls tht- scopc ol' lcgislutivc Iioxvcr us circuniscrillccl ln' tlic Constitution. 'lliut is to suv. tlitit to witlistuntl tlit- H4 Xtwvfff iv mrvi W Y f-VS C, stricturcs of' tlic Estulnlislinicnt Cluusc, tlicrc must lic u scculur lcgislaitivc purposc and ai priinury cilcct tliut nci- tlicr zulxuiiiccs nor inliilmits rcligionf' Tlic out-stion riiiscd by Lt-o Pfcflcr. arguing for tlic pliiiiitifls, wus wlictlicr grunts to cliurcli-rclzitccl scliools unclcr tht- IIEFA uct wcrc in cffcct aiding tlic instruction ofrcligion. Fziirficlcl Univcrsity wus involvctl cluc to govcrnincnt zissistuncc for tlic construction of tlic library and tlic scicncc lmuilcling. Ptcllcr lnclicwtl tliut tht- scliools in qucstion.Fuirficlcl, Annliurst, Allmcrtus Magnus, and Sucrctl Ilcurt, wcrc in- cloctrinuting uncl Prosclytizing tlic liclicfs of tlic Romani Cutliolic Cliurcli. llc lnisctl liis cusc on clocuincnts issucd ln' tht- scliools sucli its czitulogucs. liunclliooks. uclvcrtisc- incnts, and contracts. Tlicsc clocunicnts, stating tlic goals and inctliotls of' tht- scliools. wc-rc for tht- most part in- criminating, Pfcflcr ft-lt. EilXX'ill'tlYBl'Ill1Ctt Xlillizuns, arguing for tht- clcfcntlcnts, rclusctl to cull tht- scliools sectarian und czillccl tlicin church-relulefl. llis clctcnsc incluclccl tlic tcstiinony from witncsscs. It licczunc clcin' tliait tlic scliools lizul an liistori- Vv M4 iff '-4 rf ' x , x , . 42' ali. I' 'fl gnc Q .-,. I 4 Q. 1 . K rv- 1' ix' Iii ,sz p l , I K . It 1 . 1 5 H 'Nz 5 'Q - H5 ' 0 J V is v I ,f, ,7 -'QTL' , fi-Wfr , , ,L f,ff I Y 1 1 4 t . fg 1 . f ! , . 1 f,,, 4 1 f 1 f ,Ml 1' JM Y x x -4 , ,, in +fYj If s ff, X gfff' 4 , f . px ' A , 4 1 I I X 1 ,fix 7' g fl rl A , , x ' 'J f4v', , 1 :X 1 7 Qffk, V Ifl, 1 N! f , fi f, ff' XX . N Yfffgf' H, f- -,-'wi ' ,' -a X' if 3f.x4l1?w A V' x 0 5'-'-5.4. 2-4-l,. I' .L if '1-Ia JAY .4- .s .'J .. 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III IIII IIIII II IIN SIIIJII IIII' cIlIIII IIIII IIII IIIIIII II IIIIII II I IIIIIIII IIIIIIII IIIIIII IIII II.IIIIIII s Black power means black people coming together to form a political force and either electing representatives or forcing their representatives to speak their needs. It's an economic and physical bloc that can exercise its strength in the black community instead of letting the job go to the Democratic or Republican parties or a white- controlled black man set up as a puppet to represent black people. We pick the brother and make sure he ful- fills our needs. Black power doesn't mean anti-white, vio- lence, separatism or any other racist things the press says it means. It's saying, Look, buddy, we're not laying a vote on you unless you lay so many schools, hospitals, playgrounds and jobs on usf, -Stokely Carmichael .fi A x W- -wx 'fx .sh pr 15 T' 1 44 C J' .+. '2 . gift!! U .1 ' fl . '53 'P 1, I. I 4 I 'N 0 'r O . I . - M , QQ-. L, ,, U '91, 'l.L, .iw ' J ', . W. 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I . -gf fi f 'C 'S r J I VI I' I s Y 1 'f .4 4 gl ' x THE METAPHYSICAL SOCIETY UF AMERICA TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY MEETING FAIRFIELD UNIVERSITY FAIRFIELD, CONNECTICUT OPEN TO TEACHERS AND GRADUATE STUDENTS IN PHILOSOPHY .0 w '11-.4' J' 1111 X11'1.1l111XNI11131111111111 Xl1l1'l'l1'11'1'1l'111 11111 I1N1XK1lI1l111I 1111111111111 111 111 4 . 1111111111111-111111111X111'111111111111 11111 1711 1111 I111 1 1 111N11I51lX l9l'l1l1111111111l11N1lf11111 .1111111111.111 111111111 Xll111111IlIl111 11111111 111 111111111 111.1111 1lIlllX 111 1111' N11 1 1111 N111ll1l11llIQ11l11IlIN111111111 1111IIlN11X1'11111N1ll1 1111 11111111111111111111111 1111111 111111111111 Ill 1111' 111111111 IX 111 11 1111111 1111 llI1l1 111 111lN 11 1111 1X111111I'11l1'1111 Nl11.1I1111111.1151111111111 X1111'111 11111111111111 111111 1111111 1111 11111 - 111111 111l111111111111111111 11.111111111111111111.1111.1111111-11111111 l1111111111l1111 111111 11111 111 111111111111 111111111l1111111111l1111 11 11111111111111 1l1I1X 1111'11I1Pl1'111111X111111l 111111111111 1 11111 XX1111 l:111ll1f1 N111111111 X11Jl1lI111I I xf11'1 11111 11111111 111111 N11 111 '1111111 1 X1.11111111111111111111111111g111'111l1111111111l11111.1111111111111 111111111 1111111 1 111 1 111 111l111.1l1111.1I1. 1111 X1111111111111151111111111X111111111111-11 11111 '1111111 1111111111111 111 11111111 111 111111111111111111111111111- 1111X 1111 l11111111111111l11111, X1111111 1' 111 '111 1 I1 171 S1111'111111f1.1111111111.1.111111111111 1111111 I111l11l11l'1I1'11I111 111 1111 1 1111 11 l11111X11Nl1X 1111111111 K1N11l' 11111 11111111111111111 X-1111 1 111111111111 1 111111111 1 ' 11'1111111111 11111 X111 1111' 1111114 1111'1111.11111111111111111111 S1 11 P 1111111 11111' '1111111 1111111 X111.1l1111.1l1.1151111111111 X11111 1111 111 1111 11 11X11111.1111N1111111111111115 111 1.1111 f.1,11111111 1111114111 1111 I1 111 1 1 1 11111- 1111111111.1111 11.11111111111111111111111111111111111 1111 ' 111 '1 11 . 1 '1vuv1.,e ,ff XX'1'2l1xl'l1'SS1'S 111111l1'1l' 11111111'i1111s 111111 111111111111s. 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T11111' 1lI'l' 11111 1111111115 111s11'i111111111 111 il 111111111'1111e111 136 ..... DQ! If! -' as 'A'-Zsf' 'P' 1 v J. ii that dom not 1'cHect thc Hugineiitai- tion of tliv coinmunity ofiiiiqlliry that has come tlirougli dcpallfineii- tail l'UPl'llSCl1flltiOl1 ofa single school of' thought. It is for tliesc- rcasons that wc wvrc proud to liuvv the Xletupliysicul Socicty of Ainelicu on this cuinpus. -King Dykmnan 138 F97 on s- 'S-'N ff' ,xfnkn K 5 L i ., W' ,., A J- 1' ., 15. ,514 :S-f',4:5,Q 31 Q Mk 'gk L 'Q 53-N 492- ' Iv. a.'g'i I ' 25' ' f y mx.-1.13 ' ni f-:Sf 'R' 'Q':'? f'f'?k-ga. '.-tif' 1- 7W 5 ff J' ' fa! Q wr . 7 ,.. i n J,-5 it L JN? AQK ' S -,Q m A1' ' -1' ,Q?m' A .iu x WNl5,5 yN,K 'ffl , 1:F', J li in 1. Mn Txgh?--4'f -wg , v-MJ 7'-f f, ' - '4f H- x fa Q ,gf , is A 4 J jgifH ' .1 . i xgaqyg ,. i M Egg? J xi! -- if fRQf?f:f Q ' b 'l 4 J 0 'Ni I: 3 1 1 . ' . ' . , h 'xg' Q'S I lt. .,4 i .. . f . l'17 . ' f1.+ v.-me . f-- 1: f .- . f - . I' V4 ff- ls. -N w---I 1781 N . ' J N .. ' lit' 0 y - '1 - X X 1' I . rv 3 wh- S il..- A v-01' ff! nf , nf Q ?,, ,hh ' 'ii11.,1.:4'1'wyzAga'5,z-1mmnmgfwmlxxizxg k ,. ' 'S-u5w.g.kM. 5? 9, ' 0 3 1 .. if . . s . ' 1 A ten-bulldmg campus located ln a sunken valley surrounding an immense parking lot. ' .... New York Times November 22, 1969 n ' 'lam q.,-...- - U72 , 0 A . J' -V . , d 1- - ' ' -'l.'.,0 lS,,.. . . pm, 51.-l ' r 1 1' 4 1 gxcuil I Q mga' kt, -- l M I ' --nl-- A X A f out--nQxs,..,.,' I 1 -11 Qg- x , - 4 7 , Ad ' 41? 7-. nf' Q' I I .---1 L . 'tht -,.' I - 5 '4 K , r ' 'n Q ,' . nl .r V U . 5 u ' . - 5 .st IK Q Q. W A4 mf 1, vs' ssl. .I .1 A v V nv n ':F'4:'v 'A - I' 5-. Q --J f 44 VVhen in the Course of human events, it becomes nec- essary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Natures God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation. XVe hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just bowers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Gov- ernment, laying its foundation on such principles and or- ganizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to eflect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long es- tablished should not be changed for light and transient causes, and accordingly all experience hath shown, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are suf- ferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. -july 4, 1776 I! Q V 'C K ' X 9 l 9 S Ugsk I 1 Q Q ff-r .' f l7f'f. ,. iN 1 L To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world ff' ' 4 223, 4,,yb,g' ' A15 -mg-1 gqjxmi, .U , N -WWAY W ,Q ZW W' V911 A f - S-Q .Quinn-L .Tuul 1 11 A, , M, ' if a' in- .. -'an - 5 , ' . S -' en- a ' A ' '55--.-xl.-qiiq. Ig - i ' 'ff-x': 'i 7'g.- ff . ' . M - f- - .' .....'1'fa'-4-. ',,,:.gg:q . - ' M Q- A - .....u..1--.'...a.1.:. --- - -1- wfi -. -....:1.5.gg, - -na s1f-,1ff'1'7'., , -A --- J-LWJ' tiatg U.. --. ....--- K 1- - -Lund. 1- -Q L4 .-A is -4- 4.1 :ig t cl A 3 4. 1 v.1....' 1' 5 9 0 , . 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XM' th1' 151.1111 st11111-nts 111' 1 11irfi1-111 L'1l1Y4'1'N111'. 111111111111 hy jllllllilfy. 1970 1111- 1'11111irm1-11 ilpl701ll1II1l'll1 111' Black w.11.1ri1-111-111111w111rs.wh11s1'prima1r1' r1111-ist111-111111s1'1111111111111r1-sst111'1T1s1'1v1'st11t111'Black st11111-11ts 1111 1-z1111p11S. .5 - tu 0 .J. X1 1- thc' 151.1111 NflIt1t'll1N 111 1'illl'f11'111 1lllX'l'TSl1X' 111-111111111 th1- 11pp11111t1111-11t 111 15111111 s111a1r11-11 p11111'ss11rs 11l 1'x'1-1w a1'.1111'mi1' 111-p.1rtm1 -nti11t111-1111i111rsity. 4. NY1- the- 151.1114 51111101115 111 1 z1i11i1'111 1'11ix'1-rsitx. 111-111111111 t111' i111p11-m1'11ta1ti1111 111' tw11 111ll2llilL14'S 111111 thf' 1'X1'111 1.anq1111q1' 111-p.1rtm1'11t. '1.1l4'S1' 1illlLf1IdQ1'S ilfi' i1111i111tiv1- 111' th1' '1'hir11 114111111 or p1-11p11's 111' 1-1111111 '1111' two 1llll1l1lilL' Swahili 111111 Ar.111111 H S 1111 5. YY1' th1- 15111111 st11111'11ts 11f1 uirfi1-111 1'll1X1'fSl1f, 111111111111 11'll' 1'stz1111is111111-11t 11111 151111111 1'1-si111-11ti111 1111111 with 15141 residvnt .111xis11rs. 14 1111 6. XVe the Black students of Fairfield University, demand the establishment of a Black holiday in order that we may recognize the achievements of a great Black leader. Primary consideration should be given to the achievements of Dr. Martin Luther King and Brother Malcolm X when deciding upon the day chosen. In culmination, we the Black students are totally committed to the doctrine that there can he no progress for the Black man without a struggle. lf these demands are not complied with in the form of a deHnitive statement of your position, subject to our approval, on November 14, 1969, the Black students will take action. P l l iw .1 Z- l A s V ' 1 ? from I . v xx f'X 148 -4 bun... 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It IN 1-1111t1'.11'1 t11 tl11' l.111'1 11ll tl11' 1'111111t1'1 11111l 111l111 1 111 tlll' LIllX1'l'NllN 111 1l111'1'1111111.1t1' 1111 tl11' l111111 lllllllllx, 'l'l11 l' 1 111 r.111z k'lAl'l'Kl HIA 1'11l111' 111 .1111g111111'11t 11l' 1l111'1111t111'11 ' 111 1111111 l1.11 .1l11'111'1 11-111g 11if1-1l tlll' 1111l1t 111 ll'l'K' .11111111.1t11111 lll 1l111'1111t111'1' 11-l1-1-t11111 .1111l s s KKK' 1 tl111 lAl1'llI NK ll kN l111 .1111 1t111l1'11l 1ll l11- 1111111-1't111l l111' l1l.11'l1 1tl11l1-1111 lN . 1 61. l111'1'11111.1ll1 l.11111.1l111l11l.11.l11111111'111gtl11-.111l111-11-1 llll'lllN 111 .1 l1l.11l1 l1-.1111-11 .1111l 11'1ll 1l11'1-1't tl11' l11i11-11111 l,11111111l 111 1111111111111'111l .1 1l.1t1- 1111tl1111 tl11' .11 11 .11 1111 tl111 1111 1111111 1 . '.11l1-111114 St111l1-1111l1.1111.1g1'1-111ltl1.1t1111tl1111g 1l111-11111-1l1l11111l1l 1 1 11111 tl11 l1IXN1'I'lllQ ul .11.11l1'1111L' Sl.1l11l.11'1l1 nl' ll11' Lllll X111 X . 11 lllll .1ll .1g1'111- 111 11111'l4 t1111'111'1l tl111 l11'tt1-1'1111-11t I P ' ltl11 l.111111r11t1. -1t.1t1'1111111t 11u11111l l11 F11 Xl1l1111111. H1111.1l1l Nl1t1l11-ll. Xl1'1. Elll 'l'l1111111111111. H1-1.fQl1.11'l1-1C,111'1l1111..1111l Xl1'.fQl1.11'l1-1 l4111l.1l1' In the days following the sit-in, about fifty letters were received at the University. Here is a selection of these letters which reflect the major opinions expressed. Dear Father Nic-Innes: Mrs. Liskov and I heartily commend you and your associates at Fairfield University for your ability to re- solve the student confrontation on campus. e In this age of anxiety and era of violence, it is encour- aging to know that there are men of good will and faith in the democratic process of learning to live together in a peaceable society. Please accept the enclosed contribution to your scholar- ship fund as a small token of our hope that all elements of our community will Join in a mutual effort for a better wav Of lite. Yours very sincerely, Samuel Liskov Very Rev. NVm. Nlclnnesz XVhy should one lower their standards of cleanliness, morality, work habits, respect for law and order and goals just to satisfy black power. You all brought it on yourselfs, so sink or swim. Put your shoulder to the wheel. You made your bed, sleep in it. M. Leary P.S. You may say I'm a bigot, so whatl You can bet Im no IIYPOCRITE. Dear Fr. Nlclnnesz I agree with you the end justifies the means, you are not the first religious, the fascist had sexual relations with. But outside of your personal pleasure it will accomplish nothing. All religious bowed before the Brown fascist. XVith the help ofthe Jesuits and Jews, we will have Black fascism and the new dark ages that are now being born. When cannibalism, barbarism, mayhem and rape are the accepted part of life, we Jesuits and Jews can offer it up to Jehowah as the works of our hands. Abraham Moses Jacobs New York City Dear Father Nlclnnesz I hasten to offer you encouragement in the aftermath of so much criticism directed against you. Enclosed is my check for S25 to be used at your discretion. Fortunately, today's Bridgeport Post carried a com- plete account ofthe manner in which you and the other people reacted to the Sit-In. Alan Simpson of Vassar wrote to us on November 4th, 1969, describing in detail the Sit-Inu which started on November Ist at Vassar, and I want to add that both incidents could not be re- solved more wisely. No acknowledgement is necessary. I wish you and other people of Good-Will, Godspeed as you ineet the challenges of todays schools. Llovd L. Lundberv - C' Fairfield, Conn. Dm-ill' F.ltllt-it IQIIJIIIIN .lllkl llis six L-llllllxlllllrllx lllllst lu- xllllllllllg lil tlll-il' glxlxl-x. 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GENE '1-3eiNQ- , 187 . e ,X 30 xiii' 7' 3, f. -hi sr V. s 188 9 'iv 'Liv -1 ww e There is a growing concensus that the administration operates through pre-planned cabals and authoritarian power plays. VVhy else the secrecy ofthe new dorm? VVhy else the deceptive treatment of the faculty salary demands? Why else the unilateral shutdown ofthe student news- paper for t'libel when Father Mclnnes does not take his bruised pride to court and prove libel . The constitutional convention is remarkably close to developing a model for all American universities: binding tripartite university governments. But their Work, as it nears completion, is being sabotaged by a power-hungry president and his hapless cronies, who will not give up their little sheikdom. If we are not to go outside the system, which we do not want to do, we are going to have to deal with those who tool the system for their own personal privilege. And that, fellow students, means MCINNES MUST CON! , Jig Dxwpx' - . ' x.g-. 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'11111' .X111111111111'.11111- l111.11'11 111111-1-.1111111-1111 1111- l11'l'N111l'111. 11 IN 1111 1111- 111111111'.1111111 111 111-111 111111111 11111' 1-111'1'1-111 l'X1'111N. 111- 1-1111111'11- 1111- 11111.1111-1 111 1111- Mug. 111- 111111111 11111- 111 11111111111- 111.11 1131, 1111' l5l'l'N1'll1. .11111 Ill 111111-1' 111 .11-1-111111111111 -.' ,Lf .11111 11'i11.11'1111- 111 1111111- .11111 1-11111-1'1-11-11 1111111 11111 111.11 1 1.11'11111 1111111111111' 111111 1111 11111111111111'.11111- 111l'11111l'1A 111- 11111111-11 111 1111- 1-11111111.11 11111111 X11111111-I' 1111-. 11'1- 1'll1'11111'11Q1- 1111' 1'11l111l11l.1111'1- 11111111' 1'11l11111111111l1111 1'11l111'111111l1 15 1111- 111-11 11-1111-11- 1111' l1X1l11l1'1l1Q Ql'1'1111'1' 11111111-11111111111 1111.111 Q1-1111111 1111111 111 f'1111111l11111 Xll11l1ll'l' 111. 111- 111517111110 1111- 1'11111-1-111 111 111111-1' 1-1-1111-11-111.1111111 1111 1111- 1111.11'11 111 1111111-1-1. 111111 1111-1-1111-.1111 111- 1Al'1111l'N1 111111 1111111- lul-f1l1flN,l1 111- 17lA1'l3.ll'l'i1 111 1111' 111 15.l1'1l11' 1-1111111-11 1111' 1111111 N1ll11l'll1N 111111 1.11-11111 1'1-1111-11-111.1111111 1111 1111- 1'111.11'11 1111.11 1 .111- 1111- 11111-1 111111 11111 111-1'1111- 111111 11111 111- .1 1111A11111l'1' 111 1111- 1111.11'11 111 .1-l'llN111N Qknz-sa.. , 1 Terry Horan: Is this on the stipulation that the strike is ended? President Mclnnes: Yes, this is our basic starting position here. Dennis Gallagher: I would like to attempt to clarity and add a few points. The first point on the neutral board . . . President Mclnnes: Look, can we have a presentation of a counter offer so we know where we are starting? Dennis Gallagher: That's what I was going to try and do, put our offer next to yours. The neutral board in our minds . . . it would be necessary to have on paper an agreement to abide by the decis- ions of this neutral board with respect to the President ofthe University. Two, that you will endorse or argue for the addition of five faculty members and five students to the Board of Tmstees. Three, that you will endorse the form of tripartite that was agreed upon by the constitutional body. Four, that the constitutional convention be reconvened as scheduled this coming week-end. Five, that the Academic Vice-President ofthe University be directed to issue academic amnesty for all students during the course ofthe past week. I would also like to go further on the Stag, that perhaps the Fairfeld Record, the catalogue, and other publications be brought into that issue. Those are our final proposals. Mr. Fishman: There is general agreement on the overall propositions. There are some differences in interpretation of what they mean, and perhaps a few clarificationsare necessary. Let me start with the things that look as if there is complete agreement. One is the appointment to the Administrative Council. I think that the area ofthe addition of members to the Board of Trustees . . . I don't think there is a wide divergence in that area . . . In the area ofthe nature ofthe charges tagainst the Presidentj I think that the position of the administration is to establish a neutral board within the community, within the Fairfield community, selected by the University Council, to hear the validity of the charges. The decision of this board, whether to pursue them or not to pursue them, is a ques- tion that will come out. john Harrington: . . . The condition was that the strike will end, this is what Father said, the strike will end once the proposals are accepted or we can get a working agreement and the strike will end, o.l1. I Ytklllf 1lont s1-1- 11l1.1t tl11-st1'1l11' l1.1s got to 1lo 11'itl1 tlicsv 15l'015UN.lIN. 'l'l11- IK'g.lIItx ol'1t .1ll 111 IVIIIIN ol'tl11'5t111l1-nt 11111 1'r111n1'11t, .1111l I-lll 5llIl' XlllI'Il' .1ll .111.1r1- ol it .lllll I 1lont 11.1nt to lu-l.1l1o1 tI11- PUIIII. istl1.1t11l1.1t1-1111 is 1l1'1-11l1'1lgo1'sl1.11-I1totl11-st111l1'nt l1o1l1. lt is 1'n1lors1'1l 1 l.l .1 r1'l1'11'n1l11111. 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I Illllllx tl11'1'r1' .ISIQIIIQ IIIIII to do sornctliing 11111-1- .1:n1n1'1l, If it 111131115 tl1.1t lic is 1n.1l4i11g11s1'rio11s corn- zn1t:n1-nt to Xkwflx l11r11l1.1t tliv rcst ofitlu' L'UIUl11llllIlf ls 11--rl11ng tor. tl11-n I .nn 1 1'r1' 111111-li in liLlX'Ol'0lItl11ll. Init it I11 s11:n1' 1111l11-.1t1o1111'c final out tl1.1t tliis is not .1 1-111--11.11 PTKVININIIIIIII. IIIVII I .1s .1 1n1'1nl111r nl tl11' t'.111:lt1 1111-I tl1.1t tl11- lI'l1U.lTlllL' spirit l111s I11-on 1111113- 11T1l1lt'kl E11 tl11' NIIICIVIIIN. And lllt'I'L' l11'tt1-r lw s111n1- 13111111 1-111111111l11.1111111t111'1-s111r1-1.11111orilmtlip.1rts. X1111 I-11111411 .1sl4111Qtl11'111t11sigl1.1l1l.1l1l4 1-l11'11l1 1 2131-1 l::'1 .1sl11:1g lor .1 l1.1l.1111-1'1l 1 1111111111111 111 corn- :n1t:n1'11t11:1l1otl1s11l1-s. Hr. D111'i.s: I 111111l1l l1l111' to .1d1lr1-ss 1n1s1-lI'si11111l1 Toth'-11fl1ZI11s.I'1l'st11l.1ll I tl1111lxtl1.1tXlr.C1.1ll.1gl11-1's 1'1-:n.1rl1s .1l1o11t llll' 1l1fI1-r1'1'11-1' l11't11'1'1-11 tl11' Prvsi- clvnt s 1f1:11:111tn11'11t .1111l tl11- .11I1n1n1str11t111ns .1r1- XVII 111-ll t.1l11-11. Tl1.1t 111: dont 11.1111 dllfllfldf' to clo sf1:n1'tl11112 tl1.1t tl11'1 l1.111' no 1711111-r to LI11. Its not right tor fflll P.1tl11'r xILII'tI'lt's to s111'11l1c for 1-11'r1- l1o1l1. lor 11111' 11l1f1l1' s1'1t11r. 11itI11111t Cf,IlSlIIt1.ltIffIl. Tl1:s. I tIllIlk. is trn1' III YUTIIIS of tl11' str1l11-. It 11.1s 11'rt.1111l1 nn. lt't'lHlQ 1111rl41ng tl1r1111gl11111t ll11's1-11r11- po-.1ls tl1.1t tl11-s1- 111111l1I ln' r1'l1-rr1'1l to tl11' st111l1-nt Lodi. TI11-1 1.1ll1'1l tl11- stril-11: 1LIllI tl11-1'r1- tl11' Ullll fmtits Ilnxt L.1!1 1'11CI lt 511 tl1.xf IIU UIIQ' IS trying 111 f111'r-11111111111 sf11111-11111'1'ls1'11rt11t1'1 N111-t s111111-11111' tu s1gr1.1l1l.111l1 1l11'1l1. or tuflusf11111'tl111111tl1.1t is Ill 1111l1-n11- to tl11' IJfl5ItI'lIl tl1.1t tl11-1 lrfnltl III .1111 Nl'QIlll'IlI l71'1111i.1 l,UIllIl'1llI.' Inst 11111 11111st111111I111I111111l1..11 1l1s1'11ss1'1l.1t.1ll l1lI1l11 to 1sl1 tln Qlllll rl l 1 lll 1sl1l'.1tl11-1 Xl1'l11111-s.11i1'1t111111t11111st11111tl11t11111 KIKIIIIN 1lK'1Illl'IIlll .1n1111st1 XN1 lllXllIl Illllll 111 l1'1'1ll1.11'l1o11tl11so111'11111'st1o11 l 1111111l1111l 1l Illl s .1 11oss1l11l1t1, l,l'IlIlx Illl 11t1111111l tl11t l11 1111ll l1l11-1l11- IIIl'Nllll'llI t11.1sl1ll11 Xll1 l'11s1-l1111 X11 1l1'lllll' l71-.111 ol 5llIlll'IllN to '1 1111 ll 11l1 Illll lllllll t1t11st111l1-nts 11l111 l1111l1 1l.lll Ill flu NIIIIX1 pI'1'SIllt'lIf .xll'lllHl'S.' XI1 lils lll'Illlk' .1111111-st1 lNllt'1'1ll'tl.J IN going lo I11-.1 ll1'l'tl lor Ntlllllllllt to sit III llllllll 111111l11-1'.111s1-tl11-1'1'.111'I.11'11lt1 11l111 1l11l not s111111111t ll11 IIKIIIIKIII IN llIlN I Illllllsl 1 1 D1'11ni.1 lJ1n1111111n: ' ' - 1 l1 1 thc students' position and have used their position of authority to punish the students for the strike. President Mclnnes: XVhat do you mean punished? Because they didn't come to class at all? Dennis Donovan: By giving tests and hurting them academically in the three days that they were absent. john Harrington: just a point OilClkll'lHL'L1tiOIl. It was the official Student Government position that they asked the faculty not to impose their personal philo- sophical or political position on any student by using academic reprisals. They have been violating this by scheduling tests and putting up notices that there is a test tomorrow, and if you don't go to the test, you Hunk. Mr. Davis: One faculty opinion on this. I think the question of the cuts and the tests would have to be settled diflerently. I think the Dean could very well probably strongly urge people not to penalize peo- ple, but I personally would be against being coerced by the Dean to do anything. I think what john said about not letting teachers impose their individual philosophies could be turned around to say after all the teachers should not be forced to allow the students to impose their philosophy. So I think this is a question in which the administra- tion could certainly give a great deal of guidance. but I would be very much opposed to coercion. Moral suasiou, so forth, fine. 198 x Q A . Y ',4Q,Q-tr. - Q, rf. -, . I 1 Kfh 356154 , ' . '. 1 13 'sh , wa.. - 'QM- W '!'r The outcome ofthe meetings followed the general lines of the preceding discussion: establishment of a neutral board to hear the charges against the President, the rec- ommendation for the expansion of the Board of Trustees to include members of all sectors, representation for the students on the Administrative Board, and reconvention of the constitutional convention as a general assent to the concept of tripartitism. The question of amnesty was not completely settled. Once the events of Kent State and Cambodia occurred, amnesty was to become a para- mount difficulty. The failure to come to a quick, easy solution to academic amnesty was one reason provoking the seizure of Canisius Hall. At the last meeting of the University Council dealing with the strike, Chairman King Dykeman responded to a query about the meaning of the settlement. His response reflected the basisfor tripartitisni, its rnostformidiblefoe, and the tension ofthe days in negotiation. Dr. Dykeman: lftripartite is ever going to mean anything in this University. it's got to be treated with a certain amount of reverence. Now if you come here and tell me that after four days of discussions in this committee that you have not gotten your two original demands, which were one: to have the President's head on a pike-pole, and two: to have binding tripartite, and after four days of in-goodgfailh negotiations with members ofthis Universi- ty Council, that you do not have what you originally came for, then you did not come in good faith to negoti- ate with this committee, nor to find some other answers than the ones you wanted to hear in the first place. lf that is true, you have used this Council, prostituted the tripartite body in this University, to make a platform upon which to make a pitch. If that's true, then I think that tripartitism is dead at this L'niversity. and it has no chance of rising until the student body is willing to give as well as to take. If you came here unable to give and only to take, then tripartitisin cannot work. lt's got to bi the mutual interaction of the three bodies. all parties bi ing willing to give and take. Second question: ls the neutral tact finding eoininis- sion binding? lftruth is binding. the eoinniission is bind- ing. The fact finding commission is to find out the truth about allegations about problems. lftruth is binding. it is binding. Third, there is no binding tripartite body on this campus. Ifthere is one. it will be niade through the Board of Trustees. One ofthe motions in this has been a request for the President of the l'niversitv to go forward to the Board of Trustees, who now hold legal powers ofthe l'ni- versity, and to spread those powers out. But there is no binding tripartite body on this eainpus nor shall there be until the L'niversity trustees have nioved it. That has been the purpose and the hope of inost of us at this eoun- cil. that we could inove to this 201 n I- 3 Q ls The students ended the strike as they began it- with legislature meetings and mass rallies. There was no talk of a sell-outv in reference to the agreement. There was much confusion about the fu- ture of tripartitism. The voting was finished and the students tried to get back to classes. The last words spoken demonstrated the weariness of a political campaign and the restrained optimism of a Pyrrhic victory. One freshman said, This place is going so many ways at once that it isn,t going anywheref, One senior said, It's the best thing that ever hap- pened heref, Many people saw the strike end and didn't say anything. I 1 TS U f f ELM N Q dw st -ilu: gk r 1. YW' J 'x ,4 7 I 2 I fy D fi xl Campy -Y wi lr I, Q ,f U ,, J ,F 1 if m 1 A? K X xg ,v J' il, Q N ik if i 5 4 gg .. f an f l. 1 1' AQ - 'X r qw 5 ...if 1' 'f .W E 6 f K -Q ,N my a M, Q, -.. A 4 G Y Vi' J I .11 Am ,Qui 6 1 x X C fs H ' ks . I rg 15 f di . KI ' , s 1 6 1 Q . I 'N '1 Ax af- 4 12 U: X? of I , yr' W. L A xl- ' -s 1 f .wr i iii: ,A A 4 5'-Q:'f' V TW 'A 5 f ,. 'by if Q W girl' -mpg , Q 5 iq ', f : ' ' ' Y' ', -. .OA-n-.. A 9 'fi N I . I I fi, .Xin I - One of the big problems of today's society is its sus- ceptibility to stereotyping groups of people. Wayne Cib- bons, in reflecting on his four years here, attempted to relate the unknown side of the athlete: Looking back on my years at F airfield, the one tangible result has been a learning experience in which my self-introspection and greater interpersonal relationships have developed. I wanted to remove, as much as I could, the stigma and the image surrounding a basketball player. This past year, through his part in developing black identity, imploring his classmates to establish a scholarship fund for the un- derprivileged, or speaking in times of crises, Wayne has helped to distort that image. A major force behind this desire has been Wayne's commitment in confronting problems head-on. I don't believe that a man can walk in the middle of the road. There are too many questions to be answered. The mark of a man is that he commits himself one way or the other. . . . As freshmen, right then, we began to accept things without question. Now, this year, things look more op- timistic. People are finally beginning to concern them- selves with issues that reach beyond the Fairfield microcosm. This has contributed to my learning experi- ence. Wayne also cites interaction among people as an essen- tial part of his education. I've come to the startling realization that as a black person, in order to deal in the upper levels of decision-making, I have to deal with all people on an equal basis in order to make my experience meaningful and successful. It would be illusionary to do otherwisef, UW? 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Q -' 'f 1 f-,fx Q gf ,P 'i:l.fM:' 'Q A ig '17, .' 'fra-:44'.. ' 'i' - , ,M . . v - f -W-T. n 5-35' '- , 'Qty ', ft ' A Q :',-35.43 .. J 1 nc -UV: ' ' ' ' - - - - ' Q . J. M ,Q -M A. 'L U' , 'h . 1 N '-. ,-.J . I tx , g? N jx. 4 A , .1 5 U' :iz 0: I E. LJ J - ,ff D 'J 1 -Q ml, 'ji I-I 1' a .- .AQ 'v I' OX Q. ' . . x t b.. - fl- f-.. at 4 . . ,Q we -an 1 1 it 3 Q ah ' .' 551. : , . 5 it Ag.. . bw 4 .',- --fi'- +. a.' ff' 1-553'- 5 ' f - --S-e.' Ql .f'.:: B .,-wi,4Lm0S, ::' M . 4951 fligi. A. :i -.sus id ' grit- az. . .-fx . 0 ' xl F -Q ff' ' Sgr .' ' I v fl If l I O Q' .J 5 Q' R O Q Q ia- ' P: fi: :Q si, . P J H 5 Li . x ' -' I-7 s,.L.. . 1 ,s - U . -m ffdl-'swf ,gf ' ,L3 Q -f 'L . - . , - - J 'h Q ' . 'x' f I., I ' I AT -5 ' !.!1 Q' I. r .L- , n ul 'T' T 6.-- 'gg -Q 'V . Qi., . -X E. 1 . 'L . Q ' ' J 1. 0 P 4 , Q --K 5 , . . 1 . .. n' ' 1 15 6 fetal 5 3 4 ..,- pg' 23 -- M :flu -- '-' rp L O Q Z, .- 7 N3 , , Q , If-P' '- ' f ' Y Q -.,f'F fbi . B' I O . iff 3 'Qian .fa Q in .. ,. - f -'.g Q .' 7.1 ' . ' 1 .- - Q, - - . --I 'T -- - ' '-.M 0-' 11111: , Y, '-wus? W' . -, Q' ' nf ' W u A- ' Q c., 'Cb , - an . 'AH in iv. ' Q 'kia wi ' H 'K ' 1 I s m 7 ' ' , --1 It li N, '-- ' 'fm V - Y J 4 ' Hmwwwwu ff if mf' I 'f It p . , . ,.,, , ,511 3 72,1 :.. 5 VVFA T71 up H H A 5 ...Q-iv. if 's .55-' 214 .v 4, N. ,Q -A 1' 5 ' '- s' - , il'P..' xl Poem for a Pen ive Lad Tony Salerno I have seen a vast river running to sea, ecstatic, because of some compulsion, unforseen, unforgiving and strong. Fast and mad, swallowing possessed rivers, oceans know no laws but their own. And each and every rivulet, fed ofsweat and make-believe, becomes in you my ocean, and having touched the ocean, I must drown. I have been drunk dreaming, time and time again for make-believe, waiting not for someone to arrive but to arrive at someone, to be with someone always because I imagined flesh in place of ectoplasrn, because I imagined once that poetry and a womanis eyes outshine ghosts, and I wanted both. Because for every drop of water given to me in thirst, I C' I xx as left in tearsg NN I I11 1 hen xuse for everx' love, I I tr ided aixxuiy the veairs. I have made love to mental molds cast in metiilg 1 mx e kneiided people into plastic p.ir.i-ligni I ol Xly dreams, in Nix' xxxiy, .u they have done unto me .is I did unto t it in 1. m Their xxxiv. I liave inaide love ind lx1 toini in ind I inhi it 1 tl xoii .1 xx .nys tarnished 1 xx ith semi-oiicefrieiicls Sl xx N on 40-dollar-ii-month floors uid x on xx1 ll li xx ii e streams olhorieiital incense sinoke, 1 s i c rivers ofsilent Brahmins mox ing toxv.ird Bt i s sxx irled up along the newspaper insnl.ited xx ill Ll 1, tl x I have inade love I hiooc i L to 5 issoon hiiirdos in Pucci dresses ost too it 1 n md touched past them. p ist their clothing. Ind till 1 insx past their murmured hip xvords, 1 mst d I inptx rooms ol pi o i 1 mpting ment.il copiiliition 1 1 crm-.iting hixiin 1l.iin.igc. I hive made love? No . . I'x e made soinething else. Bev. inse mavhe at the time I was hnngrx' and .it the time so xvere they. all ofiis xvith hroken xvatches. cheating timi et inse AIS angels xx'e looked Iwtter elnalciatecl: skin infected, hicketl and bruised. like I'ic.isso's hlne period. -Xnd I grexx' tired when love hecame a honschold xxord in i household too high to knoxv the difference But for us. each night. lax mg together for hours, thigh over thigh. the re were searching whispers set to stereo and heeswax candles: -What are you thinking of? -Living. lonliness. -Hax'en't I given you anything? -Xinho can live on visions. -I am Ahraham. I must have no less than Sarah. You must accept this. -I am Sarah . . . You are not Ahraham. You must accept this. -But I am yours: pen, paper and penis -Gypsies don't marry jews. -Sure they do. Can you see the bans? Serious Young Artist Daughter of Sir. Gr Mrs. Pish Posh, To Marry Serious Young Ilitchhiker Son of.-X Bitch. -But I am not yours yet. v li Avis rents you a Plymouth with wer 19,000 miles on the odometer: you can keep it ffiw Q-.Q I hmm- mit in i'.iiIx'.u'tI xtatium. u.1i'Ixt iiiuriiiiig. 'Ibiiiit-swt-. at-vlitiiig Dy I.ui .uid xIl'llllTIIIN4i.ll!. LIXYLIIIIIIQ c.u'.ix .ms uiiiiiiiistivls Iixwli Iiuiii Xmlix iIIt'. plwviiig tlixiv .imI ixiiiiit-In hlutwz iiiiiixtivls hliit-It. with Imriis tural giiitiirx with sim-IIs uI'Imui'Imii .mtl t'm'.iiiit- tw t .intl I h.ixv Imiiid thvm .mtl gottt-ii high Anal mit with you. tIiasiiiiiInr. .ipologctit-. hiking Imclx t-.ich wortl qiiit-tly. griiiiiiiig .iiigvr iiiitl lit-ing NMI. Iwuilist' I ht-gtiii to wiisnii wiiictliiyw K tuiiimiows ck gtiucllwt-N. .-Xml Ytlll 11-giwiit-QI In-ttvi' than I. I tuiswtfrvcl with words that saiicl I Ion' Ytlll. .mtl I hint- wt-ii infiiiitt' wortls IliII tu nm' viiiutimi. .mtl mit- t-iimtimi tippiwiiicli infinity' iii .1 tout-Ii. .incl .1 tout-Ii In-t-tiiiiv tht- quail uiiii iiiiiclmuii. I have heen within cold cuhicles oftaught steel entrenched in granite. jailed an hungering for my fi-Qaiom while the gray starched cotton clothing warmed my hody and dried my sea. But you clothed me in acrylics, painted me like some mosaic. took my mind, dismemhered, and filled the gaps with parts of you. XVe sat once, in a room that was never empty, and watched through a stained-glass window the asylum silhouettes walking the streets looking for a friendly har, while we felt each other's hair. Lately I have watched the stained-glass window change from dawn to end ofday. your mind recurring in each pattern. morning yellow to evening purple, and each hour hecame a color, and each color lmecanie your face, and I was quiet, hurned hy purple, mocked hy yellow, soothed hy gray. Cray-we have sat in cafes early Sunday. drinking wine. Cray-sipped Turkish coflee while the music played and played. And you have sat in endless self' engaged in painting fresh new patterns for your hungry, collected, artist's mind. And I have hecome an endless incongruent pencil design on morning napkin to luncheon menu, scrawled in tolerant, discarded dreams of you and me. Gray in our afternoon. But I remember pink. Pink in a sundown garden where I touched you a thousand times lmefore I ever kissed your face. It was wrong we were lovers hefbre we were friends. lf I Xi .,gQW , Q if I J byylf ligglfy Q I ,551 I 'S' ' If 3' Q' EF 1 7 ' ,ft ,. . r453l5ff1UqSL r f I , err I Q ,I . , ' S ' ' ' iz -, . , I ,X 3,4 1 , , v I 1 , , '. 'Y r I E ,, 5 v - ' .N I-, . A h , ' 4 - V ri N rm . - 1 7 , I, .l , : x ,R W J AJ ,, an , . F3 MIX 1, if .Q I I XVe always measured closeness in touches. My Visions don-t encompass Oceans anymore, Now I am at arms length and endless truckstops from my river with no direction , you' 1 free flowing, VVhen I was Kentucky, feeling my leaves turn brown, lonely as a man without a Culture inhaling bluegrass and whiskey, moving energy afraid to be harasgeda you were New York, bracing yourself for winter waiting to be neutralized Wlfh fm Hsfhmaflc gasp' Our days, I rethink, were never hasty. stocking up on Contac and 'O1tllO.-IIOVLIITI. Q Iwas always late and wondering Philosophy And I became Arkansas, Missouri, California, and kissing your face between breasts and MQXICQ, Y undressing you every chance we had. and never forgot New Xork. And today I thought, W I ' we are all smoke along a ceiling, Sometimes, I thought, I might find you Crawling to nowhere at il truck 5t0l7-KeatSian- like wicker patterns that die in chair frames. and weld melt into real people again and Ild lift your dress and yould undo my shirt forever. 220 1' x x ll ll ll Vlll ll ,. ,,.,ll. l l x llxyul l' xlxkl . lxlfNXf'lXNl 'I'X lll 'Y ' I l 1 lux x lxx,.x xx,.l'll .114 '-ll-'llflx ll-' h ll'xx'f:1?ll.lx lXll!Illl l'll' l ll lx XXl+ K1Y'XXlIl .1 N l,.fl'kV:IlN x ' X l'x!Nl..llE'4ll'Tl'l-'EximI x Y fll!,lI ll 'IxXlWLllEV1IxXf'1lIl 'lPllN'fIUNl1liXXlllx 'R l ' gvllxllllxllxlxlx l ' l 'YIM lxllllllilx Il'I1lxN Q lll lll xxllllllllxlll xx l..'.l xl :lll xllllllllllxlx llllr lllxx llllxtx xll xl fl In--llll lx.lLlll-' lllt-ltlll xllllxx lxx N fxl x lllxllllllg lllll- xl- lll lllx NI l x l..lf:F ,lll '.lxf xllllltlx KLN :HXlYNl'F5l!Tl1Illlllllimtlill llllllxlllllllx xx.llllll ll xl -ll? llltll flll lll lll Xflx NKTY .1 .l.: Ellx H11 Nix ,lllx Xlx lxk, Q ,alll I I . lllxlll xx x-lll Illllxf Il- xllllllxxllvll ,l llltlx ..f QM ll.lllxlll xx VlI'xI'x1l HIXIIlx.1IIlllNl1lIt1.lkl. llxl xllllxllx xx IIIX lUUxx.lffxl+lIwxllx x llllt lIlUll llt1lll llfUlll lIXm'x w s ll-llx lll xllll lllllllxl-xl HH xx Illxl x lxxlllxl xl lllf1lxI.Lll'x xllmlfx 43 l X m x x Il 1Nl'kl flu' I.lxl fl lfflc xll ull I llllll ' lll? 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Cub I Ui hu Sian Hvwo , 1 Borikcmo Canusqpbc Thu? I ,vvgsrfjxo Tmh' - 'h Xuyen Hpq ,Q o Don x gpo Troch 'R S 1 D0 Hene ' I 0 ix P 0 Q! Q in X ong Hoi us O sg Kcmclheng I-O1 xsYingkohai PLE O ss Yoiche f' 1 Ss Y, S S QQ Q . 04, . I fl Xl,e Thuy I . Wh July 22, 1954 fDQmilitorized Zones! f Hu' 'Con Thien uong Tri Keng o X ng H gc. ix 1 LX Ahopcu 'Ig 4- I 5 1- -I 'fi pug am 'Yr . Lois DANANG ..Hoi An , 'yiThang Binh 1? -., Tom Ky CHU ofik Cue 'Wh QSODMHC 0 t ' DGRFSUQ M Qok To ' fn Joriyum gnmxu QQ ,ff 'QCONTUM - g, X. Kiheom bony -x , ' 54' i : 9 O N-X Melouprey, Kham UQVVANQEF .- - 'SVUY ' k KouIen0 so 'f, Chhcp 9 KHE Sigh - - 5.x ?o 'h mcxon wu 0 0 f' U , Hunos eg hon N, L ' 4RUINSv ldbdflvdf Pl, Me 75' N. R-,jfk ' .Siem Reap Roving. XSWWQ TW' Che? Reo ' ' BATTMBANQ .Kompong ChikrLng h .whit H 'ffziirm CAMQCDIA 5 f P 'Z 'x80n DOhKhSO:1 , X'-'J ., ' 1 0 - - uri :grim .Kr r niompong Thom oi I S P313 MEG Duggg , nuea ' L L 'wi' 'sn 1 J NMA Leach 0' pong 'V Chh Khfurzvll Dok Song TRANS! C ngng PONG' D' Bu Kruk . Gio NQN0 l Tong Poloch' 1 HAM A .. -W g , M00 LO' ' puma ' N ' ' 89 Duc Kim 4 ri K 'ok A I 'Hoc Nmh Dugbon 90009 ' f f.Phouminville PHNOM PENN :r'Y', J ,f 'Phu Riefwg 'ng 'gg ,' f ns-vruoox og una ' An Phuowvp mc L Kem' 9 Speu.S0dngqh I. QW? A f To Loi aj' CC 'xx Q I . r ' Jnh Fl -' '71, Tonh ff 9 'TUY P ' Angfossorprg ' SON ' BTEN HOA 'UV H00 DO P. X .af , ' -K,,,, 'PHAN mer 'mal IR un 35091 LOC OYS8 YD .Lb 'HIS CF iii ow 'cw Mwfvmfel 'This war, itsa no good, said an old lady. At the age of seventy- four, she had seen many wars. Most of the students in the colleges of America know only the war in Indochina. One war. Many of them think its no good too. On April 30 President Nixon announced the American invasion of Cambodia. Students thought back to the moratoriuins of the fall. the march for the dead winding culndlelit through the streets of XYahsington D.C.. fastings and vigils for peace. They thought back to the death of Robert Kennedy. to the Nlc-Carthy campaigns. and to the Chicago convention. They knew that throughout all of it the govemment was not listening. On Slay -I the Ohio National Guard moved onto the Kent State University campus and murdered student protestors. Murdered students whose situation resembled that of hundreds of thousands of situations which stu- dents have or might face from coast-to-coast. The war had come home. Suddenly the white student knew what the blacks were talking about. Allison. jeff, Bill, and Sandy, killed on the grounds of their own campus, were brothers and sisters. The map of Cambodia is the map of Ohio, of Harlem. of Viet Nam, of jackson. Nlississippi: the blue- print of the Pentagon. The issues at hand, Kent State and Cambodia, were not so easily united for a large portion of the populace. XVhen Nixon pointed to the map of Cambodia, he pointed to the end of the war according to his other viewpoint. The invasion of Cambodia was the proper military strategy to bring an end to the fighting. Kent State was another thing to be opposed or tolerated according to individual interpretation of the facts. At Fairfield University the national crisis reflected an intemal struggle. The unilateral action taken by the President was resented and feared just as unilateral policy-making at the University was despised. Students, faculty, and administrators who believed in tripartitism could not accept the blatent disregard on the part of the national government for a viewpoint held by a huge seg- ment of the citizenry. Power to the People was a phrase with meaning. On Slay 5 the University Council proclaimed a nine- day period of mouming with flags at half-staff telegrams of dissent to be sent to President Nixon and Governor Rhodes, and on Slay T voted to cancel classes and send a delegation representing the Fairfield University commun- ity to the scheduled march on Washington, D.C. There was a memorial march into town on May 8. lt was quiet and orderly, but the talks given at Heritage Square by Rev. james Bresnahan, Rabbi Levine, and Arthur Anderson reflected the intense com.-em over the recent events which was building up in the minds of the protestors. The march was led by a student holding an enormous .-Xnierican flag. lt had become necessary to ex- plain to the Silent Xlajority in vivid synibolisin .ind precise words that those who held anti-war positions were not attempting to subvert Ainerica, but save it from tyranny and injustice. The gesture came too late. as flags and signs appeared oil the skyscrapers of New York City. and in the windows of Niall Street. endorsing l'resident Nixon. .-Xineriea's role in Southeast Asia. and disclaiining the goals of the longhairs. The local march was little more than a prelude to the marcli for peace in XYasliington on Nlay fl. 'l'he nation's capitol was turned into a people's park. As lflflflflfl people congregated on the elipse behind the XYhite llonse to hear the vocabulary ofthe anti-war movement. thousands ofothers drifted through the streets and lawns ofthe city. or frolickcd in reflecting pools. Crowds spontaneously chanted slogans for peace. found shady spots to eat fruit. or tainted in the heat attempting to say no to the brutal- ity in the country, the war in Cambodia, and the execu- tive branch ofthe L'.S. government. Nlost of those present were used to the scene. lt had occurred before. They were also used to the fact that it would have no impression on the military front. ln the talks at the elipse. speakers stressed the importance of contimied political activity. working locally and state- wide for peace candidates. Three busloads of members of the l'niversity returned in the early hours ofthe morning physically fatigued Init emotionally energized. Perhaps there was a chance. with- in the system, to be heard. ln Connecticut joe Dully was running for senator. llis campaign would be worth work- ing for. The strike Rn' tripartitism and Fr. Nlclnnes resignation was on the verge of settlement. The eflort would be made to talk to all the people about thc power that could be theii's. None oftliis was to occur. The situation at the L'niver- sity was undergoing rapid developments. the outcome of which was merely to allow the semester to close with a seinblence of order. As a few days passed. the charged political atmospere waned. Some activists reassessed tue happenings of the past week. Kevin Kelly. writing in the final issue of The Stag, said. The news that college barber shops are once more crowded with would-be campaigners seeking to squelch voters' hostility towards long hair brings to my mind a strong sense of deja-vu. Do we really intend to embark on another fpiixotic Clean- for-Cene adventure in the wilds of suburbia? . . .lland- ing out leaflets and asking' people to sign petitions are futilc. ineffective gestures .... Une of the key elements in a democracy is the ' redress of grievances. ' The South- east Asian XVar is a grievance that hasn't been redressed for ten years and probably never will be. Strong statements from the left. strong statements from the right, remaining as a focal point were those people dying or dead already. 727 4 u fx 2 wt, g 0 A 1- - u qi.. A 'M' 'w 7 ,rn ,,. ,iv-M' ' he I ai' 0-lf' ?,..- A., ..' , - . 1732. .IJ- N Q 1' C- on 'OG N N59 i As tlu- tvxlmouk S lksx I g . 'f fm Cow mmm-nt ll pmnts out. um of thv kv' - - - 5 x alclmnts In 1 Ql1IllOL'l'LlL'Y ns ilu- l'l'tlI'l'NS UfLflll x'- .lllL'l'S.u 9 230 A , -. , ,Lin A ' i 'fig ii, 5, -I , A .ff 4 ff,,v 1 r' sts f -' W ' ' 1 xm Q. L. W-, A X 5- A11 A A . N I x, ,A wy. 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' fe , VM' ,y 3 'I 6 '-S -J 41 'V 37,9 f f 2 T' a -DF Q in -vw 'J Q - f, is 0 af' ' f' if HE' ' Li THE N . ju , Q ,, 4 5 ' , ENV BQNM NT 4,':lif'fx lf L., 4 if 1 . ff v if I ' 3 pf' .ly . be-ii'r . 0 f' X , f J Earth Day at Fairfield was somewhat diminished by other major rallies and meetings during the strike. At the environmental teach-in held in the Campus Center Oak Room, members of the biology department gave a vivid description of what was being done to life on land and in the water. There was a clean-up campaign on campus, and information was made available concerning projects being launched against pollution in Connecticut. But, as with the rest ofthe world, politics stole the show. The attendance at the Earth Day functions did not rep- resent the concern for pollution at the University. Students and faculty were involved in environmental research throughout the year. Outside the science depart- ments, members of the Urban seminar carried out their own studies of problems in the greater Bridgeport area. The emphasis on environmental studies was increased by news from Washington. The National Science Foun- dation, having spent in excess of S450 million on its pro- grams to strengthen scientific research and education, an- nounced that 'ilnstitutions are encouraged to request 244 funds for planning grants which will allow them to con- sider more systematically their moves into areas of educa- tion and research related to societal problems. Listed as top priority for support from the NSF was increased sup- port for the social sciences, including a significant invol- vement in the new program, Interdisciplinary Research Relevant to Problems of Our Societyf, Scientists frowned on the goal-directed nature of the new administration which subsequently cut off funds for basic research. How- ever in the area of environmental problems, the ability to tackle a serious pollution or urban problem and come up with an effective solution is of extreme urgency. As the academic year and the issues over governance ended, the major topics of the draft and pollution were brought forward in the minds of many graduates. Saluta- torian Edward janosko gave his address at Class Day on the subject of the environment. A graduate with a Bache- lor of Science degree, magma cum laude, janosko spent four years close to his topic. His talk is reprinted on the following pages in its entirety. 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Within this framework, man has been at ease in raping, stripping, and overpopulating our land, poisoning our waters, polluting our air, making species extinct, and rejecting the fact that he himself is a part ofnature, and that he has a role in the whole ecological plan. I am sure that all of us have seen or have heard of this waste: the seals, sea birds, and beaches of Santa Barbara covered with oil slick, the lifelessness of Lake Erie, the erosion of our western plains, the blackened skies of New York City, and the filth so near this gymnasium called Long Island Sound. XVhat have we done? Have we progressed? VVe have abused our freedoms, and now we must change our course, from wasteful destruction, to constructive conservation. And it is the task of each individual here, to work for, and to accomplish this change. Yet I can al- most guess that few of us will do anything. But why? I think there are two major reasons, one is that we are under the delusion that science, who helped to create this pollution problem, will eventually solve it, and the second reason is that most individuals feel that they could not possibly make a dif- ference among the almost 300 million people in the United States. In todays mass society the individ- ual feels that he could not effect a change, even if he wanted to. However, we must reject the concept of science as saviourg for it is not, and cannot be a saviour. Science is not an objective, impeccable deity that can solve all problems. In its true capacity, science can only aid in the environmental crisis. In her laboratories, extensive research is being conducted to find more efficient means of producing electricity, to find a less polluting automotive engine, to see if buildings can be made from garbage, to find methods of recycling wastes, and to find means to curb population. But these are only aids, for it is the individual who will decide if he will employ the achievements of science. The individual is most important, for it is he, who with other individuals, constitutes society. Each one of you is invalu- able in manls fight for survival. 248 M' ' 5 E POPULATION conmoa. QR RACE T0 osuvuon? P Plll FIU 0 B i WHILE YOU ARE READING THESE WORDS FOUR PEOPLE WILL HAVE DIED FROM STARVATION. POST OF' THEM CHIIDREN Ir. DR. PAUL R. EHRLICH , - 1 Y I v n ,V . situ' -fb--4 A- 3. 'ff' 'A A. 950 mul If 5 'z X if IV 4 ' z fa Ax 5 . ha' f 'ss '4'0. 1 I ' Q 'n , L ' I ' i Q-oN..., . - X I N 'l. 01' Us . A L 1 Q.. 3.-51 Y . 9 . , -Q. 'b. , 'Y ' K- Xxx . - .. xx h . . ' 5 1 I ' . -'-mx.:-w-NL. Le-t mc' cite an example' of how important you amz During tht- drought of 1965, Nvw York City rcstaurliiit owners wvrf' forlnidden by law to svrw- wutvr with tlic' meal. just one gluss ol water for mich diner. snwcl thi' uty .in f-stimdtvcl 12 to I5 million gallons of wutvr pvr cltiy. WF-. the: gmdudte-s of 1970. lidw- .in f'v4'n more' critical responsibility' to clmin our l,'IlVll'fHlfTlt'Ill. For if wi-, tln- collz-ge' gr.1clu.1tc's, to wliom socivty looks for lauitlr-rsliip .indforidt'.1ls. will not lfllllitll'tlll'C,'l'lillIg1'. tlwn l .isk you. who will? NVQ' mern lniw' se'vc'r.il t.isks .it liiincl. XM- nnist furthffr oductitc- ourse'lw's .ind otlivrs in vt-olou,it.il prin- ciples XV- must refuse' to work for toinp.inn-s wlio flo not list our z'nvironme'nt .is .1 top priority. NNE- must t.iki- politicul action for the- stikf' of our i'iivironnn'iit. I'in.illy .ind most importtint. we- must change' tln- .'xHll'TlI.llI lift' stvlo for it is from this lilc- stvlt' tliiit our prolilvin li.is v origiimtvclg and only liy changing our lin' stylv. will our prolilvin ln- solvvcl. Our piwsviit tittitiicli- is tli.it 'lim tliinil gow. anal tlnit wi' slioulfl clvny oiii'si'lw-s notliinil. 'llliis istlic-4iigi'ofclispos.ilil1's,olnon-rm-t11rii.ilml4-s,olc-xt-1-ssiu' lniyiiig. .incl ol. still lwlii-viiiil tli.it wi- li.iu- inllniti- iw- soiircvs. WVU do nol. 'lllius ui' t-.innot support .i lllllillvss nunilivr ol pc-opli-. nor 1-w'n .i liniiti-fl iiiiiiilwi' witli to1l.iy's iiiiliiiiitvcl clt sirvs. l.iki- rln- Apollo lui. ui' iniist pour-i IlUXk'lIn to sur YIYV. NM- lniw' liotli tln' oppoitunitx .inrl tln- ivsponsilrilitx to .iclopt .i ni-xx' tons:-rx.itionist lili- stxliq .intl to swt tlns llla' stxln' lor tln' pri-si'nt .intl tln' liitiiii . XX 1- t.innot liopf lHl'llH'Hlfl1'f gi-in'r.itioiis to initi.itf- tliis. loi it uns tln x sslio r'st.il:lisln'fl our pil-sf-nt lilf' sul'-t noi slioiilfl sw 1-xpmt llilstli.ili1L1'lI'ilii :grin-iiitioiis tofoiin' lor lix tlivn di ,IYD 's . x'- 1 ' n v. 'Q , .u , b.ILi 'V Y-gtri J . v' f-,IL '11-,Tm- V. 44' '.,,,2 h 5 -1-V24 ' ltsn ffvl? '-' - .A . 9' 'xv fy I k 3 v. - il f ef Qui' ll A x 5' .1 5 . l ,'.. X ,, A v l ,9 r E 'm ff. . Wt 1 jury .W jwfg. .. I ax 2 v F Qs 9 I O - .1 ,js , f- 'U11 75 Final Statement otltllarification and Xleaning ol' the June 6 Peace Nlass Let this he made very clear: Those seniors who choose to participate in the unofficial ugraduationv in the Peace Xlass are therehy intending to renounce and are renouncing participation in the official graduation cer- emony on Sunday. To put this another way: By participating in the Saturday Peace Mass we mean: 1 7 wearing a cap and gown at the Saturday Xlass il picking up the diploma at the oflertory of the Nlass along with those others doing the sameg 537 then remoying their caps and gowns and Offering them at this time as an offering ofthe outward iorm oitheir education and its culmination in graduation as a renunciation,' and dedication for the sake of peace. . . . Interpretation: those participating actiyely on Saturday are intending to give up their participation in the Sunday ceremonyl This is the renunciation otlsomething quite precious to many of them because: ll This is an unusual year, and a non-traditional moment in historyg and hecause of Cambodia, Kent State. and Jackson State. these seniors cannot consent to take part in the traditional and usual graduation process: 27 This is a time lor a sacrificial, personal act in tayor oth peace which they deem farther away than liefore. A very important concern ot' the memlrers oth the ugraduation committee is that the Sunday events he left clear ofthe sorts oilexpression oi' protest that might have to occur otherwise at this time under the existing cir- cumstances in the USA. and Southeast Asia. XVe leaye Sunday and its events to those who choose to partici- pate in a traditional graduation at this time for whateyer personal or ideological reasons they may have. ' Q F mir P, Q , 4 J f J' ,-if '1 Df- EVM. s.s,w Q IF, -din Midi wk . Tig! The graduation mass for peace, held on June 6, was attended by about seventy seniors. Parents, guests, faculty, and spectators filled most of the seats in the gym. The mass was punctuated by several moving readings and talks by Mr. Harry Fishman and Mr. Arthur Anderson. Mr. Fishman referred to the seniors present as prophets of the times in the Biblical sense of seers of the truth and spokesmen for the society. Mr. Anderson challenged the soci- ety to face the questioning of youth. He likened the graduates to new wine in the old wineskin, todays societyf, The main address was given by Tom Cornell, a Fairfield gradu- ate and an active opponent of the Selective Service system. Mr. Cornell explained the role of the draft in American society and told of his career to abolish all forms of compulsive induction. He asked the seniors to give up their draft cards which he would for- ward to Princeton where a massive effort was being made to collect thousands of cards from students throughout the nation. A few seniors rose to deposit their draft cards in a cardboard box. An irate man tried to run off with the box while other adults left the gym. The ceremony ended quietly and peacefully, but not before the importance of the war issue was made explicitly clear to everyone present. The next day, Sunday, june 7, the University held graduation on the Bellarmine terrace under sunny skies. 4 2' 3 ,,,, ,,.,--. 11 ' sr 'lr 1-' y 1' 1 Jn. gli ..,- v 0. Q vQsQIvh Q an-aggg F'P Q ' --Q - , . Q- . n, a, 7 1 N F, ' 'N , w I f , 1 An-ff - 2 1' 5-' 2' 1 - fi3'f 'iif . L X ' ,.. 1 J L., ! flxfiiqi. ' A-Q 3, 1 .. . , ' ' -' Y' 5Q!,fq2.' S V ew ' .t,'C '5!'A aw' N' 2551 5 I f I A ... 14, ,vi ,411 n M '. 6 - f 'Eff A 4 Q. mr 4 f , . ,gf if 'ii I it F 'FQ nt! A- tm, Q r4- lin A f l. 257 pci-- 9 'K l' 'c 'f Q:- 'y -,w Xxx ' egeff.. I, v'1' 5 - 'a .Q . , . s , - . ,z. If I fy A ,S rfx -c'. , , L J fix. ik' Y. .. fa. 5 V1 260 V. , .- ,v . . 1.05 ,I .A Q. ' 4 l 1'- ' 0 ' 5. .4 . -1 .' .4 ,q-:V jzzgseghygyi. I 9 1- 7 - A I f 1' - , ' . ' I 6 I lx G , Y M 4' wx -- f 5 f Q . if 4 9 0 '- f v 'po 4. ' -, 4 G 'tv cv Q 39 x 9 Y '1-:xg :' 1- n .' ' ' ll ' ,. s ' ,Mx .Y Q -A ah N P ' . .. . . ' 0, ' O 62 ,zaf- 1--..,...4 'il Qi I C, Simon Ilarak. recipient of the Bellarmine Nledal, the Lt. XYilliam A. Koscher Award in Arts, and graduate Bachelor of Arts tfeflassicsl, summa cum laudc,Was first to address the audience atter the conferring ot' degrees. Ile condemned the actions of any individual or group whose hasic assumption was a possession of the whole truth. The Yaledictorian discussed the search for truth undertaken hy the great societies of history. He concluded that their answers, as exclaimed hy the greatest thinkers of each soci- ety, always 1-trim-tlti to Cod in one form or another. Dr. Edmund C. XVilliamson addressed the graduates on the topic of student services in the university, and the procedure nec- essary in a uniyersity to furnish a quality education and a success- ful community lite. Receiving honorary degrees with Doctor VVilliamson were Ken- neth Burke, Harold Robert Perry, S.Y.D., and Korczak Ziolkowski, sculptor ofthe huge monument to ChiefCrazy Horse. The ceremony marked the twentieth class to graduate from the University. . -writ 'U .FQ 2 A r 5 AT:-,I5 K' ' v xv .!f ?m 1 ' 5 . - x A - -. . ' ' VM. J., ' ,x 5 Q , K e A h n V. :QM - . Q, . Q , .- ,bg vw. ' ' . 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' ' V, 3 'Mx , ,,, 4555 Q 1 ff 4 ,' ' if ff, 5 , 'Q ,qu , vm 'M If 5 f ,., 1 ,fl sl I 3.-. lg,'L !x?,vighl J' , J' I 7 .,f. ,' . 4 ,1 'T' 9'5- 'Egg 1 4' sv : if' TQ ,5--'AQ'-ffl: . -69, ss' .4 2' ,i ,. 9'-173531, ' 'QV--if A ur :sr-' - vu . - -'-L . Y F106 72-75- .1 4: QQ- , '- ff . 11. Ti 1 2fI'9l ,,,Q' if '+i 5 if 4b?5. g xiggsqa. 411- . 'rn If 'J-yff. nrcg . ' Q 'An Q, 'ALI' Y Pr - E '-'..g?:'.'1' . 3- 'Q'.'1': . ' . 7 .,- .sg fy . - .nf . .. 5' 5.1.-1 Q KH- ' -'L '- 5- 2- 4. f s '.'f .v'1'.i J- ,tsl-C' VS 'Q 27I SP Q' if-3 LBWFCIICC AC21mP0l'21 Peter V. Albano Robert M. Allison 27' 215 ix' 'ISZTT' YM., QI Peter A. Arroyo Barry S. Bane Thomas M. Barritt were ff- TTT' Thomas P. Barry Emanuel S, Bai-tolgtta Alan P. Bartony In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwar- ranted influence, whether sought or un- sought, by the militarv-industrial coin- plex. The potential for disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist. Dwight Eisenhower, Farewell Address january 1961 buf' Edgar J. Beaudreault is Q- vt., if S-' f--11 :ff . john F. Bertera Edward A. Berube Q I 'Env . William C. Allison the ' William I. Barrie John P. Bashar -fs 1 Edward J. Becher ,793 1 john W. Blair Thomas J. Bligh James C. Andrews David M- Arn . . . say we donyt get to take off our coats and ties, the point is we have es- tablished our right to be heard. NVe now have a vote on this council which is equal to two other sectors. Even if we lose this particular issue, I think we have established the principle that we set out to establish, that we have a right to decide in the areas that directly affect our lives. Student Covit Spokesman March 1, 1968 Q Frederick C. Basilico Leonard A. Battiston ,l , in-1 Robert J. Belletzkie Lyle R- Benvenuti j- Cary E. Blow Harry G. Bondi l A 'x Edwin K, BQU1-li,-r B.1rrx j, Br.11lx l,4lllll'l P. Bfilllllfllilll 'X111.111x1l111l1.1sl11'1-11l11'1111gl1t 1111 .11111111g lltlll . 1 ' 11.11 11ll1l1', Cl'la1rlo:s D. Brooks In 'R an I Frgnk C3r0ll0 ROlJt'l'l xl. Cilrpelllffl' i ' U . . kk ' . . .lllll , . xxl1.11 111' 1'.1ll .1 llK'll1lllt. l5lll. llll'lllllllx5. 111 sl11111l1l l'lll1ll-ul' tl11' t1ll1'. .lllll gin' it 1-x1'1'x11111' tl1.1t 1l111-s 11111 ls1111x1' l111xx' 111 ' tl1111l1 11111 11l'l1is Ill-llll ss11111. .lllkl 11111't11'11l111' .-X1l1l1s1111 .llltl S11-1-lv 'l'l11'S111-1't.1t111'l'.1111-rs C' William NI. Carter 1?- nb- Louis j. Cxlalano Russell E. Chapman Hichardj.Cl1iurappu 2 S- llillll Y. lircit1'11l11'rg1'1' Slcpllcli BllL'LII'lll LQ.. . Ellgelll' 1. Curty 2 4-5 ll illi11111 j. Brill Q C 'l'll0U1iIS Nl. Burke G Y jauncs F. Casey rlqllllll 1v1111lclst Q11 111111 tl11' x1'111'l1l, 1111cl illl going with 1'111pt1 llLlllLl5. with s111111- p1'11111isc 11l'l'1'1'1'cl11111 Hlllcll 1111'11 111 ll'll'll' si111l1licit1' illlil tl111i1' lliillll'1ll 11111'11li111-ss 0111111111 M1111 lllllll'l'Nl'lllCl XX'lllL'll tl11-1' lm-111' llllfl Cll'l'ilCl-llll' 1111tl1111g llklfw 1-11-1' l11-1-11 41 lb vl0Sl'llll ll. lll'1111s1111 T 1 Clr1-1.5110 j. fi3II'll'l0ll fl L i . f L.- l':llIllll'll 'l'. ciZlSl'f ll10l'l' i11s11pl1111'ta1l1l1 l111' il lllklll llllkl 11 l lllllllilll s111'i1-tx' lllilll l'1'1-1-1l11111. ll11- C.1'1111cl l111111isit11r L j11l111 j. ffliiclscy dd 4,1 5-'i 1 K Derry 1. flxuga Thomas l,. Cingn lhniclj.Cnla111gclu fllxurlvs A.fiUIll1'y Xli 'k 'l- f10H l'll? l4 4'S il- fhllllfll Neal D. Connors Kevin F. Cook Paschal A. Corbo Charles Coviello Q- Dennis NI. Crane XVilliam A. D'Alessandr0 iv-v' 5 X!! ilatkl .-fZ:'.f41'i3a:f::f'xfff Ralph J. DeDomenico A Timothy R. Cummings '11 'fu-e-1 Michael L. D'Amic0 'I Carl F DeLucia . 'Qx ET, I Paul J. Cutler Edward F. Dacey I am not capable of standing so naked and alone. I, too, am a poor weak crea- ture who needs warmth and food and oc- casionally the comfort of human com- panionship. Someone who seeks nothing but his own fate no longer has any com- panions, he stands quite alone and has only cold universal space around him . . . the man who seeks his destiny has nei- ther models nor ideals, has nothing dear and consolingl And actually this is the path one should follow. Hermann Hesse He saw a glimpse of human struggle and of valor. Of the endless fluid passage of humanity through endless time. And of those who labor and of those who-one word-love. Carson NIcCullers L- Ccorge E. Dlugos Robert S. Dmytriw Robert P. Dohn Mark I. Donahue Michael S. Coyle ff' Richard T. D'Addio 1077 Charles J. DeAngelis William A. DiCiacomo Kevin I. Dolan Joseph M. Coyne 21, James C. Daily 4 Daniel L. DeCore David J. DiLeo Dennis M. Donovan Charles Douglas Stanley XY. Druzkio.-wicz A E flrg-gory Cf, lfrigg-UI' 1-ill'X lx. lilllllll Ilia-ll.ucl U , llulrirl lQcrnrll :L llullmx XM' all him- gn-nt sa-xlml lmmu-r lm! wm- muxt llAll'lIlUlllfl' il will: tln- xxnrlll uouml. lla xp laum s J ,. -ws , lll' 1- tlu' clm'n1ltm'x' I Hull- Xu.-1. l.1st ul llwmlaltlom . ns ogx 1 m Ronald ll. Dukenski Robert K. Dunn ll-ll0Il1ilS Dyhick Ulnllv.-r S. Dy Ill :rc IN ll 'T' Myles T. Edwards Douglas L. Egan QL. i f -Q 1 jay D. Fajen Robert Faley William C. Fallon liolwrt A. Fzmnun '55 Scott F, Fay Robert B, F931-man David L, Feeney Carlos A. Figueroa Cosmo Y. lfilibcrto llilffiwll ff- l IN ? lluicl U. I-'itn-II Lnmw lf. lgitlpntrim-L lllill-'Nl l lllL21'f-llfl lllfllll-IN 3- l'iN lftlu-wluml lN'L'HIll1'NlllHl'l'llll1'll1'lllIll It will ln- t'iiNlt-I' for t'flt'lllll'.lllUlI. Il th. sf,-lluul lN'C'fJllll'N umm- ww. llly llli lllll cl l'fN'tlllt'.lllHlI cum :lu IIIUH' lmlm tlnm guml. lfantlnvl' XlQ'llllI4'N. Xl.1 x 1967 -gg- l SQ, fr - 2!-f f Michael F. Flament john T. Florio William J. Fox Charles A. Fraraccio 2.1 james P. Gallagher joseph L. Gallo WVayne L. Gibbons Robert T. Gibson A Thomas E. Ginocchio gm? 1 'vi K Ness v Arthur F. Good C tif- YVilliam E. Frese Robert P. Gaglione We are not about to send American boys nine or ten thousand miles from home to do what Asian boys ought to be doing for themselves. johnson, October, 1964 Henry j, Cioiella james E. Giuliano ox Mark YV. Govoni Craig R. Ci-einer In such a fantastic and dangerous world-we will not find answers in old dogmas, by repeating Outworn slogans, or fighting on ancient battlegrounds against fading enemies long after the real struggle has moved on. We ourselves must change to master change. We must rethink all our old ideas and beliefs before they capture and destroy us. R. F. Kennedy, September, 1966 Thomas C. Gleason John I. Grillo l 121, x Patrick F. Gleeson Mark A. Gombar l Joseph F. Groughwell Louis C. Haddad X . E' 4 . 'K john A. Hammerbacher Brian T. Hanlon Stephen J. Hanrahan Peter Hapworth D' 'I . N ' Y Simon C. Hnrailt Nliclmcl j. llurdcr .lvllll lf- llllffillilfllll Nd' D' Him m4'l'i l W- Hl'LZL1i1' tlt-stiiittitiii. ln .i slimtiht iiit1iii.itioii.il AlQl'l t nit nt liiirriiig .i iiiit-lt-iii' .iriiitiiiii-iitx Q., tv- worltl that ai nation wliit'liw1is tutlmlilv ol . . . Slltltll'l1lX' iw-It-iixiiiq at nt-xx' wt-aiptiii its , iiitlisuiiiiiiiiitt- its tht- mt-kilt hoiiih tiiicl ti thonsiiiitl tiinvs inon' tlc'sti'iit'tix't'. is to lit' trnstt-cl in its liiut-liiiiiivtl tltwirt- to sm' J1 'W5 1' H W4'l Brian niche? J1 f'5 P- Higf-lim suuh wvaipoiis giholislim-cl ln' iiitt-imitiiiiiiil aign-t'iiiviit. llitht' hnitvtl Staltvs wci't' to hc' tht- first to itlt ist this nmx' iiic-mis ol- iiiclisciiiii- iniitt' clt-striictioii on iiiaiiilxincl. she- wonlcl saiwifiu- puhlic siipport tlimiigglioiit thi' wm-ltl, pivcipitaitt' tht- iuiuf lin' gn'- 4' iiianm-iits. and pit-hiiicliu' tht' possibility' ol' H .igiw-viiiviit on tho lllttllfl' control ol-siicli wt-gipoiix. Fmin tht' Franck Report juiit-11.19-15 Stephen Illadun Paul j. Hogan Kenneth j. Hojnowski 1' 1' ' q--p C Q., Cs.4.g ,Zu f1ilTord CI. Hook f,5Cllf E. llflfilll Richard WV. Houghton john I,. llufln josvpli 'II llnnt 'Q Philip laguna Michael j. Iglesias john T. Irwin Edward 0. janosko jfillll A. l1lSl'0t 1- if Ricliaircl XY. llciiiu-my 11 . Timothy C. llill Nliclian-I A. llolhrouk IR-tvr S. llnnt 3 julm S. jorflain I invite you to sit down in front of your television set when your station goes on the air and stay there without a book, magazine, newspaper, profit-and-loss sheet or rating book to distract you and keep your eyes glued to that set until the station signs oft. I can assure you that you will observe a vast wasteland. FCC Chairman Newton Minow May 1961 4 'il' joseph P. Kailukaitis Gregory E. Kelly Christopher M. Kenefick William C. Kessler 1? Q gk . Ph gf YE , Q 9 Samuel R. King Tim E. Kloczko Robert T. Koosa 15 1 Thomas M. Krenn Ihor A. Krynycky james T. La Croix .EL px' . vi, L. Alan P. Karbousky Allan E. Kaulbach 'Uh sn.-X Yi Gfg A if Theodore E. Keyloun john R, Kegel T Thomas J. Kopnicky Joseph R. Krajci Michael E. Lajeunesse John N. Langlois There are no ghettos in Chicago. Mayor Daley, Iuly 1963 If youlve seen one city slum youive seen them all. Spiro Agnew, October 1968 james R. Kelleher QI Thomas M. Kickham sw . Bohdan Kowaluk Donald J. Lantowski Charles E. Lapp Richard L. Larese Thomas R. Larkin John I. Lauter VllI0t'lll 1. lrlmllittc james A. Loring it john T. lpgoxx xlxi AL bf er john B. Lukuch 1' Brian R. Slacauley Michael P. Nladuio john Nlagno Luxx rencc P. Niahcr 'wt 'l'ln'r-' Q ' l j0SL'Dll.'x.lA'II1lD0 Nlnrlin Nl. Iuumx vlnlm IQ l,ix liiclmul XI. I 4'llNl'lIIll'l lt is not tlmt mvn am' ill lbcl. lmt llmt tlnfx lmxv no pl1'4ns1ll'4' 111 thx- xxurlx lmx A xxllicll tlwx' nmlw lll1'll'l7l'4'1lll. amcl tlwrv- Q 4 4. . N I .surnz It ix not tlmt mvn xm' pwim-cl 2. . Ili ...'.. ix s.. tlux x' Q ' ' Inc mg om: .mal llllll'il'S tlwm lc-ss than me n julm lllhlilll Thomas P, Lynvh Paul D. l,yS2Iglll L' iz' john j. Nladeo Frank R. Nlagalettn Douglas H. Magee Robert WY. Sluggi if . i Robert F. Nlanhcr Gerald A. Nlainc Girl 1. Nlulvri 5lUUlll'N Nl- Nlululx 4 IS 1 xnxx Ill xxlncln all tln- luxe- ul nur ll4'lQlllJOlll'. tlu- impulws tnxxumls 5 for fl'lllUX'lll lnumun c-rror. K'l1'2ll'lllL: lm- m.m umlusmn. .md clnnunslnng Immam 5 miwrx. tlw lllblbll' nspirntirm tu l4'.u'1' tha' X xxnrlfl In-tu-r.rml llilJJl1'l'lllilll XK'l'lUlllNl .-mutlxc-s 4- L .. puff. IUII. lwlp. mul lN'll1'liH'llc'1'. tlu' cle-sirv xml.-umn' Ill us part ul tlu- 1ll4UlIIHlS GTV, 52 Q50 104+ - Y kv' ' ' i .riff-F Allwrl I. N1.uri.nm Ijgngld F, Mulom- xiuuhru. Arnulfl Tllnrmn Nl. Nlunninn Rulwrl j. Nlurlmc-ln 'QS David A. Marlow , . John R. Mason G her William J. McGee john C. Meditz Ceorge S. Marr William H. Martens YT' Andrew M. Mattison Kenneth A. Mayo A I . . 5 . .y ,W joseph B. McGrath Charles C. McGuire It may get me crucified. I may even die. But I want it said even if I die in the struggle that he died to make men free. I have a dream that one day the nation will rise up and live out the true mean- ing of its creed, We hold these truths to he self-evident. that all men are cre- ated equal . . . N Martin Luther King Thomas H. Martocci if in-lift I draw the line in the dust and toss the gauntlet before the feet of tyranny, and I say segregation now, segreation tomor- row, segregation forever. If any demonstrator ever lays down in front of my car, it'll be the last car he'll ever lay down in front of George C. Wallace, 1968 campaign Raymond A. McCormack Timothy C. McDonough Mark A. MCE3Ch6I'I'I Donald B. Mclnerney John D. McLaughlin David P. Melenski 49,-I YZF' ,, i 3 eil-1 w ' .... .. tQ I I Michael I. McVen'y Q Joseph A. Melita Thomas M. Miller 3' 4 Patrick T. Moran jeilrey l . Millington Frank J. Minio Frederick W. Mis Ronald Mitchell Michael P. Monahan T7 NVilIigm1j, Ninn,-Ili john l.. Moriarty xvllllillll j. Nloriairly iQ 3 If Thomas E. Nlullaney Thomas C. Nlullamey Brian F. Murphy -Q joseph Slusumano David j, Namgn Alexander R. Nestor 'M Stanley P. Norman Petter j. Notch Thomas F. 0'Hricn Richard j. 0'Connnr lov.-ph Nl. Uduarcli Hnbvrl lf. U'll1-urn Q N if N inu'nt R. Nlorris Qfv iz? Kevin j. Murphy L- john A. Nocc ,... Kevin R. 0'Cfonncll c1l2ll'll'S,l..f,llllliIX or 5 . 5- v l.aus rm nu- Nlucri U illi.mi lx xllIt'lll'l G in john Q. Nlurphy Williaun j, Nlurrny llullx vxpvvt 1UIllX'NlX umm- lllUllllIN ul hncl llffllllllf' P5 5' cll'lll'I'All XilX.llAlAl'. l.llllI.ll'X IUSI Thx- fl0lIllllllIliNlS non rf-.ilifv thi-x om 'X'l'l' L'OllIilll'l' frm- X :vt-Ninn. 6.1-m-ml XX . U Dginu-I. jun. lfifwl h'll'lHl'X' . . , is jnxt nionlhs 4m.n ... I um Salll'lx's11Y lll4'l'llll0l'lll1'XX'.ll' is in Wfht . . 5 ' 1.4-ilvlxil l'. ll. llAll'lxlllN. Uvtolwl' llKi.3 The' Lllllvil Stnlw still lnolmw lu unth- lll'AlXK llSlltNll3NllHlll Smith X111-N.unln ilu-1-ml ol-l?Xi3. Xlfxkllllillll. flL'lUlll'l' 1963 1'llllx'l'5tfllJljl'lllflNlllulll1'Xh.ll'. XlL'Xgin1an'.1. Um'loln'1' N65 I' am- vlnliglltm-livcl ln our p1'ogn-xx , , . 'Q 'lx' 'll l '4 Nl'll...XXt'.ll't'Xl'l'X snrv xvm- im- on thm- riffht lllltlx. H lolnnwn. Iulx 190, VX1' u'l'l.1llllX llll'll4'fl tln- m'rrl'1u'l', l..iml. Inlx IWW l'l'1' Kill .l l'Hlll'N1' tlmt IN QUIIIQ l1D1'lI4l thnx xx.il1 Nixon. Sl'Ill1'llllDl'l IWW! 281 IU' 7-Q QL -H- -Lf'- William I. Ottaviani Peter Ouimet Matthew J. Parzych Kenneth F. Pasini John P. Pattavina Alan J. Perkins James F. Pettinelli 'sf Ozzie F. Pisarri 3 f 0. , Q :- Michael W. Quinlan Via' Q, 1-Q X , .91 ' . 2' E.-Vi. I.. L ' 5,133 gal 1 XVillium D. Reilly It is the hour to be drunken! Be drunken, if you would not he martyred slaves of Time, be drunken continually! With , wine, with poetry, or with virtue, as you as 1 will. Baudelaire John E. Pezzullo I if PN fi Alan F. Pilch John I. Pilkington C' lla- Y I Y L iv Theodore N, Pizzino Peter A. Pomponio Richard B. Primps ,aww 1 Kenneth J. Rajotte Ladd A. Raleigh Angelo R. Ramunni Ctr John M. Riley Kerby J. Riley Joseph C. Rodriguez William I. Provost Robert E. Quick Thomas A. Ravener William J. Raymond For a second you see-and seeing the secret are the secret. For a second there is meaning! Then the hand lets the veil fall and you are alone, lost in the fog again, and you stumble on toward nowhere, for no good reason! Eugene O,Neill L. is Thomas M. Rosenduhl Joseph F. Satriano Richard F. Schonbeck if? Robert R. Sillery Benjamin M . Sollcofske fa 1 C' Sth en D. Hy an Y-' Robert j. Scaffardi fu? jcroinc Nl. Sngm-lla 4. Alfrvd D. Sillllllllilll' iv Tv Kcnnctli j. 5111111414-11111 1-v' L- Chairles P. Sc-alessc Frank I. Schullcr xvllllillll I. Schmcising x onnif or nlcl. 111iistvx'vi'lw No .'Xlllt'l'lL'Llll. ' ,, dcnivcl tlu' right to clissv11t. Nu llllIlUl'ltY must lu' ll1llZZl0Ll. Opinion aincl pro tvst are tlw lilk- lirvaitli nl' llCNNlL'l'ilCN'-CYCII whcn it lmluws l1cg1x'1'. l.A'llllOll B. -lOl1llS0ll William L. Senter Timothy j. Shaheen Ev' 5- l iw ,..,-I x,.., Nb joseph j, Sindt james M. Skonieczny James D. Small Edward 1. Smith Howard Nl, Summa jeffrey Somers Philip I, Stulilmzin f9l'l'iL'lf! WV. Mulvy Ffilllk Sunlulli :- L- 'C'- Thomus H. Schneider Gregory 1. Shuk Robert S. Snlmlcu ski iv L JZIIINWKI. Simi-l1ul1 I L John W. Strauch Peter J. Tucci 4 if ' 4,- Ralph E. Waite v . 4.37 4+ 5 Q v 55 .' A N 1 L- . g' 4, gi 33' ' f 4 Mark A. Warren fib- M if Mr V if 2 james M. Sullivan Paul J. Surovich John R. Tinker William F. Traester Thomas R. Truscinski 'R Francis A. Vitolo Ch3l'leS J- Vivi-2110 Lawrence D. Tucker joseph E. Umile Matthew J. Vitello i 1 James F. Walker john A. Watts T' John C. Wallace 6' A Matthew D. Whalen Michael Yartuli Fouad M. Younes Th00d0l'0 C. Zaleski William A. Walsh John F. Ward William P- Warnken 'Q knew' Arthur C. Williamson Thomas W. Williams Richard B- W00ll6y The University is excitingg the word that can best describe Fairfield is motion. Thomas Donahue, Dir. of Univ. Relations F ebniary 1966 Moved that the Administration notify students who have taken over University buildings that they are trespassingg and they have one hour to vacate the buildingsg if the buildings are not vacated in one hour the Administration shall take the nec- essary steps to physically remove the students by use of Fair- field Police or to call Gov. Dempsey and Pres. Nixon for use of militia. Resolution by Mr. Stephen O,Brien 785 ACANIPORA, LAYVRENCE 24 XVelsch Rd., North Haven, Conn. 06473 ALBANO, PETER V. 25 Manger Circle, Pelham Manor, N.Y. 10803 ALLISON, ROBERT NI. 130 XV. Clarkstown Rd., Spring Valley, N.Y. 10977 ALLISON, WVILLIAM C. 130 XV. Clarkstown Rd., Spring Valley, N.Y. 10977 ARN, DAVID NI. 60 Riceman Rd., Berkeley Heights, 07922 ARROYA. PETER A. 1110 Barnum Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 AURILIO, JOSEPH A. 752 XVilliam St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06608 AZAR, ANTHONY N. 26 Jeanette Road, Danbury, Conn. 06812 BALAKIER. ANTHONY 34 Dresser Ave., Chicopee, Mass. 01013 BANE, BARRY S. 92 Garfield Ave., VVoburn, Mass. 01801 BANYER, JOHN C. 232 Hillcrest Ave., Wood-Ridge, N.J. 07075 BARRIE, WILLIAM 43 Webster St., Floral Park, N.Y. 11001 BARRITT, THOlNIAS lNI. 311 Garfield Pl., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11215 BARRY. THOINIAS P. 11 Islandview Ave., Monroe, N.Y. 10950 BARTOLOTTA. EINIANUEL S. 25 Butternut St., Middletown, Conn. 06457 BARTONY, ALAN P. 210 Highland Ave., Needham, Mass. 02194 BASHAR, JOHN P. 92 Kent Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 BASILICO, FREDERICK C. 195 Modena Ave., Providence, R.I. 20908 BATTISTON, LEONARD 20 Clovercrest Dr., Wethersfield, Conn. 06109 BEAUDREAULT, EDGAR J., JR. 9015 Van Den Noort St., Putnam, Conn. 06260 BECHER. EDWARD 136-11 244th St., Rosedale, Queens, N.Y. 11422 BELLETZKIE, ROBERT 2463 North Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 BELLIVEAU, PHILIP 53 Baymor Dr., E. Longmeadow, Mass. 01028 BELZ, PETER 56 Rose Ave., Floral Park, N.Y. 11001 BENVENUTI, LYLE R. 23 Peck Rd., Milford, Conn. 06460 BERTERA, JANIES H. 737 Allen St., Springfield, Mass. 01118 BERTERA, JOHN F. 737 Allen St., Springfield, Mass. 01118 BERUBE, EDWARD A. 169 Circuit Ave., Waterbury, Conn. 06708 BIGGS, RAYMOND 84-84 Homelawn St., Jamaica, N.Y. BLAIR, JOHN W. B-33 A-125, Success Pk., Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 BLIGH, THONIAS 302 Hillcrest Dr., Seaford, N.Y. 11783 BLOW, GARY E. Apt. A-9, Rolling Hills, Mahwah, N.J. 07430 BOHANNON, JOHN N., III 39 Thomson Rd., W. Hartford, Conn. 06107 BONDI, HARRY G. 320 Sherman Ave., Sheridan, Wyoming 82801 BOUCHER. EDWIN K. 160 Kenwood Dr., New Britain, Conn. 06052 BRADFORD. RUEBEN F. 333 Lafayette Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11238 286 BRADY, BARRY 11 Dorchester Lane, Riverside, Conn. 06878 BRANCACCIO, DENNIS T. 127-83 St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209 BRANNEGAN, DANIEL P. 7 Stillman Ave., Pawcatuck, Conn. 02891 BREITENBERGER, PAUL V. 27 Derby Ave., Seymour, Conn. 06483 BRITT, WILLIAM 45 Fern St., Rocky Hill, Conn. 06067 BRONSON, JOSEPH R. 346 Greene St., New Haven, Conn. 06511 BROOKS, CHARLES D. 42 Start St., Lakeport, N.H. 03246 BROWN, RICHARD lNI. 3571 Acushnet Ave., New Bedford, Mass. 02745 BRYANT, RICHARD A. 242 W. Hazel St., New Haven, Conn. 06511 BUCARIA, STEPHEN A. 10 E. Franklin Ct., Garden City, N.Y. 11535 BUONCONTRI, GREGORY 101 Virginia Ave., Elmont, L.I., N.Y. 11003 BURKE, THOMAS lNI. 312 Berwickshire Dr., Richmond, Va. 23229 BUTLER, JOHN M. 153 Passaic Ave., Roseland, N.J. 07106 CALLAHAN, PAUL R D 1, Delanson, N.Y. CARLETON, GREGORY J. 36 Princess Pine Lane, Fairfield, Conn. 06430 CAROLLO, FRANK 38 Archer Ave., White Plains, N.Y. 10603 CARPENTER, ROBERT M. 9 E. First St., Bayonne, N.J. 07002 CARTER, WILLIAM M. 34 Congress St., Portland, Maine 04101 CARTY, EUGENE 502 E. 43 St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11203 CASEY, EMMETT T. 91 Elmwood Pl., Bridgeport, Conn. 06605 CASEY, JAMES F. 27 Addison Pl., Ho-Ho-Kus, N.J. 07423 CASTIGLIONE, EDWARD 200 St. John St., New Haven, Conn. CATALANO, LOUIS J., JR. 51615 8th Ave., Belmar, N.J. 07719 CI-IAPNIAN, RUSSELL E., III 344 Watertown Rd.,Thomaston, Conn. 06787 CHIARAPPA, RICHARD J., JR. 60 Clover St., Middletown, Conn. 06457 CHIDSEY, JOHN J. ' 21 Albin Rd., Stamford, Conn. 06902 CHUGA, DERRY 883 Black Rock Tpke., FairHeld, Conn. 06430 CINGO, THOMAS L. 532 Main St., E. Haven, Conn. 06512 COLANGELO, DANIEL J. 13 Chalfont St., Cinnaminson, N.J. 08077 CONLEY, CHARLES A. 84 Southard Ave., Rockville Centre, N.Y. 11572 CONNELL, JAMES A. 75 Highwood Dr., Dumont, N.J. 07628 CONNELLY, MARK T. Ironworks Rd., Clinton, Conn. 06413 CONNOR, RAYMOND T. 80 Main St., Newtown, Conn. 06470 COOK, KEVIN F. 50 Park Dr., Eastchester, N.Y. 10707 COOKE, EDWARD 197 Howard Ave., Ansonia, Conn. 06401 CORBO, PASCHAL A. 233 Rose Ave., Staten Island, N.Y. 10301 COVIELLO, CHARLES 133 Marion St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06606 COYLE, MICHAEL S. 36 Manning Lane, E. Hartford, Conn. 06118 COYNE, JOSEPH M. 312 Elizabeth Ave., Cranford, N.J. 07016 CRANE, DENNIS M. 1716 Del'Ogier Dr., Glenview, Ill. 60026 CRINNION, JOHN L. 1462 Lakeshore Dr., Massapequa Pk 11762 CROCKER, JAMES N. 34 Galpin St., Naugatuck, Conn. CROUGHWELL, JOSEPH F., JR. 313 Clermont Ave., Bpt., Conn. CUMMINGS, TIMOTHY R. 15 Hawthorne St., Norwich, Conn. 06360 CUTLER, PAUL 17 Delude St., Nashua, N.H. 03060 ., N.Y DACEY, EDWARD F. 91 N. State St., Ansonia, Conn. 06401 D'ADDIO, RICHARD, T. 270 Greenwich Ave., New Haven, Conn. 06519 DAILY, JAMES C. 50 Gloucester Rd., Summit, N.J. 17910 D'ALESSANDRO, WILLIAM A. 69 Crestwood Ave., Yonkers, N.Y. 10707 D'AMBRISI, PAUL L. 62 Lannen St., Waterbury, Conn. 06704 D,AMICO, MICHAEL L. 30 Rochford Ave., Hamden, Conn. 06514 DEANGELIS, CHARLES J. 4 Homeland St., Johnston, R.I. 02919 DE CORE, DANIEL L. 234 Commonwealth Ave., Trenton, N.J. 08629 DE DoMEN1Co, RALPH J. 6963 182 St., Flushing, N.Y. 11365 DEFARANOS, SPYRIIJON E. Box 450, Ffld. Univ., Ffid., Conn. 06430 DE FRONZO, DONALD J. 1287 Slater Rd., New Britain, Conn. 06053 DE LUCIA, CARL F. 58 Bradley Ave., Hamden, Conn. 06514 DEVANNEY, HAROLD 137 Wheeler Rd., Wethersfield, Conn. DI GIACOMO, WILLIAM A. 322 Charlton Ave., S. Orange, N.J. 11203 DI LEO, DAVID 86 Peach Orchard Rd., Waterbury, Conn. 06706 DI MOTTA, ANTHONY F. 963 Albany Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 07079 DLUGAS, GEORGE EDWARD 244 3rd Ave., Stratford, Conn. 06497 DMYTRIW, ROBERT S. 159 Inwood Ave., Upper Montclair, N.J. 07043 DoDsoN, RICHARD J. 81 Elihu St., Hamden, Conn. DOHN, ROBERT P. 7 Colony Dr., Blauvelt, N.Y. 10913 DOLAN, KEVIN 6215 Lochraven Dr., McLean, Va. 22101 DONAHUE, MARK 35 Park Ave., Maplewood, N.J. 07040 DONOVAN, DENNIS M. 441 Fulton St., Riverton, N.J. 08077 DOONEY, THOMAS M. 26 Renee Rd., Syosset, N.Y. 11791 DOUGLAS, CHARLES 9 Pheasant Lane, Norwalk, Conn. 06854 DOWDELL, TIMOTHY P.O. 1581, 11 Sagamore Rd., E. Norwich, L.I., N .Y. 11732 DRAB, RICHARD S. 10 Homestead Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06605 DRAVES, ANDREW K. 138 Haring St., Closter, N.J. 07624 DRAZKIEWICZ, STANLEY W. Norwich Rd., Colchester, Conn. 06415 DRISCOLL, GREGORY C. 9 Julian Terrace, Norwich, Conn. 06360 DUBIEL, RICHARD W. 24 Sheldon Ave., Easthampton, Mass. 01027 DUBIN, GARY K. 6 Scattergood Circle, Trumbull, Conn. 06611 DU BOIS. GERARD 43 Kenneth St.. West Hiiven. Conn. 06516 DUKENSKI, RONALD H. 6278 RIil1Il St., 'I71'llI1lIJtlIl. Conn. 06611 DUNN. DENNIS M. 3359 Colony Dr.. Baldwin. N.Y. 11510 Dl'NN. ROBERT K. 16 Kirlzbme Dr.. Linuiln. R.1. 02865 DYBICK. THOMAS E. 85 Bieli-Held Rd.. Middleton ii. Conn. 06157 DYMARCZYK. AYALTER S. 55 Ivy St., Bmnford. Conn. 06405 EDYVARDS. MYLES T. 37 Penng'1v.ini.i Ave.. S. Portland. Me. 04074 EGAN. DOUGLAS L. 131 Hughes Pl.. Albertson. N.Y. 11507 ELLIS. ROBERT G. 22923 Burk St.. De.ir1morn. Mich. -18124 ENGR.-TFT. JOHN C. 17 C1'uun1x'r St.. 11'.iter1mry. Conn. 06708 EYENSK1. ROBERT 134 Nichols Ave.. Shelton. Conn. 0648-1 FAJEN. JAY D. 113 Underhill Rd.. Milford. Conn. 06460 FALEY. ROBERT H. R.R. 1 - Box 282. Titusville. 08560 FALLON. YVILLIAM C. 2 Prospect St.. Shrewsbury. Mass. 01545 FARINON. ROBERT A. 110 Celler Ave.. New Hyde Plc.. N.Y. 12538 FAY. SCOTT F . Depot St.. Broad Brook. Conn. 06016 FEARSIAN. ROBERT B. 209-46 13rd Rd.. Bayside. N.Y. 113361 FEENET. DAVID L. 221 Greenwood Dr.. Schenectady. N.Y. 12303 FERRIGNO. THOMAS F. 544 Main St.. Newington. Conn. 0611 FIELDS. PHILIP 58 Tufts nd., Clifton. x.j. 07011 FIGl'EROA. CARLOS A. Box 10466. Giparra Heights. Puerto Rico 00922 FILIBERTO. COSMO V. 25 Kenyon Ave.. Babylon. N.Y. 11702 FISHER. HARRISON C. 538 Arctic St.. Bridgeport. Conn. 06608 FITZELL. DAVID 1080 Notch Rd., Cheshire. Conn. 06412 FITZGERALD. RICHARD 311 Redwood Ave. Apt. C-23, Paterson. 07515 FITZPATRICK. JAMES E. 377 Grove St., Fall River, Mass. 02720 FIN. THOMAS A. 3-0 Calhoun St.. Torrington, Conn. 06790 FLAMENT. MICHAEL F. 291 South Main St.. Seymour, Conn. 06483 FLORIO. JOHN T. 1-I Dann Dr., Stamford, Conn. 06905 FONDL. HENRY -122 Courtland Ave., Stamford, Conn. 06906 FOUNTAIN, JOHN N. -114 Orchard St.. New Haven. Conn. 06511 FOX, WVILLIAM 161 Oswegatchie Rd., 1Vaterford, Conn. 06385 FRARACCIO, CHARLES A. 10 Clifton Terrace, SvC'?I'l3W'kl'Il, 07087 FRESE. YVILLIAM E. 8 Lenox Terrace, W. Orange, NJ. 07052 FRYSTACK, CHARLES 98 Colonia Rd., Colonia, 07067 1-'l'1.'1'ON.DAYIDII..11 11 '1'.uig1r-xxooil Rd., AA't'11t'N1i'A', Mew. 02181 GAGLIONI-f. ROB!-IR'1' P. 10 S. Goodwin Ave., Elinwloiil, NI. 1052.1 CAl.1.AGI1I'fR. JAM1-IS 1'. 1146 NYvoiiiing St.. Allentois n, 11.i. 1610.1 CA1.1.0. JOSI-I1'II1.. 1921 1'.ir1t St.. 11.irtlori1, Conn. 06106 C1-fN'1'I1.1-I. JOIIN I.. 6 Mnrmv St., Ansoni.i,1fonn.06-101 CERACIITT. MARK S. '16 XY. Sylvan Rd., XYestpoi't. Conn. 06880 GIBBONS. WAYN1-fl.. 11.35 E. Cliveden St.. 1'1iil.idelp1ii.i. Pai. 19119 GIBSON. ROBERT T. 68 XI'1iitnev Dr.. Meriden, Conn. 06-150 CINOCCIIIO. THOMAS E. til Miller Ave.. N. Buhvlon, N.Y. 11703 GIOIELLA. HENRY J.. JR. 95 Alpine Rd., Yonkers. N.Y. 10710 Gll'1.1ANO. JAMES E. 5 Marlon Pl., Cromwell. Conn. 06416 CLEASON. THOMAS C. 249 Mlxitllaiiitl St.. Bristol. Conn. 06010 GLEESON. PATRICK F. 5 Charles St.. Valhalla, N.Y. 10595 GOMBAR. MARK A. 45 Yielie St., Straitlord, Conn. 06497 GOOD. ARTHUR F. 8 Prospect Ave.. Roslindale. Mass. 12131 GOYONI. RIARK TV. 10 Plymouth Ct., Milford. Conn. 06460 GREINER. CRAIG R. 61 First St.. Garden City, N.Y. 07652 GRILLO. JOHN J. 95 Cromwell St.. Hartford, Conn. 06114 HADDAD LOUIS C. 29 Donahue St., XVaterbury, Conn. 06706 HAMMERBACHER, JOHN A. 180 Verbena Ave., Floral Pk., N.Y. 11001 HANLON, BRIAN T. 150 Prton Rd. VV. Caldwell, N.J., 07006 HANLON. GARY VV. ll Stanford Rd., VVe11esley, Mass. HANRAHAN, STEPHEN 12 Bruce lame, Kings Pk., NY. 11754 HAPYVORTH. PETER 161 Washington Ave., W. Caldwell, N.-1. 07006 HARAK, G. SIMON 719 Derby Tpke., Orange, Conn. 06418 HARDER. MICHAEL 201 Concord St., New Haven, Conn. 06512 HARDISTY, RICHARD W. 63 Beaconview Dr., Fairfield, Conn. 06430 HARRINGTON, JOHN E. 301 Colonial Ridge, Moorestown, 08057 HART, NEIL D. 11 Catering Rd., VVo1L0tt, Conn. 06716 HEBERT, RICHARD P. 6 Grove Ct., VVaterbury, Conn. 06710 HEGGIE, RICHARD VV. Litchfield Tplce., 1Voodbridge, Conn. 06525 HENNESSY, RICHARD 326 Reservoir Rd., Chestnut Hill, Mass. 02167 HESSEL, JAMES 45 Murray St., Meriden, Conn. 06450 HICKEY, BRIAN 83 Fawnfield Rd., Stamford, Conn.0690f1 HIGGINS. JAMES P. 713 Mayfiower Ave., Pawcatuclt, Conn. 02891 HILL, TIMOTHY G. Meads Point, Greenwich, Conn. 061510 III..-KIILN. S'l'1'1I'l1I'fN 5HtTul1ot1t-ii llil., N1.lI1l1tI1tl,11UIlIl.OO11O.: IIIICAN, I'.-ALI. 6 .'AA'l.11ll1 St., Next Inuit, 11.1 02810 IIOJNOAYSKI. K1'INN1'f'l'I1l1. .17.S11ou1i-x.utl, I1.1X1lI1111',N I own- iiousiiooit, MI1'11A1-i1.A. .3 F 1.m1 API. 1. lllllelexl Axe., M. ll.tl11illtl, 11 06110 11ON1'I1'C1 1 1'.JAMI-IS1'. 86 IOSH111 Ave., X1'ootl1i.ixen, N1 111.21 HOOK. C1.l1 1 O11DC. -128 Ititlgi-vi-ootl Ave., 1'.u'.iiuus, 07652 I1OI1AN.OSlF.-IRIi. 151-128Conw.iv 1td.,St. Louis, Mo. 6.11 11 HOl'GII'I'ON. RICHARD IV. .176 Melrose 111.. S. Orange 07079 IIUFF. JOHN I.. -15-1 Sln-rid.ui ltd.. N1'innetkii. 111. 600951 I11'N'1'. JOS1-I1'I1 T. 528 Monroe Ave., Elizailmetli, N.J. 07201 11l'N'1'. I'1'I'1'I-111 S. T535 llainlord Pl.. M'i-stlield, 07090 IACOZZA, PHILLIP 84 E. Thorne St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 ICLESIAS. MICHAEL 6 Harvey Ct., Rollinghill, Morristownship, 013104 IRIVIN. JOHN T. 51 Forest Ave., Caldwell, 07006 JANOSKO, EDWARD O. 187 Light St., Stratford, Conn. 06497 JASCOT, JOHN A. 35 Garfield Ave., Middletown, Conn. 06457 JEANNONT, BRUCE K. 88 Branchville Rd., Ridgefield, Conn. 06877 JOHNSON, ROBERT P. 1 Roseld Ave., Deal, NJ. 07723 JORDAN, JOHN S. 661 Arcadia Rd., Ridgewood, N.J. 07450 KAILIIKATIS, JOSEPH D. 164 Chestnut Ave., VVaterhury, Conn. 06710 KARBOUSKY, ALAN P. 71 Greystone Ave., Bristol, Conn. 06010 KAULBACH, ALLAN E. Benedict Rd., Bethel, Conn. 06801 KELLEHER, JAMES R. 76 Cherrywood Dr., New Hyde Plc.. N.Y. 11040 KELLEY, KEVIN J. 86-36 136th St., Richmond, Hill, N.Y. 11418 320 E. 92 St., N.Y.C. KELLY, GREGORY E. 28 Churchill Rd., 111-thersfield, Conn. 06109 KENEFICK, CHRISTOPHER M. 31 Cedar Ave., V1'olcott, Conn. 06716 KESSLER, TVILLIAM C. 29 Vliirwiclc Ave., Bridgeport. Conn. 0660-1 KEYLOUN. TIIEOIXJRE E. 79 Mayliiir Laine, Mainhaisset, NY. 11010 KEZ1-I1..JOl1N R. 188 Greyroclc Pl., Stamford, Conn. 06901 KICKHAM, THOMAS M. 20 Butler St.,1Vest1mr'y. 1..1.. N.Y. 11590 KING, SAMl'E1. R. 51027 Guilford St.. I'1ii1.ide1phi.i. 1'.i. 19115 KLOCZKO. TIM E. 26 Smith St.. Bristo1.C4mli.06010 287 KOPNICKY, THOAIAS 5 Baxter St., Stratford, Conn. 06497 KOYVALUK, BOHDAN S. 55 Gordon St., Perth Amboy, N.J. 08861 KRAJCI, JOSEPH R. 222-24 92 Avenue, Queens Village, N.Y. 11428 KRYNYCKY, IHOR A. 151 Portsea St., New Haven, Conn. 06519 LA CROIX, JAMES T. 11 Godfrey St., VVillimantic, Conn. 06226 LAJEUNESSE, MICHAEL E. 9 Vandale St., Putnam, Conn. 06260 LAKE, DANIEL H. 709 W. Jackson Ave. Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 LANGLOIS,JOHN N. 50 N. Main St., Newmarket, N.H. 03857 LANTOWSKI, KONALD 3144 Old Town Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. 06606 LAPP, CHARLES E. 438 Summit Ave., Cedarhurst, N.Y. 11516 LARESE, RICHARD L. 58 Clearview Ave., Meriden, Conn. 06450 LARKIN, THOMAS R. 59 Bayberry Ad., Newington, Conn. 06111 LAUTER, JOHN J. 25 Claremont Ave., Bloomfield, N.J. 07003 LEBONITTE, VINCENT 35 Orchard St., Mt. Vernon, N.Y. 10552 LECOWSKI, JOHN T. 1782 Farmington Ave., Unionville, Conn. 06085 LEMBO, JOSEPH A. 4 John St., Ansonia, Conn. 06401 LEUSCHNER, RICHARD M. 238-17 116 Rd., Elmont, N.Y. 11003 LIS. JOHN T. 95 Crescent St., Willimantic, Conn. 06226 LOONEY, MARTIN M. 175 Wolcott St., New Haven, Conn, 06513 LORING, JAMES A. 49 Lowell St., S. Portland, Me. 04106 LUKACH, JOHN B. 8 Ambler Dr., Norwalk, Conn. 06351 LYNCH, THOMAS P. 110 Adam Rd., Massapequa, N.Y. 11758 LYSAGHT, PAUL D. Pine Point Rd. W. Scarborough, Me. 04074 NIACAULEY, BRIAN R. 38 Wakefield St., Hamden, Conn. 06514 INIACDONALD, ROBERT B. 107 Sandquist Circle PO 4151, Hamden, Conn. 06514 MADAIO, MICHAEL P. 17 Wisconsin Ave., N Massapequa N.Y. 11758 MADEO, JOHN J. PO Box 336, Bellmore, N.Y. 11710 MAGALETTA, FRANK R. 252 Alta Vista Dr., Yonkers, N.Y. 10710 MAGEE, DOUGLAS R., JR. Lisa Lane, Middletown, Conn. 06457 MAGGI, ROBERT 2 Carol Ct., Holmdel, N.J. 07733 MACNO, JOHN 25 Cedar Pl., Floral Pk., L.I., N.Y. 11001 MAHER, LAWRENCE P. 757 Murray St., Elizabeth, N.J. 07202 MAHER, ROBERT F. 2 Tracy Dr., Huntington, N.Y. 11743 NIAHONEY, LEO T. 67 Cary Pl., Freeport, N.Y. 11520 MAINE, GERALD A. 49 Belleview Ave., Torrington, Conn. 06790 288 MALERI, CARL J., JR. 234 New Haven Ave., Derby, Conn. 06418 NIALOK, MATTHEW M. 305 Burritt Ave., Stratford, Conn. 06497 NIALONE, DONALD F. X. 15 Argyle Rd., Merrick, N.Y. 11566 MANNION, THOMAS M. 15 Knob Hill Rd., Madison, Conn. 06443 MARBACH, ROBERT J., JR. 69 Parkview Ave., White Plains, N.Y. 10604 MARCINKO, JOHN R. 240 Oak St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 MARIANI, ALBERT 7 Morison Ter., Springfield, Mass. 01104 MARLOW, DAVID A. 147 Spencer Ave., Lynbrook, N.Y. MARR, GEORGE S., JR. 73 Arbor Ter., Southport, Conn. 06490 MARTENS, WILLIAM H. 9 Stephen St., Manchester, Conn. 06040 MARTOCCI, THOMAS H. 64 Amherst St., Hartford, Conn. 06114 MASON, JOHN R. 149 Herman Ave., Bethpage, N.Y. 11714 MATTISON, ANDREW M. 118-83 St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209 MAYO, KENNETH A. 328 Willow St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 MC CARTHY, PATRICK M. 311 S. Kilburn Rd., Garden City S., N.Y. 11530 MC CANN, PETER J. 373 Gregory St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 MC CORMACK, RAYMOND A. 35 Baird Ct., Stratford, Conn. 06397 MCDONOUGH, TIMOTHY C. 121 Devon Rd., Essex Falls, N.J. 07021 MC EACHERN, MARK A. 32 Park Circle, WestHeld, Mass. 01085 MC GEE, WILLIAM 264 Voorhis Ave., River Edge, N.J. 07661 MC GRATH, JOSEPH B. 34 Bridge Lane, Enfield, Conn. 06030 MC GUIRE, CHARLES C. 183 Summit Ave., Upper Montclair, N.j. 07043 MC INERNEY, BRIAN P. 119 Green Acre Lane, Fairfield, Conn. 06430 NIC INERNEY, DONALD B. Indian Neck Lane, Peconic, L.I., N.Y. 11958 MC LAUGHLIN, JOHN D. 170-20 Grand Central Pkwy., Jamaica, N. Y. 11432 MC VERRY, MICHAEL 37 Damson Lane, Naugatuck, Conn. 06770 MEDITZ, JOHN C. 21 Hamilton Ave., Weehawken, N.J. 07087 MELENSKI, DAVID P. Poland Brook Rd., Terryville, Conn. 06786 MELITA, JOSEPH A. 745 Lincoln Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06606 MERRILL, THOMAS A. 1 Springton Lake Rd., Media, Pa. 19063 MILLER, EUGENE T. 16 Channing Rd., Trumbull, Conn. 06611 MILLER, THOMAS M. 528 Wahlmont Dr., Webster N.Y. 14580 MILLINGTON, JEFFREY P. 61 W. End Ave., Westwood, N.J. 07675 MINIO, FRANK 1170-82 St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11228 MIS, FREDERICK W. 15 Avenue D. Beacon Falls, Conn. 06403 MITCHELL, RONALD F. 3414 20th St., N.E., Washington D.C. 20018 MONAHAN, MICHAEL P. 226 Franklin St., Holyoke, Mass. 01040 MORAN, PATRICK T. 389 Edgefield Ave., Milford, Conn. P.O. 1015 MORELLI, WILLIAM 29 Hill Rd., Farmingdale, N.Y. 11735 MORIARTY, JOHN L., JR. 3929 Laurel Ct., Seaford, N.Y. 11783 MORIARTY, WILLIAM 13 Hampshire St., Holyoke, Mass. 01040 MORRIS, VINCENT R. 129 Mill Hill Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 MUCCI, LAWRENCE J. 259 Carter Lane, Southington, Conn. 06489 MUELLER, WILLIAM F., II P.O. Box 1132, Weston, Conn. 06880 MULLANEY, THOMAS C., JR. 119 Dryden Blvd., Warwick, R.I. 02888 MULLANEY, THOMAS E. 35-12 165 St., Flushing N.Y. 11358 MURPHY, BRIAN F. 55 Bruce Rd., Waltham, Mass. 02154 MURPHY, JAMES 606 Lancelot Rd., Plymouth Meeting, Pa. 19462 MURPHY, J. KEVIN 15 Primrose Lane, Valley Stream, N.Y. 11580 MURPHY, JOHN Q. 1 Beach Ave., Newport, R.I. 02840 MURPHY, TERRENCE M. 290 Club Rd., Stamford, Conn. 06905 MURRAY, WILLIAM General Delivery, Linden, N.-J. 07036 MUSUMANO, JOSEPH, JR. 1530 Wolcott Rd., Wolcott, Conn. NAMAN, DAVID J. 21 Bay Ridge Pkwy., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209 NESTOR, ALEXANDER R. 22 Westwood Dr., Easton, Conn. NOCE, JOHN A. 1199 Nostrand Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11225 NORNIAN, STANLEY P. 49 Garden Dr., Fairfield, Conn. 06430 NOTCH, JOHN P. 150 E. Locust Ave., White Plains, N.Y. 10604 O'BRIEN, THOMAS F., III 99 Bald Eagle, Hackettstown, N.J. 07840 O'CONNELL, KEVIN R. 19435 W. 11 Mile Rd., Southfield, Mich. 40875 O'CONNOR, RICHARD J. 3069 Hobart St., Woodside, N.Y. 11377 ODOARDI, JOSEPH M. 1000 Madison Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. 06606 O'HEARN, ROBERT E. 61 Temple St., Gardner, Mass. 01440 OHLHAVER, CHARLES T. 1003 Seamount Rd., Bel Air, Md. 21014 OTTAVIANI, WILLIAM 576 North Main St., Mansfield, Mass. 02048 OUIMET, PETER J. 125 Kaynor Dr., Waterbury, Conn. 06708 PARZYCH, MATTHEW 118 Woodlawn St., W. Hartford, Conn. 06110 PASINI, KENNETH F. 396 Kinderkamack Rd., West Wood, N.j. 07675 PATTAVINA, JOHN P. 3A Charbeth Lane, Westport, Conn. 06880 PERKINS, ALAN 888 Rock St., Fall River, Mass. 02720 PETERS, PAUL R. Laurel Lane, Sherman, Conn. 06784 PETTINELLI, JAMES F. 369 Greenwood St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06606 PEZZULLO, JOHN E. 392 Huntington Rd., Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 PILCH, ALLAN F. 307 Dwight St., Waterbury, Conn. 06714 PILKINCTON. JOIIN J. -110 Rich Ave.. Mt. Vernon. N.Y. 10552 PISARRI. OZZIE F. 350 River Vale Rd., River Vale. 07675 PIZZINO. THEODORE N. 16-1 Beech St.. llaelieusael., 07601 PODIIBYNSKYJ. ZENON 7-13 Fairview Ax e., Bridgeport, ifonn. 06606 POMPONIO. PETER 119 1Vi1son St., Bridgeport. Conn. 06605 POSTICH. JOSEPH A. 1439 Kearney Ax e., Bronx. N.Y. 10165 PRIMPS. RICHARD B. 2 Canning Dr.. Ossnuug. N.Y. 10562 PROVOST, WILLIAM 122 Colton St.. YVuidsor. Conn. 06095 QUICK. ROBERT E. 2018 Edgewater Pkwy.. Silver Spring. M11 20903 Ql'INLAN. MICHAEL. W. 106 Linwln St.. llinghaui. Mass. 0201-3 RAJGTTE. KENNETII 17111 Broadbridge Ave.. Apt. C-13. Still.. Ct IB-197 RAKOS. JOHN C. 10 Pawtuclzet Ave.. Shelton. Chun. 06484 RALEIGH. LADD A. 106 YVi1mot Circle. Searsdale. N.Y. 1056-3 RAMl'NN1.ANCEI-O 691 XYa1t Whitman Rd.. lluntiugtou Station. L1 N.Y. RAYEXER. THOMAS A. Crescent Beach Rd.. Clen Cove. N.Y. 11542 RAYMOND. WILLIAM Fall Mountain Like Rd.. Terrswille. Conn. M5756 REDDY. ROBERT A. Valley Heights Rd., XV!-stport. Conn. 06880 REILLY. YVILLIAM D. 28 YVes4.0tt St.. Riverside. Conn. 06876 RENEHAN. BRYAN C. 309 New York Blvd.. Sea Cirt. 08750 RILEY. JOIIN K. Bittersweet Pl.. Burlington. Iowa 52601 RILEY. JOHN M. 295 Figlar Ave.. Fairfield. Conn. 064530 RODRIGUEZ. JOSEPH C. 1420 E. Main St.. Bridgeport. Conn. 06608 ROSENDAHL. THOMAS H. 83 Highwood Ave.. Englewood, 076531 ROSSITER. DAVID A. 491 Montauk Ave., New London. Conn. 065320 RESSO. JOSEPH S. B8 Victoria Rd.. Hartford. Conn. 06114 RYAN. STEVEN D. 19 Harrison St.. New Milford. 07646 SACHS. CARL R. 245 Lee Ave.. Yonlters, N.Y. 10705 SACNELL-L JEROME M.. JR. 297 Howard Ave., New Haven, Conn. 06519 SALOMONE. ALFRED P.. JR. 47 Pollock Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. 01202 SANDACATA. KENNETH J. 24 Kaye Rd., YV. Haven, Conn. 06514 SANTULLI. FRANK J. 4 Bridge Rd.. Manhasset, N.Y. 11030 SATRIANU..1051-IPII I . 517 11Illgl' ltd., Melllelslieltl,1101111.06109 SIxAI I ARD1. 110111-fR'1',I. 18 11 97 St., Iforona, N Y 11166 SlfA1.1-fhS1'f. l'1IA1I1.I'IS1'. 121 Stuyvesant Axe., New llaxeu,1'onn.06512 SIANIAN. J E191-'I11'fY R. -I.il1ostSt..New lluiaan, foun, 06610 SC'llA1.I.ER, FRANK ,1. 681 I11OSIl'I Duel. Rtl.,i'1ostel. 07621 SCf1II.1l'l1'1'INll. Kl'1I'1'lT. 10t7euter1irooL Rd., 1 au'1ie1tl, l'onn. 061 10 Sl'IIMI'1ISINC. YYll.l.l.-IM 76 1-'loral Blvd., l lora1 1'1t., N.Y. 11001 SCIINEIDER. TIIUMAS Il. PO. Rox-l1.lllnt1ia, X.11.0S03-1 Sl'1IONBl-XTR.I1ll'IIA11Dl-'. 112 E. Main St., 1Vestlioro. X1ass.015S1 S1-fN'l'1'fR. YV11.I.1AM I.. 45 Monroe St.. Apt. A- 19, Rpt.. tfoun. 06605 SIIAFER. JOIIN YV. 2.3 lfreseent Ter.. Troy. N.Y. 12150 SIIAIIEEN. 'I'IMO'I'I1YJ. 29 YVal't1 Ave.. IIIIIIISUII, 17760 S111-II-ZRAXJOIIN D. 9 Eastview Dr.. lluiteiport. N.Y. 11721 1o.e. P.O. 1.354 SHVK. J. GREGORY 4534 George St.. New llaveu, Conn. 06511 S11.I.ERY. ROBERT R. 71 Crand Ave.. YVa1dwiek. 074653 SINDT. JOSEPH 27 lligliland Ave., Emerson, 076510 SITTNICK. KENNETII D. 119 S 1Vliitt1esev Yve XVi11in'1ord. Conn. 1 . . ' .' .. A L 06492 SKONIECZNY. JAMES M. 67 Sueu-ss Ave.. Bridgeport, Conn. 06610 SMALL. JAMES D. S2 Congress St.. Millord. Mass. 06460 SMITH. EDWARD 27 Merton Rd.. Newport. R.1. 02840 SOBOLEYVSKI. ROBERT S. 174 Prospect St.. Ansonin, Conn. 06401 SOLKOFSKE. BENJAMIN M. 586 Huntington St., Shelton, Conn. 06480 SOMMA. HOYVARD M. 18 South St.. YVest llaven, Conn. 06.516 SOXVERS. JEFFREY M. 7 Altamont Ave., Albany. N.Y. 1 1250 STAHLMAN. PHILIP 1039 Stuart Pl., Seaford, N.Y. 117853 STALEY. GREGORY YV. 17 Chamberlin Dr., XV. Hartford, Conn. 06107 STARR. PAl'L 71 Fairview Ave.. Stamford, Conn. 06902 STEVENSON. JAMES C. 60 1Vade Ter., Bridgeport, Conn. 06604 STRAIQCH. JOHN YV. 663 St. Davids Line, Schenectady, N.Y. 12309 SI.'LLIVAN. JAMES M. 186 Violet Ave., Florul Pk., N.Y. 11001 SUROVICII. PAl'I. 4 Hzinlord Pl., Tarrytown, N.Y. 10591 TINKER. JOIIN R. 15 Bliss St.. Mancliester, Conn. TRAESTER. YVILLIAM I . 64 Lailceview Ave., liannden, Conn. 06514 TRUSCINSKI. THOMAS R. 280 Pierremount Ave., New Britain, Conn. 06052 TRZCINSKI. EDYVARD J. 49 Park Ave., E. Ilurtlord, flonn. 06108 Tl.'CCl. PETER J. Bureliard 1-11113 Rowuyton, Conn. 06853 TUCKER. LAYVRENCE D. 143 Russell St., New II.IV1'Il,1101111.06-51-1 l Xl1l.1-f.,lUsl'Il'11 li. ill. I.1ul1II1llIlN1', Ni-xx 1I.ueu,l lbllll V1lI'1'17I.1. NIIVIIAI-II. H1 I.lIN'IlA St.. S1.lI11lll1lI, 4 'onu 061101 VIAI'I'lI.1.I1. Nl.-V1 I'1l1'fYV 1l17uuel1en Htl., Ililllllllllill, Vonu, 06611 Y IX IANO. lT1I,tR1.1-15.1. 3511 Major Dine1'1..1N.in1ag1i,N Y 11705 YVAl'1'I'1. l1Al.l'1l If. 215 Nlauliasst-I Axe., Xlanliasset. N.Y. 110 i0 YVA1.KI':R. ,lAMI'1S I . .11 Riverside 1113, YV, llam it-Ii, Xlass, 02671 YVAI,I.AIfI'1. ,IOIIN C. 207 Chestnut 11111lid..Stainlonl,tIouu.0600S YVAI.SII. WII.1.1.-IM A. 759 1Vestlie1d Ave.. Elimlietli, 07208 YVARD. JOIIN I . 223 Dogwood Lane. l.art-Iuuout, N.Y. 105558 S12-1 Mt. Urove St., Bridgeport, Conn. 06605 YVARNKEN. 1VII.I.IAM P.. JR. S1512 11ie1torvSt., N. Maissupeqiia, N.Y. 11761 YVARREN. MARK A. -'10 Lawlor St., 1Vaterliurv, Conn. 06708 YVATTS. JOIIN A. S11 Platt Lane, Milford. Conn. 06460 WIIALEN. MATTIIEYV D.. JR. 19 Lexington Rd., YV. Hartford, 11.06119 YVILLIAMS. THOMAS A. 112 Oweno Road, Mnliwali, 074330 YVILLIANISON. ARTHUR C. 2251-5-ltli St., YV. N.Y., 070951 YVILLINCER. CHARLES JR. 171 Lynnbrook rd., Flid., Conn. 06-1530 YVOOLLEY. RICHARD B. 154 Kenyon St., Hartford. Conn. 06105 YVRICIIT, THOMAS E. 953 Ash St., Bridgeport. Conn. 06605 YOl'NES, I Ol'AD M. 2:35 E. 7-'ird St., New York, N.Y. 10021 iuiasiti. 'ruuoooniz cz. 511 Morristown Rd., Linden, 070 36 289 ,r .-v 'rv' V' .-7,15 NA. df, vf:, vf f' nrrh . f 1?- .,i.., 1. x i4 f . x, 1. ikhif' ' 4. ' Tiff.. , I. '.1 '1- 5 ' 1 ll, HONORED BENEFACTORS MR. 8K MRS. JACK PILKINGTON MR. 8. MRS. JAMES B. NOLAN MR. 81 MRS BAKER MR. 8. MRS MIS MR. 8. MRS FAY MR. 8. MRS MEDITZ MR. 8. MRS SACCO MR. 81 MRS FREDERIC B. WALTER A. FRANCIS M. FRANK E. ALBERT A. THOMAS M. MALON EY MR. 8. MRS. P.J. TREMAGLIO JUDGE 8. MRS. JOSEPH F MORELLI MR. 8. MRS. HARRY J. SCANLAN MR. 8. MRS. WALTER DYMARCZYK MR. 8. MRS. CHARLES E. LAPP, SR. MR. 81 MRS. JOHN W. PROVOST JOHN D. BLAKELY MR. 8. MRS. JOSEPH A. WOLLOW MR. 8. MRS. FRANCIS J. MURPHY MR. 8. MRS. ROBERT H. DOHN MR. 8. MRS. FREDERIC E. DUBIEL MR. 8. MRS. PANFILO BASILICO MR. 8. MRS. BRADLEY HOUGHTON MR. 8. MRS. JAMES H. FITZPATRICK, JR. EDWARD J. GOEDECKE, JR. ROBERTO E. SCHNEIDER MR. 8. MRS. THOMAS J. LONG MR. 81 MRS. ANTHONY J. ZIMARDO JAMES V. REME, JR. ROBERT A. MCDONOUOH PAUL J. GREELEY, JR. 291 Mr. 81 Mrs. George A. Callahan Mr. 8. Mrs. Victor Shaheen Mr. 8. Mrs. Robert C. Sowers Memere and Aunt Claire Mrs. Cecile O'Connor Mr. 8. Mrs. Philip Iacozza Mrs. Leo J. Kiernan Mr. 8. Mrs. Anthony E. Napolitano Mr. 8. Mrs. Michael E.S. Reinhard, J r. Mr. 8. Mrs. Walter Tarnowski Edward 8. Ellen Blow Edward 8. Valerie Pogoda Mr. 8. Mrs. Thomas P. Maher Mr. 8. Mrs. A. Nestor John 81 Helen Magno Percy D. Stone Eleanor M. Heide 292 PATRONS Mr. Ozzie Pisarri Mr. 8. Mrs. H.J. Schanck Mrs. William C. Mattison Mr. 8. Mrs. Edward F. McGrath Martin F. Randolph, M.D. Mr. 8. Mrs. John P. Di Leo Mr. 8. Mrs. Lee McNaughton Mr. 8. Mrs. Ivan Sattem Edward Paul Bashian Judge 81 Mrs. Daniel F. Brannegan Mr. 8. Mrs. Frank Dacey Mrs. James F. Fagan Mr. 8. Mrs. William Larkin Mr. 8. Mrs. Robert A. Murphy Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis J. Burke Mr. 81 Mrs. Robert R. Stevenson Mr. 81 Mrs. Eugene Laieunesse Mr. 8. Mrs. A. Mazzone Mr. 8. Mrs. M. Niezabitowski Mr. 8. Mrs. James V. Pezzullo Mr. 8- Mrs. John Mora Mr. 8. Mrs. W.J. Barrie Atty 8. Mrs. Donald T. Dorsey Dr. 8. Mrs. William Di Giacomo Mr. 8. Mrs. L. Maggi Arthur S. Gallagher, '72 Mr. 8. Mrs. William S. Mc Mahon Mr. 8. Mrs. Herman J. Martocci Mr. 8. Mrs. A.J. Draves Mr. 8. Mrs. William McCann Mr. 8. Mrs. Robert H. Merrill William E. Jaquet Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph Szewczyk Mr. 8. Mrs. Thomas E. Mullaney Mrs. Frank J. Zukoski Lawrence W. Mucci Stephen G. Hicks Mr. 81 Mrs. Robert P. Barry Mr. 8. Mrs. John R. Mason Henry P. Baby Sciarra Family Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles D. Slocum Mr. 8. Mrs. Camillus Walsh Dr. 8. Mrs. Stanley Huff Mr. 8. Mrs. Emanuel Giuliano Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph E. Woolley Mr. 8- Mrs. Warren Hayes Roland J. Dayon Mr. 8. Mrs. Charles Haddad Mr. 8. Mrs. Louis D'Alessandro Mr. 8- Mrs. P. Marinello Mrs. Arthur J. Pagano Mrs. John M. Fallon Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph E. Buckley Mr. 8. Mrs. Mario Piazza Mr. 81 Mrs. Emil Melenski Mr. 8- Mrs. Edward R Defeo Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph M. Hunt Mr. 8. Mrs. John Cherichello Mr. 81 Mrs. Daniel P. Weiteramp Edward G. Britt Mr. 8. Mrs. Thomas C. Mullaney Mr. 8. Mrs. Roman Krynycky Mr. 8. Mrs. Wm. J. Schwaner Dr. 8. Mrs. Arthur F. Good Mr. 8. Mrs. J.G. O'Connell Mrs. Francis T. Irwin Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph M. Coyne, Sr. Mr. 8. Mrs. John L. Burke John D. Lindsay, Sr. James R. Kelleher Mr. 8. Mrs. William A. Moriarty Mr. 8- Mrs. Joseph P. Harrington Mr. 8. Mrs. John E. Harrington Fruitrich Cadillac- Oldsmobile, Inc. Fairfield Trading Post, Inc. 29 Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Ernest A. Gardella, Jr. James Camarata Stanley J. Drazkiewicz George P. Cloutier William C. Beyer Leo C. De Voto, Jr. John P. O'Rourke Mr. 8. Mrs Thomas Denning, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs George W. Williams Mr. 8. Mrs Joseph Gallo Mr. 8. Mrs Ray H. Cunningham Richard J. Chiarappa, Sr. Mr. 8. Mrs Francis J. Gallagher Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph Salvini, Jr. John T. McCafferty F.C. Neary Peter J. Martin Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Durr Douglas R. Magee Henry J. Lysaght Ernest L. Thivierge Mrs. Stephen P. Bergin George A. Schmitt Mrs. Sherman T. Connelly William H. Vierling Mr. 8. Mrs. Thomas M. O'Brien Mr. 8. Mrs. John Thomas Crowe BOOSTERS William Ramaccia Mrs. James V. Perkins Mr. 8. Mrs. James J. Morrow Mr. 8. Mrs. Frank S. Owen Dr. 8. Mrs. Stephen Dmytriw Mr. 8. Mrs. George Dlugos Michael Quinlan Mr. 81 Mrs. Theo G. Schonbeck Mr. 8. Mrs. Amand S. Du Bois Dr. 81 Mrs. C.E. Iliades Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph Sidote Frank Fortney, '7'l Mr. 8. Mrs. F. Alexander Mr. 8. Mrs. C. Dombeck John P. Mullen Mr. 8. Mrs. James A. Kelly, Jr. Charles De Angelis Vincent J. Tucker Mr. 8. Mrs. Victor Fraulo Mrs. Roderick V. Hunt A. Kowaluk Mrs. Ellen M. McGee John Power Mr. 8. Mrs. Edmund J. Sydertz Edward J. Halton, M.D. Santiago M. Diaz Tomias Mr. 8. Mrs. Walter Nasthoski Mr. 81 Mrs. Vincent J. Vuturo Harold L. Riner Pauline Chibard Mr. 8- Mrs. Thaddeus P. Dankowski Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph Garvelli Caroline L. Garvelli Mr. 8. Mrs. Louis Laccavole Carl M. DeLucia Mr. 81 Mrs. Chester A. Garvelli Mrs. Mary Garvelli Mr. 81 Mrs. Vincent D'Alessandro Mr. Frank Gentilesco Henry Storoni John H. McLaughlin Ed wa rd A. Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 8. Mrs Mr. 8. Mrs Mr. 8. Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 8- Mrs. Mr. 8. Mrs Tully, Jr. Ned F. Carollo William Rowe Frank Rupp Anthony Truslinski Victor M. Coe, Jr. R.J. Reilly Joseph R. Kraici, Sr. Daniel J. Murphy Robert E. Fisher Salvatore P. Mia no William C. Springer Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas P. Lynch Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Spahr Vincent R. D'Alessandro, III Mr. 81 Mrs. Vincent R. D'Alessandro, Jr Beniamin M. Solkafske Mr. 8. Mrs. D.A. Dicamillo Henry J. Gioiella, Jr. Mr. 8- Mrs. George J. Hofmann Mr. 8. Mrs. William P. Warnken Robert Belletzkie 8. Family Mr. 8. Mrs. Francis J. Cooney Mr. 81 Mrs. Donald Reilly Mr. 8. Mrs. Joseph Dorval Mr. 8- Mrs. Graham F. Wallace Mr. 81 Mrs. Patrick Downs Mrs. Olive Fearman Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Lantowski Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Bernard F. Duffy Philip Fields Walter Dukenski Mr. 81 Mrs. John E. O'Connor Mrs. Margaret Burroughs uavid R. Fabbri Mr. 8. Mrs. G. Macaluso Mr. 8- Mrs. Robert W. Connor Mr. 81 Mrs. Lawrence B. Keith COMPLIMENTS OF SAVQY LAUNDRY AND LINEN SUPPLY, mc. 1 NH JDlND Ri XD IRXH RD CKNNHHCUI LINENS RENTED FOR ALL OCCASIONS i.LQl.XX7'.iZL11'if1'CC1?.f53 Ili Te EllEliALf MILFORD FAIRFIELD BMERQBT eucx nacx amcs .,, ,,,M,,,N ' L neu me rasr amce -A .mu BROAD sum AT mon INSURED . N iq I fe gag Free Parking See CY and JOE at Compliments of PHOTO SALES EASTERN BAG and PAPER CO. Everything Photographic BPT. 335-6891 1967 Main Street R al of Lighting for Parties 8- Sh RAY BROWN 259-7029 Electrical Contractor Wim., 5 .-..,,.,i.tn,, . FAIRFIELD CAMERA sHoP Light Heat and Power George W. Cummings 1482 Post Rd. Prop. Fairfield, Conn. 185 Greyston Bridgeport, C 372-8971 e Road Ohh ABBEY RICHMOND Conn. Inc. 1032 East State Street Westport, Conn. Telephone: 227-7281 RENTALS AND SALES Tables Chairs Dishware Silverware Glassware etc. Hospital beds Wheelchairs Walkers Oxygen Bed trays etc. CENTER RESTAURANT AND COLONIAL ROOM T AND STAG ROOM Catering for all occasions Fairfield Center 259-8570 Ml KO BROTHERS, INC. General Contractors Bridgeport, Conn. PAUL S YONEY 'NC WE TAKE BETTER CARE OF YOUR BURNER Mechanical Contractors Bridgeport, Connecticut 298 156 E. Washington Avenue f Bridgeport 367-6641 Y Wlstport 227-5153 - Milford TR 4-2584 fAnsonia, Derby, Shelton, Seymour, Oxford ENT 5390 my PROMPT BURNER SERVICE ' WATER HEATERS ' HEATING EQUIPMENT THE BELLARMINE CLUB AND THE BELLARMINE GUILD OF FAIRFIELD COLLEGE PREPARATORY SC HCCJL WISHES THE BEST TO THE CONGRATULATIONS AND BEST WISHES T0 THE CLASS O F l 970 The Three Bears Restaurant In Westport on Route 33 - M mile north of Merritt Pkwy. Exit 41 - 32 miles north of Conn. Tpke. Exit 17 Best Wishes to the Class of '69 RELIABLE SANITATION T36 Oldfield Drive Fairfield, Conn. FOR ALL YOUR TRAVEL NEEDS SAMUEL J. KLAHR, INC. Plate and Window Glass T849 Main Street Bridgeport, Connecti f 300 Greenfield Hill Travel 75 Hillside Rd. Fairfield 255-2801 Main Office: Barnum Travel Bureau, 232 Fairfield Ave., 334-7225 api.-367-5381 GRAY LINE BUS CO., INC. 137 Dover Street Bridgeport, Connecticut 336-4735 COMPLIMENTS OF I FAIRPORT GULF STATION 1101 Post Road Fairfield 259-91 17 l airI'ioId Flour Ibvering' Shop IIHI I'I DSI III DAD I XI IIFIFII .Il I 'NNN 230 - 9836 Sweet Heart Brand Fountain Syrups and Crushed Fruits Coca Cola Distributors CONN. FOUNTAIN SYRUP CO 17 Mix Avenue West Haven, Conn. David Natkin, Pres. Phone: 865-2591 SUCCESS, HEALTH AND HAPPINESS TO THE CLASS OF 1970 MR. and MRS. THCMASJ LONG PATRICK K. LUNG '71 GEORGE A. MURRAY COMPANY INCORPORATED BUILDERS THE E. 81 F. CONSTRUCTICN CO Builders of. BERCHMANS HALL CAMPION HALL LOYOLA HALL XAVIER HALL GONZAGA HALL CANISIUS HALL REGIS HALL GYMNASIUM CAMPUS CENTER LIBRARY UTILITIES FACILITY SCIENCE CENTER Cunder construction! BRIDGEPORTZ C6NNECTICUT Phnnr TS-fTll'5 I EL. 255-3605 .JOI IN E. PERHAM oP1'lcfl.xN ALDERMAN .IEWELERS , 'Q . .-A-A FAIRFIELD CENTER MALL X QURS 1305 POST ROAD AILY: 9.00 - 5 30 FAIRFIELD. CONN 06430 HURS 5 FR' 9 OO'9 OO OPPA POST OFFICE IFRS Post Ruud I airfieId.Curm QRIARTYS IQUQR S GRE VVINES OF THE VVORLD 1434 POST ROAD FAIRFIELD, CONN. AI.. MORIARTY, MANAGER OQILO TEL. 335-5332 Houns 0 U, 9 T0 5:00 DAILY 41,613 9 TO 8:00 Tl-IURS. THE FLJRZE AND ACKLEY CO. FASHION EYEWEAR Fairfield Carpet Center 1961 MAIN ST. 255-3533 LYLE S FURZE BETWEEN NORTH AVE. AND GRAND ST. LAWRENCE J ACKLEY BRIDGEPORT OFFERING THE FINEST BRAND NAMES ALDON-BARWICK-MAGEE-BEATTIE-PATCRAFT- VIKING sm EQUIPMENT sNow at WATER THOPHIES . SPORTING c-ooos . ENGRAVING Varsity Sports Distributors, Inc. 555 KINGS HIGHWAY FAIRFIELD, CONN, 06430 ' cgcuan csfbecialiaf' ' Mom, . Fm, ro AM - 9 PM TEL 333-0195 SAT. so AM. . 5 PM 333-0196 Congratulations to the Class of 1970 IELD X -,, FNRF se g ALUMNI U N IV E RSI TY ' .fs 42+ N II Assocumow 411 1947' William J. George, D.D.S. '52-Pres. J h o n E. Doheny '53-Vice-Pres. Joseph G. McGann '51-Treasurer James M. Diorio '63-Secretary Edward J. Caldwell, Jr. '5'l Vincent R. D'Alessandro, Jr. '65 David P. Speno '65-Pres. New York Area Club Leonard S. Paoletta '56 Anthony P. Pagliaro, Jr. '54 Christopher S. Barrett '53 3 CQQNGRW l.llNlllQNS ASS Qi liQ Graduati0n . . .an important milestone in your life. Now you will oe seeking U further educational experience or a business oareer. Warnaoo has opportunities that may interest you now.. . or in the future. We invite you to come and see us soon. Warnaoo is Go and we would like to have you go with us. -v WARNACO INC. 350 LAFAYETTE STREET A BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT CB602 HATHAWAYI PURITAN SPORTSWEAR f W I ' The Fairfield Inn -Caterers Weddings 81 Banquets a specialty Cocktail Lounge open daily from 3:00 Phone 259-0841 680 Post Rd., Ffld, Conn. FAIRFIELD T227 POST ROAD WASH-DRY--FOLD SAME DAY SERVICE 'IOM DISCOUNT THE YOUNG MAN'S SHOP Our Young Man's Shop is crammed with clothes and furnishings geared to the campus crowd. 1499 Post Road Fairfield, Conn. Thruway Exit 21 R KINGQ HIGHWAY CUT-OFF of EXIT 24 FAIRIQELD, CONNECTICUT 06430 5 sign: Pont L me Y x N -S S x N Z I D I S x :N A Q ul A -S CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF '70 Love, THE Student Government Goodbye and love to all my friends. Michael Madaio 308 P. O. Box 826 Fairfield, Connecticut C5430 l203I 372-1190 - 734-3940 Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 'I970 Mr. 81 Mrs. Vincent R D'Alessandro Best Wishes To The Class of 1970 LEVERTY and HURLEY COMPANY 260 Bostwick Avenue Bridgeport, Connecticut 0 Congratulations and Best Wishes to the Class of 1970 from SPECIALIZED MANAGEMENT SERVICES INC. A Division of the Macke Co. The 1970 Manor Nloderator ..... ................................... . . . Rev. George Callerelli, S. Editor-in-Chief .... .... W illiam Anthony D,Alessandro Associate Editor. . . .............. Michael Madaio Sales Director ..... .............. R obert Wollow Advertising Staff ..... . . . Paul Callahan, Thomas Bligh Charles Coviello Production Staff ..... .... j ames Fitzpatrick, Louis Catalano Contributors: Poetry, Nicholas Rinaldi, Tony Salerno, Avoiding the New Action Army, Kevin Kelly, Rockin' Religion, james Honeycuttg The Metaphysical Society, King Dykemang QHOH Broadway Comes to Fairjield, Connecticut, Peter Hunt, The Crisis of the Human Environment, Edward Ianosko. Special Thanks to: james Findley, Paul Creeley, Fran Kelly, Peter Hunt. And to Thomas Reme for his Work in the lab, to Alan Pilch for his contributions to the Manor photography staff and to Ruppert Williams for his photographs and his time, to the University Council for use Ofits tapes. Printed by BRADBURY, SAYLES, O'NEll.L-PARAGON .up 5 'Z ' - aa, and oh flap Alf 4,44 -Q x X , , N ' ?4 ?1v, . - ' S7 +p'f'f' Z V -' 914. v-'X 4.-W ,Jinx .412 .,.'.x ,, I fur, kb: , 1- Cfg?? Q-g. Q, -f':':f1 , 4 '. - 1 ,, 1-gn. 3 'I , , 4, L .. .,, ., -: ' - 41 , n -4, .gk .V Um I , - Q. lf, . , ug r' ,Q ,xz ' 7' -'V 'IN ' -,. 4-.f-1 .- ... -tv 6 I A ,4'. 4' X-. ' . .-2 . ., Q- 'Cs' ,., C F v ww ' 1 'A f I u r, V . u .r 'A n cr .J yn' ' .vl- ,' .' . . ,Jr J.. f, qv' , ., ., 4 N- 2 W ci-' - 0... .X .X . ,X-,yY,f,,f,.f'.,Fj fl' ' 'L . :5'1'3fr hadnt 'f 1.v...lL' - -4raf.wf'wmE -'.'x . Q V I., ,, A ' Q


Suggestions in the Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) collection:

Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

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Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

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Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

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Fairfield University - Manor Yearbook (Fairfield, CT) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

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