St Josephs College High School - Chronicle Yearbook (Philadelphia, PA)
- Class of 1956
Page 1 of 204
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 204 of the 1956 volume:
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f '7 f7 , , 1 ' f, .. ti F .f ,. I gfcivikx ,, fl. f'Q-W7 xxx K A A Q1 62 jL s E ni 1 T r 1 e S U Y E I 1. f 11 E X E 2 v 3 ,a P. 5 1 V, I . Qachers at the prep Elie cultivators . . . . X -E E The 1956 Z if - 1 HMOY W ' fi U f V uf . X L 'W X 12 ., T! 9 9 fall j-524 X N Z X' gli Q! 4 E i f E e f ix N-Q f I I 5.1 ' , T if 0 ' 1 ' 1 The rwh S of 2631 5 fi 5+ . I Q 55 1 1 iiiii- ua - Ili .. m.. m In !l:Lqqs!M,vl!!!! I!!1!!n I!mI!M!!Il!,jf.'Q'i E555-I XX F Z ? ' ' ff 'fill , WNW W fi l ll fX 9 l filudy - L A ffl ff! 5 7 gl g. .I iw-' , f -Q' J L w ui' gin of E?0tlVltl6S 3 1' -11 ' A I if I 1 lil! II xlflull ll efl- i n , m u iff i .HHEFE aaa!!!-55555 V f Igllll l li iiir 355555.55 V 9 f ug- 3 ' ' W m ' Il lll X X SAINT .IOSEPH'S COLLEGE HIGH SCHOOL PHILADELPHIA, PENNA. E x.: xx v r' J r P Q the environment in which we grow 'J Q Mlfwtf .YK R , nina - , i if ,Lf IL .7356 u.,?,A,fIFQv 1,1 aiu! , gl, 'nf f iii? W ff 4' It E! Qi 6 I Fa v,?M' i M , ' ggi' '11f'gkv.mZ 'il av' anyzgg' 3 Hu as me R fu 75 .:a. QV' Y gb Pm! Q6 Ieuzvd My Nl W l fZ4 'M,., XMLJ ummm h 'verrvnmm qs-www ,I b w-www-, - Q,-NMN n- W .5 X S X .XX XFXXQ Xxx xx 'XX XX XX WE, THE CLASS of 1956, dedicate our Chronicle to St. Ignatius Loyola in this, the 400th anniversary of his birth into Heaven, because he has given us the Jesuits and inspired them with the firm and reassuring principles which have already put stability into our lives. For the Greater Glor of God T. ICNATIUS was born in 1491 at Loyola in the Province of Cuipuzcoa, Spain. As a young boy he became a page at the court of Ferdinand and lsabella. The turning point of his life came in 1521 when he was wounded during the French attack on Pampeluna, capital of Navarre. During convalescence, the reading of a Life of Christ led to an intense interior struggle which terminated in a vision of the Blessed Virgin with the Child Jesus, at whose sight he felt a surpassing sweetness, which finally left him with a loathing for his past sinsf' His conversion was complete, but the planning of his life's work took another twenty years. In March, 1522, he made a general confession at Montserrat where he suspended his sword and spent the vigil of the Annunciation in watching at Our Lady's altar. The next eleven months he often retired to the cave of Manresa where he began to make notes which grew into the book of the Spiritual Exercises. Seven hours a day he spent in prayer and three times a day he scourged his emaciated body. After recovering from a severe illness brought on by these penances, he went to the Holy Land. In 1521 he began studying Latin with the school boys at Barcelona, and completed his philosophy and theology at the University of Paris in 1535. Mcantime at Montmartre in Paris, on August 15, 1534, Ignatius and a group of six followers pronounced their vows of poverty and chastity, adding the alternate promise of going to Palestine or placing themselves at the disposal of the Pope. En route to Rome, at La Storta, he had a vision of Cod the Father, in the company of His Son, who said, '61 will be propitious to you in Rome. Ignatius and his Company of Jesus offered their services to the Holy Father. On September 27, 1540, Pope Paul III approved the preliminary draft of the Constitutions, after the Fathers had promised to say 3,000 Masses to obtain this favor. In April, 15111, lgnatius was elected the first General, and on April 22 he and his companions made their profession in the Church of St. Paul, Outside the Walls. Ignatius continued to govern the Society until his death, July 31, 1556. He was beatihed by Paul, V in 1609, and canonized by Gregory XV in 1622. Pius X1 declared St. Ignatius heavenly patron of all Spiritual Exercises. Soldier of Spain Convert to Student of Christ Priest of Cod Saint of the Church at , are cultivators because ici.. ,- We-w: ,iwgiiafi t Q, ' ' f M, ,. 1? S' M t 4.J55Q:fs- gf V Q' 'W-Q,QH L L, MS' ab 5 A Q 7? 3 5, A f A ,-'L. f - y , 5 J Aisb E K h 3 2 ,Sim ,gs 3 5 . ' ? ' Magi? 'Q , I , ff' Lf? A 9x K' fm rss. , z vi ,fm . s ' M A W . k lk - . in Q 'ff-ii A A W? x ....--n - 'env 25 sig W. if ,M , ,ap , X gf x.'5 , Qxi fs, Qu'-2 q ina 1 'i Jag!! A . Q K xx , N. is W 4, UE4 y.- if 2 if . E Q X if fa ,wax L .5 . , uv-. -an in 11' 'Q N 4 'Q,:: 853. -,5..3g3ig K Ah DVLL 4, aft N A u u messa e from Father Rector Dear Seniors: St. Ignatius was a great example of growth in Christian perfection. You know his life and how he grew from a worldly soldier into a godly saint, the founder of the Jesuit Order, and the foremost leader of the counter- reformation. You have begun your own growth in Christian perfec- tion here at St. Joseph's. Let St. Ignatius be your inspira- tion to never stop growing as long as you live. Pray to him during this, his 400th anniversary year, to obtain for you all the grace you need to reach your full stature in Christ. Cod bless you. Rev. Joseph A. Cawley, SJ. President Rev. Matthew W. Kane, SJ., Treasurer. Rev. Joseph A. Cawley, SJ., Pres- ident of St. Joseph's Prep, cele- brating Mass in the Cesu Church. Rev. Martin J. Casey, SJ., Vice- President. w '3- 'H .-. kip is al' ,ff- , . ss 'i if X5 C JJ s AWS. , i:!:,'1,z.EW ez f M Yi N 'l X11 52 4. . JF' Xi Av 44 .4 Mr. Earl I. Hart has been astounding Prep seniors by the ease with which he solves seemingly insoluble problems in mathematics for eleven years. He is also our Athletic Director. Mr. John Blong coaches the sophomores in mathematics, the seniors in English, the members of the varsity basketball team in the intricacies of that complex sport, and the mem- bers of our one-year-old baseball learn withal. t -are w i 377: -:5f 1 S512 i xw Us 4. 4 , i rn- 'R is-s.2,m K rf. '- r-:. .mai-1 ,-'f-fn' -gf ' ..,. i o,',' K '..f s ie fee-wr-fi n -fs .t., if i ,. . X M,- V 4 p t Q A ' 'i' - .. M ,,:. i ae pp is ig .ff L www- -N- , x w . Q x 5 ,gi ff - ,Le ,N i Qqgskswifw S New ,., .... .xfwwm . ii. -X-mexw f Q R 56 ge, ,QA idx QR, X X W YY -z - f 0 ma Q icffdfiwahiyafmwq, E i blk I 1 . K ,un :- 1 41? U Zz' x A I v jx ff Q g Q 1'i5?ffVk 'ff , my M. Q f '-ff I A 7-., we QU ,flfi iii? QEQQW. . 3 wry:-pgig: La - 21255 1 2 . A -Lli 9152? f .A W M Wag '91, If ' ' f. Y .11 ,, x,,, L, ff ,lggff , L. W Wm .,.Awfw1-'va' ,E 1 1 s ' x . p N ' fl is f . A Q M, ' K N if mr SK 5 X X W' my QR is ? S, yi , .U wif ' 'Z 'La- gy f' fm . 11 5554? . U . 7 usfi,l : 4 V . , , , L 1 .,,, ..WA.., . ..,,,:, .,,!., , ,, My Y N .,.. xg - 1 K k Q? , ii z,.. V 2 lg U x 1315 1:5 Vi? L 6 f Wifw lr V, i l ly! have to go to a Jesuit high school to know what the Jesuit Scholastics are to f I r 1 W3 xflf 'f ff l 1 r f v y' V Halfway between their entrance into the Society of Jesus and their goal, the Jesuit priesthood, the Scholastics are of our own generation. They are young men, in sympathy with our peculiar ideals and temptations as children of the day. They moderate most of our extra-curricular activities. They are available. We talk to them freely and they make holiness seem possible to us. The Scholastics 15 L.- v 4 l ....,. if w l X N ,wi A im+gMt xii ' N Fatllcr Clmrlcs A. St'l1nni'r, SJ., tt-at-lies latin, l':llgIllSll and history In l J, untl is tht- originativv niuclcrutor of the Prvp Alumni ASSOi'l1lll0ll. Fatllvl' ,lulin lf. llivtillvtt, SJ.. lPill'lll'S l,utin :Intl l'.llQllSll to l lu and was rvsponsllrlv tlns yvnr fm tlic lint- l'lllQ'I'lillllllll'Ill provitlc-ml lay our tmtlitiollzllly fine Cape and Sword Drunlutic Clulr. .3- .s '23 .N..X,5, A if -may Mr. John A. Moritz teaches us how to reason in third year with the 2000-year-old device of Euclid, geometry. Mr. John J. Gaffney is the mainstay of the math department in first year. He generously imparts life-principles along with the principles of mathe- matics. f 1 0' 1 1 lf'-' ,tffrf If' 'Ju I g - I K 1 , Arn, I A M any 'if' tx Q ' 1-ff' 1 .pf - ,f V rf Lg' ,fr M ,, wg,,.,w 5,4--v fx 4, :Q1,I,alf'i K' ,- , ff 1 'pw 1 ,,,'f'f 2' Q...-1-f ',. 1. .T ' 1.1 rl MQW' xv Mr. 110801111 A. Rll2 lQiPl'O tPZ1Cllf'S ch:-111ist1'y to Mr. 101111 J. DCl'l1ligl1,', Coach of H10 footlmll team and gym i11st1'11c'tor, t'0IIlll1lllliL'lllCF sound lll'illCil7ll'S with pc-1's011z1lity and wit. Mr. 11111105 J. Murphy. nvwcst z1dditi011 to thc P14011 Lay Faculty, is also a wclcomc addition. j11111u1's and giws 1116111 1111 0xz1111plc of thc dcvo scientist. tvd NAM th boys who com to us are we 1 J W 4-:Ml 1 , , mf ,fi A dh. e ef f fn ESA g ' 'Emi J nw M. A . 1, 54. Sbgtri ., ffl , bw-,Q i -- K . , ,gn - 2 ,,.,,N1 V ,K H AQ. P' , -:yr , if pf Q 5 A 13,3 Z , 92, ' if !'y ',?w is ik, A 6,4 'Z f , , F V , f L, 1 xv ' ..,, , ..,:. A ' f W il L , A L,-. . xv' :Tx X ' A :': .,, , Q if .Q.,,, .. ' fab ' 'W gil? ff L Wk 5 -1 1 37-.gin ., 1 ' l - 4- - ' 1 'Ti ' ' X 1358 QF , fs' my x ' ' in , Sf., . are 1' f..H- -t-fkxw L , my . ., A L,. Sikh! A ., -,.- It VLC 3 i'A 55 ' ,:, 4, 1 bk ax ,... - K' , 'E Wf s. Q11 Qgp R yy. 3 X ,N QW, :X , Q33 K'-'l'. Z.. Seeds Bursting with possibilities M-H ., ,- 'T' 4 ' . A m gf m M .- M U55 ia 4,5-. X ff- Q' :X ..s5i5gu ..,. . . M L . 5, Q 1 wr '35 .ix 19 - EalT5If?5sI.'1 ' Y S A ,,.. wi? X? Qfgw ii M w 5 Q -N, , .0 4' 3 - ips fi T .ex Y Yu a 9: I, E 1' 'V' Fi 5 0 S S A 5 ' . 2 5' W 5 X -Nw ,R g if' ' sf , A f Ky dwg: 5'-gel IiPiQg'ii13S7 ' 2 is? H T -A 11 -TQ-QQ -,,:. , L,,X, A 1 , ,J,.ML.sx--X - wr S if QW 4 .Fw .lx nil Maxwell, M. Jeuug. J. O'Brien. J. Clement. Second Roux' F. Orr, C. McCafl'crt5 S. IICUIHHIIII, XV. De Long. T. Finan, M. Smith, A. Banenas, Harris, Caspvl 7 Mr. T. J. Sm-mwy. SJ. Fourlh RIOILI' J. Gallagher, Vw. Rybacki, A. PiC1'Ill2ll.lC0, 1 Maher, T. Andcrcr, P. Kirchof'fer. . . and inculcate study habits . . Firsl Roux' M. Brauka. A. xvilll-ESl'llPllll2lCll, L. Lane, A. Thomson. R. Seigrr. J .l. Gorclon, J. Foli. C. lfxans, D. Busch, C. Strand. P. Earl. Third Razr: li. Mclnlyrc W... Q Eg 'K 5 5 -K ,, f X X f , ms pw . 1 - ,X in i , f A 'L ' N I . W f J ' f' 'Q f'ffQzQQs?fE1,fg ' , ,, X ' x, 1 , ' , ' wh 2 1' .x ,Qkf5v15Qz-5351-fi ' A 'Q Q .Q N V K X, if ,Q f 14 - 0 ,pw 1 'an' A ik .' ' P ,E x -v-, QA 5 . h SG , ILT' K. 1. 3. Sw umm NIH lfll lfll ld! ' ID First Row: R. Cunningham, J. Anthony, R. Wurster, J. Smyth, M. McAndrews, P. Porreca, T. Buckley. Second Row: T. Waskiewicz, J. Gallagher, R. Fitzgerald, C. Sulzhach, W. McKeevcr, V. Barattieri, J. Gorman, G. Fitzpatrick, J. Hilger. Third Roux' P. Rosato, D. Sgro, A. Naseef, G. Donnelly, R. Malach, W. Kritzler, J. Over- beck. Fr. J. Dougherty, SJ. Fourth Row: S. Sarat, T. Mawhinney, J. Barrentine, J. De Phillipo, A. Koliba. . . . and for two hours a day drill Latin . . . E f Q L... 5 If C First Roux' J. Thompson. D. Segrnvc-Daly. J. Hyun. J. Slmrpo. J. Hoyle. N. Uunnv. J. Clark. lf. Kelley. Svconzl Roux' H. Colden, D. HilIlSl'l1IIlllllll. J. 1.0 5ll'illlsIP. J. Strain. L. Maguire. A. X illl Parys. F. A1l'llhiIllN'y, lf. tlflllilgllfxll Coyle. Tlzirrl Roux' E. McBride. J. Jankowski. A. Perlini. J. DQ-Lone, P. Lanllw, D. MVAIPH. C. IgI'1llH'UIA4l., J. Mulhern. C. Houislor. F. Burke, Fl. F. J. Bradley, 5.1. Fourth Roux' R. U'Ncill, I . Dolce, J. Carroccio. J. Slawek, M. Dooley. U . . . and the rich treasure of ancient history . . . Firsl Rong' J. Moors. J. Murphy. H. Quinn, D. Mcxultv. J. Seborowski. R. Mn'- Climlicy. W. Roth. W. Hunifen. T. Junkcr. Sec011fiR01l'.' J.'King. R. Binns. F. Cullan W. Rvpslu-1'. B. Holm. C. Murim-lli, L. Bonclli. R. Baker. R. Wcisgrau. Thirrl Ron' Mr. ll. T. Nctlvr. SJ.. B. Sxaszurowsky, J. Logan. A. Chiurco. J. Spakauskas, P. Mvlfcolvy. M. lYAnlonio. C. Fox, XV. Cummerc. Fourllz ROIL'.' J. Graham, B. Simone D. Folino, H. Dougherty, M. Howitz. . . . and the rigorous mental exercise which is algebra . . . - pl? H, .2 4 S. SNA ' f Q! il Q . . ,Q N if AS., fav' X , -q-,gf Q..-. -1 a is fi in .RSV WMM Q . 5:25 Q 1 Ii- 1 Q if Q R f 5 -3-F . A X if ,5 i f 5 K 5 35 -mmm-N. t it Qi? NA 5 ' s , b Q, M , f 1 B' Q M H' - ' 1 , Q ' K Fil I -523 .31 hz Q ' . - L:LEf gfQ '5,gQff+ PL-- ' i ff-Lf -x ! fi f' 53 1, Am.' A if , E R.. . .WS. iv W .X gif? Qflmfa ,M 4 kg 15. X 3SZ3i M?f ,W g XRS wh ,J xml. Im 1 x 1+ Q 4 1 Q E343 5 Q L Y x, l Y, X as N? .E Q x Q , X 3. f . 5 5 5, , Q K . Q if lv Q , W N s WN ' WN' yia, ' Q' Q5 Y fi QQ' 9. . fs f . ' . - , ,-jg,,fs'f:ff ig-ff 'F 'S f ,f 1 '3if?ffE51J5f5fx,,, . .fS1 ik?Qf. , w ,F fi 5 , L xiii :if 3915 fi? ' V -..,. hx x . ' X 50' 1 QQ M WfE V ' iff f. -, g,:3L,g-rr . -z . x X Y 4 . isgeiwi' if - Q ,ig ff f ' 4 A .s . E fgg 1 '3t, !ffg's'I WW. 335 Q - -155,61 , 2 U Q S pf S . X, S Q msn f X g 5 5 mix m 'll!Q.,., '-up-.4 QQ K In L ff ,xg We I 'Q 3,1 L . ,. , it . W ,,sI3X:,f W I f-95' i Qilfi-T iizgf mix' f L5 ' Myigxf x 1 , K -y, ,X X, ..,,.,f.:,Qk5 3 Q X . . . :RY -uf: ff ii. . ,Q 5 .., Q t me X, xi- ,, ' 5 :SX ' R Sig Q W Qs? S YS ax f X K ss.. fix .X .. A - f A3 5 1 3 E X , ,:Q,Y,,:..,: L V X 1 Q v , - x . N5 .. .SQL Q , 65? ' . g I Q .gf I -gLL. S XX N : A 4 . x 9 J 3 , I , . 4 .A , K ', t.x..X, , , x SQ X Q 5--Q v5 s A' 1 sf eg? Z 4 ,1i,, Q? W Q 4. . ,, 'Z miss in 5 5 ff' va- fmi Pg' . .rg v :M ' f 2 fwvi lr K 3 ,P if Q5 35 gf., bg -Q W.: 'RS' P 9, ww-f wg--. is n A A 4,1 K 2 S 1 A in .g.-g- -5 'S e 1 ,, Q 1 i e T s EM U1 4, sa ,fU4L m 5 ,B 5 Q A H W 5 W Q. R A my gf 31 s First ROILH' R. Staclalniclc. YV. Doyle, S. Shoemaker, C. Brady, P. Pinto, XV. Finlay Second Roux' l.. Stevens. P. Ad0lIl2lIllS. C. Connolly. 1. Dale, C. Carroll, F. Sc-hamme J. Cabrey, J. Bluett, B. Hnatiuk. Thirrl Row: Mr. C. Barton, J. Celllar, F. Brennan R. lVladdalena, li. Monuglxan. J. DeSalvo. D. Kelly, E. Carlin. L. CutlafeSta. K Andersen. Fourllz Rout J. lNlcAnulty, J. Ullland, J. Wullowicz, F. Mulino, M. Gm agllan, J. Caristo, J. Munshower, E. Mooney. builds upon the old subjects like English . . . W vunv4t Y. I wimwx X. X wwf Q X L es Q .. .W .-AN K., . A--m.w......,... calls for drill and reading in old subjects like Latin . . . First Rout J. Kelley, ll. llook. J. Sulwick. J. Malloy. J. Patton. N. 'lll'0lllll0, J. 'llill'gf'l, ,l. l.ac'c'y, T. lloylv. SPFOIIII Roux' ,l. lllCcl0Vf'l'Il, li. Lliillliil, J. liolm. A. Juslwl. J. liuvny. l . Kuminski. YV. Cliurchill. A. Blll'Q10yIlC, C. Fagan. Third Razr: Mr. Falu- lwllu. Sul., J. Uralunn. G. Sign-l. li. We-lsll. l.. CP1'z1nkmx'ski, W. l'llll1Ill'SlN'. l . llursxv- zvwski. ll. Nlingle. ll. Burton. C. Svgcr. Fourllz Roux' J. liyun. ,l. CUl'I'lgIilll, li. Salem, l,. Brooks, C. Turner, V. Dvllcncdctto. Absent: li. Leahy, K. Quinn. K S . . . and though the discipline and many demands are still there . . . firsl Roux' li. Cllillllllilll, W. Noxuk, J. Short, ll. Mahoney, C. Cowen. J. Humor, J. livlly. A. Zappaln. C. Nagle. Sccmzrf 15010: A. Dalo. J. lVlcCo1'111ic'k, L. lvlillllillll. H. lirmsn. li. Mzlzzolu. li. SJIIIIIIOIIS. G. McDermott. li. Burns. P. liavc-lli. Third Rrmx' J. Lange. li. Corclon, l . liLllll2lIllIllCl'. T. Prior. J. Appalucvi. li. 1,1-amy. J, Weiss. NV. Duffy. NV. Klein. Mr. J. Muore. S.J. Fourlh Roux' T. Deudy, J. lNlcCrall1, C. Schorpp, P. Kelly. J. Uroclll, J. lllcllzllldlcss. M ' ' ---- .WM . .. J W, . M v-----ww, mvmwmnu- First Row: P. Barnes, J. illuhony. ll. Currie, B. Dettinger, R. Lewis, S. Stevens, C. Scalies, P. Arino, T. Lloyd, A. Bateman. Second Roux' J. Ksansnak, J. Darrah, J. O'Brien, R. Esposito. Jajko. R. Kasper, J. Corr, J. Oilirien, J. lnnes. J. Sosnowslxi. Third Row: Fr. Lynch. SJ., F. Lawrence, J. McCrea, P. Sensor, J. Leyden. S. llallvr- meier, W. Rooney, T. Higgins. J. Caine, C. Bryan, C. McFadden. Fourth Row: J. Imsenik, E. Whittaker, K. Duckworth, J. Mitchell, T. Leggett, C. Meakim. . . . so is the encouragement and the comraderie. Junior year First Row: J. Campbell, E. MaCcf-. J. LaR0sa, J. Naseef. B. Deviiw, T. McCalla I . Mvis. Second Row: lf. Davis, R. Efldowes, J. Kelly, C. Grandy. E. Flegol, J I m1-iida, J. Dizxngelo, T. Owens. J. McGrann. Third Roux' Mr. J. Maltern, D I30lVlar4:0. YV. Trainer. XV. Klepczynski. P. Bossow, C. 0'Neil. J. 0'C0nnell, lf Mloclzik, J. Connor. M. Fanelli. C. Mulvenna, H. Halloran. Fourlh How: A. Cavallo H. Sawycky, D. U'Connell, J. Wagcnhoffcr, P. Smith, L. Kosinski. . . is a difficult year . . . we-yu lllm ,E . :wg i. 4 am., 8-mf ul wi 1621 K 1 ,,,. Q Lynch, M. Oli, H. Klllfllllf, C. l'ccl1111o. K. Hodgcls, NV. l'1Clll'1l. A . . . and the more advanced work in Creek class fir A , . Sclleiclcl. lf. UvlC11c1'i1'0. Svvmzzf Rami J. Pullclolii. M. RiTlldl'2llll, N. ,lllC'lP. NY. lluylm 'I' H11 111 W Tcl' C' Smuux lx Clllll Nl 1 llll 0 I 1 llx II1 I lx N11 a 112. . 'l. .. - '. .1 .1 . 11' S :0Illl0 -. H In 'rmti . . .A . . . 1. . 1 1 J. P. l..1l11ll, BJ.. L. Io1101'11. L. l.c1'111. 5. Mz11'l111 I lvu-11111-1' J U N111--1 I lwllI'l l1l H I ivst. W. M1'l711cl1le11. H. AIl1K'I'il1'0Ill'. K. Hud1l1'11. J. Iil'l'l'UIl. Fuurllzl lfmcx' I' 'sl Roux' T. Tillllly, J. 3ICCI'illIl. M. Zi1'f'111'cli. lf. Crimlh. P. H11'11v. I. Tllt'k1'l' J xi 'P .5 . y , , 45- 4'-4 V . L . ww . A . ' . R ,Q X W S. sf ' S f x w Mx 4 x Q it A - .f if i :J 4 .-hmm.. 1. fl Y' 1. x . I Mpk Q. 1 ix Q. 5535 V Q Q 5 . .X . ..- x .. i Xxx -f A. nf f S y s. - , 'Xa s J' 1 . X - LX-9. Q 1241. f X 1 .gk ' 5 ' W at . 2 . 9 . My .'-.-,-:..u..-HN .f f .f - 'wif .1 11 . f, .ia...,f,g,yxg . -...Q-iv. , . - Qkfmi-' +1-K-FN S 'Mw..t N1 . ' .. L. Q- gs. , I I E. f wk e i Ai. , N, inn Vx ii if .. 1. Q U, v 1 ' X 15 an :Rik Jax by U ia. in 5 sf wwf- wkgi igg i W 3 1- .fWx,,m . 3H,,.h. -r. 'M-nr i mmm, A Wgvg ' ' R Qrflg f - AN X47 ,xxx X - gwifsi -p4P'!' 2 'Jw I , .. . www qi.kL,.Lw1 my me-. 1 . - Ni: Q W ,f 15 ' if 'vu ' 'NWS sk X! :FM 5 , x ,,.: . ' M t K ws K f ' A X, eff' Riff X 9.3 K W . fi: ig. x 'N :SSH X X Si . X xx .Q .:Q, 9. Q dii C4 2 Q' 7 x -f R -xnxx A i ourished and matured b the clean air of stud , The transforming sunlight of grace, ,Hurxt W ga x a f fam a aira ql? A A 1 X13 X ! 7 'rar N a . 'X Q 2 X AUTUMN fr as if , l,4 gcfviw- N, ,K qi- ww V , 1 ,f g. , ,L , -V 4. . Sm, H 4 5 vi 1. M wir 1? Wi 116 7 E! n -3 4' 5 5' if , 2 3 S Z ak! igf XX gi lj? The rieh soil of friendship, and 5 2, 16 Q the rain of r 1 , x X ig bxsiq R A Ea 3' xg W., KK K N .gk . - KK V . ' i a ,af X K 2 K K KK X K KKK K K KKIKKKKKK ,K K K K KKKK K K-,K K XKK KW K K 'Ki K 2 , , 2 KN K .Q KK EEK Wk K YK iw, K K 3 . mi A X K A K K -+ kg.X KAK 21 .KK . L K 3 Kal. Xxx ix K QKK ' xx :Xt 5 S, . b , X2 K XK Q . K . K . 'I 1 X K il he ities i 1 Q A he R v, , ei v .. f E x 'I is : If! '5 sw, I 5 H!! 'ft1'h . - .TNF K5KgAgL '7Q' '11 ,Rf , ' V' 'fe i X L H 1 1 ' ' . . . K K, , xl 1 - ,ff , . E . Q ' 1 '5 ' . v 1 N .K h Z . . , , ,K S.. 'K KKK 1.4, in Q SK K i V ' - A 'fr 2 L v W x K YK KK . gK 1 M M L 1 E K :K 'X 2 we - 1 , 3: 1 . k - ' X f aff' 41 'wwf 4 be 5' 'rv'- ffq L, Q, Y' ij ,,va ',M,..4av if- ,.,,.,fv ' X6 1 .M-155' I I k gif. we f , e Y' , f, Klydv, ,K :IREM 'KW' ,X W trifif'.g.Q.. ' TW, ' ' f . min' ,, MN' Q . Agp mf 'W V I , 'xy-N' , ,W Mm i iwwfhffwfihfizhhf fwJ ' 'i5'4 'Z ' JWwsff1bKd.,..ff-'A' K , ff' Q TQ,-,af fv 4 ,,,,,,,.- W! . K,,,.f' ,, 4 ff' haf W V ,ef ,fff f' ,sew , , A ' .maxi-KZ,,,f, ff uj'M .W -f-fjje 7 Q +'e'M ?m ,, V I wig, 51? W N K, .-fm -be-' ,,--'i M' ,, .-v q fx, . -fz 'i N ,ww- ,,.,.6-W- 'f..,f - ' . V K KH,,.,,h KV: I in .fyw , WW ' 3' W 4 ,,,,,!,,,wl 'M 4K QT ,.,f V' 4 e,7f,,,f WJ 'W' . prix,-? 'f ' ' , .nw KW M ovnw , , ,W W f--ff W... , -... .-.Q rf- ' LZ' A V x ,A N X S I - , , Q5 wg- X Vi M3-Z. 5 S Q W fn 'ifxzzssiigigfggff mn mr h A WEN 4 I Q: if 2 .F Q - 2 1' 5 Q - X 1' ? Q L k . Q-,iii 3, W' L Q x wm- ,,,w A 33, ,, My shi avail. 'W' The Mass . . . is the most important activity at school . . . because in the Mass our activity is maclv one with the activity of Christ. All four years lwgan with a Mass of the Holy Ghost to call clown Corrs blessing on the school year. And 1-very Frirlay began with a Mass of the League of tlw Savrvcl Heart at which we rc-dedicated all our activity to Cod's greater glory. Father Cawley cclclmrates the Mass of the- lloly Ghost, 1955: H. . . and l will go unto the altar of Cod, to Cod who gives joy to my youth. E '? 4' The freshmen attend to the word given to them by Father Stephen Laut, SJ., who can be seen here only by his effects. A group of freshmen ex- amine the works of Dan- iel Lord, SJ., outside the students, chapel. Father Charles Dolan, Sul., striving to get the sophomores into the palm of his hand. Q vi:- Q x. W Q S Q C Q E454 Xpfvl' A my. S . Hg, ...- 51, S nior J M ,xr Q fwm, , if i 552.52 . f:k.5L:i7i ff' :. 'W X X , X 3 Km' lfifi S X as 3 fa 2, af Q is 4. I 1 a 4 f MA M, X-I n S Y um Retreat This one was different. We fseniorsl had the school to ourselves for three days. There was no class, except in how to conquer ourselves and order our lives as Catholic Christians. There were no teachers, except Father Burke, SJ., who lec- tured from a little book called The Spiritual Exercisesw on a man called Jesus Christ who was also Cod. What had we done for Christ? What were we doing for Christ? What were we going to do for Christ? Answering these questions in the relative silence of retreat prayer and reHeetions was anything but easy to anyone who was honest. And yet- strangel-when we answered them honestly, with eontrition and resolution in con- fession, we found ourselves walking on air. What a man! What a way to spend three days! What a way to live! It was good to he good. More memorable than Father Burke's inspiringly frank talks, more memorable than our personal interviews with him, more memorable than the silence and prayer- fulness that overtook so many, is that realization: it was good to be good. The Senior Retreat was a high point. The meditations lcd by Father Thomas Burke, SJ., were great but . . . . . . the personal interviews were the greatest, and well worth the wait. we-D Senior Sodality What is the Sodality? What is the Sodality's purpose? What does the Sodality do? One cannot be more concrete than tl1is: The Sodality is an organism whose purpose is to save and perfect souls. There is nothing more concrete in life. How? Through prayer, especially mental prayer, and through good works. The main activity of the Senior Sodality, therefore, can not be chronicled. It was interior. The effect of membership on each of the sodalist's souls is a personal matter known only to God. The weekly meetings, the days of recollection, the exercises in mental prayer all had a different effect on each of the members. The effect of the Senior Sodality on others is also incal- culable. Even the children on the Puerto Rican catechetical mission and the patients over at St. Josephls Hospital could only guess at the efficiency of Sodality grace. Ujficers Prefect, Vincent Cenovesig Vice-Prefect, Frank Nashg Secretary-Treasurer, Lawrence France. Discussion Leaders: Bernard Currie, John Silcox, H. Cornell Bradley, Paul Shoup, Thomas Cannon. The Senior Sodality in the Students' Chapel: interior formation came before the apostolate. Who made you ? Why did Cod make you? The Junior Sodality: charity began at home and at school. l 4 , 5 mf ' We meet each Wediiesday morning during the year to help each other appreciate the meaning of the rules of our new way of life, and together we planned ways in which we could help others to think and act like Christ. Our principal concern was the school, our classes and our extra- curricular activities. If we hoped to be good Catholic men in the future, we had to he good Catholic men in school now. Then we studied the family together. If we hoped to be good Catholic fathers in the future we had to he good Catholic sons now. It was difficult work heeause of the material: ourselves. It is difficult to chronicle because of where it took place: inside our minds and hearts. Memories are not made of things like this. But men areg Christians areg saints are. Ojicers Prefect: Tom Carlin. Discussion Leaders: Edward Colts- man, Joseph Jerome, Michael Floyd, Robert Morris, Charles Sweeney, Arthur Rodgers. The Ollicers: Torn Carlin, Prefectg Harry Halloran, Vice- Prefevtg lid Cottsinan and Dick XViekersham, Discussion Leaders. Other discussion leaders were Michael Floyd, In ..,..t I. I ...-f.. ..,- I Znlmrr Mm-rig, Arthur Rodgers and Charles we g l at .,,.M.-N--...Nt rffmrr . .... V ,. .W , t.,, lt .., ,,...--M-t,,M.V,w ,i.f.wM.f.W ,, Innini' gnI15IIifV -umm in Lg Q M 2 1'-jf 4 m Ls , ik. Vkyh In Q.. . I ,,.,fXQ, Q u, is f K . M. 5 if P t z l-1 -'kL W 4 -Q - N ,W A .:.. A 1 , 5 X , ibn 'I 1' 1 .f- ' . .. , M, Mm.-,.....-.....4.,..w -..W -W, X X A- M Qggk f 4 Q S if 1 if dallty Mr John he Freshman Sodality 1. What? A spiritual program for the freshmen to give sodality candidates the necessary knowledge of the way of life which is the sodality, to introduce them gradually into living this life, and to build a firm foundation for future sodality living. 2. Why? To train and test hopefuls so that the moderator can judge whether they can make it and so that the hopefuls can judge whether they want to make it. 3. How? Through weekly meetings which introduce the candidates to the sodality rules, the meaning of holiness, the apostolate, mental prayer, the act of consecra- tion-everything. And through personal interviews with the moderator, Mr. Richard Ferry, SJ., who checked progress and helped hop the hurdles. Girard College Teachers: lst row: Charles Reed, Daniel Slack, Rich- ard Simmons, William Hanley, James Grant. 2nd row: Mr. James Cahill, SJ., John Silcox, Arthur Rodgers, Frank Nash, H. Cornell Bradley, Ed Sobel, Anthony Tam- hurri. . C , , v :---f W irard College Teachers It was in Stephen Cirardls will that no cleric should enter his magnificent institu- tion so that the boys there would not be upset by the type of religious wrangling that had broken out into an epidemic in his day. The boys, however, are allowed to go out and receive instructions in the faith of their parents. S0 the Catholic young- sters troop over to St. Joeis twice a week where the seniors teach them catechism and prepare them for Communion and Confirmation. A work so dear to the heart of Christ hardly needs praise from other sources. ,lohn Flanagan, President. The Barbelin Debating Society M.. Mr. James Moore, SJ., Moderator, with four demosthenic seniors: Bill Hanley and ,lohn Flana- gan tstandingjg ,lohn Laflerty and Al Heumann fseatedj. Resolved that governmenlal subsidies should be granted according to need to high school gradu- ates who qualify for additional training. Glance at the above resolution, the national de- bate topic for the 1955-1956 school year. ls it worth foregoing more afternoons than not of sun- shine and fresh air to go up in the debating room and argue and write and argue and re-write and finally to prepare closely knit, logical and irrefut- able cases both for and against the resolution? ls it worth all the training in delivery, in cross- questioning, in refutation? The members of the team were enthusiastic in their 'gYesl', No amount of time and elfort was too much to expend to develop power in logic, speechmaking and speech-giving. Besides there were the social advantages of debate trips to places like Georgetown University, and of getting to know well some intellectually alive students in a common cause. Even if they had not come out first among 46 schools up at St. Peter's College with a trophy to show for it, first at Cathedral in Trenton, and first in debate at Temple University, this was an activity whose benefit could not be measured out in man- hours-and there were plenty of them. The Barbelin Debaters: lst row: Lafferty, Hanley, Heumann, Flanagan, Nash, Wiza, Duggan. 2nd row: Quinn, Britt, Jerome, Cottsman, Callahan, Blair, Rodgers. Sallie Activities in which the Barbelin Debating Societies Participated: 91 Temple University Speech Festival. 11 Exhibition debates before several Catholic 101 Fordham University Tournament. Schools of the city and the K. of C. 111 Georgetown Prep Tournament. 21 The weekly debates of the Philadelphia Catho- 121 Valley Forge Tournament. lic Forensic League. 131 Eastern Catholic Tournament in Pittsburgh 31 The Peacock Tournament at St. Peter's Col- 141 N.F.L. Tournament in Englewood, N. J. lege. 151 Senior Elocution Contest. 41 Red Bank Tournament. 161 World Affairs Council of Philadelphia. 51 Camden Catholic Tournament. 171 1 Speak for Democracy Contest. 61 Cathedral Trenton Tournament. 131 Jesuit Oratorical Contest in Washington, 11. C. 71 Seton Hall University Tournament. 191 C.Y.O. Speech Contest. 81 Georgetown University Tournament. 201 And Many More. The CIIZIIHPSI-IJCSI out of forty- six schools in the Poacock Dolmatc 'l'ot11'11u1x1v11t up at St. Peter! Col- lege i11 Jcrsoy City. 1 . - .,,..,..-W 1 We of the affirmative Did I understand you to uBul this, Of COUYSC, is 3 , , Say , , , contradiction . . . U The Wal h Debating Society . . . is Composed of freslnnen and sopllonwore hopefuls. By dint of the haul work ol' the lllt'lIllN'l'S :mtl the inspirat- tion of the lnoclerator. Mr. llolmert lhtlztlwllal. SJ., the Wlalsh clehators hnxe had il full year. learning anal apply- ing the laws of clelulle. they how not only won for them- selves the eoveterl iilSill'Cl of IIlt'llIlN'I'Slllp in the National Forensic League hut ltave also taken giant fteps touurmls the realization ol two of their most gotllike potentinlities, the powers of eloquent uriting uncl speech. Mr. Robert Fallalaellal, SJ., hloclerutorz loree presnpposecl facts. The Walsh Debatcrs. Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr The Music Department of St. ,loseph's Preparatory School Vito LalVlonaca, Director of the Concert Band Frank Battaglini, Instructor in Saxophone George l'losfeld, Instructor in Cornet and Trumpet John DelVIatteis, Instructor in Flute and Piccolo Nicolai Mastrangelo, Instructor in Clarinet Lewis Hallo, Instructor in Oboe Jules Serpentini, Instructor in Clarinet Frederick Stoll, Instructor in Brass Ciacinto Vitacolonna, Instructor in French Horn Nicholas D'Amico, Instructor in Percussion James Cullen, Director of the Clee Club H. Cornell Bradley, '56, President of the Band David Christian, '56, Vice-President of the Band Clifford Wolfe, ,56, Vice-President of the Band Carroll gl. Bourg, SJ., Moderator ,Iohn D. Sweeney, SJ., Assistant Moderator The Band Israfel or Gabriel? Could it be lsrafel's heart strings going to pieces? Or is it Gabriel on a Chinese lute? Whatever it is, please shut the door and keep it shut! ! Surely you can guess. It was the door to the Band room. Well, the boys must learn to blend their musical talents for the concert at Town Hall come spring. You enjoyed their Christmas Concert, did you not, and certainly you appreciated their marching and fun- raising music at the football games. You must have felt a little proud to see them in the St. Patrick's Day Parade, toog and I'll bet you would have liked to bum a ride when they toured the rolling hills of Maryland. Let's give them credit for their time fwhere do they get it alll and eflorts. They spend endless hours for such fine performance with just about the best music teachers there are. That's why many of the Prep men were selected for the All-Catholic Band. That's why the dance band section is so smooth. But let's not make them martyrs either. Ask them. They will tell you they enjoyed every minute of itwfrom the time they brought home those newly cleaned uniforms to have the buttons sewed on them until the time they brought home their instruments to polish them up for the big night at Town Hall. They are happy to have worked under Mr. Bourg and his assistant, Mr. Sweeney. Men couldn't have been more selfless. Shut the door, now, but open it again in May when lsrafcl or Gabriel or whoever is making that blessed noise will be singing a different and delovely tune. .ff Oomp-da-da to perfection by Dave Christian. The Marching Band Contest at LaSalle: with frenz- ing fingers and freezing toes the band played on. ...a- i v '7f'w' 1 u .pw :'SgfV:r K N 1k,f:-,fggjhg V' nk ,.- art, ky ,,V ,. n M K H:- iq 4 J J R K ran T ,- , .Q V- .H a-ug. M, V ,W ' m- 'rf'-J' -1, .p jr-A-fb ' 'A vw A' ,Ava N it ii' h ,r' L WN ' W-A frm -H-'13 A' ---1 'M 'f Nw W X J t A rf, r ,,,2.......W , A fg-,.f,, it ' i ,yr A Y .fav W A'-1 '-'bl H A A ,,..,, A t .. -f R 'ld 'I Q, if wiv Q' 42' ' Q it AHF.-ji .. W F ,fit .V Q M-tif xii X 4 r ' 'O V Q- mf.: -1-ew ' f dm., A 'K ., L ' yy -,fr --it If 1 . GK , l A ,.,. 34.3. V K ,z - A-pg ,m,,,,Y .,. V f mt ,Q vw 1, ,,.kk ,Q 2' 1 N I +L A ifvwjxtif ,fy Hhwer A 74 3. E ,vig-nkxgkf. A tn Wg tt, i it ,M , . iw-W' 'Er wwf ' , -Y A ,, A A A - 1 A . r I ' i 4 -' i X A .94 ri in .- 1,-W., wr A -L ttii an M, 'xt.mStA-. -M --W --f...,- rww: aw it an WW 'HP' QF' ,,,t is K C as Q igihxy. 1 Q, ' -1. Q Ili vivwwfx . Q Elin wwi yi . if ATS iii The Marching Band Dante Bevilacqua-rpianissimo. Q V X vx K, NV75! lj' 1 jg. ,, 9157 XXXKJJ X I k DJ3 f ' 1 'H' Phil Toutkoushian--con fuoco. XRS! Dave Christian-bravissimo. Senior Band Members Bill Hanley-poco a poco crescendo. ,lim Grant-cantabile. I S I ,p-- Ky. 5 AwM,WW,,,,, M x 3 1 .S X was Q im Q ' il: 5 We T? ' -f JP'- ig ,e X A il T' i,3h ' 'A '1 x X. PSSSQAK. x ggi A M Qi . f... M .--- ww., ,., L sm m . QM khkx Vx , 1 N , ,R .N ,Q :sew-f ..x, ,::.:. x - m 1i,,,:,. . Q Q M32 R 2 - -2 Q Amm.LL . wpr... ww. QA t. K V ,gi gg N My x fmt. . ----.-4..- ..,...,,,k K ,, NN S X , X ii . gsm.. . N . 'HWNMmawswmwm-..va.kMx,.xYx.k if ,my F XX QR... Ea. 5 f ff a ps. x ., , out on top in thc lntcr-Class by Silwxv Murphy Act Play Contcst. T e Cape and Sword Societ They saved the lmst till lust: thc unnnul plan' No, anything lrut ulllllllllllu It stood out. It was il thrcc night occasion. l'l1c llliysician in Spitc ol 7 lliinselff writtcn in H100 lvy ,lcsuit traincd Molicrc had not lost its edgc. llutlicr, it was l't'SllillilN'lN'Kl hy the rclcntlcss grinding of l'lillllt'l' John llcnnctt Sul., who wanted pcrfcction. and thc spirits-d uct- ing of a cast lieuded hy Hurry Cullugllcr. and thc dazzling sets dcsigncd and cxccntcd by lVlr. Cc-urgc Krieger, SJ., with thc uid of Mr. J. D. Swccncy, SJ., and a tireless stage crew. Even the severcst critics raved. Thi- I,lllllf'Illillllt' Cmncdy PyI'ElIllllS und 'l'liislny : Slit spcarn and tho soplimnorcs 4 nm v ' 'WI Q wmyw ,-:gf ,., xi 9 t K i w X E ex' R ' Xa. , KX 6 T .isgtig H .1 fltg. -ff f-Q Q Q, Wil! arg C' ,-,, I L 175+ 4 5 if x Xi mg, 1,5 viii af Q17 . X sskifigi . .5 1 ., :., ,:,-., 2 5515: ww f- A Ewwww wk 2 fi ' e N Q E .i -x , s K ! s E I X x w i wi i ,mgldcflilqgg 'TYWURQ OMMNXQESQ n PHS comm W Ullitfxiiqf 3 NM! l fl 1 wHYsxcsMr NN SW I E OF MMSELF in mm Dubois Ott and Croisy Maxwell: an ad out of the 17th Century. Thesf- sticks of yours rvuson vcry Soundlyfl llurry CilllilQllCl' literally look a lwaling to win tllc gold modal for star actin Oli, that feeling in my sloinaclilll SQAQIQQW i X' Ninos Ccnovesi, Leandro: uSir, I, Leandre, return to you your daughter whom you caressly left in thc hands of an apothecaryf' E Q l E 4 3 S if l llm-nry UiillLl2IllCI', Sganarelle: Senna, puter, also mater, Canis, juwnis and frutcrfl f ,-u 1 Frank Cray, Valero: I shouldnat like to exaggerate, Sir, but I bc- liove we brought the best doctor in the worldfl Rd Blztnney, Martine: HI shall stay by you until you div. Father John Bennett, SJ., Director: Say it as if you meant itf, Jim Christy, Perrin: HIsn't this chcesc, Doctor?'7 Art Rodgcrs, Thihaut: HIt's not thc boy, Doctor, it's his mothcrf' E a .ag Joe Wiza, Lucas: hHe ainit to be trustcd, I tcll you, hc ain,t to be trustcdf, l i i s i John Coync, Jacquclinc: That Ycry fancy talk wc'vc hccn hcan ing? John Silcox, Ccrontc: '4What kind of a lunatic have you brought nie? X x 'Y xc 4 J xi: X an Dick Simmons, Lucindc: llc, har, haw, hayf' Q XA V.. lb- .jv ' 4 fr W.. nie 4 First there was the money to worry about. Some days it looked like the patron drive would be a short put. But it came in. Then there was the theme and the layout. Some days it looked like it would just have to be last year's all over again. But Tom Plunkett got inspired. Then there was all the picture taking and writing. Many days it looked like it would take till '57. But the pictures all got taken tapologies to all whose toes were tread upon in the process! and what had to be written was written tfor our everlasting praise or blamej. What went on in the process up there in that mysterious unhealthy room between the second and third floors? Much talk, much argument, much The Yearbook Bart Myles and Joe Palladino, Co-Editors. banter, much ado about nothing, and yes, even a little work. Not too much, but enough to produce this chronicle of events at the little red school house off Girard Avenue during the 1955-1956 school year. Actually, if you are interested, a yearbook grows like topsy. lt calls for about five men who are will- ing to spend ten hours in discussion and seeming inactivity for every half-hour of inspired work. And it calls for an editor or co-editors who are willing to spend the better part of senior year to make school life into history. The reward? This permanent creative work. Worth all the hours? You be the judge of that. no Q Ihr' .ar-1 .. ,I X .,'f 5. XX! V Crave historians of school events. The Write-ups Staff: trying to express a personality in ten words or less took time. f -4 ff' I ,f I . fd: AQ ff' J , L4 vg ,A,,,,,,,Msf,g ,f V ,,,,.,,!4 . ,ja .Lf I If f 1 f Tf!JfD9rw.1'lXjf-X A 'I X W1 Lf, I. The Yearbook Staff. The Business Staff: You say his was the patron card with no name on itvw The Yearbook Staff fcontj. The members of the Chornicle Quartely Staff with Editor, Al Heumann, at the head of the table. The Chronicle Magazine THE STAFF Al Heuman: Editor-in-Chief. Michael McManus: Associate Editor. Joseph Tiberino: Layout and Art. H. Cornell Bradley and John J. Quinn: Fiction Editors. Lawrence France, Richard Warchol, John P. Francis, Assistant Editors. For the past several years The Chronicle Quarterly has been feeling its way through a period of experiment. This year was no exception. After much consideration the staff decided that a single large issue would best embody the ideal of literary perfection at the Prep. This version of The Chronicle Knot to be confused with the yearbook of the same namel differed from former models in layout, composition, size and illustration. Practically every story was illustrated and only after the most careful revision and scrutiny were the articles pronounced ready for publication. The guiding hand behind this progress was Mr. John D. Sweeney, S.J., himself a member of the staff in the halcyon years of ,ll-6-'fl-8. His was to organize and meditate. The members of the staff are thankful. The Lihrar luh There is an entire world known only to hook lovers. It is much more varied than this workday world is to those who merely see it on the surface. It is the world of Oz and Culliver and Captain Nemo. One way to enter this world last year was through the Library Club. Of course, it meant that you had to help to check out, check in and replace hooks. It meant that you had to show the freshmen how to use the card catalogue and direct them to reference works. It meant that you had to hind magazines into units of a definite time-span. It even meant that you had to help clean the library, fall under the devoted direction of Mr. John Lange, SJ. But this was a small price to pay for such an opportunity to expand the mind and heart. The French lub An a J rf-ciation of the unexcelled culture of Franc? was the Ovi- I P dent raison lfgllf of the French Club. The richest ex PI'i?llCC of the P year was a Held tripn to the Conzedic 1 ranqaise in New York. Le Bourgeois Cenlilhomnzc elait treis nnlusanl. Marcel Marceau. the famous mimic, was also on the list of events. And the coupe de grficff. pikce de rcisislarzce, or what will you, was il trip to the United Nations. aff v f 1, im: 5 4 st!! fl 1 .0-- ' 1 g . z 3 V - :gf is N52 A X .Q 4 ii 1 K ,693 x X ' 1 ii-RRR , iyiiigfm .,,,,,... 5 r 6 1, L3 W Y 9 A , .K+ K 4 ' 5. - L' A ,N K X A A Y 'N . H 1 may 'k -.2 ff l ' v I ' K . .S ' B ,J f 1 i f . Ql5f,gQ 53f'Mx Q x g 0 Xa N x v Q v U. . . they try to see into the mystery of lifef' The Biolog lub . . . is for those especially interested in the living world about them. lf the class looks at one protozoan, the members of the Biology Club look at manyg if the class cuts up a frog, the members of the Biology Club cut up a crocodile. Witll microscopes and the expert direction of Father John Fay, SJ., they try to see into the mystery of life. The tudent Council Unlike many other schools, the Student Council at the Prep is not Z1 police force. The purpose of it is to mediate between the faculty and the students, on the supposition that the students actually want to better the school and can constructively criticize it. This year open discussions were even held for the separate classes where complaints and suggestions were heard and, if reasonable, were presented to Father lianahan for his approval and hacking. Besides this diplomatic function, the Student Council also engineered the seasonal dance, the rallies and the class athletic leagues during the year. How is the Student Council formed? Three sophomores, four juniors and five seniors are elected hy popular vote. The senior with the most votes is the President. Each of the five main activities in the school also has a representative. lhc 19051906 Student Council with Frank M ll P fd a on, resi cnt, presiding. Every month reports came out, and that was had enough. But then our mothers went down to school for a Mothersl Club Meeting, after which they chatted with the teachers. The subject of conversation? Us. lt was terrible. Oh those week- end at the books when Mom came home with a report that we were loahngl But the mothers could not have lost complete The faith in us, because they organized a very success- ful fashion show at the Drake Hotel and the best Homecoming ever just to better our school. The latter affair is now the biggest Catholic social event of the season thanks to their maternal efforts. Yes indeed: many thanks to their maternal efforts, especially to Mrs. Emil Perrot, their capable Presi- dent for 1955-1956. others' Club Mrs. Emil Perrot, President, addresses the Communion-Breakfasters at the first of many successful affairs run by the mothers --g8ITi - ' -Q ii NV X , The Umcers at the Homecoming Luncheon: lllrs. Harry Kelly, Recording Secretaryg Mrs. George Porreca, Yll'C Pl'f'5lClClllQ Falller Cnwleyg Mrs. Llmil Parrot, Presidentg Mrs. Joseph Dwyer, 'llreasurerg Mrs. 'llllcoclore McCulla, Corresponding Secretaryg Mrs. Thomas Lyons, Assistant Trous- urer. Now about that Latin mark . . M Homecoming: lhc Prep social event. ...ff ST. JOSEPH S PREP. HERS CL B Msemus RE IND DAD Dr. Michael Quinn, President, starts the hall rolling on Freshman Night. Fr. Thomas Linskey, SJ., Moderator, is seated to his left. The Fathers' Club The Prep Dads are not satished with paying the bills. They have organized to actively promote school spirit and school activities. Beginning with Freshman Night, when the fathers of the fledgelings are welcomed with their sons, and continuing through the year with the various sports dinners and sports contributions, the Dads show their love in deeds. The Fathers' Club was headed this year hy Dr. Michael Quinn. His leadership was responsible for such things as the 800 men and hoys turnout for the Communion Breakfast on March 18th. The Fathers niet every month or so to decide which activity they would help and how rnueh they would help it. They also discussed school policies and their good influence was felt in every part of the complex which is the Prep. We ought to say thank you. We sin- cerely do. K Quvm ,. Ei 4 PREP Ei A w e ,?. T . x N gg N .X f.. V V mm Q... 569' :Af ., xy 3' . A f,, .,HA?,...Ak-15--K., . WCPC .Q-.fy-11. .-,. A,.f MA-Af.fA1,. .v 12 A iw. , - A , f. ,A ffW'?f?E?5TiF'7gfE5'fSIRQfffflff lSw'1.iQ.5 3812 iflfjlsl ' . :Qs-W..if.:fmA7zSZ-11, U fx Harm' Aw-.1 .A . A . fi:'Qu-fw?.sWzf'S-vain ., .-1 ly 7 5 is wig.. .si.gi25f.i-Ygegw.-w , fi x: WSfff9iQi:5':f, f:e,A.sf.f2-'fif 25' Af. fx:-.s H ' ,Ax Am, ,Q Ria, . wf-k'Su-'auswfdsw fm ,fix wQ:f.f3'1nf1m.,fzzmsisis f.: M . ,.., . AA., WA. J 51-3-f . 'A A .. . f il W .TMQL 295 wnsfia, f gig F3'ss1iQQQi'?lfA1 A, A W., .. M - fwm., . WA A..,A. 5 ,..,.. Qt. A .-1 f -Q A 1.5, ff .rg mm-A..Ks-V5sA:S '.-1 . LJ-. MAH:-A:1A.fJ1-.Vw f, 3, -513, .yrmgzify -- 3 ww . , - iwugffg 22454'fii.'1A,ffi,..Jg,k y A ,A 2-fam xy., .4 wee.. . W w'is..'1Aff va. UA is psy lm? xg rig ga gr fs? 311 , 54 .en 3?,i?Qf4s,ilgyA .5 A k A1-.fix-. A,-. . sw . A A. Af 11 .vm ,A M .1 .,---'sm N A :QQ . A. . . N... M ff, Q. Y 28 RJ 'S Q' . as if mfg QR .A ,A f- . sf gy.. 5. :mf-.5 . Q . ,A Wg, .0 f+S5w5PN?'s:sf fs-- .Vf Ev Egg. 1 . Mil.: Q- , As N... , K. if - ,ye,..4A.H 5 Lf Aw.. AQ A..4.,A.,31.5, A A Ziggffifli . Q .1 .M ., ,A W there 'a2-iAf15CM.- i - - ' 1 43i'4Q:ium ?.,g- 9-3... V - .ww dyke.-1.53,-A-,yfA.vig-f-.QA A - . , . A -M K' ...Ref 4 :Tw A . :rg K 11.6-.w w- .-. V -af' .., A v71f?9Qf..1l1 A 152 1 . .ii A . . ..,..--A.,-W fi -A311 N A... 5.5 . N .5 .Aw fx Aga EQ BS e to Win ff swf, or lose but always there was pirit , Football '6Forty-six to nothing. Boy, that's really hard to take after seven days of hard practicef, said a tired, beaten Prep gridder as he walked out of the shower room. '4Yes,,' his friend said, 'cliloman was really up for that one. And for that matter, so were the six other teams. Gosh, one win and seven losses,- that doesn't give us or the student body much to brag about, does it? Youire not kiddingf' said the first boy, Only one win for a student body and a coaching staff that deserves a hundred wins. You,re right,'7 agreed his friend. L'Remember how great the cheering was the day of the St. James game and the North game and even today at the Roman game? The school stuck with us all the way. The coaches, too. They were with us and for us through ten weeks of spring practice, two long, hot weeks of summer camp, and eight weeks of a long season. uSuppose,', said the first player, usomeone asked you tonight what good you got out of it all. What would you say?', 4'l'd tell himf, said the second player, 'sthat l learned something that we must all learn sooner or later, and that is how to take a loss. l've also learned a thing called teamwork. And finally I'd tell him that l had the good honor of playing on a Prep team, which to me and about forty other guys is a great, thrilling, and memorable experiencef' A it A 3 H a The 1955 Varsity Football Team. Front Row Cannon. Wind, Kvnnedy, McCormick, Slawck, Nvalsll, M1'Uonn0ll, Rigler, Shoup, Coyne, Brady Mullon. Second Roux' Sensor, Seger, Herron, Ca ruso, Fraunccs, Porrcca, Kosinski, Grandy, Lynch ' Ferris, Owens, Faconda. Tfzud Ron Mllloy mgr.g DiMonto, Corr, Kcum MlF4TX?IIl Illllllll , Shvohan, Leahy, Brooks, D1 Buudmllo 5111011111 - Brennan, Frenvy, senior mgr 5 va ,Q f x ff E gf, S 7 x 1,.,x L .lf y 1 .. y My xy 4 , y, , . , 3 K, Hank Rigler 1 ...R v Q 1 w 'H AER' K1 'CK E31 Bfffdl ,H ,F ie? ,Q 9. Pi! 5 ff- NNM, bv .vfv ,fa-A U. u 13,411 The Coaching Stuff: John Mvllet, Asst. Line Coach: Furl Hart, Athletic: Dire-cior: John J. Dvnnigny. Hvad Coavhg Gus Kcuny, Asst. Buckflcld Coach. Ahscnti Warrcn Horton, Line Coach. i W... Senior Nl? Paul Shoup Jerry McDonnell Stars Joe McCormick, Joe Brady, and Chuck Kennedy Jocko Coyne and Mal Ward Tom Gannon Reds Mallon Mike Slawek Football Camp: Reds Mallon and Wal Camp: Chuck Kennedy and Coach Ward at work. Keuny at rest. The Prendergast Rally: The Football Mothers lead a cheer. 2 .A of The Prendergast Came: Rigler, Shoup, and Owens converge on fallen Friar as team opens up with a victory. At West: As the Saints come marching in. At South: Lynch sinks a Pirate but cargo slips through. 02 --1--- ., . 1 - . ...- - ,1hu....,t Co-Captains Rigler f-1411 and McDonnell open up the season at Prcndergast with the traditional gesture of fair play. I03 x S ,sa S 'i ff Q35- Q L 1 sir, ,Q 5 1 w -1 2 4 Jiekfswg Q W W 5 N 'P AVS, wx BWV? Nays 5f.s-Us 'Q S:,if7s Egg -at it , Y sad, 'N' qvqgpfxff kfm qk S31 if wp ,S 41 Q :M ww Q Q The La Salle Came: Joe Corr hands off to Dick DiMonte for a gain. The La Salle Came. Smgle wmg clleks as Corr blocks for Owens. The mbht before the St. Tommy s Game. Team members see how the pros do it at Don Ward's house. Halfllme during the St. Tommyls game: Faces tell the story. Chuck Walsh escapes the clutches of a Colden Bear to score! St. James: Manager Freney helps hard-tackling Owens to the therapeu- tic hands of Mickey McLaughlin. St. James: Joe Corr gets one off before Bulldog bites. The Roman Rally: Father Cawley gives winning poster the nod. Owens completes one against the Callillites. 3 S' 75 1 'E Q . -K if . Q .vim f l gi if Q was p' 'S Epps all L L, S5 .. K if seats? wif-S-Q 14 Q. i K is Vk... I a V K . kM...Qf,i hmm ws K ' .Wy is .wk - - , . . -L- QS5' i er mf .G ai - N sv 2' S wx f. 1 ...X S.J.P. 6 0 0 0 0 13 7 0 5, o g 5 .S X THE RECORD Archbishop Prendergast ..... South Catholic .......... North Catholic . .... . West Catholic .. La Salle ........ St. Thomas More . St. James ......... Roman Catholic .... Chuck Walsh's reach symbolizes the as pirations of the entire season. Y ., . vs- - 2 -f x Q Y l Qf . pf' M995 kg. Q Qi, mmf w L , 'L f Q ff hglgpm Away Q b1f ' Q? Q,.smsQz2.f: ww A Egg? 3 ' xg? x i M mix? K v Z Q9 ff YAAL K LW ww I' img? N Rm J R Eqi xxm F , st shots l'i'c-to' 11141 Illll 'll' tour-li that Sl ful S.,l.ll. f S llard-playing Captain. Jim llrown, spark of thc team and its repre- svntativc on the all-Catholic squad. WWII! Thx- rvcorcl shows a ret-o1'd of Pl and 9 in the Catholic League play, ont- playvr on the All-Catholiv team, Captain Jimmy Brown and some grvat play --Bill Plngleslu-'S hook, Nlledsw Malloifs hall-handling. Roh Currie's passvs, llaul Shoup's rebounding, and some momvnts of haskvthall hrilliancc for all nivnilvvrs of a team that never said die. Had they lwgan as they ended . . . but thatis not history. u H10 0 Paul Shoup: 7 beats a 6! Anybody,s ball 9 . Q , . K A ,, ii Q if .x . Re- K - 5' L5 4 M f l Be 3 ,sv 5 5 ix wi Mm if 4 A 'Q ,1 QM ,sm fin Q fig A I is s Y -Wy Q Six 2 hi XI Ss x Q Q6 wg Q 1' Ns i 14 f Q45- , .,: NR fc ?' :il .Z get l u - ,1 gs, E ef f 1 S ii 1 4 X 4-18 Basketball Chuck Verna 117D : that inch makes the difference ii-AQ kxsgix f iwikis X Ekiks gamwmw l .X SHR I' P is f lf: R V . 'Sw' 13 W. H ' ': ' F .515 S Af' .6 .mi ,SE .. Y lv Q X is Q ,, 1 is, 'Es W-sd 1 JMU Swimming Naturally they were all out to dethrone the National Catholic Champions this year. When Judge upset us in their first meet with us their chant could be heard on Girard Avenue: We beat the Prep! We beat the Prepli' That was the spur the team needed. They beat Judge in their second meet and then in a dramatic swim-off which meant that the Prep Swimmers were still the Catholic League Champs. This was only the beginning. At Villanova top honors in the Catholic League Individual Cham- pionships also went to Prepmen. And then there was the City Championship meet with Central over at Penn. What a night! lt was anybodyis victory up till the final event, in fact, up till the final lap of the 200 yard freestyle relay. Inspired swimming by Sheehan, Nolan, and Porreca left McHugh just a little bit behind-gaining-gaining-gaining-to win by ten inches! At the Nationals the Prep Squad turned in a notable performance and took third place, being the only team to take two individual first places. Who? Cassani and McHugh. Record breakers for the year: McHugh and Cassani jointly lowered the 100 yard freestyle record doing it in 56-7. McHugh also turned in a record 199 seconds clocking for the 40 yard freestyle. The 200 yard freestyle relay of Nolan, Porreca, McHugh and Cassani re-wrote the record books, doing it in 144 seconds flat. Divers Chuck Pedano and Dave O'Connell were instrumental in winning the honors that were won, as was the backstroking of Neil Fagan and in fact the pull, the push and pluck of the whole tireless team. And to Coach Leon Macionis goes more credit than to anyone else: he has put St. ,loseph's Prep Swimming Team on the map. The Varsity Swimmers: lst row: Duckworth, Hewitt, Schurr, O'Connell, Nolan Higgins, Pedano, Stevens. 2nd row: McGovern, Sheehan, 0'Connell, Nolan, Higgins Pcdano, Stevens. 3rd row: Boyle, Slawek, Del Guericio, Thistle, Riceman, Zin. we L M. mf, 1-..,,. wsw.Mv, NQNX - GRA ,,q.,,,..v-df iw. Ex .uw -v MA, 3, A , ..... N. . . W s . -mx ,H N . . .A ,4SaqnuirNf'-lnuqlzwm' NM . .ewdwilnci ' Q Y' A., ' ., shiny as w. Mx. v 5 , sfvsi-1. WN vm --sw Q xv 'SY + X ,wx ,, wx .Q . .f.- 5 A Q l7 'v ...Q-. Swii I :K Q .,L. t KN-..... Diver Chuck Pedano comes out of a spin. Versatile Drew Casani at the City Championships Tireless backstroker Neil Fagan-go! A x Diver Dave O'C0nncll: what,s wronff with this iicturc? D I N. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,-,,,,,,, ,Nh - M 1 i 4 .i,i.i ' f iv i , i i i - A . A -rf' . l2l , . f - I P - wi 4. Q A sf. 51' 1 H' Q6 +1- 'LL 1 -.- 'w wx QS' ga '- me, v -Q , .Q , ,vim 'Q-9 AV ,va A I ' Qfri U Aaz S K. 2 8 , I . fm .Q V. Skin .W A 'Q Q J MN . in . X . A Q 4 i ggi, w , If N ' gf fx S fr f A sw bw 'MSN QA, S f f Q 9 N- mi X3 N Q 5 s N , ' - x ,, .. eg- 4 2' Q . gy- , j K .ws X as fx n 1 gi- , A gyms-,Q 'Az - Mm. A 3 rn 5 5 ,L HQ' H ef - gin ,. 'w5Q6v X ' -wi xl 4-. 4.., K E - A ' MMff'fffw?'sif' A s ii- - .. iw Q gl lit f ' n n - , Ks ef fs S Q Q it X. v 'fi' Q-jwx.wf,g, A sf W ' J' Q Q ' 'lvl .X 5 ., x S - X A Q 1' K 0- i 'E , f 5 3 52' f' TQ .3-6 ,Ns Q . f ' 5 X. , J. g X 1 'Ss' . - f , Q. E ps, 4 J g 1 its A , Vx Q D :S gy - t'g. K - Q . .. ' gif . Q . ,W ff- fgfgk f. .kk s lx ,Fx . Sw 5' -- 3 i N A N ' ul' -1 i Q i 6 . 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Mr. ,lohn Lange, SJ., Moderator, and the Bowling Team: Mike Ruggieri, Ralph Eddows, Jerry Goldner, Joe Spuhler, Mike Quinn, Dick Stefanowicz, Dick Wicker- sham. Bowling The first bowling team in St. Joe's history is that pictured above. Bowling weekly at Gehris Alleys, 69th St., the Preppers bowled all ten teams in the Catholic League. After losing all but one of their first eighteen games fbeginnings are difticultl the spark hit the team and they came upon some tinder. They bowled fforgive the punl over St. James 3-0, but then dropped a close one to La Salle. The following week they defeated Neumann 2-1, and went on to end the season by beating St. Tommies 2-1. The record at the end of season number l: 9 wins and 21 losses. Though not exactly a triumphal season, the spark shown at the end and the fact that 3 members of the team will be back next season give hope for a championship team in the near future. l 'N' of gi Broehl and Monahan pace each other in the St. James, West, St. Joe's Meet. 1 Cross-Countr Rudy Virga crosses the finish line. Rod Edwards: it was endurance that counted. w This was the first year for cross-country competition at the Prep. The sophomores were the heart of the team which gives hope that it will heat faster in the next few years. Standouters in the ten meets this year were McCandless and Broehl but all were out in Fair- mount Park running hard with an eye to a bright future. .F5'v,Sl'Pio9'g: Q Finishers wait for classi- fication at the finish line. 3222275 3-N55 gf 584' The Cross-Country Team: lst row: Graff, Sledalnik, Brown, Dongies. 2nd row: Mcffandlcss, Carlin, Edwards, Green, Virga, Monahan, Broehl. 3rd row: Mr. John Hzuiglxvy, SJ., Modcratorg Sweeney, Mlodzik, Mr. Manus McHugh, Couch. wp-.--mf 'wif 'z xg- - 05125 93559 I29 From September to June EQ., .nf ,Hs HWS A Qu there was growin . Q 0 T. E' E f F W x 1, 11 4 20 ,4 A , 'Hai K , A. 5 g,,.,..L- ,bf W f 'wil 'Y , , , - if W y T :Q we ' fx .gk K ' Sv , '19 1, , Wg. ef. ,I.gieiifgfrfwf2,'r.ffQQ?5vfr,5 5 ,Q :iff W 1 433' AQ x laik' i f-2 lr A 4 . , , .x , A , QQ is we 1 1 Q x v, . , ,D 4' wg? I v . ,di-M ,,, S Q XXX Sk CX :if Ss FH-xii Efffk NSF QQ43, N- S 5 5 is w gv--ww :sm '82, qapudimk. M3533 w. vw- -'gf' 4 .crm Q ...- ,,---fv M ...f A , f as s '-., .,,,,.. 'gui' 15 .xvx 5 ep' unw- Q . 'VN 1. VLQ.-.mf 5 ti ..., ,ik nil .'u 4,.,.fv- -V wi- N :- ,ww 1 ui ...Q-. 'N YH Qs-,+, iv' fQwQ'f M .ngskm .x xe .X The graduates are a field white with the harvest We began our high school march to maturity in the Ignatian manner with the blessing of a retreat just for freshmen before the 'cold boysu came back. The first stage of the march led to the land of the Latins, where, as somewhat unwilling conscripts, we joined Hannibal and his Carthaginians in their effort to subdue the mighty Caesar in the Punic Wars. We also fought the complexities of our native language, the mysterious symbolism of algebra, the detail of ancient history and civics, and the long questions to be mem- orized in Cassily. We Hfought' 'them, alright, and won- dered why we had not picked an easier school. But there were pleasures on the march, too. There were the football games, the comraderie of class socials, the homecoming, and such colorful officers as Mr. Staffieri and Mr. Donohue who urged us to do every- thing by the numbers. And in spite of all the discip- line, we loved Father lVlcNicholas fkeeper of the guard- house that yearl as much as we feared him. We all approached the major battle in ,lune with apprehension. There were a few major catastrophes, a few minor. A chastened lot, we left for our summer furlough, convinced that, although this march was not the camping trip we had expected, yet it was a grand enterprise, wherein, if we stuck it out, we could prove ourselves to be men. ll. ln September we rejoined the ranks. Summer had put a few inches on almost all of us, and many a pink- cheeked, bird-voiced boy returned a bearded, baritoned veteran. We found our forces divided. Some of us were hoplites in the Greek department, others budding biolo- gists in Father Fayls lab. We were under a new general- ship, too, that of Father Lanahan whom we quickly grew to appreciate along with our new top sergeant, Father Gilvary. Downstairs, near the pool, was a new smoking room, colorfully decorated by Brother Brennan. What a let- down to find that it was for seniors only, and that for us it was merely another thing to be hoped for. The football squad won the battles of Germantown, West and St. Tomrniels, that season, and gave St. James irresistable forcei' the best fight of its campaign. The morale was at a high point, thanks to the verve of Mr. Galvin and Mr. Pyne, the former coming to be known as Mr. Prep. An enthusiastic, if unmelodious, Solid 700', became our battle song. Mr. Blong took over the basketball corps. They fought mightily without too many victories except the personal victory of ,loe Ryan who was All-Catholic and led the league in scoring with 328 points. The swimmers reached second place in the Catholic League in a drive that was to end in national preeminence the next year. On the Schuylkill, the crew won the Catholic League race in a drive that was also to end in national victory. There were memory filled furloughs for the battle- weary, also, the most memorable of which was the Soph Hop. All the frays of sophomore year conditioned us for the major battle with books in June. There were fewer fatal casualties. And then there was the summer armis- tice during which the rest of us could recuperate from minor wounds. lll. Back we trudged when August ended-upperclass- men! Our ranks were further divided into those who sprechened der Deutsch and those who parlezed Fran- cais. Cicero came to speak to all of us and can hardly have been called a morale builder. The footballers started out with a near bang against a strong South team and nearly ended with a resound- ing crash when Bob Lamb and Don McBride were injured at West. They kept on their feet, however, with the aid of some of our own fighters like Rigler, Ward and McDonnell, and when the injured returned, broke an eight year losing streak up at North and upset a favored Roman team in a Turkey Day Classic which set appetites on edge as they have never been set on edge before. For a while it looked like the basketballers were a cinch for-the title. Joe Ryan was his amazing self, and with the sparkling play of others such as ,lim Brown it looked like we were Hinf' But the attack lagged at mid- season and a team that should have been first ended up fourth in the league. The swimmers just couldnit be beat. Catholic League Champs! City Champs! National Champs! The victory string was extended to 23 with 14 for the year. The navy was unbeatable, too. The coveted Stotes- bury Cup and the National Championship were the hard won victories of a crew that wouldn't be beat. Coach Manning, in a post-race rally, set his sights on international competition for our senior year crew. Nor were the athletic fields the only field of battle or of victory. Chuck Dwyer won the I Speak for Democracyi, contest-first among 18,000. And the Bar- belin Debating Society under Mr. Devereux, and in- cluding some junior standouts such as John Flanagan and Al Heumann, won too many prizes to name. The Sycamores romped through I Can't Take It with Youw and the crowd roared. On April 29, stuffed into dress shirts and tuxedos, we journeyed to Melrose for a Junior Prom which was too bright a let-up in the daily battle for the torrents of rain which fell that night to dull. Somehow we managed to survive all the homework, gibes and erasers which were hurled at us during junior year and when lovely May turned to fearsome exam-time we-most of us-had enough energy in us to get through safely. IV. Seniors, seasoned veterans, we were back in the fray. The smoking room and other privileges were ours, and with the privileges, of course, responsibility. There was a distinct aroma of purposefulness, during this, the last leg of our march to maturity in high school. We were thinking about such goals as certilicating marks for college, the armed services, vocation. ln the dead language department Virgil took over. Favorite teacher Mr. Bourg racked l1is brain thinking up ways to rack our brains in math tests. Mr. Mattern cautioned us not to use Pennsylvania Dutch and Mr. Cahill, while refusing to take his Frenchmen to the Eiffel Tower unless they agreed to jump, did manage 51 most memorable trip to the Comedie Francais in New York. The football force fell upon hard times. It was decided to take a year to think over the desirability of a school like our own staying in the rapidly expand- ing Catholic League. The team's defeats, however, did not prevent the personal achievements of Rigler and McDonnell, both of whom made All-Catholic, and other stalwarts. Nor did they stop the student body from showing their enthusiastic loyalty in a season of cheer- ing which culminated in the Roman Rally. The latter was a tremendous display of spirit, spurred on by a poster contest in which Mr. Sweeney's artistry helped 4C to win a holiday. If the basketballers had begun as they ended there would have been more to shout about in that line of competition than the individual merits of the players and occasional brilliance. When the swimming team lost their first meet with Judge it looked like their tower might have toppled. But they came back to beat Judge in the second meet and went on to win the City Title. The most exciting moment of the year was surely the last lap of the med- lay relay in the Title Meet, when Abe,' McHugh came from behind to win the event and the championship by ten inches. McHugh and Casani also came through with individual first prizes in the Nationals out at Villa- nova, while the team placed third. The crewmen, as this is being written, are down on the Schuylkill every day, straining to achieve a time that will bring them an international prize. The debaters have only begun to fight. Already they have placed first out of forty-six schools in the Peacock Debate Tournament up at St. Peter's College in Jersey City. The Physician in Spite of Himself, with Harry Gallagher in the lead, and Jocko Coyne as a buxom scene stealer, was as funny as it was professionally pro- duced by Fr. Bennett, and stunningly set-ted by Messrs. Krieger and Sweeney. Undoubtedly the experience of the year was Father Burke's senior retreat. He talked to us as men, the men we had become on our four year march to maturity. And in the light of retreat reflection all the study, all the extra-curriculars, all the crises with parents and teachers, all our associations and disassociations, all our failings and all our achievements in the past four years became meaningful. Our march was seen to be a march with a goal over and above that maturity which is reached in high school. Our march was seen to stretch beyond life to a goal beyond which there is no other. May we all receive strength to reach Him. x 1 x 'S X L 5 f ' :':E'5::::E.k W. ' ' ' A 1 f ', 'V :ww-3,wa?l 5 Y E '- QM ? A fikif Q X 5. Q - f -Ww- K ., :. Y Missy iff: Q N 2 'Q X 2 Q X YQ. N , x .ix xg vw QS is S R ' Su, 1 RSS' Q - N Qi Q as Wa 'wx 0 gf :Xe X1 xx lr- M 'www-l.QQ,, W Q Mm W A- Y . f 5: Jr +R 4 Y, ,Q K' Ji 5 M ws Q XM w'fM vrw-, x.-N.. .NM-Q. W N f ..,, www MN, W' 2 Q... RAPHAEL FRANCIS ARMENTO 1203 Tree St. Philadelphia 48, Pa. Ray: Highly intelligent and al- ways ready with a confident, posi- tive statement. Activities: Yearbook 4g Class Officer 1,2,33 Soph Hop Committee 23 Jun- ior Prom Committee 3g Senior Prom Committee 43 Chronicle 1,25 Biol- nnrv f11n11 9' gnf1211lV 1. ZX' LOUIS JOSEPH CARBO 629 S. 9th St. Philadelphia 47, Pa. Lou: It goes without saying. Activities: Junior Prom Committee 3g Senior Prom Committee 43 Base- ball 3,43 Sodality 1,23 Class Oliicer 3. LAWRENCE J. COPELAND 9245 Frankford Ave. Philadelphia 14, Pa. Larry: Still waters run deep. Activities: Dramatics ls Choir 3,4. JOSEPH JOHN DUGGAN 6536 N. Uber St. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Joe: Behind the smile, sober re- flection. Activities: Sodality l,2,3,43 Library Club 1,2,33 Color Guard 3,43 Dance Decoration Committee 3,43 Debating 1,3,43 KBS Usher 43 Stage Crew 33 Senior Prom Committee 4. THOMAS JOSEPH CONNOLLY 8515 Widener Road Philadelphia 18, Pa. Tom: A personality with many ar- resting facets. Activities: Basketball 1,2,3,43 KBS 1,2,3,43 League of Sacred Heart 4. RODERICK YERKES EDWARDS 22 Hampton Rd. Westmont, N. J. Rod: Intelligence and humor will render his ambitions fruitful. Activities: Track 3,43 Swimming 1,2 Cross Country 43 Dance Decorations Committee 4g Biology Club 2 Chemistry Club 33 Stage Crew 3 Senior Prom Committee 4. J -aww Q vw. I ,annum JOHN LEO FLANAGAN 6711 N. 6th St. Philadelphia 26, Pa. Jack: Logical, eloquent, forceful. Activities: Debating 1,2,3,43 Sodal- ity 1,2,3,43 Chronicle 43 Yearbook 43 Dramatics 43 Junior Prom Com- mittee 33 Senior Prom Committee 43 Library Club 1,23 Girard College Instructor 23 Sophomore Hop Committee 23 Class Officer 43 Stu- dent Council 33 Dance Committee 34. -nw WJ. THOMAS MICHAEL CANNON 2026 S. Bucknell St. Philadelphia 45, Pa. Tom: Athletic and scholarly gentleman. Activities: Football 3,43 Sodality 1,43 Yearbook 43 Junior Prom Com- mittee 3g Class Officer 2,33 Senior Prom Committee 4. .1 . W- I .' .9 'X, My '- 1 x ,W , ,af 1-f.C? 3 -1+ w 34277 ' 5, 0 Jwii Jofitvfff , VINCENT JOSEPH GENOVESI 4144 Markland St. Philadelphia 24, Pa. Vince: Brilliance and balance as- sures success. Activities: Sodality 1,2,3,4 fPrefect 4j3 Debating 1,33 Choir 3,43 Track 2,3 fMgY.i, Dramatics 43 Dance Committee 43 Student Council 4g Color Guard 3,4 fCapt.J3 Senior Prom Committee 43 Class Officer 3,43 Stage Crew 4. PETER EDWARD COETTLE 73 Rochelle Ave. Philadelphia 28, Pa. Pete: Unruffled with a sophisti cated air. Activities: Sodality 1,23 KBS 1,2,3,43 League of Sacred Heart 4. f WILLIAM CHARLES HANLEY 2985 Salmon St. Philadelphia 34, Pa. Bill: Morally and intellectually robust. Activities: Sodality 1,2,3.4: Band 1,2,3,4-Q St. lgnatius Club 2,3,4g De- bating 1,2,3,4g Art Club 4g French alll! .A Jffvgv. EUGENE ARTHUR HEBERT 6165 Cratz St. Philadelphia 41, Pa. Gene: Humorous, easy-going and competent. Activities: Sodality 2,3,4: Decora- tions Committee 4g Track 2,3g Year- book 4g Prep fNewspaperi 3g Choir 3g Debating lg Senior Prom Com- mittee 43 Dramatics flgwopggk L f 1 Clif!! Rf , 1 LA ,fvwfl ,vffel Don-e Most for the School and Best All-around Athlete: Frank Mallon The opposite of the 2:55 men are the men who make the school life their own life and take the same pride in its develop- ment that they take in their own develop- ment, looking not only at what they can get out of it, but also at what they can give to it. Paradoxically these are the stu- dents who get the most out of school. There are a lot of seniors like Frank lscconrl from lefll, and many who would be so if they were in a position to he, but none who were more conspicuously boosters of the school in the past four years. ALBERT JOSEPH HEUMANN 421 Glendale Rd. Upper Darby, Pa. Al: Sincere and unhesitating speech bespeak a sincere, unhesi- tating character. Activities: Debating l.2,3.4: Sodal- ity 1,2,3,4g Chronicle iVlilg.L'2lZllIC 1.2, 3,4 414111. 41 3 Yearbook 43 Dramatics 3,43 Track 2: Class Ulhcer 4: Dance Decorations Committee 43 Band 1. 5? f I4I DAVID THOMAS HORN 4710 Penn St. Philadelphia 24, Pa. Dave: A competent interior man. Activities: Sodality 13 Band 1.,2,3,43 DANIEL JOSEPH KEENEHAN 2823 Rosehill St. Philadelphia 34, Pa. Dan: Likes everyone and every- one l.ikes him. French Club 4- Activities: Debating 13 Sodality 1,43 JOHN JAMES LAFFERTY 5108 Springfield Ave. Philadelphia 43, Pa. Laff: Nothing is worth more than a mind well instructed. Activities: Sodality 13 Stage Crew 3,43 Debating 4. A SSA I Crew 33 Track 3,43 KBS 1,2,3,4. JOHN JOSEPH KING 5208 N. Sydenham St. Philadelphia 41, Pa. Jack: Light spirit beneath grave expression. Activities: Sodality 1,2,3,43 Crew 3,43 Swimming 43 Yearbook 43 Sophomore Hop 2g Senior Prom Committee 4g French Club 4. so xfn A L 7 A- -1 A ,,,, JOHN MICHAEL McALUNEY 7229 Forrest Ave. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Mac: Fine example of the Finished Prep Product. Activities: Junior Prom Committee 3g Senior Prom Committee 43 Stu- dent Council 43 Basketball 43 Base- ball 43 Class Officer 2,3,4Q Dance Committee 4. MICHAEL DANIEL McMANUS 248 Hamlock Rd. Wynnewood, Pa. 3 Mike: The quiet light. Activities: Sodality 1,2,3,43 Library Club 1,23 Debating 13 Student Coun- cil 2g Chronicle 3,4 fAsst. Ed. 453 Yearbook 4g Junior Prom Commit- tee 3g Senior Prom Committee 4g Basketball 1,2,3,4 fMgr.J3 Sopho- more Hop Committee 23 Track 43 French Club 43 Radio Club 3. we .-k. Q.. sw, ki V X Q X WILLIAM JOSEPH MOONEY 4-642 Emery St. Philadelphia 37, Pa. Bill: High ideals with the fortitude to overcome obstacles. Activities: Sodality I,2,3,4g Library Club I,2Q Debating 1,23 St. Ignatius Club 2. s--1Q '3 FRANCIS PAUL NASH 6218 Cedar Ave. Philadelphia 4-3, Pa. Frank: The ladder of knowledge reaches beyond the ladder of Life. Activities: Debating 1,2,3,43 Dra- matics 1,2,3,43 Sodality 1,2,3,43 Li- brary Club 1,2,3,43 Student Council 4g Stage Crew 2,33 KBS Usher 43 Dance Committee 3,43 St. Ignatius Club 233,43 French Club 4g Color Guard 3g Sophomore Hop Commit- t 2. ee X MSL, X . , 'NE 1 N. AJ 1 RAYMOND R. RAFFERTY 6050 Overbrook Ave. Philadelphia 31, Pa. Ray: Intelligence refracted through wit. Activities: Sodality 1,2,3,43 Chron- icle 4g Yearbook 4g Senior Prom Committee 43 Crew 43 Choir 43 French Club 43 Dance Decorations Committee 43 Class Officer 2g Band 1. DANIEL B. SLACK 11 Llanberris Rd. Cynwyd, Pa. Dan: Precision is his note. Activities: Band 1,2,3,4Q -Sodality 1,2,3,43 Library Club lg Choir 3g Girard College Instructor 4g Senior Prom Committee 4g French Club 43 Debating 1. QDVBEYW JOSEPH ANTHONY PALLADINO 203 Sagamore Rd. Havertown, Pa. Joe: Depth and industry, his sig- nature. Activities: Sodality 4g Junior Prom Committee 33 Dance Committee 3,4Q Yearbook fEditorj 43, Class Ofiicer 1,2333 Biolo'gy Club 2,3,43 Chemistry Club 33 Spanish Missions 43 Stage Crew 2. 5 WILLIAM FRANCIS SMITH 6639 Algard St. Philadelphia 35, Pa. Smitty: The quiet and classical student with Southern Hospital- ity,' and wit. Activities: KBS 1,2,33 League of Sacred Heart 4. W ,sk ,P ,, .::Q41,, WML.. ua mmf.. my x Xiigfz f 5 ' 2 if, ,gi Hi mv 1 ,Q 3 Q f Qss'-X55 Q Q Q Q, X K fa A 1, QM. . :fb . x .A - is r gg 1 .-,r f ' :vw .X api--' . k, Yi X Si 3 . 5 5 N C, X Y ,sy X if XXX 1 x 'lf ' . - 14.5544-A. 3 ,. -Q w X W 4 Q4 Q --G AP'-ff 'lv- 21 1 iii U 'st Ishii X f' ig KL1. f gg 9 5 S 4 if 5 -Q if Y , ,- 55: .Q iw if ,N ,S v..,.w wxzfillll ...c . H-. H . I ,L Q ,R X x. 'X W4 fl' F Q 5 F. 2 il . 3: Sk . lf' 'fa x 1 , N 9 L KW, x Q f Q ls. ,K . .,., ,N A .Qi-i,f1gz.vq,3,1 f iva- W- .bww ,. af 31 v Us . L 5 wi 5 i Ei Q Saw: ::: .-X. K 5 Q R nl W QQ A he A A v a .-k L-s ,Q - ' f . X! vifif? T: .5 k z, . ,QV aw img . . 2,5 -:aww Q 359' a xx x + ' -1 ' D-ww. fv- Q 'X ' ff. ygg. M' , fi .K f E , Q, 1 N gk? 1 . if g S : K , K 3 fs, 1 S K . 2 A ffzgi. if Q - 1 5 5 -, i ' 4 ga 3 593 X .5559 'A 555+ , X, 1- S , J- 1 K N xl y gg? ggi X ' Q, XL, in was Q -b B wQ.54fQ kv 52. N .Qi S x QL r J ' ' .QQ ' pdf .ix g K.. s W if 5 - 1 i 5 3 xg . we. K E P Sv - . - se ' Y 1 -f. x.a2-V'-Q-sv t- '-I -Nr.-fr. X3Aksx...,b-P 5 SXQQQ . V L leaf. rg. N:-. 3 r . aw PETER LOUIS ALESSANDRONI RONALD PAUL BAKER GERARD JOSEPH BOSSUYT 1855 Wynnewood Rd. Philadelphia 36, Pa. Pete: Makes friends easily and sticks hy them loyally. Activities: Sodality 13 Crcw 3,43 Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom C1 nmittee 4. i JOSEPH MICHAEL BRADY 223 E. Somerville Ave. Philadelphia 20, Pa. Joe: Manly man on the ball. Activities: Basketball 1,23 Football 3,45 Baseball 3,43 Sodality 1,43 Apostleship of Prayer 2g Class Olli- cer 2,33 Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom Committee 43 Sopho- more Hop Committee 2g Yearbook 4. 4636 E. Thompson St. Philadelphia 37, Pa. 6'Bakes : A magnetic man worth getting to know. Activities: Intramurals 1,2,3,4Q League of Sacred Heart 3,4. JAMES BENEDICT BROWN 251 Winding Way Merion, Pa. Jim: Drive and teamwork are his traits on and off the court. Activities: Basketball l,2,3,43 Class Oliicer 1,23 Junior Prom Committee 33 Sodality 1,2,4Q Crew 43 Senior Prom Committee 4g Sophomore Hop Committee 2. 626 E. Shawmont Ave. Philadelphia 28, Pa. Gerry: Positive personality. Activities: Sodality 13 Junior Prom Committee 33 Sophomore Hop Com- mittee 23 Senior Prom Committee 4. JOHN 3100 N. 8th St. Philadelphia 33, Pa. Jocko: Would rather be right than president. Activities: Football 1,2,3,4g Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom Committee 43 Dramatics 3,43 Class Oiiicer l,2,33 Yearbook 43 League of the Sacred Heart 4g Glee Club 4. COYNE Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Wittiest: John Murphy Let's face it: there were times when the last four years were anything but bright and gay. There were losing streaks in foot- ball, homework streaks before the mid- years, gray-day streaks in Lent, and streaks in May when the dull pain of repetitions was sharpened by the pain of Spring Fever into something like torture. Those were the times when the wits were more than a garnish on school lifeg they were a neces- sary ingredient. We could not have done without men like Murph. EUGENE RONALD HEWITT 144 Fawn Lane Haverford, Pa. Gene: Good humor and determin- ation assure him of success. flctivities: Swimming l,2,3,4g Sodal- ty lg Intramurals 1,2,3,4g Senior Prom Committee 4g Junior Prom ommittce 33 Yearbook 4. FRANCIS JOSEPH MALLON 4614 Disston St. Philadelphia 35, Pa. Reds: Athletic and scholarly stand- out. Activities: Sodality 1,3,4g Student Council 2,3,4g Football 3,43 Basket- ball 1,2,3,4g Sophomore Hop Com- mittee 2g Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom Committee 4g Class Officer 1,2. JOHN RICHARD MURPHY BARTHOLOMEW DEAN MYLES 1456 Alcott St. Philadelphia 49, Pa. 15 Ambler Rd. Merchantville 9, N. J. Murph: Keen wit made Murph a Bart: Amicable and efficient with friend of all. Activities: Sodality l,4g Class Oili- cer 2,35 St. John Berchman's Soci- ety 3,4g Sophomore Hop Commit tee 2g Junior Prom Committee 3 Senior Prom Committee 4g Dra- matics 4. 3 a mind of his own. Activities: Sodality lg Yearbook 4 fliditorjg Senior Prom Commit- tee 4. it RICHARD FRANCIS O'CONNOR 4065 Ford Rd. Philadelphia 31, Pa. '60kie : Mysteriously attentive and alert. Activities: Football 1 fMgr.Jg So- dality 1:, St. John Berchman's So- ciety 1,2,3,4g Walsh Debating l. 1 9' MICHAEL FRANCIS QUINN, III 5109 N. Broad St. Philadelphia 41, Pa. Mike: His cordiality is boundless. Activities: Sophomore Hop Com- mittee 2g Stage Crew 3,43 Student Council 43 Dance Committee 43 Bowling Team 4. Best-looking: Chuck Walsh lleftb If handsome doesn't start out as hand- some does, it definitely ends up that way. The broad forehead is soon disfigured by a frown, the bright eye soon dulled by cynicism, the generous mouth soon tight- ened by selfishness. Forgive us a toast-like sentiment, but may all the clean cut mem- bers of the class of '56 be recognizable at the reunion in 1981. WILLIAM FRANCIS RUSSELL NICHOLAS CHARLES SCOM0 1323 N. 28th St. 5816 Torresdale Ave. Philadelphia 21 Pa. Philadelphia 24, Pa. Russ: Small frame about a great Cole: Candid, talkative, easy to soul. know. Activities: Library Club 13 Chem- Activities: Photography Club 2,33 istry Club 3. Chronicle 2g Biology Club 2,33 Art Club 43 Band 13 Sophomore Hop Committee 23 Senior Prom Commit- tee 43 Sodality 4g Class Officer lg Yearbook . .. AO.: DENNIS HOWARD SILCOX 2521 Huntingdon Lane Ardmore, Pa. Howie: The realistic half of the class twins. Activities: Basketball 1,23 Track 2,3,43 Yearbook 43 Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom Com- mittee 4. JOHN DONALD SILCOX 2521 Huntingdon Lane Ardmore, Pa. John D. : Idealistic half of the class twins. Activities: Draniatics Club 3,43 So- dality 43 Saint Ignatius Club 3,43 Glce Club 3,43 Class Officer 3g French Club 4g Chronicle 4. EDWARD ROBERT SOBEL 1934 Robinson Ave. Manoa, Pa. Ed: He has an air about himg a gentleman. Activities: Choir 33 French Club 4g Sodality 1,43 Girard College 43 Soph- omore Hop Committee 2g Senior WILLIAM F. SPRINGFIELD, JR. 1926 S. Second St. Philadelphia 48, Pa. Springbok: jovial, with the gift of imagination. Activities: St. John Berman's So- ciety 3,43 Art Class 43 Senior Prom Committee 43 Biology Club 33 Prom Chronicle Writers Club 2,32 Chem- istry Club 33 Class Officer 33 Library Club 1. I JOSEPH PETER STARK 1127 Somerville Ave. Philadelphia 41, Pa. Joe: If you want a favor cheer- fully done, ask Joe. Activities: Biology Club 2: Chem- istry Club 33 Sodality 3,4g Apostle- sllip of Prayer 45 KBS 1,2,3,-1. Maw? 3 ANTHONY N. TAMBURRI 6431 Overbrook Ave. Philadelphia 31, Pa. Tony: Does everything with rhythm and ease. Aelivities: Class Ollieer 2g Dramaties 4g Cleo Club 3,45 French Club 43 St. Ignatius Club 3.4: Sophomore Hop Committee 2g .lunior Prom Committee 3g Dance Committee 3g Sodality 43 Clll'0IllClt? 3,4: Senior Prom Committee 45 Stage Crew 3. Nu. .-..'.!.'.. Best Writer: Al Heumann Of the two main types of expression, ex- pression in spoken words and in written words, the latter is doubtless the kind which has had the most iniluenee. Would that all those years of Sunday composi- tions had borne fruit in all of us as abund- antly as it has borne fruit in the best of many seniors who, even now. have an ines- sage which will be listened to. because of the language in which they can package it. PHILIP H. TOUTKOUSHAIN 4504 Pine St. Philadelphia 43. Pa. Toot: Respe,cts and expeets re- spect. Aetivities: Band 1,2.3.4: Sodality 1: Junior Prom Committee 3: Senior Prom Committee 4g Chemistry Club 3. IR7 a ready natural wit. CHARLES JOSEPH VERNA 88 E. Marshall Rd. Lansdowne, Pa. Chuck: Amiably devotes himself to the help of others. Activities: Basketball 1,43 Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom Committee 43 Class Officer 1,43 Clu 3. ROBERT STEPHEN VIOLA CHARLES B. WALSH 3603 Winona St. Philadelphia 29, Pa. Benny: His quick smile expresses Activities: Chemistry Club 33 Bi- ology Club 2g Tennis 3,45 Class Offi- cer 13 Junior Prom Committee 33 Glee Club 43 Sophomore Hop Com- mittee 2. 469 Forrest Ave. Drexel Hill, Pa. Chuck: If he sees something he wants he'll go for it. Activities: Football 2,3343 Sodality 43 Class Officer 2,3,43 Junior Prom Committee 3g Senior Prom Commit- tee 43 Sophomore Hop Committee 2g Yearbook 4. wtf hfm N' C 'Q DONALD MALCOLM WARD 317 Berkeley Rd. Merion, Pa. Malcolm: Radiates warmth and good humor. Activities: Sodality 4g Chronicle 3,43 Dramatics 3g Football 3,43 Jun- ior Prom Committee 33 Yearbook 43 Senior Prom Committee 43 Soph- omore Hop Committee 23 Class Offi- cer 4. I I RICHARD E. WISNIEWSKI 2819 Plum St. Philadelphia 37, Pa. Gus: Aifably reasonable and pleas- antly serious. Activities: Sophomore Hop Commit lee 23 Crew 35 Senior Prom Com- mittee 4. CLIFFORD JOHN WOLFE 442 Sharon Ave. Sharon Hill, Pa. Cliff: His fine presence, an abid- ing letter of recommendation. Activities: Band 1,2,3,4g Sodality 13 Debating lg Biology Club 2. Best Debater: John Flanagan We have all had the experience in elo- cution class and recognize how hard it is to think clearly, much less with force and interest, on oneis feet. We have not all had the experience of meeting in competitive debate those from other schools who do this best. Our choice for best debater has met this competition, however, many times, and many times has shown that our best is good enough to bring home the trophy. XJ-ww 'A 1 Q XX., XXX,...X.XX.a..-w-.X-,..mX.,.,XXX .X Mensa-X,-WX WXXX .XXXX -X 1-5 1 KK A W.,-W w.Xw..w.npwXXXXKK ,, N KK ' 1 2 X Q' X QQ MM V....AM- gan-i-wwww ,XMXXXXX 5 KK sv, XL,.XXX,.XX..,.s,X...X -X,-X,s...X,X....,., XX.-3-.XyXX,W XXXX X .X.XXX.,....-X , Q X Q., ,X XXXX,X,,X , aXXX,,,.X.XLXX,X,,XXX X ,KX,,X...,,' +V..-.QLN i wg-M-.ff WX,-mmm, .3....m,?.XX Mm fs--gf--A-Q.-f-nw-Stu X Q- E ,N X ' !.....i.M--X?..,X.W ..,XXX,,XMX.a. XXT XXX.,.......!.v..-s.--E---M -- +...Q,,..,..,,i..,XXX 'Q 3 - +' Q--WMM-Q-fY'im'1+w Q'-wwf 'W ' , ' L 'I E sg? 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Left foreground ll. to rj: P. Dougherty: D. Capllllll B. Peters: W. Cnc-ml. Right Foreground in Circle: D. Bevilacquag C. Kennfdyg R. Lerrog R. DiPielr0: I. 0'C0n- nellg Mr. Herrity, 5.1.3 A. Stefanowiczg J. Tiberinog H. C. Bradleyg F. Plefka. Center vt mm Background 11. to r.b : B. McHughg P. Shoup: E. Duckworthg C. Porrf-ca: D. Marino. Near Step in Background: J. Hartman. At Base of Steps: C. Putekg S. Dirvin: T. Plunkett. Az Top of Steps: J. Crantg F. Lalley: W. Griffey. On Steps. Descendirzg: C. Coldnerg D. Sweeneyg W. Klumpg C. Mcllonnellg J. Calleng T. Murthag D. Burnsg F. Hanley. S Sin ' x 1'-aisw' e 5 Ibl UM-eu DANTE JOHN BEVILACQUA, JR. 2337 S. 13th St. Philadelphia 48, Pa. Dan: Wise beyond his years. Activities: Concert Band 2,3,4, Chess Club 43 Sodality 19 French Club 45 Biology Club 2: Chemistry Club 3, Class Officer 1. if' ffrfwfiff 7.77 'f Ill If HENRY CORNELL BRADLEY 1511 Surrey Lane Philadelphia 31, Pa. 6'H : Leadership is his earmark. Activities: Sodality 2,3,4g Band 1,2, 3,4g Class Ofiicer 1,2,3,4g Student Council 3,43 Chronicle 4: Girard College 2,43 French Club 43 Junior Prom Committee 3g Senior Prom Committee 43 Intramurals 1,2,3,4g Debating 3. NW DAVID MICHAEL CHARLES CAPUZZI 1816 S. Broad St. Philadelphia 45, Pa. Dave: Unselfish with his unpar- alleled knowledge. Activities: Band 1,2,3,4g Sodality 1,2,3,4g Class Officer 2,45 Chess Club 4: Debating lg Biology Club 2g Chemistry Club 3: French Club 4. RUDOLPH VICTOR DiPIETRO 4130 N. 8th St. Philadelphia 40, Pa. Rudy: Quick, mischievous and imaginative. Activities: Biology Club 23 Crew 4, Class Ofiicer 1,25 Intramurals 1,2,4. DANIEL LEO BURNS 3113 Berkeley Dr. Philadelphia 29, Pa. Dan: Pleasant nature glows through a reticence which is not forbidding. Activities: Golf Team 2,4g Biology Club 2:, Intramurals 1,2,3,4g KBS 1,2,3. 5' 'L ll ' '4.,l1 51.481561 STANISLAUS JOSEPH DIRVIN 1913 73rd Ave. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Stan: Steady and personable, an honest man. Activities: Chemistry Club 3g Biol- ogy Club 2, Swimming Team 23 In- tramurals 2,3. 's NW EDWARD J. DUCKWORTH 6515 Belmar Terrace Philadelphia 42, Pa. Duck: Silent, studious and self reliant. Activities: Sodality 1, Basketball 1,23 Crew 3,45 .lunior Prom Com- mittee 3g Class Officer 1,2,3,4g Soph- omore Hop Committee 23 Senior Prom Committee 4. JAMES ANTHONY GRANT 47 W. Carpenter Lane Philadelphia 19, Pa. Jim: Diligent diplomat. Activities: Band 1,2,3,4g Sodality 1,2,3,4g Dramatics 3,4-g Girard Col- lege 4g French Club 43 Chess Club 4. JOHN JAMES GALLEN 643 Lawson Ave. Havertown, Pa. Johnny: Has foresight and gets the job done well. Activities: Chemistry Club 3, Class Officer lg Sodality 1 GERARD CARROLL GOLDNER 1210 Stratford Ave. Philadelphia 26, Pa. Gerry: A man of interior stature. Activities: Tennis 3,43 Bowling 43 French Club 4. V! WILLIAM HENRY GREEN Red Lion and Knight Rds. Philadelphia 14, Pa. Bill: A rarity, a warm and friendly mathematician. Activities: Crew 3g Track 2g Cross- Country 4, Sodality 3,4g Biology Club 23 Radio Club 2,33 Senior Prom Committee 4, Sophomore Hop Committee 2. Mm Nbikismfwtw WILLIAM CAHILL GRIFFEY 1049 Haddon Ave. Collingswood 7, N. J. Bill: His unassuming air belies his efficiency. Activities: French Club 4g Debat- ing 1,23 Stage Crew 3,43 Yearbook 45 Sophomore Hop Committee 2. Best Dancer: Anthony Tamburri St. ,losephls is far from a finishing school. and yet we could not help but pick up some of the social graces during the four years from the discipline which 0r- clered everytlling from eonfluct before class to clances. There was poise in every line to he purchased for nothing hy the oh- scrvant. You Could learn something for example from watching the experts dance. No one had as much poise and grace as the best dancer. , 42 ' - 'l . 'tl H l X ,, , , ,A V, ,gl X , ff -rv ' X ,f y ..f,,,, img , ' - i YV 1 FRANCIS JOSEPH HARLEY ' 308 S. 4th St. Philadelphia 6, Pa. Frank: Always a calm before the storm. Activities: Sodality 1: Chemistry -X' I Club 3g Intramurals 1,2,3,4-3 Senior Prom Committee 4. , '-x N, - , 9' P J '-EJEEFQYZ 1 r S A' 5 , x QS 5 NK 0 ,wiv M K s N is NNN sap Q -EN s X, X if ww K 135 l t ix Us ve, 3 Qi? S H lt -T533-f'5' . 1 ? -fi. ' si X ' Ml' l l llilfll JOHN VINCENT HARTMAN 212 E. Palmer Ave. Collingswood 7, N. J. Jack: Reserved, neat, willing to help. Activities: Sodality lg Yearbook 4: Intramurals l,2,3,4: Baseball 4: Senior Prom Committee 4. i FRANCIS ALOYSIUS LALLEY 817 E. Stafford St. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Buz: Manly self-possession makes him a man you can trust. Activities: Sodality 3,4: Debating 3: Yearbook 4: French Club 4: Senior Prom Committee 4. fl 4 Wulf: Antik' CHARLES JOSEPH KENNEDY 1243 Roosevelt Dr. Upper Darby, Pa. Chuck: Small, smooth, big, brave. Activities: Football l,2,3,4g Track 4: Junior Prom Committee 3: Sen- ior Prom Committee 4: Debating lg French Club 4, Sodality 1,43 Year- book 4. ROBERT JOHN LERRO 6964 Cedar Park Ave. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Bob: Always obliging and always prepared. Activities: Biology Club 2: Sodality 1: Intramurals 1,2,3: Senior Prom Committee 43 KBS 1,2,3. WILLIAM JOSEPH KLUMP 5223 Chester Ave. Philadelphia 43, Pa. Bill: Has his great energy under control. Activities: Sodality 1: French Club 4: Choir 3,4: Senior Prom Commit- tee 4. i GERARD PAUL McDONNELL 5211 N. 15th St. Philadelphia 41, Pa. Gerry: Vigorous competitor. Activities: Football 1,2,3,4: Basket ball 1,23 Sodality 1,2,3,4: Class Offi ccr 2,3g Sophomore Hop Commit tee 2: Student Council 3. fsgjd rt. xx . 'Q...., x H 'Imp i X fx- i 1- K .L x . X- sf M QWQ SN- ,M L ' 11 x ' - 'ff A C.. , Q 1 f x 4 1: 'I' mi ,g 4 fit . fs ' NN 1 Q, gi DONALD CHARLES MARINO 6732 N. Broad St. Philadelphia 26, Pa. Don: When he finds his star he will reach for and get it. Activities: Yearbook 4, Sodality 3,4, Baseball 4, Senior Prom Committee 4g Intramurals 1,2,3,4g French Club 4. , 'I ' it N , A, . -,. JOSEPH EDWARD O'CONNELL 1907 Plymouth St. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Oakie: Cheerful, colorful person- ality. Activities: Swimming Team 1,2g Bi ology Club 2, Intramurals 1,2,3 KBS 1,2,3. W THOMAS FRANCIS MURTHA 2535 W. Harold St. Philadelphia 32, Pa. Tom: The quiet comedian. Activities: Library 1,23 Sodality 13 Chemistry Club 3, Debating 1,2. BASIL WILLIAM PETERS 404 Werner Ave. Glenolden, Pa. Bill: Has a fine concept of the worthwhile things in life. Activities: Sodality 1,43 Debating 1,2,3,4-3 Band 3,43 Dance Decorating Committee 4. ALFRED FRANK PLEFKA 1225 W. Venango St. Philadelphia 40, Pa. General: Pulls hard in everything he does. Activities: Crew 3,4g Intramurals 1,2,3,4g Junior Prom Committee 35 Senior Prom Committee 45 Class Officer 2,43 Chronicle 43 Sodality 1. 'F'- THOMAS JOSEPH PLUNKETT 7149 Cottage St. Philadelphia 35, Pa. Tom: Always underestimates his own fine qualities. Activities: Sodality 4, Yearbook 4, Intramurals 1,2,3,4g Class Oliiccr 33 French Club 4. fnlij 'J I X GEORGE A. PORRECA 13 N. Morgan Ave. Havertown, Pa. George: Personality, enthusiasm and drive. Activities: Sophomore Hop Com- mittee 2g Junior Prom Committee 3, Senior Prom Committee 4, French Club 4, Yearbook 4g Chron- icle 43 Swimming 1,2,3,4g Dramaties 3,4g Crew 3,4g Glee Club 3, Dance Committee 3, Sodality 3,43 Class Officer 1,2,3g Cheer Leader 3,4-. Best Football Player: Henry Rigler Football is a rugged sport which calls for more than co-ordination and practice. It takes intestinal investiture, more popu- larly called 'gutsf to keep coming back for more when you have been hitting and being hit so hard that your teeth ache. lt is not so bad when a man is in shape, but it's the getting in shape. Co-captain Rigler, for example wasn't always 200 All-Catholic pounds. And if the glory goes to the After- Rigler, the credit, as to all other fine senior competitors, goes to the Before-Rigler. y M, Is. .ww Kiwi f .J f V! I 69 CARL JOSEPH PUTEK Fulton St. Merehantville 10, N. J. Carl: A polished appearance opens all doors. Activities: Debating 1. ADAM RICHARD STEFANOWICZ State Rd. and Filler St. Philadelphia 14, Pa. Steve: A man of limitless potenti- ality. Activities: Sodality 1,2,3,4g Year- book 4, Baseball 3,4g Bowling 43 French Club 4g Senior Prom Com- mittee 4g Golf 4. X'.iT-QLLLQI V5 K PAUL WAYNE SHOUP 7007 N. 12th Sl. Philadelphia 26, Pa. Paul: Man in motion. Activities: Football 1,2,3,4g Basket- lmall 1,2,3,4g Sodality 1,2,3,4g Student Council 2,3,4g Sophomore Hop Com- mittee 2g Junior Prom Committee 3, Senior Prom Committee 45 Track 25 Crew 4. DONALD JAMES SWEENEY 6505 N. 4th St. Philadelphia 20, Pa. Searfie: He knows the past and is ready for the future. Activities: KBS 1,2,3g League of Sacred Heart 4. 'it Af-ffl U4 f' lr f , I 7' 'HT riff 'YQ f i 'flffiw KQZMQ: A J JOSEPH JAMES TIBERINO 248 W. Roosevelt Blvd. Philadelphia 20, Pa. Joe: Creative with a bright artistic future. Activities: Debating 1: Sotlality lg Yearbook 4g Chronicle 43 Chess Club 4g Art Club 4g Senior Prom Committee 4. 1 If 1 fl qi ' 1' ,f ,V 4 in X V04 vvcffc 'f 0 fx, N If 1 cf f X ,I g,i,,x,Q 1211! Q7 f ff 'lf C ,f Best Swimmers Brian McHugh There have been exciting moments in all fields of athletic combat in the past four years but never a moment like the one in which a champion on a team of champions won the city title by ten inches in the medley relay. , .m , .- X-'G' -'QSWQQQ' S'IBix-1vk- - wma 1 X - :aw HSN fij i ,W L Sie N i Me ww 1535213 1-' . sawed I K1 f- M ,W M AK WF 5 -Q -Q 'I rf A lt w I -, 'V 'asf 'Q Q ,, ,af N?iisssiE?5? 6 i Q5-Qu. 5 wma- mania, Ghuxmig N s 'Q Q . 3 . mfvfwwwwwmwww. ww-wg..-..N.U...,.,w ,mm ...M ...Wm .... X, QB K In 2 Q . . N, . '-X - SQ N .gxgggggwy Q ' - k h Q X K Ed 4 . M V.g. i , .ji N x S 5 s L ,ig mg Nx xw5QfSg 'ry' 5' Q XX- v DAVID B. CHRISTIAN 21 Wellington Rd. Upper Darby, Pa. Dave: A musician with a keen mind. Activities: Band 1,2,3,43 Chemistry Club 33 Bowling 4. Z' ANTHONY JOSEPH CIERI, III 1724 S. 2nd St. Philadelphia 48, Pa. Tony: In whom there is no guilef' Activities: Swimming 13 Sodality 13 Band lg Biology Club 2g Chemistry Club 3. , 'A V ' ' 3 T 'YW Mila? A.- ,ii WILLIAM RUSSELL COLUCCI 2102 S. Broad St. Philadelphia 45, Pa. Clue: Easy to meet with a friendly sort of suavity. Activities: Sodality 13 Biology Club 23 Class Officer 2,33 Chemistry Club 3g Crew 43 Prom Committee 3,4. PATRICK J. EDMONDSON 6559 N. Woodstock St. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Pat: A good athlete and a better friend. Activities: Swimming 13 Baseball 3,43 Basketball 4g Sodality 1,23 .lun- ior Prom Committee 33 Class Oili- cer 4. THOMAS JAMES ENRIGHT 5319 N. 15th St. Philadelphia 41, Pa. Tom: The vim and vigor of im- petuosity. Activities: Dramatics 43 Sodality 4g Baseball 4g Senior Prom Committee 43 Apostleship of Prayer 4. DONALD MICHAEL FINELLO 8251 Craig St. Philadelphia 36, Pa. Don: Well balanced wit and thought looks forward to well balanced future. Activities: Sodality 1,43 Baseball 3,43 Swimming 1,2,3,43 Biology Club 2g Chemistry Club 33 Class Oliicer 3. Best Basketball Player: James Brown A man is good in basketball only when all his actions have become reflex actions. A pass behind the back, a block with the foot, a hesitation shot--the man who has to stop and think about these things just never gets to do them in a game. And a man does not convert from deliberate to reflex aetions unless he has a lot of eo- ordination to begin with. One does not become accomplished in basketball har- monies unless, like Brownie, he is gifted with a hue set of sinews which can convert all possible actions to reflex actions and leave the mind free to make plays. CHRISTOPHER JUHN FIUMARA 2935 S. Juniper St. Philatlelpllia 48, Pa. Chris: Comradeship along with scholastic eompetenee. .4eti1'ilies: Soalality l: Class flflieer 3.-1-1 Baseball 3g Debating lg ,lunior Prom Committee 3: Senior l,l'0lll Committee 4g Biology Club 2. X -, 7 N K i .vi iw- .Q K, ' C LOUIS CARL FLANAGAN 601 Overhill Rd. Ardmore, Pa. LAWRENCE WILLIA F , NCE 326 Clifton Ave Sharon H 1 . I OL Lou: Deep run the thoughts of a quiet man. Activities: Biology Club 23 Crew 3,43 Class Officer 23 Intramurals 1. HARVEY MAURICE HILLMAN 65 Cooper St. Woodbury, N. J. Harvey: A loyal friend and genial companion. Activities: Sodality 1,2,33 Biology Club 2g Class Oiiicer 33 Apostleship of Prayer 4. 2 Larry: Behind th - e im s- sion-Quality. Activities: Stage Crew 43 Sodality 1,2,3,43 Band 2,3343 Debating 133,43 Biology Club 2g Dance Committee 3,43 Crew 33 Chronicle 43 Yearbook 43 Senior Prom Committee 4g St. John Berchman's Society 43 Soph- omore Hop Committee 2. ANTHONY JOSEPH INTRIERI 8111 Ardleigh St. Philadelphia 18, Pa. Sonny: Clear perception and de- cisive action. Activities: Sodality 1,23 Baseball 43 Football 33 Basketball 4g Biology Club 2. .I HN PATRICK HASSAN - 1536 Ruan St. Philadelphia 24, Pa. Jack: Gay, witty and dependable. Activities: Sodality 1,23 Band 1,2, 3,43 Class Officer 1,23 Biology Club 23 Chemistry Club 3g St. John Berch- man's Society 3,4. JOSEPH FRANCIS KNOLL 636 Hermitage St. Philadelphia 28, Pa. Joe: Dissimulates a wealth of knowledge. Activities: Sodality 1,23 Track 2g Baseball 4. aw Best Oarsmanz Fred Plefka Championship crews are no accident. They are planned. They demand long train- ing hours during the entire year. When the river is navigable by sculls. when it is free of ice and the temperature is not below what a strong man can stand, the crew is out there. VVhen it is not navigable. the crew is up in the attic at school working: out on the rowing machines. The smooth. almost mechanical stroking one sees from the blossom covered banks of the Schuyl- kill in June is the polished performance of hardy devotees of a rough path to glory. Among them Fred Plefka was pre-eminent. JOSEPH FRANCIS KRIWASCH 423 Vine St. Philadelphia 6, Pa. Ioe: An impulsive personality, a man with his own ideas. Aletivilies: Sodality 15 Class Officer lg Chemistry Club 3g League of Sacred Heart 45 Intramurals 1,2,3,4. ff., gi Q i luifbwe W 305521: I I7 JOHN JOSEPH KUGLER 4049 Dayton Rd. Drexel Hill, Pa. Jack: Humourous and human out- look on life. Activities: Sodality 15 Library Club lg Biology Club 2g Chemistry Club 33 Apostleship of Prayer 4. Q GREGORY ALOYSIUS McADAMS JOSEPH EDWARD McCORMICK EDWARD THOMAS McGARRY 1009 Sycamore St. 860 Sanger St. 322 Godfrey Ave. Haddon Heights, N. J. Philadelphia 24, Pa. Philadelphia 20, Pa. Greg: Always master of the situa- Joe: Diminutive ball of fire. Ed: Puts you at ease with his man- tion. Activities: Football 2,3,4g Track 4g ner-ful approach. Activities: Crew 43 Chemistry Club St. John Berchman s Society 43 Sell' Activities: Color Guard 3g Library 3:, Class Officer lg St. John Berch- ior Prom Committee 43 Sophomore Club 2,33 St, john Berchmalfs So. man's Club 3,4. Hop Committee 2. eiety 3,4. W 94 If K I A7 . -,,. RONALD R. MANKOWSKI 3004 E. Thompson St. Philadelphia 34, Pa. Reggie: A man with a broad out- look. Activities: Band lg Chronicle fMag azinej lg Sodality 1,2,3,4g Choir 35 Apostlcship of Prayer 4. Best Trackmen: Dennis Howard Silcox- Bill Green Track has not had the play at the Prep that it so richly deserves. The Marathon is still the symbol of endurance, and even in the age of supersonic air travel the names of Bannister and Landy are synonomous with perseverance and endurance. Out there everyday from early spring are men like Silcox and Green following a path to glory that will never lose its appeal. LOUIS FRANCIS MARONI ANDREW JOSEPH MULHERIN 2232 S. 16th St. 4649 Hazel Ave. Philadelphia 4-5, Pa. Philadelphia 43, Pa. Lou: A wit in scholar's clothing. Andy: Speaks little, does much. Activities: Sodality 1,23 Debating Activities: Band 3,43 Chemistry 1,2,3,4g Band 13 School Paper 35 Club 33 Senior Prom Committee 4 Chronicle 15 Class Officer 1. JOHN JOSEPH NAPOLEON 7275 Bradford Rd. Upper Darby, Pa. Nappy: Dynamic bearer of a great name. Activities: Sodality 1,33 Crew 3,4g Biology Club 2,43 Chemistry Club 33 Senior Prom Committee 4, Soph- omore Hop Committee 2g St. John Bcrchman's Society 35 Class Offi- cer 2. JOHN PAUL POTTS 1533 S. 53th St. Philadelphia 4-3, Pa. Jack: Engaging personality and well informed mind. Activities: St. .lohn Berchman's So- ciety 3,4g Chemistry Club 3g Class Officer 1, Intramurals l,2,3,4. CHARLES RICHARD REED 31 First Ave. Cape May, N. J. Charley: Serious without solemn- ity. Activities: Sodality 3,4g St. John Berchman's Society' 3,43 Stage Crew 3,43 Chemistry Club 3g Yearbook 4, Debating 33 Library Club 3, Girard College HENRY JOSEPH RIGLER 5113 N. Fairhill St. Philadelphia 20, Pa. Hank: Big man in both senses of the word. Activities: Football 2,3,4 fCo-Cap- Atainl 3 Class Officer 2,43 Sodality 1,43 Stage Crew 2, Student Council 3,45 Junior Prom Committee 3g Soph- omore Hop ROBERT PETER RIO 1100 S. Front St. Philadelphia 47 Pa. Bob: Geniality plus. Activities: Sodality li Band lg Soph- omore Hop Committee 2g Biology Club 2g Chemistry Club 33 Drama- tics 3 St John Berchman's Soci JOHN JOSEPH SALERA 1230 Ritner St. Philadelphia 48, Pa. Jack: The kind of person who en- joys the enjoyment of others. Activities: Sodality 1,2g Biology ety 3,4,. . - if Club 25 Cl1e I Favorite Teacher: Mr. Bourg, SJ. What makes a teacher liked as well as respected is a combination of fairness. pa- tience, and just plain personality. Granted that our passion for justice was often ex- aggerated, we liked the teachers who satis- fied it most the best. Cranted that we often would have tried the patience of a saint, we liked the teachers who were tried least of all best. Crantcd that we should have looked for books and not for nice covers we liked the classes with the nicest covers best. EUGENE JOHN SCHERNECKE 3338 N. Palethorp St. Philadelphia 40, Pa. Gene: Reserved and dependable. Activities: Biology Club 24 Chem- istry Club 3g Senior Prom Commit- tee 43 St. John Berchman Societyfl-. ot' . if nal GEORGE WARREN SCHURR MICHAEL ANTHONY SLAWEK JOSEPH PATRICK SPUHLER 24 W. Logan St. Philadelphia 44, Pa. Tank: Dynamic and buoyant. Activities: Swimming l,2,3,4g So- dality 1,43 Junior Prom Committee 3: Biology Club 2:, Intramurals l,2, 3,43 Senior Prom Committee 4: Chemistry Club 3: Sophomore Hop Committee 2. + X Y ,X I THOMAS JOSEPH WALKER 5327 Hadfield St. Philadelphia 43, Pa. Tom: The wit behind a lot of wis- ticisms. Activities: Sodality lg KBS 1,2,3. 4202 Manayunk Ave. Philadelphia 28, Pa. Slouch: His good nature is hidden, but only at first acquaintance. Activities: Football 2,3,4g Sopho- more Hop Committee 2g Junior Prom Committee 33 Senior Prom Committee 4, Class Officer 2,45 KBS l,2,3,4g St. John Berchman's Soci- ety 4g Chemistry Club 3. L RICHARD JOSEPH WARCHOL 875 N. 30th St. Philadelphia 30, Pa. Dick: His good nature diffuses it- self widely. Activities: Sodality lg Sophomore Hop Committee 2, Chemistry Club 3g Yearbook 4g Chronicle 4g, Track 3,4g Senior Prom Committee 4. 801 S. 47th St. Philadelphia 43, Pa. Joe: Rugged exterior cloaks a gentle personality. Activities: Band lg Sodality lg Bowl- ing 45 Biology Club 2g Chemistry Club 33 Class Oflicer 1,23 Junior Prom Committee 3: Senior Prom Committee 4. GERALD MICHAEL WHALEN 6606 N. 20th St. Philadelphia 38, Pa. Jerry: Infects you with a feeling of well being. Activities: Sodality lg Biology Club 23 Sophomore Hop Committee 2g Intramurals l,2,3,4. it-tw ft .J df 5 X N X X I i .lk X XXNXKJ V X X X X if X X X 5 NR X mf XX Qfwvg XXX X X .X ,mQkXgkQR N1 5 'X rf' . 6 I : fl' I 5 I . lg 3 s 4 1 - - -5. .. MQXNX ff.,-. -,X . ,, Xfxkg N X X X X X SKQSQW ' - - - EX 5 XQQ A K Q N X S 'X it 1 hlnll,,,,gn A A 55.554, xffg,.55.ff: , V -fi ,lag fl :Hg iii: Ssgfgz , y X ill W W 1' af-IS lg 5 Q 5 Ma . 1 i x ji 53355 53 352 5 ,: . , .ide f r Ns 7 . ze ff, . 1 sz' M a 1' Af? pg -i .Q F 'L 1932 : ff ff-gsm ,Q TIIE YEAIRIIMIK STAFF C0-EDITORS: Bartholomew Myles and BUSINESS MANAGER: Bernard Currie ASSISTANT EDITORS: Frank Lalley Donald Marino STAFF MEMBERS: Raymond Armento John Coyne John Flanagan Harry Gallagher Frank Gray Al Heuman Joseph Brady Joseph Duggan Lawrence France Vincent Genovesi ART: Joseph Tiberino TYPING: Nicholas Scomo Josep h Palladino all Gene Hebert 'l'homas Plunkett John King John Lafferty Michael McManus George Porreca Raymond Rafferty Richard Stefanowicz cl William Griffey Howard Silcox Charles Kennedy Donald Ward Charles Reed Robert Viola George Schurr I85 535.00 James B. Brown, Jr. 325.00 George M. Cavanaugh Edward J. Fitzgerald Mr. 81 Mrs. William Grant Mr. 81 Mrs. David T. Horn Charles H. Knecht Dr. Joseph V. Missett, Sr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. J. Myles Dr. 81 Mrs. Michael F. Quinn G. E. Robertson Dr. 81 Mrs. George D. Shoup 520.00 Capuzzi-Intenzo, Incorporated Mr. 81 Mrs. F. A. Lalley 315.00 John Alessandroni PATRO Harry R. Halloran Mr. 81 Mrs. Matthew J. Hanley Mr. 81 Mrs. William Hanley Vincent P. Hartman Mr. 81 Mrs. John Hassan Mr. 81 Mrs. Arthur Hebert Mr. 81 Mrs. Edw. J. Hennessy Dr. 81 Mrs. J. A. Herrman, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. George F. Hewitt Mr. 81 Mrs. James J. Higgins Mr. 81 Mrs. Sydney Hyman Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas J. Innes Walter Jajko Miss Katherine Keenehan Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Kennedy Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. King Mr. William A. Klump Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Knoll Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mrs. M. Sp Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Charles Short Joseph E. Slawek Charles Sobel Thaddeus Solecki uhler Joseph W. Stark Patrick J. Sweeney Edw. Szuszczewicz Earl Tamburri Mrs. Cecilia Tiberino Miss Gladys D. Toutkoushian A. Louis Verna Robert S. Viola Mrs. Anna Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Dr. 81 Mrs. Thomas V. Walker Charles B. Walsh Joseph Warchol M. J. Ward Winn Miss Rose Armento Mr. 81 Mrs. Eugene J. Anderer Mr. 81 Mrs. Godfred A. Anderson Dr. 81 Mrs. Teofil Babacz Richard J. B. Baker Mrs. Louise Barrentine Dr. 81 Mrs. Dante J. Bevilacqua Katherine Bins Joseph Boyle Mr. 81 Mrs. Henry Bradley Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Brady Mr. 81 Mrs. William Colucci Mr. 81 Mrs. Vincent A. Connolly James B. Copeland A. Cunningham Edmund L. Dale Bill Davis Vincent H. DeBenedetta Mrs. John DePhillip Mr. 81 Mrs. Stan J. Dirvin Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward G. Donnelly Mr. John T. Dooley Mr. 81 Mrs. J. W. Dorsey Mr. 81 Mrs. Philip J. Dougherty Mr. 81 Mr.s Bart J. Duggan Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. E. Edmondson Cdr. 81 Mrs. Roderick Y. Edwards Mr. 81 Mrs. Bernard J. Enright Mr. 81 Mrs. Michael Finello Mr. 81 Mrs. F. Emmett Fitzpatrick Mr. 81 Mrs. John V. Flanagan J. W. Flanagan Mr. 81 Mrs. James France Mr. 81 Mrs. C. E. Frech George M. Gowen Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas M. Gannon Mr. 81 Mrs. Harry L. Gallagher Mr. 81 Mrs John J. Gallen Mr. 81 Mrs D. Genovesi Mr. 81 Mrs. Herman W. Goldner The James M. Gray Family Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank P. Green Dr. 81 Mrs. Wm. C. Griffey Mr. 81 Mrs. William Gummere, Jr. Joe Kriwasch Bernard E. CGusJ Kueny Nick Kueny, '43 Mr. 81 Mrs. Dominic Lerro Mrs. Helen A. Makem Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis J. Mallon Leo J. Malloy Mrs. Maria Marinelli Mrs. Josephine Maroni Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles A. Marino Mrs. Mae A. Martynn Mr. 81 Mrs. James P. McAluney Edward J. McBride, Sr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Dr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles F. McCafferty M. H. McCloskey, III John A. McCormick Neil McGarry Manus McHugh Frank X. Mcllhinney Mr. 81 Mrs. Michael C. McManus Mr. 81 Mrs. Andrew J. Mulherin, T. J. Murphy Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Murphy . James A. Nolen, Jr. Joseph E. O'Connell Charles M. 0'Connor Stanley Ostaszewski, Sr. John B. Overbeck, Jr. Dr. Frank J. Pandolfi Mr. 81 Mrs. Dr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. B. Peters George A. Porreca Vincent Potako John Potts Mr. Joseph C. Putek Mr. 81 Mrs. Raymond R. Rafferty Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Reed William F. Rhinehart, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Peter Rio Mr. James P. Ryan Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Salera Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs John Schernecke George W. Schurr Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Bartholomew A. Sheehan Mr. 81 Mrs John J. Shevlin l86 Mr. Edmund Wisniewski Dr. 81 Mrs. Edward J. Wiza Dr. 81 Mrs. Anthony V. Ziccardl 510.00 Fred Barnitz Borio 81 Martina Mr. 81 Mrs. Alfred Chiurco Class of '4D Mr. 81 Mrs. James E. Currie Toselli DelGuercio Mr. 81 Mrs. H. E. Duckworth Mr. 81 Mrs. Christopher Fiumara Peter F. Graham A. E. Gray D. F. Hassett Michael J. Henry Mr. 81 Mrs. Albert J. Heumann Mr. 81 Mrs. Harvey M. Hillman Mr. 81 Mrs. Steward C. Holman Leo J. Howitz Dr. 81 Mrs. R. Juele Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph E. Kelley Mr. 81 Mrs. Louis A. Kosinski Mr. F. Leo Lechleidner Mr. 81 Mrs. John I. Logan Major 81 Mrs. Robert F. Maguire Mattea Family Mr. 8 Mrs. Leonard J. McAdams Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas McDonnell, Jr Mr. 81 Mrs. George E. Nash Mr. 81 Mrs. Emile Perrot Elizabeth Regan William Scheer Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas Seioli Mrs. Joseph Spatola Miss Helena W. Stefanowicz Edwin F. Uhlaud David W. Weston, Sr. 155.00 Mr. 81 Mrs. Philip Adomanis Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Ammlung Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis T. Anderson Stanley Angelo Mr. Louis Anker John Anthony Mrs. A. Appalucci Mr. 81 Mrs. Vito Arino Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis I. Bailey P. J. Barnes Mr. 81 Mrs. A. Barszczewski Mr. 81 Mrs. Edmund A. Bateman Mrs. Caroline Battista Mr. 81 Mrs. Eugene Behl Mr. Joseph Bellesorte Mr. Paul Bellino Dr. 81 Mrs. Chas. J. Benz Mr. 81 Mrs. Louis A. Berret Mr. 81 Mrs. Edw. T. Blaney, Sr. James H. Bluett Mr. 81 Mrs. Louis F. Boedewig Mr. 81 Mrs. Louis Bonelli Patrick Bonner Mr. 81 Mrs. Peter W. Bossow Mr. 81 Mrs. L. Bossuyt Gerard Bossuyt Mr. 81 Mrs. F. C. Boyce Mr. 81 Mrs. Montrose L. Boyle Theo. J. Branka Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank X. Brennan, Jr. Mr. Thomas J. Breslin Mr. 81 Mrs. Earl Britt Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph L. Brogan Dr. 81 Mrs. Louis E. Brogan J. W. Brown Mr. Joseph Brown Thomas J. Buckley Dr. 81 Mrs. S. J. Buonato Mr. 81 Mrs. Harry M. Burgoyne Mr. Frank V. Burke, Sr. Mr. John Burns, Sr. William T. Burton Marie Bryan Mr. Edward B. Byrne John F. Byrne John J. Cabrey, Jr. James R. Caine Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis P. Callahan Mr. 81 Mrs. Raymond C. Callahan Mr. 81 Mrs. Firmin G. Callan Mrs. Frank C. Campbell Mr. 81 Mrs. A. H. Campbell Mr. 81 Mrs. John A. Campbell Cdr. 81 Mrs. T. F. Campbell Mr. 81 Mrs. John P. McCandless Mr. 81 Mrs. Robert F. Cann PATIHI -Uuntinued Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs. Dr. 81 Mrs. L. Catafesta A. Cauterucci Joseph James Cava Mr. 81 Mrs. Andrew A. Cebula Mr. 81 Mrs. Guido B. Cellucci Mr. 81 Mrs Leon J. Cerankowski Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Chalmers Mr. 81 Mrs. E. S. Chapman Dr. 81 Mrs. Albert Chinappi Mr. 81 Mrs Frederick Christie David Christian Mr. 81 Mrs. W. B. Christy, III Mrs. Nellie McCrea Christy Mr. 81 Mrs. W. J. Churchill Frank F. Chrzanowski Elizabeth Cieri Joseph Clark, Jr. 2E Class of 3D, ,57 Dolores Clement Mr. Thomas F. Coffey Joseph T. Coghlan, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. John Conaghan Edward J. Conlin Francis G. Connelly Edmond J. Connolly Gerard Connolly Ed Connor John A. Corr John R. Corrigan Robert J. Coyle A. F. Cullen Charles L. Currie Nelson Curran J. Frank Crawford, Esq. Charles Dabagian Arthur C. Dalo Joseph J. Dalton Mrs. Adeline M. Dougherty Mr. 81 Mrs. John V. Dougherty Mrs. Thomas L. Doyle Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. J. Doyle, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Duchnowski Walter J. Dutiy Francis Dennis James Dugan Mrs. Mary Dunne Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward T. Durphy Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph E. Dwyer Mr. William A. Dwyer Mr. 81 Mrs. Ralph K. Eddowes Robert L. Eck George Eidman Mrs. J. T. Emery Mr. 81 Mrs. E. Peter Englesbe Mr. Anthony Esposito Miss Helen F. Espenshade Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles W. Evans Mr. 81 Mrs. John Facenda John F. McFadden, M.D. Mr. 81 Mrs. C. J. Fagan Mr. 81 Mrs. Matthew J. Fanelli, Sr. Samuel V. Fasy Dr. William Fearn Mrs. Mary DiFilippo Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas J. Finan Mr. 81 Mrs. William P. Finlay Mr. 81 Mrs. Jos. Fitzpatrick Mr. 81 Mrs. Ernest C. Flegel, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. S. C. Flood Mayor 8 Mrs. Frederick W. Floyd Mr. 81 Mrs. Andrew A. Foley George A. Fox Mr. 81 Mrs. George S. Fraunces Compliments of a Friend Mrs. Bertha G. Fulton Mr. 81 Mrs. Umberto Gagliardi John Canterino Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank Cardamone Anthony Caristo Margaret J. Carlin Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. James M. Carlin Alfred Carroccio Louis Caruso John C. Casani J. Casper Milton F. Casson Louis Cattafesta, Sr. Mrs. Beatrice G. Daly John M. D'Angelo Albert D'Antonio Mr. Ewald Darrah Mr. 81 Mrs. T. F. Deady Mrs. Vincent De Lucia Dr. 81 Mrs. John H. Dempsey Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. S. Demski David N. Desimone Mrs. Carmen DeStefano Mrs. Anna Dever Mr. 81 Mrs. Bernard Devine Mr. 81 Mrs. Phillip DeCarlo Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph DiGiovanni Mr. Harry DiMonte Mr. 81 Mrs. R. DiPietro Senator Anthony 81 Mary DiSilvestro John J. D'Lauro, Jr. Robert J. Doyle Mr. Frank A. Dolce Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank J. Dolge John W. Donges Edward J. Donnelly, M.D. Miss Elizabeth Donnelly I87 Mr. Edward F. Gallagher John J. Gallagher John P. Gallagher, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Gallagher John R. Gallagher William G. Gallimore John J. Gannon Vincent T. Garrity Walter Garvin Walter Gasiewski Anne C. Gara Bernard Gedaka Mr. 81 Mrs. Samuel Gentile Mr. 81 Mrs. Albert A. Gibboni Mr. 81 Mrs. George Gillespie Mrs. J. A. Gilson Vincent Di Gironimo Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward Glendale Frank P. Glenn Gerald P. Glowacz The Golden Family Mr. 81 Mrs. Henry D. Gordon Mr. 81 Mrs. Mlt'lllllFl Cordon Mr. 81 Mrs. James F. Gorman John J. Gormley Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward C. Gottsman Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Gough Mr. Walter T. Grandy Mr. 81 Mrs. Jack H. McGrann Mr. James J. Grady Mr. 81 Mrs. Benj. P. Graif Mrs. David M. Graham Mr. 81 Mrs. E. J. Grimth Stephen Grimes Mr. Martin Grourke Charles A. Guinosso John A. Haas Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Hallermeier Harry R. Halloran Felix N. Hanschmann Mrs. Jeremiah P. Hannan Dr. Margaret M. Hassett Mr. 81 Mrs. M. H. Heidere Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph M. Heimerl Mr. Joseph R. Heppler Mr. 81 Mrs. C. Herron Albert J. Heumann '56 Stephen M. Heumann 1-B I. K. Heuisler Mr. James F. Higgins '49 Dr. 81 Mrs. M. W. Hnatiuk Mr. 81 Mrs. Austin L. Hogan Mr. 81 Mrs. W. S. Howland Mr. 81 Mrs. E. Hunter 81 Family James L. Hughes, D.D.S. Robert Hughes, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Richard F. Hyland Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Intrieri Mr. John G. Ioia John Jankowski Mr. 81 Mrs. Peter Jaskel Mrs. Joseph Jerome Mr. 81 Mrs. Domenick D. Joseph Miss Jean Jungkurth Mrs. Louis Junker Mr. Edward J. Kalicki Mr. 81 Mrs. A. Kalhammer Mr. 81 Mrs, Frank B. Kaminski Mrs. Walter Kane Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Kasper F. Kawski John L. Kay Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank J. Kearney Bernard J. Kelley Mr. 81 Mrs. F. Kelly Mr. 81 Mrs. Harry T. Kelly James J. Kelly John Kelly Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas J. Kelly In Memory of Joseph W. King, Jr. '52 Julian Kirchmann Mr. 81 Mrs. Frederick Kirchoffer Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph W. Klemick Mr. 81 Mrs. W. Klepczynski Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Kling Mr. 81 Mrs. Carl W. Koch PATRO -Continued Anthony J. Koliba Mr. 81 Mrs. E. Kondrath Mrs. Marie Kowalski Mr. 81 Mrs. Russell Krantz Mr. 81 Mrs. W. Kritzler Mr. 81 Mrs. E. J. Ksansnak Miss Caroline M. Kugler Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Kugler Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph S. Kugler Mr. 81 Mrs. John A. Laiierty Mr. 81 Mrs. John D. LaLumera Mr. 81 Mrs. Leonard LaLumera John J. Lamb Dr. 81 Mrs. R. C. Lanciano Mrs. Joseph Lange Mr. Joseph Lange Rev. Frederick F. Lanshe Mr. 81 Mrs. J. LaRosa Mr. 81 Mrs. F. J. Lawrence Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward Leahy Mr. 81 Mrs. Ralph J. Leamy 81 Son Mr. 81 Mrs. J. F. Leihrandt Dr. Thomas J. Leichner Pasquale Lerro Mrs. Stella Les Mr. 81 Mrs. M. Levin Mr. 81 Mrs. John Lewis Mr. 81 Mrs. James J. Leyden Mr. 81 Mrs. John B. Lynch Thomas V. Lloyd, Jr. Frank Lokaj Mrs. James F. Loughery Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph A. Luczak Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas Lyons Mr. Joseph Maccarone Mr. 81 Mrs. James J. McCarthy Salvatore Maddalena Mr. 81 Mrs. Jerry A. Madden Mr. 81 Mrs. Walter J. Maginnis The Maguire Children Mr. 81 Mrs. Jos. P. Maher John J. Mahoney Mr. John A. Mahony Laura Malach Mr. 81 Mrs. A. Malcarney Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank Malfara John J. Maloney Mr. 81 Mrs. Leon T. Mankowski Ronald R. Mankowski Leon A. Mankowski Dominic Mangravite Albert Marta John 81 Barbara Martin Mr. 81 Mrs. Lewis J. Martin Stephen J. Martin Mr. 81 Mrs. H. N. Martindell Thomas J. Mawhinney Mr. Donato L. Mazzola Mr. 81 Mrs. John McAleer Michael T. McAndrews Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward F. McBride Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles F. McCaiIerty l88 Margaret C. McCaiierty Mr. 81 Mrs. Theodore H. McCalla Mr. 81 Mrs. John McCarthy Mr. 81 Mrs. E. B. McCauley The McCormick Kid's Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph W. McCormick William H. McCormick Mrs. Katherine McCrea Mr. 81 Mrs. Hugh McDaid Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas McDonnell Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Mclilderry The McFadden Family Mr. A. G. McFall Mr. 81 Mrs. E. McGarrigle Mr. 81 Mrs. William H. McGarvey Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Stewart McGill Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Raymond McGill Mr. 81 Mrs. R. E. McGlinchey Charles J. McKee Mr. 81 Mrs. Leo F. McKee Francis McGovern Mr. 81 Mrs. John McGovern Mr. 81 Mrs. John C. McGrath William I. McHugh James J. McLaughlin Mrs. Catherine B. McGrath Catherine McNamee Mr. 81 Mrs. Michael McNulty Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph P. McNulty Frank J. Meis, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Melchiorre Mr. 81 Mrs. Dominic Melino Joseph Meloni Mrs. Martin Mellon Catherine S. Mettler J. James Mirabile Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Mitchell, Jr. Edward N. Mlodzik Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank Molle Patrick Mooney Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas J. Mooney Mrs. Lillian R. Moors Mrs. C. M. Mosser Mr. 81 Mrs. David E. Morris Albert J. Mortier Joseph R. Mulhern James J. Mulligan Mr. James T. Murphy Mr. 81 Mrs. James T. Murray Magistrate 81 Mrs. Elias Myers Ann E. Myles Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Nagle, Jr. Mrs. Jean Napaver Mrs. A. Naseef Mr. Joseph Naseef Mr. Frank M. Nash Dr. S. I. Nichols Mr. Joseph I. Niklas, Sr. Mrs. Ena Nicklas Miss Geraldine Nicklas Mr. 81 Mrs. William M. Noonan Mr. 81 Mrs. Jules S. Novak Mrs. Roseva McCann Nuttall Mr. 81 Mrs. James D. Obrecht Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. O'Brien Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas J. 0'Brien Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph 0'Connell Mr. 81 Mrs. Patrick S. 0'Connell William F. 0'Connell George 0'Hea '59 Mr. Stephen M. O'Keefe Mr. 81 Mrs. Samuel E. Oldt Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles J. 0'Neill Mr. 81 Mrs. L. V. 0'Neill Mr. 81 Mrs. James P. 0'Shea 8 Joseph C. Ott Thomas A. Owens Kathleen A. Palladino Mr. 81 Mrs. W. Palmatary Mr. 81 Mrs. Martin Paone Mr. 81 Mrs. Luke H. Pape Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Pedano Mr. 81 Mrs. Anthony Pentino Mr. 81 Mrs. Alfred G. Perlini Joseph Petrone Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas Piermatteo Mr. Joseph Pinto Mr. Primo Piunti Mr. 81 Mrs. Herman P. Phillips Mr. 81 Mrs. Carl Plefka Floyd R. Pope Mr. 81 Mrs. E. Porreca Mr. '81 Mrs. Lewis Porreca Mr. 81 Mrs. William H. Powell Thomas Prior John Pukrop Mr. 81 Mrs. Edw. J. Quinn Mr. 81 Mrs. Hugh F. Quinn, Jr. Mr. 81 Mrs. Milton B. Quinn Mr. 81 Mrs. John J. Rafferty James Ragni, Sr. Mr. Gerald J. Raidy Mr. 81 Mrs. Gerald J. Raidy Joseph Reeves Fred E. Rein Mr. 81 Mrs. William Repsher Mr. 81 Mrs. Herbert W. Rest Dr. 81 Mrs. Earl F. Riceman Mr. 81 Mrs. Harry Rigler Misses Rita 81 Theresa Rigler Mr. 81 Mrs. Arthur E. Rodgers Elizabeth Rook William M. Rooney Mrs. Irma Rosato Margaret Roth Mr. E. T. Rowland Michael E. Rubino Mr. 81 Mrs. Albert Rummel Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. F. Russell Mrs. Mae Ryan Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Ryhacki John J. Salera Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank Sambuco Ludovico Barattieri di San Pietro PATIHI -Gontinued Miss Rose G. Sanderson Sarat Family Mr. Roman Sawycky Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Scalies Frank Scannapieco Mr. 81 Mrs. Lester Schaffer Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Schang Mr. Frank J. Schanne Mr. 81 Mrs. Paul L. Scheidel Mr. Charles Schorpp Nicholas Scomo, Jr. Mrs. Rose Scomo Joseph F. Scott Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph A. Seborowski Frank Seger Mr. 81 Mrs. Norman R. Seger Mr. 81 Mrs. A. M. Segrave-Daly Rev. Stanley S. Skowronski Joseph S. Senser Mrs. Catherine Shaw Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank G. Shea Mr. 81 Mrs. Samuel Shoemaker, Sr. Mr. 81 Mrs. A. R. Shuman Mr. 81 Mrs. George H. Sigel Michael J. Slavin Mr. 81 Mrs. John Slawek Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Mcslermatt Mr. 81 Mrs. LeRoy Srnedley James C. Smyth K. Spakauskas Mr. 81 Mrs. Charles Spinelli Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. F. Springfield, Sr. Mr. 81 Mrs. James Stahilito Mr. 81 Mrs. Albin Stadalnik Mr. Joseph Stadalnik, Sr. Mr. Anthony Stagliano Adam Richard Stefanowicz Mr. 81 Mrs. A. P. Stefanowick Mr. 81 Mrs. Paul F. Stewart Mr. 81 Mrs. Stephen Stevens John Strain Mr. Roger J. Stroebele Charles H. 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Yinger Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs Mr. 81 Mrs. Mr. 81 Msr. Richard B. Dr. 81 Mrs. Francis J. Young Arthur Younglove William V. Zambelli Adam Zygmont 33.00 Baker, M.D. Richard P. Baker Miss Elizabeth M. Baker Rt. Rev. Msgr. Cletus J. Benjamin D.D., Ph.D. Robert J. Blake Mr. 81 Mrs. George W. Bur Fortunata M. Cacciola Mr. 81 Mrs. Louis Carbo Peter J. Cazello Mr. 81 Mrs. Michael Del Monte Joseph M. De Lone, Jr. Robert Eichmann Frances Evans Miss Jessie Faber Mr. 81 Mrs. Patrick Ferrie Rose Marie Finelli Rita 81 Edward J. Hendrick James Hendrick Mrs. Harvey M. Hillman, Sr. Elizabeth G. Hills Mrs. Fred Horner Mrs. Leo J. I-Iowitz John J. Imsenik Mr. 81 Mrs. Louie Jeung Mr. 81 Mrs. Hubert D. Lacey Joseph Lehman Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank J. Maher Mrs. Anne Manning Lew's Market Mr. 81 Mrs. Walter T. Maylie Joanne McAdams Harriet McAdams Thomas McCahon Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank McCloskey Mr. Daniel A. McCormick Mr. 81 Mrs. George J. McHugh Thomas McColgan William Mosconi Frank C. Orr Stanley Ostaszewski, Jr. Henry Panetta Mr. 81 Mrs. George Pieretti, Jr. Wm. Plefka Mrs. John P. Plunkett John Rama Quentin Rescigno S. G. A. Rudolph Ray A. Shaffer Dr. B. T. Simmons, Chp. Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph F. Skowronek B. T. Smith Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Spitz Miss Barbara Stefanowicz Clifford Wolfe Cliff Wolfe Mr. 81 Mrs. George A. Wright Emil 81 Madeline Wurster Mr. 81 Mrs. Frank Zielinski Mr. 81 Mrs. Zin, Jr. Eugene Zyblikewycz 32.00 C. D,Antonio Augustine Adele Baltrush Mr. 81 Mrs. J. Baker Mr. 81 Mrs. Raymond F. Baker Mrs. Richard B. Baker Mrs. William C. Beck Mr. 81 Mrs. William C. Beck 1 H. F. Becker Circolo Mario Bianco Cecelia Bohn Mr. William Bolger Mrs. Bernard J. Boyle Brigidi Mrs. E. Brown Miss Helena Bugsch Helen V. Calnan Mr. 81 Mrs. Harry Carbo Mrs. Rachael F. Carroll Mrs. J. W. Cosby Mrs. Catherine Crine Richard W. Cava Mr. 81 Mrs. M. Chilnick Mr. 81 Mrs. R. T. Clark 2E Mrs. Clara Colan Mr. 81 Mrs. Francis Collins Mr. 81 Mrs. James Conway Michael Del Monte 1-4 Joseph M. De Lone, Sr. John A. Devlin Vincent DeVuono Mr. 81 Mrs. H. Di Peppe PATRO S-Continued Mrs. P. Dolan Paul D'0rtona Clair F. Dooley Charles L. Donahue Helen M. Donahue Isabel A. Dougherty Miss Teresa M. Doyle Mr. 81 Mrs. Stanley C. Duckworth John J. Duffy Mrs. M. Duncan Mr. 81 Mrs. Edw. W. Eichmann Mr. 81 Mrs. John B. Egner Dominick Enrico Frances Evans Mrs. Samuel Fasy Mr. 81 Mrs. Domenic Finelli Mr. Dominic Fiocca Rev. Richard J. Fleming Mr. 81 Mrs. Fred P. Folino Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph F. Ford A Friend James J. Furey Mr. 81 Mrs. Jos. T. Gallagher Mr. 81 Mrs. Louis A. Galzerano Mr. 81 Mrs. Vincent D. Galzerano Mr. 81 Mrs. Theodore J. Geitner Constable William Gerricke Mr. 81 Mrs. Alfred Gionta Mrs. Jeanette Gionta Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Glowacki Mr. 81 Mrs. George Griffin Al Greenman Mr. 81 Mrs. A. E. Hammon Mr. 81 Mrs. Herman J. Heim, Sr. Mary Herman Mrs. Florence High Thomas A. Higgins Gas S. Miss Mary Hillman Alfred D. Hills, Jr. Charles Hoelzle Mr. 81 Mrs. L. F. Hoelzle Frank J. Honer Mrs. Gloria Horan Joseph F. Howitz, M.D. John J. Jacoby Mr. Joseph Janssen Mrs. Paula Janssen Jay, Carolanne, and Jay Boy Rose M. Juel Mrs. Robert Kane Karenski Mr. Hugh Kelly Mr. Richard J. Kenney Mrs. W. Kowalski Sigmund B. Kozuhowski Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas Leggett Marvin G. Leon H. R. Liebtag Mr. 81 Mrs. Donald MacCallum John G. Mackey Nick Madrigale Mr. 81 Mrs. Eugene A. Magee l90 Mr. Thomas F. Magee Mr. 81 Mrs. Ferdinand Manlio Mr. 81 Mrs. Wm. H. Martin Mrs. George S. Mans James L. McBrearty Dr. 81 Mrs. Francis P. McCauley Miss Marian J. McCauley Mrs. Bridget McCauley Mr. 81 Mrs. Geo. McCloskey Mrs. Nellie McCormick Thomas McCusker Miss Dorothy J. McDonald Rev. Wm. F. McDonough John J. McElroy Mr. 81 Mrs. Thos. J. McErlane Mr. 81 Mrs. McFadden Mr. John McGahey Mr. 81 Mrs. McGahey Mr. 81 Mrs. Edward L. McIntyre Miss Mary L. McIntyre Miss Editha C. McIntyre Mrs. John McLaughlin Mrs. Jennie McNamee Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph McMenamin Dr. John F . McMullin Frank X. Mehl Miss Margaret Mellon Mr. 81 Mrs. Anthony Menna Mrs. Linda Milanesi Charles Miller David J. Miskey J. C. Moors Mrs. C. L. Moors Louis Mosconi Joseph J. Moy Joseph Mugford J Rudy Murlasits John Murphy Marie A. Murphy Brendan 81 Kevin Murray Mr. 81 Mrs. James J. Murray Miss Mary P. Murtha Mickey Natello Mr. 81 Mrs. Mickey Natello Nick Nigro Francis J. Nowak Rose.T. Nicotera Mrs. M. 0'Brien Mr. Cyril S. Olson Mrs. Helen 0'Neill Mrs. Francis O'Rourke William H. Ott Mrs. William Ott Dan Pelullo Mr. 81 Mrs. George Peranteau Mrs. M. Peranteau Anna Philip Miss Helen Marie Plunkett Johnnie Potako Isabella A. Preston Mr. 81 Mrs. C. J. Przybylowski Mr. 81 Mrs. James Quigley Mr. 81 Mrs. John Quinn Kathryn Quigley Mrs. Ann B. Raniseski Mr. 81 Mrs. Silvestro Reali, Jr. John Riceman Mrs. John Rogers Louis J. Romanoli Miss Marie Romanoli Romanow S. G. A. Rudolph Jerry Ruggieri J. J. Ryan 81 Son Walter G. Saville Schmidt Mrs. Martha Seiger Mr. R. Seiger 325.00 Duffy Brothers, Opticians 120 N. 11th Street, Phila. General Radio Supply Co. 600 Penn Street, Camden, N. J. Kencliff .Corporation 121 N. Broad Street, Phila. William Lafferty 81 Sons, Live Stock Delsea Drive, New Sharon, N. J. William C. Martin 801 Walnut Street Pinto Trucking Service, Inc. 1219 Morris Street, Phila. Richmond Grocery Company 5630 Tacony Street 315.00 Baldwin Overall Service 1724 N. 8th Street Bioren 81 Cow-Investments 1508 Walnut Street Rosa Food Products 1312 Federal Street Joseph Walker, Watchmaker 81 Jeweler Room 505, Washington Sq. Bldg. 310.00 Beneficial Saving Fund 1200 Chestnut Street Bundy Typewriter Co. N. W. cor. 10th 81 Chestnut Sts. Energy Elevator Co. 214 New Street, Phila. Albert Felice 81 Company 5707 M1-Mahon Avenue, Phila. Maud C. Produce Co., Inc. 3rd 81 Walnut Streets PATRO -Connnued Mr. 81 Mrs. B. Simmons Mrs. John Simpson Wm. T. Slaven, Jr. James T. Smith Mrs. Lillian Smith Leo J. Sommar Mr. Louis Spinelli Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Stadalnik, Jr. Wallace Stefan Mr. 81 Mrs. Max Stromeyer Mr. 81 Mrs. Walter A. Stryker William Subick Joseph A. Sweeney, Jr. The Target's Three Brothers Dr. 81 Mrs. J. S. Toton B SINESS PATRO Nickie's Market 301 Benson Street, Camden, N. J. Plunkett's Esso Servicenter Torresdale 81 Tyson Avenues Edmond C. Metz, General Contractor 2831 N. 9th Street Universal Canning Co. 9225 Tinicum Avenue, Phila. 35.00 Joseph M. Baltz 8 Co. 41 E. Lancaster Avenue Bartle's Beverages 8919 Ridge Avenue Boulevard Cafe 33 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, Pa Bernard J. Boyle, Realtor 6100 Ridge Avenue Callahan's Restaurant 22nd 81 Wharton Street R. Cavallo Sons 310 Kaighn Ave., Camden, N. J. C 81 T Cold Cuts 1309 Morris Street, Phila. Daro Shop 1739 E. Passyunk Avenue Parrot Grocery 1026 S. 9th Street John David Co. 1013 Vine Street Esposito's Meats 1001-03 S. 9th Street Fante's Furniture 81 Gifts 1004-06-08 S. 9th Street William A. Doyle 401 Merion Road, Merion, Pa. l9l Mr. 81 Mrs. O. Updegraft Mr. 81 Mrs. S. J. Urso Emilio Violetti Mr. 81 Mrs. Andrew Von Eschenbach Bess C. Warren Mr. 81 Mrs. Thomas Ward August Weinrich Mr. 81 Mrs. Raymond Weinstein Edward Wekler Mr. 81 Mrs. Joseph Welsh William W. Weston Mrs. Gabriel J. Wilson .loan Whalen Philip Youth Eugene Zyblikewyez Ford 81 Kendig Co. 1428-32 Callowhill Street Gallagher's Food Store S. E. cor. 4th 81 Spencer Streets Glaco Machine Co. Inc. 5528 N. 2nd Street Heaney's Cigar Store 3101 Magee Street Joe's Barber Shop 1016 W. Somerset Street Raymond Jones and Company 7042 Marshall Road, Upper Darby Kelly's Cafe 2nd 81 Mifflin Streets King of Prussia Inn Trooper Rd. 81 Ridge Pike, Jeffer- sonville, Pa. Krometal Mfg. Corp. 5825 Tacony Street Walter J. Kropp, Pharmacist 2613 Allegheny Avenue K 81 S Cafe 6080 Ridge Avenue Lange's Flowers 404 Lemonte Street La Rosa Pastry 1727 E. Passyunk Avenue Lee's Men's Shop 7230 Ogontz Avenue Marshall Road Inn 7042 Marshall Road, Upper Darby McCafferty's Funeral Service 6126 Torresdale Avenue Frank l'. Mcllonigle, Drugs State Rd. 81 Twp. Line, Drexel Hill BU I ESS PATIHI -Continued Patton's Gulf Service Station 63rd 81 Chestnut Streets Philadelphia Tile Xt Mosaic Co. 7904 Germantown Avenue Ravelli Memorials 140 W. W-hite Horse Pk., Berlin, N.J. George S. Reins V 1625 S. 2nd Street Robertis Pharmacy Haverford 81 Wynnewood Roads, Ardmore, Pa. Rose Floral Shop-John J. Foster 310 S. 60th Street Ryder's Inc., Ladies Apparel 4864-66 N. Broad Street Sam's Luncheonette 16th 81 Girard Avenue Walt Schmidt's Esso Station 6700 Castor Avenue Shortall's Sweet Shop 199 W. Linton Street, Olney Sol Brothers 2010 Morris Street Tony's Delicatessen 1631 S. 2nd Street Triems Co. Inc. 49 Rittenhouse Place U. S. Art Weaving Co. 11 S. 17th Street Wagner's Religious Goods 425-27 W. Girard Avenue Windsor Oil Co. 823 N. 21st Street 53.00 Dairy Maid ' 5534 Germantown Avenue Dairy Queen-Haerer Folcroft, Pa. Godfrey Ave. Sweet Shop 3rd St Godfrey Avenue Jimmy's Food Market 201 W. Olney Avenue Lambert's 2984 Richmond Street William R. May, Funeral Director Glenside, Pa. Monk's Sweet Shop 345 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, Pa. Moseley's Cleaners 7400 Marshall Road Oak Lane Beverage Co. 800 Oak Lane Ziehler Bros., Weather King Batteries 324 N. 15th Street, Phila. 52.00 Aigeldinger's Sweet Shop 31 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, Pa. Bowman-Morell-Real Estate 5020 Wayne Avenue C 81 D Auto Repair 1615 McKean Street Colney Barber Shop 5437 N. Sth Street Commonwealth Opticians 10th Sz Market Streets Ed Daub-Jewelry 5706 N. 5th Street Del Monte Beef Co. 1629 Ritner Street Harry DeMarco-Real Estate 6418 Frankford Avenue Dan DePitro 812 Concord Avenue Frank's Barber Shop 6232 Belfield Freddie,s Barber Shop 541 E. Butler Street Gallelli Tailors 803 Oak Lane Avenue Wm. B. Graf St Sons 1631 Germantown Avenue Jenkintown Hobby Center In the Arcade .lohn's Delicatessen 3026 Wharton Street .lunior's Restaurant 81 Snack Shop 4750 N. Broad Street Kaplan Brothers 2240 Mt. Vernon Street I92 Klaster's Meat Market 2614 W. Lehigh Avenue Geo. A. Kyle Hardware Store Glenolden, Pa. Marie's Apparel Shop 6301 Cottage Street Max,s Fruit-Produce N. E. cor. 8th 81 Lycoming L. J. Merenda Hardware 5553 N. 5th Street The Merrymakers Brookline, Pa. Milligan,s Funeral Home MacDade Blvd. St Jackson Avenue Olney Beer Distributors 132 W. Tabor Road Pontarelli's Pizzeria S. W. cor. Reese St Pike Richard P. Redheffer 3848 Germantown Avenue Ridgeway Ice and Coal Co. 25th 8: Harold Streets Ross,s Pharmacy 14 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, Pa Herman Schwartz 6201 N. 2nd Street, Phila. Shepherd Beer Distributors 2315-17 N. 28th Street The Shoe Box 1219 E. Darby Road, Havertown, Pa Sorber's Drugs 1 Brookline Blvd., Havertown, Pa. Tony's Barber Shop 439 W. Chew Street, Phila. Tony's Fruit Market Stanley 81 Wharton Streets Tony's Place 6326 Sackett Street Turneris Photo Supplies 6007 N. Sth Street Vent's Hy-Grade Delicatessen 1615 E. Darby Rd., Havertown, Pa. Albert C. Wagner 81 Son Plumbing 81 Heating 408 W. Somerville Avenue Produced by William T. Cooke Publishing, Inc. 21 S. 21st Street Philadelphia 3, Pennsylvania ..v . v Ai .vi wx elf' , M if , .Q V, Q. ff, xx. 'Sli 'Q J, A 1:15- :E .jj . ' s, ,w .Y Yi! . ' gf? 11,1 Q W-M k . 'fu Ewf a, ' .c,., ,I A X ,.x,.,.,,,,. 'M ,qw - , , .. x iv. My , 5 .-ffl ' 3-, , Y, b-,Y . . A . 'XQA 5- ipl, V , ,. , -.2 ,.,. ' 'xpiqw v'4,, i, E . ,J,: I x, ., ng f 3-,Ui K L.-gglry 'L uni , x Y .W , .. . i, ,.. 1 QA . 1, ff! in 1 t ,...,:: I r x , ' I ' - x rf H--L-. L'W v , 'mi .f V LV :EQE ir Q5 1 rf I I P J 2 , 3 J
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