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ENGINEERING & ARCHITECTURE

SENIORS

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V A^»-/ My dear Class of 1954: It is written that "God gave wisdom to Solomon and great discernment and a heart wide as the sand on the sea shore." Wisdom, discernment, a generous heart! Those were precious gifts. Those were the gifts that made Solomon the great man he was—a symbol of all that was just and wise. Solomon surely seems a great way off from the members of the Class of '54. Upon reflection, however, we realize that the gifts which God gave Solomon are really the same gifts which He has been offering you these past four years. Through the instru­ mentality of this University, God has been giving you the oppor­ tunity to share more deeply in His own life, to penetrate into the truth and to share the love which He is. It may be said of you, in words which described One who was far greater than Solomon, that you have had the opportunity of advancing "in wisdom with the years, and in favor both with God and man." I know you are grateful for the education which you have re­ ceived. As a consecrated helper of God let me remind you briefly that every gift carries with it responsibility; every privilege has its accompanying burden of duty. The gifts God has given you He expects brought to full development in His service and that of your neighbor. In our time, the necessity of such service to neighbor by the man or woman who has received a truly Christian education is more than obvious. The world you are entering is a world in crisis, a crisis born of long failure to acknowledge the sovereignty of God. That world needs you. It needs the gifts God has showered upon you. It needs wisdom to be able to recognize the proper ends of man as God has created him. It needs discernment to select the proper means for reaching those ends. It needs great generosity of heart for the sacrifices required to convert such ideals info action. The world needs, in short, your witness to the principles you have learned here. In parting with you, let me repeat the farewell injunction of Saint Paul to his beloved Philippians: The lessons we taught you, the traditions we handed on to you, all you have heard and seen of Christ's way of living—let this be your rule of conduct. Then the God of peace will be with you, and Mary, the Patroness of our University, will become for you what she so wants to be —your Gate of Heaven. With a blessing from my heart, I remain Sincerely yours in Christ, >i< BRYAN J. McENTEGART Titular Bishop of Aradi Rector of the University

13 These serve well . . .

\el. to consider the total of their lahors merely in terms of service is to lose the force and personality of each administrator; and to attempt to delineate single units, each functioning in splendid isola­ tion, is to deny the whole core of university community life. For ihasc. are the people who operate, behind the scenes, the daily machinery of counseling and computing. To be successful they must be un­ obtrusive, but a\ailable. To be effective, they must discipline, hut not antagonize, a difficult and often unrewarding task. To the officers whose photographs are on these pages, it is often a discour­ aging one. Thev are faced with student ajjathy and the im[jracticality which mav easilv arise in a scholastic atmosphere. Nevertheless, they strive to carrv out their tasks competently; more than this, they are a nucleus around which students and instructors flow. They and others like them are the core around uhich a s\steni has develf)ped, a svstem \Nhich has grown and thri\i-(l for nearK half a ffiilury.

L4 Mona Smytti, Dean McPadden's right hand.

SYSTEMS THRIVE WHEN MEN SERVE WELL

Mrs. Marie Davidson, Miss Smith's secretary.

Mr. James Dunleavv, purchasing agent.

Three of the most faniihar faces on Campus—the Post Office staff, sometime dispens­ ers of parental largesse. PERSONNEL PLEASANT, POLITE Maintenance Department Head, Mr. Edward Wunder.

Even the academic avenues haven't escaped that horror of a society on wheels—the parking ticket! The Home Guard: Mr. Whelehan and Mr. Fitzgerald. ARTS & SCIENCES Cm/^kaJiJ pn ttaMticnal 4i^cifiline^- pkilcMpkif, lettei'^ an4 ^^cienceJ

ARTS AND Dean's Dean, Mrs. McCarthy and the awesome regis­ tration forms.

TO THE CHRISTIAN INTELLECT

Plato, William Shakespeare, Isaac Newton, and a good many texts in the sciences and liberal arts, texts which often date to others help to shape a liberally educated man. To organize these antiquity in languages not easy to comprehend, much less to master. divergent elements into a coherent pattern in the individual is the The resources of a fully stocked library are the materials with task of CU's College of Arts & Sciences. It is an important task, which the liberally educated man is fashioned. First of all. there the climactic development in an educational process which began is the array of texts required for the student's several courses— in the student's infancy. Latin and biology, history and English, religion and politics. The acquisition of any kind of education involves, in the main, speech and calculus, French and philosophy. In addition, there people and books. At a university, the people are the student's are reference books and manuals to be consulted for term papers, most direct aids—the professors and instructors. One in partic­ periodicals and dissertations for research. There is the vast store of ular, the Reverend Dean, is the man who molds the student's great plays, novels, and philosophical works which make up the entire scholastic career. This man's influence permeates the college individual departmental reading lists. There are. finally, the books world. His word is the guidepost at the start of the student's the student reads independently^—all contributing to his education. excursion into education. At the end, the Arts & Sciences graduate possesses more than The road is clearly marked. At every turn there is a book. a large accumulation of information. His contact with teachers Particularly in Arts & Sciences is the student exposed to a variety and books has organized his learning and formed it into a living of books that is sometimes astonishing. They are the classic principle.

21 % L ^

Hi1 f -i ^ ^ 1 Jarqule lipgncr''s theorizing seems to int

I)eveIo])ing an art that is conteniporarv in expression and \ et retains its traditional heritage in content is the jjroblem of e\ery student artist. I nder- V standing these needs, the Art Department under the direction of .Miss Clare i Fontanini offers the student courses in the theory, philoso])li\. and history of art. in addition In crcnliNP experience with rla\. wood, stcmc. silver, and pigments. Ka( li teacher in tlic drparlnienl is also a highh idnipctcnt artist or crafts­ man, engaging in lii>- nwn (r(ati\c work in (irdcr to sup|)l\ the practical 1 knowledge necessar) lor tlic pra(ti( ing arli.sl nf liMla\. These teachers and cdurses. together with exhibit'- l)\ present-dax arli>t>. (ilf( i the student of •.; ail the ii|i|)(irtunil \ l

.\n ilhI^lrali

ART 22 Lab light silhouettes Kitty Gebhard as she dissects that bane of the hiology student—the frog.

'S MIRROR

To all but a select few, biology is nothing more than a course that has to be taken, an exhausting hike up four flights of stairs, the memorization of unintelligible Latin terms, and the clinging odor of formaldehyde. But to the few, the concentrators in biology, it is an exciting, ever-varying adventure into the unknown and. at times, seemingly unknowable. It is the unfolding of the mysteries and wonders of nature in all its beauty of composition and design. Biology majors peering over McMahon's west stairway are, left to right: In this light, the backbone of biology is the complicated terminology Browne Riley, Bro. August, Rolf Jettinghoff. Charles Bechert, Katharine Gehhard, Harold Freeman, Sr. Eulalia, and Dorothy Lipka. and the laboratory techniques; the flesh is the endless dissection, the field trips, and the research; and the lifeblootl is the discovery of the meaning of physical life and the use of this knowledge in the Dr. Edward G, Reinhard, Department Head. molding of modern civilization. Dr. Edward Reinhard guides his staff in the teaching of biology as a pure science in order to lav a foundation for future profes­ sional training. Dr. Dale Braungaii introduces the student to the plant and animal kingdoms: Dr. Lynn unravels the maze of anatomy and embryology; and Fr. Wachowski, in addition to showing the characteristics of animal tissues, gives the senior in seminar tiie kcN- piece which make the facts from each stud\ take their places in the gigantic jig-saw puzzle of biolog\\ With this iienetic constitution of learniiii;. the enibr\onic bioloiiist will be able to grow and differentiate into a responsible scientist.

BIOLOGY Pass the eye of newt, please . . .

ELEMENTS IN COMPOSITION

Dii\vii at Maloney Building there is a little world of test tubes, Ikniscn burners, Erlemneyer flasks, and strange odors. It seems dis­ tinct from the other buildings on campus—yet like them, it is there for a reason. Realizing that the discoveries of chemistry have |)laced it in a j)osition to be one of the controlling forces in conteiti|jorary society, the Chemistr\ l)ei)arlment offers the concentrator a program of studies designed to helj) him combine his scientific knowledge with other disci])lines, as well as to aid him in fulfilling professional re(|uiremenls. I nder the dir(>clion of Dr. Francis 0. Rice, the Department has attained a professional reputation for its participation in Air Force and Navy contract researches. Dr. Rice is noted for his work on free radicals: Dr. Laidler, for his kinetic research; and Dr. Griffmg, for her study of the application of the molecular orbital theory to molecular structure.

Luminescence

Dr. Francis O. Rice, Department Head.

24 CHEMISTRY 'S ACCOUNT BOOK

Economics is theory and economics is history and economics is statistics. The economist plans ways to raise the standard of living, makes exhaustive studies of past economies, and arranges both in statistical fortn. These things he does to put the goods of the earth to the best use for the most people. To reaffirm the belief that "economics is for man," the Economics Department, led by Dr. Paul Fitz- patrick, utilizes Catholic social principles in a com­ prehensive program which combines theoretical Economics seniors. Left to right. Jim Pliippard, \ ince Agnelli. Jack Hennessey. Arell leaver. aspects with practical application. Charles Stewart, Bro. Carroll, and Jim Bult.

Dr. Paul Fitzpatrick, Department Head.

The poetry of a machine

ECONOMICS The unhcatable combination of Shakespeare and Dr. Cain scores as usual.

WHAT DO YOU READ, MY LORD?

Campus aciitiaintanceships alwa\s include not onK |iirsoiial ture. that the student meets Mrs. G. and Mr. P., aforementioned, friends and associates in studv but also t\pes nioir iini\rr~all\ and all who intervene, both real and imaginary. known. Ironi Cicndcls niollicr |o J. Mind I'liihock. I he ~lu- Ihroiigh the leading list, which extends to all times and tech- denl may like these latter or lie ina\ iiol. luil al lia>l he will lune tiiciues of English literature, and the co-ordinating seminar, which been introduced. It is one of the Innction^ ol the English Depart­ applies this general knowledge to one author in a particular genre, ment to make these introdu(tion> a^ jii-l one part of its contri­ the concentrator learns to know more intimately the characters of bution to the ediicatioii ol each student. English literature and their creators. Aclualh. as a result of the work of this department, the average But whether or not his interest lies in literature, contact graduate is likeK to ac (|nire a good deal more than a collection between undergraduate and English Department is inevitable. And offictional accpiainlani cs. 'i'he freshman, whatever his ambitions. for most students, once they have observed the enthusia.sm of is (diifiontcd with the inli icacics of English grainniar and coni- Miss McNamara speaking of Gerard Manley Hopkins, or Dr. jiosilion. from which cnroimter it is expectetl that he will emerge Foley about Henry James, or have heard Dr. Cain, Head of the with a ((im]>etent gias[i and assured use of his own language. It Department, digress brilliantly about Shakespeare, their studies is ill his sophomore \ear. during a survey course of English litera- become enjoyable as well as profitable.

3Iodern Midnight Oil reflects Mary Kirwin's concentration on a seminar paper.

ENGLISH Dr. H. Edward Cain. Dtrparlinent Head.

Anne McNamara, Dante Alighieri, and Frank Seward.

English 101

English concentrators on the Library steps. Left to right. Diana Camp­ bell, Alary Kirwin, Eugenia Moore. Tim May, and Frieda Emnierth. MONUMENTS MORE LASTING THAN BRONZE

Rare indeed is the iindiiiiim frr-hman who has been adequately Whether being transported to the wind\ plains of Tro\. into trained in mental disc ipline. Rarer still is the one who has been the comic chaos of the confused twins oi S\ racuse. or into the shown the heritage that comprises the very base of our civilization. glory that is the speech of the Western Church, the new disciple Il is for this reason—to instill this discipline, to give the student of the classics finds in Dr. Martin R. P. McChiire. Head of the an understanding of this mighty treasury of the past, while re­ Department. Miss Marian McNamara. and Mr. John Lacy, will­ taining the breathing life whichfills these works—that the Greek ing guides on this journey taken by nearly all students in the and Latin Department exists. College of Arts and Sciences. I he l)i partmi-iit is one of the oldest in the College of Arts & Few can return from this [lilgrimage into the past with minds Sciences. This is as it should be, for it is concerned with one whose horizons have not greatly broadened by at least momentary of the oldest and most honored disciplines in the scholastic world. contact with some of thefinest mind s the world has ever produced.

Dr. Martin R. P. McCuire, Dcparliiieiil Head.

\l times fighting the Second Punic ^'ar would -eem more agreeable ''S'ell. I don't think Plato e\er said that about women.

28 GREEK AND LATIN Fr. Aloysius K. Ziegler, Department Head.

A text, a cigarette and a com­ fortable chair.

CHAPTERS IN A CONTINUED STORY The History Department of Catholic University revolves, like history itself, around the Incarnation and the effects of this central event on the nations and races of man. In trying to overcome the general apathy of the student to history, the Department has seen to it that there is a marked relation between its teachers and their courses so that each brings to his subject a familiarity that is often personal in origin. For example, Dr. Manoel Cardozo, himself of Portuguese extraction, conducts courses in Ibero-American History which bring the student into close contact with the strongly Catholic culture of our Latin neighbors, while Dr. Tierney. a Cambridge graduate, colors and vitalizes his courses in British History with a dry- wit and a sound practical knowledge, clearly depicting the role of seemingly minor events in shaping the course of the English nation and ultimately our own. However, this wealth of knowledge is not dispensed from teacher to student as a simple verbal chronicle of things past. Present-day chapters are added to the ancient story of man in order to show Historic Personages. Lett lo righl. Don Slieel. Tiilll l)rnck«cll. his place in contemporary society. Dr. Engel-Janosi's Origins of Bro. Theodore, and Bob Quigley. seniors. World War II is a course of such up-to-date appeal. And Sr. Marie Carolyn's organized quiz and discussion sections on the History of Western Civilization serve to make the student conscious of his part in the continuing story of life, unafraid of the future because he is aware of the past.

29 HISTORY Mr. John Paul, Deparlineiil Head.

.4.

D<-!-ccndiiig the «c:ilc. Mu-ic -ludciil- lca\ing early cl.i-~. Do' beat. I'aul Traver, conducting—Mr. Paul, observing. PLAY ON THE TIMBAL, THE CYMBAL, THE LYRE

."^I'Nfii ila\> and SCNCII nights a week, the former Phi Kappa signed to combine theoretical informatioti with the jjractical ex­ house rocks melronomicalU to the music of trumpets, pianos, and perience necessarx in developing a fine art. For the layman, the bass drums as it formerly sounded with the tempered or ill- department offers an often-elected Music Appreciation course tempered gravel-chords of human voices. .\11 this sound comes which gives a diversified background in the lives and styles of from a three-\ ear-old campus prodigy, the Music Department. composers. W hen the department took o\er the fraternit) house, the old congenialitN clung to its \\alls under the casually efficient direction The department shares itself with the entire student bod\ of Mr. John Paul. \^ ith him. a facult\ of well-trained artist- through the L niversit) Orchestra; the Music Club, a student group technicians, main of them members of the National S\niphony whose librar\ contains over 3-50(1 \(dtime- and records: the ( ni- Orchestra, offers courses ranging from composition and applied \ersit\ Chorus, open to all studetits: and the String Quartet, uhose nuisic to conduiting and liturgical music. The courses are de- concert series is highh praised b\ the Washington critics.

30 MUSI C It is safe to say that there is no college that does not offer philosophy, but at CU it is a required and basic foundation for a thorough education. The graduate of the College of Arts & Sciences will remember his six semesters of philosophy as a varied experience of central importance for the integration and relation of other studies. Most important, because it shapes methods and attitudes of thought and permits the student to recognize his position and pur­ pose in the universe, it is a practical basis for life. Engineers, too, are introduced to a non-empirical thinking in cosmology. From Fr. McAllister and Dr. Nolan the sophomore receives the basic philosophy courses—logic, the process of right reason­ ing, and epistemology, the establishment of the criteria of truth. These two courses form the foundation without which the student can go no farther in the study of philosophy. In his junior and senior years the student has a choice of courses taught by Fr. Hart, Fr. Mohan, Dr. Bode, and Fr. Reilly, which explore the nature of the universe, the nature of man, the nature of being itself, and the existence and nature of God. Although his guidance is felt through the shaping of the philosophy curriculum, Fr. Ignatius Smith, the Head of the Depart­ ment, teaches no course below the graduate level. The undergraduate thus misses the man. not his influence. OUT TO THE UNDISCOVERED ENDS

Thinking seniors. Left to right,first row: John Bai rett, Marianne Biltz, Hil­ lary Bombara, Gene Bon- nike. Bob Gibson. Ray Handel, George Hughes. Don Kommers. Second row: Dick Laudisi, Joe Mazure. Bro. Stanley. Ray Saplis. Bro. Cyprian, antl Georae Parker.

31 PHILOSOPHY Oh well, whal will il all mailer in the liglil lil rlniiil)

Sole surviving math majors Marianne Sullivan and liuli Pikul pose on sicps of .^1. Tlioiiia-.

Mr. Gardiner O'Boyle demonstrates a numerical nicety. ABSTRACTION IN THE SECONO DEGREE Mathematics may make a surface appeal as a fascinating game with rules and syllogisms. As a body of knowledge, however, the science actually has an elusive yet compelling objective—the estab­ lishment of an organic union between pure philosophy and applied science. With this end in view, the Mathematics Department offers courses which provide the point at which the studies of the Arts & Sciences student intersect with those of the engineer and the architect. Under the direction of Dr. Otto J. Ramler, and with the aid of adviser Dr. Edward J. Finan, the student is prepared for a career in teaching or research, or for graduate studies. Since his is the science which is neither wholly applied nor wholly theoretical, he is trained to be logical and intuitive, analytical and constructive; to perceive generalities. \el discern individualities. He must learn to concern himself with perceptible entities as well as with tho.se beyond his vision.

32 MATHEMATICS The application of any theory is a long and absorbing process.

Graduating seniors. Left to right, Al Knudson, Arch McAlister and John Finan. ENERGIES IMPRISONED, CLASSIFIED, DIRECTED

The science of physics has come a long way since the days of Newton's basic laws of motion, ft has moved with accelerated speed through a developing world of thermodN namics, optics, magnetism. and electricity. Along the way, sub-atomic physics joined the field and the two journeyed together toward a better understanding of the relations of mass and energy. Now that physics is rushing into an un-NeW'tonian universe of electrons, quanta. relati\ itv. and space- time, the study has made strides toward becoming the most ad\ anced and the most exact of the natural sciences. Because the discoyer\ of the general laws underlying the phenomena of inanimate matter and of motion has far-reaching implications, thorough and well-balanced training of physicists is demanded both professioiialK and spiritiialK. The task of providing basic, theoretical, and experimental training at CL' has been undertaken by the eminent physicist. Dr. Karl F. Herzfeld. and his staff, which includes many nationally-known scien­ tists. Familiar to the undergraduate are Dr. George Rock ami l\e\-. L'rban Schnaus. who conduct the lecture and laborator\ phases of introductory physics.

PHYSICS Studies in stales and societies . . .

FASHIONERS OF STATES, CITIZENS OF WORLDS

Realizing that the strength of a democracy lies in a well-informed and active citizenr>, the Department of Politics, directed by the Rev. Francis Powers, Acting Head, attempts to achieve this end by presenting a panoramic view of politics in the light of Christian principles. In courses varying from the complexity of government to the un­ charted regions of international law, a concentrator in politics is given a knowledge of political theory with which to assess current events. With men such as Dr. Joseph Sulkowski as guides, the intrica­ cies of political life are laid bare and examined. The controversies currently stirring the political scene are clarified as they are related to the political principles of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas. As a politics concentrator in the capital of a leading nation of the world, the student derives innumerable advantages. He has quick and easy access to the Capitol, the Supreme Court, and the White House so that he mav see atfirst han d h(j\v these United States are gov­ erned. Insead »i mere words in a text book, the process may be seen Impromptu orator for the vital, dvnamic force it actually is.

34 POLITICS Trois girls, deux books but not much fran(;ais homework. SDH SOUTHERN TONGUES

An evening walk along the Seine, a bullfight in Madrid, or a realization of the origin, growth and development of words. gondola trip along Venetian canals—dreams such as these, in­ The concentrator in French, Spanish, or Italian finds his classes spired by the implications of the title. Department of Romance small enough to insure a maximum of individual attention by Languages, are soon known for misapprehensions when the stu­ Dr. Alessandro Crisafulli and his staff. He is drilled in the basic dent learns, perhaps to his dismay, that the adjective "romance" rules of speech and grammar, and practices them in writing and has connotations philological rather than adventurous. Yet there conversation. As he advances into the classics, perhaps under is romance in the achievements of the language student: the trac­ Dr. Aida Mastrangelo, he discovers the beaut) of a chej-cVoeuvre ing of the lineage of the modern tongue back to its ancient source; or capolavoro in the original. Then will he begin to share in the the pleasure of greeting a stranger in his native language; and cultural heritage of the country as expressed in the living, plastic the appreciation of the universality of human nature through a speech which has been shaped by its peoples past and present.

Dr. Alessandro Crisafulli, Department Head.

Romance language seniors include left to riiiht. \X avne Jackson. Sr. M. Beniiina. Roscoe Thomas, and Xaverian Brothers.

35 ROMANCE LANGUAGES Fr. John J. <>".SulliMin. iiiah li inaki i.

Mspr. Maurice Shcchy, l)(i)arlnienl Head—and Rear Admiral, IJ.S.M.K-

36 Father Henry E. Wachowski, Girls" Chaplain. ... AND THERE TO FIND THY LORD

It was a freshman year learning the Catholic moral ideal. It was a sophomore year probing dogma and exploring chan­ nels of grace. It was a junior year immersed in the Church: a study of it as an organization, and an appreciation of it as an organism. It was a senior year anticipating life's problems and formulating Christian solutions. It was all this, and it was more than this. It was sharing a biology lab table with a Carmelite Sister. It was a Shakes­ peare class with a Xaverian Brother. It was learning the dif­ ference between Brown and Black Franciscan, and learning how to pronounce Capuchin. It was a wave that permeated every incident and accident of four years at Catholic University. And religious education was still more. It was early Mass in Gibbons chapel. It was the annual Mass according to some Oriental rite in the Shrine. It was Lenten talks and \dvent wreaths,first Friday s and May devotions. It was Fides House on Thursday afternoons: it was teaching catechism on Sunday mornings in Southern Mar\ land. It was Msgr. Russell, from whom we came to know Christ: it was Father OSullixan. who inspired us w itli the ideal of Christian marriage. It was a ccnirse. and it was more than a course—it was an attiliule. a purpose, a \\a\ of life. It was a way of finding Our Lord, and that meant some losin;;. loo. even of ones life.

RELIGIOUS EDUCATION With FalstalT, jilayed by Henry Sutton, as their source of uil- I'lincr llai and coinpaiu ^(li^ln in Mislr(-ss Quiekly's tavern. WITH A GESTURE AND A A WORLD IS MADE

Dick .Armstrong, a- I )j. ( liiiinli'N. ciu i^ions a secluded spol near Akron.

.Mr. i^'o Brady, pro\iMati\e in-lructor, playwright, and no\cli;t. A reformed Prince Hal, Joe Plummer, proves himself by hisfight with Hotspur, Tom Carlin, in Shakespeare's Henry IV.

Fr. Gilbert Hartke, Department Head.

A tragic moment in Antigone with Angela Bayer and Pat Sugrue.

Elwood P. Dowd, Henry Sutton, introduces a friend to Hw •

SPEECH AND DRAMA (]l s Speech and Drama l)cj)artmcnl not oiiK in.-trucls it> students in making words and gestures meaningful th(\itricall\. but also in making them meaningfid for eteriiil\- While often considered the most ilamboyant and frivolous dei)aitmenl of the I ni\ersit\. in reality it is far more than a mere outlet for extroversion. By practice in the skills of production—acting, directing, designing, making— it |)ro\ ides the student with the means ol best returning to (h)d the talents given him. Foumled on the belief that, according to (Christ's parable of the talents, there is an obligation on souls to return His gifts, and believing in the inherent dignity of the creative artist because his creative act most closely parallels that of God. the de­ partment, under the leadership of Fr. Hartke. forms men and women with Christian as well as artistic principles to people the stage and make word and gesture live. This accomplishment requires a foundation in aesthetics, creative criticism, and theory. All are furnished in courses ranging from Mr. Graham's initial Public Speaking course to Pla) writing under Mr.

From llie manual labor of coii'-lrucling the set

THE SHOW and of hoisting it inio place,

and the careful preparation of props, through

from the meticulousfitting and pinning necessary in costume-making Brady and Dr. Dugan. This theoretical instruction is brought to the practical level by working on a play. And working on a play involves ju.st that—working. It means days as weU as nights filled with the preliminaries to production. It means hours spent prepar­ ing props, scenery, costumes, or lines. The end product of all this effort is the pla\, of which there are five major offerings during the school year plus innumerable labo­ ratory productions which provide an outlet for fledgHng directors, actors, playwrights, and technicians. This year began with a heavy portion of classicism, with / Henry IV and Antigone as thefirst two productions. This serious mood was dispelled by Harvey, but was re-established by Murder in the Cathedral. The season, however, ended on a happy note with the original musical, Huck Finn. But the work of the department is not confined to drama alone. The Speech Clinic, which offers speech correction service, is a nat­ ural outgrowth of the department and is staffed by its personnel. An outlet for drama graduates is provided in Players Incorporated, an outstanding, nationally-touring repertory company.

and intense care taken to achieve effective lightin" I IS MADE.

where concentrated effort is required of director as well as tedious rehearsal hours student actors. 41 SPEECH AND DRAMA i. -^

APPROACH Dce<'isions .. ansas al» - tlr< I-KPII^

.•\rclil>isliop O'Roylc breaks ground for new hospital.

01T-diil> life at Laboure.

*1*<5§

44 NOBILITY IN WHITE

The School of Nursing Education at Catholic University grew out of an experiment conducted during the summer session of 1932, when a few courses in professional nursing were offered to test the demand for a nursing program at the University. The response proved so great that the courses were continued into the following academic year, when they were made into a department and became a part of the Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. Today, twenty-two years after the original "experiment," the School has complemented its graduate, professional status with a flourishing four-year undergraduate program in conjunction with Providence Hospital. This undergraduate curriculum falls into two distinct pro­ grams. One is arranged for students without previous training in nursing, and the other, more advanced, is designed for the graduate nurse wishing to grow in her profession. The student spends her days in deepening her understanding of nursing as a vocation in the true Christian sense of a selfless devotion freely rendered. She comes to realize that no professional relation­ ship calls for greater tact, understanding of human nature, and, above all, love. Through courses in the social sciences, philosophy-, and psychology she increases her knowledge of her patient as an indi­ vidual with spiritual depths and social relationships which are as important as his physical well-being. She sees herself in true perspec­ tive as a Catholic nurse who carries within her not only the power to aid the afflicted, but also the knowledge that her tasks, no matter how small, are tasks of mercy and love performed toward the highest end, for Christ has said: "As long as you did it for one of these, the least of my brethren, you did it for me." Sister M. Olivia, Department Head.

Charting their course.

45 NURSING EDUCATI O'N ENGINEERING & ARCHITECTURE T^ckncUfical excellence cenMMicte4 en a liberal atU ^ean4atien

ENGINEERING ARCHITECTURE

Miss O'Donnell, .Secretary to E \ A- lit an

ENRICHERS OF INDUSTRIAL SCIENCE

Both are students at the same LIniversity, yet the education of ing a sure touch in handling the instruments of his chosen work the engineer differs greatly from that of his liberal arts counter­ and of gaining the necessary insight into the principles on which part. During theirfirst two years, the two take many of the same they are constructed. courses, but the engineer's concluding semesters are spent almost He associates with many people, all of whom contribute to his entirely in the precincts of his chosen field. Nor can his education developinent. His dean is always ready to help him untangle any be compared with that of the scientist. Though both share many of his confusions. His department head plans the sequence of his science courses, the engineer is interested in them mainly as a courses and constantly supervises his progress. His instructors. framework for the particular applied science on which his full most of whom are professional engineers, exemplif\ for him the attention will be focused. union of theory and practice. All make use of books, but for the engineer, they serve more for reference than for research. His attention is held more by technical But more important than these books, these lab reports, these works that demonstrate the solution of problems than by treatises people, is the embryonic engineer on his own. meeting his subject that probe the philosophic nature of his work. His handbook is face to face. His reading assignments do not suffice. He must his professional Bible, and the rules of hisfield's national code devour professional journals. His lab exercises nuist be comple­ are his commandments. mented by visits to near-hy projects. His school associations must The engineer spends many afternoons in the labs, many nights be furthered by participation in his local professional societies. comparing results and writing reports. This is his way of acquir­ The engineer himself determines how well he is educated.

49 V

I:-, '^^

\ m^ ^:

-:.*'

^££> . '^^ -^ •• ri'sti, Now, gentlemen, you will find that each airplane has a motor and a fuselage.

Dr. Max Munk, De­ partment Head.

Kit! KIson. President oi ilie International Society of Aero-Engineers.

A quartet of seniors is formed by Tom Derby, Joliii

50 STRUCTURES FOR THE IONOSPHERE

Air is a fluid; aerodynamics is the study of bodies inoving channel-wing aircraft, he developed a department which gave to through that fluid. These bodies, or, more properly speaking, air­ its students a balanced education in aeronautics with a special craft, may be driven by the conventional propellor, by gas-turbine emphasis on its experimental nature. engines, by rockets, and even by rotating wings. Today they may Today the department is stiff located in its high-peaked building climb 80,000 feet above the surface of the earth and cruise at a on the lower campus, but Louis Crook is gone. The new Depart­ relaxing speed of 1300 miles per hour—feats undreamed of by ment Head is a man whose name is equalh well-known in profes­ the Wright brothers on their lonely stretch of North Carolina sional circles. Dr. Max Munk. His achievements on the campus beach. We are separated frotn them by onlyfifty years of time, an already include the renovation of the building and a revamping incredibly short span in view of the tremendous achievements of the courses offered by the Department in order to place more made since then in thefield of aviation. emphasis on the theoretical aspects of aeronautical engineering. To this rapid advancement Catholic University has made sev­ eral important contributions. It was here that thefirst win d tun­ The courses in aerodynamics are taught by Dr. Munk himself. nel built in the United States was constructed. It was here also, that Presiding over courses in aircraft drawing and design is Mr. the late Professor Louis Crook worked and taught. In conjunction William H. Miller. This combination of experiment and theory has with his own experiments, which included important work on produced an active and revitalized department.

Markle. Bill Elsen. and Dan Coen.

51 AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING Gentlemen of the jury.

R.I.I*. Design completed SffES, SKETCHES,

Sun>hin> days ^ empl\ cliair- in Dr. Maniiccia's archilcclure clas

"Too radical. Jack. .\ house must have at least one wall.' Dr. Thomas H. Locraf t. Department Head.

Critics' Forum.

SHELTERS

Architecture is a department old yet often misunderstood. When Efficient elements in Tempo Two: Mr. Freson, librarian, and Mrs. Atkins, secretary. the architecture student takes courses in the Art Department, he is considered an engineer: when he studies with engineers, he is labeled an artist. In a sense both are correct, for the architect is an artist- engineer. He must see visions and build dreams. He must be sensi­ tive to the real needs of his clients and yet be prepared to guide them where guidance is needed. He must have a mind of compelling logic as well as of creative imagination. He must believe that architecture is the most important thing in the world and yet not forget that worldly things are unimportant. He must deal in terms of bricks and ideals, of cement reinforcement and spiritual implication. And most of all he must build. To prepare the student for this high vocation the Department of Architecture offers a five-year program in design. Taught by Dr. Thomas Hall Locraft and his staff, the design courses are the frame­ work to which all other courses arefitted. Dr . Paul A. Goettelmann guides the student in a thorough study of architectural history and Mr. Herbert Manuccia lectures on all aspects of construction. After cotnpleting his design-integrated architecture program, which includes selected Engineering and Arts & Sciences courses, then, and only then, is the student ready to build.

53 ARCHITECTURE Seniors. I.efl Icj riglil, slandiiig: Ken (Jraver, Gene Pyfrom, Ralph UuesI, Vic Paturzo, Al Temin, Tom De(^icco, Ponciano Mauricio, Harold Buehler. Sealed are: Tony Elmiger, Conrad Grant, Rill Savory, and Fred -Schemmer. THEY CALCULATE

In a day when building has become a series of complicated processes, the architect must rely on the active collaboration of various s].)ecialists. The architectural engineer is the most important oi these, for he can transform the architect's structural plans into economical realities. His knowledge and prac­ tice are based on both cvery-day actjuainlance wilh building methods and appreciation of the principles of architectural design. Often the architectural en­ gineer works directly with the contractor; always he works with the architect. The dual nature of the architectural engineer is reflected in the depart­ ment's double headquarters at Catholic University: the second floor of Tempo 'fvN(j. the architecture building, and the basement of Gibbons, haven of Civil Engineers. .\t the first place the\ stud\ the

5f Senior Vic Paturzo, obviously awaiting inspiration.

AND BUILD

history of architecture with Dr. Goettelmann, and both inaterials and working drawings with Mr. Duane. They spend most of their Tempo Two so­ journ in pursuit of architectural design, taught by Mr. Miller and by Mr. Kelsey. Here they gain an insight into the problems that confront the architect. In lower Gibbons they learn the other half of their profession, the probletns that confront the engineer. They study^ surveying and physical geology, and they learn the theory of structures. Armed with these varied courses, plus the knowledge gained from taking auxiliary courses in Double E and Me­ chanical, architectural engineers are ready to render invaluable help to the architect and to serve the pub­ lic at larjie.

'Next time, do it in charcoal

55 ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEERING A pretty and efficient lab jiarlner works wonders for some chem majors.

Do >ou think il will?

TradesnuMi's and sludent's entrance.

Seniors: Jerry Greenberg, Maury Flynn, Don Gormley. and Bill McCann.

56 INDUSTRY'S FORM AND MATTER

Whether he is reading a temperature, estimating a rate of flow, or checking evaporation, the chemical engineer continually consorts with the coquettish needle of a gauge. These gauges are used to help him in his work of con­ verting chemicals to industrial use. And this is the basis for the distinction between a chemist and a chemical en­ gineer, for a chemist works in terms of grams at a labo­ ratory level while the chemical engineer works in terms of tons at the factory level. Although his job may range from pure research to the physical layout of new plants. most Chem E's labor in the middle strata of chemical processes, where they work on unit operations to increase the production and reduce the costs. This is the goal to­ ward which their education is aimed. Although a Bachelor of Science degree in Chemical Engineering was offered at Catholic LIniversity as early as 1905, it was not until 1944 that Dr. Francis Owen Rice. the Head of the Chemistry Department, organized Chemi­ cal Engineering into a separate department. In 1949. the unit operations laboratory was set up in the basemetit of Maloney', and a few years later the product analysis labo­ ratory was built nearby. Here Dr. Rice and Dr. Ward, with the assistance of Mr. Barclay, Dr. Clark, and Dr. Evans, instruct the incipient Chem E's in technical analy­ sis, chemical processes, and other fundamentals of their field.

57 CHEMICAL ENGINEERING "CiviP'ians: Dick Scheetz. Bob Jackson. Julio Ocampo. Jim Clark, (ieorge Pbilo. Joige \illacics. Orlando Faroh. Stu .I,nMi-..ii. Ii.di \iiuilo.

.Jorge Villacres, Picsiih ill ,,f \.>.(J.E.

CONSTRUCTING FOR COMMUNITIES

("i\ il engineering begins with a line. This line is rarefulK laid Preparation for this type of work is the business of the Civil out with a transit, measured \)\ a tape, and checked with a com- fjigineering De])artiiient at (Catholic University. Lines, angles, and |)ass. Another line is similarh laid off. Their extensions form elevations are consideretl in the surveying courses of Professor an intersection, an angle into which a curve is fitted. A level is J. I'- (iallogly and Assistant Professor Claffey. Every day their emploved to establish the elevations, which are plotted on a graph. men can be seen emerging from Gibbons basement armed wilh After several comparative-economic studies have been made, the transits and rods, ready to report thefirst campus buildings ihey highwav |)osition is fixed and the cover material determined. A find moving. Next they study engineering, soil mechanics, and few computations of the slide rule set the thickness of the cover. then the theory of structures. At last they come to structural de­ Now comes a sharp dei)ression in the ele\ ation. but the road must sign. These courses are taught by the Departnient Head, Associate contimie. So out come the handbooks and the slide rules, transits Professor Gallogly, by Professor Scullen, and by his son. Assist­ and level, and soon a bridge is made. But there is water and sew­ ant Professor Scullen. Professor Biberstein and Assistant Profes­ erage: so the conduits and mains must be fitted under the road. sor Cattaneo are in charge of the Materials Testing Laboratory Now a railroad is in the way and must be lifted over the line. A seminar. The line has been completed. different type of bridge is required. .At last the road is completed; the civil engineer has done his work.

Weighing a decision.

Mr. Harr> P. (.allogiy. Department Head. CIVIL ENGINEERING And this oiu' heals ilic water for coffee

Seniors. Left to right. Bill Danco, Paul Emmons, Gerald McMorrow, Tom l.annon, Harold Mailers, I'xd) lovino. Paul Aur/.ada, and William Barnes.

Bill Danco, President of the .\.I.E-E. 60 Hocni \ CURRENTS CONTROLLI CIRCUITS COMPLETED

Electricity runs America. A vast, complicated network of wires carries electrical power from distant dams to the shops and houses of Main Street. Its energy rings the alarm in the morning, roasts the turkey at noon, and delivers Godfrey everv Monday night. It powers the elevators in the Empire State Building and runs thefive-tube radi o in Junior's rooin. It is little wonder, then, that the production, trans­ fer, and application of such energy calls for a special branch of engineering. Until 1922 McMahon Hall housed CU's Department of Electrical Engineering, when the former Department Head. Dr. Thomas J. McKavanagh, moved his equipment and settled in St. John s, where the department has since remained. In 1949 its growing demands for additional laboratory space resulted in the addition of a new style of architecture to the campus. "Late Quonset." Today the department continues under Associate Professor Micha- lowicz, who supervises a department offering both graduate and un­ dergraduate courses in electrology. After the introductory courses, his students study currents, direct and alternating, and work in the electrical machinery laboratory, where work is guided by Mr. Wise and Mr. McDufTie. The contact between classroom work and actual experience is established in the senior course in Electrical Engineer­ ing Problems, where there is a correlation of electrical engineering

Picture of a problem. with other branches of knowledge by the solution of general problems in engineering. With such an education behind them, the Double E's are ready to develop and hold in mastery the mechanism of power- run America.

Seldom scene.

Mr. Ernest A. Valade of the E.E. Department and .Veling Dean of the School of Engineering and .Architecture.

ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Prepare lo surface!

'**>J

«\Ji wm y^ :x

Ifin nil -!• ^.

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING 62 Seniors. Left to right, George Greweling, Francisco Delejada. Louis Cass. Professor Lackler. George Greweling, President of A.S.M.E. Guillermo Zuleta, Dan Seganish, Joe Stivaletti, Bob McCarthy.

POWER TO Ours is an age of machines, and the mechanical engineers are quarters for the Mechanical Engineering Department, however, is the men who control them. They plan, build, install and service located in the nearby University power plant. Here, above the every type of mechanical device from the Grand Coulee dynamos surging boilers and whirling generators, a vast room forty feet to Remington Shavers. They work in the roar of turbines and the high houses the offices, classrooms, drafting room, and testing whirl of generators. They listen to the steady hiss of air compres­ areas of the department. Here, Assistant Professor Bischoff teaches sors and study thermometer charts of commercial refrigerators. the elements of power plants and supervises the mechanical engi­ They learn the inner rh\'thms of these machines and master their neering laboratory. Here there is experimental study of prime hidden scales. The) labor and sweat to build the perfect machine, movers and pimbs. nozzles and Venturi tubes, weirs and h\ draulic knowing all the while that they will never succeed. And yet the machinery. Here. also. Associate Professors Lackler and Cotter completion of one machine marks the beginning of the next and teach the courses in fluid and engineering mechanics, while Assist­ even better one. ant Professor Hill lectures on thermo-dynamics and the theory of Down where the smokestacks rise and the testing machines grind. machines. And here it is that Professor W eschler instructs the the Catholic Ihiiversity M.E.'s learn the fundamentals of mechati- seniors in nieclianical equipment, conducts the seminar, and super­ ism. In the red-roofed shop presided over by Assistant Professor vises the thesis work—the climax of a thorough ccnirse in mechani­ Steinhagen they become acquainted with the engineering problems cal engineering. relating to the manufacturing process in industry. The real head­

63 M%ii

l-'^^^i

JC'^\ V ww y~ % >4-N^ Major I'liilip Cox—the model of a modern major.

Lt. Col. Joseph S. Magrath, director of the University .\ir Force ROTC program. THIS ARM IS A WING

Instructors, Lt. Lewis Holt and Capt. Earl Hinman teach courses Major William Nash, instructor in Air Science and director of the Pershing Rifle in basic and advanced Air Science. Team. The smoke cleared, the island gone, the weapon proved! (.ould those few watching scientists realize the destructive power thcii know 1- edge had brought? Not only had they released iiilherto unknoun energies: they had transformed the airplane with its world-shrinking ability into an instrument of fear so powerfid that ihe very existence of the world was imperiled except there should be ((introl. The indiv idual. group, or nation that controls this inslruinent con­ trols the life or death, peace or destruction, of the world. .Since Amer­ ica leads the free world, the youth of America must mainlain this control. To this end. Detachment 1.-55. .AFROTC. prepares the men of this Universitv in the instruments inaslerv. Guided by Professor of Air Science and Tactics, Lt. ('ol. Joseph S. Magrath. and his staff, the cadets are introduced lo all phases of militarv life and to the weapons of the Air Force. The corps organi­ zation gives the fourth-\ear men conqjiete responsibilitv for the

The Supple Line: \lr. Kranci- SiMiberl, .'^gl, Kran

The Middl<'nian: Sjil. Kiissell liiiller operates as intermediary between 'Ihe ladies of the corps, llie> add beauly, charm, and sjionsor-grace lo olhccis and cadets.

The Form-fillers: Si;l. (Jiarli~ V>iiiii; and Sgl. Cliarles Drennen, carry on Slaiidard Olhcc Proccdiuc.

The Understudies: The cadet staff is, left to right, Maj. Jose|)li Conroy, Col. Arell Weaver, Maj. William Savery, and Capt. Joseph Jacobs. proper cadet functioning of the unit, and provides the opportunity for cadet officers to encounter and solve problems similar to those met on active duty. Cadet Colonel Arell Weaver and his staff. Cadet Lt. Col. Urban Lester, and Cadet Majors Joseph Conroy and Wiffiam Savery are directly responsible to Lt. Col. Magrath for the condition of the 2.50-man unit. An organization complete in itself, the unit houses its cadet head­ quarters in the Quonset hut on Brookland Avenue, publishes its own four-page mimeographed newspaper, and boasts both an Arnold Air Society Squadron and Pershing Rifle Drill team, plus a 26-coed corps of Sponsors. The teaching staff includes Major Philip S. Cox, Training Officer: Major Wilham P. Nash, Adjutant; Captain Earl Hinman and Lieu­ tenant Lewis Holt.

The society boys: The Arnold .Ur Society officers, left to right. Lt. C- Courpas, Maj. A. Weaver, Capt. M. Riley. Lt. W. Savery. and Lt. R. Anzelnio.

tlie Air Force Blue.

The fact-finders: Cardinal Points news staff, left to right, E. Winner, AL Clendenin, C. Englehart, D. Willingham. and K. Mullins.

The Firing Line: Ken Murdock, Ben McMullen, Walter Seigel, Byron Williams, and Paul Rose. SENIOR SECTION Tke ei^etii4aif l^innin^ e^ memeHeA an4 tM4itien ..Sfejt«ii«*aiiiai(Mfe •• 1*.

i''i•#> r ' Vincent R. Agnelli, A.B. Robert F. Amato, B.C.E. John R. Barrett, A.B. Charles H. Bechert II, A.B.

Marianne T. Belair, B.S.N. Legrand A. Benefiel, B.Arch Bernard A. Bernier, Jr., A.B. Richard B. Bier, B.Arch. AND NOW TO BEGIN

The senior year, like every other school year and like a lot of other things, begins with waiting. Before the classes can start, before anything else, there has to be regis­ tration—and waiting. The process itself ac­ tually takes only a few minutes, but of course everybody is there at the same time, and there are lines, lines winding all around the gym, threading in between desks and down in front of the bleachers. You hold your breath for an X-ray. You see friends from last year, and you remem­ ber only half their names. You watch the people who are sitting at desks and wrho seem to be just as bored as you are. You read signs which ask you to register your car, tofill out a form, to go this way if you are A through L. Finally, you reach the end. You pay the bill, sign a few things. and receive your course cards. Looking through thetn. v ou wonder why you pre- registered for Eskimo Folk Dancinsc 301, but it's too late now. You gather together the h)rins, cards, and receipts. Then vou leave the cool dimness of the gym. standing for a moment in the doorway. The vear has begun—the senior year.

71 Marianne T. Biltz, A.B, Herbert E. Boeckel, B.Arch. Francis J. Bombara, A.B. Tibor Borsos, A.B.

Harold R. Buehler, B. Arch. E.

In September, the L niversity comes to life, and ever)- year there is a new beginning. For the stu­ dent, there will be new friends and new classes, new ideas and new activities. Symbolizing this feeling of newness and resolution is the Mass of the Holy Ghost which fornialK inaugurates and blesses the a( ademic vear. Appropriately, this years Mass was celebrated by a new Rector of the L'niversity. The celebration of Mass is a reminder that, along wilh the feeling of •"hegimiing." there is always an iiiiderlving spirit of tradition, of an age-old Catholic laith. which binds all the \ ears and all the members ol the I nixersiiv together. I'hrougli the spirit of lliis I'ailh- the work, the small events, the ordinary activities of (dllci;c lilc can he transformed into prayer. The pia\cr is begun in Se|itcmlier 1)\ the Mass of ihc llidv (ilnisl. It is strengthened throughout the loUouiiig months li\ the I niversity (Community Masses, through which the entire 1 niversity family idfi'is in unison its petitions and thanks to (iod. The annual retreat, at the beginning of Lent, revives the piaver when it may seem to be faltering. It ))ro- \ iilcs a time for introsjjeclion. an occasion to look at the ilisiancc traveled since September, and at the long stretch that still lies ahead. \t the start, when examinations and papers and projects are onlv somewhere in the dim future, work begins slowlv. but it begins in the tradition of CU, in the spiritual bond which encompasses everything. uniting one with another, and all with God.

James A. Butt, Jr., A.B.

Louis D. Cass, B.M.E. Claire M. Cody, B.S.N. James B. Clark, B.C.E. Hauline J. Ciaybour, B.S.N. Ruth O. Brantley, B.S.N. Thomas J. Brockwell, A.B. Ruth A. Buchbinder, B.S.N. Walter E. Bucher, Jr., B.Arch.

John C. Cahlll, B.Arch.

Diana L. Campbell, A.B.

Daniel K. Coen, Jr., B.A.E. Robert L. Conforti, A.B. Patricia A. Cottom, A.B. Constantine A. Courpas, B.Arch. Mary L. Coyle, B.S.N. Hannah T. Craven, B.S.N. Norman F. Curran, B.Arch.E. Mary P. Daley, A.B.

John M. DiJoseph, A.B. Jaime C. Duque, B.Arch. Concetta M. D'Urso, B.S.N. Matthew J. Ehrlicher III, A.B.

TIDY

Ihf liooksicjrc is the last hurdle before you can safely settle down to attending classes. There are always books to be bought, and consequently there must be a visit to the bookstore. Thousands of students clog its little maze of aisles, scanning shelves and })Ooklists. Everything is in Charles W. Englehart, B.Arch. Katharine J. Erisman, B.S.N. order; the books are on the shelves—or will be in any day now. But booklists, like train schedules, can be neat nu­ merical nonsense. Perhaps someone has torn f)ut a cru­ cial page, or tnost likely of all, you simply haven't enough monev to buy, at one time, all the books that are needed. After this first hand-to-hand meeting, however, the bookstore will turn into a personal friend, saving innu­ merable trips to Brookland. Notebooks in every imagin­ able size, stationery from yellow scratch pads to the best of letter paper, beer mugs, emblazoned sweatshirts, stuffed animals, and aspirin are just samples of what may be bought for any contingency, from a birthday party to a headache. If you know what you want, you can even lo­ cate and pay for it in those few moments between classes, now" that the store has become self-service. That was [jrob- ably the most timesaving innovation made on the campus since they thought of pre-registration. Orl.^ndo J. F.-^roh, B.C.E. Kathryn A. Farrell, B.S.N. 74 William J. Danco, B.E.E. Jeanne A. Davis, A.B. Joseph B. de Groot, B.E.E. Thomas J. Derby, B.A.E.

Antonio E. Elmiger, B.Arch.E William G. Elsen, B.A.E Frieda M. Emmerth, A.B. Paul M. Emmons, B.E.E. Louis M. Florenzo, A.B. Maurice F. Flynn, B.Chem.E,

Katharine L. Gebhard, A.B. Edward G. Gibson, A.B.

^^«C'

Joseph L. Godkin, B.Arch. Donald R. Gormley, B.Chem.E.

76 Gloria T. Femia, B.S.N. Alberto E. Fernandez, A.B. John E. Finan, A.B. Sarah A. Finnigan, B.S.P.H.N.

Eugene P. Foeckler, A.B. James P. Foote, A.B

PATHS THAT ARE THERE FOR NO OTHER TIME

Sometimes the world is a small place. Maybe there's nothing but two people and a very long path. They're just walking, and they know there are trees and grass around, and they know that at the end of the path there are buildings and people. But for the moment they are just walking, and nothing else matters. They're almost as happy as it is possible to be, but they're not even think­ ing about that. Maybe for one wildly funny moment they're throwing snowballs, or just running in the snow, because this white campus doesn't happen very often and they suddenly feel fine. They might do anything just because their world is small and everythin" else has. for a moment, vanished. Laughing together, walking together, in a full silence, it may be the most important path that can be walked, yet they just found themselvej there. Even if this was the first time it had happened to them, they could guess where thev were going but there xvere many details to be discov­ ered—seeing a newh valued face in the mirror, finding new meaning in music and poetry. Maybe in ten years, five \ears, even one vear. trees and snow will be just trees and snow again. The\ end it in different wa\s: it doesn t matter, it means the same.

77 John H. Grace, B.Arch.E. Conrad J. Grant, B.Arch.E. Jerome Greenberg, B.Chem.E. George R. Greweling, B.M.E.

Raymond H. Handel, A.B. Katherine M. Heffernan, B.S.N. Jacqueline A. Hegner, A.B. Ursula M. Heibges, A.B. HE CAME, HE SAW,...

The L niversity's Rector, His Excellency the Most Reverend Bryan .1. -McEntegart, was appointed in the summer of 19.53, and arrived in Washington soon afterwards to renew his acquaintance with the University—a few weeks before the students returned for the fall teriTi. It did not take long for the Bishop to become a familiar figure on campus. Smiling and interested, he was present at every school function, the break­ fasts and dinners sponsored by the various college organizations, the |>lays, the basketball games. Perhaps there were a few problems atfirst, littl e ones like pronouncing his Irish name. But no matter how his name was said, the L niversity community came to realize that their new administrator was mak­ ing every effort to be a friend. At hisfirst convocation, on December 1, the Rector sat on the platform while Monsignor O'Connor talked about the forthcoming drive for the Shrine, and "Miggs" Reilly spoke about the basketball team. The hour was getting late when the Bishopfinally ros e to speak. He said onU a few words, words of thanks for the reception he had received at CU. But his warm and informal tone captured the audience, and the first convocation ended on a friendly, humorous note. As his presence became more and more welcotne at campus functions, as his quick, fatherly smile and his interest in university affairs became more and more apparent, it was clear that here was a man who was doing his best to enliven the spirit of the school, and succeeding. He had come, he had seen a great deal, and more important, he was already a happilv accepted part of the L ni\"ersitv.

78 Alvaro B. Gutierrez, B.Arch.

John P. Hennessey, A.B.

William M. Hocking, A.B. George J. Hughes, A.B. Vincent A. lannone, B.Arch. Antoinette A. lorio, B.S.N,

Marie F. lorio, A.B. Margaret M. Jackson, B.S.N. Robert D. Ja:kson, B.C.E. William W. Jackson, A.B. 79 Joan A. Jahoda, A.B.

Rolf J. Jettinghoff, A.B. ... AND DECIDED

Norman E. Kelly, B.Arch.

Patricia A. Kiermas, B.S.N. John S. Jamison, B.C.E.

TO STAY Waldo E. Johnson, A.B.

The inauguration of His Excellency, the bishops of the LTnited States. Television Most Reverend Bryan J. McEntegart, as cameras moved onto the campus to pick up Rector took place on November 19, 1953, Bishop Fulton Sheen's appeal for the Shrine and it was a big day in the history of fund drive, and noted visitors and Secret Catholic University. The occasion was Service menflooded in. given a special distinction by the con­ The climax was the inauguration itself. ferring of an honorary Doctor of Laws de­ In ceremonies reported to the world by TV, gree upon President Dwight D. Eisenhower. newspapers, and newsreels. Bishop McEn­ As a matter of fact, it was a big week tegart was installed, and when the festivi­ at CU. The inaugural events were made to ties and excitement were over, CU's new coincide with the annual meeting of the Rector was here to stay.

Mary L. Kennedy, B.S.N.

Mary K. Kirwin, A.B. Alvm R. Knudson, A.B. Donald P. Kommers, A.B. Jeanne M. Kowaleski, B.S.N. John T. La Forge, A.B.

AUB ii^yA4:KA<;KN mow OJILT

Carlos F. Lavandcro, B.Arch.

t Lorenzo Lopez-Duke, B.Arch.E.

4'

Joseph W. Mabire, B.Arch.E. George A. Macdonald, B.Arch.

82 Elizabeth M. Lamb, B.S.N. Thomas J. Lannon, B.E.E. Esther M. Larkin, A.B. Richard T. Laudisi, A.B.

Rome, Athens, every community has boasted a market place and a meeting ground. At Catholic University, the gray stone heart of our daily lives is McMahon Hall. Sometime during the day, nearly every student in the University swings through the great revolving door and makes his way to one of McMahon's thirty-odd hallowed classrooms. Every hour on the hour, these classrooms spew their occupants into the great foyer, under the placid white eye of Pope Leo XIII, and out onto the wide front steps. Clusters of students form around the booth. the bulletin boards, the long wooden benches, and traffic to and from the classes is halted long enough to tie little knots in the crowd and weave a human pattern in the confusion. There is work for the com­ ing class to put in order, a date to discuss, a friend to meet. Outside, somebody is holding court on the steps, or just sitting in the sun if the day is nice. Late-comers are running up the steps two at a time and colliding with the hordes on their wa\ to Shahan. Finalh. bv quarter after the hour, an almost unnatural (]uiet has descended. Mc­ Mahon Hall rests quitUlv in preparation for the next onslatis;ht. John H. Markle, B.A.E Harold P. Matters, Jr., B.E.E Timothy J. May, A.B. Joseph L. Mazure, A.B.

Robert F. McCarthy, B.M.E

CORRESPONDENCE Downstairs. McMahon is nmch the same as upstairs, lint more tightly packed, simply because there is not as mill h room for the masses to move around. There is an­ other constantly-revolving door, and there are chairs, machines for buying cigarettes or soft drinks, and a mys­ terious long counter which seems to have no other func­ tion than to be leaned on. Yet there is not so much of the carefree lounging that takes place upstairs. Usually, in this dimly lighted basement, a spirit of urgency prevails. There is pressing business to be transacted at the book­ store—the purchase of a notebook or an evening paper. The post office window attracts lines of students laden with packages and laundry boxes, and the unfortunates who only want a three-cent stamp. In the morning the lines stretch far into the narrow room, playing havoc with the stead) current of humanit) which moves down the two stairways. The central attraction is the bank of mail boxes. There is just eve-room enough to peer inside the slots, and to risk losing an eve from the shoves of the person peering into the slot above yours. The looked-for envelope brings the news, the encouragement, the reprimand, and the money from home. On either level. McMahon Hall represents the headquar­ ters of CL' activity. The activity ma\ be frantic, and some­ times almost overwhelming, but old, gray McMahon re­ mains unperturbed.

•••••••I Archie J. McAlister, A.B. Thomas J. McCaffrey, B.Arch.E. Joseph W. McCann, B.Chem.E. Agnes B. McCarthy, A.B.

Ross B. McMullen, B.A.E. Edward A, Meaney, B.M.E. John H. Menges, B.Arch. Erwin L. Montany, B.Arch.

Eugenia A. Moore, A.B. Allen I. Morris, B.Arch.E.

Helen A. Morris, A.B. Frederick J. Murphy, A.B. 85 Ann T. Nicholson, B.S.N. Andres A. Mutis, B.Arch.E. Joan O'Brien, A.B.

Marilyn L. O'Neill, B.S.N. Robert T. O'Reagan, A.B. George H. Parker, A.B. THE SHORTEST DISTANCE

86 Patience is a Christian virtue—one the often harried but seldom hurried CU stu­ dent has most opportunity to develop. Al­ ways happily slow, CU-ites come to a full dead stop when faced with the ever-present line. Lines in the dining halls, bookstore lines, lines in the snack bar, registration lines, ticket lines! It sometimes seems that CU must be remembered as a network "re­ ticulated or decussated at equal distances with interstices at the intersections.' Most chronic of these linear functions is the one thwarting the basic drive—hunger. No matter where you eat—in the dorms, the Dugout, the snack bar—you are forever confronted by droves of ravenous .students who descend on the laden board with all the delicacy of a plague of locusts. In Graduate Hall the line has a legendary or epic quality. In the snack bar the awe­ some length is shrouded by the shadowy hall, but that doesn't fool the worldly-wise CU student. He is used to these lines—the wonderful lines—the direct lineal descend­ ants of the route of Marco Polo.

Michael B. Patterson, B.Arch. Salvatore V. Paturzo, B.Arch.E. Nedra B. Peck, B.S.N. James R. Phippard, A.B.

Robert P. Pikul, A.B. H. Joseph Plummer, A.B. George J. Pluto, B.C.E. Robert E. Quigley, A.B.

87 Roscoe Reeves, Jr., B.Arch. Ruth Rich, B.S.N.

LINES AND LIGHTS- REFLECTIONS OF A LITTLE WORLD

iJrooklaiid is a roinimiiiit\. a section of l).C.. a placi' where |)eo[)le live in houses just like anywhere else. Il is also rwclllh Street, a collection of stores, and a trollcv sto]) where you can get off the car. go to the movies for sixty cents, and eat \our Sunday night supper in DePerini's for a quarter. .\t the top is St. Anthonvs. dominating the whole length of Twelfth Street, espe­ cially on Sunday mornings when the crowds flood out from Mass and spill into the drug­ stores, the bakeries, and delicatessens of the next block. Whether you want tooth paste, cigarettes, or a haircut. an\ day of the week, it's here. .\fter dark, activitv continues. The New­ ton lures the student to its newest double- feature, anrl afterwards he is drawTi inevi­ tably up the street again by the din of the juke-box and the welcoming sign of the red cardinal blinking on and off. But by two o'clock, the glasses have been collected, the neon lishts go off. and Twelfth Street settles down lo wait for morning again. In a \Norlil full of books and term papers. Brookland is a special place. Best of all. it's familiar—the drug-stores, the houses. sometimes even the people. Twelfth i^treet is Main Street, and sometimes it looks like home. Edward Q. Rogers, B.Arch. Madeline M. Ruddick, B.S.N. William E. Savery, Jr., B.Arch.E. Richard E. Scheetz, B.C.E.

89 - - '• .M:-::-^ --:--"^V m

^^^^^^^KtL^

k I

>^ / Fred M. Schemmer, B.Arch.E. Daniel Seganish, B.M.E. Roger N. Shaw, A.B. M. Gretchen Shrum, A.B.

Arnold H. Singer, A.B. Elizabeth F. Smith, B.S.N. Robert I. Smith, B.Chem.E. Arnold Sperling, A.B. COFFEE AND CONVER-

Joseph F. Stivaletti, B.M.E. Joseph A. St. Jean, B.Arch.

Donald R. Struttmann, B.M.E. John D. Sturgeon, A.B. 90 Michael Sierco, A.B.

SATION IN CU'S ROOM Charles F. Stewart, A.B. Mary L. Strosser, B.S.P.H.N.

If a frantic search all over the campus hasn't found the person you're supposed to meet, go to Shahan. There, wading through a miasma of smoke and coffee fumes, you will find just about anyone, from deans to freshmen. If you're lucky enough to locate your friends and get both food and a chair, you will need all your will power when the time for leaving rolls around. It isn't just because you're hemmed in on all sides by chattering and chewing student bodies, but because here there is a flow of shop talk, repartee, and occasional lucid­ ity which makes this one room the social nerve center of the CLJ campus. M. Patricia Sugrue, A.B. The snack bar is not always the itnbroglio it is at mid­ day. Before and after the lunch hours it quiets down to a pleasant simmer. Here in the mornings is the coffee that helps people to wake up and face the day, and here in the afternoons are the card games and quiet conversations that lighten the drag of classes. At any time, thotigh. here is the place for students to grab those few needed minutes of relaxation with coffee, cards, and badinage. They're always there in the snack bar.

91 Marianne A. Sullivan, A.B. Patricia A. Taffe, A.B. Fracisco S. de Tejada, B.M.E. Alvin J. Temin, B.Arch.E.

II I•fIIIH Jorge N. Villacres, B.C.E Josephine V. Vlahovich, B.S.N. Lillian G. Watson, B.S.N. Arell E. Weaver, A.B.

Rudolph R. Zaiesak, B.S.N.

Guillermo Zuleta, B.M.E.

92 Alfred E. Wehby, A.B. Mary P. Whalan, A.B. John D. Winters, B.Arch. Alice M. Wolowsky, B.S.N. POINT OF Take a last look back. • Those are the buildings you made grow. In them you gave and took important years. You used to walk, sometimes run, through cold mornings to get inside them. Then leisurely paced back hoine through a warmer afternoon— Mad, worried, or maybe just happy. And while you were in there, young man. a few people on the other side of desks gave you everything they knew. Listen, write, hear a bell chime the end. Remember. Take a last look back. Other buildings—a chapel, a shrine— An unfinished shrine for an unfinished person who grew in those two buildings a little taller than in any other. A retreat. A morning Mass. And another bell. You're ready, thev and you say. You took it and now it's vours to give again. Evervthing they knew and gave was only the beginning. They made \ ou find and know and love something all the world wants to win. Take a last look back And listen for another bell. 'i^A /%

UNDERCLASSMEN Juniors <-nr

WHITE BUCKS AND A

a junior is v\hat thev named the \^ eek end after . . . no longer asks "Why must I do this?" . . . instead says "What— has suddcnU discovered the wonderful power of thinking for again ?" . . . himself . . . drives teachers, mothers, and sweethearts to distraction . . . he has finallv gotten his feet wet in hisfield of concentration and ... at an average speed of sixty miles an hour . . . wonders wh\ it isn't more like what he imagined it would be . . . beholds each week end with the weary knowledge that Friday night . . . lives on coffee and cigarettes . . . will be followed by a cold gray Monday morning . . . is full of information—carefully gathered from TIME. LIFE, and . . . means white bucks and a prom . .. Tin: NEW YORKER . . . a studi'iil witli something to remember hut no time to remember is getting just a mite tired but is still secure in his knowledge that it . . . next vear he'll be a senior and what-wiff-all-this-matter-then . . . a junior looks at his reading list and fondly hopes that he will be ... he thinks it's too late to change his major and is secretly driven to drink . . . preferably some place close by . . . glad . . . is delighted witli a thousand things . . . a junior is actively bored . .

96 Junior Class officers. Left to right, Al Rishe, Don Sewell, Margo Dargan, Grover Manderfield, Pat Christian, and Dan Fagan.

Big Four. Juniors, left to right, Terry Horowitz, Don Nalley, Bill Mello, and Bob Harwood-

97 (^iirrnly ran

After cstahlisliing a icpiilalion as innovators, the .liiiiior Class this vear led the wa\ in a iie\s held li\ being tin- first class at (.1 to (haw up a constitution governing class aclivilv. In it thev have endeavored to set down the func­ tions and duties ol the various oliicers in a simple, sys- li'inalli- loiin. Il pio\ ides lor a class council coinposcd of the regular oliicers and membeis from each of the schools to formulate and ( an v out decisions that do not need the attciit ion of the w hole class. r>v adopting this plan. Al Rishe. president: Don Sewell. vice-president: Pat (Christian. secriMary: Margo Dargan. treasurer; and the Sliulciil (oiiiuil representatives Dan l'ai;an. Crovcr \Iaiulci field, and Marie Gallo have shortened class meetings and relieved them of the burden of extraneous matters. On the social side, the traditional .lunior \^ eek end was the pivotal activitv. For months in advance the energies of till- week-end conmiittee were all aimed at this affair. and their finished product was the topic of conversation long afterward. The week end began at the Willard Hotel on Friday. Februarv 26. with the Junior Prom. The highlight of the eveniiii! was the crowning of the queen. Saturday night found the juniors at the Dupont Plaza in the midst of a cocktail partv. The Sunday morning Mass and Com- imniion Breakfast was made more memorable by the presence of Bishop McEntegart. Rector of the L nivershy. The week-eml was climaxed by an indoor picnic at Binders Lodse. r*^'

Junior week-end committee. Left to right. Ann Amer. Sue Pyeatt. Grover Manderiield. Ed Snyder. Peggy Dorety. Joan Vollbrecht, Mary Ellen Mac.Arthur, and Dan Fagan.

Junior Levels. The higher level, left to right, are Pat Chris­ tian, Lido Rossi. Laird Horrell. Laia Shevitz. Nieky Tiranno. Downstairs are Bob Kastner. Margo Dargan and Bob Rutkowski.

JUNIORS Junior nur>*-s. Left lo riglil. seati'd are: Joan Hellrring. Betly J. Lotion. Alice Kotiiig. Jai- i|nelin<' Garner. Jeanne Kowaleski. .'•^lainling: Guen Bradv. Betiv Svlvia. and Marie (iailo.

Framed hy IMciMahon Archwav. Left lo riglil, slanding: Jim Nidaii. .loan Vcdibrechi, Ray (Jreg- nrv- Norman l)i('arlanloiiio. (iil Kaufman. Sally Itiiici'. Itill Misik. Paula tlaigli and Lois Sehmill. .Scaled are: Dee Zaiss, Maureen Nill, and Lynn Pvfroni.

!.^.' Junior vantage point. Left to right, Louis Layton, Eduardo Menendez, Arturo ^^ alsh, Larry Partridge, Osear Medina, Kevin Callahan, and Ramon Sobri

LIpward looking Juniors in fi-onl of McMahon. Left to right. Back row: Don iNally. Bol) Harwood. Lou Lav ton. .\rt Cole. Larry Partridge. John Sarstield. Joe Gmniaii. ami Grover Maiuh rluld. Si-coiul honi the last row: Bill Mello. Terry Horowitz. Ronnie Barbulti. Ed Snyder. John Lynerd. Lido Rossi. Laird Horrell. Joan \ (dlbreeht. and Art Halii. Tliinl row: John Bulla. Eduardo Menendez. Dick Zauner. Tom Foote. Dan Fagan. and Joe Powers. Fourth row: Joann Heinen. Bill Fitzgerald. Chris Taylor. Peggy Baurys. Sue Pyeatt. Kitten .Mullins. Joan Maye. Naney Connley. Jere DeLany. Sylvia Petruoeelli. Jose -Vlnienar. and Lorelta Ross. First row: Vtif Handal. Gsear Medina. Gecuge Denietrovils. and Jose Torano.

101 JUNIORS /

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•iiiMl"»] .Mt..^jfe!-. - A sircci full of sophs. Lefl to right, firsi rou : \likc (.linil.nin, Bill .Majeriis, llavi' Mark, /iiglcr While, Stan Bazydola, Jerry Slilwell, Joan Scully, C^andc \larho. Beverley Skrinak, Turk M<-.\ndrew, and Gene Alalieko. Second row: Dan Ruslander, Joe Sicari, Dick Murray, Andrew Chang, Bill Retzbach,

A LEGENDARY STATE OF

a so[ihomoi c is the bottom half of the middle . . . a mighty leap into feverish activity ...... an awesome lord to a freshman . . . for him the school week begins with the Mixer and ends with a immersed in parties and politics up to his crew cut . . . track meet. . . with the iiiuisiial faciiltv of putting .Audrey Hepburn. Aristotle and a sophomore girl is the only creature made by God who can wear r. S. Eliot in the same sentence and making the relationship earrings and tennis shoes and still look charming . . . sound logical . . . firmly believes that if you leave McMahon foyer at ]f):H) you can thinks a cheeseburger must have relish, nuistard. pickles, and easily make a 10:10 class in the Music building . . . potato chips on the side to be wi_irth a quarter ...... enthusiasm and school spirit in motion ...... rev els in his new-found freedom . . . a sophomore is a legendarv state of mind . . . knows every word and every verse of every song ever written, a jircttv nice guv the rest of us are just beginning to know" . . . including Mimi. the College Widow . . . who likes jazz. Chas. .Addams. and the Sunday funnies . . . a sophomore is a consensus-of-opinion all his own . . .

102 .*«- - - —** "" s~*>~ ^*a!

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Jerry Carter, Dot Drissel, Bill Misik, and Andy Balint. Third row: Owen Simon, Lyn DeBaecke, Pat Smith, Jim Winkler, Georgette Bergeron, Jose Gonzalez, Pat Maguire, DeeDee Richter, Clem Gailliot.

SOPHOMORES

Soph <^ueen George Richer—"Guilolining anybody?' m

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.-siiiiliiig sophomores. I.cll lo iiglil- lii-l \<>\\ : KHIMMI lliggiii-. Paul Braider. Dolori's Colopy, Thomas Loerafl. John Kearney. Second row: liriaii Dolliver, Barrv Kelly. George Gigioli. Ken Murdock. Third row: Kob BOIKIIIOU ice. Shiila Manning, liaibara l!ro\Mi.

iVnd they never opened the gate. Lefl to right, first row: \era Virant, Maureen Daley, (Jarl Viesli, Adele Marlino, Jo«^ Schubert, (ieorge Rieber, Bernadette (Janncjn, Margaret fjiiling. lolin Manion, Joseph Richards, and I'.ill McDonald.

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More Sophs fill stands. Left to right, top row: Joan Scully, Ernesto Arteaga, Nick Generelle, Genevieve LaGrua, and Nick Gallipoli. In the second tier are Jack Whelan and Alice Emniett. The last line includes: Eleanor Westhead, Mary Beth Morin, Carolyn Hurd. Vin Farrell. Jim Lally, Tom Anessi and Charles Larkin.

Class Officers. Left to right. Mike Flvnn. Pat Alcfnlyre. Midge Smith. Jcrrv Carter, \rlcne l.cvc-iinc. Joe Wholey. and John Manion.

SOPHOMORES / - 0 il / Asstenihleil in front of the Press I!ox. Left to right, first row: Zeigler White, Eithne Tabor, and Ellenore Kordiek. Second row: John .Stofila. Paul Rose, Jim McCiowan, Jack Looney. Jim Hughes, and Jake Povvderly. Third row: Stan Bazydola. Tom Black. Ed Winner, George Donovan. ]?en Giuliani. Ed Hurley, Bob Ziernicki, and Ned Kraft.

Sophomore nurses. Left lo right, first row: Sr. Marv Beala. C.S.F.N.. Sr. Loolla Michael. O.P.. Sr. Marie Brigid. G.P-. Dol Daly. Second row: Arlene Lcvcs(|uc. Barbara Poe, Frieda Roots. Bernadelle (;reen. Loretta Flynn. Third row: .Mary Lou Reardon, Midge Sinilh. Jane Sagnrlon. Agnes Win.sehel, Ann Orlosky, Pal Sieber. Fcnirth row: Mary Barber. Joan Savoy. Belly Davis. Alice Handrieh, Patricia Adams, Eleanor Siiuonick. Fiflhrow: Calherine Murphv, Mary Jo Sehmilt. Carole Howard. Hoscmarv Carosilla. Peggy Slillcr, and Maryann Mason. At CU the sophomore year begins early, with the orientation com­ mittee arriving several da)s before the new freshmen. Then, with the arrival of the frosh, the carefully laid plans unfold with scarcely a hitch. This year's plans included a three-week initiation period with badges and dinks, a tea dance, Othello and The Miser presented by Players, Inc., an evening campfire on Bunker Hill, and to end it all on friendly terms, a joint picnic. Continuing their busy schedule, the sophomores, backed by ardent rooters, won the intramural football championship by beating the seniors. Throughout thefirst semester the sophomores continued the two- year-old tradition of the Shahan Mixers. This year's committee en­ larged the original plan and introduced many new features. Two of the favorites were the Sadie Hawkins Day party and the Hallowe'en party. At the close of the semester, president Jerry Carter, vice-president Mike Flynn, secretary Arlene Levesque, treasurer John Manion, and Student Council representatives Joseph Wholey, Patrick Mclntyre, and Margaret Smith helped to organize and set up the freshman elections. The second semester was crowded with a variety of activities, ft began with the third annual recurrence of the "Flapper Frolic." This was followed, in Lent, by a closed Communion breakfast. On April thirteenth the class brought the year to a successful close with the Sophomore Cotillion at the Willard Hotel. Also included in the weekend were a communion breakfast and a picnic. All in all, it was a very satisfactory year for the sophomore class.

Ceil Brogan, John Philibert. and Janis Bradley stand benealh wav- side shrine, gift of the Class of 1950.

Fenced-in Sophomores. Ascending steps: George Fisher, Margaret Curling, Tony Kalafatieh. Charles Downham. Richard Carr, Gregory Moore, Don Schroeder, Mike Flynn, Betty Seidensticker, Mike Lyons, and Pat Mclntyre. IV

r^

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AN UNKNOWN QUANTITY

a freshman i~ boundless energv in a w ide-eved container . . . one who has just arrived at college—his high-school triumphs still fresh in his mind—and somewhat taken aback to find that nobody here has ever heard of him . . . the reason win the snack bar can sell chocolate fudge nut sundaes with marshmallows and cherries and whipped cream on top ...... an enthusiastic reminder that the world isnt so blase after all . . . a freshman is an unknown quantitv in which the upperclassman thinks he has fcnmd his hojie and knows be has found new worries . . . a homesick kid who eagerly seeks (jut the gang during Christmas vaca­ tion only to find long gaps in the ccmversation and that the world has suddenly acquired a new dimension . . . freshmen are a new point of view . . .

House Rules for the new guests

^ you '^"^.t all

The ^°^'-,.,. your CUfc ^ i-rJr* „ ooplioaior" ^ ^, ^d receive J ^aya. »TO ^^„ » 30? "^P^t^s-

.egardcci as ^^ ^^^\t 11 ^Tl, ol ^t- 8^ ^«'^**'"'* i«erv «i^ "^^J^'^^ ^^ ^iTto of ^"' ^ , ,, Fre8'""Vi. soti^o™*^ „„ one ^^"^ .-

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,.th tW-ee or *^ ,,,00 noon- Freshmen stop traffic. Left to right. First row: Rosemary Maori, John Hesson. Carolyn Lawlor, Phyllis Egan, Tom Keeler, Mary Garrett, Patricia Keating. Second row: Carole Komosinski, Sandra Komosinski, Martha Gannon, Ed Flood, Anne Finnegan. Edward Keeley. John Maysak, Mary McAlister. Pat Kelleher, Brian Lally, Joan Harrison, John Izzo, Marian Hubert, Susanne Hegner, Ted McLaughlin, Carol Murphy, Ann Jones, Jack Lynch, Betty Jane Hamilton, Charles Downing, Pat Florence, Tom McKavitt, Mary Frances Crowley, Ethel Green, John Holden, Margaret Anne Hennessee.

Mixed emotions.

We hereby declare the defendant

111 FRESHMEN Ai.hilcclural line-up. I.. Il I., righi. Ja( k Pi. iiu-/ka. KnI,, rt Ebner. John Tseronis. Tom lV|,p, i, J.„ k (.o, n-pan. J.dm Libert, John Bligh, Carlos Acevedo, Juan Rodriguez. Jerry Kane, (^abriel Ferrer, Scotly Milne, John Quinn.

njP n Jr - 1 *^^^p

\ clusicr of fresluncn in Music Building patio. In the foreground: Left to right. Nancy Dunkle. Carol I'duford ami Aim Hanly: seated on truck, .Ann Morgan, Janie Elite. .Martin tTinvley: First row: .Nancy Fiesler. Diane Cross. Sheila Budinger. .Mary N'isceglia. Marguerite Ejiright. Jimmy Baleman; Second row: .Mary (Jieseldine. Don ClilTord. Alarv Pat Lowe. Shannon Randcdph. Rose Grec Bob Gormley. Elaine McCabe. Mary Beth .Mosher. Fred DeSantis Chick Chiara- luonle. Rosemary Coakley. Josephine Fl ov d Bill Brennan: on steps: Yvonne \^ inston. Ann Baker. Pat Farrelly. and .Ann Gregory. 112 ^2^^.V .-N '

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Lofly view of freshmen. Left to righl. fiisi i,n\: John Shanks, Larry Hartnett, Bill Rogers, Bonnie Rimkus. Ann W asson, j,,,- ,s,.„,irv. K.iuardo Kociui: Second row: Steve Rossi. Pete Ruvolo. f^huck Strauss. Phil Stevens. Tony Rossi, Don Sargeant. Chuck Thuss: Third row: Mary .Ann \^'illging. Jopie Speekenbrink, Alargaret Robinson, Phyllis Robinson, Dave AA'illingham; Fourth row: Mimi Reisman. Joe Tiziani. and Carol Salvatore.

113 F.R E S H M E N m^

Railing ei'ilics. I.cll lo ri;;lil. seated: William .Meyer. John Mui|iln. and Ini- Jill. Slanding an- Francisco Hennessey. Laurence Meley, Giislav Ilcnsel. Ilcclor LlorcMs. John (;iallino, Ed MacLeod. Earl (iill, .Al Huels. and lom lliv.ni.

The freshman, whclliei he likis il or not. is ahvavs cv civ bodv "s Finallv assembled as an organized and functioning machine, the hope f(n' the fiiliiic as well as his own. lie has (he sdincwlial naive frosh served notice that their originality and infectious energy would liigli-scho(d conci-plion ol what the college licshman s||,,|||(| l,,- like not 111' allowed lo lade with the fanfare of elections. The other class and. lo ihc consistent wonder and delight id llic (dclci. iliillcr. iip|icr ollicers-clect. treasurer (^hiick Thuss, Nursing Fd. representative Mary classes, the idea and the I'licrgv-in-acl ion that Icdlows iisnallv invcdvcs Clilford. and secretary Mary McAlister furthered Baleman's class some highlv original ihinking. The (!lass ol .1, is a classic exainple. iinitv platform by sponsoring and desigtiing Birthday and Valentine llcld III I iicck diiiini: the first semester hv more siiiimciit academic Day -Mixers in .Shahan. I'Veshtnen representatives on varsity teams. rcsii iiiions than anv previous class, the Irosh. in iheir elections. like McKavitt, Thuss, and Bob Flynn, helped lo achieve a long- prodiiccd :i widcomc replica of the exciting davs of Tammany and awaited reactivation of support for the University teams. There is tor. h-lighl iKiiadcs. l.iitl,' jiin li.ii.'inan. >M) major Ironi Philadel- the making of a moral in the fact that sports success in 19.S4 .seemed pliia. loiining ;i co:ilili.in with liaskctludlcr liim AlcKav ilt. used a to coincide with this student effort. sli.k. bran.l-n.'w puMi.ilv 1 .immitlcc l.i alcrl the campus with The warm-weather activity schedule of the young class is filled with the latest vv.n.i .m llii' campaign, and promoted the unconventional the Communion Breakfast, under the direction of Bill Brennan; the cnvcnlion rallv in Siiahan on election eve. His oratory won Spring Dance; and many, many ambitions, as yet formless and friciiijs. V.ill's, and a landslide \ ictorv for this neophvte Napoleon. nameless. Frosh front Mullen Library. Lefl lo right. First row: seated, Joe AJcDermott, I'rank Duchesne and Harolil Carter; standing, Mary Lou Curtis, Tom Buttimer. Dolores Cummings, Alan Daly and John Crowley. The group on the steps includes: in descending order. Ken Bush, Joe Binowski, Frank Austin, Jim Evans, .Alberto Castro, and Jim Becker.

From Dugout depths i.nne freshmen \nn W illi-y. Kathleen O'Shaughnessy. Bill Parvis. Ann (l'('..unudl and .Nat Palione.

FRESHMEN ACTIVITIES t^ii)ef'^ienafii ^actet^ (itte4 tc 4ii^^ff^^t tastes 9 t% .-tr i •• ^~ i <^-»i

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Abbey.s. L.fl lo righl, FirsI row: Joe De (irool, IJ(jb Har­ wood, Jaime Du<|ue, Charles Downham, Terry Horowitz, D.m Nalley, Jack Dirks, tins Ojurpas, l^aul Car('y, John Wilson. Pete .Stancioff, and Bill K(dlerman. .Second row: Bill .Mello, Carlos l.avandero, Don McNeiee, Joe Jacobs, Jack Cahill, Bob Anzelmo. Tom .\1cArdle, Joe Leo. Slanding are: Lt. Ed O'Neill, Frank Duane, Dean MePadden, Er. (;il- ber! Hartke. Ed Rogers, Fr. (Jerard .Sloyan, Don Si reel and Tom O'Reilly.

Officers: Don -Street, secretary; Ed Rodgers, president; Gus Courpas, l-C-C: Frank Duane, vice-president; Bill Kellerman. treasurer.

118 A new pledge receives his token of admittance.

ABBEY CLUB

Abbev motto: Mlnni TOIIITP

^^itum ^oileei'e Alpha Delia Gammas. I.ctl lo righl, FirsI row: \ ic Palur/..). jack Looney. fr. ".ilvwHil DOVMI. mo.lcralor. Mike Sierco. Second row: Clem Gailliot. Brown Riley, '.I M.ancv. Slan Bazydida. Cieorge Gigioli. Bob Tommasi. Third row: .Art laKI. li.n Giuliani. Joe Giuliani. Bob Fallon. Fourth row: Bill Oxenreider. .din M.Knroc- Dick Tli.irnt.m- Phil .'scader. Turn DeCirco- Jim Hull- an.I Carl \ iesti.

120 Officers: Ed Meaney, treasurer; Mike Sierco, president; Fr. Edward D.)wi moderator; Art Hald, vice-president; Tom DeCicco, secretary.

DELTA GAMMA

^^^d cJ^el KJiorlonum Oliicers: (...irg.- Ma.'.l. nal.l. I.C.C.: k.\:n Callahan, presldeiil ; Jol.n (iraci-. vi<-e-presidciil; Bob iMc(!arlliy. c.irrcspnn.ling secrelarv ; D.m (i.irmley, secre­ tary; Waller ."Seigel, treasurer.

CAVE DWELLERS

^l ore at J i/hque cJLeo ...... 4srji&.^... \»b Cave Dwellers: Lefl lo right. Guillermo Zulela. Jerry Greenberg. Bob Smilli. Ge(M-ge Macdonald. Kevin Callahan. Bob McCarlhy. J.ihn L. Sullivan. Joe Powers, John C.raee, Dan Scanlon, Don Gormley, and Tom Brockwell.

123 Odirers: Joe Si. Jean. IrcasiiriT; Lou Fl.,iin/n. 1,( .( ,. Ilijl lliMkmg. viee-presideni ; .loe (;..ilkin. c.irri'sp.ni.ling siin-laiv; .la.k (!arn.v. reeoriling secrelary: Jack Menges. presideiil.

CLIPPER CLUB

Clippers. Left to right. First row: Tony Elmiger, Norman Kelly, Jack ^yreqiio _^/i itno Carney. Joe St. Jean, and Al (Jreene. .Second row: Bill Hocking, Lou Florenzo. Jack Menges. Gene Maticko, Pete Smith, and Joe Godkin. Third r.jw: Turk Mc.\ndrew. Zeigler White. Bob Rubanowice.

124 r>:

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Officers: Lefl l.i right. Marianne Sullivan. Spiritual Council representative: Alice Koenig. president; Belly Jane Lofton, recording secretary; Msgr. William J. M( Donabl. moderator; Lillian Watson, vice-president; Eugenia Moore, Ireasurer; Jeanne Kowaleski. I.(^ C.

CLUB

I eace Weeard an

C^xnreSSion oi ^endierneSS

(^ollecled Columbians. Firsi r..w: Katherine Erisman. Alice Koenig. Made­ leine Ruddick. Ruth Buihbinder. Claire Cody; ."^econd row; Dorothy Daly. Genevieve Latirua. Betty Davis. Margaret Curling. Jeanne Kowaleski. Georgette Bergeron, (ienie Fisher: Thir.l r.iw: Bernadette Gannon. Marv" Ann Moran. Mary Joe .^i liniitt. Msgr. \V illiam J. AlcDonabl. mo.leralor. Lucille .Aidt. Joan Juliano. There-a Luisi. Lillian Watson; Fourth row: Caridyn Hurd. Marieanna Probst. Anne Farrell. Eugenia Moore. Marianne .Sullivan. Margaret Jackson. BetIv J. Lofton. Diana Campliell. J^

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^<;.' KAPPA lAU GAMMA

UJou (^an (^h anaet tke l/Uorld

Oliicers: Fi. B.di.il M.)liaii. mn.l.i .il.n : rM\.il.\ .skiinak. pi .-id.iil : Fllenore K.ir.li.k. vi.i' pi.'siilinl ; .l.uii Hill. I.f^.t^.; lullin.' label, i .irrcsponding sccrc- tarv : .loan \niclius, Ir.asur.r. Kappa Tan Gamma. Lefl to right. First row: Eithne Tabor, Joan Aurelius. Sheila Manning. Flleanor Kordiek. Beverley Skrinak. Jane Hill. Secimd row: Lyn DeBaecke. Frieda F'mmerlb. Baiiibi Stancioff. Carole .Macho. Didores Colopy. Joan Scully, Fr. Robert Mohan, moilerator.

129 PHI KAPPA

Phi Kappas. Left to right. FirsI row. Ed J.dins.m. C.miad (.lani, Fr. Charles Hart, moderator. Erwin Montany- Second row: Bill ll.dowesk.i. Chris Taylor, Ralph W uesl. John Manion, Al Cupka, Hillary Bombara. Ed O'Konski. Third row: Padrie Nelson. Ray Handel. Ray (ircgcuy. Bob Ziernicki, Dick Murray, Ed Kelley, .Al Colonero, Jerry Carter. Fourth row: Dick Laudisi. Jack Derhani. Bob Conforti. Don Koinmers. Jim AIcGrath. Dick Scheetz. Dick Mullin. Dick Zauner, Ken Resheske. J.din Bulla, and Pat Mclntyre.

1.30 Feet on rail, steins in hand, ambro­ sia (m tap . . .

^JLouattu to Luod

and i^ountr^1

Officers: Connie Grant, vice-president; Dick Mullin, corresponding secretary; Erwin Monlany, president; Fr. Charles Harl, moderator; Dick Scheetz. treas­ urer; Bill H.dowesko. l-C-C-; Ray Gregory, recording secretary-

131 ^#4 Senators. Sealed aniuiul the froni table, counler- cl.>ckwise, beginning at extreme left: Jidin Groschan, Buddy Myers, Norman Di C:arlant(mio, Slu Jamison, Neil Whilney. Hamld Mailers, and Jim McMahon. Sec­ ond row: Roscoe Reeves. Joe Gorman. Frank lackmaii, Jidin Winters. Gil Kaufman. Al Knudson. Jcdiii Finan, Jim Otiey, Tom Locraft. and Francis Maniim; Third row: Dick O'Keefe. Tony Kalafalieli, Paul Hose. Bob McHenry, Mike Lyons. Dave Mark. Jack Win Ian. ^ 1 ^i^^^S^ Mickey Borger. and Jim McGowan.

Bk^'i.'^^l LiLSenatorsd' caucus.

ili.'nMiit'i. Iii-loiian. SENATORS 7]on f]oL

CLUB Sed OmnilyntnibuS .:t*«

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.1^ SIGMA BEfA KAPPA

(^Sde ycs^uam Uideri

Officers: Ralph McHorney, vice-president; Fred Favo, l.C.C. Lido Ros treasurer; Al Rishe, secretary; Clint Remuzzi, president.

Sigma Beta Kappas. Left to right. First row; The Choreia. SBK formal dance highlights the first semester. George Rieber, Ed Snyder, Clint Remuzzi, George Vaeth. Second row: Mike Timpane, Fred Favo, Ed Fitzgibbons, Tom Brockwell, Tom Foote. Third row: Lido Rossi, Al Rishe, Carl Lippold, Straton Laios, Ralph Borzillo, Ron Barbutti, and Vince Farrell. On the steps, in descending order, are: George Demetrovits, Bill Fitzgerald, Tom Buttimer, Byron Williams, Dan Fagan, Ralph McHorney, Jim Hughes, Don Sewell, Grover Manderfield, and Roscoe Thomas.

135 X

'ri'iainoiids. I,ill 1.1 li^lil. fnsi r..M: \lai\ l.iii II. aid..n. II i liniil\. .Ian.' .~sa;:ur l..n. I'al Tallc. Fr. Ib-iirv lirown... ,Maiy kirwin. Agnes W'inschcl, Miilgi' Sinilh. (^al li.i 111.. \IIII|IIK. l.uii- IJia.ll.v. .•sr.i.n.l r.iw : \nii \niii. Maig.i Dargan. Pal (!liris|ian. Mck> Tiiaiin.!. I).-.- /aiss. I)e(d)ee Rieblcr. Joan Maye,

(Mowing candles r..!!.. 1 lli.. .lignilv an.I i harm ni th< Triamond reception ceremony.

Officers. In descending order on the steps are Ann Amer, historian; Janis Bradley, record­ ing secretary; Sue Pye­ att, LC.C; Fr. Henry Browne, moderator; Pal Taffe, president; Margo Dargan, vice-president.

1:',(, J

Peggy Colosey, Arlene Levesque, Bobo Flood, Pat Maguire, Eleanore Westhead, Sue PyeatI, Pal Cottom, .Ann Nicholson, Dot Drissel, .Marianne Belair,

TRIAMOND CLUB

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(HIicers. \n.li.s Miilis, aiilnvisl: l)an (!.i.n. I.( .( .: liill ^aMtv, pr..~i.l..|il ; f r. Ignaliiis .Sinilli. ni.iilci aloi : loin XbCallo'V. vicc-pi(.si.|(.nt II.d) KaslMcr. Ircasiut-r; .liin Pbippanl. secretary.

Utopians. Left to right. t'irsl row: Andy Mutis, Randy Reed, Vic .Suski, UTOPIAN CLUB Tom Derby, Bob Kaslner, Ben McMullen, Bob Ru­ banowice, Mike Clenden- nin, Bill Leahy, John Tay- l.ir. Sc(.(md row: Jim I'ljole, Dan Coen, Jim Phippard, Arch McAlis­ ter, Bill Savery, Boris .Sok.jloff, Maurice Flynn, Joe Battaile, Bob Molseed.

(^ ojaiu^, u a I til, Service. L^couraae f

GOOD LISTENERS, NOT TOO EASILY DISTURBED

The Padres: llefl lo righl I Fr. Waller Coggin. Fr. (leorge Pulnam. Fr. Gc.irg.- Powi-rs, l-'r. N.irbcrt \ antireiinsven, F>. William Jones, Fr. (!arl Rice, F'r. Davi.l Bowes, anil F r. N.irliirt Fleikcnsn-in.

In on lime for a (dianye. AND WIT ARE WHAT-HERE'S WHO

Who's Who. Left to right. Seated are; Ann Nicholson, George Hughes, Carl Lippold, Katharine Gebhard, Pat Taffe, Dan Coen. Madeleine Rud.lick. Standing are: Tony Elmiger, John Winters, Charlie Englehart, and Bill Elsen. Absent from the picture are; Hal Freeman. B.di Pikul. J.>c Plum­ mer, Bill .Savery, Dick Scheetz, Mike Sierco. I'ockct I harts. Hash cards, stick figtires—all revolve in the latechists head as he tries to write his first lesson. Ami in his first (lass, with the Hash cards not going into c. the jiocket chart and the stick figures looking like some­ thing never seen before, he wonders if the prescribed method is an\ good. Hut after a few reassuring words from Sr. Marie Charles hes on the right track again, and another member is supplied for the CCDs principal activ­ c. itv the teaching of religion to Catholic children attend­ ing jiulilic schools. D. "SERVING, I LIVE"

The pro])erly-luxedoed men shown below are doing more living than serving, but the) have good reason to celebrate, for this year marked the twenty-fifth anniversary of the ("atholic 1 niversity honor societ). After niaiiv \ears as a piiiciv Inniorarv groii]). a reward for outstanding seniors, the Blue Key has. in the last few )ears, seenfit t o Sr. Marie Charles, M.H.S.H. em|)hasize its service character. This involves service on two levels: first as an adv isory group that tries to ferret out camiius problems and offer constructive siiggeslions for sidiilion. and second in such diverse jobs as ushers, sign-makers. ;iiid iiiiproniplii |nililishers.

Hhie Kev IMenihers al llnir annual dinner: Clockwise: Rav Gregory. Chris Taylor, Frank Duane. Alvin Knudson, Charles Englehart, John Finan. Tim May, Dick Schccl/, Gcorg.' Hughes, Bob Pikul. Rev. Henry Browne I moderator 1, Dick Mullin. Alumni PresidenI Nicholas J, Chase (guest speaker), John Winters, an.I M ik.. Si..i ...I. :L 1

I Student Council. Left to right. Back row in­ cludes: Don Clifford. Alidge Smith. Dan Coen, Dean James AlcPadden. First row: Dan Fagan Ruth Buchbinder. .Al Rishe. and Pat Mclntyre. The four on the steps are: Joe A^ h.dey. Jerry Car­ VERSITY FORUM ter, Jimmy Bateman, and Mary Clifford. The president's gavel falls heavily, in- To the casual observer a Council meet­ forining twelve student politicians that an­ ing seems a cross between a three-ring cir­ other Council meeting is under way. They cus and a sophomore logic class. At such begin to weigh the business at hand, cog- meetings, however, policies which serve the iii/ant of their responsibility as a law-mak­ University conununity evolve from the give- ing body—to counsel students, meet their and-take discussions. And through this stu­ probletns. and present their needs to the dent participation, the Council members administration in an intelligent, sympa- receive practical lessons in democratic ihetic maimer. government. •i: fs

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The Tower SlafT. I . It I., liplil. Fii-l rn\'. : Hcriia.lelle (iannon. Jane Flill, Belly Jane Hamilton, I'al Florence (foreground), Ann O'Connor, Dave Will­ ingham. Joan Juliano. FleaniMc Westhead. .Second row: .Mike Clendenin. Kitten .Mullins. .Margaret Curling, .Mary Jo .Sehmill, Jimmy Baleman, Pat Tail. Mary McAlister. Mimi K.-isniaii. Third row: Ed Winner, Padrie Nelson. Dan Fagan. Monica Trueson, Ann O'Oinnell, Kitty (ndiliard, Andy lli-ssinan. DIM' (..•iinniiigs, loan Mavr. Maillia I'llrailis. Shannon Ramlolph. F.mrlh r.iu : Bill Elsen, Mike Timpane, Jere DeLany, .1.dm ll.ildcn. THE TOWER

Its been said . . , nearlv everv bodv reads The Tower. Like the The Tower is an attempt not only to keep the student body well poor. The Toner is alwavs with us. In taking it for granted it is informed, but to give it some means of self-expression as well. eas\ to overlook the work and worrv that makes possible the state­ Perhaps its most outstanding achievement of the year was the ment: •"Published weeklv during the school vear bv and for the pictorial coverage of the Installation and Conferral ceremonies. undergraduate students of the Catholic 1 niversitv of America. ' The Tower was thefirst pape r on the streets with the news. The problems that beset the staff of a weeklv newspaper are The second semester brought an editorial turnover. Michael main and troublesome: thev range from finding a photographer to Clendenin, elected editor-in-chief, named as his editorial board meeting a [irinters deadline. The most persistent and difficult is Kitten Mullins, Bill Fitzgerald, Padrie Nelson, Dan Fagan. and keeping a regular, efficient staff to insure that the paper will be Afargaret Curling. This group has returned the fourth page, given "published weeklv." The Toner often goes to press simply because the paper a somewhat new format, restored Morpheus, and set up of the eiforts of a tinv skeleton staff. In the past year, novice Joe a new system of assignments. For the most part the Tower is the Powers served as editor-in-chief and under him. for two semesters, same ... a group of generous, more or less desperate jieople on (T had the onlv three-page newspaper in existence. Editor Kitten the third floor of the .Administration Building, attemptin" to get Mullins assumed one job after another as the necessitv arose. a job well done with too little time and too few people.

144 Editor-in Chief: Michael Clendenin Managing Editor: Kitten Mullens Sports Editor: Pill Fitzgerald Neivs Editor: Padrie Nelson Feature Editor: Dan Fagan Copy Editor: Margaret Curling Business Managers: Flip Phippard Mike Timpane Circulation and Exchange: Bill Elsen Staff: News: Jim Bateman, Joan Bennett, Pat Flor­ ence, Kitty Gebhard, Betty Jane Hamilton, Joe Jacobs, Joan Juliano, Mary McAlister, Mary Neitzey, Anne O'Connell, Mimi Reis­ man, Eithne Tabor, Pat Taffe, Chris Taylor, Monica Trueson, Dave Willingham Feature: Ed Winner Sports: Jere DeLany, Jack Holden

The Management. Left to right, Padrie Nelson, news editor; Mike Clendenin, editor-in-chief; Mike Timpane, ass't business manager; Bill Elsen, circulation manager; Margaret Curling, copy editor; Kitten Mullins, managing editor; Dan F'agan, feature editor.

Copy copyists race to meet deadline.

THE TOWER . .. . et Al.

Debaters. Lilt to right, Don Kommers; (ieiuge Hughes, treasurer; Tim May; Al Weliby, presidenI ; Ralph Hardin; Frank /(deiika. coach; Bob Rubanowice, secrelary; Carl Lippold. and George Parker. LOGIC IN ARGUMENT

Since the org;ini/at ion of didiating on a c.iinpeti- live collegiate level, the ancient ;irt has cume to topical life in its application to contemporary prob­ lems. The process of "thinking on one s feet" as a slogan and an achievement has centered this vear aboni the cpicstion. Ucsolvcd: That the I nited .states should ado[)t a p.dicv of free trade. Opposing, as well as proposing, the above is the .Shahan Debating Societv. coached bv Frank Zelenka, Last vear he and his spokesmen carried an iinjiressive record of fifteen wins and five losses awav from their equallv impressive schedule against such honored opposition as Harvard. Pennsylvania. Georgetown. Boston College. CCN\. Armv. Navv. Columbia. \ illanova. and Temple. This vears earlv spring tour of the major East­ ern colleges has taught that old lesson learned by the voting debater onlv in the spontaneous phase of the contests — that that whole decision can suddenly depend upcui the force and fire with which he refiuts an unexpected challenge or converts his pin-pointediv precise constructive attack into an impromptu defense, without skipping a comma.

16 CHRISTMAS IN SONG

If the students and faculty of the Uni­ son, the group is joined by the audience in versity return home for the holidays more the singing of familiar carols. The gym is holly-and-ivy-like than usual, the reason rarely so crowded as it is on this night. The lies in the picture above, taken at the an­ walls, banked high with pine branches, echo nual Christmas concert given by the Music the sounds of Christmas. The whole build­ Department. Each year Mr. John Paul, ing seems to overflow with the spirit of the Head of the Department, gathers his chorus season. and orchestra to provide the members of the Certainly this is one concert that nobodv University family with a inusical key for misses—the concert of Christmas, bringing the Yuletide. once more to the campus the sound of peace After presenting a program composed of everlasting and good will. both ancient and modern music of the sea­

Accompanist and choristers.

« •

'^^ 4li^ .£' , ^^^^^«Jt|f^^^^H Si' Spiritual (Council. Left t.i liglil. Bill Brennan; Ellenore Kordiek; Kevin Callahan; Pat Taffe; Jacqueline Hegner; Marianne Sullivan, secrelary; Car Li|.p.>ld, pri.si.lcnt ; (diris Tavlor; Ju.lge Harris.m: Peggy Shaw: Kitty Gebhard; Lou Florenzo; B.di Kastner; and Eleanor Simonick. SPIRITUAL AWARENESS

J he one o i lock (liiincs sliikc. \ Indl resounds. A hiish falls. A l.C.C. Representatives. Lefl to Right. In llie foreground are: John Winters; Gus Courpas; Bob Toinmasi; Alice single voice leads, as main res|)oiid. Ihe scene is the same in Koenig; (Jeorge Macdonald, president; and Jeanne Kou.. McMahon fovei. .Shahan snack bar. the Dugout, and Graduate Hall leski. .Second row includes; I'red F^avo, vice-president; F^rwin Monlany; Bill .Savery; Mike Sierco; .Sue Pyiall, diiiiiiLL room as sliidcnls join togclliiM in dailv rciilation of llie secretary-treasurer; Dan Coen, Pal Talle; Lou F'lorenzo; .Angidiis, I his is iiiilv mil' .>! the inaiiv slmli'iil activities fostered by Beverly Skrinak; Jane Hill; (dini Remuzzi; and F'.d Rogers. the Spiritual ( ..nincil this vear. \\ illi llic aim ..I .iroiising a s|iiritual avvaii-ncss anioni; the students and s|i|f nsjuj^ llnli lives with r(digious values, the Spiiilinil (anincil. mi.lci the leadership of |-r. <) Sullivan. proniidcd m.mllilv i.imiminilv Alasso and a tridiiiim of praver in coniiccli.m Willi v.Mali.inal lectures bv cmincnl (!atli.di. leaders.

t.eoigc Macdonald. I.(!.(!. President. CONSCIOUSNESS

On thefirst Thursday of each month, eleven individual and some­ times conflicting interests meet in Albert Hall, in the jiersons of presidents and delegates of campus clubs, fraternities, and sororities. Problems concerning the social life of the college, especially those affecting the clubs, are considered and acted upon by this under­ graduate body which makes up the Inter-club Council. Apart from immediate and novel problems, the Council must deal with annual matters such as arranging the Social Calendar so as not to conflict with Lent. Advent, and other major campus events. Be­ cause a large segment of the student population is represented, the Council is able to present club interests to other student organizations, as well as to govern the social and athletic activities of the clubs. This vear. the Council encouraged acceptance of a new sorority. revised and clarified sections of its constitution, and considered a new social activities program.

]4« 119 Tke ^pitit tkcufkt an4 ^kill tkat make a team-mate

I'Mniiiiiil l.al'oiiil ill., man wli.i niak.s allihliis p.issible.

Manv trends and ci.is .an i.c trai.'il thiiiugh the vears of the tiii- dcigi;idnalc exisicncc al (d . One .d these eras might lie called our Allilclic \gc. for during this lime tli.' I niversity became prominent PRESERVER OF on the phiving Held. For the past few vears this era has been dying and ibis V c.ii. w itli llic death .d boxing, it was buried. It is an easv thing lor stu.icnts who speiul onlv four vears here to s(;ilti>r complaints. \\ hv d.m'l we have football? Or boxing? Win doesn't the basketball team win? But what about the man who has devoted twenlv-six vears of his life to bringing good athletics to CL- Kddie l.aFond? .\s Director of Athletics. Eddie wants to win as much as anyone. and everv game—basketball, soccer, or track meet—is as important to him as if it were for a National Title. The abandonment of foot­ ball several seasons ago was a severe bi.iw to his ceaseless efforts, but periiaps most distressing to him was the cancellation of this season"s boxing schedule. The last of the teams meeting top compe­ tition w as gone. This sports section is dedicated to Mr. LaFond. whom manv stu­ dents tend to overlook in this era of losers, but it must be remembered that there has never been a season when CI has not won at least one title. This is indirctlv due to Eddie, because of his abilitv to get such coaches as Dorsev Griffith. Bill D.irasav age. Dave Bernstein. Miiiiis Reillv. and Gabe Ferazzi. A FADED ERA UP, DOWN, AND AROUND

Despite the fact that Fred Favo was the only returning letterman from the previous year, the Cardinal Harriers rolled up a re­ spectable 4 and 4 record. The victories came at the expense of Howard University. Loyola, and Gallaudet twice, as the fresh­ man and sophomore-dominated team proved that determination is a large factor in cross-country races. Losses were inflicted by Johns Hopkins. Bridgewater. Towson. and Washington College, who all had the advantage of a longer period of condi­ tioning. The Mason-Dixon Conference Champion­ ship Meet proved a tough one for the team. Only Fred Favo placed among thefirst fif­ teen to collect a medal, finishing in tenth position, with Brendan Doyle the only other CU man to finish in the top thirty. The team placed seventh in a field of ten t-A..i schools, with some 75 runners competing. Left to right: Tom Buttim.i, Dick Thornton, Brendan IJ..>I.. Mik. Il>iiii an,I li..! Favo. Since none of the team is graduating, Dor- sey Griffith hopes this year's experience will prove a training ground for next year's triumphs.

Out of llu- stadium. up the hill. down the path. and around the truck. ?.•.••••«•

Lefl lo righl. slaiuling: Neil Mulr.iv. liob Flvnn. Paul MiKavill. Idiii Brown. Arell Weaver, Ed Keeley, Bill Filzgerald, Barry Killy. Kneeling, Miggs Reilly, Mi.hail K.aii... Il.il Frcnian. G.nr^c' Huiihcs.'jav K.-ilcr, Hill I ber.

In one of the school's worst seasons in many years, the Card (^ourt- men captured only three victories in twenty-two starts. However, CORD-CUTTING EXPERTS the season wasn t as bad as the win-loss record indicates. Inexperi­ ence plagued Coach Reilly as three starters were frosh with only two vets from last year on the twelve-man squad. This was a year of seasoning and the squad played well but always had one bad quarter that thev could never quite overcome even though they would trade the opposition basket for basket during the remainder of the game. Hal Freeman and George Hughes, both seniors with four years' experience, were the big guns. George hit over 2.S0 points and Hal passed the 300 mark. Tom McKavitt. freshman center, averaged over 10 points a game and. along with Bill I ber and Jake Kiefer, rounded out the starting five late in the season. Arell Weaver joined the team after mending an ankle injury to give the squad more outside scoring power. If studies allow all the men to compete next season, their determined spirit, plus the experience of 19.5.3-.54. mav well be the factors which FROM AND OUT will reverse their present record. 154 BASKETBALL RECORD CU ___....._.7 4 Bainbridge — 100 CU___..-....54 Gallaudet — 57 CU..._ ..__..75 University of Baltimore -- 109 CU_...-...... 52 American University — 74 cu. 50 Towson 72 cu.._..-6 1 Mt. St. Mary's — 75 CU.. .45 Bridgewater _ _ --- 78 CU..-...___..5 8 Western Maryland —- 76 cu.______...63 Towson -- 75 CU_ .--.-.84 Gallaudet — 72 CU. ._ -—69 Johns Hopkins .-. 94 cu...___ --71 American University — 97 cu_____.--8 5 Bridgewater -- 71 CU ^ --74 Washington College — 84 cu_._.._--6 0 Loyola .-. 86 cu____ —.55 Randolph-Macon — 73 CU .._ —.69 Western Maryland — 82 CU _ - -59 Mt. St. Mary's -.... 81

Miggs Reillv Thai play should

Everyone came. iv. n I In- Bi'i t.ir.

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Did it or didn't it? Hughes for two????

The opposition scored, too. Wrong place, ITal. *^' T>.!il-

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Sailing (Muh: (lefl lo right) Seated are: Monica Truesini. Peggy Baurvs. Carol)n Huril. (Carole Ibiwanl, (ieorge MacLeod, Dick Bier, Art Hald. Norm Curran, Ed Kogers. Dol Drissid. Slanding are: Naney Oinley, Midge Smith. .Al Daly, Don Street, Dick Brennan, Joe Richards, Eleanore Westhead.

Ihe iieo(iIivte became a full-grown, top varsity contender with the changing of the Sailing Club into the Sailing Team, featuring its own dinghv fleet. This is a long way for the small group of sailing TILLER, SHEET AND enthusiasts who gathered back in "49 under the direction of then freshmen Ed Rogers and Don Street and rented boats at their own expense on Sunday afternoons to get the needed practice. Three years of sailing under the CI colors w ith no support from the school finally CENTER BOARD resulted in the awarding of letters in "53 and full varsity standing this vear with the acquisition of four 16-foot craft. \^'ith Skippers Ed Rogers. Norm Curran. and Don Street at the tillers, the Cardinal sailors were never out of the money, scoring twofirsts, tw o seconds, and one third in theirfive-regatta fal l sched­ ule. The crowning achievement of the season was the capturing of the .Associate Member Championship at Kings Point on October 31 and November 1. Biggest point man in the fall victories was Ed Rogers, who cr

158 The last mark.

Oct. 10 George WasTiington .Septagonal Second George Washington, Catholic U, Georgetown, Navy, Mary­ land, Lehigh, Lafayette.

Oct. 17 Navy Septagonal Third Navy, George Washington, Catholic U, Georgetown, Mary­ land, Drexel, Hobart,

Oct. 24 George Washington Sextagonal First Catholic U, George Washington, .Swarthmore, Drexel, St. John's, St. Joseph's.

Oct. 31-Nov. 1 Kings Point Middle Atlantic Associate Member Championship First Catholic U, Rutgers, Columbia, RPJ, St. Joseph's, Hofstra.

Nov. 7-8 Navy Greater Washington Dinghy Championships Second Georgetown. Catholic U, George Washington, Navy, Mary­ land, St. Joseph's.

Early morning practice.

159 Soccer leani. I.cll to righl. (irsl r..v\ : .]n^r Mnunar, lioris SnkidnlT. .lainu. P.irl.icarcro. Al B.ilcro, Coa.h ISill D.nasavage. .Scconil row: "Cliico" Mandcrfii'l.!, Luis Kcrnan.lcz. Alberto Fernandez. ,Alc\ S..k.ilidT. Diinininu Trijo. and Ed Barberena. Third r.jw: Andy Mulis, Ernie Arteaga, Tony Mendoza, Andy Xepajias, Jose Duran, Ernie Velez.

If CU's stadium suddenly acrjuired vocal chorils its stories of All- Americans would thrill listeners for hours. On this same field where NEOPHYTE GAINS manv AU-Americans w(m glory, a group of Latin Americans again brought sjjorts headlines to CU. After playing three years of pick-uji games, the soccer squad acquired varsity recognition this season and a full Mason-Dixon Conference schedule. Using a makeshift goal, many times torn down and rc]ilanted to make way for intramural foot­ ball, these kick-ballers brought both enthusiasm and amazement to CU students as they booted o goals for 3 victories in 7 season starts. The big game of the year in many ways jiaralleled Notre Dame's first victory over mighty Army, as the little-known Cardinal hooters, backed bv an ardent Spanish cheering section scored a 1-0 upset over the four-time champion Baltimore Bees, on Boris Sokoloff's first quarter goal. But Boris' boot was soon forgotten as Al Brjtero turned in an All-.American net job that had both spectators and players scratching their heads in bewilderment and coniinenling, "He's all VARSITY STATUS over that goal.

160 Jose backs up to cover on defense.

Chico closes in.

Defense definitely won that contest, but it couldn't win them all; the Bird hooters lacked an offense, averaging less than 2 points a game. Bill Dorasavage did a commendable job in hisfirst experience as soccer mentor. Although they had no tremendous season in the win column, the boys from below the border aroused a great amount of excitement, interest, and student supjiort for the sport. The stadium was never filled to overflowing, but each game saw the crowd increase along w ith the anticipation of next week's contest. Primarily manned by f..atin Americans, the team was, however, an exemplification of the United Nations in action. Andy Xepapas from Athens and Grover Manderfield from the United States offered inter­ national support; but it was the Spanish-speaking contingent, sparked the team, with Boris Sokoloff and Jose Alinenar as high scorers, Jaime I'ortocarrero on the defense, and \\ Botero at the goal.

161 Swimming team: (left to right I Fii-i ..." : Jack Whalen, Tony Kalafatieh, Chuck Thuss, Lee Cessel, John Dirks. Secimd row: Bob Harwood. Hector Llorens. Bob Ziernicki. Dick Zauner, Art Cole, Doug Bochard. Last row: Jose Duran. Pete Bogan. Fish Fletcher. Dick Carr, Jake Hengsller.

With the help of several returning veterans, mixed with the ability of the new freshmen, the Cardinal Aquamen acquired a second leg toward the Walter Memorial Trophy and posted an even split for the season. After dropping the opening trio of meets the watermen came back to drown Shephard, T^ynchburg, and Randolph-Macon. This was one of the best seasons for Jake Hengstler's men in the past four years. Junior Bob Ziernicki was the big fin for the Redbird squad and ended the season with three firsts in the Randolph-Macon meet. Art Cole, Dick Carr and Tony Kalafatieh round out the standout returners. Frosh Charlie Thuss and Pete Bogan, plus the unique advantage of no graduating seniors, give the tankmen optimistic hones for the '55 campaign. With the AAU Championships coming up after the Cardinal dead­ line. Coach Hengsder's natators have a hopeful outlook for several individual titles. According to all indications, next season will be one GILLS FOR of the best.

162

/ CU 20 V. M. I 64 CU 30 Gettysburg College 52 CU 361/2 Howard 47% CU 52 Shephard 31 CU 58 Lynchburg 25 CU 45 Randolph-Macon 37

20-20!!! Welcome wetting.

Instantaneous departure. ym

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Hall l!n..|d..|. (.r.irgi. Iii..|.,.|. li..! Lav... I ii.k ."s. licl/. I.mi f Im iii/.u, liill I lnlowi.sko. /iggy While, (irover Manil..|(i..|.l.

At the end ol the season, the (^iJ matinen showed a 3 and 2 record. GROANERS The biggest rout of the year was the Cardinal wrestlers' 33-2 ])inning of Western Maryland, as spectators watched five of Bernstein's graji- plers pin their opponents. The biggest upset of the season was accomplished over Baltimore University. By careful strategy, a little luck, and much prayer. Coach Bernstein wrestled his boys into their best win of the season. George Rieber. Ziggy White, Jim Chiaramonte. and Hal Buehler joined veterans Fred Favo, Grover Manderfield, Dick Scheetz, Bill Holowesko, and T^ou Florenzo to make CU a top contender. Much was expected from the team, from the light-weights up to the heavies, during the late Februar\ Mason-Dixon Ctmference cham|)ionships. Although they could never qualify for Rainbow Arena, the Red- Iiirds were well trained, and il was enlightening to see them set up their holds and then tr\ and get out of them, each man in the same manner with little innovation. Hal Buehler and Lou Florenzo. both wrestling in the unlimited class, and Dick Scheetz in the 157-pound class, are the only losses through graduation, leaving Bernstein a solid cor|)s of grapplers for the '54-55 season.

164 Dave Bernstein and friend. Rugged Richer near five points

Who gets the left over parts?

CU 11 Towson College 23 CU 33 Western Maryland 2 CU 25 Loyola College — 11 CU. 13 Gallaudet 23

It all begins from a standing position.

165 For the past five vears CI fans have been (heer- ing t.i the directions of Charlie laiglehart but ihis year they got a real Ireal when eleven prettv voting ladies joined his squad. Little by lillle (Iharlie taught them the fine points of cheerleading and gradually allowed them to take over completely at the games. Carole Macho. Bobo Flood. Jude Harrison. Pat Sieber, Joan Juliano. Sally Bruce. Carol Salva­ tore, Mary Lou Curtis. Jane Eble. Dee Colopy. and Maureen Daley are the eleven lovely ladies pictured below. Regardless of the odds or the scores, this little and loval band, led by Charlie. Maureen and Jane. traveled to neighboring cities to support their team . . . and never admitted defeat until the game was over. CHEERING COEDS .-.-...,_*. ^t^ ^._

^iS^HtKsmSBssr-

Track. Standing Left to Right: Vincent Farrell. Brendon Doyle. George A'illaeres. .Albert Glass. John Crowley. John Libert, Jake Powderly, Antinio Mendoza. Jim Becker. Dick Thornton. Herb Mould; kneeling. Sam Mutis. Mike Flynn. Jack Manion. Tommy Buttimer. Fred Favo. and Connie Grant.

167 Farrell and Nilbiiics high hopping Inn.11. i-

Connic gets wings from a p.de. TRACK 1954 The track season comes with the suddenness of spring to the aver­ age spectator, but to Coach Dorsey Griffith and the men on the team it is but a climax to many months of training. The wooden track behind the Chemistry Building is the basis of the pre-season train­ ing, as could be seen during the past winter by the hooded figures going round and round the track. Focal point of the entire season is the Mason-Dixon Conference Championship Meet. CU won the event last year with a breathtakingfinish. In all the years of con­ ference competition they have never been lower than third in the chantpionship meet. As defending champions the Cardinals face a tough group of opponents, with Johns Hopkins and Roanoke the greatest pre-season threats. Back from last year's team are senior lettermen Toin Arienti and Conrad Grant, co-captains of this year's squad. Arienti is a middle- distance man and Grant is co-winner of the 1953 pole vault. Other returning lettermen are Fred Favo, defending conference champion in the 220 and 440 yard races, Mike Flynn, a middle-distance runner, and Jim Hill, a dash man. A victory in the Evening Star Games Mason-Dixon Sprint Medley Relay was one of the high points of the indoor season, CU being thefirst tea m to win the event two years in a row. Other indoor meets had the team traveling to VMI twice and to North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where the Cardinal thinclads turned in some more than creditable relay performances.

SCHEDULE

TRACK 1954

April 2 Mt. St. Marys Home 3 Howard University Home 10 19th C.U.A. Invitational Meet Home 13 Johns Hopkins Away 23 Penn Relays Philadelphia 24 Baltimore Relays Away 28 Western Maryland Home May 1 Washington College Away 4 D.C.A.A.LI. Chainpionships Geo'town 8 William & Mary (Norfolk Div.) Home 14 & 15 Mason-Dixon Championships at Lynchburg, Va. '<'??'^ -vr"» •••-'» *#'" ^^^m-

With the diamond opener set for March 25th wilh Trinity College, Coach Gabe Ferazzi was expecting tofield a team that was green but BATS fast and full of fight and hustle. The biggest pointer of hope for a good season was the return of three capable chuckers in the persons of Andv Balint, Buck Whelan and Johnny Wilson. The infield presents an entirely different picture, with all new men BALLS around the diamond. Pete and Justin Smith were battling for the initial sack with two high school buddies George Vaeth and Bob Flynn of Mt. St. Joe in Baltiinore covering short and second, and Jim Hughes moving over from '53 position of second to cool the hot GLOVES corner. Three freshmen will patrol the pasture; Tony Huerta, John Tseronis and Jack O'Neill, reading from left to right. Frosh Ed Keeley and junior Butch Colonero were neck and neck in the backstop battle as the book went to press. AND This year is a return v ear for Coach Gabe Ferazzi after a year s absence. With the talent the club has shown in spring training and Gabe's abilitv to inspire men to plav their best there was foundation for high hopes, but baseball and sports in general have a way of UMPIRES making pre-season predictions become mid-season bad guesses. 3 170 Gabe Ferazzi, clear and ae.

BASEBALL 1954 Ma 25 Trinity College Home 27 Wash. 12 games) Home Apr 2 Towson Away 3 Loyola Away 6 LIniv. of Maine Home 8 W. Maryland Home 9 Bridgewater Home 13 Mt. Union Home 27 Randolph-Macon Away 30 U. of Baltimore Home M ay 1 Lynchburg Home 3 Towson Teachers Home 4 W. Maryland Away 5 American Univ. Away 7 Johns Hopkins Away Jimmy Hughes hitting 'em high, hard, and far in practice. 12 Villanova Home 15 Naval Receiving Station Home 17 American Univ. Home

Mound Men Balint, Whalen, and Wilson.

Not 0"'te. Jim m*^ '"W'l • •M*;

.*:it

^

[(; ij

w

^r

Tenuis. I.. II 1,1 Kiglil; .^lainlin^ : ,|aik ll.nnissiv. jack Liniii/., G.-oigc Hughes, Bill Holowesko, Hal Freeman, kneel ing: Paul Carey. Larry Lop./, ami coach Bill Dorasavage.

I'.iinting l.ir llicir sixth straight Mason Dixon (ioiderence title. CL s winningcst team opened its season on March 26, against Ainerica TENNIS 1954 U on the Eagles court. Every tennis team in the coidcrence had but one thing in mind and that was clipping the Carditial's wings. M; 2(1 \incii( an 1 . Away This vear Coach Billy Dorasavage had thi^ lough job of rebuilding 27 Ilampden-Svdnev Home after last year's graduation took a heavy toll of thefirst stringers . 29 Washington ("ol. Home Apr. 2 Towson Trs. fail. -Away But all was not dark, for back for their fourth year of court competi­ 3 Lovola ,\way tion was Captain Hal Freeman, Jacky Hennessey and Larry Lojiez. 9 Vi ilson Trs. Col. Home Three additional starters must be selected from Joe Lloren, Paul 10 \^ ashington Col. Awav Carey. John Murphy, George Hughes, Bill Holowesko, Tony Elmiger 23 Mt. St. Marvs Awav and Joe Binowski. With three proven singles men and an experienced 24 \^". Maryland -Away 27 W. Marvland Home doubles team the search was for a man to gain that vitalfifth point . Mav 1 Lv nchburg Home With a coach like Billv Dorasavage who has develojied manv lop 3 Towson Home college tennis players, and the ability of the aforementioned men 4 \^ ilson Teachers -Away the outlook is parth cloudy and could become sunny. 6 Bridgewater Home i Howard Uni\. Home 8 Johns Hopkins Home 12 Mt. St. Marvs Home 14 American U. Home l.i Mason-Dixon Plav offs

172 Followers fight coJd and benchltss courts

m Carey gives his wdiole self.

To swing or not to swing? ? ? ? ?

Carey backhand, seen through the net.

173 Althiinglitd boasts no nationallv know n v arsilv s|iorts. its intramural department ranks with the best in the country. Hardly anvdiie escapes joining one of the teams directed bv Coach Art Endres. over the course of four vears here, even if it's onlv swinging the ball in the sw ing- du-lum bowling room, or shoiding foul shots. Hard-fought competition is built up in the club leagues in football, basketball. voUevball. and baseball. The indi­ vidual student can compete for himself, for his (lub or fraternity, in boxing, wrestling, tennis, badminton, horse­ shoe pitching—in an\ sport where tlieri^ are two people to compete! This season Sigma Beta Kap])a (a|)tiire(l the pigskin title, and the club hopes to take the team tropin for the season from the Phi Kappas. Another coveted award pre­ sented by the intramural department is the individual trophv to the player who has acquired the most points during the current )ear. Not only playing, but also olli- ciating. is fostered bv Cl''s intramural de])arlinent. This year the All-Lhiiversitv Football championship was started with the winners of the frosh-soph. and junior-senior games meeting for the universitv title. A powerful sopho­ more team over-ran the seniors. CU's intramural department is tops because all the students |)artici|iate. l\veryone plays, club members or nut. even the seminarians and padres, whose teams usually dominate the iiidependenl league. Besides the active and enthusiastic participation of the students in the intramural jirograir), one more person is

.Art Fndrcs inlranniral .lircilor. needed to make a successful on-campiis league. That someone is Art I'ndres. who efficicMilIy guides the intra­ mural jirograni. LIFEBLOOD OF ATHLETICS

Vi ho"s gol the t>all':'

174 Principle of pendulum-swing.

Doyle blocks as Vaeth goes the distance.

If 1 could only move the queen.

175 WONDERFUL PEOPLE Tke Ulnii^etMtii U plle4 Mtk tkem- Jeme 4em 4i^elletA, etkef^ ttaiHelin^ ^tcm acteSA tei^n ?^3^1S* A typical evening of haril slud) lor llic Cibb. il.'s u h. (or iheir love of visual eduealion.

THE UNIVERSITY FAMILY AT HOME

Natne a college and you will find most of its students living in dormitories. This is the case at CU. In fact, it is a practical im|)ossibility to miss it unless your family lives in D.C. or you are under a doctor's care. But the restrictions are slight and the advantages considerable. To begin with, the boys in Gibbons and the girls in the Dorm are close to their work. The transit time they save is sometimes jiut into study but more often into less vital but more pleasatit pastimes like decorating their rooms or sunning on the rail. Dwellers in both dorms have television sets at their disposal, though they may have to fight for thttir favorite channels. They live in the center of canqius culture. Home games, debates, lectures, concerts, plays—all are just a few steps from their door. f^iving in this close community has, per se, many advantages. There is always someone to hel|) you with that unanswerable problem or to walk to Brook­ land wilh vou. It is these people—the boys or girls you live with—who will be remembered long after vou have forgotten what happened in 1066. They are friends. ith and even furniture!

178 Chained but cheerful . . . even enforced desk duty doesn't seem to faze this co-ed.

The end of an all-too-short evening.

Glad to see you SURFed them, George.

Home-Making, dorm style. Piclur<- of concenlralion.

' MIGRAINES

Dav-hops are iicilher here nor there, and it seems lo them that they spend half their time traveling between those points. They must greet the dawn, wrestle with the rest of the family for possessioti of the bathroom, rush through a brief breakfast, atid wait on a still- dark street corner for the 7:10 bus in order to make that eight o'clock class. If they are so fortunate as to have the use of the family car, they have another half-hour of sleep, but when they arrive at school thev must then jockey for a parking space. By mifl-morniiig, however, things have improved. In the library thev can collaborate with frienrls at roomy tables, or brood for hours alone at small desks whichfill quie t cul-de-sacs of halls, until a coffee thirst drives them to the Snack Bar to study one of the most fascinat­ ing subjects on campus—human personality. Comfortable couches in the lounge next door or in the basement of the library beckon the girls to catch an extra wink. After dinner in the Dugout, followed by an eight p.m. meeting, the day ends with a long wait for the streetcar. For them, locker living (some keep evening clothes atid/or tennis rackets there I may be chaotic at times, but it offers thefifth freedom— from curfew!

180 Student interprets Ladies Lounge sign literally.

The last and longest mile ... to home.

Hurry up and find a chair, George, before you spill it all over the place. i. X

i* Inlermission lalk. 9 I km ^7-1 »t I^ ^V^ ^

\ ^1^ Uf^:^^4 \ ^•^liS^*' ' ^^IK^I^^^^^^^^H

•. y :i S^ ^

^ » Y\ Oucen for a niglil. I.ni ill.- \i.ll. reigning al ADG Dance. WONDERFUL TIMES

182 .^^-s*^ High style n ' -j i^i'- c, match.

Essential ingredient of a dance —lableho|iping.

Til the student, life without dances winild be a real These are cerlainlv characlerislic of our age—one in trial. At (.[ the social activities calendar is alwavs full. which things like Jack Webb's TV show, outer space, The natural tendency of college students being whal it is. and the depressions or triumphs of a didialable future are these dances have themes reflecting the eclectic trend of significant parts. Even the resurrection of the Bunny today. Hop. a frustrated conga-line of the Twenties, is a reflec­ So it w;is lluit this vivir f.mnd the gvm hung with a tion of the devotedly uninhibited spirit of the Frenetic huge fishnet and s|iotliglited to reveal a frightened fugi­ Fifties. However, beneath our contemporary fai^ade of tive peering thnnigh homemade jail bars at the TriainKiid- crew-cuts and sneakers, the reasons for dances remain the I'hi Ka|ipa "Dragnet Drag. Later this same Inill had same . . . the easv laughter, the ipiiet duologues, the chance an iiiit-df-this-world hmk with balloiuis and rmkcl ships til use the lyrics of a song to tell that one girl the things at the Abbev ".Satiirnalia. " The theme .if ihc ( ailiimbian- you feel but can't express ... all to capture the mood Senator "Lil 8 Ball was must apprii|ii iaic In the vicissi­ and never-to-be-forgotten feeling of a college dance. tudes of college life.

The s

Sudden shower of briglil balloons dcdighls ringside auiliencc.

Balloon's eve view. system . . . home- made.

A new dance . . . but that same old feeling This is ;i slnrv ali.>iit a bnv wlm c;illcd a girl to ask her for a There was nothing he could do but stand in the doorway and dale—and seemed vciv siiipiisc,! when she accepted. She said she'd smoke one cigarette . . . and another . . . and another . . . until be re;idv bv 7:.3(l s.i hi- ma.li' the mistake .d being :il the D.nni by finally she appeared. It was worth the wait to sec her smile and the then. way she seemed to look forward to going to the neighborhood movie with him. D 0 R D A T E

This story is a very short one. Nothing extraordinary happened to these people. Maybe they'll have another date next week-end or maybe not. But for a little while they were touched with the magic of having someone to walk and talk with . . . some­ one who would share a happy time. , SVIA'AMA

.t-f-. AV".:

K,dilor-in-Cliicf Charlie Knglcliarl, lln- man vvli.i ma.le the book.

Copy K

Designed and Edited by (Charlie Englehart Copy Editor: Pat Taffe Photography: Charlie Ford Caption Editors: Mary Neit/ey and Gene McCarthy Senior Section Editor and Assistant Copy Editor: Kitty Gebhard Business Manager: R\\\ .Savery Advertising Manager: (.larl Lippold Assistant Editor: Jude Harrison Faculty Advisers: Miss Anne McNamara, Mr. Frank Seward Moderator: Rev. Gerard Sloyan Copy Staff: John Barrett, Jay f'^hrlicher, Jim Foote. Kitty Gebhard. Jane HunL Dick Mullin. Mike Murray, Joe Plummer. Staff: Ann Amer, Joan Aurelius, Jim Bateman. Ronnie Barbutti. Ruth Buchbinder, Diana (^ain|)- bell, Mary Pat Daley, Dot Daly. Jeanne Davis, Bill Elsen, Frieda Emmerth, Katherine l^risman. Jacquie Hegner, Andy Hessman, Jane Hill, Mary Kirwin, Arlene Levesque, Dot Lipka, Joan Maye, Jeanne Moore. Kitten Mullins, Catherine Murphv. Jim Nolan, Madeline Ruddick, Mary Jo Schmitt, Pat Sieber, Pat Sugrue, Marianne .Sullivan, Honor Trinity, Jorge Villacres, Joan Vollbrecht, Elea­ nore Westhead and Tom Brockwell.

188 Senior Section Editor Katharine Gebhard, chief cook and coffee-maker.

Advertising Mgr. Carl Lippold whose ability changed near bankruplcv to ^$$$5.

s» fm

Imperturable Dr. John Farrell, who shared the Cardinal fourth-floor.

WMR^" ^^I^^M^ 5••^ S PB^^ ' i-• ..,^:^_ !^^HHE^I Assistant Editor Jude Harrison ami her cnislanl .•.impani..n, known as a "dummv. "

Typists: Dot Daly. Mary Jo Schmitt. Kalherine Murphy, and -\rlenc Levesque. 189 rhotographer Charlie Ford whose l^peeil Graphic saved ten-thousand words.

Captious caption editors: Mary Neitzey and Gene McCarthy.

Copy staff. Left to right. First row: Pat Sugrue: Fr. Gerard Sloyan. moderator: Pat Taffe. editor: Kitty Gebhard: Eleanor Westhead; Jane Hunt. Second row: Joe Plummer. Jeanne Davis. Jay Ehrlicher. Kitten .Mullins, Joan .Maye, Frieda Emmerth. Third row: John Barrett, .\iike Murray, -Vnn Anur. Jacqueline Hegner.

190 SENIOR INDEX

A c CONCETTA M. D'URSO. B.S.N.; RD. No. 2. Box 230. Greenville. Pa.: -Nursing Educa­ VINCENT R. AGNELLI, A.B. in Economics; JOHN C. CAHILL, B.Arch.; 1.301 Longfel tion Society 1, 2. 46 N. Bedford St., Arlington, Va.; Economics low St., N.W., Wash., D.C; A.I.A. 3, 4. 5; Club 2, 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3; Clipper 1, Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Abbey. E 2, 3, 4. DIANA L. CAMPBELL, A.B. in EngUsh; ROBERT F. AMATO, B.C.Eng.; 4413 3219 Naylor Rd., S.E., Wash., D.C; Cardinal MATTHEW J. EHRLICHER 111. A.B.. in Illinois Ave., N.W., Wash., D.C; A.S.C.E. 3, 4; Columbian 3, 4. Drama; 1961 Oliver -Ave.. Memphis. Tenn.; 4; Track 2, 3, 4. LOUIS D. CASS, B.M. Eng.; 2707 Hartford Cardinal 4; S.&D. Plavs 1. 2. 3. 4; Utopian St., S.E., Wash., D.C; A.S.M.E. 1, 2, 3, Vice- 3. 4. B Pres. 4; Cross-country 1, Wrestling 1. ANTONIO E. ELMIGER. B.Arch.Eng.; CLAIRE M. CODY, B.S.N.; 457 S. Main 8A CO. No. 20. San Salvador. El Salvador: JOHN R. BARRETT, A.B. in Philosophy; .St., Mansfield, Mass.; Nursing Education So­ A.S.C.E. 2, 3. 4: Pan American Club 1. 2. 3. 4816 Eastern Ave., N.E., Wash., D.C; Cardi­ ciety 3, 4. 4; Phi Eta Sigma: Clipper 2. 3. 4: Who's ^T ho nal 4; CCD. 1, 2, 3, 4; I.R.C 1; Tower 3. JAMES B. CLARK, B.C. Eng.; .325 Franklin 1954. CHARLES H. BECHERT II; A.B. in Biol­ St., N.E., Wash., D.C; A.S.C.E. 3, 4. WILLIAM G. ELSEN. B.Aero.Eng.: 90 13 ogy; 1207 N. Wallace St., Indianapolis, Ind.; PAULINE J. CLAYBOUR, B.S.N.; 615 185th St., Mollis. N.Y.; Gibbons Hall Commit­ Swimming 3, 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Class View Ave., Fairmont, W.Va; Nursing Educa­ tee Sec. 2; I.A.S. 1, 2, Sec. 3, Pres. 4; Phi Sec 4; Chairman .Senior Week; Phi Kappa 1, tion Society 4. Eta Sigma; Student Council Parliamentarian 2, 3, 4. DANIEL K. COEN. JR., B.Aero.Eng.; 1022 3: Tower Circulation and Exchange Manager MARIANNE T. BELAIR, B.S.N.; .3.302 Vir­ Maxwell Ave., Nashville, Tenn.; I.A.S. 2. 3, 2, 3. 4; Who's Who 1954. ginia Ave., Falls Church, Va.; Laboure Hall 4; l.C.C 4; Student Council Pres. 4; Uto­ FRIEDA M. EMMERTH, A.B. in English; Association 2, 3, 4; Nursing Education Society pian; Who's Who 19.54. 410 -Millwood Ave., Winchester, \a.; Cardinal 1; .Sailing Club 3; Student Council 2, Tria­ ROBERT L. CONFORTI, A.B. in Drama; 4; Kappa Tau Gamma 4. mond 2, 3, 4. 2436 Grove Ave., Berwyn, 111.; Spiritual Coun­ PAUL M. EMMONS, B.E.Eng.; 13 Wood LEGRAND A. BENEFIEL, B.Arch.; 7321 cil 1, 2; S.&D. Plays 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Treas. 3: land Ave.. Binghamton. N.Y.; A.I.E.E. 2. 3. Forest Road, Hyattsville, Md. Phi Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4. Vice-Chairman 4. BERNARD A. BERNIER, JR., A.B. in Phi­ PATRICIA A. COTTOM, A.B. in Drama; CHARLES W. ENGLEHART, B.Arch.; losophy; 115 Lake St., Webster, Mass.; Gib­ 340 Cleveland Ave., Akron, Ohio; S.&D. Plays 321 S. Fulton Ave., Baltimore. Md.; A.I.A. bons Hall Committee 3, Pres. 4; Polish Club 1, 2, 3, 4; Triamond 1, 2, 3, 4. 4, 5; Arnold Air Society Public Info. Officer Pres. 3; Spiritual Council 4. CONSTANTINE A. COURPAS, B.Arch.; 4, 5; Blue Key 5; Cardinal Editor 5; "Cardi­ RICHARD B. BIER, B.Arch.; 2924 Argyle 1.308 W. Cold Spring Lane, Baltimore. Md.; nal Points" 4, 5, Editor 4; Cheerleader Cap­ Dr., Alexandria, Va.; A.I.A. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Ar­ Arnold Air Society 4, 5, Treas. 4; Art Club 3; tain 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Gibbons Hall Committee 3, nold Air Society 4, 5; Sailing Club 3, 4, Com­ Cardinal 3; l.C.C 4, 5; Intramurals 2, 3, 4. 5; 4; Sailing Club 2, 3, 4, 5; Tower 2, 3; Intra­ modore 5; Class Sec. 1; Sigma Beta Kappa Abbey 2, 3, 4 ,5, Pres, 4. murals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Baseball Manager 3; 4,5. MARY LOUISE COYLE, B.S.N.; 163 N. Class Sec. 1, 2; Abbey 2, 3, 4, 5, Sec. 3, 4; MARIANNE T. BILTZ, A.B. in Philosophy; Mechanic St., Cumberland, Md.; Nursing American College Student Leaders 1953; 395 Clay Ave., Rochester, N.Y.; German Education Society 3, 4; Sailing Club 4. Who's Who 1954. Club 2, 3, 4. HANNAH T. CRAVEN; B.S.N., 348 W. Col- KATHERINE J. ERISMAN, B.S.N.; 19 Orcdiard .St., Greenfield, Mass.; Cardinal 4; HERBERT E. BOECKEL, JR., B.Arch.; 7 vin St., Syracuse, N. Y.; Nursing Education Nursing Education .Society 3, 4; St. Vincent Prospect St., Caldwell, N.J.; Intramurals 1, Society 3, 4. de Paul Chapel Choir 4; Columbian 3, 4. 2, 3, 4, 5; Clipper 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. NORMAN F. CURRAN, B.Arch.Eng.; 90 Loring Rd., Winthrop. Mass.; German Club FRANCIS J. BOMBARA, A.B. in Philos­ 1, 2; Sailing Club 3, 4, 5, Vice-Commodore 4, ophy; Main St., East Douglas, Mass.; Ger­ F Treas. 5. man Club 1, 2; Polish Club 1, 2; Tower 1, 2; ORLANDO J. FAROH, B.C.Eng.; Carrera Basketball 1, 2; Wrestling 3; Phi Kappa 1, 2, 16 No. 209, Barquisimeto, Venezuela; A.S.C.E. 3, 4, Corresponding Sec. I, Treas. 2, Vice- D 2, 3, 4; Pan American Club 2, 3, 4, Treas. Pres. 3. MARY PATRICIA DALEY, A.B. in Drama; 3; .Soccer 3, 4. 15222 Grovewood Ave., Cleveland, Ohio; Car­ TIBOR BORSOS, A.B. in Chemistry; 2807 KATHRYN A. FARRELL, B.S.N.; 165 09 dinal 4; S.&D. Plays 3, 4. Connecticut Ave., N.W., Wash., D.C. 85th Ave., Jamaica, N.Y. WILLIAM J. DANCO, B.E.Eng.; 1308 RUTH O. BRANTLEY, B.S.N.; 2035 CONSTANCE M. FAVA, A.B. in Speech; Oleander Ave., Norfolk, Va.; A.I.E.E. 1, 2, 3, 2nd St., N.E., Wash., D.C; Nursing Education 7001 Bristol Rd., Baltimore. Md.: Nursing E.l. Pres. 4. Society 3, 4. Bldg. Committee Pres. 3; S.&D. Plavs 1. 2, JEANNE A. DAVIS, A.B. in Drama; 118 3, 4. THOMAS J. BROCKWELL, A.B. in His­ Smallwood Dr., Snyder, N.Y.; Cardinal 4; tory; 220 Lincoln St., Portsmouth, Va; l.C.C 3; N.S.A. 2; Nursing Ed. Bldg. Com­ OGBONIA M. FEARING, B.S.N.; 3723 Oak Cardinal 4; Phi Eta Sigma; Intramurals 1, mittee 1, 2, 3, 4, Pres. 1; S.&D. Plays 1, 2. View Terrace, N.E.. T^ ash.. D.C; Laboure 2, 3, 4; Sigma Beta Kappa, 2, 3, 4, Treas. 3. 3, 4; Class Sec. 1; ROTC Sponsor; Triamond Hall Association 3, 4; Nursing Edurali.m RUTH A. BUCHBINDER, B.S.N.; 461 1, 2, 3, 4. Society 3, 4; Class Treas. 2. 3; Triamond 3. 4. Best St., Buffalo, N.Y.; Cardinal 4; Nursing JOSEPH B. de GROOT, B.E.Eng.; 3938 GLORIA T. FEMIA, B.S.N.; 169 State St.. Education Society 3, 4; St. Vincent de Paul Morrison St., N.W., Wash., D.C; A.I.E.E. 4; Meriden, Conn.; Nursing Education Society Chapel Choir 4; Student Council 4; Colum­ Sailing Club 4; Abbey. 3, Columbian. bian 3, 4. THOMAS J. DERBY, B.Aero.Eng.; 3914 ALBERTO E. FERNANDEZ, A.B. in His­ WALTER E. BUCHER, JR., B.Arch.; 34 10th St., N.E., Wash., D.C; Cardinal 3, 4; tory; Colegio Fernandez Baena. Cartagena. Ladson Rd., Silver Spring, Md.; Sailing Club I.A.S. 2, 3, 4; Student Council 2; Tower 1, Colombia, S.A.; Pan -American Club 1. 2. 3, 2, 3. 3, 4; Class Pres. 2; Utopian 1, 2, 3, 4. 4; Sailing Club 4; Baseball 1: Soccer 2. 3. 4: HAROLD R. BUEHLER. B.Arch.Eng.; JOHN M. DiJOSEPH, A.B. in History; Swimming 1. 2; Inlramurals 1. 2. 3, 4: (!ave 114 Carroll St., S.E., Wash., D.C; A.S.C.E. 1739 Allison St., N.E., Wash., D.C; Intra­ Dweller. 3, 4; Track 4; Intramurals 2. 3. 4; Senator 4. murals 3. JOHN E. FINAN, A.B. in Phvsics; 2228 JAMES A. BUTT, JR., A.B. in Economics; JAIME C. DUQUE, B.Arch.; Calle 55 No. Tavlor St.. N.E.. Wash.. D.C: Blue Kev 2. 2828 Cottage Toll Rd., Norfolk, Va.; Econom­ 45-120 Medellin. Colombia, S.A.; Pan Amer­ 3. 4; l.C.C: l.C.C Parliamentarian 4: N.F.C ics Club 3, 4; Pi Gamma Mu 3, 4; Intramurals ican Club 3; Sailing Club 4; Swimming 3; CS. 1. 2, 3. 4; Phvsics Club 3. 4: Student 3, 4; Alpha Delta Gamma 3, 4. Abbey. Council 1: Class Pres. 1: SenaL.r 1. 2. 3. 4. SKMOH INDEX

SARAH A. FINNIGAN, B.S.P.H.N.; Kensing JACQUELINE A. HEGNER, A.B. in Art; MARV K. KIRWIN, A.B. in English; I91(. Ion, Ohio; CCD. 3; Nursing Eduealion So- 2100 Pleasant Ave., Wellsburg, W.Va.; Art Avenue A. .ScotlsblulT. Neb,; Cardinal 4; 10ND 11. HANDEL. A.B. in Philos­ LAWRENCE L. KETTERER; B.Arch.; ion .St., Springdale, Pa.; Nursing Eduealion ophy; 94.5 (!anfield Road, Aimngstown. Ohio: 34 Linden Place, Nutley, N.J,: Intramurals 2, •Society 4. Inlramurals 4: .'^enior Week Committee; Phi 3, 4: Abbey 2, 3. 4. THERESA M. Ll LSI, A.B. in Drama; K.ippa. PATRICIA A. KIERMAS. B.S.N.; 5157 8 S. Florida Ave.. Atlantic City, N.J.; French kATHERlNE M. HEFFERNAN. B.S.N.: 33rd St.. N.W„ Wash., D.C: Laboure Hall Club 1; Italian (Jlub 3: Band .Majorette 1: 29 Bock St.. Rochester. .N.Y.: .Nursing Educa­ .Association 3. Pres. 4: Nursing E.lucation So­ Polish Club 2, Treas, 3, 4; S,&D, Plays 1. 2, tion Society 4: Sailing Club 4. ciety 4; Columbian, 3, 4; Columbian. SENIOR INDEX

M HELEN A. MORRIS, A.B. in English; R 1373 Nicholson St,, N,W„ Wash,, D,C,; JOSEPH W. MABIRE, B.Arch.Eng.; 1519 ROSCOE REEVES, JR., B.Arch.; 3704 In Tower 4, E. LaRue St., Pen.saeola, Fla.; A.S.C.E. 2, 3; verness Drive, N, Chevy Chase. Md.; -A.I..A. 5; Basketball 2. FREDERICK J. MURPHY, A.B. in Philos­ Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Senator 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. GEORGE A. MACDONALD, B.Arch.; Bris ophy; 35 Mayflower Drive, Edgewood, R, I, RUTH RICH, B.S.N.; 11240 Dilling St., N, tol, M.; A.I.A. 5; l.C.C. 4, Pres. 5; Cave MICHAEL W. MURRAY, A.B. in EngUsh; Hollywood. Calif.: Laboure Hall .Association Dweller. 4256 Warren St., N.W., Wash., D.C; Cardinal 3, 4; Nursing Education Societv 4; Class A ice- JOHN H. MARKLE, B.Aero.Eng.; 4823 4; S.&D. Plays 3, 4, Pres. 3. Chevy Chase Drive, Chevy Chase, Md.; ANDRES A. MUTIS, B.Arch.Eng.; Calle 53 M. BROWN RILEY, A.B. in Biology; Box LA.S, 4, No, 6-07, Bogota, Colombia, S,A,; A,S,C.E. 1; 165, Montgomery. W.Aa.; .Arnold .Air Society HAROLD P. MATTERS, JR., B.E.Eng.; Pan American Club 1, 2, 3, 4, Pres. 3; Soccer 3, 4; Spiritual (Council 1; Class Vice-Pres. 1; 2704 Webster St,, Mount Rainier, Md,; A.I. 2, 3, 4; Track 1; Utopian 3, 4. Alpha Delta Gamma 2, 3, 4. E.E. 3, 4; Intramurals 3, 4; Class Vice-Pres. ELIZABETH A. ROMAN, B.S.N.; 2800 3; Senator 2, 3, 4. N Wisconsin Ave.. N.W.. Wash,, D.C, 1 TIMOTHY J. MAY, A.B. in English; ANN T. NICHOLSON, B.S.N.; 5 Randolph EDWARD Q. ROGERS, B.Arch.; 4715 Ed 3126 W. 37th Ave., Denver, Colo.; Blue Key Place, West Orange, N.J,; Laboure Hall Asso­ mondson Ave,, Baltimore, Md,; .A.I.A. 4, 5; 4; Cardinal 2; I.R.C. Vice-Pres. 3; Band 2; ciation 1, 2, 3, 4, Sec,-Treas, 2, Vice-Pres, 3; Sailing Club A'ice-Commodore 1. 5. Commo­ N.F.CCS. 3, 4; N.S.A. 1; Shahan Debating Nursing Education Society 2, 3, 4, Correspond­ dore 2, 3, 4: Student Council 2; Class A'ice- Society 2, 4; Spiritual Council 1; Tower 1, ing Sec, 3; Student Council 1; Corresponding Pres. 1; Abbey 2. 3. 4. 5. Corresponding Sec. 2, 3, 4, News Editor 3; S&D. Plays 1, 2; Intra­ Sec, 2; Class Pres. 1, 2; Triamond 2, 3, 4; 3, Pres. 5. murals 1, 2, 3; Chairman of Junior Weekend; Who's Who 1954. MADELINE M. RUDDICK, B.S.N.; 1203 Senior Week Committee; Phi Kappa 1, 2, 3, 4. Lake St., Elmira, N.Y.; Nursing Education JOSEPH L. MAZURE, A.B. in Philosophy; O Society 3, 4; St. Vincent de Paul Chapel R.R, No, 4 Bad Axe, Mich,; Poli,sh Club 1, JOAN O'BRIEN, A.B. in Drama; 2226 Deca Choir 4; Columbian 3, 4; Who's Who 1954. , ARCHIE J. McALISTER, A.B. in Physics; tur Place, N.W., Wash., D.C; Triamond 3, 4. 4508—38th Place, Brentwood, Md,; Phi Eta JULIO E. OCAMPO, B.C.Eng.; Calle 29 s Sigma; Physics Club 2, 3, 4; Utopian 2, 3, 4, No. 22-58, Manizales, Colombia, S.A.; A.S. WILLIAM E. SAVERY, JR., B.Arch.Eng.; ' THOMAS J. MCCAFFREY, B.Arch.Eng.; CE. 2, 3, 4; Pan American Club 2, 3, Pres, 4, 716 S. Dupont St.. Wilmington, Del,; A.S.C.E. 5518 Beverly Place, Pittsburgh, Pa,; Gibbons MARILYN L. O'NEILL, B.S.N.; 221 S, Tal 3, 4; Arnold Air Society Adjutant Recorder 3. Hall Committee 4; Chorus 1, 2, 3, 4; Intra­ ley Ave,, Muncie, Ind,; Laboure Hall Asso­ 4; Cardinal Business Manager 4; Cardinal murals 3, 4; Utopian 2, 3, Vice-Pres, 4, ciation 3, 4; Nursing Education Society 3; Points Editor, Ass't Editor 4; l.C.C 3, 4; In­ JOSEPH W. McCANN, B.Chem.Eng.; Student Council 3; Class Pres, 3, lramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Vice-Pres. 4; Uto­ 5708_9th St„ N,W„ Wash,, D,C.; A.S.Chem. ROBERT T. O'REAGAN, A.B. in Drama; pian 1, 2, 3, Pres. 4; Who's Who 1954. E. 1, 2, 3, 4; Sigma Beta Kappa 1, 2. .3000 Minne.sota Ave., S.E., Wash., D.C; S.& RICHARD E. SCHEETZ, B.C.Eng.; 3911 AGNES B. MCCARTHY, A.B. in English; D. Plays 2, 3, 4. Mahoning Ave., Youngstown. Ohio; A.S.C.E, 45 Popham Rd., Scarsdale, N.Y,; CCD, 2; 3, 4; Blue Key 4; Spiritual Council 2. 3; Stu­ French Club 2; N,S,A, 2, 3, 4; Polish Club P dent Council 3; Wrestling 2, 3, 4; Intra­ 2, 3; Tower 2; Triamond 2, 3, 4, GEORGE H. PARKER, A.B. in Philosophy; murals 2, 3, 4; Class Pres, 3; Phi Kappa 1, 2, ROBERT F. MCCARTHY, B.M.Eng.; 1512 32 Oregon Court. Roxbury, Mass.; Albertus Treas, 3, 4; Who's Who 1954, Webster St„ N,W.; Wash,, D,C,; A,S,M,E, 4; Magnus 2, 3; German Club 3; LR.C. 2, Sec- FREDOLIN M. SCHEMMER, B.Arch.Eng.; Cave Dweller 1, 2, Corresponding Sec, 3, 4, Treas. 3, Pres. 4; N.F.CCS, 4, 4340—2nd St„ N,E„ Wash,. D.C; A.I.A. 3. 4; MICHAEL B. PATTERSON, B.Arch.; 5516 ANN E. McDERMOTT, B.S.P.H.N.; 103 A,S,C,E, 3, 4; Senator 2, ,3. 4 McKinley St„ Bethesda, Md,; A,1,A, 1; Chorus Bradley St„ Portland, Me.; Chorus 2; Nursing DANIEL SEGANISH, B.M.Eng.; 109 Dia 1, 2; Alpha Delta Gamma 1, 2, 3, 4, Education Society 2, 3, 4. mond St. Swoyerville, Pa.; -A.S.M.E, 1, 2, 3, SALVATORE V. PATURZO, B.Arch.Eng.; 4; Swimming 1, 2. RALPH R. McHORNEY, B.Arch.; 192A "Greystone", Dulaney Valley Rd,, Towson, ROGER N. SHAW, A.B. in Politics; 7200 B Bowers St., Jersey City, N.J.; Alpha Phi Md,; Track 2; Intramurals 4; Football 1; Rossbourgh Dr., College Park, Md, Omega 1, Vice-Pres. 2; A.I.A. 5; Sigma Beta Alpha Delta Gamma, Kappa 2, 3, 4, Vice-Pres. 5. NEDRA B. PECK, B.S.N.; 225 Maple St,, M. GRETCHEN SHRUM, A.B. in Drama; GERALD A. McMORROW, B.E.Eng.; 1717 Kittanning, Pa,; Nursing Education Society 3; Lakeview Terrace, Lalrobe, Pa,; N,S,A. 1; 17th St., S,E„ Wash,, D.C; A.I.E.E. 3, Sec. 4; Columbian 3. S.&D. Plays 1, 2, 3; Triamond I, 2, 3, 4. Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Class Sec. 3; Senator JAMES R. PHIPPARD, A.B. in Economics; MICHAEL SIERCO, B.Arch.; 302 North 3rd 1, 2, 3, Sec, 4, 7 Pierce St,, Greenfield, Mass,; Economics St., Harrison, N.J.; A.I.A. 4. 5; Blue Key 5; ROSS B. McMULLEN, B.Aero.Eng.; 65 Club 2, 3, 4, Sec, 3; French Club 2; Pi Gamma l.C.C 4, 5; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; .Alpha M St„ N.W., Wash., D.C; Arnold Air Society Mu 3, 4; Tower Business Manager 3, 4; Uto­ Delta Gamma 3, 4, Pres. 5; Who's Who 1954. 3, 4; I.A.S. 2, 3, Treas. 4; Utopian. pian Treas, 3, Sec, 4, ARNOLD H. SINGER, A.B. in Chemistry; EDWARD A. MEANEY, B.M.Eng.; 5735 ROBERT P. PIKUL, A.B. in Mathematics; 4926 Livingston Rd„ S,E„ Wash,, D,C, 9th St., N.W., Wash., D.C; A,S.M.E, 2, 3, 348 Maple Ave,, Hartford, Conn,; Blue Key ELIZABETH F. SMITH, B.S.N.; Milton, Sec. 4; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4; Senior Week 3, 4; Phi Eta Sigma; Polish Club I; Student N,Y, Committee; Alpha Delta Gamma 1, 2, Treas. Council 3; Track 2; Class Treas. 1, Vice- ROBERT I. SMITH, B.Chem.Eng.; 1018 N, 3, 4. Pres. 2, Pres. 3; Phi Kappa 2, 3, 4, Treas. Carolina Ave., S.E., Wash.. D.C; A.S.Chem.E. 2, 3; Who's Who 19.54, JOHN H. MENGES, B.Arch.; Basking Ridge, 1. 2, 3, Pres, 4; Cave Dweller, N.J.; Intramurals 1, 2, 3, 4, 5; Clipper 1, 2, H. lOSEPH PLUMMER, A.B. in Drama; 3, 4, Pres. 5. 5243—42nd St„ N.W„ Wash,, D,C,; Cardinal ARNOLD SPERLING, A.B. in Drama; 1735 Webster St,. N.W.. Wash,. D.C: S.&D, ERWIN L. MONTANY, B.Arch.; 1654 How 4; Phi Eta Sigma; Tower 3; S,&D, Plays 1, Plays 2, 3, 4, ard Ave., Ulica, N.Y.; A.I.A. 2, 3, 4, 5; In­ 2, 3, 4; Who's Who 1954, tramurals 3, 4, 5; Senior Week Committee; GEORGE J. PLUTO, B.C.Eng.; 7327 Forest CHARLES F. STEWART, A.B. in Econom­ Class Treas. 1; Phi Kappa 2, 3, 4, Pres. 5. Rd„ Hyattsville, Md,; A,S,C.E, 2, 3, 4, ics; 3126 Buena A'ista Terrace. S.E., Wash,, D,C, EUGENIA A. MOORE, A.B. in English; I7I2 Ft. Davis St.. S.E,, AX'ash.. D.C; Cardinal Q JOSEPH F. STIVALETTI, B.M.Eng.; 2214 4; Columbian 3. Treas. 4. Randolph St,. N,E,. Wash.. D.C; A,S,M,E, 2, ROBERT E. QUIGLEY, A.B. in History; 3, 4, ALLEN I. MORRIS, B.Arch.Eng.; 1903 Am­ 1033 S, 51st St„ Philadelphia, Pa,; Albertus herst Rd., Hyattsville, Md.; A.S.C.E, 3, 4; Magnus 1, 2, 3, 4; I,R,C, 1, 2, 3, 4; Shahan JOSEPH A. ST. JEAN. B.Arch.; 2 Pulnam Track 3, Debating Society 1, 2, 3. Dr,, Danbury, Conn,; Clipper Treas, 5, SKMOI? INDEX

MARV 1. STROSSER. B.S.P.H.N.; 2815 ROSCOE A. THOMAS. A.B. in French; ARELL E. WEAVER, A.B. in Economics; 61I1 .^1., N,F... Wash., D,C 2.306 Ainger PL. S.E„ Wash,. D.C: Sigma 8803 Leonard Dr.. Silver Spring. Md.; Arnold DONALD R. STRUTTMANN, B.M.Eng.; Beta Kappa, Air Society Pres. 3. 4; Basketball 1. 2, 3. 4; 7313 Halleck Sl„ District Heighls, Md,; A,S. ROBERT J. TOMMASI. B.Arch.; 590 West Inlraiiiurals I. 2. M.E. 3. 4; I.A.S. I. 2. 172nd St,. New York City. N.Y.: A.I.A. 4. 5: ALFRED E. WEHBY, A.B. in Philosophy; JOHN D. STl R<;E0N, A.B. in Chemistry; l.C.C. 4, 5; Intramurals 2. 3. 4. 5; .Alpha 607 jAIcFennin Ave,. Nashville. Tenn.; (Car­ 89 Darringl.m St.. S,W„ Wash,, D,C, Delta Gamma 3, 4, 5. Treas. 3. Pres. 4. dinal 4: N.F,C,(^,S. I. 2, 3. 4; N..S.A. 1, 2, 3. 4; Shahan Debating Society Pres. 4; Tower M. PATRl<:iA SI (,RIE, A.B. in Drama; 2, 4; Phi Kappa. 6729 S, Merrill Ave,, (diicago. 111,: Cardinal U MARY PATRICIA WHALAN. A.B. in 4; French Club 1; Nursing Ed. Bldg. Com- OLGA N. UJHELY. B.S.N.; 3.307 Macomb Drama; 1 Gary Si., Norwood, R. I.; S.&D. niitlee 1. 2, 3. 4; Polish Club I; Tower 4; St.. N,W„ Wash,, D,C,; Nursing Education Plays 4; Triam.md 3.4. S.&D. Plays I. 2, 3, 4; ROTC Sponsor; Society 3, 4, Triamipiid 2, 3. 4, JOHN D. WINTERS, B.Arch; 517 Shi ridan MARIANNE A. SULLIVAN, A.B. in Mathe­ V St., N,W„ Wash,. D.C; A.I.A. 1, Vice-Pres. 5; Art Club 4; Blue Key 5; l.C.C. 4, .5, Pres. matics; 1713 N, (ircenbrier St,. Arlington, ERNESTO VELEZ, B.Arch.; Calle 49 No, 4; Track 4; Inlramurals 1. 2. 3, 4, 5; Senior Va.; (Cardinal 4; ."spirilual (>juncil Sec. 4; 44-6, -Medellin. Colombia. S.A.; Pan American Week Commillee; Senator 1. 2. 3, 4, 5, .Soc. Columbian 3, 4. Club 4. 5; Soccer 4, 5. Sec. 3; Pres. 5; Who's Who 1954. JORGE N. VILLACRES, B.C.Eng.; 2416 T ALICE M. WOLOWSKY, B.S.N.; N.S.D, 937 Arlington Blvd.. .Arlington, Va.; A.S.C.E. 1, PATRICIA A. TAFFE, A.B. in Drama; 718 Harbor Dr,. San Diego. Calif.; Laboure Hall Treas. 2. Corresponding Sec. 3. Pres. 4; Car­ I5lh Si.. S.E.. Wash., D.C; Canlinal Capti.m Associalion I. 2. 3, 4; Nursing Eduealion dinal 4; Tower 3; Cross-Country 2; Track Edilor 3, (^ipy Editor 4; French Club 1. 2; Society 2. 3, 4; Class Treas. 1, Sec. 2; Co­ 1. 2. 3. 4; Intramurals I. 2. 3. 4; Senator 2, LCC 4; Pidish Club 2; Spirilual Council lumbian 2, 3. 3. A'ice-Pres. 4. .3. 4; Tower 2, .3, 4; S,&D, Plays 1, 2, .3. 4; Class .Sec, 2. Vice-Pres. 3. Treas, 4; Senior JOSEPHINE V. VLAHOVICH, B.S.N.; 20 Z Week Committee; Triamoml 2, 3, Pres, 4; Glcnmore .Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. RUDOLPH P. ZALESAK, B.S.N.; 114 01 Who's Who 19.54, 103rd Ave.. Richmond Hill. Long Island, N. FRANCISCO S. de TEJADA, B.M.Eng.; W A.: Nursing Educali.ui .Sociely 2. Primcsa 33. Madri.l, ."spain, LILLIAN G. WATSON, B.S.N.; 49.5.5—Ilth GUILLERMO ZULETA, B.Meeh.Eng.; Calle ALVIN J. TEMIN. B.Arch.Eng.; 191(1 9lli SI,. N.E.. Wash,. D.C; CCD. 2; Laboure 22 No. 1249, Bogota, Cidombia, S.A.; A.S.M.E. Si, N,W., Wash,. D.C: A.I.A. .3. 4; A.S.C.E Hall .Association 2. 3. 4: Nursing Education 2, ,3, 4; l.C.C 3; Pan American Club 1, 2, 3, 3. 4; Phi Ela Sigma .Siciety 2, 3, 4: C.diimbian 2. 3. \'ice-Pres. 4. 4; Cave Dweller. PAIRONS JOSEPH F. AMATO GENERAL AND MRS. E. F. KOENIG JOSEPH ANESSI MR. AND MRS. RICHARD J. KOINIOSINSKI MRS. JOSEPH AVERY MRS. MARY LAVANDERO MRS. MARIE BARBUTTI L. H. LAYTON MRS. A. BARTELLI MR. AND MRS. EDW ARD LEDDY MRS. WILLIAM G. BATTAILE DR. AND MRS. ROMEO J. LEVESQUE DR. AND MRS. WILLIAM BAUREYS MR. AND MRS. CARL LIPPOLD. SR. MR. AND MRS. CHARLES BECKERT MRS. HOWARD H. LOGUE MRS. J. BENNETT MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH MACRI MR. AND MRS. A. J. BIER LIEUTENANT. COLONEL JOSEPH S. MAGRATH, US.AF MRS. HORACE BLUFORD REVEREND DR. JOSEPH B. McALLISTER MR. AND MRS. EDWIN C. BRADY MARGARET M. McCARTHY MR. WILLIAM B. BRENNAN R. J. McGUIRE FATHER HENRY BROWN ANNE MARIE McNAMARA ALOIS BUCKBINDER MR. AND MRS. JAMES E. McQUADE F. J. BUDINGER J. S. MENDOUSSE JOAN BURNS MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH MIGLIORE MR. AND MRS. J. ANTHONY BUTT MR. AND MRS. J. SCOTT MILNE MISS MARY R. BYRNES REVEREND ROBERT PAUL MOHAN, S.S. MRS. VINCENT CARTER MARTIN A. MOORE MR. AND MRS. GEORGE R. CASTELL HERBERT N. MULES F. DAVID CLARKE MR. AND MRS. JOHN F. MULLINS DR. WM. R. CONLEY DR. AND MRS. OW EN L. MIRPHY MR. AND MRS. BERNARD F. COYLE MR. AND MRS. W M. M. MURRAY LT. COL. AND MRS. JULIAN B. CROSS HELEN F. NAGLE GREGORY AND FREDERICK CUNNINGHAM W ILLIAM F. O'CONNELL ROBERT VINCENT CUNNINGHAM MR. AND MRS. J. J. O'DONNELL, JR. MR. AND MRS. WM. H. CUNNINGHAM, SR. REVEREND JOHN J. O'SULUVAN MR. AND MRS. ALBERT CUPKA MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL A. PATTERSON DR. AND MRS. JOSEPH L. DARGAN MARGARET PAULONIS MR. AND MRS. HARRY F. DAVIS CARLTON J. PECK MR. AND MRS. FRANK J. DUANE ERLINE W . PERKINS ROY W. DUNKLE MR. AND MRS. BEN J. PHILIBERT MR. AND MRS. J. H. EBNER MR. AND MRS. H. \X . PHIPPARD MR. AND MRS. GEORGE F. ELSEN MR. AND MRS. FRANCIS B. PIKUL MR. AND MRS. CHARLES ENGLEHART MR. AND MRS. HERBERT PLUMMER MR. AND MRS. W. F. ERISMAN PETER PROBST NELLIE EVANS MR. AND MRS. ROSCOE REEVES VINCENT J. FARRELL DR. F. O. RICE MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH J. FEMIA JOSEPH H. ROBINSON JOHN J. FILICKO, JR. MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH ROSSI EDWARD J. FINAN MR. AND MRS. JAMES H. RUDDICK DR. AND MRS. JOHN F. FINNEGAN MR. AND MRS. P. RUVOLO MR. AND MRS. JAMES E. FOOTE W ILLIAM J. PYAN ALLEN J. FRANK J. ROBERT SAGURTON LT., jg. JOSEPH A. GAMMON, USRN MR. SAMAHA MR. AND MRS. W ILLIAM A. GARRETT MR. AND MRS. W ILLIAM E. SAVERY GASPARE GIATTINO MR. AND MRS. LEO A. SCHMITT MR. AND MRS. JOHN J. GRACE REVEREND URBAN SCHNAUS, OSB MRS. D. M. GRANT CHARLES G. SHUBERT MAX GREENBERG ROBERT P. SCHU ARTHUR HALD MR. AND MRS. PHILLIP SIEBER MR. AND MRS. A, HALPERSON FRANK P. SILVIA HARRY A. HAMMOND VERY REVEREND IGNATIUS SMITH, O.P. MR. AND MRS. JOHN F. HANLEY A. B. SPEEKENBRINK WILLIAM J. LIANLON MR. AND MRS. VICTOR E. SUSKI JOSEPH H. HILL MR. AND MRS. EDW ARD TEPPER MR. JOE HUELS MR. AND MRS. W ILLIAM N. TRUESON MR. AND MRS. ARTLIUR H. HUGHES MR. HARRY TSERONIS MR. AND MRS. M. V. HUGHES MAJOR LEO B. VIRANT MR. AND MRS. FRED HURD ANNE MARGARET W ASSON JOHN HUNGLER. JR. MR. JOSEPH S. WHOLEY MR. AND MRS. W. G. JACKSON MR. JAMES R. \^ INSTON H. V. JACOBS MR. AND MRS. JOHN W INTERS ENS. DONALD F. JOHNSON, USNR MR. AND MRS. NICHOLAS YANNARELL MR. AND MRS. EDWARD M. JOHNSON ALYSIUS K. ZIEGLER ALEXANDER KALPERSON MR. AND MRS. L. A. ZERNICKI MR. AND MRS. H. J. KASTNER A FRIEND OF THE EDITOR MR. AND MRS. AVILLIAM H. KELLEY A FRIEND OF A FRIEND DR. AND MRS. A. B. C. KNUDSON Comj?hments of tll e FRANCISCAN MONASTERY WASHINGTON, D.C. EDWARD TARR, INC

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1014 VERMONT AVE., N.W. 1110 E STREET, S.W. WASHINGTON, D.C.

Phone: District 7-6210 FAMILY TAVERN THE ORIGINAL PIZZA CRUST

THE BEST BEER lA' TOWN » » » B U D W E I S E R « « «

"The Family Atmosphere for the CU StudenC^

PETER J. GHISI, Prop.

3301 - 12tli STREET, N.E. LA 69842

The Palladian Room One of America's most beautiful rooms for dinner and supper. SANDE WILLIAMS and his entertainment specialists. The Blue Room Entertaining floor shows. BARNEE conducts the music DON'T FORGET for dancing at dinner and supper. two famous rooms for TA YLOR PORK ROIL dining and dancing of THE SHOREH CONNECTICUT AT CALVERT Reservof/ons: ADami 4-0700 ,fi\ Around IlieTown" GAS O OIL O LUBRICATION

BROOKLAND GARAGE

930 MICHIGAN AVE., N.E. LA 6-9000

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS ROAD SERVICE

"Just over the bridge Hot Shoppes from the University" FAMOUS DMV£'IN'fiBSTAURANTS

CORSON & GRUMAN CO.

(INCORPORATED) C-ompiimenli of

Paving Contractors LOUIS BERNHEIMER

Office and Plant: 33RD AND WATER STREETS N.W. Theatres

WASHINGTON, D.C. -)c LOU MENGES ORGANIZATION, INC. JOHN H. DAVIS & CO. ARCHITECTS - EISGINEERS Painting Contractors and

1019 G STREET, S.E. CO^SULTAJSTS

FOR THE LI 3-2337 PACKING HOUSE INDUSTRY

-K Ba^kiii^ Ridge, New Jersey

Over Fifty Years of Dependable Service GRIFFITH-CONSUMERS CO

Phone ME. 8-4840

COAL FUEL OIL OIL BURNERS

AIR CONDITIONING BUILDING MATERIALS

J,\MES E. COLLIFLOWER, THOS. TRODDEN - J. W. I HILL) WARNER, Vice-President Representatives HENDRIX Coiiipliiiieiils of STEAK HOUSE

^Aril f-^ictuteS ^or

1954 CARDINAL YEARBOOK

^alien v~>iy CHARLES P. FORD Those famous J. E. DYER & CO. "reeii and white

WHOLESALE GROCERS stripes ...... the package from Hotel, Iiisliliitioii. Bakers, Jelleff's, what a Washington sight Janitor Snpplies it is! Whether it holds a Handmacher suit, gay WASHINGTON, D.C. Mademoiselle shoes, another Ship 'n' Shore shirt for her collection . . . OFFICE AND SALESROOM it means: happy day 3 3 30-34 .\1 STREET . she s been shoppinsf

WAREHOUSE e I I e f f ' s F Street REAR ^V.S-•^S M STREET Silver Spring at Bethesdo 4473 Connecticut Ave. Shirlington

.ihbott.>> /<•<• (.ream i^omplimenlA ol

Jane Lo^aii Itr (.ream A FRIEND

(,ra(liiates of ABBOTTS DAIRIES

'The roHe^ie of icecream kiionledge''

BEST WISHES

TO THE

CLASS OF 1954

ird and Lombard Streets, Philadelphia The Motley Crew

"<*C^5^^ cs»^

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