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1-1-1966 Boston College Bulletin, Law, 1966 Boston College

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This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law School Archive at Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. It has been accepted for inclusion in Boston College Bulletin by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Boston College Law School. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BOSTON COLLEGE

BULLETIN

THE LAW SCHOOL

1966~1967 VOLUME XXXVIII1 NO. 1

(

JANUARY, 1966 BRIGHTON, MASS. 02135 )

Volume XXXVIII January 1966 Number 1

BOSTON COLLEGE BULLETIN

The Boston College Bulletin is published ten times a year, as follows: No. 1, inntnu Qtnll~g~ iull~tin January (Law School); No. 2, March (Summer Session); No. 3, April (Graduate School of Arts and Sciences); No. 4, August (Evening College of Arts, Sciences and Administration) ; No. 5, August (School of THE LAW SCHOOL Social Work); No. 6, August (College of Business Administration) ; No. 7, September (College of Arts and Sciences); No. 8, October (Under­ graduate Entrance Bulletin); No. 9, October (School of Education); No. 10, December (University General Catalogue).

School of Nursing will publish in July, 1967 Graduate School of Business Administration will publish in July, 1967

Entered as second class matter at the post office at Boston,

BULLETIN 1966-1967

Published by BOSTON COLLEGE BRIGHTON BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL

MASSACHUSETTS 02135 BRIGHTON, MASSACHUSETTS 0 213 5 Phone DEcatur 2-3200 Telephone: DE 2-3200 BOSTON COLLEGE CHESTNUT HILL MASSACHUSETTS _;!}

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r,£l LBG~N~ LOWER CAMPUS: [ 19 Service Building 20 Campion Hall 21 Activit;es Building 22 Carney Center 23 McElroy Commons 4 5 Philometheia Club RESIDENCE HALLS: 6 lntmmural Sports 24 Colombiere House 7 McHugh Foruln 25 Faber House 8 Alumni Stadium 26 Roncalli Hall 9 Roberts Center 27 Welch Hall 10 CDR Shea Field 28 Williams Hall 29 Gonzaga Hall UPPER CAMPUS: 30 Fitzpatrick Hall 11 St. Mary's Hall 31 Cheverus Hall 12 Bapst Library 32 Fenwick Hall 13 Gasson Hall 33 Xavier Hall 14 Lyons Hall 34 Loyola Hall 15 Fulton Hall 35 Claver Hall 16 Devlin Hall 36 Shaw House 17 Higgins Hall 37 Kostka Hall · 18 Cushing Hall 38 Card. O'Connell Hall 4 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL

The corporate title of Boston College is: THE TRUSTEES OF BOSTON COLLEGE

THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES

MICHAEL P. WALSH, S.J., President LAW SCHOOL ADMINISTRATION THOMAS FLEMING, S.J., Treasurer GEORGE L. DRURY, S.J., Secretary RoBERT F. DRTNAN, S.J., A.B., A.M., S.T.L., LL.B., LL.M., Dean ]AMES J. DEVLIN, S.J . FRANCIS ]. LARKIN, B.S., LL.B., LL.M., Associate Dean CHARLEs F. DoNOVAN, S.J. JosEPH F. McCARTHY, A.B., A.M., LL.B., Assistant Dean Chairman, Committee on Admissions JoHN V . DRISCOLL, S.J. STEPHEN G . MoRRISON, LL.B., Librarian ALEXANDER G. DuNCAN, S.J. HERTA S. VARENAIS, MAG. JUR., Assistant Librarian W. SEAVEY JoYcE, S.J. MARLENE C. McGuiRL, A.B., J.D., M.A. IN L.S., Reference Librarian JosEPH R. WALSH, S.J. PATRICIA D. BoNELLI, Se cretary of the Law School JoHN R. WILLIS, S.].

UNIVERSITY ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS AGNES M. CARROLL, Secretary VERY REv. MICHAEL P. WALSH, S.J., Ph.D. President CATHERINE D. CoNNELLY, Secretary REv. LAURENCE A. DoRR, S.]., A.M., S.T.L., (cand. ) Ph.D. DANA T. McCLusKEY, Secretary Executive Assistant to the President HELEN R. SHEEHAN, Secretary REv. CHARLES F. DoNOVAN, S.J., Ph.D. MARY E. TooMEY, Secretary Academic Vice President JuDITH A . WooD, i1ecretary REV. THOMAS FLEMING, S.J., A.M., S.T.L. Financial Vice President and Treasurer REv. BRENDAN C. CoNNOLLY, S.J ., Ph.D. Director of Libraries REv. GEORGE L. DRURY, S.J., A.M., M.S., S.T.L. Director of Student Personnel REv. JoHN F. FITZGERALD, S.J., A.M., M.S., S.T.L. Registrar of the University REv. FRANCis B. McMANus, S.J., A.M. Secretary of the University REv. EDMOND D. WALSH, S.J., A.M. Director of Admissions 6 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 7

THE LAW SCHOOL ACADEMIC CALENDAR FACULTY ARTHUR L. BERNEY, A.B., LL.B., Associate Professor of Law AcADEMIC YEAR 1966 - 1967 WILLIAM C. BREWER, JR., A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law J . ALBERT BuRGOYNE, A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law JoHN J. CuRTIN, JR., A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Instructor in Law RoBERT F. DRINAN, S.J., A.B., A.M., S.T.L., LL.B., LL.M., FIRST SEMESTER Professor of Law SANFORD J. Fox, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law ''Registration ______------Friday, September 16, 1966 RoBERT S. FucHs, A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law Classes begin ______------___ Monday, September 19, 1966 WILLIAM GABOVITCH, B.S., LL.B., LL.M., Instructor in Law Columbus Day: No classes ______Wednesday, October 12, 1966 FREDERICK M. HART, B.S., LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law Veterans' Day: No classes ______Friday, November 11, 1966 JAMEs L. HouGHTELING, JR., A.B., M.P.A., LL.B., LL.M., Thanksgiving Recess ______------Thursday, November 24, thru Associate Profess01' of Law Sunday, November 27, 1966 RICHARD G. HuBER, B.S., J.D., LL.M., Professor of Law Christmas Recess _ ___ Close of classes on Saturday, December 17, 1966 MoNROE INKER, A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law thru Monday, January 2, 1967 Examinations end ______Saturday, January 2 8, 19 67 WILLIAM J. KENEALY, S.J., A.B., A.M., Ph.D., S.T.L., LL.B., Professor of Law FRANCIS J. LARKIN, B.S., LL.B., LL.M., Assistant Pmfessor of Law JosEPH F. McCARTHY, A.B., A.M., LL.B., Assistant Professor of Law JoHN J. McNAUGHT, A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law SECOND SEMESTER RoBERT P. MoNCREIFF, A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law Registration __ . Wednesday thru Friday, January 25-27, 1967 STEPHEN G. MoRRISON, LL.B., Associate Professor of Law Classes begin ______. ____ , ______Monday, January 30, 1967 FRANCIS J. NICHOLSON, S.J., A.B., M.A., S.T.L., LL.B., LL.M., S.J.D., Washington's Birthday: No classes ______Wednesday, February Professor of Law 22, 1967 JoHN C. O'BYRNE, A.B., M.S., LL.B., Professor of Law Easter Recess______Close of classes on Saturday, March 18, thru Sunday, March 26, 1967 WILLIAM J. O'KEEFE, A.B., LL.B., LL.D., Professor Emeritus of Law Patriot's Day: No classes______Wednesday, April 19, 1967 JoHN D. O'REILLY, JR., A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law Senior Examinations end ______Saturday, May 27, 1967 EDLEFF H. ScHWAAB, A.B., A.M., Ph.D., Instructor in Forensic Psychology Memorial Day: No classes ______Tuesday, May 30, 1967 EMIL SLIZEWSKI, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Law Other Examinations end __ ------Friday, June 9, 196 7 JAMES W. SMITH, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Professo1' of Law Annual Commencement ______Monday, June 12, 1967 JoHN PAUL SuLLIVAN, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Instructor in Law RICHARD S. SuLLIVAN, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., Professor of Law BARRY J. WALKER, A.B., LL.B., Instructor in Law WILLIAM F. WILLIER, A.B., J.D., Professor of Law HAROLD G. WREN, A.B., LL.B., J.S.D., Professor of Law 8 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 9

THE UNIVERSITY AccREDIT AnoN Boston College is a member of, or accredited by, the following Boston College is one of twenty-nine Jesuit colleges and universities educational associations: The American Council of Education, the Asso­ in the United States. The university traditions of Boston College derive ciaction of American Colleges, the National Catholic Edu'cational Associa­ from four centuries of academic experience and educational idealism of tion, the American Jesuit Educational Association, the the Society of Jesus, which since its foundation by Ignatius Loyola in Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, the Board of Regents of I 534, has established and conducted institutions of higher learning the University of the State of , the American Association of throughout the world. The foundation of Boston College arose from the Collegiate Schools of Business, the Association of American Law Schools, labor of the first Jesuit community in New England, established at St. the Section on Legal Education of the American Bar Association, the Mary's, in Boston, in I849. In I859, John McElroy, S.J., first Superior American Association of Schools of Social Work, the National Nursing of the Jesuit community at St. Mary's purchased the land and erected Accrediting Service, the American Chemical Society, and other similar the collegiate buildings on Harrison A venue, in Boston, the location of organizations. the ·college for fifty years. THE LAW SCHOOL On April I, I863, the College received from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts a university charter empowering the Board of Trustees to The Trustees of Boston College, with the active support and coop­ confer degrees usually granted by colleges in the Commonwealth, except eration of many eminent members of the bench and bar in Massachusetts, medical degrees. This single restriction in the charter was removed by established the Boston College Law School in I929. Formal instruction legislative amendment, approved April, I908. John Bapst, S.J., was the was commenced on September 26, 1929, and the first class was graduated first President of Boston College and inaugurated the program of collegiate on June I5, I932. With the graduation of this first class, the Law School instruction on September 5, I864. In I907, President Thomas I. Gasson, was officially approved by the Section on Legal Education of the Ameri­ S.]., secured the land which is the site of the present campus at Chestnut can Bar Association. Upon its first application, in I937, the School was Hill. In I9I3, the College was moved to the Chestnut Hill campus. elected to membership in the Association of American Law Schools. In I954, on the Twenty-fifth Anniversary of its foundation, the Law New schools were added to the original College of Arts and Sciences. School moved from downtown Boston to Thomas More Hall on the The Law School and the Evening College, both founded in downtown Campus at University Heights. Boston in I929, are now on the Chestnut Hill campus. The School of Social Work, founded in I936, is presently at I26 Newbury Street, AccREDITATION oF LAw ScHOOL Boston. The College of Business Administration was founded in I93 8. The Boston College Law School is a member of the Association of The School of Nursing, the School of Education, and the Graduate School American Law Schools and approved by the American Bar Association of Business Administration were founded in later years in response to the and the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York, educational needs of the nation. the only recognized accrediting agencies for law schools in the United Physical expansion came rapidly after World War II when Lyons, States. Fulton, and Campion Halls were erected. During the Presidency of Very LocATION Rev. Michael P. Walsh, S.J., Cheverus, Fenwick, and Fitzpatrick dormi­ The Law School, locacted on the main campus of the university, tories were built; McHugh Forum and Roberts Center were dedicated; combines the advantages of urban and suburban locale. It is far enough Cushing Hall, McElroy Commons and the Carney Graduate Center were removed from city life to have the quiet that is needed for study, parking opened. spaces and ready access to major highways (The Massachusetts Turnpike To keep pace with the educational needs of the nation and com­ is five minutes away) that are lacking in urban areas. At the same time munity, Boston College now is engaged in a Development Program in public transportation direct to downtown Boston is just across the street. which more academic facilities are being added to the campus, including The availability of Boston's cultural qualities, including the Symphony a Science Center, Library, Auditorium, Theater and Fine Arts Center, Orchestra, the many fine museums and libraries, and the host of other dormitories, Institute of Human Sciences, and School of Public Affairs. outstanding universities provides a stimulation unmatched elsewhere. From the first class of 22 young men, Boston College has grown THOMAS MORE HALL in numbers, size, and prestige. The total enrollment is I 0,5 00, although Thomas More Hall, occupied exclusively by the Law School, contains none of the schools and colleges has an enrollment of more than 2,000. ample provisions for administrative and faculty offices and classrooms, The original faculty of six now numbers more than 700. In this university a Law Library with a main Reading Room seating two hundred and forty, are students from nearly every state in the nation and from some 3I study carrels for forty-five students, a Browsing Room shelving quasi- na•tions. LAW SCHOOL 11

legal materials, and a Stack Room with a capacity of 250,000 volumes. In addition there is a Moot Court Room seating one hundred and fifty spectators, seminar rooms, and attractive lounges for the faculty, students, and administrative assistants. A students' Dining Hall seating three hundred, students' lockers and other conveniences make Thomas More Hall a completely self-contained unit for the Law School on the Uni­ versity Heights campus. The new building is of contemporary architecture, but its stone work reflects the Collegiate Gothic of the undergraduate buildings on the Heights. It is named after Thomas More (1478-1535), lawyer and judge, humanist and humorist, Lord Chancellor of England, and one of the truly great figures of legal history. The building is designed to provide every necessary and useful facility for students who wish to pursue the study of law in an atmosphere of scholarship and culture, surrounded by extraordinary architectural and natural beauty.

METHOD OF INSTRUCTION The program and method of instruction employed in the Boston College Law School is designed to prepare the student to pracctice law wherever the Anglo-American system of law prevails. Hence, there is a thorough insistence upon the common law and upon the important statu­ z tory enactments of the federal and state governments. Ill Ill Ill Ill c( THE THOMAS J. KENNY LIBRARy _, 0 The Thomas J. Kenny Memorial Library has a spacious Reading Room 0 ::r: seating two hundred and forty students and individual study carr,els u accommodating forty-five students. On the same level with the Reading Ill Room is the Clement Joseph Maney Browsing Room with an additional c( collection of quasi-legal materials. A two-level stack room below the _,== Reading Room has a capacity of a quarter of a million volumes. Ill ::r: The Library contains the reports of all the state courts of last resort, 1- the National Reporter System and the several series of annotated reports as well as a good collection of English and Canadian decisions. The statutory section of the Library contains a complete collection of the current state and federal annotated codes as well as current English legislation. In recognition of the development of public law and its increasing importance in the United States, the Library contains a large section of this material, particularly the decisions and orders of administrative bodies, state and federal, and the numerous loose-leaf services which make avail­ able all current laws, regulations, administrative interpretations and decisions in this field. The Library contains a comprehensive collection of treaties and text books, legal journals and reviews, and the standard legal encyclo­ pedias. . , L . . . ~ .

\ \ ' 14 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 15

The Law Library is administered by a full-time librarian and a staff ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS of assistants. It is open from 8:30 A.M. to 11:00 P.M., Mondays through Applicants for admission to the Boston College Law School as candi­ Fridays; from 9 :00A.M. to 5:00P.M. on Saturdays; and from 2:00P.M. dates for the degree of Bachelor of Laws must possess a Bachelor's degree 10:.._ l'to'\ to~ on Sundays. During the Summer the Library is open during the from an approved college or university. day. LAw ScHOOL ADMISSION TEsT In addition to the Kenny Law School Library, the Bapst University The Boston College Law School requires all of its applicants to take Library of Boston College, which is situated on the Chestnut Hill campus, the Law School Admission Test which is given at the Boston College Law contains more than five hundred thousand volumes, is available to students School on all four occasions when it is conducted at universities through­ of the Law School. Law Students also have access to the world-famous out the nation and in certain foreign centers. The test will be held at the Public Library of the City of Boston, with its more than two million Boston College Law School on Saturday, February 12, 1966; April 9, 1966; volumes, and to the Massachuset'ts State Library of more than six hundred August 6, 1966; and November 12, 1966. thousand volumes. For information and application form wa.-ite to the Educational Test­ Patrons, sponsors and friends of the Boston College Law School mg Service, 20 Nassau Street, Princeton, . Library generously contribute gifts and books of ever increasing value. ADMISSION PROCEDURE Application must be made upon the official form: and, as noted PRE-LEGAL STUDIES therein: 1. Official transcripts of all collegiate, graduate and professional Boston College desires that its students come to the study of law study must be sent directly to the Registrar of the Boston College Law with the broadest possible understanding of the divergent forces which School by the registrars of the institution in which such study has been impinge upon society and give it quality and direction. The School recog­ done. nizes that the foundation for such understanding- so vital to the effective 2. The recommendation form issued by the Law School must be modern lawyer-normally is gained during the four year college program. sent directly to the Registrar. Accordingly, while the School refuses to designate a particular collegiate 3. The Educational T'esting Service must be directed to report the program as the "best" preparation for the study of law, it strongly applicant's Law School Admission Test score to the Boston College Law believes that no student should forego the indispensable generality of a School. wide liberal education for studies which might have the reputation of being particularly "legal" in nature. However, because the field of law As soon as the completed application forms, all requisite transcripts, spans the entire social and commercial processes of our society, there is no and the application fee of $10 have been received, the applicant will be collegiate program which cannot serve as an appropriate vehicle for pre­ promptly advised by mail of the decision upon the application. legal training. AuDITORs We believe that a student considering the relative merits of a col­ A limited number of applicants, usually members of the bar, who legiate pre-legal program can do no better than recall the words of Justice do not wish to study for a degree, but who desire to enroll in specific Frankfurter. courses may be admitted as auditors. Auditors must prepare regular assign­ ments and participate in classmom discussions. They are riot required to "No man can be a truly competent lawyer unless he is a culti­ take examinations, but may elect to do so. Normally, credit will not be v~ted man. If I were you, I would forget all about any technical certified for auditing. preparation for the law. The best way to prepare for the law is to come to the study of the law as a well-read person. Thus alone can ADVANCED STANDING one acquire the capacity to use the English language on paper and An applicant qualified for admission who satisfactorily completed in speech and with the habits of clear thinking which only a truly part of his law course in another approved law school, may be admitted liberal education can give. No less important for a lawyer is the culti­ to upper classes with advanced standing. At t:he minimum, two complete vation of the imaginative faculties by reading poetry, seeing great semesters will be required in residence at Boston College immediately paintings, in the original or in easily available reproductions, and preceding the award of a degree. listening to great music. Stock your mind with the deposit of much good reading, and widen and deepen yom feelings by experiencing vicariously as much as possible the wonderful mysteries of the uni­ SCHOLARSHIP AND FINANCIAL AID verse, and forget all about your future career." The following scholarships, financial aid and loans are available to students at the Law School: 16 BOSTON COL LEGE LAW SCHOOL 17 to fill out the application and discuss the matter with the dean or other 1.) Fifteen Presidential Scholarships, established by the Trustees of official of the Law School. Federal loans are also available at Boston College. Boston College. Thes•e are full scholarships to be awarded each year to students entering the Law School. Applicants must be outstanding in their college graduating class and must attain a high score in the Law School HOUSING AND BOARDING FACILITIES Admi.ssion Test. Beneficiaries are expe·cted to achieve high scholastic The Director of Resident Students, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, standmg and to participate in the work of the Law Review. Massachusetts 02167, maintains a list of private homes, rooms, and apart­ 2.) .The Keefe Scholarship, established in 1956 by the late Margaret ments near Boston College where living facilities are available. Correspond­ M. Keefe m memory of The Keefe Family. ence regarding this mattecr should be directed to this office, or to tRe 3.) The O'Connell Scholarship, established in 1946 by Patrick A. Student Bar Association at the law school. O'Connell of Boston, in memory of his son, Edmund Fabian O'Connell. No difficulty has been experienced by law students in obtaining .4 .) Two academic awards of half tuition granted to the highest adequate and attractive livrng accommodations near the Boston College rankmg non-scholarship students entering the second year class. Law School. 5.) The Walter R. Morris Scholarship, established by the friends All law students are eligible to utilize the extensive athletic facilities of the late Professor Morris who served on the faculty of the Law School of the university. from 1929 to 1938. REGISTRATION 6.) The John J. Flynn, Jr. Loan Fund, established by the past presi­ dents of the Newton-Waltham-Watertown Bar Association in honor of Successful applicants must register personally at the regular registra­ one of their past presidents. tion period indicated in the current Law School Bulletin. Each applicant is required to present, before or at the time of registration, a recent un­ 7.) The Parker Morris, Esq. Scholarship Fund. mounted passport-size photograph. There is no regular registration fee; 8.) The Pitcoff Scholarship Fund. This scholarship was established but a student permitted to register after the regular registration period by the family and friends of the late Robert S. Pitcoff who, having com­ will be charged a late regist

Notice within five weeks of first classes ______20% tuition refund No refunds are allowed after fifth week of classes. If the student does not elect to leave the resulting cash credit balance to his account, fotr subsequent use, he should notify the Treasurer in writ­ ing to rebate the cash balance on his account. The Trustees of Boston College reserve the right to change the rate of tuition and fees and such changes may be made applicable to students already enrolled in the School. THE ORDER OF THE COIF The Order of the Coif, the national honorary society for law students, is designed to promote legal scholarship. The organization has chapters at about fifty of the nation's better law schools. Faculty members of the local chapter at Boston College Law School each year select those to be honored from among those seniors who are academically within the top ten percent of their class and who have a-ctively participated in significant extra-curricular activity of a scholarly nature. Induction ceremonies are held late each spring, at which time a distinguished member of the bench or bar is also ordinarily selected for ..Ill honorary membership. All members upon induction commit themselves ..Gl to carry out the highest scholarly, and public-service traditions of the ...;;:: legal profession. The combination of high standa,rds for selection and the 0 Order's nation-wide reputation makes membership the most esteemed ·c: E honor a student can obtain while at the law school. :I Ci STUDENT ACTIVITIES , c STuDENT BAR AssociATION a The Boston College Student Bar Association is a member of the c a American Law Student Association, the student affiliate of the American c ·;: Bar Association. The Association, whose members are all the students at Q the School, sponsors many co-curricular and extra-curricular activities ....: during the year. ,; The Association, through the Chairman of the Board of Student ...a Advisors who is an ex officio member of the Board of Governors, assists .. in the work of the first year study ~roups and the Wendell F. Grimes :. Gl Moot Court Competition. The Association also conducts an extensive .a Forum series which attracts to the School outstanding speakers from the <( Gl fields of law, government and business. The Student Bar Association aids ;:.. Ill in publishing the Law School newspaper, Sui Juris. During the course of :I the year, the Association sponsors a broad range of social activities includ­ ... Gl ing smokers, cocktail parties and dances. The fundamental aim of the ...a Association is to inculcate in the students an awareness and consciousness ·;:; 0 of the many facets of the legal profession and to acquaint him, while yet Ill Ill a student, with the special values of an organized bar association. <( The Law Wives' Club, an organization made up of all the students' .... wives, conducts social and cultural events throughout the school year. :I u0 ~ LAW REVIEW Gl E The students are -responsible for the publication of the Boston College ..Gl Industrial and Commercial Law Review four times each year. A senior A :I Ul vi ::; - ~------~

L

23 22 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL

Board of Editors chosen by the Editors of the prior year supervises the BoARD oF STUDENT ADvisERs work of second and third year Staff members. Criteria for membership The Board of Student Advisers consists of upperclassmen chosen on are academic achievement and contributions to the Law Review which the bases of academic achievement and demonstrated interest in law school meet standards set by the Board. Staff members and Editors write a programs. The Board is both an honor and a service organization which substantial part of each issue of the Law Review. chooses its own officers, makes its own operating rules and determines the The Law Review was established to achieve several purposes. First, means for carrying out its duties. Responsibilities of the Board of Student it provides a laboratory where top students may pursue independent re­ Advisers include: search, employ and perfect knowledge and skills acquired in course work ( 1) Participation with the Student Bar Association in a program of and publish the fruits of their efforts for the benefit of the profession. orientation and consultation for first year students; Second, the Law Review is the highest honor as well as the greatest pro­ (2) Conducting the Wendell F. Grimes Moot Court Competition, fessional responsibility afforded by the Law School. As a result, successful and membership is a signifi·cant factor in retention of Presidential Scholarships ( 3) Assistance to the lnstructo·r in Research and Writing as advisers and in finding a place in the profession upon graduation. Third, the Law to first year students in writing projects and the Moot Court program. Review aids lawyers and judges alike in its thorough and well-reasoned treatment by leading outside authors as well as students of subjects within WENDELL F. GRIMEs CoMPETITION of industrial and commercial law. the ever expanding fields The \'V'endell F. Grimes Competition, named for the late professor Uniform Commercial Code, containing comprehensive Because the who was for many years moderator of the moot court program, is the the conduct of commercial transactions, is well on its statutory rules for intraschool moot court competition. of the sta·tes, it is given significant treatment in the way to adoption by all A trial court decision in a hypothetical case is the subject of appeal. meet special needs of commercial lawyers, the Law Law Review. To Teams of two participants prepare appellate briefs for each side of the Staff in 1962 prepared a special hard-bound volume, Review Board and case and orally argue before an "appellate court" in the McLaughlin CODE COORDINATOR, which was the UNIFORM COMMERCIAL Memorial Courtroom. Both briefs and oral presentations are evaluated to by a leading law book publisher. A similar volume published commercially determine winners in each round of the competition. Finalists are awarded entitled THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL with expanded coverage trophies and the winners' names are engraved on a permanent trophy. DIGEST was published in 1965. CODE REPORTER Faculty members, practicing attmneys and judges from state and federal courts serve as judges in successive rounds cf the competition. ANNUAL SuRVEY Participation in moot court requires the kinds of research, preparation, The Annual Survey of Massachusetts Law was established to meet advocacy and legal skills sought by firms, government agencies and courts the needs of practitioners within the Commonwealth. It consists of an in filling positions for law graduates. annual compila:tion and analysis by experts of significant judicial and legis­ la:tive developments within Ma•ssachusetts in important legal fields. A NATIONAL MooT CouRT CoMPETITION faculty Editor-in-Chief supervises publication. The Annual Survey Editor Each year a team of three students from Boston College represents of the Law Review Board and members of the Law Review Staff assist the the law school in the National Moot Court Competition sponsored by the Faculty Editor and outside authors in their research, writing and editing. Young Lawyers' Committee of the Bar Association of the City of New York. Some 100 of the nation's law schools participate in the Competition SUI }URIS which was inaugurated in 1950 to help develop the level of appellate purposes of the National Competition, Sui Juris is the news journal of the Student Bar Association and the advocacy among law students. For into fifteen regions. In each region elimination Alumni" It is under the editorship of a student boa!l'd selected by the the country is divided schools in the region. Student B'ar Association and is published five times during the school rounds of argument are held among the participating rounds advance to the final rounds which are year. The primary purpose of Sui Juris is to inform the student body and The winners of regional in December. The winner of the final round is the alumni of developments at the school and of newsworthy events con­ held in New York City cerning the alumni. The unique magazine format of this publication also the national champion. acquired and per­ affords a vehicle for publishing articles of general inte·rest to the legal The art of appellate advocacy, like all arts, is best Competition pro­ profession. Sui Juris is distributed without charge to the student body, fected by actual experience. The National Moot Court and students are alumni and friends of the law school and has a circulation of over four vides a unique opportunity for acquiring this experience on the team. This membership is restricted, thousand. In 196 5, Sui Juris was given a special awa:rd by the American encouraged to seek membership in the Grimes Law Student Association an "outstanding publication utilizing a unique here at Boston College, to students who have participated concept in format." Competition. 24 BOSTON COLLEGE

PLACEMENT SERVICE The effective placement of every graduate of the Law School is regarded by the Dean and the faculty as a continuing responsibility. The Law School maintains a placement office to help students find advantageous employment after graduation. This office is under the direction of the Associate Dean. Other members of the faculty are available for con­ sultation. Each year interviews are held with every member of the graduating cbss to ascertain their career objectives. Moreover, a complete placement file is maintained on each student so that his qualifications and objectives may be matched with prospective placement situations as they develop. Representatives of leading law firms and government agencies regu­ larly visit the Law School to interview candidates for prospective place­ ments. Recent graduates of the Law School have obtained an ever in­ creasing number of graduate fellowships, judicial clerkships and other significant positions. Summer positions in law firms after the second year of Law School arc available. An increasing number of appointments in student intern­ ships in legal aid groups, federal and state courts are also available.

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION The 2660 living graduates of the Boston College Law School are members of the School's Alumni Association. This organization helps in placement work, brings outstanding speakers to dinner gatherings of the Alumni, sponsors regional meetings and seeks in many ways to enhance the prestige and advance the interests of the Boston College Law School. The 1963 Alumni Directory has proved to be especially valuable to the alumni of the school who practice law in most of the states of the Union. The Alumni Association cooperates closely with the Annual Giving Program of the Law School and is largely responsible for its ever increasing success. 26 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 27

PROGRAM OF INSTRUCTION''. DESCRIPTION OF COURSES

FIRST YEAR ADMINISTRATIVE LAw 3 Sem. Hrs. First Semester Second Semester Administrative tribunals in the present political and social order. Rule Constitut-ional Law 3 Constitutional Law 2 making powers. Procedure: right to notice; necessity, form, content, Contracts ...... 3 Contracts ...... 3 and service pleading. Conduct of hearings and procedural safeguards Property ...... 3 Property ...... 2 against abuse from administrative action. Impartiality, right to appear, Civil Procedure ...... 2 Civil Procedure ...... 3 issuance of subpoenas, admissibility of evidence, official notice, and the Torts ...... 3 Torts ...... 3 examination of witnesses. Necessity and adequacy of findings of fact. Legal Writing ...... Agency ...... 2 Methods and scope of judicial review. Federal and state administrative procedure acts. 1 5 15 AGENCY 2 Sem. Hn.

SECOND YEAR Agency distinguished from various other legal relationships. The agent's authority, formalities in the appointment of an agent, types and First Semester Second Semester sources of the agent's authority. Unauthorized acts by agents and the Equity ...... 2 Equity ...... 2 legal effect of the principal's ratification of such acts. Termination of Trusts and Estates ...... 3 Trusts and Estates .. .. 3 the agent's authority. The course concludes with a brief survey of cases Commercial Law ...... 3 Commeroial Law ...... 2 dealing with the liabilities of employees for torts of their servants. Business Associations 3 Electives ...... 7 or 2 Crimes ...... -----········ BusiNEss AssociATIONs 3 Sem. Hrs. Income Tax ...... 2 The major part of the course deals with business corporations; their 15 14 or 15 organization and promotion; corporate powers, distribution between shareholders, directors and officers, mode of exercising same; voting trusts; duties of directors, remedies available to shareholders for en­ THIRD YEAR forcement of same; creation, maintenance, decrease and increase of First Semester Second Semester corporate capital. Partnerships and other unincorporated associations are Administrative Law . 3 Conflict of Laws treated comparatively, primarily in the early stages of the course, with 10 to 12 Electives ...... 10 to 12 Electives ...... emphasis on the choice of form of doing business.

13 to 1 5 13to15 CHURCH- STATE SEMINAR 2 Sem. Hrs. An analysis of all of the decisions of the United States Supreme Court ELECTIVE CouRsEs construing the establishment and free exercise of religion clauses of the Civil Liberties Seminar Federal Courts and Jurisdiction First Amendment. An investigation into the relationship of these two Commercial Transactions in Land Insurance clauses. An evaluation of Federal and state legislation designed to achieve Constitutional Law Seminar International Law a secular objective through the instrumentality of a Church-related Corporate Finance International Business Transactions agency. Corporate Reorganization Jurisprudence Corporate Tax a tion Labor Law CIVIL PROCEDURE 5 Sem. Hrs. Creditors' Rights Labor Law Seminar An introduction to the rules of law governing the conduct of litiga­ Criminal Law Seminar Land Use Control and Planning tion. After an overview of the entire sequence of events from com­ Criminal Procedure Legal mencement to final disposition of a lawsuit, the following topics are Damages Restitution considered in detail: pleadings; discovery and other pre-trial devices; Estate and Gift Tax Seminar on Church-State Problems summary disposition without trial; the trial, including rulings on mo­ Estate Planning Securities Regulation tions; appellate review; the effect of prior adjudications; the jurisdiction Evidence Trial Pract.ice of courts; and multiple parties and causes of action. Also introduced Family Law Trade Regulations are the law-equity distinction and the division of business between federal and state courts. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are ''·NOTE: Since the curriculum of the School is periodically re-evaluated, emphasized to give a rounded view of a single modern procedural sys­ this program is subject to change. tem, but other procedural arrangements are also examined. '28 BOSTON COLLEGE

CIVIL RIGHTS SEMINAR 2 Sem. Hrs. Selected legal aspects of civil rights are discussed m detail with the Ambassado; Henry Cabot Lodge content of the course varying annually. Commencement Speaker

CoMMERCIAL LAw 5 Sem. Hrs. The legal and commercial problems in transactions with personal property, including distribution of goods and services, role of com­ mercial paper and secured and unsecured credit. The core of the course is the Uniform Commercial Code. Effort is directed to developing skills in statutory construction and in the solution of pragmatic commercial problems.

CoMMERCIAL TRANsAcTioNs IN LAND 2 Sem. H rs . A course in seminar form designed to explore modern applications of vendor-purchaser law. Purchase and sale agreements, mortgages, and title security are related to modern federal and state tax, mortgage in­ surance and housing law. The commonly used forms of ownership of real estate-trusts, ·corporations, cooperatives, condominiums, and others - are explored. Reports are made in class and a final paper on an appro­ priate subject is required.

CoNFLICT oF LAws 3 Sem. Hn. The law applicable to transactions having contacts with more than one state. The course considers such problems as the following: domicile; classification and renvoi; substance and procedure; choice of law rules applied with respect to torts, workmen's compensation, contracts, property, marriage and divorce; and the influence of the Constitution upon conflict of laws problems.

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 5 Sem. Hrs . The doctrine of judicial review of legislation. Reciprocal immunities of the federal and state governments. Express and implied powers of the federal government. The commerce clause as a source of federal power and as a limitation upon the power of states. A study of the constitutional provisions in aid of individual rights and privileges, par­ ticularly the due process clause and the equal protection clause.

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW SEMINAR 3 Sem. Hrs. A seminar in which are considered various current problems of public law, pa-rticularly in areas not treated in other courses. Members of the seminar go through the various steps of certiorari and appeal practice in constitutional litigation before the Supreme Court, and prepare papers on assigned topics or topics of their own selection. l

30 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 31

CoNTRAcTs 6 Sem. Hrs. CRIMINAL LAW SEMINAR 2 Sem. Hrs . Contract as a principle of order. The movement from Status to Examination of selected problems of criminal law and criminal law Contract. The role of contract in society. The basic ideals of an indi­ administration in the light of relevent criminological knowledge. Such vidualistic law of contracts. The "Anatomy of a Promise." Contracts questions as the admissibility of confessions in view of the psycho­ implied in law. Offer, acceptance and consideration. Fairness of the dynamics of the confession process and various aspects of psychopathy bargain-Exchange justice. Assignments, delegation, third party bene­ are covered. Substantial research into extra-legal sources is required ficiaries. The statute of frauds. The parole evidence rule. Conditions. for a research paper. Impossibility of performance and frustration of purpose. Substantial performance. Restitutional remedies for breach of contract. Introduc­ CRIMINAL PRoCEDURE 2 Sem. Hrs. tion to certain provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code. The legal requirements of the criminal process relating to arrest, interrogations, trial and other procedures derived from constitutional, 2 Sem. Hrs. CoRPORATE FINANCE statutory and common law sources. Emphasis is made in relating the An examination of problems arising out of the promotion, organiza­ law to relevant criminological material. tion, , re-organization and dissolution of the corporate entity. Liabilities of the promoter; rights, liabilities and interests of the DAMAGES 2 Sem. Hrs. Shareholders; preemptive rights; Capital Stock, classes and types, rights General principles of damages: value, certainty, avoidable conse­ and interests thereof. Special consideration of corporate distributions quences, interest and expenses of litigation. Material will also be selected and redemptions. Organic c_hanges in the corporation; mergers, con­ from the following topics: Damages in tort actions (exemplary dam­ solidations, sales of assets or stock and recapitalizations. The amend­ ages, personal injuries, wrongful death, defamation, deceit, injuries to ment power and dissolution. the interests of owners of personal property and real property); Dam­ ages for Breach of Contract (restriction to foreseeable losses and other CoRPORATE REORGANIZATION 3 Sem. Hrs. standard rules operative in contract cases, loss of future performance, A consideration of the funda~ental problems in corporate changes, construction contracts, liquidated damage clauses). including study of the corporate and bankruptcy law affecting such changes. The tax effects of reorganizations are studied in detail. At­ tention is also given to policy limitations on corporate changes as EQUITY 4 Sem. Hrs. affected by the anti-trust laws and securities regulation. History of Equity; powers of the courts; specific performance of affirmative and negative contracts; relief for and against third persons; CoRPORATE TAXA noN 3 Sem. Hrs. equitable servitudes; conversion by contract; partial performance; the Tax problems in connection with the organization, operation, pur­ Statute of Frauds; relief against torts including trespass, nuisance; wrongs involving criminal misconduct; business injuries; defamation chase and sale, reorganization and liquidation of corporations, and of corporate dividends, including stock dividends, redemptions, and dis­ and protection of interests of personality; social and political relations. tributions in partial and complete liquidation. Tax treatment of business purchase agreements, collapsible corporations, personal holding com­ EsTATE AND GIFT TAXATION 2 Sem. Hrs. panies and corporations with improper accumulated earnings. A consideration of the fundamentals of taxation on transfers at death and during the life of the transferor, including transfers in con­ CREDITORs' RIGHTS 3 Sem. Hrs. templation of death, with life estate retained, and with the retention The collective rights of creditors are considered, including composi­ of powers. The estate and gift tax effects on special types of property tions, creditors' agreements, assignments for the benefit of creditors, holding, such as joint tenancy, powers of appointment, and life insur­ and arrangements. Primary emphasis is given to the first seven chapters ance contracts are also considered. The use of the marital deduction of the Bankruptcy Act. Certain rights of individual creditors are also and problems arising from transfers for an adequate and full considera­ considered. ticm are discussed.

CRIMES 2 Sem. Hrs. EsTATE PLANNING 3 Sem. Hrs. General principles underlying the use of the criminal law are exam­ An examination of the various methods of preserving and disposing ined, especially as these are involved in the sentencing responsibilities of of wealth to benefit the family group. The uses of the will, inter vivos legislatures, courts and administrators. The nature and scope of several revocable and irrevocable trusts, non-trust gifts, the different kinds of defenses as well as the substantive offenses are considered in detail. insurance, and forms of concurrent ownership as instruments in the (

l

32 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 33

estate plan. Analysis of the impact of estate, inheritance, gift and in­ INTERNATIONAL LAW 3 Sem. Hrs. come taxes on the disposition of property under different plans. An An introductory course, treating of the principles and practice of examination of estate plans with emphasis on draftmanship and the the law governing inter-State relations. The course will consider such desirability of the different modes of procedure open to the estate topics as the nature and sources of international law, international planner. Special consideration of future interest problems, powers of claims, treaties and other international agreements, recognition of States appointment, disposition of business interests, the marital deduction and governments, territory, jurisdiction of States, nationality, peaceful multiple state death and income taxation of dispositions of property settlement of international disputes, and war. and charitable gifts. Selecting fiduciaries and granting them adminis­ trative powers. INTERNATIONAL BusiNEss TRANSACTIONS 2 Sem. Hrs. EviDENCE 3 Sem. Hrs. A seminar which will study some of the more difficult legal problems Law and fact, functions of the judge and the jury; testimonial, cir­ facing American business enterprises engaged in activities in other cumstantial, and real evidence; relevancy, competency and privilege; countries. After examining the principles controlling the scope and writings; examination of witnesses, offer of evidence, exceptions and effect of national law upon international transactions, attention will be review of questions of law and fact. given to a variety of specific problems, including an examination of FAMILY LAw 2 Sem. Hrs. the possibilities available for the organization of business abroad, the A study of the civil law of persons and domestic relations at common protection of intangible industrial property, the reach of United States law and under modern statutes. The laws concerning marriage and and EEC antitrust statutes, and the taxation of foreign income. divorce, separation and annulment. The parent and child relationship; infants and adoptions; effect upon property, contracts and torts. Ethical jURISPRUDENCE 2 Sem. Hrs. obligations of lawyers and judges respecting separation, divorce and annulment. A fundamental course in legal philosophy. Among the problems con­ sidered are: the Austinian theory of law and its modern counterparts, FEDERAL CouRTs AND juRISDICTION 3 Sem. Hrs. historical jurisprudence, natural law philosophy, modern American legal An analysis of the function of the federal courts in the operation philosophies, law and economic life, the relation of law and morality, of the federal system, with particular emphasis on the distribution of and problems of justice. The course utilizes cases from different branches power between federal and state courts and the limitations on federal of the law to test the principles expounded in the various schools of judicial power, special attention is directed to the role of the Supreme legal thought. Court in umpiring the federal system; related problems of federal pro­ cedure are also considered. LABOR LAW 3 Sem. Hrs. INCOME TAXATION 2 Sem. Hrs. Introductory considention of organized labor in a free enterprise A fundamental course in federal income taxa;tion. A study of source society. Establishment of collective bargaining including representation materials of federal taxation, such as legislative materials, the Internal and bargaining status under the National Labor Relations Act. Nature Revenue Code, and Treasury Regulations. Tax procedure; the organ­ of the collective bargaining process, collective bargaining agreements ization of the Internal Revenue Bureau; and the function of federal and the administration thereof pursuant of grievance machinery and courts in tax matters. Constitutional and interpretative questions arising arbitration. Legal limitations on employer and union economic pressure. from the federal income tax provisions. Legal controls which are applicable to intra union relationship. INSURANCE 2 Sem. Hrs. An examination of the rules, principles and concepts of insurance law; the formation and regulation of the insurance carrier; the special LABOR LAw SEMINAR 2 Sem. Hrs. characteristics and requirements of the insurance contract. Particular This advanced labor law course is available to students who have attention is given to the construction and enforcement of insurance completed the basic course in labor law; it is primarily concerned with contracts, to the legal devices upon which the insurer relies in the selec­ the problems of the National Labor Relations Board practice and pro­ tion and control of risks and to the inter-relationship of insurance and cedure and the lawyers part in the collective bargaining process; tran­ the insurance carriers with customa·ry public practices. Also considered scripts of fictitious Board hearings are examined and form the basis for are the problems of premium rate determination, the anti-t·rust aspects discussion and reports. State Labor Relations Acts and developments in of concerted rate-making and the effectiveness of insurance in achieving the field of arbitration are examined; students are required to write economic and social objectives. class papers on problems of first impression in the field of labor relations. I I

34 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL 3 5

LAND UsE CoNTROL AND PLANNING 2 Sem. Hrs. TAXATION 4 Sem. Hrs. A course in a combined cla.ssroom and seminar form designed to ex­ A fundamental course m federal taxation. A study of source ma­ plore in depth various problems in zoning, eminent domain, urban re­ terials of federal taxa-tion, such as legislative materials, the Internal development, subdivision control and other public and pr~vate la:' areas Revenue Code, and Treasury Regulations. Tax procedure; the organ­ affecting land use, with a concurrent study of underlymg social and ization of the Internal Revenue Bureau; and the function of federal economic policy problems and planning concepts operative in these courts in tax matters. Constitutional and interpretative questions arising areas. Students are required to submit a paper and will be assigned re­ from the federal estate, g.ift, and income tax provisions. Problems in search topics for presentation at class meetings. computation of es-tate, and income taxes are assigned to develop fa­ miliarity with federal tax forms and their use.

LEGAL AccouNTING 2 Sem. Hrs. ToRTs 6 Sem. Hrs. A study of basic bookkeeping procedures and the mechanics of finan­ Assault, battery, false imprisonment, trespass to land and chattels, cial statement preparation followed by case studies of the legal bases and intentional infliction of mental suffering. An intensive study of of accounting principles. The focus is on the area of accounting judg­ the law of negligence, or accident law; an analysis of the concept; ments and their related legal problems rather than on the technical the measure of damages in personal injury litigation. Survival and aspects of accounting theory. No previous knowledge of accounting is wrongful death actions. The concept of strict liability. Nuisance law. required. The tort liability of owners and occupiers of land, or manufacturers, contractors, and suppliers of chattels. Misrepresentation, libel and LEGAL RESEARCH AND WRITING 1 Sem. Hr. slander, invasion of the right of privacy, malicious prosecution and A course in which first-year students are divided into seminar size abuse of process, and interference with contractual and other advan­ groups for an analysis of the manner of reading and briefing cases, an tageous relations. intensive study of the tools of legal research and their use, an introduc­ TRIAL PRACTICE 2 Sem. Hrs. tion to the techniques of legal writing including legal memoranda and This course deals with problems of proof and persuasion in the trial appellate briefs. of actions. The function and responsibility of the trial lawyer are considered, together with intensive cons.ideration of the methods of PROPERTY 5 Sem . Hrs. developing facts at both the trial and pre-trial stages. Emphasis is A course that covers ba·sic personal and real property law. Personal on assigned problems which require practical application of rules of property includes coverage of the concepts of possession and relativ~ty procedural and substantive law in a typical trial context. This course of title, using primarily bailment and gift materials. Real property In­ is offered in small sections to afford each student amply opportunity cludes an historical study of the development of the land law, the more to participate in demonstrations of trial practices. elementary aspects of future interests, basic vendor-purchaser and landlord-tenant law, and study of non-possessory interests in land. TRADE REGULATION 3 Sem. Hrs. General survey of trade regulation by public and private power; the REsTITUTION 2 Sem. Hrs. Serman Act: monopolization, contract, combination and conspiracy; Material will be selected from the following topics: Restitution as certain problems as affected by the Clayton Act, Federal Trade Com­ an alternative remedy for tort; Equitable accounting, the constructive mission Act, and Robinson Patman Act including: patent, copyright trust and equitable liens; Legal and equitable remedies on rescission for and trade mark use; tying agreements and exclusive dealing arrange­ fraud; Benefits conferred under agreements; Unsolicited benefits and ments; resale price maintenance and discriminatory pricing; mergers; the volunteer; Mistake in bargaining transactions; Mistake in gift unfair competition. transactions; Defective capacity; Duress; Illegality. TRusTs AND EsTATES 6 Sem. Hrs, SEcURITIES REGULATION 2 Sem. Hrs. Intestate succession; execution and revocation of wills; incorporation A survey of the statutes administered by the Securities and Exchange by reference and related problems. Creation and elements of the trust, Commission, with particular reference to ( 1) the registration and the powers, duties and liabilities of the tru~tees; charitable trusts. Re­ prospectus requirements of the Secu6ties Act of 1933 and the related versions, remainders and executory interests at common law and under exemptions, ( 2) the effect of Federal statutes upon common law modern legisla-tion. The creation and execution of powers of appoint­ standards of disclosure in the purcha·se and sale of securities and ( 3) ment. The construction of limitations, particularly of class gifts. The the duties of fair dealing and disclosure imposed by Federal law upon nature and application of the rule against remotely contingent interests corporate management in its relations with s·tockholders. and related rules. DEGREES IN COURSE COLLEGES AN D UNIVERSITIES REPRESENTED 1964 - 1965 196 5 - 1966 The following graduates awarded the degree of Adelphi University ______2 McGill University ____ _ American Internat ional College Merrimack College ______. ------BACHELOR OF LAWS A merican University ______Michigan, University of ------4 Amherst College Middlebury College ------2 As of June 7, 1965 Athens University, Greece Newark College of Engineering .... Babson Institute ______New England College of Pharmacy I PAUL ALBERT ABODEELY KENNETH DANIEL KERR Bates College .... _ New Hampshire, University of ...... 4 CHARLES SIGLER ADAMS BRADLEY FRANCIS KIDDER Bellarmine College 2 New York University ______HOWARD jAY ALPERIN PAUL RoBERT LAWLEss Boston College ______85 Northeastern University ..... 4 GEORGE wALLACE ANTHES joHN CosGROVE LEM ERY Boston State College Northwestern University PHILIP THOMAS BEAUCHESNE RoBERT GEORGE LIAN 13 Norwich University ______CHARLES K. BERGIN, JR. NICHOLAS jOHN LlSI Bowdoin College ___ 7 Notre Dame, University of ______CONSTANCE jANE BETLEY RICHARD FRANCIS LOCKE Brandeis University 17 Pennsylvania, University of ______RAYMOND PHILIP BLANCHARD FRANCIS BARRY MAHER Brooklyn College __ l Pennsylvania State University ______EDWARD MICHAEL BLOOM, cum laude ANTHONY Rocco MANCINI --· _ 10 Pittsburgh, University of SIDNEY RALPH BRESNICK RICHARD KENNETH MAZOW Bucknell University Princeton University RoBERT EMMETT BuRNs THOMAS MARK McCAFFREY Buffalo, University of Providence College ____ _ ------.... I 5 ALAN ARCHER BUTCHMAN joHN KELLEY McDEVITT California State Polytech. College Radcliffe College . ------RoBERT LEo CAPORALE DoNALD JosEPH MAcDoNALD California, University of Regis College ------. ------­ RoGER MicHAEL CAREY WILLIAM JosEPH McDoNALD Canisius College ------. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute .... THOMAS ]AMES CAREY, ]R . joHN FRANcis McDoNOUGH Carnegio Institute of Technology , University of ______EDWARD VINCENT CASEY, JR. RoBERT EDWARD McGINNEss Catholic University of America, The Rochester, University of ------­ ,TAMES DAviD CoFFEE GERALD DANIEL McGoNIGLE Citadel, The Rockhurst College ------THOMAS FRANCIS CoLLINS joHN FRANCIS McMAHON Clark University St. Anselm's College ______------RAE BERNADETTE CoNDON PAuL JosEPH McNAMARA Chicago, University of St. John's Seminary ------BARRY ]AMES CONNELLY DERMOT ]AMES MEAGHER Colby College ______4 St. John Fisher College ------2 ]AMES jEROME CooGAN ARTHUR pATRICK MENARD Colgate University .. 7 St. Joseph's College ------joHN CoNATHAN CRENEY MELVIN DuNcAN MERCER, JR. Columbia University 2 St. Michael's College ______------.T OSEPH Lours DEAMBROSE DWIGHT WHITTEMORE MILLER ______7 St. Peter's College __ _ ------RoNALD WINSTON DELSEsTo RoBERT HAIG MINASIAN Creighton University St. Rose, College of DoNATA ANN DELULIO jOHN PETER MoNTE Dartmouth College .. St. Vincent College ------­ jOHN FRANCIS DOBBYN RoBERT INNis MoRIARTY Fairfield University .... ------­ Salem State College ------­ THoMAS JosEPH DoRCHAK CHARLES FoREST MoRRILL Fitchburg State College ------· Scranton, University of ------­ CHARLEs CLEMENT DuPRE RoBERT JosEPH MuLDOON Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy Seminaire de Joliette . ------MARY KATHERINE EGAN DAVID PAUL MURPHY Florida State University Seton Hall University ______------CLIFFORD joHN EHRLICH JERRY BRADY MuRRAY Fordham University ___ __ . Siena College ______------2 BENJAMIN THOMAS EISENSTADT RoBERT YoRK MuRRAY Franklin and Marshall College Smith College ------4 WILLIAM JosEPH ENGLER, ]R. ALAN L EIGH NEIGHER George Washington University Stanford University ------SIDNEY PAUL FELDMAN PETER JosEPH NoRTON Georgia Institute of Tech. Stevens Institute of Technology ------­ DoNALD DAviD FERLAND RrcHARD WALSH NoRTON Georgetown University ______11 ------­ THEODORE FISHER KEVIN LAWRENCE O'BRIEN Goethe University, Germany ___ I Suffolk University .... WILLIAM CURTIS FOEHL WILLIAM BERNARD O'KEEFFE Harvard University ___ _ 27 Syracuse University ------­ GEoRGE MicHAEL FoRD JuDITH LESLIE 0LANS, cum Iande Hobart College ______. Trinity College (Conn.) ------jEROME KENNETH FRosT, cum laude jOHN FINBARR O'LEARY Hoi y Cross, College of the 26 Trinity College (Washington) ______I FRANCIS JosEPH GALLAGHER, ]R. DAVID TULlO PAGNINI Indiana University __ ___ Tufts University __ __ 13 PAUL EDWARD GALLAGHER, ]R . RoBERT BREWSTER PATTEN John Carroll University ______Tulane University ------2 jOHN GERSHON GANICK RICHARD jOHN PENTLAND Johns Hopkins University Union College ------SHELDON HENRY GANZ PETER EMIL PICHE Kenyon College ______U . S. Military Academy .. ------­ BARRY H. GERSTEIN STUART LEE PoTTER LaSalle College Vermont, University of ------EDWARD ALAN GoLDBERG BARRy RA VECH LeMoyne College __ _ Villanova University ______------DouGLAS RoBERTs GRAY PAUL VINCENT REYNOLDS Loyola University ______Virginia, University of ------­ FRANK EDWARD GREEN RoBERT WALKER RITCHIE Manhattan College __ _ 6 Wheaton College ------­ WILLIAM RONALD HALL DouGLAS PAUL RuTNIK Manhattanville College 3 Wheeling College JosEPH PAuL HARRINGTON PHILIP MICHAEL ST. GERMAIN Marquette University __ __ Williams College __ _ ------2 PAUL FRANCIS HARRINGTON DANIEL RICHARD SALCITO Marist College ______Xavier University 4 BuRTON MICHAEL HARRIS RICHARD IRVING SAMUEL Mass. Institute of Technology I Yale University __ ___ 7 BARBARA LEviNE HAssENFELD MICHAEL DAVID SHAPIRO Massachusetts, University of 22 PAUL FRANCIS HEALEY, ]R. SAMUEL ERVINE SHAW, II FRANCis WADE HoLMAN, ]R. GEORGE RILEY SHEA TOTAL INSTITUTIONS: 113 PHILIP FRANK HUDOCK MARK DAVID SHUMAN VINCENT ANTHONY SIANO Loms RicHARD VITIELLO Cahill, Peter J.-1966 Conlon, Brian P.-1968 BARRETT NEWMAN SIDEL FLETCHER RoBINSON VREDENBURGH A.B., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Boston College NoRMAN PETER SoLOWAY BRANDT ARNOLD wAX Caldarelli, Albert F.-1966 Connell, Daniel D.- 1967 IRVING STARR EDWARD WILLIAM WAYSTACK, Ill A.B., Boston College B.S.B.A., Boston College RoBERT MITCHELL STEINBACH JoHN KEviN WHEELER Callaghan, Matthew F.-1967 Connelly, Paul J.- 1968 FREDERIC JosEPH ToRPHY RoBERT PAUL WHITTEN A.B., Providence College A.B., Boston College THOMAS HUGH TRIMARCO AARON NoAH WISE Callahan, Charles T.-1967 Connolly, Matthew T.- 1966 EDWARD CARL UEHLEIN, JR. HENRY BENJAMIN WYNN A.B., Colgate University B.S. , Boston College Callahan, John M., Jr.-1968 Connor, John P., Jr.- 1968 B.S. , Boston College A.B. , Boston College Callanan, Kevin B.- 1967 Connor, Wayne M.-1968 DEGREES AwARDED SrNcE JuNE 8, 1964 A.B., Georgetown Univ.; M.A., Fletch"· A.B., University of New Hampshire School, of Law and Diplomacy Conway, Leonard F., Jr.- 1967 BACHELOR OF LAWS Cameron, Thomas C.-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., Bates College Coran, Paul M.- 1967 FRANCIS JosEPH FRASIER GEORGE BERNARD WALDRON Cangelosi, Carl J.-1967 B.S., Northeastern University A.B., Georgetown University Corkin, Charles- 1968 Capossela, Domenic A.-1966 A.B., McGill University B.S., Boston University Cook, Albert B.- 1966 BOSTON COLLEGE LAW SCHOOL Carr, Robert E.-1968 A.B., Northeastern University A.B., Fairfield University Cournoyer, Donald C.- 1966 REGISTER OF STUDENTS Casey, Peter S.-1967 A.B., University of Massachusetts B.S.B.A., Babson Institute Cournoyer, Gerald S., Jr.-1967 1965 - 1966 Caulfield, Donald C.-1967 A.B., Boston College B.S., College of the Holy Cross Coyle, James P.-1968 Abatiell, Anthony F.-1966 Berkowitz, Steven H.-1968 Chaifetz, David H.-1968 A.B., Clark University; M.A., Univ. A.B., Boston University A.B., Trinity College (Hartford, Conn.) B.S.B.A., Clark University of Chicago Abdella, Charles A.-1967 Berley, David R.- 1966 Champy, James A.-1968 Cramer, Richard S.-1968 B.S., College of the Holy Cross B.S.B.A., Boston University B.S. and M.S., Mass. Institute of A.B., McGill University Adams, Leland ]., Jr.-1967 Bernett, Peter C.-1968 Technology Crandall, Arthur J.-1968 A.B., Bucknell University A.B., Brown University Chase, Charles E.-1968 A.B., Boston College Agnoli, Robert G.-1968 Bien, John R.-1967 A.B., St. John's Seminary Creedon, Robert S.- 1967 B.S., Tufts University B.S., College of the Holy Cross Chew, John A.- 1966 A.B., Boston College Altman, Michael L.- 1966 Bigda, John P.-1966 A.B., Johns Hopkins University Cronin, James M.- 1968 A.B., Bowdoin College A.B., Yale University Cira, Carl A., Jr.- 1966 A.B., Harvard College Ambrosini, Peter A.-1968 Black, Samuel L.- 1967 B.S.S., John Carroll University Currier, Philip R.- 1968 A.B., College of the Holy Cross A.B., University of Pennsylvania Clancy, David L.- 1967 A.B., University of New Hampshire Anderson, Ernest L.- 1966 Blauvelt, William E., Jr.-1968 A.B., University of Massachusetts Curtiss, Jack D.-1967 B.S., University of California (Davis) B.S., Villanova University Clarie, Thomas C.-1968 A.B., University of Massachusetts Angoff, Walter-1968 Boris, Stanley E.-1966 B.S., College of the Holy Cross D'Amico, William S.-1966 A.B., Tufts University A.B., Harvard College Clifford, Eugene T.-1966 B.S., Boston College Arena, Robert F.-1966 Boudreau, Martin D.-1967 A.B., Boston College D'Andrea, Donato A.-1968 A.B., Boston College A.B., Brandeis University Clinton, Thomas E.- 1968 A.B., Brown University Audet, Paul R.-1968 Bradbury, Peter W.-1968 A.B., Boston College deAbreau, Orlando F.- 1966 A.B., Brandeis University A.B., Tufts University Coen, Cary J.-1968 A.B., Stonehill College Baird, Stokes A., IV-1968 Brandt, George W., Jr.-1968 A.B., Colgate University Dean, James J.-1966 B.S., A.B., Franklin & Marshall College Cohen, David M.-1967 A.B., Manhattan College Bagileo, John R.-1966 Brandt, John M.-1966 A.B., Bowdoin College Delahunt, William D.-1967 B.S., Georgetown University B.S., Pennsylvania State University Cohen, Mark L.-1966 A.B. , Middlebury College Baker, John M.- 1967 Brereton, Michael F.- 1966 A.B., Syracuse Deland, Michael R.- 1968 A.B., John Carroll University New Ross Tech., Commerce (Ireland) Cohen, Ralph S.-1968 A.B., Harvard College llalanoff, Michael J.- 1967 Bmckleman, Michael D.-1966 A.B., University of Massachusetts DeMarco, Anthony J.- 1967 A.B., Tufts University A.B., Cornell Colannino, Francis X.-1967 A.B., Princeton University Barber, Oliver H., Jr.-1968 Brown, George W.-1966 A.B ., Brandeis University DeRosa, John B.-1966 A.B., Bellarmine College A.B., College of the Holy Cross Cole, Richard K.-1968 B.S., College of the Holy Cross Beale, Stephen P.-1967 Budd, Ruth R ., Mrs.-1967 A.B., Providence College Desiderio, Robert J.- 1966 A.B., Bowdoin College A.B., Smith College; M.A.T. Harvard Coleman, Michael J.-1967 B.S., St. Joseph's College Beatty, Paul F.-1966 Univ. B.S., University of Pennsylvania Collins, Edward J., Jr.- 1968 DeStefano, Ralph J.- 1967 A.B., Harvard College; B.S., New Eng. Burford, Kendall-1967 B.S., State Teachers College at Salem A.B., Colby College B.S.B.A., Boston College Col. of Pharm. Devin, Robert L.- 1966 Benjamin, Thomas B.-1968 Burke, John F.- 1966 Colopy, Robert H.-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., Harvard College A.B., and M.Ed., Boston College B.S., College of the Holy Cross Berger, Alan J.-1968 Burt, Janet B., Mrs.-1966 Concemi, Samuel J.-1966 DiAdamo, Carmine W .-1966 A.B., University of Michigan B.S., Fitchburg State College B.B.A., University of Massachusetts A.B., Colgate U niversity DiVito, Pasquale F.-1968 Foley, Paul J.-1 968 Greco, R a lph R .-1966 Jasse, Andre C., Jr.-1966 Bach. of Architecture, Univ. of B.S ., Boston College B.S., Providence College B.S., Georgia Institute of Tech. Notre Dame Ford, Patrick M.-1968 G reenwald, Evelyn, Mrs.-1968 Jo nes, Joseph E., III-1968 Doherty, George M.-1966 A.B., Creighton University B.F.A., Carnegie Institute of Tech. A.B., Brown B.S., Boston College Friedman, Kidders H . -1967 Griffin, Richard A.-1968 jorling, Thomas C.-1966 Doherty, James N.-1968 B.S., University of Pennsylvania A.B., Northeastern Unive rsity B.S., University of Notre Dame B.S., Boston College Frisoli, Leonard M.-1 968 Grimes, Peter 0.- 1968 .J oyce, John J.-1968 Doherty, Will iam A., Jr.-1966 B.S. , Boston College A.B. , Providence College A.B., Boston College A.B., Boston College Gadbois, .James J.-1 968 Grindle, Steven H.-1967 Kachinsky, Joel E.-1968 Dohoney, James P.-1966 A.B ., Boston College A.B., Brown University B.S., Tufts University A.B., College of the Holy C ross Galluzzo, Robert M.-1967 Guiney, Cornelius J. , III-1968 Kalib, David L.-1966 Dona hue, John E.-1968 B.B.A., Manhattan College A.B., Harvard College A.B., Suffolk Universi·ty A.B., Harvard College Gamerman, Berel R .-1968 Gundersen, Robert F., Jr.-1968 Kaplan, Arnold S.-1968 Donnelly, William G.-1968 A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., B oston College A.B. , University of Massachusetts A.B., Manhattan College Ganem, Joseph J .-1967 Hall, Joseph M.-1967 Kaplan, William S.-1968 Donovan, John A.- 1 966 A.B., Boston University A.B., Providence College A.B., University of R o chester A.B ., W illiams Coll ege Gans, .Jason Y.- 1 968 Hallisey, Dennis L.-1968 Kapstein, Jeremy A.-1968 Donovan, Paul M.-1967 A.B., University of Michigan A.B., Boston College A.B. , Harvard College B.S. , LeMoyne College Garrigle, William A.-1966 Hamel, Paul G.-1967 Kargman, William M.-1967 Dooley, .John A., III-1968 B.S., LaSalle College A.B., Seminaire de Joliette A.B., Harvard; ]o.J.B.A., Columbia Univ. B.S.E.E., Union College Garvey, David T .-1967 Hampers, Lavonne J., Mrs.-1967 Kaschub, William J .-1968 Downes, Robert B.-1968 B.A.A., Siena College Indiana University & Northwestern A.B., Bowdoin B.S., St. Vincent College Geller, George H .-1968 Hannon, David F.-1968 Kates, Robert J. -1967 Drake, Harold M., Jr.-1966 A.B. , Harvard College A.B., H a rvard College B.S.B.A., Babson Institute A.B., Tufts University Gibbons, William J.-1967 Heller, Linda-1967 Katz, Lawren"e A.-1967 Dulong, Harold C.-1968 B.S., State College at Boston A.B., Brandeis University A.B., Harvard College A.B., Boston University Gill , John G., Jr.-1966 Henderson, Donald F.-1967 Kaufmann, John W .-1966 Du vall, Mich ael G.-1968 A.B., Catholic University A.B. , Tufts University A.B., Brown A.B. and M.A., Boston University Gillespie, Roxani, Mrs.-1 967 Hershenson, Frank J.-1968 Kehoe, Joseph M., Jr.-1968 Eaton, Donald E.-1967 Athens University, Greece A.B., Dartmouth College A.B., University of Scranton A.B., University of Vermont Giuffre, William J.-1968 H icks, William F.-1968 Kelleher, Daniel H . -1967 Ea ton, Laurence D.-1 967 B.S., Boston College A.B., Harvard College A.B., Harvard College A.B., Cornell University Glynn, Theodore A.-1967 Higgins, George V .-1967 Kelley, John A.-1967 Engstrom, Robert C.-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., Boston College; M.A., Stanford A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., University of Pennsylvania Gold, Paula W., Mrs.-1967 Univ. Kelly, John F.-1968 Esc helbacher, Michael J.-1 968 B.S., Boston University Hilgendorf£, Hugo A., III-1966 A.B., Harvard College A.B., Brandeis University Goldberg, Alan S .-1967 A.B., Princeton University Kelly, Walter F.-1968 Falla, .James M.-1 966 A.B., Brooklyn Colle ge Hines, John H ., Jr.-1966 A.B., College of the Holy Cross A.B. , Boston College Goldberg, Joseph-1968 B. Ed., R hode Is land College Kenney, Michael T .-1968 Farese, Alfred P., Jr.-1 966 A.B., Trinity College (Conn.) Hogan, Francis G.-1968 A.B. , Loyola University B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst. Goldberg, Michae l L.-1966 A.B., St. John Fisher Kent, R ichard E.-1968 Farrell, Brian J.- 1966 A.B., University of Vermont Holland, Edward J., Jr.-1968 University of Chicago B.S ., Villanova University Goldenberg, Stephen B.-1 967 A.B., Rockhurst College Kenyon, Barry F.-1967 Farrell , G erald E.-1966 A.B., Kenyon College Holland, Raymond C., Jr.-1968 A.B., Siena College A.B., Boston College Goldman, Alan J.-1966 A.B., Providence College Kershaw, John W.-1966 Feinberg, Michael A.-1968 A.B., Colgate University Houpis, George-1968 B.S., College of the Holy C ross A.B., Boston University Goodman, Michael E.-1968 A.B., Yale University Klein, James H.-1967 Feldstein, Edward D.-1 967 B.S .B.A., Georgetown University Howard, Richard A.-1966 A.B., University of Pennsylvania A.B., Providence College Goodrich, Paul W.-1968 A.B., Brown University Kohler, Rainer M.-1967 Finn, John M.-1966 A.B., Georgetown University Hren, G regory-1 968 A.B., Georgetown Univ.; LL.B., Goethe A.B., Georgetown University Goodstein, Gerald L.-1968 B.E.E., Marquette University Univ., Germany Finnegan, Paul W.-1966 A.B., Brandeis Unive rsity Huestis, Amy E.-1966 Komroff, Lynn G., Miss-1968 A.B., College of the Holy Cross Goonan, John J .-1966 A.B., Regis College A.B., Smith College Fitzgerald, Frederick F.-1966 A.B., Boston College Humphreys, Charles J.-1966 Korff, Joseph M.-1968 ·A.B., Boston College Goot zit, Robert D.-1967 A.B., Boston College A.B., Brandeis University A.B., Boston University Fitzpatrick, Peter A,- 1968 Hunt, Neal E.-1968 Kotarba, Richard G.-1966 Gothreau, Michael J.-1968 A.B., Brandeis University A.B., Boston College A.B. , J ohn Carroll University A.B., Unive rsity of New Hampshire Jabbour, Ralph J.-1966 Kozodoy, David E.-1966 Flaharty, John J., III-1968 Gouin, Raymond P.-1966 B.S., St. Peter's College B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute A.B., Xavier University A.B., Kenyon College Flah erty, Ruth W.-1968 Grady, Thomas J.-1966 Jackson, Roger A.-1966 Krenzer, Cyril A.-1966 A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., Providence College A.B., Wheeling College A.B. and B.S., University of Rochester Fly nn, Paul P.-1967 Grandberg, Martin G.-1968 Janas, John A.-1966 Krumsiek, James B.-1967 B.S., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Dartmouth College A.B., Boston College A.B., Amherst College -

Kuhl, Robert W.-1968 Maher, Paul R .-1968 McLaughlin, David A.- 1968 O'Brien, Francis-1968 B.S. , Xavier University A.B., Marist College A.B., Boston College A.B., Yale University Kulak, Daniel B.-1967 Maio, F. Anthony-1968 McLaughlin, Hugh J.-1968 O'Brien, Robert M.-1968 B.B.A., University of Notre Dame M.E., Stevens Institute of Technology B.S., Boston College B.S. , Boston College Lamport, Allan H.-1968 Malandrino, Joseph P., Jr.-1968 McLean, Lionel D.- 1966 O ' Connell, Patricia M.-1967 A.B., Cornell; M.B.A., Columbia Univ. A.B., The Citadel A.B., Harvard College A.B., Manhattanville College Lareau, Norman P.-1968 Marcellino, James J .-196 8 McLoughlin, Frederick J., Jr.-1966 O'Connor, Charles P.-1966 A.B., Boston College B.S ., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Stonehill College B.S., College of the Holy Cross Larsen, Darrell W.-1968 Marquet, Thomas M.-1966 McPartlin, Edward P.- 1966 O'Connor, Donald T.-1966 B.S., Stanford University B.S., Manhattan College A.B., Boston College B.S., University of Buffalo LaTanzi, Thomas A.-1967 Martin, Edward R.-1968 Medverd, Richard L.-1967 O'Neil, Michael D.-1968 A.B., Brown University A.B., St. Peter's College A.B., Tufts University B.S.B .A., Babson Institute Lawler, Robert A.-1967 Martin, James F.-1968 Meisenzahl, Stuart B.-1966 O'Neill, Elizabeth C.-1968 B.S.B.A., Boston College A.B., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Boston College A.B., George Washington University Lawlor, James J.-1967 Masarik, Albert E.-1968 Merski, Leonard J.-1968 Os trowsky, Steven D.-1967 A.B., Fairfield University A.B., LaSalle College A.B., Harvard College A.B., University of Virginia Lawrence, Peter Thomas-1968 Masnik, Peter L.-1966 Michaelson, Martin R .-1968 Paris, Michael A.-1968 B.S., College of the Holy Cross A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., University of Chicago A.B., University of Massachusetts Leahey, George B.-1966 Mason, Arthur D.-1966 Mills, Charles G., IV-1967 Parish, David F.-1968 A.B., Georgetown University B.S., Cornell University A.B. , Yale University A.B., Colby College LeBovidge, Alan L.-1967 Mason, John L.-1968 Mills, David A.-1967 Parks, Robert G.-1966 A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., Boston College B.S., Boston College B.S., Boston College Leen, Thomas L.- 1966 Maxham, Lawrence A.-1966 Moloney, Kevin F.-1966 Pashman, Louis-1967 A.B., Brandeis University B.S.E.E., Tufts University A.B., Harvard College A.B., Colgate University Leicester, Mark-1967 May, Thomas J .-1966 Mane, Charles K.-1968 Peltonen, John E.-1967 A.B., University of California, B.S., Boston College A.B., Georgetown University A.B., Dartmouth College Los Angeles May, William L.-1967 Mone, Michael E.-1967 Perry, Donald R.-1967 Lemega, John W . -1968 B.S.C.E., Cornell University A.B., Middlebury College A.B., Providence. College A.B. , Trinity College (Conn.) Mazzeo, Frank R., Jr.-1966 Montanari, Gerald J.-1967 Peters, Michael-1968 Lenz, Edward A.-1967 A.B., Providence College A.B., Boston University A.B., Brown University A.B., Bucknell University McAleer, James F.-1968 Morales, Conchita F.-1966 Petruccelli, Gerald F., Jr.-1967 Lenz, Frederick S., Jr.-1967 A.B., Providence College A.B., Trinity College (Washington, A.B., Boston College A.B., Providence College McBride, Edmund F., Jr.-1966 D . C.) Piazza, Edward F.-1966 Leonard, John S.-1968 A.B., St. Michael's College Moran, John M.- 1966 B.S., Fordham University B.S., Boston College McCarthy, Charles C.-1967 B.S. , Bo ston College Pickman, Mary D.-1968 Levenson, David J.-1968 A.B. , and M.A., University of Notre Morrissette, Peter J .-1968 A.B., Radcliffe College A.B., Brandeis University Dame A.B., Dartmouth College Piker, Richard E.-1967 Levine, David I.-1966 McCarthy, Jerome F.-1966 Moynihan, David S.-1967 A.B., University of Notre Dame A.B., Cornell University B.S., Boston College B.S. , College of the Holy Cross Plotkin, Samuel S.-1968 Lewenberg, Stephen S.-1968 McCarthy, Robert E.-1967 Mullahy, John M.-1967 A.B., University of Vermont B.S ., Cornell University B.S., United States Military Academy A.B., Boston College Posner, Jack N.-1968 Linscott, Eric F.-1968 McConchie, James H .- 1968 Mullen, James J.- 1968 A.B., Bucknell University A.B., Boston University A.B., Colby College, M.B.A., Amos A.B., Providence College Pothier, Robert-1966 Lipton, David M.-1966 Tuck School Murphy, Brian D.-1966 A.B., Merrimack College A.B., University of Massachusetts McCormack, William A., Jr.-1967 A.B., Yale University Pavich, Michael E.-1968 Lloyd, Crystal J.-1966 A.B., Boston College Murphy, D a vid L., Jr.-1967 A.B., Harvard College A.B., Northeastern University McCormick, Lawrence E.-1968 A.B., Dartmouth College Price, David L.-1966 Long, William A.- 1967 B.B.A., University of Mass. Murphy, John D.-1968 A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B. , Xavier University; M. B.A., McCullough, John C.-1966 A.B., Georgetown University Pritzker, M. Frederick-1966 University of Pennsylvania A.B., University of Notre Dame Murphy, John F., Jr.-1967 A.B., Yale University Lovett, John R.-1967 McCusker, Thomas P., Jr.-1966 A.B., Dartmouth College Prunier, Gerald R.-1967 A.B., Boston College A.B., Stonehill College Murphy, Paul G.- 1968 A.B., College of the Holy Cross Lucid, Albert R.-1966 McDermott, Brian E.-1968 A.B ., University of Notre Dame Pyne, David W.-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., Boston College Murphy, Thomas E.-1966 B.S., Boston College Lucid, Rowland V., Jr.-1967 McDermott, Frank V., Jr.-1966 A.B ., St. John's Seminar; Raymond, Douglas F.- 1966 B.S., St. Peter's College A.B., Boston College Myerson, Peter P.-1966 B.S., Tulane University Lukis, Joseph P.- McDonald, James A., Jr.-1967 1967 A.B., University of Michigan Reed, Robert L.-1968 A.B., Boston College B.S .B. A., Boston College A.B., Colgate University Newman, Andrew J.-1968 Lundregan, William J.-1967 McDonnell, Matthew J .-1966 Regan, Robert S., Jr.-1967 A.B., Cornell University B.S., Boston College A.B., Boston College B.S.B.A., Boston College Lynaugh, Thomas J.-1968 McFeely, John F.-1968 Nerstrand, Hans P. -1966 Reid, John J.-1968 A.B., Manhattan College A.B., Manhattan College A.B., Dartmouth College A.B., Clark University MacDougall, Joseph W.-1 968 McGuirk, John K.-1966 Northrup, Donald W . -1966 Reidy, Charles P.-1967 A.B., Boston College A.B., Manhattan College A.B., Tufts University A.B., Providence College Richardson, Bruce E.-1966 Sheehy, William K.-1966 B.S.B.A., Boston College Weber, Don N.-1966 B.S., Newark College of Engineering A.B., Harvard College Taylor, Thomas H., III-1968 A.B., Indiana University Richmond, Paul J.-1968 Shenker, Ronald E.-1968 A.B., American International College Welch, Robert W.-1966 B.S., California St>te Polytechnic College A.B., University of Notre Dame Teaff, Robert F.-1968 A.B., Boston College Roberts, Dennis J., II-1966 Shepard Alan P.-1968 A.B., Bellarmine College Welch, Thomas A.-1966 A.B., Fordham University A.B., Dartmouth College Teagan, Robert L.-1967 B.S., Boston College, M.B.A., University Roberts, Herbert F.-1966 Sherbakoff, Jeffry A.-1968 A.B., Boston University of Pittsburgh A.B., Florida State University B.S., Tufts University Theodore, George S.-1966 Weisman, Lawrence C.-1968 Rogers, Peter N.-1967 Shillaber, Charles R.-1966 A.B., Boston University A.B., Harvard College A.B., Hobart College B.S., University of New Hampshire Thoms, Peter W.-1968 Welburn, Alfred T.-1968 Rogers, Wilson D.-1966 Sidor, Walter ]., Jr.-1968 A.B., Williams College A.B., Boston College A.B., Boston College A.B., Trinity College () Tishler, Gerald P.-1966 Wellman, Peter J.-1968 Rohan, William E.-1968 Silva, Robert M.-1966 A.B., University of Michigan A.B., Loyola University A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., Providence College Tobin, Jane E.-1967 Wenners, Vincent A.-1967 Rohman, William J.-1968 Skerry, David P.-1968 A.B., Manhattanville College A.B., St. Anselm's College A.B., Seton Hall University B.S.B.A., Boston University Tobin, Robert D.-1968 Whiteman, Steven H.-1968 Rcllins, William R.-1968 Slotnick, Helen-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., St. Vincent College A.B., University of Pennsylvania A.B., Smith College Trost, Timothy J.-1967 Wickham, Richard J.-1968 Rosenfeld, Arnold R.-1967 Smith, C. Charles-1966 B.S., Canisius College B.S., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Bowdoin College A.B., Union College Troyer, Terence M.-1967 Wiener, Arthur G.-1968 Rosenthal, Barry E.-1966 Smith, Dennis J.-1968 B.S., Boston College A.B., Adelphi University A.B., Colgate University A.B., Brandeis University Tucker, Bruce G.-1966 Williams, Fred B.-1966 Rougeau, Richard N .-1967 Smith, Mercedes-1967 B.B.A., University of Massachusetts A.B., Georgetown University A.B., Boston College A.B., Smith College Twomey, David P.-1968 Winer, David M.-1968 Rozes, Arthur S.-1966 Soble, Richard A.-1968 B.S., Boston College, M.B.A., University A.B., University of Rochester A.B., Tufts University A.B., University of Massachusetts of Massachusetts Woll, Jeffrey W.-1968 Rudy, Michael H.-1967 Somers, Jeffrey P.-1968 Unsino, Stephen C.-1968 A.B., Boston University A.B., Adelphi University A.B., Boston College A.B., Fordham College Wood, Charles E.-1966 Russo, Anthony M., Jr.-1966 Sautter, Nicholas B.-1966 Uskevich, Robert J.-1967 A.B., Brandeis University A.B., New York University A.B., Harvard College B.B.A., Tulane University Wright, George J.-1968 Ryan, Joseph F.-1966 Spencer, Samuel B.-196 8 Vitagliano, Suzanne M.-1967 B.S., Boston College A.B., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Amherst College A.B., Wheaton College Young, Carl J.-1966 Ryan, William A., Jr.-1968 Staiti, Peter F.-1968 Vitiello, Philip A.-1967 B.S., Boston College A.B., Boston College A.B., Norwich University A.B., Boston College Zaiger, Richard D.-1967 Sacco, Daniel C.-1967 Starr, Enid M.-1967 Waite, C. Barry-1966 A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., Harvard College A.B. and M.T. Certificate, Radcliffe A.B ., Boston College Zimmerman, Mark E.-1966 Salis, Harry A.-1968 College Walsh, Frank M.-1968 A.B., American University A.B., St. John Fisher College Statsky, William P.-1967 A.B., College of the Holy Cross Sawyer, Charles F.-1968 A.B., Boston College Watz, James H.-1966 Zimmermann, Robert-1967 A.B., Yale University Stearns, Barbara-1966 B.S., Canisius College A.B., Trinity College (Connecticut) Schlenker, Dennis B.-1968 Boston University Wayne, Howard J.-1966 Ziter, Michael P.-1968 A.B., University of Pennsylvania Stein, Stanley R.-1967 A.B., University of Massachusetts A.B., Colby College Schmit, James N.-1966 A.B., Boston University B.S., Canisius College Stephens, Mary A.-1968 Schneider, Jon Dale--1968 A.B., College of Saint Rose B.S., Boston College Sullivan, Albert W.-1968 Sears, Samuel P.-1968 A.B., Boston College A.B., Harvard College Sullivan, Charles W.-1967 Sgarzi, Louis A.-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., Brown University Sullivan, David J.-1968 Shasha, Gilbert R.-1967 B.S., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Amherst College, M.A.T., Harvard Sullivan, Dennis M.-1968 University A.B., University of Massachusetts Shatz, Stephen A.-1967 Sullivan, Joseph F., Jr.-1968 A.B., Brandeis University A.B., Brown University Shaughnessy, John R ., Jr.-1968 Sullivan, Robert E.-1966 A.B., College of the Holy Cross A.B., Boston College Sullivan, Thomas F., Jr.-1966 Shaw, David M.-1968 A.B., College of ·the Holy Cross A.B., Tufts University Sullivan, Timothy J., Jr.-1966 Shea, Andrew F.-1966 A.B., Boston College A.B., Harvard College Sullivan, William C.-1968 Shea, Robert L.-1968 B.S., Boston College A.B., St. John's Seminary Sullivan, William T.-1968 INDEX THE AMERICAN JESUIT EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIATION Academic Calendar 7 Colleges and Universities in the United States Accreditation of the Law School ______9 conducted by the Society of Jesus Admission Procedure ______------15 Admission Requirements ______------1 5 ''-Boston College ______Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts Advanced Standing ____ ------1 5 Canisius College ______Buffalo, N. Y. Alumni Association ______------24 College of the Holy Cross ______Worcester, Massachusetts Annual Survey of Massachusetts Law ------22 ''"Creighton University ____ ------Omaha, Nebraska Auditors ------·------15 Fairfield University ______------Fairfield, Connecticut Board of Student Advisors ______------2 3 ''- Fordham University ______New York City, New York Boston, Proximity ------9 ''-Georgetown University ______Washington, District of Columbia Coif, Order of ______------20 ,,_Gonzaga University ------______~pokane, Washington Colleges and Universities Represented _ ------3 6 John Carroll University ______Cleveland, Ohio Continuing Legal Education ___ ------19 LeMoyne College ------Syracuse, New York Courses, Description ______------27 Loyola College ______------Baltimore, Maryland Degree Requirements ______------18 ''-Loyola University ______Chicago , Illinois Financial Aid ______------1 5 ''-Loyola University ______Los Angeles, California Grading System ______------17 ''- Loyola University ______New Orleans, Louisiana History of the Law School ------9 ''-Marquette University ______Milwaukee, Wisconsin Honors ------19 Regis College ______------Denver, Colorado Law Review ------20 Rockhurst College ______Kansas City, Missouri Law School Admission Test ______------15 Saint Joseph's College ______------Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Library, Thomas J. Kenny ------11 Saint Peter's College ______Jersey City, New Jersey Loans ______------1 5 Seattle University ------Seattle, Washington Location of the Law School ------9 Spring Hill College ______------Spring Hill, Alabama Moot Court, Grimes Competition ______------23 ''-University of Detroit ______Detroit, Michigan Moot Court, National Competition . __ ------23 ''-University of St. Louis ______St. Louis, Missouri National Moot Court Competition ------23 ''"University of San Francisco ______San Francisco, California Placement Service ______------24 ''-University of Santa Clara ______Santa Clara, California Pre-legal Studies ______------14 University of Scranton ______Scranton, Pennsylvania Program of Instruction ______------2 6 Wheeling College ______Wheeling, West Virginia Refund of Tuition ______------19 Woodstock College ------Woodstock, Maryland Registration ______------17 Xavier University ______Cincinnati, Ohio Reinstatement ______------18 Saint Thomas More Hall ______------9 ''" The thirteen universities marked above Scholarships ______. . ------. ------1 5 with an asterisk conduct schools of law. School Newspaper ______------22 Student Activities ______------2 0 Student Bar Association ------2 0 Sui Juris, School Newspaper ____ _ ------22 Tuition ______------19 Uniform Commercial Code Coordinator ------22 University History and Accreditation ------8 Withdrawal from School ______------19 ACADEMIC DEANS

REV. CHARLES M. CROWLEY, S.J., A.M., M.S., Dean The Evening College of Arts, Sciences and Business Administration REv. JosEPH A. DEVENNY, S.]., Ph.D ., Dean The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences REv. CHARLEs F. DoNOVAN, S.J., Ph.D., Dean The School of Education REv. RoBERT F. DRINAN, S.J., LL.M., S.T.L., Dean The Law School REv. JoHN V. DRISCOLL, S.J., Ph.D., Dean The School of Social Work REv. RoBERT F. HoEY, S.J., A.M., Director The Summer Session

REv. ALFRED J. ]oLSON, S.J., M.B.A., S.T.L., Associate Dean The College of Business Administration REv. W . SEAVEY JoYcE, S.J., Ph.D., Dean The Graduate School of Business Administra•tion and The College of Business Administration RITA P. KELLEHER, R.N., M.Ed., Dean The School of Nursing FRANCIS J. LARKIN, B.S., LL.M., Associate Dean The Law School VINCENT C. Nuccro, D.Ed., Associate Dean The School of Education REv. REGINALD F. O'NEILL, S.J., Ph.D., Dean The School of Philosophy, Weston REv. JoHN P. RocK, S.J., Ph.D., Director The Institute of Adult Education REv. PATRICK A. SuLLIVAN, S.J., Ph.D., Dean The School of Liberal Arts, Lenox JoHN E. VAN TASSEL, ]R., Ph.D., Associate Dean The Graduate School of Business Administration REv. JoHN ]. WALSH, S.J., S.T.D., Dean The School of Theology, Weston REv. JoHN R. WILLIS, S.J., Ph.D ., Dean The College of Arts and Sciences

I' ') ~~ '- 1 I I