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1-1-1953 The Redwood, 1952-1953 Santa Clara University

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Foreword

It is in the hope of achieving a very basic and clear

order that 1953's Redivood is presented as it is. Primarily,

the measure of its projected success will be its capacity to

serve as a candid chronicle of the year's events.

To adhere to a rigid theme is to limit and to channel —

often too narrowly — the minds and hands of available talent.

Rather than confine poetry and photography, artist and writer,

to a single limiting subject, brush and pen were given

creative freedom.

The seed has been sown, the roots have taken hold, the

stalk has shot up, the Redwood has emerged — simple but

stately — presenting Santa Clara's September to June record: a

perennial account written of the past, read in the present,

and remembered in the future. Dedication

To the sport that began at Santa Clara in 1902 with

a meek five-game schedule, to the sport that for fifty years

thereafter provided indelible souvenirs of publicity,

including two popular and profitable Sugar Bowl triumphs

(1937 and 1938), and still another

lucrative victory in the Orange Bowl (1950) ; to the sport, however,

whose practicability can no longer match its popularity;

to football — to the passing of it from the

Santa Clara scene — is this 1953 Redwood dedicated. Table of Contents

Academics

University Administration 8-21

Student Administration 22-24

Classes :. 25-77

Law _ 78-84

Activities

Engineering Groups 87-89

Organizations 90-112

Contest Winners 113

Publications ___ 114-120

R.O.T.C 121-130

Athletics

Athletic Committees 134-135

Athletic Staff _ _ 136-137 iuM^:lJ^'i.>i^k^. -V Football 138-151 ..... 152-167

Baseball 168-174

Minor Sports 175-179

Intramural Sports 180-186

Advertising

Acknowledgements 189

Advertisements 190-205

Patrons 206-208

/ Beginning

In this Shadow of Seven Hills The fragment valley green With Slimmer spills A gardened spreading scene, An all-hued sheen

Of reborn earthly light, Vibrant, reigning, yet serene;

But this quiet moment spend Before the shrine Of Joseph, patron, blessed friend, Here to resign The future to his foster-Child,

Hopeful, reconciled ...

Our Mission Garden, a valley's heart. The vanished days Remembered — Fall, the start, New friends, new ways — The seeming endless maze

Of books ... the sports, dances .. . Long hours

Near Chapel .. . Life's golden rays

On time to light our Garden's flowers ... -w \ ':'^'

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Administration Rev. Herman J. Haiick, S.J. Salute to the Graduates of '53

Informally here on this page of The Redwood, in echo of much we have discussed before, I take occasion to commend you for garlands the world may never know you carry, for a victory the world may never applaud you for winning.

"It's funny," we say, when we mean to say "it's sad." It's funny how one can never explain to otliers the meaning of the greatest hours of one's life; it's funny how futile are words to tell of those hours. It is fumiy even how little those momentous hours seem to show on the surface of.one's life. And yet they were our realest hours.

The Battle of the Books is over. Yoti have won and the Books are yours. You are a college graduate.

Who can describe what this means, and who can tell when it happened? It was, I would say, like a shell breaking or a cocoon cut away, or like coming up through water into gasping air— it was like anything in which a new life, a completely different life, is born. And the past, the former life seems an alien thing, a life that never could have been yours —because now you are so different.

I shall not here try to map it out even briefly, shall not tr)' to say what the Philosophy did to you, when the Literature first spoke to you, how the History shaped you, what the Theology formed in you, how the Political Science meshed into your mind, what the Physical Sciences revealed to you, how the Economics and Engineering and Law added to you. But I tliink you rea lize now how truly Newman spoke when he said "Educa- tion is a high word."

And now you see and from these heights. And you can never be a child again, the same again. For now you are a man. For the magnificence and the vastness of God's creation has been unfolded in all its complexity and yet in all its simplicity before you — and you are educated. And as you turn from your college days you realize with humbleness and pity the truth of the

words : "The fool sees not tlie same tree that the wise man sees" — and you realize that trudi holds for seeing anything in life.

For that Victory, for your long labors towards and finally catching up with that Vision, for the "wotmds" endured, for the silent hours of study and for the inches of stature you have added to your soul — our commendation. And our thanks! Our

world is now a better place .. . because of you. God now go with you, and you with God Who has need of you by His generosity.

Sincerely,

Rev. Herman J, Hauck, S.J. REV. JOHN M. HYNES, SJ. Academic Vice-President

REV. JAMES A. KING, S.J. MR. O. ROBERT ANDERSON, A.B. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Acting Dean of the College of Business Administration REV. RAYMOND J. KELLEY, S.J. Vice-President in Charge of Student Affairs

MR, GEORGE L. SULLIVAN, PH,D. MR. EDWIN J, OWENS, LL.B. Dean of the College of Engineering Dean of the College of Law REV. JOHN COSGRAVE, S.J. Minister

REV. CHARLES GUENTHER, S.J. Director of Purchasing

REV. ERNEST WATSON, S.J. Treasurer MR. DAVID ARATA Registror

Administration

REV. ROGER McAUlIFFE. S.J. REV. JOSEPH MARTIN. S.J. Chaplain Alumni Director

REV. HENRY WALSH, S.J. ^ Curator MR. VIC STEFAN Alumni Secretary MR. GENE PERRY Publicity Director

REV. EDWARD BOLAND, S.J. Librarian Faculty

AIKEN, H., B.S., M.S. Engineering

ALLEN, P. N., A.B., C.P.A. Business Administration

ANDREWS, J. D., S.F.C. Military Science and Tactics

AUSTIN, F. D., M/Sgt. Military Science

BACIGALUPI, E. M., S.J., M.A., Ph.D. Physics

BEAVER, J. T. Jr.. Cpt. Militory Science

BECCHETTI, J. M., A.B., LL.B. Business Law

BEILHARZ, E. A., A.B., M.A., Ph.D. History, Political Science

BIRD, T. S., S.I., A.B. Latin, Greek

BOLTON, L. L., B.A. , M.A. , Ph.D. Biology

BOURET, J. E., A.B., M.A. History

BROWN, J. E., B.S.. M.S., Ph.D. Education

13 CAMPBELL, D. R., A.B. Mathematics

CARTER, W. A., B.S. Chemistry

COLLINS, J. E., A.B. Economics

COPELAND, R. F., S.J., Ph.D. History

CORCORAN, A, C, S.I., Ph.D. Philosophy

CROWLEY, W. H., S.J., M.A. Philosophy

DECK, J. F., Ph.D. Chemistry

DONAVAN, H. C, S.J., M.A, Religion

DONOHOE, P. J., S.I., Ph.D. Political Science

EARLEY, S. B., S.J., M.A. Religion, Philosophy

FAGOTHEY, A. J., S.J., M.A. Philosophy

FEERICK, R. I„ B.S. Director of Basketball, Physical Education

FLAIM, F. R., A.B. Biology

FLUMIANI, C. M., Ph.D. Political Science

FLYNN, E. C, M.S. Engineering

14 GALLAGHER, R. F., M.A. Director oi Football

GEARY. I. M., S.J., M.A. Greek, Latin

GLAVINA, M. C, A.B. German ^S9/////Ma

HEENAN, D. A., A.B. Director of Athletics

HERMES, R. M., Ph.D.

Director of Bureau of Research

HUBBARD, B. R., S.J., M.A. Geology

LOFTUS, R. L., S.I., B.A. English

LOFTUS, W. I., B.A. Bursar

KAMALSKI, E. I., Sgt. Isl cl Military Science

KEARNEY, P. J., Cpt. Military Science and Tactics

MARKEY, J. J., S.J., M.A. Religion

MARTIN, I. L., S.J., M.A. Religion

McAULIFFE, R. A., S.J., M.A. Religion Student's Chaplain

McDonald, g. e., a.b. English

McFADDEN, E. a., S.I., M.A. Assistant Student's Chaplain

15 McLARNEY, W. A., M.A. Engineering

MONASTA, I. F. X., M.B.A. Business Administration

MERRYMAN, J. H., LL.M. Law

MURRAY, R. I., M.S. Engineering

NAU, A. L., Ph.D. Engineering

NETTESHEIM, H. P., B.S. Engineering

NILAND, E. J. Ir., LL.B. Law

O'CONNELL, J. P., S.I.. M.A. Religion, English

OLIVIERI, U. A., LL.D. Italian

O'SULLIVAN, C. M., S.J., Ph.D. Chemistry

PEFLEY, R. K., M.S. Engineering

PLEHN, B. A., M.S. Engineering

POCIASK, I. L., S.I., M.A. English

RANNEY. D. J., M.A. English, Public Speaking

RANSFORD, J. E., S.J., M.A. Chemistry

16 REEDY, W. W„ Sgt. Military Science

ROBERTS, R. J., S.J., M.A. Political Science

SCOTT,P.T.,Lt.CoI. Military Science

SCARRY, M. M. S., B.S. Assistant Football Director

SCHMIDT, R. M., S.J., Ph.D. English

SCHMIDT, W. E., S.J., M.A. Religion

SCHMIDT, H. A., B.A. Athletic Trainer

SCHONLAND, H. E., B.S. Mathematics

SHEA, P. E., Col. Military Science and Tactics

SHIPSEY, E. A., S.I., Litt.D. English

SNOW, B. J., LL.B. law

SPIELER, F. I., S.J., M.A. Physics

SWAN, L. W., Ph.D. Biology

SWEETERS, J. E., S.J., M.A. Philosophy

TAHENY, T. T., S.I., A.B. English TAPAY, H. M., M.S. Engineering

ULINSKI, E. F., B.A. Assistant Football Director

VAN PERRE, C, B.A. French

VARI, V.B., A.B.

, Spanish

WADE, J. E., Ph.D. English

WASEL, A. D., M-Ed. Mathematics

WILHELMSEN, F. D., M.A. Philosophy

ROSS, J. T., Moj. Military Science

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^ri jTsii^ drtii }Auie»vK. ^re^i&i^ Student Government

BILL MARINOVICH BILL PAYNE Secretary Sergeant-at-Arms

22 Student Council

More than merely following the precedents of previous administra- tions, 1953's Student Government

displayed unusual initiative. First, an effective Student Advisory Board indoctrinated rather than initiated

Freshmen. Then too, the Student Government could take credit for sponsoring a hest-ever Intramural Sports Program, and for guiding an efficient, increasingly important Rally Committee. But most signif-

icant of all, a new A.S.U.S.C. Consti- tution was drafted—the final stroke of an imaginative, prolific, political brush.

BACK ROW, left to right: Dick Jonsen, John Vasconcellos, Carl Bosque, Bill Payne, Jack Trily, Gene Lynch. FRONT ROW: Don Johnson, Frank Morales, Pat Rogers, Jack Sauer, Bill Marinovich.

BACK ROW, left to right: Jack Sauer, Jim Lindquisl, Bill Murphy, Ed O'Brien, Al Mills. FRONT ROW: Tom Waugh, Dave Costanza, Ferd Hall, Jim Perry, Elmer Wood.

Student Advisory Board :

Faith

No, sir, I have not seen But somehow — are there flowers Roses, perhaps?

Somehow I sense them near.

As if beyond my reach, Yet near, some hovering vapor Faintly in the breeze,

Near, and I feel ... I feel they are

Indeed most beautiful . . .

So strange? .. . Your world to me Is a hidden garden, And your commonplace some dream, Rich azure hues O'er head, each warm

Red roses . . . these simple things Of which you speak I've never seen.

Though you have seen, and ... I wonder. Did you watch and wonder?

I wonder ... Did you watch

The colors deepen? ... Color, Formless, forming word ... Did you trace the change From whatever was to that

Which came? .. . For me

The signs are very few, A new sweet scent in the air, A substance Soft and smooth And different to my

touch. Hardly more, yet I feel, I feel, somehow. These are, indeed, most beautiful. Classes GENE LYNCH President

JIM ROCCA Vice President

DICK TROUT Ihh Secretary

DAVE SHLEMMER Sergeant-at-Arms

26 ABOITIZ Y MONTENEGRO, AGNELLO, JOSEPH AGUILAR, WILLIAM ALPHONSE, HAROLD ARON, JOHN GEORGE, B.S. ERNESTO ANTHONY, B.S.C. PATRICK, B.S.C. THOMAS, B.S. Madera, California Cebu City, Philippine Islands Monaco, Pennsylvania Palo Alto, California San Carlos, California Day Students Association Engineering Society B.A.A. B.A.A. International Relations Saber Society President, Camera Club Block S.C. Delta Sigma Pi Club Intramural Sports Ski Club Saber Society Saber Society Glee Club Nobili Club Captain, Soccer Team Managers' Association Day Students Association Day Students Association Clay M. Greene Student Congress Band Blackstone Society Intramural Sports Vice President, Junior Class

Class of 1953

AU, ROBERT H.C. BALISTRERI, LEO ANTHONY, BANDUCCI, DOMINIC BANISTER, RONALD H. BETTENCOURT, RAYMOND R. B.S. DANIEL, B.S. San Jose, California Eureka, California International Relations Day Students Association Club Nobili Club Day Students Association Block S.C. Tennis Managers' Association Saber Society Alpha Phi Omega Nobili Club Clay M. Greene

27 BI^S^ITTI, BRUNO ALFRED, BliiSETTI, EDO SANTO, B.S. BLAKE, ROBERT L. BOREILO, PIERINO JOSEPH, BOTTERO, FRANK B.S.C. Dallas, Texas B.S.C. LAWRENCE, B.S.C. Livermore, California Varsity Football Sunnyvale, California Monterey, California B.A.A. Block S.C. B.A.A. B.A.A. Intramural Sports Day Students Association Day Students Association Clay M. Greene Delta Sigma Pi Saber Society

Class of 1953

BOULGER, MJiRTIN G., B S. BRADY, WILLIAM J. BURTON, GEORGE H., JR. BUTLER, LEROY BERNARD, CAMPBELL, WILLIAM Los Angeles, California B.C.E. EVART, B.M.E. Basketball Los Angeles, California Santa Rosa, California Block S.C. Engineering Society Engineering Society International Relations A.S.C.E. A.S.M.E. Club Santa Clara Rifle Team Intramural Sports

28 CIAPPONI, ARTHUR CAPURRO, ADOLPH JOSEPH, CAPUTO, RICHARD P., B.S. CASSIMUS, RICHARD CAVALLINI, FRANK DOMENICO B.S. Gan Jose, California FRANCIS, B.E.E. RAYMOND, B.S.C. Oakland, California San Francisco, California President, Day Students Oakland, California Los Gatos, California B.A.A. Alpha Phi Omega Association Engineering Society B.A.A. Day Students Association Glee Club International Relations A.I.E.E. Day Students Association International Relations Club Sodality Club House Sanctuary Society Blackstone Society Delta Sigma PI Saber Society Blackstone Society House Nobili Club Clay M. Greene

Class of 1953

CECCHETTI, WILLIAM J., JR.. CHARGIN, JAMES EDWARD, CHRISTENSEN, NORMAN S. CODY, ROBERT MERVYN, COLES. JAMES A. B.S. B.S. B.S. Santa Clara, California San Jose, California San Jose, California Owl Treasurer, Mendel Society Basketball Santa Clara Nobili Club Mendel Society Nobili Club Day Students Association Sodality Day Students Association

29 ^kj^ CONMY, EDWARD ADAM, CONNELL, DANIEL FRANCIS, CONSTANTINO, THOMAS COSTANZA, DAVID JOSEPH COTRELL, ROBERT B.C.E. B.E.E. San Jose, California JEREMIAH San Leandro, California San Francisco, California President, Mendel Society Manteca, California Water Polo Team Amateur Radio Club Santa Clara International Relations Swimming Team KSCU House Club Engineering Society Glee Club Glee Club Saber Society A.S.C.E. Choir Day Students Association House Saber Society A.I.E.E. Nobili Club Redwood Alpha Phi Omega Engineering Society Student Advisory Board Santa Clara Boxing Clay M. Greene Intramural Sports Nobili Club Alpha Phi Omega Blackstone Society Fencing Club Passion Play Owl

Class of 1953

^ftii^i^ COTTA, RICHARD P. CRONIN, JOHN F. CROSBY, THOMAS CONWAY DALY, JOHN A. DAVIS, MATTHEW J. Bishop, California A.S.M.E. Engineering Society Sodality

30 de LANNOY, CLARENCE W., DEMPSEY, RAYMOND DERRY, EDWARD JOSEPH, DUFFY, WILLIAM THOMAS, EDDEN, FRANCIS EARL JR. JEROME, B.S. JR., B.S. JR., B.E.E. GEORGE, E.E. San Mateo, California Atherton, California Redv^ood City, California Rockville Centre, New York International Relations Intramural Sports Engineering Society Engineering Society Club Santa Clara Pi Delta Sigma Pi Delta Sigma Owl Alpha Phi Omega Alpha Sigma Nu Golf Team Saber Society Day Students Association Glee Club Day Students Association Mendel Society A.I.E.E. Student Bar Association

Class of 1953

EDWIN, HOWARD WARREN, EGAN, JOHN F. FAHEY, RUCHARD JAMES, FALCONE, DEWEY VICTOR, FEE, THOMAS J. B.S.C. B.S.C. B.S. Great Falls, Montana Los Angeles, California Hermosa Beach, California B.A.A. B.A.A. Block S.C. Day Students Association Delta Sigma Pi Football Alpha Phi Omega Santa Clara International Relations Camera Club Clay M. Greene Club Sodality Saber Society Passion Play

31 FELICE, BRUNO FLYNN, JOHN WILLIAM, FOSSELMAN, PETER FRANCIS, BEN CHARLES, FREDIANI, VICTOR JOHN, San Jose, Caliiornia B.C.E. BERNARD, B.S. B.S. JR., B.S. B.A.A. Sacramento, California Spreckels, California Avenal, California Sacramento, California Basketball Engineering Society House Secretary, Freshman Class Day Students Association A.S.C.E. Senate Sodality Football Saber Society Camera Club Sanctuary Society Redwood Edmund J. Young Writers President, Alpha Phi Omega Editor-in-Chief, Santa Clara Redwood Passion Play Rally Committee Blackstone Society NobiU Club Saber Society Thomist Club

Class of 1953

FREITAS, ROBERT B., B.M.E. FUNK, DONALD WALTER, GALANTINE, RAYMOND GALLAGHER, CHARLES E. GLEESON, ROBERT Honolulu, Hawaii B.S.C. MANUEL, B.M.E. FRANCIS, B.S. Engineering Society B.A.A. Santa Clara, California Chicago, Illinois A.S.M.E. Day Students Association A.S.M.E. Mendel Society Pi Delta Sigma Saber Society Engineering Society Block S.C. Intramural Sports Football Football Sodality Prefect Sanctuary Society Social Chairman ASUSC

32 GORDON, LOWELL THOMAS. GOULARTE, DANIEL D. GREGORY, MARVIN L.. GUGLIELMETTI, RICHARD HAMMOND, JOHN MARTIN B.S. B.C.E. JOHN, B.S.C. B.S. Los Altos, California Lawndale, California South San Francisco, San Marino, California Nobili Club Block S.C. California Santa Clara Passion Play Football B.A.A. Clay M. Greene Clay M. Greene A.S.C.E. Day Students Association Student Council Alpha Phi Omega Engineering Society Alpha Sigma Nu Rally Committee Delta Sigma Pi Boxing Delta Sigma Pi Day Students Association Santa Clara Sanctuary Society Saber Society International Relations Vice President, Sophomor Club Class Blackslone Society Intramural Sports B.A.A.

Class of 1953

HENDERSON, WILLIAM HERBER, JOHN CARROLL. HARE, FRANCIS W., B.A. HEGARTY, DANIEL McIVOR, HEMKER, THOMAS A. B.S.C. Spokane, Washington B.E.E. SHERMAN, B.C.S. Sacramento, California Port Blakely, Washington Football Belmont, California Saber Society B.A.A. B.A.A. Block S.C. Students' Association A.I.E.E. Basketball Day Water Polo Team Golf Team Intramural Chairman Ski Club

33 HEISEL, RICHARD LOUIS, HI3GINS, ROBERT JAMES, HILL, ROBERTO JOSE HONZEL, ANDREW JOHN, HORSTMANN, JOHN B.S.C. B.S.C. Santa Ana, El Salvador, C. A. B.S.C. ANTHONY, B.S. San Carlos, California Altadena, California B.A.A. Klamath Falls, Oregon San Francisco, California B.A.A. B.A.A. Soccer Team B.A.A. Nobili Club Day Students Association Intramural Sports International Relations Delta Sigma Pi Glee Club Delta Sigma Pi Club Ski Club Choir Tennis Intramural Sports Saber Society Blackstone Society Intramural Sports Football

Class of 1953

HURLEY, DEAN R., B.S. IGOE, JOHN BERNARD, JANDA, ANTON ROBERT, JORDAN, ROBERT S. JOYCE, THOMAS F. Bakersfield, California B.S.C. B.E.E. Boxing Brooklyn, Neiv York Carmel, California Clay M. Greene B.A.A. Sanctuary Society Dramatic Arts Contest Delta Sigma Pi Sodality Edmund J. Young Writers Alpha Phi Omega Santa Clara Tennis Passion Play Engineering Society Fencing Team A.LE.E. Owl Redwrood

34 KAHN, JULIUS III, B.S. KONa, VIVIAN, B.E.E. KANE, PAUL D., B.S.C. KAPLAN, JOHN L., B.S.C. KELLY, V/ILLIAM L., B.S.C. San Francisco, California Watsonville, California Santa Monica, California Tacoma, Washington Ski Club B.A.A. B.A.A. B.A.A.

Clay M. Greene i Saber Society Block S.C. Saber Society Alpha Phi Omega Day Students Association Football Day Students Association House Intramural Sports Santa Clara

Class of 1953

KILKENNY, ROBERT GARY Ka.!iE""EK, GILBERT U., JR., KUMP, CHARLES GALEN, KYBURT;, SAMUEL WILSON, LA"OMAHSINO, JAMES B.S.C. B.S.C. B.E.E. B.S.C. EDWARD Dixon, California Placentia, California San Mateo, California Placerville, California Sacramento, California B.A.A. B.A.A. Engineering Society B.A.A. House Student Advisory Board Saber Society A.I.E.E. Nobili Club Saber Society Day Students Association Radio Station KSCU International Relations Alpha Sigma Nu Basketball President, Amateur Radio Club Day Students Association Swimming Team Club Clay M. Greene Intramural Sports

35 LABKIN, MICHAEL MARTIN, LARKIN, DONALD J. LEWIS, MELVIN, B.A. LINDEGREN, JACK K. LINDQUIST, JAMES J. B.S. Santa Clara, California Wilton, California Alpha Phi Omega Football Block S.C. Rally Committee Football Nobili Club International Relations Club

Class of 1953

LITTMANN, DONALD F. LONGWELL, DOUGLAS R. LOUIS, DUANE JOHN, JR., LOVE, JAMES H. LUCAS, LOUIS B., B.S. B.S. San Jose, California Alameda, California Block S.C. Football Saber Society Baseball Baseball Block S.C. Sergeant-at-Arms, Student Advisory Board Freshman Class

36 LUZZI, ROBERT ERNEST, B.S. LYNCH, EUGENE FRANCIS, LYNCH, WALTER G. McCLELLEN, JOHN EDWARD McEVOY, RICHARD W. Healdsburg, California B.S. B.A.A. International Relations San Francisco, California Saber Society Club Football Delta Sigma Pi Nobili Club Block S.C. Block S.C. House Sodality Baseball Baseball Sanctuary Society Santa Clara International Relations Club

Class of 1953

McSHERRY, JOSEPH M. McENANEY, FRANCIS A., McNALLY, DANIEL J. McNAMARA, JOHN THOMAS, McMAHON, JOHN WILLIAM, B.S. B.S.C. B.S. Redding, California Merced, California Butte, Montana President, Alpha Sigma Nu B.A.A. Sodality Sodality Day Students Association Sanctuary Society President, Sophomore Class Delta Sigma Pi Mendel Society Secretary, ASUSC Treasurer, Junior Class Block S.C. Chairman, Student Football Football Advisory Board Rally Committee Alpha Sigma Nu House President, Junior Class Senate President, ASUSC Ryland Debate Clay M. Greene

37 ^»^< MALLEY, GEORGE P. MARDAHL, ANDERS MARCH, GERALD EUGENE, MARINOVICH, WILLIAM F., MARONICK, WILLIAM J., KRISTIAN, A.B. B.C.S. B.S. B.S.C. Weed, California San Francisco, California Watsonville, California Great Falls, Montana President, Freshman Class Redwood House B.A.A. News Editor, Santa Clara Blackstone Society Treasurer, ASUSC Sodality Editor, Owl B.A.A. Nobili Club Sanctuary Society NFCCS Senior Delegate Glee Club International Relations Rally Committee Chairman Sodality Prefect Club Secretary, Sophomore Alpha Sigma Nu Blackstone Society Class Blackstone Society Intramural Sports House Fencing Team Sanctuary Society Passion Play Edmund I. Young Writers Nobili Club Thomist Club Chowder and Marching Society Class of 1953

MARTIN, JOHN D., B.S. MASTERS, RICHARD FORD, MAUS, FRANK BRANDON, MAYLE, RAYMOND J., JR. MEECHAN, FRANCIS Minneapolis, Minnesota B.S. B.M.E. PATRICK, B.S.C. Editor, Redwood San Carlos, California Petaluma, California Payette, Idaho Sports Editor, Redwood Santa Clara Engineering Society B.A.A. Santa Clara Clay M. Greene A.S.M.E. Saber Society Rifle Team Baseball Student Advisory Board Passion Play Intramural Sports

38 MERRICK, JAY WILLIAM, MILLS, ALBERT, B.S. MIRCH, KENNETH M. MOBERG, RONALD L., B.C.S. MONDON, RICHARD M B.S. B.S.C. San Luis Obispo, California San Francisco, California Palo Alto, California Tacoma, Washington Senate B.A.A. Clay M. Greene B.A.A. House Block S.C. House Rally Committee Owl Baseball Senate Santa Clara Passion Play Student Advisory Board Santa Clara Radio Station KSCU Day Students Association Nobili Club Thomist Club Day Students Association Owl Boxing Nobili Club Blackstone Society

Class of 1953

^iL COVERT, m^R. MONROE, ROBERT EDWARD, MORALES, FRANK F., JR., MURPHY, PAUL MURPHY, WILLIAM NAGLER, GERN B.S.C. B.S.C. B.S.C. FRANCIS, B.S. Glendora, California Ensenada, Mexico Menlo Park, California San Mateo, California Delta Sigma Pi President, B.A.A. B.A.A. International Relations B.A.A. Delta Sigma Pi Delta Sigma Pi Club Santa Clara Day Students Association Boxing Team Santa Clara Santa Clara Track Team Nobili Club Ski Club Treasurer, Freshman Class Student Advisory Board Soccer Team Ski Club Blackstone Society Clay M. Greene Day Students Association President Day Students Association

39 NABDINELLI, KENNETH NELLIS, RICHARD BARRY, NOCK, RICHARD LEO, B.S. NOLTE, LEO JOSEPH, B.M.E. OWENS, OWEN MICAEL, EUGENE, B.S.C. B.S.C. Cambria, Caliiornia Los Angeles, California B.S.C. B.A.A. Germantow^n, Tennessee Band Editor, Owl Piedmont, California Saber Society B.A.A. Soccer Team Alpha Sigma Nu Day Students Association Block S.C. Boxing Team Nobili Club President, Pi Delta Sigma Ski Club Football International Relations A.S.M.E. Saber Society Baseball Club Engineering Society B.A.A. House Delta Sigma Pi Soccer Team

Class of 1953

'ifl^t.^^ ^kjU^^. O'BRIEN, EDWARD PATRICK, OKAMOTO, ROBERT Y. O'KEEFE, DAVID EDWARD, O'NEIL, RAYMOND ORNELAS, RICHARD B.S. B.S.C. KENNEDY, B.C.E. San Mateo, California San Jose, California Spokane, Washington Nobili Club B.A.A. National Students Santa Clara Delta Sigma Pi Association International Relations Saber Society Engineering Society Club Day Students Association A.S.C.E. Passion Play National Federation of Blackstone Society Catholic College Intramural Sports Students, President, San Saber Society Francisco Region Marching and Chowder Student Advisory Board Society House

40 O'SULLIVAN, MICHAEL PANELLI, EDWARD A. PASSALACQUA, EMIL R. PAYNE, WILLIAM EDMOND, PERRY, JAMES FRANCIS, ROBERT, B.E.E. B.S. B.A. Los Angeles, CalUornia Tacoma, Washington Salinas, California Business manager. Nobili Club House Redwood Sanctuary Society Senate Pi Delta Sigma International Relations Blackstone Society Glee Club Club Day Students Association Clay M. Greene Sgt.-at-Arms ASUSC Student Advisory Board Santa Clara Block B.C. Santa Clara House Football Saber Society Engineering Society Nobili Club A.I.E.E. Intramural Sports Sodality Sanctuary Society

Class of 1953

2l^^ PFEIFFER, ROBERT J. PIERCY, JOHN PHILIP, B.C.E. POLLARD, LOUIS MELVIN, QUAGLINO, ALEXANDER P., QUILICI. ADOLPH M., B.M.E. Pacific Grove, California JR., B.S. B.S. San Jose, California Engineering Society Sunnyvale, California San Luis Obispo, California Vice President, A.S.C.E. Saber Society International Relations Engineering Society Radio Station KSCU International Relations Club A.S.M.E. Amateur Radio Club Club Nobili Club Sodality President, Band Day Students Association Football Pi Delta Sigma Clay M. Greene Band Day Students Associotion Intramural Sports Engineering Society Intramural Sports QUINN, JOHN LAWRENCE, QUINN, ALBERT STEPHEN, RANKIN, ROBERT C. RANKIN, ROBERT JACK, B.S. RAPOZA, JAMES PAUL, B.S.C. JR., B.C.E. San Francisco, California Eureka, California Seattle, Washington Soccer Team Honolulu, T. H. B.A.A. Ski Club Thomist Club Engineering Society Santa Clara Engineering Society Blackstone Society A.I.E.E. A.S.C.E. Saber Society Pi Delta Sigma Saber Society Intramural Sports

Class of 1953

^utk REDHOUSE, REX P., B.S.C. ROCCA, JAMES VINCENT, ROGERS. FRANCIS PATRICK, RUDEE, ELLIOTT, B.E.E. RUSTUM, SARGON E., B.M.E. Shiprock, New Mexico B.M.E. JR., B.C.S. Redwood City, California Baghdad, Iraq B.A.A. San Francisco, California Seattle, Washington Engineering Society Engineering Society Glee Club Engineering Society B.A.A. A.I.E.E. A.S.M.E. Day Students Association A.S.M.E. Vice President ASUSC Soccer Team Passion Play Nobili Club Student Congress Glee Club Student Congress Sanctuary Society Clay M. Greene Saber Society Delta Sigma Pi Sodality Clay M. Greene NFCCS Santa Clara Ski Club

42 L iMAi^Skl SAUER, ANDREW JACKSON, SCANNELL, WILLIAM H. SCHERFF, JOHN T. SCHMITZ, HAROLD EUGENE, SEBASTIAN, CHARLES R. B.M.E. B.S.C. Oakland, California Modesto, California President, Engineering B.A.A. Society Delta Sigma Pi A.S.M.E. Saber Society Sanctuary Society Student Advisory Board Sodality Student Advisory Board Ski Club Student Congress

Class of 1953

SEBASTIAN, MICHAEL J. SILVA, M. J. SENEKER, STANLEY A., SEYBOLD, DONALD ALLEN, SHLEMMER, JAMES DAVID, B.S.C. B.S.C. B.M.E. Bristol, Tennessee Oroville, California Long Beach, California Senate B.A.A. Engineering Society Delta Sigma Pi Delta Sigma Pi A.S.M.E. Swimming Team Baseball Rally Committee B.A.A. Block S.C. Santa Clara Sodality Saber Society Sodality Saber Society

43 SIEVE, FRANCIS JOSEPH, SINGLEY, JAMES M. SMALLEY, JOHN PATRICK, SOARES, RICHARD J. SORTINO, ANTHONY S. B.S.C. B.C.E. Pacific Grove, California Jackson, California B.A.A. Engineering Society Basketball A.S.C.E. Saber Society Glee Club Block S.C. Soccer Team Alpha Phi Omega Ski Club Astronomy Club

Class of 1953

STERLE, DAVID ELMER, SULLIVAN, FLETCHER SULLIVAN, RALPH T. TONEY, BUFORD TROUT, RICHARD LEE, B.A. B.S.C. RICHARD, B.E.E. LAWRENCE, B.S. Portland, Oregon Woodland Hills, California Pasadena, California San Jose, California Ski Club B.A.A. A.LE.E. Alpha Phi Omega Radio Station KSCU Delta Sigma Pi Engineering Society Saber Society International Relations Track Team Saber Society International Relations Club Senate Soccer Team Club House Astronomy Club Blackstone Society Rifle Team Clay M. Greene

44 TROWBRIDGE, JAMES O., VERTIN, MATHIAS B., JR. VIAL, BRUNO ANDREW, B.S. VIRGA, MICHAEL JAMES WASH, JOHN LEITH, B.S. B.S. Susanville, California Sacramento, California Manhattan Beach, California San Jose, California B.A.A. Football Mendel Society Block S.C. Block S.C. Nobili Club Baseball Clay M. Greene Saber Society

Class of 1953

WAUGH, THOMAS LEE, B.S. WEBBER, LESLIE R. WIEAND, WILLIAM GEORGE, WILLIAMS, LAWRENCE R., WILLIAMS, ROBERT Visalia, California B.A. B.C.E. PATRICK, B.S.C. Band San Diecio, California Los Angeles, California Susanville, California Clay M. Greene Basketball Engineering Society B.A.A. Senate Santa Clara President, A.S.C.E. Sodality House Student Advisory Board Football Sanctuary Society Nobili Club Nobili Club Block S.C. Ski Club Santa Clara Red-wood Owl Thomist Club Student Advisory Board Passion Play Day Students Association

45 WIRTS, JACK VERNON, WONS, WILSON, D.S., B.E.E. WOOD, ELMER O., B.S. YOUNG, JOSEPH BAYARD, ZANETTE, RALPH DOMINIC B.S.C. Wailuku, Maui, T. H. Visalia, California B.S.C. B.S. Sacramento, California Engineering Society Redwood Salinas, California Palo Alto, California B.A.A. A.I.E.E. Student Advisory Board Senate Nobili Club Ski Club Clay M. Greene B.A.A. Clay M. Greene Golf Team Intramural Sports Owl President, Alpha Phi Inlramural Sports Omega Santa Clara Blackstone Society • Intramural Sports Passion Play

Sub Seniors

BOB DRESS LOUIS GAIRAUD FEBD HALL CHARLES LEONHARDT LARRY SCHOTT

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RHHHk MIKE SMITH Treasurer m ^^

Abate, Ed Abeloe, Wm. M. Ackerman, M. M. Akin, R. E. Allen, W. A. Attanburg, J. H. Anderson, G. R.

Arena, !• R> Badella, Wm. BaU, J. W. Benedetti, D. A. Bengtson, J. Berg, Joe Bernal, Bob

Berry, H. Bertkin, Tom Birmingham, D. J. Bispo, E. L. Black, Tom Blanke, Ray Bonnel, R. A.

NOT PICTURED: Bagley, R. F.; Binckley, W. G.; Bryant, Dan; Celli, R. C.

k Braun, D. L. Briggs, Dick Brown, D. V. Brunkow, W. H. Camilli, R. I. Caro, Wm. Chanteloup, A

Chase, A. B. Chinnici, N. Ciapponi, A. D. Citrigno, C. J. Clark, J. Cloney, L. Codiroli, E. Cole, Don Cortese, D. L. Cravalho, C. Curran, E. E. Delucchi, Wm. J. DeNardo, G. L. Diaz, Al

53 ^^ ^^.

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Donavan, D. F. Doyle, Tom Draklich, Bob Edwards, Les Edwards, T. M. Enright, R. E. Escover, A. I.

Fahrner, H. A. Farley, D. J. Fay, K. J. Felice. Wm. G. Fennone, T. J. Flanagan, I. F. French, C. B.

Fulton, L. I. Gagan, B. E. GarriJy, Wm. J. George, R. G. Giampaoli, D. A. Gill, Wm. J. Gile, V. R.

NOT SHOWN: Flynn, T. I.

Gilligan, P. J. Gleason, Wm. E. Gordon, C. H. Grotz, B. J. Hartman, W. E. Hartung, Wm. E. Hennessy, Wm. J.

Holland, B. Wm. Hoy, R. Isola, H. L. Ithurburn, F. B. Johnson, R. H. Kennedy, Wm. J. Kern, J. P. D.

Kern,:R. I. Kilty, Wm. R. King, E. T. Kuehler, I. D. Lanz, L. A. Laubacher, R. R. Lelli, R. S.

54 Lewis< A. I. Loer, T. A. Lowell, D. M. Luchessa, C. £. Machado, H. L. Malone, R. Martin, Geo. A.

McCormick, E. O. McGlinchey, R. C. McHenry, M. C. McNamara, C. F. McPherson, W. J. Menard, L. A. Mendoza, J. A.

Menzemer, G. L. Mirch, E. C. Mirch, P. D. Moran, C. E. Morgan, E. J. Morris, Wm. I. Morrissey, J. R.

NOT SHOWN: Ogle, Kelly

Murphy, F. J. Murphy, J. P. Murry, R. C. Muxlow, R. W. Neary, R. E. Nobriga, J. S. Nussbaum, P. R. O'Boyle, N. F. O'Brien, J. E. O'Brien, W. E. O'Donnell, D. J. Olson, W. T. Ornellas, D. L. Ostrofe, C. L.

Parsons, C. Pavlina, M. M. Payan, Jess Pera, R. I. Perdichizzi, F. G. Peters, J. H. Petroni, I. C.

55 ^% 0^ 1 W^- ^v /J ^

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Ravizza, K. D. L. Piazza, D. I. Picano, H. F. Pretari, D. D. Putkey, 1. 1. Quinn, C. A. J. Reynard, Schleich, A. Schoenstein, H. Reynolds, J. F. Rielly, Wm. H. Rianda, L. F. Roderick, R. R. Rowe, J. P. O. I.

Scholz, R. H. Scurich, L. A. Shay, H. M. Siegfried, I.E. Smith, C. M. Smyth, I. R. Stanton, J. J.

NOT SHOWN: Zuppan, Ben

Stuart, J. M. Suhr, A. R. Tarabini, M. E. Tarvid, D. S. Taylor, J. L. H. Tiernan, P. E. Toomey, D. J. Torres, A. Y. Vance, R. A. Vasconcellos, J. B. Vaughn, D. J. Walsh, A. C. Welsh, Ray Weseloh, Wm. E.

ilkinson, Wm. E. Winsor, R. G. Wood, R. D. Young, J. M. Yost, J. A. Yamate, M. Zamora, Frank

66 '/

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l^ijn ^amari-kn. m4n^4^T GfooJ DICK JONSEN President

DON JOHNSON Vice President

BIU WISWALL Secretary A

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HENRY SOLDATI Treasurer

ALF KAELIN Sergeant-at-Arms 60 A. f^ ^^

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^1 4 ±i '^t^l 4 Allen, E. V. Allison, J. E. Arancio, J. S. Asimos, G. W. Baldacci, P. R. Barth, H. A. Barloo, R. L,

Beriyessa, R. S. Bianco, P. S. Blach, D. C. Bocci, G. A. Besozzi, R. A. Boudreau, J. E. Bourquin, D. M.

Bowe, J. F. Brown, W. F. Burnham, R. F. Buschini, J. A. Bush, R. C. Carlson, F. O. Campion, I. E.

A

Carral, F. Chenu, R. J. Chock, K. J. Clarke, D. R. Cole, C. A. Conn, W. J. Coughlin, H. J.

Crane. D. M. Cucuzza, F. J. Davis, M. T. Davis, P. T. Deere, J. R. Desmond, A. L. Dolin, L. Jr.

DostalUc, F. A Early, E. A. Eitner, A. K. Fitzenz, J. A. Flaherty, S. M. Flood, J. J. Foehn, R. C.

61 A

Pontes, A. R. Ford, P. Gable, E. T. Ghiringhelli, H. C. Ginella, J. F. Goodwrin, F. E. Gould, I. L.

Greco, L. A. Groat, A. A. Gutierrez, P. A. Hally, P. W. Hardy, H. A. Howes, G. A. Hayes. A. H.

Hearne, L. F. Heeg, G. C. Hester, J. M. High, P. H. Hinojosa, F. C. Holland, B. G. HoUmer, C. A.

in

Hutz, J. B. Iniguez, R. E. Jacko, P. P. Jacobs, D. R. Jennings, W. Jensen, K. G. Johnson, D. H.

Jonsen, R. W. Kaelin, A. A. Kane, P. E. Kerckhoff, W. G. Kernan, T. J. Kiefer, J. H. Kiely, W. P.

Kotey, F. D. Kruse, W. G. Leahy, C. A Leal, G. D. Lewis, L. P. Lucas, R. F. Lynch, R. A.

62 '110''/I

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Machado, V. F. Madigan, J. J. Maher, T. V. Maier, T. J. Mardisch, P. B. Marnett, P. J. McGoldrick, J. P.

McGuire, T. J. McKenna, H. A. Messina, A. A. Miggins, J. F. Miller, M. J. Minnerly, J. E. Modena, D. J.

Modeste, R. G. Montero, O. Murkowski, J. H. Murphy, J. F. Murphy, P. J. O'Shea, M. F. Ottone, H. P.

M

Vanetla, J. H. Perry, J. A. Peterson, D. B. Pierovich, A. L. Pigato, C. L. Pipi, E. K. Piro, R. L.

Poletti, B. I. RaHanti, W. I- Ranieri, L. D. Ried, A. D. Richardson, T. F. Risso, A. J. Ruggles, C. W.

Salazar, J. A. Schall, J. T. Schaub, W. B. Scherrer, G. J. Scilacci, R. F. Shay, I. M. Sheehan, W. W.

63 M

Sheerin, J. W. Sherwood, S. J. Shlemmer, R. L. Simoni, R. J. Soldati, H. J. Sorensen, N. B. Sousa, T. M.

Specht, D. F. Steffani, E. A. Stensby, A. K. Stoney, R. J. Sullivan, J. F. Swreeny, M. J. Tang, E. P.

Tennison, E. A. Terry, W. E. Tinoco, J. H. Trent, J. W. Vadnais, N. P. VanEtten, D. T. Vasconi, V. P.

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3. I 4: iBi^k / ^f Vlasich, V. M. Volpalli, H. C. Von Der Mehden, L. Von Raesfield, E. Wade, I. P. Wallace, J. E. Whaling, T. M.

Widmer, T. E. Williams, J. J. Wilson, D. J. Yee, D. H. Yee, R. H. Yragui, R. A. Zajec, T. M.

Zanger, L. C. Abruzzini, L. L. Bordelon, J. F. Bowen, J. G. Chase, V. W. Williams, R. J. Wiswall, W. T.

64

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MARTY SAMMON Sergeant-at-Arms

68 Akin, E. P. Anchondo, W. M. Andrini, L. F. Arnautou, P. P. Ball, H. D. iBarraza, D. A. Barron, J. H.

Baumann, D. P. BeauUeu, J. A. Bellaschi, ]. A. Benz, W. G. Berg, R. J. Bernardicou, L. A. Bernie, I. J.

Bertolani, V. A. Betschart, E. J. Bock, C. R. Boose, H. R. Borelli, F. P. Bosque, C. M. Brethauer, P. D.

m

Briggs, R. A. Brown, W. A. Bruni, A. W. Bryson, D. H. Burke, L. P. Burns, M. J. Bush, I. A.

Busher, P. L. Butcher, D. L, Callahan, I. R. Caratti, J. F. Carmassi, H. L. Carmichael, R. L. Chambers, W. S.

Chapman, A. R. Chapman, A. S. Clarkin, R. A. Clayton, R. H. Cleary, J. T. Cole, T. A. Collins, T. N.

69 Comstock, D. L. Conley, J. J. Conley, P. E. Conmey, T. P. Conrado, P. A. Cooney, J. D. Cornaggia, R. J.

Cosca, R. A. Cotter, R. P. Cox. R. E. Davis, L. G. Davis, P. T. DeBellis, P. C. Dechart, L. F.

Deiro, R. L. DeLaCruz, A. L. DePfyfler, P. A. Devincenzi, R. D. Diaz, J. P. Diolo, A. R. Disney, R. F.

Dohrman, R. M. Dorsey, D. Dossee, R. L. Eagan, M. T. EUinger, P. J. Esguivel, J. M. Farley, T. T.

Ferguson, H. J. Ferrari, R. L. Ferrini, F. A. Fife, D. F. Figone, R. P. Flanagan, R. L. Fogarty, J. E.

Foley, P. I. Forge, O. C. Foster, E. P. Frazer, R. B. Fry, L. S. Fulco, A. W. Furlanic, R. A.

70 Gallagher, E. J. Giacomini, G. F. Gianotti, J. R. Goldstein, R. G. Gomez, P. F. Goolkasian, W. J. Gornick, E. A.

Grady, D. H. Grimaldi, J. S. Hall, W. O. HoUenbeck, H. C. Hanson, C. W. Harris, A. C. Hayes, G. A.

Heifernan, P. C. Henderson, L. J. Heuer, J. M. Hodoian, A. L. Hoffman, F. X. Hogan, R. W. Huarte, J. E.

A 4 A Mm lacopetti, L. R. J. Johnson, R. Jones, N. F. Kam, G. W. Kelly, S. A. Kenneally, J. J. Kennedy, J. F. Kennelly, K. J. Kernan, R. F. Keefe, M. J. Kiely, W. P. King, M. J. Kistinger, J. W. Klement, M. R.

Kohlman, R. J. Kranz, E. H. Kropp, J. L. Krug, P. H. Laqomarsino, W. J. Laney, F. E. Lang, G. L,

71 Liccardo, S. A. Loney, K. A. S. Long, D. Longwello, C. J. Lopes, A. J. Luchetti, M. L. Lynch, N. J.

L. Lynn, D. G. Meckel, O. Maddalena, R. G. Maino, R. L. Malloch, J. S. Marckx, J. E. Maronick, R. S.

Martinez, J. H. Marvin, J. G. Mastelotto, M. Matthews, T. H. McCormack, M. T. McCosker, D. A. Burgess, R. E.

McCullough, K. F. McDonald, P. J. McFadden, A. L. McGrath, J. G. McLaughlin, H. Y. McNamara, S. E. McNamee, J. W. Meyer, H. W. Michaels, J. A. Miick, D. V. Miller, G. J. Minton, J. R. Moore, G. L. Moore, M. R.

Morabito, C. S. Moron, J. C. Morello, H. S. Murad, K. F. Murphy, M. D. Nicholas, J. L. Nicholson, P. I.

72 Nickum, R. B. Nolan, J. E. Noonan, J. H. Normandin, L. A. O'Brien, W. K. O'LaughMn, J. J. O'Neill, T. T.

Oneto, I. B. Ospina, C. S. Ottaviano, J. E. Padget, D. L. Palmer, R. G. Passanisi, P. P. Pereira, L. A.

Perrin, K. H. Peters, P. J. Peters, S. T. Phillips, W. F. Pimentel, G. L. Piser, D. C. Poche, M. B.

Pugh, E. L. Quinlan, R. J. Quinn, J. J. Rasrhko, M. A. Redell, R. C. Reagan, F. R. Reid, W. D.

Robinson, D. N. Rocha, A. L. Romero, D. J. Ross, W. P. Sammon, M. P. Sauer, A. P. Scanlan, C. R.

Schober, F. J. Scbrick, D. P. Schultz, R. P. Schwade. D. H. Schwartz, D. J. Seiser, W. R. Seifz, W. P.

73 ScUars, W. C. Shopes, R. J. Siemer, R. A. Smith, F. R. Spinardi, T. J. Stanley, F. H. Stewart, A. W.

Stoult, B. A. Stowers. J. R. Sullivan, D. J. Sullivan, J. P. Sullivan, J. L. Sullivan, T. J. Sweeney, G. I.

Thomas, P. C. Thompson, P. G. Thompson, P. P. Tomney, E. T. Toomey, H. E. Torres, M. J. Tourtelot, H. H

Trask, K. Trily, T. I. J. Vadnais, D. I. Vasconcellos, R. K. Ventura, J. A. Voshall, M. M. Wallace, F. J.

Walshe, B. J. Wanner, M. A. Walerbury, J. J. Wedow, I. E. White, M. W. Wilde, J. D. Williams, M. H

Wiswall, G. C. Barstis, Dennis R. Wolleson, R. I. (In memoriam)

74 ^i, ve

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'*^^!** " ••/Ui let i>« '"^„^ i" STUDENT BOARD OF GOVERNORS

CLOCKWISE, left to right: D. Smith, V. Sovely, W. Antonioli, J. Greco, G. Strong.

College of Law

78 Student Bar Association

STANDING, left to right: V. Sevely, D. Richardson, R. Vatuone, G. Strong, D. Smith, H. Allen, J. Greco,

C. Frank, W. Shimoda. SEATED, S. Leal, J. Kelly, R. Lagomarsino, T. Oliver, E. Panelli, B. Blake.

Under the leadership of President Bill Antonioli and Vice President Dave

Smith the Student Bar Association successfully completed this, its sixth year of activity. The year opened in a social vein with a Bar-B-Cue, the Fall Golf Tournament and the annual dance at Paradise Lodge. The year saw the green- bound Annual Survey of California Lawbook find its way from the pens of the Law Students to the shelves of California Attorneys for the fourth time.

The fifth volume is now in preparation. Through its membership in the American Law Student Association and the California Student Bar Association the legalistic horizons of the students were extended far beyond the walls of Bergin Hall. With their primary purpose the promotion of closer co-operation and better iniderstanding jjetween the present and future members of the legal profession jjoth organizations have established themselves as valuable assets to the legal profession; as founders of the California Student Bar Association. Santa Clara barristers can indeed be proud. Two additional facets of a year bright with activity were two series of evening lectures, one on Contemporary Legal Problems arranged by Prof. John H. Merryman and the other on Trial Practice,

79 Moot Court

S. Leal, D. Andsrson, V. Sevely. STANDING: D. Smith.

Committee for the Annual Survey of California Law

CLOCKWISE, Irom left; J. Kelly, V. Sevely. S. leal, R. Blake, H. Lagomarsino, D. Richardson, R. Vatuone, D. Smith, E. Allen, T. Oliver, E. Panelli, W. Shimoda.

80 THE LIAISON COMMITTEE

Headed by Chairman Robert Vatuone the Liaison Committee again arranged a series of lectures to further the students' knowledge of courts, torts, and law reports. In addition to its regular work of securing information on student placement after graduation the Committee arranged for a hearing of the probation proceedings of the California Adult Authority Board and a tour of San Quentin Prison.

THE PUBLICITY COMMITTEE

Carrying on its unheralded task of keeping the University, the legal profession, and the public in- formed of the developments and activities of the Student Bar Association and the College of Law was the Publicity Committee. Guided by their co-chairmen, Anthony Oliver and Robert Lagomarsino, the publicists were key reasons for the successful moot court hearings, lecture series, and well-attended dances.

THE INTERIOR COMMITTEE

Chiefly responsible for the balancing leaven of social enjoyment in the barristers' life was the Interior Com- mittee under the deft touch of Vince Todisco. With a barbecued steak, a pleasant dance, and an afternoon of nine, a welcome complement for trials and hearings was provided all.

LIAISON: D. Richardson, R. Vatuone, J. Kennelly. PUBLICITY: J. Greco, R. Blake, R. Lagomarsino, T. Oliver.

INTERIOR: S. Leal, £. Panelli, I. Kelly, O. Anderson.

MM* m I Law Graduates

WILLIAM ANTONIOLI JOSEPH GRECO ROBERT LAGOMARSINO ANTHONY OLIVER B.A.< University of Santa Clara, B.S., University of Santa Clara, A.B., University of California B.S., University of Santa Clara, 1950 1951 at Santa Barbara, 1950 1951

DONALD RICHARDSON WILLIAM SCHLEICH ROBERT VATUONE A.B., Stanford University, 1950 A.B., Fresno State, 1950 B.S., University of Santa Clara, 1951

82 Second Year Law

Anderson, D. Bender, J Kelly, J.

Leal, S. Miller, J. Severly, V.

First Year Law

Blake, R. L. Engle, E. D. Frank, C. A. Panelli, E. Shimoda, W. T.

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Dissertation

0, friend, such ponderous truths I've learned, such deep and all Embracing truths Has mere contingency not shown Me God beyond all doubt?

Yet must I pose one final question.

The core of all the rest:

Have I truly found my God?

Religion is a word. Some say, ringing well in churches. But a word — no more

True, Goodness is — a. term. Useful, connotative.

And hope — hope, the same .. . The God we proved can die in us

Earth, no more than this ... ?

We have proved a God of love.

But have I glimpsed His beauty?

Have I found the spring of hope.

Proved the reason of my life, But denied Him in my heart?

For some the dreary days of learning

Are done at last, With the last of reasoned proofs Set down between blue covers Books forever closed; Now we who came to witness truth Must carry forth in life Our careful proofs. There humbly seek the higher Beauty.

-.;=-== p^nnet'

86 ^^ UPPER DIVISION ENGINEERS BACK ROW, left to right: C. Luchessa, C. Schleich, L. Nolte, M. O'SulIivan, R. O'Neil, T. Bertken, D. Vadnais, C. Leonhardt, G. Fontinos, J. Putkey. FOURTH ROW: B. Putnam, R. Blanke, K. Kelly, E. Cloney, C. Ostrofe, R. Cassimus, L. Schott, L. Butler, J. Murphy, E. Conmy, L. Williams, J. Piercy. THIRD ROW: A. Quinn, J. Sebastian, J. Barron, R. Au, P. Edwards, R. Freitas, E. Aboitiz, F. Hall, A. Bertagna, E. Rudec, W. Reilly, L. Taylor, J. Seigfried, E. Codiroli, J. Flynn, F. Sullivan, B. Campbell, T. Crosby, N. Vadnais. SECOND ROW: T. Fee, W. Wong, G. Anderson, R. Kern, S. Rustum, R. Braun, W. Duffy, J. Ginella, A. Quilici, A. Sauer, J. Smalley, D. Birmingham, C. McNamara, J. Kuehler. M. Gregory, B. Maus, F. Edden. FRONT

ROW: H. Carmassi, D. Connell, N. O'Boyle, W. Binckley, A. Chase, J. Lindquist, G. Heeg, D. Shlemmer, A. Janda, C. Kump, L. Rocca. Enigineermg

LOWER DIVISION ENGINEERS

BACK ROW, left to right: H. Hallenbeck, C. Forge, J. O'Loughlin, D. Pad get, T. Cole, L. Fry, J. Gianotti, T. Sleek, T. Minton, F. Hoffman, G. Moore.

FOURTH ROW: G. Sweeny, J. Bellaschi, A. Harris, J. Heuer, W. Seiser, E. Kranz, L. Burke, E. Akin, G. Hayes, C. Bock, R. Fraser, D. Vadnais, M. Shank, N. Lynch, M. Torres, J. Mandeville. THIRD ROW: D. Schwarz, R. Cosca, P. McDonald, M. Burns, R. lacopetti, R. Palmer, P. Nicholson, E. Tomney, P. Conrado, V. Machado, R. Burnham, J. Williams, G. Leal, D. Comstock, J. Bush, J. Hutz, W. Terry, R. Clarkin, D. Clarke. SECOND ROW: P. Busher, N. O'Boyle, C. Luchessa, D. Bauman, R. Nickum, A. Eitner, J. Salazar, J. McGoIdrick, D. Johnson, D. Schrick, T. Spinardi, J. Marvin, R. Devencenzi, H. Carmassi. FRONT ROW: G. Lang, K. Murad, R. Siemer, L. Dolin, J. Ginella, P. Krug, M. Luchetti, L. Meckel, R. Bartoo, J. Wilde, T. Bertken.

'^^u*.:.^*. Torres, A. Quinn, D. Vadnais, P. Conrado, E. Tomney, BACK ROW, left to right: J. Smalley, G. Hayes, C. Leonhardf, E. Codiroli. FOURTH ROW: M. P. Vadnais, V. Machado, A. Bertagna, R. Au. THIRD ROW: L, Taylor, H. Carmassi, E. Conmy, R. Burnham, G. Leal, L. Schotl, G. Fonlinos, J. Flynn, L. Mackel, R. O'Neill. SECOND ROW: A. Jones, G. Heeg, D. Johnson, J. Murphy, L. Butler, L. Williams, J. Putkey, N. O'Boyle, W. Reilly, T. Fee, J. Piercy. FRONT HOW: J. Siegfried, K. Kelly, L. Cloney, J. McGoldrick, R. Palmer, J. Salazar, T. Bertken. A.S.CE

A.S.ME

E. Kranz, D. BACK ROW, left to right: T. Harris, C. Ostrofe, R. Fraser, M. Burns, B. Grotz, F. Hall. FOURTH ROW: J. Wilde, J. Heuer, W. Seiser, Freitas, Williams, C. Bock, W. Braun, J. Ginella, A. Eitner, R. Galantine, J. Ventura. THIRD ROW: P. Nicholson, J. Sauer, J. Bush, G. Shea, R. J. Quilici, B. Maus, Campbell, G. Sweeney, C. McNamara. SECOND ROW: R. Kern, J. Kuehler, E. Akin, C. Sebastian, T. Crosby, D. Shlemmer, A. J. Marvin, L. Nolte. FRONT ROW: A. Chapman, T. Spinardi, S. Rustum, J. Rocca, J. Lindquist. BACK ROW, left to right: D. Schwarz, W. Seizer, C. Forge, J. O'Laughlin, B. Clarkin, T. Tomney. FOURTH ROW: R. Siemer, R. Devincenzi, L. Burke, D. Baumann, J. Barron, M. Luchetti, D. Schrick. THIRD ROW: E. Kranz, L. Heuer, W. Wong, J. Ginella, W. Terry, B. Rapoza, E. Aboiliz, M. O'Sullivan, T. Janda, W. DuHy, L. Fry, K. Murad, J. Hutz. SECOND ROW: G. Anderson, R. Blanke, D. Birmingham, R. Cassimus, C. Kump, E. Rudee, F. O'Sullivan. FRONT ROW: O. Schleich, C. Luchessa, W. Binckley, A. Chase, D. Connell, F. Edden.

AIRE.

The Santa Clara branch of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers this year

retained its position as one of the most active organizations on campus. Under the organ-

ization's capable officers, the group spon-

sored several guest speakers and at the same

time organized interesting and unusual field

trips.

89 «v?%.

BACK ROW, left to right: Richard Winsor, Raymond Lelli, Frank McEnaney, David Sterle. Albert Mills, James Perry. FRONT ROW: Joseph Young, Richard Smyth, Jack Pelars, Peter Fosselman, Pete Tiernan.

It was Pericles who once declared that the perfect democracy should embrace no more members than can stand within earshot of a single orator. The upper "chamber of hear- Senate ers" and, of course, debaters, numbers well within his limit. Under the persuasive direc- tion of Fr. Stephen B. Earley, the group functions democratically enough. There are

no student officers and, orators themselves, they really enjoy being within earshot of their brethren.

Their year began, as in the House, with a series of inter-chamber debates. Later on they combined with the lowerclassman society in intercollegiate contests, culminat-

ing in the annual Foch Debate with St. Mary's. Santa Clara again won the palm, Pete Tiernan and Marcel Poche arguing in favor of the French Union. Now, nearing the year's end, the Senate prepares for another annual classic—the full-dress Ryland Debate with the finest from the House.

90 STANDING, left to right: J. Trent, A. Pierovich, B. Perrin, A. Hayes, N. lynch, D. Disney, J. Ferguson, P. Baldacci, L. Davis, J. Trily, D. Quinlan, F. Schober, J. Marckx, J. Howe, D. Butcher, M. Poche. SEATED: M. Raschko, D. Piser, D. Fife, Fr. Copeland, S.J., B. Fitch, T. Farley, W. Brown.

'The House is met; the debate's begun." House —Blackstone

Early September found forty-four aspir- ant Clarence Darrows gathered in Seifert Lounge to formulate the program for the House's new year of forensic polemics. Some were mere novices in the fine art of argumentation; others had more than once heard the gavel's rap. But all felt a mutual bond for there was something to be learned here from a scant hour spent each week analyzing, discussing, and relating modern topics of controversy. After "warm-up" intra-House debates, the Spring Semester saw the debating campaign launched with full vigor. Within the Neo- Gothic walls of San Francisco's College for Women, a three-man team from Santa Clara argued assuredly against its counterparts from St. Mary's on the relative merits of France's Foreign Empire. During the re- mainder of the academic year, the campaign proven Broncos proved to be worthy mettle for the best of Bay Area opposition.

91 BACK ROW, leif to right: D. Petersen, J. Trily, J. Beaulieu, B. Bonnel, A. Jones, L. Normandin, R. Bagley, G. Scherrer, D. Grady, W. GooUcasian, H. Guglielmetti, O. Schleich, T. Bertken, L. Butler. FOURTH ROW: C. Pigato, G. Kam, J. Trask, C. Cravalho, H. Isola, J. O'Brien, I. Petroni, W. Aguila,

W. Wilkinson, P. Seybold, W. Henderson, J. Wirts, M. Virga, D. O'Keefe, H. Edwin, R. Maronick, Lee Lewis. THIRD ROW: N. O'Boyle, H. Wollesen, P. Peters, M. Sammon, D. Yee, W. Filice, C. Citrigno, R. Higgins, R. Fahey, B. Muxlow, J. Miggins, D. Deiro, J. McClellen, A. Brown, P. Williams, W.

Anchundo, A. Modoian, C. Scanlan, J. Quinn, S. McNamara. SECOND ROW: I. Ginella, L. Luchessa, F. Edden, S. Seneker, R. Monroe, H. Schmitz, D. Sterle, R. Hill, F. Morales, P. Rogers, T. McNamara, W. Maronick, P. Borello, R. Ornelas, S. Rustum. FRONT ROW: P. Heiiernan, J. Marckx, J. Ferguson, D. Butcher, J. Caratli, F. Cavallini, D. Crane, C. Leahy, C. Vierra, P. Murphy, E. Gable, W. Sellars.

Industrious, forward-looking B.A.A. BAA. president Frank Morales successfully com- pleted the school year with a full program of activities for Business Administration Association members.

The B.A.A. was organized to "gather all President Frank Morales students of the University possessing a com- mon interest, to broaden their business edu- cation, and to foster and develop a sound and ethical understanding of business prob- lems." This year the organization was credit-

ably up to its self-set standards. At bi-monthly meetings problems of busi- ness opportunity for the graduate were probed. In addition the B.A.A. was respon- sible for some of the best social functions of the year, the Association's dance at San

Francisco's St. Francis Hotel following the Cal game, a barbecue, and banquet—all moderately howling successes and carried out under the Faculty advisorship of Pro- fessor Louis A. Boitano.

92 BACK ROW, left fo right: D. Jacobs, L. Zanger, W. Bradley, R. Panella, R. Cody, J. Trowbridge, M. Yamate, J. Ball, P. Bianco. THIRD ROW: R. Modeste, R. Vasconcellos, W. Chambers, E. Betschart, F. Ferrini, M. Williams, V. Chase, R. Deiro. SECOND ROW: E. Abruzzini, P. Kane, H.

Morello, J. Huarte, W. Hennesey, E. Abate, H. Bernal, R. Lynch, D. Vadnais, F. Hinojosa. FRONT ROW: R. Celli, D. Romero, M. McHenry, J. Peters, D. Smythe, M. Raschko, D. Piser, T. O'Neill.

The all-embracing language club faced Nobili Club odds that would have put the linguistic build-

ers of the Tower of Babel off the job before they laid on the second story. Among the insurmountable difficulties, the most press-

ing was the problem of arranging a program Professor Umberto Olivieri, Club Moderator that would suit German and Spanish, Greek and Italian students equally well. With poly- glot purpose the Nobili Club has never quite

echoed standards set before 1949. Then it was a single language (Italian) group and far more manageable. A brighter future seems worth predicting, for reorganization

is being mooted by some members. The best

of luck to them when it comes.

93 BACK ROW, left to right: J. Sullivan, P. Davis, E. Bispo, G. Scherrer, T. Sousa, A. Capurro, J. Minnerly, R. Chenu, C. Vierra, G. Tang, W. Wiswall, P. Murphey, R. Scilacci. SECOND ROW: C. Leahy, D. Yee, D. Petersen, R. Modeste, J. Peters, K. Murad, L. Abruzzini, P. Kane, D. Costanza, D. Crane, J. Miggins. FRONT ROW: K. Ogle, R. Smyth, L. Gordon, M. McHenry, A. Chanteloup, R. Cotrell, V. Chase, R. Caputo, L. Lewis.

In his five years at Santa Clara, Professor C. M. Flumiani, colorful head of the Uni- versity's Political Science Department, has earned a reputation for getting things done. International This past year has uncovered nothing to dis- parage that reputation. As moderator of the Relations Club widely acclaimed International Relations Club, Professor Flumiani has encouraged participation in his "brain child" in order to acquaint students with current affairs and political situations now prevalent through- Professor Carlo Flumiani, Club Moderator out the world. Under his guidance the IRC has fostered a model UN during the past year in which the members of the IRC take an active part in learning the intricacies of fc the real United Nations. This replica of the UN in action mushroomed from a state-wide plan adopted by other IRC's in California colleges. So tenaciously has this model UN

taken hold that it is now an integral function of many of the monthly meetings of the IRC. Whatever plans the International Rela- tions Club may have for the future will certainly include one element—the dynamic personage of Professor Flumiani, moderator extraordinary.

94 LEFT TO RIGHT: Pete Tiernan, Tom King, Jim Bowe, Andre Mardahl. N.F.CCS.

Blackstone Society

BACK ROW, left to right: B. Holland, R. Quinlan, W. Raiianti, A. Capurro, B. Kilty, B. Rankin, J. Panetta, J. Vasconcellos, T. Black, G. Martin, H. Isola, L. Menard, V. Chase, J. McNamee, W. Caro, P. Ellinger, A. Sauer, E. O'Brien, J. Perry, B. Murphy, A. Mills. FRONT ROW: Mr. B. Snow, J. Morrissey, R. Lucas, P. Ford, J. Bowe, A. Pierovich, R. Cotrell, P. Tiernan, J. March, A. Alphonse, B. Marinovich, M. Smith. This is the ninety-ninth year of the Sodality on the Mission Campus. A cher- ished document in the office of the Student Counselor certifies that The Sodality of the Immaculate Conception and St. Clare was founded on September 20, 1855. For just

under a century it has been Santa Clara's

chief spiritual organization. Its purpose it shares with the sodality movement through-

out the world : to form exemplary Catholics and to foster a special devotion to the Blessed Virgni lary. Members carried their work to the students at large this year through the Mass and through the Apostolic Committee's catechetical program in schools from Mil- pitas to Cupertino. Dozens of non-sodalists have become part-time pedagogues to the local young. Promoting daily Communion, attendance at evening Benediction, spread- ing the devotion to the Sacred Heart and, Sodality particularly, sponsoring Nocturnal Adora- tions were the work of the Eucharistic Com- mittee. The activity of the Sodality has been co-ordinated and supervised by Prefect Bob Gleeson with the assistance of Rev. Roger McAuliffe, S.J., for another good year.

BACK ROW, left to right: Joe Clark, D. Braun, B. Francis, I. Flanagan, H. Schoenstein, S. Seneker, E. McCormick, L. Cloney, F. McEn'- nry, R. Wood, W. Wilkinson, A. Walsh, F. Zamora, J. F. Sullivan, J. Trent, A. Hayes, R. Fulmore, J. Bowe. SECOND ROW: W. Cecchetti, W. B nckley, T. Flynn, C. French, M. O'Sullivan, W. Huggles, S. Rustum, J. McMahon, A. Mardahl, V. Machado. FRONT ROW: J. Kuehler, M. McHenry, A. Chantoloup, W. McPhorson, R. Gleeson, L. Norton, A. Sauer, A. Parker, D. Birmingham. 96 :

Mission Santa Clara is not a small church. It has seven altars and on each of them priests celebrate the holy sacrifice of the Mass every morning. Assisting at every Mass — even the very early ones — are the mem- bers of the Sanctuary Society. No badge or pin designates the members of this select group. They meet only once a month, usually for business or social reasons. But their purpose, the greater glory of God and greater personal sanctification through service at the altars of God, cannot be subordinated to the aim of any other campus organization. Besides the usual daily and Sunday Masses, the Society also performs its sacred duties at all other Church functions—Bene- Sanctuary Prefect Leal Norton diction, the Way of the Cross, and the general student body Masses. A final service members also teach others who desire to learn the prayers and method of serving at Mass. Sanctuary Society

BACK ROW, left to right: R. Guglielmetti. R. Modeste, R. Cassimus, R. Fulmore, P. Baldacci, H. Shoenstein, W. Olson. FOURTH ROW: P. Rogers, P. Bianco, D. Birmingham, C. Cole, E. Early, B. Francis, G. Heeg, D. Petersen, T. McGuire, A. Walsh. THIRD ROW: E. Tang, T. Whaling, V.

Machado, V. Chase, J. Wade, R. Lucas, W. Maronick, R. Jonsen, A. Sauer. SECOND ROW: J. Kuehler, F. Zamora, L. Cloney, A. Eitner, J. Ginella, R. Burnham, W. Wilkinson, P. Vadnais, W. Wiswall. FRONT ROW: P. Kane, R. Gleeson, A. Mardahl, J. Flanagan, K. Jensen, J. McMahon, M. McHenry, A. Chanteloup. m

4^ .^-f/^^ BACK HOW, leit to right: D. Schwarz, I. Beaulieu, R. Vasconcellos, B. Ponella, C. Forge, H. Cody, D. O'Keeiie, L. Schott, L. Abiuzzini, F. Schober, F. Trent, G. Giacomini. FOURTH ROW: G. Hayes, R. Ornelas, S. Liccaido, J. Bush, D. Vadnais, J. Marvin, J. Ventura, R. Kernan, J. L. H. Taylor, I. Siegfried. N. O'Boyle. THIRD ROW: W. Hennessey, R. Roderick, L. Zanger, C. McNamara, P. Tiernan, A. lohnson, G. Lang, A. Quilici, B. Grotz, H. Morello, K. Murad, C. Bock, J. Shay, A. Wallace, A. Hayes, J. Trent, L. Menard, Fr. McFadden, Moderator; J. Bowe, J. Trowbridge. SECOND ROW: D. Kern, J. Kuehler, M. Yamate, D. Costanza, R. Caputo, L. Weber, J. Nicholas, F. Morales, P. Borello, F. Cavallini, J. Sullivan. FRONT ROW: B. Abeloe, J. Reynolds, J. Denardo, R. Bernal, W. Filice, C. Citrigno, J. Chargin, L. Normandin, E. Abate, H. Edwin.

Day Students

Besides the students living in campus OFFICERS dormitories, there are those who live off LEFT TO RIGHT: Ed Abate, Sergeant-at-Arms; Jerry DeNardo, Treasurer; Larry Menard, Vice President; Bob Bernal, Historian; Richard Caputo, President; John Reynolds, Sec'y. campus and commute daily by train, bus, car, motor-scooter, and bicycle.

The Day Students' Organization is the

club at school which unites these men. Its

prime function is to make "the day dogs" an

integral part of college life. Because of the distances that some travel, they have missed many of the activities of the general student body. But in this group they are informed of

coming attractions and every member is urged to become a full-time student at Santa Clara. The Club itself sponsors a dance for the student body each year as well as other campus "extras." Under the direction of President Dick Caputo, the Day Students' Organization has

grown in size and popularity and effective-

ness in rounding out the college life of those who do not board.

98 BACK ROW, left to right: Jack Kuehler, George Fotinos, John Shay, Jay Murphy, Melvin Luchetti. SECOND ROW: Brian Gagan, Jim Stuart, Ray Blanke, Dan Connell, Herb Schoenstein, Allen Chase, Tom Bertken, Joe Williams, Hugh Coughlin. FRONT ROW: John Piercy, Charles Kump, Joe Nicholas, Bob Fitch, Barron Holland. KS.CU.

"Six seconds to air time.' Lefs push this button and see what happens. -:*'•

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BACK ROW, left to right: Ken Lindegren, Sandy Kahn, Ben Francis, Hugh Coughlin, Ed Abate, Al Capurro, Paul Baldacci, Ed Conmy, Earl Curran, Al Reid, Lowell Gordon. FRONT ROW: Bob Cotrell, Vern Chase, Wes Huggles, Bob Bernal, Kelly Ogle, Ralph Zanette, Barry Toney, Dick O'Day, Gerry DeNardo, Bill Kennedy.

The measure of success for an Alpha Phi Omega chapter is the service rendered to its Alpha Phi Omega campus and community. It is purely a

service fraternity, and in that regard is unique among campus organizations. "To assemble college men in fellowship and to develop friendships and to promote service to humanity" is the august aim of the fraternity.

Four fields of activity are distinguishable

within this objective: President Ralph Zanette

Service to the student body and faculty

Service to youth and the community Service to members of the fraternity Service to the nation as participating citizens

The Eta Alpha Chapter this year occupied

itself with much and diverse activity, prin- cipally; supplying leaders for local Boy Scout troops, and ushering for events in the Ship. Also assisting in the newly organized intramurals program, helpful Alpha Phis are at press-time working on a trophy for the championship team.

100 Guglielmetti, Duffy, Francis McEnaney, LEFT TO RIGHT: Fr. King, Moderator; Robert J. Lagomarsino, Robert Vatuone, Anders Mardahl, Richard William lames Driscoll, Stanley Senecker, Robert Kilkenny, Leo Nolle.

"People listen to a group like this," is Alpha Sigma Nu Fr. James A. King's pithy description of the organization which President Frank Mc- Enaney says "meets once a month to decide what needs to be done around school, and

then tells somebody else to do it" — to observe, to judge, to advise.

This elite corps of nine gentlemen are Santa Clara's 1953 representatives in Alpha Sigma Nu, the national Jesuit honor society.

Analogous to the rather less exclusive Phi

Beta Kappa, the society was founded at Marquette University in 1915 and now has chapters in twenty-three of the twenty-seven

Jesuit colleges in the country. Its main

object is to honor with recognition, prestige, and a gold key the top skimming of scholastic cream in each of those colleges.

Alpha Sigma Nu, the brain trust, the uni-

versity's most select organization, in its very nature and purpose commands the respect

of those beyond its sacred circumference.

President Frank McEnaney

101 BACK ROW, left to right: Robert Okamoto, Francis Perdichizzi, James Raposa, William Duffy. SECOND ROW: Michael O'Sullivan, Leo Nolle, Francis Edden. FRONT ROW: Otto Schleich, Robert Freitas, Adolph Quilici.

Pi Delta Sigma

The honor society for particularly pro-

ficient engineers, Pi Delta Sigma is a con- summation realized only by selected "upper fifth" technical students. Granted the cama- raderie, insignia, and privileges belonging to a fraternity, members ask only to bask in one another's honor. Prestige, a Certificate of Membership, a badge, a copy of the Constitution and By-Laws come to them in exchange for high grades and a one-hun- dred-word initiation essay.

President Leo Nolte

102 'M:^ *

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BACK ROW, left to right: B. Aguilar, B. Gagan, D. O'Keefe, R. Schoenstein, R. Monroe, H. Schmitz, J. Kieier, B. Hartman, C. Pigato. THIRD ROW: F. Morales, R. Guglielmetti, R. Heisel, G. Menzemer, W. Wilkinson, R. Ottone, R. Caputo, G. Scherrer. SECOND ROW: B. Muxlow, D. Toomey, D. Seybold, J. McClellan, D. Fahey, C. Citrigno, W. Filice, J. Miggins. FRONT ROW: P. Borello, S. Seneker, K. Fay, J. Petroni, J. Arena, D. Pera, J. Murphy, H. Shea.

In May of 1950, students of the college Delta Sigma Pi of Business Administration formed an or- ganization which would add to their pre- executive experience and enjoyments. They sought the support and became the prestige garnering Gamma Xi chapter of Delta Sigma Pi, an international fraternity having the appealing double objects of furthering both the educational and social interests of the businessman. Educationally through the chapter-sponsored forum of successful Busi- ness College alumni through field trips, in- vitations to guest speakers, and the use of visual aids, members have been supplement- ing their formal education with glimpses of the machinery of business in action. Socially the fraternity honored Dean Charles Dirksen with a dinner marking his invitation as visit- ing professor to the Harvard Graduate School of Business. Then followed the "Rose of Delta Sig" dance at Boussy's in Los Gatos where Miss Joan Flannery, of Lone Moun- tain, was acclaimed Queen Rose. The vigorous pursuit of an ambitious program seems to have proved that the good intentions of 1950 have not been unfounded in the capabilities of the members, nor slow in being realized.

President Bob Monroe

103 Ja*^#*1l

BACK ROW, left to right: Al Reid, Paul de Pfytfer, Jay Murphy, Jim Noonan, Jack Sauer. SECOND ROW: Dave O'Keeie, John F. Sullivan, Clifi F. McNamara, Gene R. Anderson, Julius Kahn, David Braun. FRONT ROW: Jack Minton, Ed Tomney, John Ottaviano, John Miggins, Ernie Aboitiz, Charlie Luchessa, Jack Kuehler.

Ski Club

Who pulled that chair out Baby, it's cold outside. BACK ROW, left to right: G. Sweeney, M. O'Sullivan, K. Lindegren, P. de Pfyffer, E. Curran, W. Hartung, D. Petersen, G. Tang, E. Tomney, B. Duffy,

SECOND HOW: P. Conrado, L. Pereira, A. De La Cruz, B. Sietz, G. Kam, B. Clarkin, D. Scanlon, P. Thomas, P. Vadnais, J. Ottaviano, T. Rocha. FRONT ROW: J. Minton, G. Gable, W. Ruggles, J. Lindquist, K. Ogle, D. Quinlan, J. Flood.

Glee Club

Glee Club Director Rene Dagenais Franciscan Choir of Santa Barbara ^;J;;^,/:m

BACK ROW, left to right: Richard Smyth, Howard Edwin, William Hartung, Jack Kenneally. FRONT HOW: J. Peters, Kamal Murad, Ernesto Aboiiiz, Robert Perrin, Peter Fosselman.

Camera Club

Band

BACK ROW, left to right: Bert Groat, Dale Schrick, John Kiefer, Harley Deere, Russ Barto. FRONT ROW: Gene Gornick, Gene Gable, Ed Gallagher, Pete Tiernan. LEADER, Ray Lelli. ^' y':^-''' :i>t^

BACK ROW, left to right: J. Flanagan, L. Zanger, W. Brady, J. Trowbridge, E. Abruzzini, F. Hinojosa, R. Akin, M. Yamate, J. Ball, H. Soldati. FOURTH ROW: D. Jacobs, R. Modeste, L. Henderson, A. Groat, J. Mad=,gan, L. Weber, J. Chargin, J. McMahon, C. French. THIRD ROW: W. Abeloe, P. Kane, R. Stoney, J. Huarte, R. O'Day, R. Bernal, J. Lewis, D. Vadnais, F. Trent, R. Cody, B. Bleeson, D. Costanza. SECOND ROW: D. Romero, B. Celli, M. McHenry, W. Hennessy, Dr. L. Swan, Dr. L. Bolton, Mr. F. Flaim, E. Abate, J. DeNardo, W. Kennedy. FRONT ROW: R. Johnson, R. Lynch.

Mendel

Fencing

BOB FITCH IN TWO POSES A parry with Joe Nichols A thrust at chest of Fencing instructor, Mr. Victor Vari B:.-

Campus

.:s??t^ Clay M. Greene

The one remaining edifice from the neo- classic "wooden" era of Santa Clara

campus architecture is the "Ship." For

seventy-eight seasons it has thrown its hulking embrace around the members of the Campus Theatre. Whatever the de- mands, the "Ship's" vast stage and enor-

mous loft (sometimes compared to the inside of a "Trojan topless tower") have always fulfilled them.

This year the entire deck, fo'c'sle, and foremast of HMS Indomitable was brought onstage for Herman Melville's major production "Billy Budd." From

'Yes, and I'M even deadlier with a cutlass.'

"Boy, can the Captain tell jokes."

"Traded it in for a 155."

108 —

Theatre

more than one of view "Budd" was major—the realistic sets, shipboard life itself, designed in Hollywood and con-

structed by Director Donald J. Ranney^ the mood-setting music arranged by Mr. Rene Dagenais—a sparkling portrayal of the tragic Billy by William Garrity, and a spotlight sharing, headline performance by Dick Mondon, as the menacing master- at-arms. Shipmen and sailors Frank Mc- Enaney, Dick Briggs, Andy Pierovich, Mike Fitzgerald, Wes Ruggles and Paul Baldacci — illusory marine lighting by Sandy Kahn and Lowell Gordon—all helped this year to make thespian quality triumph over abbreviated quantity.

"Sharks beware!"

"Long live Billy Budd!"

"The lull beiore the storm.'

109 1

I.. 4^^

•.. fe^

Menacing master-at-arms Mondon ... to a watery

Billy Budd: Rebellion in

Billy Budd stargazing without spyglass Director Donald J. Ranney exhorting "Indomitable" crew. the Royal Navy

"Pleased la meetcha"

"Hold still while I hit you"

"That's hilarious, read it again.'

'You'll swaIlo\v this lime-juice, Claggart, ...!!" ^

^^^Hpii: ' aim,

BACK ROW, left to right: Bill Hartung, Jack Shay, Dick Briggs. SECOND ROW: Bob Cotrell, Jerry McGrath, Dick Fahey, Bob Fitch, Paul Baldacci, Dick Jonsen, Mike O'Sullivan. FRONT ROW: Joe Nicholas, Kelly Ogle, Al Reid, Sandy Kahn, Dick Mondon, Lowell Gordon, Rolph Zonetie, Wes Rugerles, Bcirry Holland.

Clay M. Greene Society

Behind the scenes: Hugh Barth, Dick Fahey, Joe Nicholas. —

Dramatics Arts Contest

Bob Fitch, a freshman from Santa Cruz,

claimed first honors in the Dramatic Arts

Contest this year. His presentation of Mark

Antony's famous oration at Caesar's funeral, generally recognized by its salutation, ," "Friends, Romans, countrymen ... unan- imously received the vote of the judges and was aptly described by Father President as "interesting and exciting." Other participants in what proved to be a close contest were Richard M. Mondon, Who dramatized "Richard III"; Charles L. Ostrofe, who presented a scene from "The Merchant

of Venice" ; Robert B. Robertson, who enacted a scene from "Macbeth," and Joseph A. Fogarty, who fought a good fight as "Cyrano."

Owl Oratorical Contest

Crowded, confined Adobe Lodge was the setting for the second annual Owl Oratorical Contest, won by Dick Jonsen for his presenta- tion of "He Conquered Alone," a tribute to archeologist-adventurer T. E. Lawrence. Bob Winsor, who orated "Today and For- ever," registered in the runner-up spot, ahead

of a pressing field which included Bob Fitch, Ray Lelli, and Pete Tiernan. Adding color and an intermission to a full evening's program were the renditions of organist Rene Dagenais, given a special and twist from a whistling accompanist Father President. AL WALSH HUGH COUGHLIN BUD SCHERRER Managing Editor Feature Editor News Editor

The Santa Clara

BEN FRANCIS Editor-in-Chiei

TOM WHALING DICK FAHEY PERRY CARTER Sports Editor Circulation Manager Advertising Manager Regularly through the school year, the Student Body's official news publication, The Santa Clara, appeared on the campus adequately reporting newsworthy events of past weeks. From its editorial offices in the basement of the Faculty Residence, the staff of the student-activity chronicle, led by editors Ben Francis and Al Walsh, successfully planned, edited, and distributed to alumni, friends, and faculty of the University a week-by-week digest of the school year. That success must in no small part be credited to Rev. Richard Loftus, S.J., moderator, and Rev. Richard Rol^erts, S.J., faculty advisor, who contributed their past experience and technical skill to the Santa Clara s enterprising staff. No doubt the hardest-working members of the staff were the speciabsection editors. The front page, the news division, was edited by Bud Scherrer and Jack Madigan, whose task it was to keep tab on noteworthy events in the spheres of both scholastic and extracurricular activity.

BACK ROW, left to right: J. Wilde, J. Beaulieu, T. Sauer, D. Quinlan, J. Vasconcellos, P. Gilligan, R. Lelli, T. Flynn. THIRD ROW: T. Kinq, J. Perrv.

H. McLaughlin, S. Kelly, D. Sullivan, J. Marckx, B. Johnson, R. Fiqone D Baumann, J. Huarte, J. Kennedy, W. Sellers, J. Kenneally, T. Watters,

W. Seitz, Roy Butler. SECOND ROW: T. Collins, B. Groat, J. Trent, B. Allen, B. Caro, G. Menzemer, B. Yragui, B. Chambers, F. Zamora, H. Coughlin,

P. Baldacci, D. Jonsen, G. Shea, M. White, I. Schlemmer, P. Carter. FRONT ROW: M. Raschko, B. Cotrell, D. Fife, W. Ruggles, B. Wiswall, T.

Whaling, B. Perrin, T. Farley, B. Francis, B. Johnson, M. Poche, B. Scherrer, B. Holland, A. Pierovich, J. McGrath, M. Klement, D. Fahey.

Sophomores Hugh Coughlin and Mike Miller handled the "bull section"—the Feature Page. Made doubly interesting with rousing accounts of the newly-instituted intranuiral program, the Sports Page was directed by Tom Whaling and Bob Yragui. Two important managerial posts, necessary to a soundly financed publication were filled by Perry Carter, in charge of advertising, and Dick Fahey, who headed the circulation department. Next year, when Managing Editor Al Walsh steps into the office of Editor-in-Chief, he will have the advantage of directing a well-trained staff. To assure him of this, a special class has been conducted by Budd Fulmer training prospective writers, as well as next year's editors in the skills of college journalism. BOB JOHNSON DOUG LOWELL DEAN HURLEY Editor Editor Poetry Editor

The Owl

LEO NOLTE ANDERS MARDAHL Consulting Editor Consulting Editor

R. DEMPSEY FR. SHIPSEY A. MILLS Special Editor Faculty Advisor Circulation Manager

16 "Names do change, but the spirit goes on," wrote Addison. Santa Clara's Redwood has not always been the Redwood. For that matter, neither has Santa Clara's Owl always been the Owl. The 1902- 1921 Redtvood was the monthly literary magazine. But prior (1869-1875) to that time there was an Owl published monthly on the campus, and from this older bird the current magazine takes its right to style itself "the oldest collegiate publication on the Pacific Slope." In 1922, the Redwood became the yearbook, and in 1931 the Owl was revived as a literary supplement to the Santa Clara, later to become once again the University's independent Literary Monthly. In a valiant effort to overcome the above confusion the Owl continues to l)e published each month under the guiding hands of editors Douglas M. Lowell and Robert H. Johnson, and faculty advisor Rev. Edward Shipsey, S.J.

BACK ROW. left to right: Peter Fosselman, Dean Hurley, Leo Nolte, Bob Dohrmann, William Chambers. FRONT ROW: Anders Mardahl, Robert Johnson, Fr. Shipsey, Barron Holland.

This year the Owl furthered its policy of devoting special issues to Music, Economics, Biology, Engineering, Education, and Contemporary Literature. In addition, a striking new cover design and more easily readable format were introduced, both innovations meeting with favorable comment.

The Owl's columns are open to all Santa Clarans and each contribution, whether it be fiction, verse, or essay, is given careful consideration. The Owl, Santa Clara's bird of literary leaning, looks forward to many more years of stately flight, a rara avis to be sure, that can triumphantly hoot its own horn as one of the few collegiate publications that has not dived to the strata of the moronic joke, the crude cartoon, and the venomous double- entendre. BOB COTRELL PETER FOSSELMAN JOE KERN Assistant Editor Photo Editor Literary Editor

The Redwood

JOHN MARTIN Editor

JOHN VASCONCELLES JOE BERG DEAN HURLEY Sports Editor Business Manager Poetry Editor The story of and behind 1953's Redwood is not new, not as it applies to yearbooks. Like a number of other annual publications, it was born in indecision and worry, it thrived on audacity, it matured shakily in vigor and expediency. There was the customary, almost inevitable student apathy toward it.

Likely the publication of which the most is expected, it is also that for which the least is done.

As usual, the few shouldered the burden, heavy as it was this year and as it must be every year. Except for an ingenious picture-taking network devised by Photo Editor Pete Fosselman (who was appreciably abetted by Bob Perrin, Jack Kenneally, and Kamal Murad), the student life and campus shots would have played a negligible role. And except for round-the-clock working Joe Kern, a harassed

BACK ROW, left to right: Tom Waugh, Ferd Hall, Bob Johnson, Jack Kenneally, Elmer Wood, Richard Figone. FRONT ROW: Peter Fosselman, Lon Normandin, John Martin, Bill Kennedy, Robert Perrin.

but imperturbable Literary Editor, the many writeups would have attained nothing close to a professional finish.

Pictures and writeups were only two departments of a diffuse division of labor. The one thing

lacking, all too often, was labor itself. Innovations, however, were not lacking. The introduction of

poetry must be credited entirely to Dean Hurley, who 1) assigned its topics; 2) wrote it; 3) edited it. Staff Artist Jim Putkey, who handled the art work, likewise proved both capable and reliable.

But notwithstanding the whims and caprices of human nature, the Redwood trembled only slightly

on its well-rooted foundation.

R.

0.

T. C

X iSt^iMMaiM' .*s«l-/.v^ .. «' " I'^'ai ofe^i Chain of

"Hut, two, threep, foore; eyes right," and six hundred future officers of the United States Army Field Artillery pass in review. "^ISSiiv The Freshman and Sophomore members of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps at Santa Clara spend two hours a week in class learn- ing the fundamentals of military life. Juniors and Seniors have four classes each week where they are trained to operate and service artillery pieces and equipment. On Wednesday, all cadets and cadet officers, dressed in the khaki of their Gov- ernment issued uniforms, fall in on the parade grounds for battalion drill. The ad- vanced students carry out "the drill pre- scribed for the day" and develop their voices in counting cadence for the lower division men. In June each year. Able, Baker,

R. O. T. C. STAFF BACK ROW, left to right: Sergeant Kamalski. Sergeant Andrews, Sergeant Reedy, Sergeant Alexander, Sergeant Boyer. FRONT HOW: Captain Kearney, Lt. Colonel Scott, Colonel Shea, Major Ross, Captain Beaver.

122 Command

Cadet Lt. Col. Gary Kilkenny

Charlie, Headquarters, and Service Bat- teries of the 1st and 2nd Battalions assemble for a formal inspection and parade. All the Military Science classes, the weekly drill and parade and the University Gun Club are staffed by officers and enlisted men from the regular army under the direc- tion of Colonel Patrick Shea. Professor of Military Science and Tactics. After this four-year course at the Uni- versity and six weeks at Oklahoma's Fort Sill—for practical experience—the men are commissioned second lieutenants, ready to begin their two years of active duty in the United States Army.

123 SABER SOCIETY

BACK ROW, left to right: W. Binckley, A. Chase, R. Blanke, D. O'Keefe, G. Kraemer, W. Hartung, J. Kahn, R. Rankin, L. Menard, E. Bispo, W.

Aguilar, L. Cloney, R. Akin. SECOND ROW: L. Balistreri, J. Mendoza, R. Scholz, L. Gairaud, B. Toney, I. Lucas, J. Reynolds, R. Roderick, R. Enright,

I. Kuehler, D. Braun, E. Gable. FRONT ROW: M. Pollard, R. Cotrell, A. Capurro, R. Schoenstein, H. Schmitz, Secretary; J. Seive, President; D. Seybold, Vice President; K. Nardinelli, Sergeant-at-Arms; 3. Kilkenny, J. Agnello, J. DriscoU, R. Fahey.

R.O.T.C

CADET BAND

124 SENIOR OFFICERS, FIRST BATTALION

BACK ROW, left to right: A. Quinn, E. Derry, R. Cassimus, F. Edden, E. Conmy, R. Monroe, J. Flynn, J. Rocca, L. Nolte, M. Gregory. SECOND ROW: F. Bottero, J. McCargar, B. Francis, R. Okamoto, T. Janda, D. Shlemmer, B. Freitas, H. Schmitz, M. Virga, R. Butler, D. Fahey, B. Campbell, L.

Gairaud, W. Wong, P. Malley, M. Lewis. FRONT ROW: D. Hegarty, J. Coles, K. Nardinelli, R. Jordan, J. Driscoll, B. Aguilar, A. Bertagna, J. Hammond, A. Honzel.

R.O.T.C

SECOND BATTALION SENIORS

BACK HOW, left to right: A. Capurro, J. Ramona, R. Knox, D. Seybold, I. Love, D. O'Keefe, W. Kelly, J. Aron, J. Kahn, B. Brady, R. Rankin, H. Shoenstein. SECOND ROW: R. Cotrell, R. Au, E. Gable, M. Pollard, L. Lucas, B. Toney, J. Smalley, E. O'Brien, R. Scares, M. Boulger, J. Horstmann,

P. Murphy, D. Louis, R. Gleeson, S. Seneker, L. Balistreri, J. McClellan. FRONT ROW: P. Meehan, W. Maronick, G. Kraemer, P. Kane, G. Kilkenny,

J. Agnello, E. Biasatti, R. Luzzi.

125 JUNIOR R.O.T.C. — FIRST PLATOON

BACK ROW, left to right: C. McNamara, A. Chase, R. Scalzo, R. George, A. Escover, J. Vasconcellos, R. Berry, J. Young. SECOND HOW: W. Gill, W. Reilly, W. Binckley, G. Fotinos, D. Braun, J. Kuehler, F. Perdichizzi, W. Brunkow, J. Arena, R. Neary, D. Giampoli. FRONT HOW: J. Ginella, Larry Cloney, G. Anderson, J. Rowe, M. McHenry, R. Blanke, B. Bonnel, F. Zamora,

R.O.T.C

JUNIOR R.O.T.C. — SECOND PLATOON BACK ROW, left to right: T. King, W. Hartman, C. Quinn, M. Tarabini, R. Muxlow, R. Laubacher, W. Filice, D. O'Donnell. SECOND HOW: C. Gordon, T. Black, A. Walsh, H. Shea, R. Pera, P. Zasso, H. Fahrner, W. O'Brien, K. Ravizza, K. Kelley, W. McPherson, W. Caro. FRONT BOW: J. Mendoza, M. Yamate, J. Miggins, M. Smith, H. Isola, R. Johnson, J. Nobriga.

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126 JUNIOR R.O.T.C. — THIRD PLATOON

BACK ROW, leit to right: J. Flanagan, J. Ball, R. Wood, W. Wilkinson, J. Clark, W. Olson, E. McCormick, E. Abate, J. Lewis, D. Toomey, J. Murphy, R. BernaL FRONT ROW: R. Celli, K. Ogle, E. Curran, D. Garibaldi, P. Tiernan, C. Cravalho, R. Camilli, A. Chanteloup, D. Colo, D. Donovan, H. O'Day.

KO.T.C

JUNIOR R.O.T.C. — FOURTH PLATOON

TOP ROW, left to right: K. Fay, W. Hartung, J. Kelly, B. Zuppan, R. Symth. SECOND ROW: L. Edwards, R. Sanguinetti, J. Trent, P. Gilligan, G. Martin, L. Menard, T. Doyle, L. Rianda, D. Benedetti, E. Mirch, D. Vaughn. FRONT ROW: F. Bengston, J. Stuart, R. Scholz, D. Ornellas, R. Roderick, J. Reynolds, R. Enright, D. Cortese, R. Akin, S. Leal, E. Bispo.

127 Cra-a-'4«y f^p/^c;

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STANDING, left to right: L. Rianda, J. Merrick, B. Maroniik, B. Francis, D. O'Day. KNEELING: W. Ruggles.

Two or three nights before every major game, the lights go on in the basement of Walsh Hall. Down into the depths march pep-spreading, sign- painting Santa Clarans, to work among the cobwebs, the old lumber, and

the glare of fifty iceboxes. Before morning, every tree and post, every bare spot on the Co-op bears some reminder of the coming contest. Headed by Bill Maronick, the Rally Committee has covered the campus.

It was they who got the entertainment, the speakers for the rallies at

school and the news reporters to cover them. At games against the repeated attacks on Banners and Bell they stood up well. And after handling student seating at the games, they stood up too—to cheer the teams with about twice the decibels of other rooters. In short, they

made it their job to channel student spirit, to cheer with the cheerers, to play with the players.

134 /

if ' »ii

BLOCK S. C. BACK ROW, left to right: T. Whelp, M. Gregory, G. Nagler, B. McPherson, B. Payne, B. Olson, M. Virga, K. Lindegren, L. Lanz. SECOND ROW: D. Sey- bold, A. Bertagna, D. Louis, P. Zasso, D. Vaughan, G. Lynch, E. Biasatti, L.

Lucas, M. Lewis. FRONT ROW: Fr. Markey, J. Young, D. Scares, R. Moberg, P. Malley, M. Boulger, H. Schoenstein, A. Daly, J. Kaplan.

President Pat Malley

In the early days of the fall Freshmen were moved to revolt. They had bowed low enough and long to their initiators. The time had come to throw off chains, and if a few Seniors got hit with flying shackles it wouldn't make much difference. A 150-Frosh demonstration was or- ganized before before Walsh Hall. One flaming youth of '56, imbued with the spirit of a Teddy Roosevelt, proposed a charge up the steps, into the rooms. He charged five steps before he was collared by an impressive right guard. Rebellion was squelched—the Block S.C. had turned in another job. Formed of letter-holding athletes in all sports. Block S.C. has this year again done its best to order the new class of Freshmen into a vital, interested unit, helping along such lines as handling the concessions at Frosh games and welcoming new ball-playing Santa Clarans to school. Maintaining order at the bigger games and some degree of it at rallies is another of the Block S.C. services.

Block S.C. is an honor society. There is honor in the hard playing that won members their letters and honor in the service they give to the rest of the student body.

135 HEAD COACH LINE COACH Dick Gallagher Ed Ulinski

^lllliim00'

BACKFIELD COACH Mike Scarry

ATHLETIC MANAGER Denny Heenan STUDENT MANAGER Joe Agnello

TRAINER Henry Schmidt

EQUIPMENT MANAGER Salty Campo Aided by Lewis' bloclt Hare cuts inside 10-yard stripe

s T A Hare off on 41-yard scamper to Stanford goal N

F STANFORD STADIUM, Stanford, California, September 20— Unable to make the proper advances when Lady Luck smiles their way, the Santa Clara Broncos today back into a 28-13 defeat at the hands of the Stanford Indians, in the opening of the 1952 football O season at Palo Alto. The high-spirited Broncs take early command of the situation, as they block a punt, and 27 yards later Billy Gil walks over left tackle for one yard and the initial touchdown. A following drive sparked R by Joe McCargar and Duane Louis, carries them to the Stanford one-yard line — but here the roof caves in. Lady Luck finds the Santa Clarans too free with their hands, too prone to injury, and unable to com- D pete with the passes of the Indians. With a penalty stopping this drive, and Gern Nagler out of action, the Broncs lose their lead on a 26-yard pass play from Bob Garrett to Ron Cook. Minutes later John

Stanton falls on a fumble in the end zone to make it 14-6. Just before halftime, a bench-called play finds Louis screen-passing to Fran Hare for 41 yards and

seven points. But after the intermission, it is all Stanford as Garrett throws to Sam Morley for 24 yards and a touchdown, and Bob Mathias scores the clincher on a short plunge.

Kid Kaplan Axes Indians (Picturp bv S F Examiner)

CO-CAPT. GENE LYNCH

CO-CAPT. GENE PISENTI CO-CAPT. MARV GREGORY

CO-CAPT. JOE McCARGAR

Jayhawkers light on Novak

MEMORIAL STADIUM, Lawrence, Kansas, September 27— Still shy and awkward, Santa Clara's Broncos today come within a hair of upsetting the high-and- mighty Jayhawkers of Kansas in 95-degree heat. In a contest remarkably similiar to that of last week the Kansans find the Broncos looking the gift horse in the mouth and take advantage of it in grabbing a 21-9 verdict.

Once again the Westerners tally first, as Bill Olson recovers a fumble and 43 yards later Jack Kaplan drives through guard for 14 yards and six points. Again Daly's kick is blocked. After Kansas marches 69 yards, sending Bob Brandeberry into the end zone, to take the lead, Daly's success from the 23-yard line gives the Broncs a 9-6 halftime lead. But again the Broncos find themselves impotent in the final two periods, time and again finding K opportunity at the door, and just as often refusing admittance. Failing to score on four possessions deep in Kansas territory, the losers see their chances vaporize on a 71-yard punt return touchdown by Gil Reich, and a subsequent three-yard scoring dash by Frank Cindrich. A Louis dumped hard after short quarterback sneak N S A S

!39 r«wps'

T U

L Gregory ready to pounce A N Tulane secondary gives Gil helping hand SUGAR BOWL STADIUM, New Orleans, Louisiana, October 4— E It is a gloriously sunny day as Santa Clara returns to New Orleans' Sugar Bowl Stadium, the scene of her greatest triumphs. But for the Broncos there is to be no sunshine today. The Broncos figure that this will be their game. They are pre-game razor-sharp. But comes the opening kickoff, and they are blunted by the Green Wave of Tulane. The Broncos can't gain, they can't get past the victor's thirty-yard line. The Green Wave boils, their varied offense confuses the Broncos, their backs have their best day of the season, they injure George Montgomery and Billy Gil, they play hard, rough-and-tough football. The Wave scores first after a fumble, as Max McGee goes 14 yards inside left end. Then after McGee goes 66 yards on a punt return, Pete Clement passes to Bravo for another fourteen-yard score, and this just two seconds before the half. Post-intermission, Clement throws 36 yards to McElhannon, Dempsey screen-tosses to McGee for 31 yards, and Partridge goes three yards over left end, for the final, brutal, three touchdowns of a 35-0 rout.

Southern salute to Santa Clara

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CO-CAPT. JACK KAPLAN

COCAPT. EDO BIASATTI COCAPT. BOB GLEESON

ner Pholo) CO-CAPT. GERN NAGLER Bo Lewis begins 43-yard sprint to Cal 27yard line

CALIFORNIA MEMORIAL STADIUM, Berkeley, California, October 18— c Playing their most inspired ball of the season to date, the Santa Clarans today give the Golden Bears of California many anxious moments, before bowing out in the final quarter of play, 7-27. A Off to an unpretentious start, with the victors scoring 14 points in the initial period, the Broncos bounce back to play stalemate ball for one period, and then superior ball for another, against the best the Bears have to offer. But comes the closing quarter, and the breaks go against the Santa Clarans, L as do the gambles, and the Bears add a duo of touchdowns in the final minutes. The Broncs' one successful drive finds all three running backs participating. The drive, carrying 33 yards, is led by Joe McCargar with 20 of those yards. Mel Lewis adds nine, but it is Jack Kaplan I who enters the end zone from the one-yard line. The victors are led by half Bill Powell, who thrice crosses the goal on jaunts of 1, 17, and 7 yards. The second Bear score comes as fullback John Olszewski takes off around end for a 13-yarder. F The longest run of the contest is turned in by Lewis, as he rambles 43 yards early in the game—but to no avail. This drive halts on the Bear 28, another on the Bear 8, and a third time a penalty keeps the ball on the Bear 40, instead of leaving it on the Cal one-yard line. O R (Call-Bulletin Photo) N I A

lohnny-O bobbles pass in three-point landing 141 / D A H

O (S t LxaiiiiiiHi I'liui'., Broncs gallop for plenty

KEZAR STADIUM, San Francisco, California, October 24—

"It feels awfully good to get that first win, regardless of how we got it—we were very lucky." With these words Coach Dick Gallagher aptly pictures the Broncos' initial 1952 victory, a 9-7 struggle over the University of Idaho in a night contest at San Francisco's Kezar Stadium. Starting off like Wildfire, the Broncos quickly recede to the level of their opponents and after being held on the Idaho one-yard line, they play a hot-and-cold, sloppy ball game that was won only because of the running of Joe McCargar, and occasional heads-up, always hard-fought football. Trailing 7-0 after half Dick Pickett goes four yards down the middle for a touchdown, the Broncs drive 65 yards to penetrate the Idaho end zone. On a fourth down, Louis with a beautiful bit of deception, spot-passes to an all-clear Gern Nagler for the score. But, apropos, Daly's kick flies wide of the target, and the Broncs trail 6-7 at halftime.

Third-quarter-wise, it is Daly who plants the football through the uprights from the 12-yard line, for the all-important trio of winning points.

Hare shoestrings Vandal's Hart

CO-CAPT. MEL LEWIS

CO-CAPT. BILL PAYNE Broncs turn tables — lasso Cowboy H GRAPE BOWL STADIUM, Lodi, California, November 1—

The Santa Clara Broncos storm the Alamo tonight, but the best they can get is a no-conditions truce, A as they battle to a 14-14 tie with the Hardin-Simmons Cowboys.

It's give-and-take all the way, and but for SC half Mel Lewis, it is a take-home victory for the El Pasoans. But Lewis scores twice, and John Daly converts twice, to safeguard the stalemate. R The Broncs score first on a three-yard toss from Duane Louis to Mel Lewis, but twelve plays later the Texans send Mitch Malouf 11 yards into the end zone to knot the score. The tie stands until the last three minutes of the third quarter, when Lewis scores again, after a sixty-yard drive, on a one- D yard run around right end. But the Cowboys are not to be denied, as they culminate an 80-yard drive with a 26-yard paydirt pass from Ogden Compton to End D. C. Andrews. The closing minutes are hectic, as Hardin-Simmons drives for yards and yards, but on the final I play Fran Hare tackles Compton on the Bronco 13-yard line to insure the tie. N CO-CAPT. KEN MIRCH CO-CAPT. KEN UNDEGREN S MI M O N S a p.

Kaplan caged by Tigers

PACIFIC MEMORIAL STADIUM, Stockton, California, November 8—

Amidst a mass of glorious pageantry, the Santa Clara Broncos and College of Pacific Tigers tonight give birth to the nearly stillborn Garcia Sombrero trophy. And in quest of this trophy the Santa Clarans enter Pacific Memorial Stadium determined to upset both Tigers and betting odds. But once again the Broncos just haven't got the goods, and after looking good on an early-game threat, they watch Pacific dent the scoreboard on a two-yarder by halfback Tom McCormick. Then, still in the second quarter, Jerry Streeter hits monstrous end Ken Buck for the second touchdown of the period. The victors open the second half by kicking off, but do it cleverly—off-sidedly, and recovering on the Santa Clara 40, they add another touchdown via the Streeter-Buck battery, this time for 24 yards. Now quarterback Joe Clark takes full command for the first time this season, but even that is not enough, as the big Tiger line holds the Broncos deep within Pacific territory on two occasions. And just before the third period closes, Streeter throws again, for five yards to half Phil Flock, for the tally which makes the final score 27-0.

Broncs close cage too late as Tigers' McCormack scores

COCAPT. JOHN DALY

CO-CAPT. FRAN HARE (S. F. Examiner Photo) Ute slips through Bronc tacklers for TD

HUGHES STADIUM, Sacramento, California, November 15—

For the only time this season, the weather is bad for the Broncos. Heavy rains have limited the crowd to 2500, and the field is muddy. To add to the confusion, both Santa Clara and Utah bring bright red jerseys, so the Broncs must sport white half-T-shirts. u The visitors score first, as Bean travels 24 yards around the left side of the Bronco line. But before long, safetyman Fran Hare takes off on a scintillating 53-yard pinit return, with two reversals of field, to make the score 6-6. The attempt for extra point is blocked. In the third quarter Bronc Edo Biasatti T recovers a fumble on the Ute 10, and on his fourth successive try. Jack Kaplan goes over from the one-yard line. With things seeming under control, the tables turn. After a lateral interception, the victors cover 32 A yards with Bean again scoring, this time from the eight-yard line, with only five minutes remaining. Then begins the desperation battle, and the Broncos lose their opportunity. The Mountaineers take over, and although they can't make it all the way, they settle for an eight-yard field goal, with two H minutes to go, to emerge victorious at 16-13.

CO-CAPT. DUANE LOUIS CO-CAPT. JACK McMAHON

!45 s A N J O s E Charging McCargar heads for State secondary (S. F. Examiner Ph

SPARTAN STADIUM, San Jose, California, November 27— S Despite crippling injuries and stalling penalties, the Santa Clara Broncos today play "Guts foot- ball," and bring home the bacon in their final contest of the season, with a 15-7 victory over cross-town rival San Jose State. T The game opens with the Broncs 13-point underdogs. Two minutes, 46 seconds later, after a fumble recovery by Ken Mirch, Jack Kaplan scores for the Broncos. But the conversion misses, and Fran Hare, Joe Clark, and Gern Nagler leave the game on injuries. The tides change again, as tackle Bill Payne A catches Spartan q.b. Lynn Aplanalp in the end zone for a two-pointer, just seconds before the half. The second half is a travesty of penalties, but the Broncs push across their final 1952 touchdown with Kaplan again doing the honors. After that, only a fortunate 70-yard pass plan, from Jerry Hamilton T to Larry Matthews, saves San Jose from an inglorious shutout defeat. The final gun sounds, and the Broncs are jubilant in this sweet victory. While their fans are assaulting the goal posts, they hoist their coaching staff onto their shoulders and trot off the field—in the conclusion E of football at the University of Santa Clara.

The last chapter — a happy ending

CO-CAPT. DEWEY FALCONE

CO-CAPT. JOE RAMONA

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BACK ROW, left to right: Coach Gallagher, J. Agnello (Mgr.), P. MalUy, J. Sullivan (Mgr.). L. Lanz (Mgr.), S. Campo, H. Schmidt, M. Scarry, E. Uliaiki. FOURTH ROW: E. Biaiatti, P. Baldacci, A. Smolich, T. Zu]*c, F. NoTak, B. Draklich, K. Lindagran, D. Vaughon, R. Gile, R. Salaiar, I. Clark, B. Olion. THIRD ROW: D. Giampoli, S. Hunting, T. Connolly, J. McCargar, T- Kaplan, C. Hollmar, I. Walsh, B. McPharson, M. Lewis, F. Hare. SECOND ROW: B. Gil, J. Payan, F. Bengston, C. French, B. Payne, B. Gleeson, X. Mireh, D. touis, M. Gregory. FRONT ROW: G. Lynch, G. Nogler, G. Pisenti, J. Ramona, I. McMahon, J. Daly, D. Falcone.

Varsity Football

It was just after the turn of the century that the University of Santa Clara

first flung its battle flag into the wars of intercollegiate football competition.

More than fifty years ago H.M., King Football commenced his long and

glorious rule at the Mission School. His rule was prosperous, although the fortunes of his subjects ran not always high. But yet what reverses were severe enough to counterbalance the glories of the two great Sugar Bowl teams and the team that won at the Orange Bowl—glories that sing aloud the name of Santa Clara through the world of intercollegiate athletics?

Football had brought many fine and happy moments to Santa Clarans faculty, alumni, friends, students, as well as the players themselves. The spirit of competition and the education in the art of winning or losing well,

went far to inculcate Santa Clarans with the fullness necessary to mold the man after the Man-God. Football has been discontinued before at the University, during each of

the two world wars. Now it has been discontinued for other reasons, too numerous and controversial to enumerate here. Without football, a part of the glory that has been Santa Clara's will lapse

into darkness, to live again only when that sport is once again restored to an

integral position in the extracurricular activities of the University.

148 jLgiiiiwj_ . Wggggg^l-i^iWMgyM;^;;^^ ;^3^muggg,fa; ,_--^ _ ^ :Jl=J!!.-^^:i„ri»JL-B:J^JH-J' J. ;^ T BACK ROW, left to right: Salty Campo, Coach Denny Heenan, H. Toomey, P. Thompson, T. Walters, J. Decker, R. Marnett, H. Schmidt. THIRD ROW: L. Davis, F. Laney, F. Ferrini, M. Maddalena, T. Spinardi, M. Torres, W. Towne, C. Morabito, W. Ross. SECOND ROW: J. Heuer, T. Brennan, H. Redell, D. Comstock, M. Mastelotto, J. Brown, F. Brannen, C. Massey. FRONT ROW: R. Burgess, R. Disney, M. Voshall, T. Kieier, D. Lauricella, A. Stewart, F. Furlanic, J. Quinn.

Freshman Football

In its last year in the intercollegiate stadium the Red and White Frosh fielded what was, ironically, one of the most promising and inspirited teams in its history. Hard-running, high-stepping backs with seven-league cleats, a line that held-to like the boy on the burning deck carried the Colts through all collegiate competition. During the season they lost only one game—to pro-studded Treasure Island Navy. First of the many victims was the CO. P. Cubs. The poised Colts used every period but the second to run up a 19-0 victory.

Next, the young Broncs fell before the battle-scarred veterans of Treasure Island, 14-7, after holding the vaunted navymen for three quarters. But Colt power bucked again as the Frosh fought their way from behind a 17-0 half- time score against the highly-touted undefeated Stanford young ones, 20-17. And in the season's finale the Colts kicked the cross-town Spartan Babes mightily 54-13. The running and stellar defense of Jim Decker, the powerful arm of Joe

Quinn, the linebacking of Jim Brown, the team spirit of the finest aggregate of Frosh pigskinners to gather at the Mission School in many years—all played important roles in chalking up a victorious farewell. ^" •|;-yi/vf J^l m^ -^e

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SEASON'S SCORES

Santa Clara__....19 C.O.P. _ ._.

Santa Clara 7 Treasure Island. .14

Santa Clara 20 Stanford 17

Santa Clara 54 San Jose State ....13

4. 3

A Basketball

COACH BOB FEERICK

Starting slowly, but again finishing with a flourish, the Santa Clara Broncos compiled a 20-7 win- and-loss record for the 1952-53 basketball season, one of the best in recent Bronco history. Highlighting the season's play for Coach Bob Feerick's Broncos were the sweeps of the cross-town series with San Jose State and the Hawaii tour, the sharing of the California Basketball Association title, the intersectional victory over highly-regarded Brigham Young, and the tremendous effort against the outstanding Washington Huskies. The Broncos, after a strong 1951-52 finish, started the season inauspiciously, dropping three of their first six games. But as is characteristic of Feerick's teams, the Broncs finished fast, winning nine of their last ten outings. In the newly organized California Basketball Association, the Broncos put on a great stretch drive to overhaul the USF Dons at the wire, and gain a tie for the championship. Because of their superior

overall season record, the Santa Clarans were tendered the NCAA "member - at - large" bid to the Regional Playoffs at Corvallis, Oregon—but only after they had overcome the Hardin-Simmons Cow- boys, winner of the Border Conference Crown, in a qualifying contest. The Broncos then eased by the Skyline Conference champion, Wyoming, in the opener at Corvallis. And the following night, only the uncanny accuracy of one Bob Houbregs, kept the Broncos from once again capturing the Western Regionals Championship. National ratings, always neglectful of the Santa Clarans, finally granted them a 16th spot at the conclusion of the season. And with only one senior. Captain Dick Soares, on the squad. Coach Bob Feerick had done a remarkable job with "a bunch of kids."

154 VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM Benedetti. BACK ROW, leit to right: Dick Camilli, Dick Simoni, Coach Bob Feerick, Capt. Dick Scares, Don SECOND ROW: Salty Campo, Tom Doyle, Mickey Mount, John Boudreau, Gary Gafzert, Smitty Schmidt. FRONT ROW: Dom Banducci, Ken Sears, Herb Shoenstein, Dick Garibaldi, Jim Young, Marty Boulger.

LEFT TO RIGHT: Dick Garibaldi, Ken Sears, Dick Scares, Herb Shoenstein, Jim Young CB.A.

The maiden season of play in the California Basketball Association found the Broncos of Santa Clara and the Dons of the University of San Fran- cisco sharing the top rung of the laddier. The 61-58 victory over the Dons in the regular season finale climaxed a long up-hill pull by the Broncs. With but two games remaining, the Santa Clarans were at a distinct disadvantage with their 4-2 record, compared to the Dons' commanding 6-0 total. However, a timely victory by San Jose over the Dons gave the Broncos the opening they needed, for they went on to nip both the Spartans and the frontrunning USF'ers. In the St. Mary's series the Broncs rang the hoop twice in three attempts; losing the first tilt in a player spilling rhubarb, the Broncs gave vent to their anger by dumping the Gaels rather rudely (84-56 and 72-57) in their final two encounters. The cross-town series with the Spartans was a three-game complete success. However, the Staters barely succumbed in overtime, 50-47, in the final meeting. Hapless COP was the victim in a record scoring conquest.

Mount's iingertip control

Mount and two Lions play high altitude leapfrog

Soares pumps — Gael jumps the Broncos caging the Tigers 89-51 following a 69-46 win. Lanky 6' 8" Kenny Sears finished third in the CBA individual scoring race, and represented Santa Clara on both the All-CBA and All-Northern California All-Star Teams.

CBA RECORD

SC Opponents

58 San Jose State 42* 48 USF 59 69 COP 46

65 San Jose State 47

65 St. Mary's 70

84 St. Mary's 56* 89 COP 51

72 St. Mary's 57

50 San Jose State 47 61 USF 58

'^non-league games

Young collars Gaal as Ga«l collars ball

Garibaldi losas hsad but gets ball

Two that didn't go through Pacific Coast

In an otherwise highly successful season, only the Broncos' 2-4 record against their PCC opponents showed a deficit.

In an early season Northern trip, the Broncos were edged out by Oregon 65- 62, topped Oregon State 68-66, then fell to the same team 69-68 on a com- bination of a hot host team, home-town refereeing, and an after-the-final-buzzer by Tex Whiteman, Beaver forward. On this trip Ken Sears, Jim Young and Dick Soares provided the Broncs' scoring kick. Upon their return home the Santa Clarans ran into more trouble, as they gave away a 72-61 victory to the Trojans of Southern California. Finally hitting their stride, the Broncos easily scalped the Stanford Indians, 81-71, in a game which saw

Palm-reading Indian held in seance by "Garibaldi the Great" (Call-Bulletin Photo)

Rear-guard action from Sears as Shoenstein pivots to shoot (S. F. Examiner Photo)

Swan Sears in perfect form Confterence

dribbling Don Benedetti play casaba "Indian-giver" with the befuddled Stanford defenders and Kenny Sears joining the elite Cow Palace "21 Club." In the contest against California, the Southern Division champs' fantastic

69% first half shooting display nulli- fied a desperate Bronco comeback attempt, and the PCCers triumphed, 70-64.

FCC RECORD

SC Opponents 62 Oregon 65

68 Oregon State 66

68 Oregon State 69

61 use 72

81 Stanford 71

64 California 70

Shoenstein and Sears wage battle vrith Troy

Mount soars; Soares mounts

McKeen and Sears poised to Inter

Santa Clara opened its season against the San Francisco YMI, and squeaked through to a comeback, overtime 66-63 victory in a game indicative of thrilling comebacks to come. The Broncs then swung into action against Fresno State's

Bulldogs, first outracing them on the hard- woods of Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, and then capturing a 74-67 contest in Fres- no. The locals then entertained the Lions from their sister institution, Loyola, of Los Angeles, and treated them to an 82-67 defeat. Nationally ranked Brigham Young U. of Provo, Utah, ran into a host of rebound-

ing giants and lost, 72-64. Hard pressed B.Y.U. seldom got a shot away, and then were doled only one per time, as the board-sweeping Broncos seldom allowed their visitors a tip or rebound. Again Don Benedetti put on his fan pleasing drib-

bling act and frequently left two and three

Cougars clawing the air in their ball steal- ing attempts.

Soares 'Scoares.'

Ken Sears: Animated Suspension.

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sectional

Finally, Santa Clara's basketballers

took the tourist route to the Hawaiian Islands, and came back with three victory

leis, 68-63 and 71-47 over the strong am- ateur Universal Motors, and 80-55 over the University of Hawaii. Pacific Coast prestige was well upheld! Intersectional record

SC Opponents

66 YMI 63

77 Fresno State 59 82 Loyola 67

74 Fresno State 67 72 Brigham Young 64

68 Universal Motors 63

71 Universal Motors 47

80 University of Hawaii 55

'I'll take two on this one/' Herb Shoenstein. [Vhoto by Honolulu SUr-Bullelin)

Young ball-headed man.

"I'll just grab this and go home!" The Big

The Broncos completed their regular season's play with a driving finish, win- ning nine of their final ten encounters. And catapulting them into the NCAA playoffs at Corvallis were the victories over San Jose State, USF, and Hardin- Simmons. The twice-downed but steam-gathering Spartans, riding high after their upset

conquest of USF, argued strongly this time before bowing 50-47 in an overtime contest at the San Jose Civic. Once again Sears and Young spearheaded the Mis- sion-Towners' attack.

That victory set up the Broncos for a

"Float up and check that!"

"Please stand back and let us finish this dance!' Mickey Mount and Spartan partner.

Don Benedetti: "More bounce to the ounce."

(P/joto by S. F. Examiner) Build-up

tie with pace-setting USF for the CBA crown. Jampacked Kezar Pavilion in San Francisco witnessed a whistle-tooting 61- 58 Santa Clara triumph. Adding a new twist, Coach Feerick sent dribbling ace

Benedetti into the Pavilion's alcove to warm up for his fan pleasing "cat-and-

mouse" act. With the NCAA bid now in pocket, the Santa Clarans had to meet the Hardin- Sinnnons Cowboys for the Corvallis berth. On the neutral court of Stanford Pavilion, the Broncs, led by Capt. Dick Soares' 21

points, easily corralled the Cowboys, to win going away — away to Corvallis!

Garibaldi rising to the occasion.

"V\\ take a high ball!'

'Well, let's get there before they're all sold!

(Photo by S. F. Examiner) NCAA.

CORVALLIS, OREGON

For the second straight year Santa Clara's Broncos invaded Corvallis' Gill Coliseum, this time to defend their West- ern Regional Championship. Sporting a sparkling 19-6 record, the best major col- lege mark in California, the young Santa Clarans would have to get by Wyoming's Cowboys, Seattle's Flying Chieftains, and the terrors of the Northwest, the Wash- ington Huskies. With Ken Sears' 19 markers leading an easy-going attack, the Broncos con- vincingly unseated Wyoming's Cowboys 67-52. But there now loomed Washington, the crushing 92-70 conquerors of Seattle.

From the opening tip-off surprises were

in store. Santa Clara scored first, and with Kenny Sears wheeling and shooting and Sears and Garibaldi shattering the Hus- kies' rebounding legend, the Broncs main- tained a 30-28 halftime lead.

Hooking Huskie Houbregs shown collecting 2 of 34 points total despite Mount's menacing metacarpals.

Soares dodges Wyoming thrust and parries with overhead lunge.

Sears making like Houbregs with finger-tip hook.

(Photo by Heib) Rigid Garibaldi "pointing" for Cowboy

But in the third period All-American Bob Houbregs began to swish the netting with incred- ible 20-30 foot hook shots. He concluded the eve- ning with 34 points in a 74-62 win, a margin which doesn't tell the close story. On a par with Houbregs was the great and game Sears, the "best player on the floor" and All-Tournament Team first stringer, who left the game to a standing ovation of 10,000 fans.

Young breaks through to bisect Washington triangle. %*irf**'^

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^ * - • ; - > x^^ ;: ^ ' ^^™^^' 4WW^^ML .IK\.i:»^ yjfc ^^^^f Jg HI ^^^^P ' "^ ' ^ - ^ ^ fei # STANDING, left to right: Coach Marty Boulger, Joe Wedow, Bob Eraser, Nick Jones, Dean Robinson, John Huso, Barry Oneto (Mgr.). SEATED: Pete Murphy, Denny Miick, Danny Ball, Dan Sullivan, Mickey Kelly, Mose Mastelotto, Carl Bosque, Pat DaBellis.

Freshman Basketball

The Freshman basketball team this year must have been the shortest ever to parade onto any court. Yet, they kept pace with the rangiest opponents to compile an 8-7 record for the late season. They just took more steps. Using speed to compensate for lack of height, the Colts, under Coach Marty Boulger, employed an often successful fast-break, team-work variety of play that gave them their biggest victories over Lowell High (San Francisco City Champs) and the high-flying Stanford squad. Leading scorer among the ground- hugging Colts was 6' 2" forward-guard Dean Robinson, whose 186 points led Carl Bosque's 171, and Danny Ball's 147.

GUARD DEAN ROBINSON CENTER CARL BOSQUE FORWARD MOSE MASTELOTTO

Record: Santa Clara Freshman Basketball team:

61 City College S. F 57 49 Bellarmine Prep 52 78 Hartnell College 69 49 St. Mary's Frosh 69 91 Santa Cruz All-Stars 75 75 Lowell High 63

62 U. S. F. Fresh 69 70 Menlo J. C 77 70 Hartnell College 59 77 Stanford Frosh 69 48 San Jose State Frosh.... 57 58 St. Ignatius High 50 56 St. Mary's Fresh 84 75 San Jose State Frosh.... 46 48 U. S. F. Frosh 73

GUARD DANNY BALL

FORWARD NICK JONES

BACK ROW, leit to right: S. Campo, D. Cole, D. Seybold, J. Payan, S. Sherwood, D. Simoni, D. Camilli, K. Nardinelli, T. Welp, P. Zasso, Coach Prentice. SECOND ROW: R. Moberg, J. McClellen, G. Suhr, M. Virgo, L, Lucas, D. Louis, Trainer Henry Schmidt. FRONT ROW: K. Lynch (Mgr.), R. Stanley, O. Schleich, A. Bertagna, D. Benedetti, D. Modena.

Varsity Baseball

Tearing off like a line drive, Santa Clara finished the first of its season with seven victories in eleven games. The record, which includes two won in three league attempts, carried the team to second place

in the California Intercollegiate Baseball Association by the end of March.

The Broncs romped the diamond with victories over Moffett Field, the Minor League All-Stars, and the Palo Alto Oaks before deferring to the overpowering opposition of the Moffatt-Mantecas. After three

more practice tilts, the Santa Clarans edged Cal's Bears by one run, 7-6. Pete Zasso relief pitching and

Merriwelling it for the winning run.

At the series in the South with U.C.L.A., the Broncos took the first game 6-4, on Ken Nardinelli's grand- slamming home run. But next day, the Bruins availed themselves of six Bronco errors for 11-1 vengeance.

Coach Bill Prentice was looking with his team, as of April 1, toward the remaining seventeen games on the schedule, thirteen of which will be in C.I.B.A. competition.

70 k ^tv

Plate Play: Lucas on top. Bronco Coach: Bill Prentice.

King Kong Ken Cuts.

r » 171 S-c-r-r-e-e-e-t-c-h,

S-u-u-u-u-u-u-h-r-r! !! McCIellen fending off Bruin body block.

"Whadda ya mean, 'ball'?" Cap-balancing Bruin bears down on Bronco. Power plus Camilli piques pitcher. Ball-fondling Bronc obscures dust-biting Uclan.

Foul tip.

Virga swinging for the fences.

r-'^'^7^0j '-I

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BACK ROW, left to right: Mgr. Bob Dohrmann, Frank Wallace, Dud Schwade, Bill Chambers, Joe Quinn, Bill Kiely, Terry Harris, Coach Jim Bowen, Head Coach Bill McPherson. FRONT ROW: Vic Zabala, Don Piser. Dean Robinson, Bill Carroll, Chuck Longwello. Dick Ferrari, Reno Cornaggia, Dave Bryson.

Freshtnan Baseball Record to date:

Displaying a surplus of hard hitters, liut lacking in "control" pitchers, the Frosh base- Frosh Opponents ball team compiled a 3-4-1 record in games played during the month of March. The 6 San Mateo J. C 10 13 Santa Clara High 11 entire pitching staff, though equipped with bullet speed, tended to fire more like shot- 11 San Francisco C. C... 12 guns than rifles. And a radar-minus defense too frequently neutralized the power laden 6 St. Ignatius 10 bats of the young Broncs. 5 San Jose High 5 Coached by Bill McPherson and Jim Bowen, the Colts hit their peak with a 16-13 16 California Frosh 13 victory over the Cal Frosh. Joe Wedow displayed the best pitching of the season when he 20 Willow Glen High.... 6 James Lick High .... 2 threw a three-hitter in losing to James Lick High. Top performers for the Colts were third baseman Chuck Longwello, second baseman Dud Schwade, left fielder Herm Carmassi, and shortstop Joe Quinn. The Team; Don Ornellas, Jerry Bordelon, Adolph Eitner.

Wrestling

The wrestlers entered what a politician would call "an era of realization" when they hit the mats this year. By even the Eitner in action. least favorable accounts, this was the best season for them in recent years, perhaps the best ever. Although too few torso- twisters came out to allow dual competi-

tion, three enthusiasts were entered in every local intercollegiate tournament. Leading his mates was junior Don Ornellas with a 6-5 slate, and following closely along were Jerry Bordelon and Adolph Eitner, a pair of sophomores who posted 5-6 and 4-8 records. In the tourna- ments, 130-lb. Ornellas managed a fourth place in the Pacific Coast Intercollegiates, a second in the Far Western Champion- ships, and a third in the Senior P. A.A. in San Francisco. Bordelon, at 147-lbs. won fourth spot in his division of the P.C.I.

175 Soccer

Santa Clara's cosmopolitan sporting club—the Soccer Team—acquitted itself rather less well this year than it has done for some time. Under the coaching of the Nigerian Napoleon, Ike Ozigbu, a former All-American in the sport, the team moved into its season lacking experience and time (most players were harrassed engineers) to develop into a free-running outfit. Football dropped, there is a good case to be made for revivified Soccer in next season and for many to come.

Captain Ernie Aboitiz

BACK ROW, left to right: D. Birmingham, R. Scholz, P. Thompson, J. Beaulieu, J. O'Laughlin. FRONT ROW: V. Vlasich, R. Tinoco, E. Aboitiz, F. Corral, D. Lynn. LEFT TO RIGHT: Captain Beaver (Coach), Charles Vierra, Bob Clarkin, Lucas Lanz, Lee Greco, Bill Campbell, Tom Bertken, joe Willioms, Sergeant Reedy (Coach).

Rifle Club

Golf Club

BACK ROW, left to right: John Beaulieu, Jack Cheatham, Joe Salazar, Bill Henderson, Frank Edden, Lcrry Fry, Perry Carter. FRONT ROW: Harry McLaughlin, Jim Flood, Jerry Trask, Don Johnson, John Miggins, Mike Raschko.

*-^*itri Water Polo

-A»S ,

The rush of certain minor sports toward discontinuation had little effect on the water polo team. Well ahead of the crowd in that regard, members unofficially beat themselves silly three afternoons a week for another entire season. Unfortunately, their zeal went somewhat unrewarded in their competition with some of California's best at supermarine soccer, including Cal Poly's very going concern. It was fifteen games altogether and not much luck. Top scorer for the Broncs was junior Fred Benson, followed by John Kistinger, a freshman whose promise seems ready to pay off in upcoming seasons. The water polo situation could hardly be as dismally water-logged as pictured. The team, mostly engineers, must have really enjoyed wrapping a corpus saniim around their already mens sana. They could not have flogged themselves and endured perennial pink-eye for the glory attached to the game.

BACK ROW, left to right: Phil Arnatou, Dave Braun, Jack Kuehler, Bill Terry, Charlie Luchessa, Neil O'Boyle. FRONT ROW: Dick Wood, Clifi McNamara, Dick Vance, Dick Jonsen, Bob Williams.

h Boxing

Fort Sill Heavyweight Champ Marv Gregory.

Another minor to take it heavily on the chin. Physical disqualification took stalwarts Marv Gregory, Tom Black, and John Ginella from the regular team early in the season, leaving only Bill Wiswall, Denny Bourquin, and Tom Zajec to carry on. But in spite of solid blows, the team boxed with success in two tournaments, Pepi Salazar and freshman Max Voshall taking winners' places in the San Jose State and the Northern California Intercollegiate. The annual Santa Clara Novice Tournament was another annual success, with the gym crowded and the pro- ceedings broadcast by campus radio. Judges, among them former A.A.U. champion and now Coach Mac Martinez, gave the meet's oustanding boxer award to 147-lb. sophomore Dave Van Etten.

BACK ROW, left to right: Paul High, Ernie McCormick, Pepy Salazar, Dave Van Etten, Gary Moore, Max Voshall, Ed Conmy. FRONT ROW: Salty Campo, Bill Wiswall, Denny Bourquin, Tom Zajec, John Ginella (Assistant C-^ach'.

\m\

A I Intramural Sports

Intramurals — derived from the Latin, meaning "within walls" — have in the short space of the 1952- 53 school year come to rest on a par of popularity with the University's three major sports. The figure

behind their resurgence is the Intramural Program's inspirited moderator, Rev. James Sweters, S.J. Re- vamping the entire status quo, Fr. Sweeters succeeded

in bringing the ideal of universal student participation to almost total actuality. In one sport alone—volley- ball—more than five hundred students competed. Under his guidance, and to a lesser but appreciable

extent, through the efforts of Student Director Jim Rowe, the program moved, and moved swiftly. In the organizational scheme they formulated, class super- visors played key roles. Bill Payne took charge of Seniors, Bill Olson, Juniors, John Miggins, Sopho- mores, and "Hap" Meyer, Freshmen. M.

The initial Intramural activity was football, cap- tured by Junior Clarence Cravalho's "Nobili Nuggets" in an unexpected upset over 1951's Champion, Senior Dick Nellis' "Blue Devils." The colorful volleyball tournament was played with

all the accoutrements of a World Series. Spectators crammed the courts and lined the fences to watch elim- inations that narrowed down to a championship clash between Bill Wieand's Senior "Spikers" and Freshman Dick Disney's "Ducks," won by the Seniors 21-9, 10- 21, 21-7. Competition was likewise provided in softball basketball, swimming, tennis, handball, and even ping- pong. Local merchants generously donated trophies

and medals, as a final and formal flourish to the newest of Santa Clara enthusiasms.

180

INTRAMURAL COMMITTEE: Bill Payne (standing), John Miggins, lim Rowe, Bill Olson. ]/o//eoI>Siil Ch^mpmi, "SpiArsfZ^'- i.-ko r., AprTi^

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SANTA CLARA! ALMA MATER! OUR HEARTS ARE PLEDGED TO THEE! ;^^J7 "--5; II

Epilogue

From every now flows after O'er man's passing sphere Of hope and laughter, Of sometime pain and fear But drawing near, Some after place of beauty

Where endless love is duty —

Has it breathed a warmth and promise here?

The days have drifted by, Their moments flown Within one smile or sigh; Our youth has known But a few short years, yet nigh

Dark dusk-birds fly ...

And so you quiet Garden's spell Leaves gently done

Its work — faint-sounding bell And sky seem one With embered sun And earth, with misty night With other lives begun

Ere the Mission Garden fades from sight . .. Thanh

To Father Kelley, an understanding moderator, whose watchful eye followed and

guided the Redwood's progress; and to an energetic Father Taheny. assistant moderator, who did more assisting than moderating and a generous amount of both.

To a staff whose small size was an obstacle to progress, but who masterfully pretended that it wasn't and worked faithfully—often at personal inconvenience—to maintain the deception.

To a Camera Club, at least to its more responsible members, who provided a surplus of picture coverage by dutifully fulfilling the assignments of workhorse Photo Editor Pete Fosselman.

To a Printer (Bob Ozias) and to an Engraver (Bill Thurlow), who bore with us when we were barely bearable and made it possible for the book to come out on time.

To the Tom Collins Photography Studio for pictures delivered in the heat of battle and the nick of time.

To a co-operative Publicity Director, Gene Perry, and to a recent alumnus. Art Johnson of the San Francisco Chronicle, who graciously supplied us with many of the athletic pictures we wanted and needed.

To our advertisers, whose monetary cooperation was indispensable to production.

To Mr. Joseph Monasta and his advertising class who made a successful project of soliciting advertisements.

To our patrons, whose active interest in the Redwood's financial success, especially as evidenced by their responsible contributions, bespeaks of both a commendable philanthropy and a well-placed faith.

To the class instructors, who took only a mildly jaundiced view of the yearbook and the work that goes into it, and who liberally, if not cheerfully, granted excuses for the classes that inevitably had to be missed.

To a curious student body, which, while not participating in the actual production work, kept us at it with queries relating to distribution date.

To the many not mentioned who performed the unseen behind-the-scenes odds and ends which, though always appreciated, were seldom formally recognized.

To the mentioned and the unmentioned, to everyone who contributed one iota of effort to making 1953's Redwood what it is, our sincere and lasting gratitude.

CIt^ Z/. ~P?Ca4A^

189 Compliments of

GEO. F. BURR MOTOR CO.

INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS

AND

PAGE LOGGING TRAILERS

Sales and Service

COQUILLE, OREGON

MARVEL CLEANERS NORMANDIN'S We Own and Operate Our Own Plant

All Work Done on the Premises Established 1875

ft- T^r 1^ Irving Normandin '32 • Carl Normandin '36

ONE-HOUR FAST SERVICE ii -d -it

Three-Day Regular Service DE SOTO . PLYMOUTH

Let Us Renovate Scientifically ft ^ * Cleaning Fluid Setsink

Phone CYpress 3-0113 ii .it -^

405 West Santa Clara Street Phone AXminster 6-4272 San Jose 12 California

998 Franklin Street Santa Clara, California

190 COFFEE SHOP CLUB CHENANGO CENTRAL

CONCRETE SUPPLY CO,

Hotel Coquille ROCK • SAND • GRAVEL

Transit Mixed Concrete

On U.S. Highway 101

C. P. ALBANESE COQUILLE, OREGON

Norwood Browne, Prop. Phone 2991 610 McKendrie San Jose, California

WOOD'S MEN'S STORE fioAsdioL 3'OOjcL Qsmhh. 181 South First Street

QUALITY FOODS Featuring

1364 University Avenue CY 4-6016 APPAREL FOR YOUNG MEN

^'Italian Dinners'' Santa Clara Drug Co.

Prescription Druggists RESTAURANT AND LOUNGE

Banquets Are Our Specialty-

Corner Main and Franklin AXminster 6-4727 Open 24 Hours

Opposite University of Santa Clara SANTA CLARA • CALIFORNIA 965 Grant Street Santa Clara A. J. PETERS & SON MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS

Plumbing, Heating and Vlililies • Industrial Piping

534 Stockton Avenue CYpress 5-5646

SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA

COMPLIMENTS OF

SOUTHWESTERN MOTORS, INC.

BUICK AND CHEVROLET DEALERS

COQUILLE, OREGON

192 Compliments of SANTA CLARA HOME FURNISHERS AGNES and MARGARET DRAPERIES • APPLIANCES

Any Style You Desire . . . El Padre Creamery Maple, Traditional or Modern Frank Delia Maggiore — Jack Lindquist

Across From The "Ship" 1295 Franklin Street AX 6-3743 Santa Clara, Calif. Res. CY 3-4371

WADE'S CARL N. SWENSON CO. INCORPORATED MISSION PHARMACY GENERAL CONTRACTORS

Phone AXminster 6-6016 CYpress 4-3232

1000 Franklin Street Santa Clara, California 1095 Stockton Avenue San Jose. California

• Roofing • Insulation SMITTY'S RflF, Inc. • Linoleum • Asphalt Tile • Appliances FINE FOODS . COCKTAILS • Carpets

Free Estimates • Liberal Ti-ade In Allowances 349 West San Carlos

Phone CYpress 5-4145 SAN JOSE CY. 3-9599

497 South First Street San Jose, California

"Everything for the Well Dressed Man" JERRY DAVIS TRAVEL PEREIRA'S SERVICE MEN'S FURNISHINGS CY 7-1700 Gil Pereira • John Igoe

976 Main Street No Charge for Service SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA

193 CONGRATULATIONS Philip A. Sunseri • Salvador Lima TO THE Anthony Lima UNIVERSITY OF SANTA CLARA Santa Clara Bowl HOLEMAN Lunch Counter and Fountain in Connection

AXminster 6-4214 PONTIAC

970 Washington Street Santa Clara, California

Come In and Say Hello

SPROUSE REITZ CO.

1095 Franklin Street SALES and SERVICE Serving

S.C.U. Students 443 West Santa Clara Street CY 4-1055 20 Years for SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA

COMPLIMENTS OF AXminster 6-3824 The MOORES PHOTO WOODWARD'S FLOWERS

SERVICE JO MARTIN

1030 Franklin Street 1038 Franklin Street

SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA

Compliments of

HARMON A. SMITH Long's Sporting Goods Store Owner Hunting, Fishing, Athletic Equipment A. m. Nuttman 949 Main Street

SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA 907 Washington Street Santa Clara

194 Compliments THE J. S. WILLIAMS CYPRESS LOUNGE 227 South First Street SAN JOSE

1024 Main • AX 6-9913 Home of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes

STETSON HATS • ARROW SHIRTS SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA Johnson & Murphy Shoes

AXminster 6-3824 A. M. GRIJBE CO,

"Kakle Berries" Woodward's Flowers Eggs from Contented Hens JO MARTIN QUALITY EGGS EXCLUSIVELY 1030 Franklin Street 900 Lenzen Avenue SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA SAN JOSE

JOE BRUNA AMERICAN FISH AND GENOVA DELICATESSEN OYSTER CO. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in COLD MEATS • PICKLES FISH, POULTRY and GAME IN SEASON CHEESE • OLIVES

CYpress 2-2802 970 Franklin Street F. LociCERO AND Caruso Bros., Proprietors

SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA 38-40 POST STREET SAN JOSE

"Eat the Best With the Rest"

at the Campus Smoke Shop Ccllefe Cfeatneftf 737 Franklin Street

BREAKFAST • LUNCH • DINNER SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA 733 Franklin Street SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA

195 ITniveriSit^ o£ Santa Clara BOOKSTORE

(Conveniently located on the campus)

Hours: 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

All required class texts available, as well as supplies and equipment.

SHOP HERE AND SAVE .. . Please compare our prices!

We always have a fine selection of Catholic books, missals and religious articles.

WATCH FOR OUR WEEKLY SPECIAL

OBTAIN YOUR ROYAL OR UNDERWOOD PORTABLE TYPEWRITER FROM US ON A SPECIAL DEAL

Quality Dairy Products

Santa Clara Creamery Home of the Famous Honey Glazed Potato Doughnut

We deliver in Santa Clara, Sunnyvale, San Jose Something Different—Gee! They're Swell! and Campbell

JOS. INDERBITZIN, Res. CL 8-3295 IN SAN JOSE AT 371 WEST SAN CARLOS Call: AXminster 6-5225 1048 Franklin Street Phone CYpress 4-9174 SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA

HEROLDS Sherwin-Williams Paints

MEN'S SHOES Super Kem-Tone Keni-Glo

Bostonian • Mansfield Homewares, Sporting Goods, Etc.

Taylor Made • Stanwell French, Shriner & Urner REIMERS HARDWARE Come In and Make Yourself at Home AND AUTO SUPPLY

40 South First Street 1156 Franklin AX 6-5742 SAN JOSE SANTA CLARA

196 What I want isya*^LCoke

'Coke" is a registered frode-m

BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY 6Y COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. OF SAN JOSE. 763 The Alameda

THE PLACE TO GO AFTER THE SHOW FALERS UNION SERVICE KOTTAGE DONUT SHOP UNION OIL SERVICE and FOUNTAIN Santa Clara's Most Modern Station

"Home of the Bakers Dozen' Park and The Alameda 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. SANTA CLARA CALIFORNIA Burbank Theater Building 560 S. Bascom

San Jose's ONLY Body Building Gym vfTOMsALTH BODY BU'^OSNG- BEST WISHES

MISSION CREAMERY

982 FRANKLIN STREET

1455 W. San Carlos (Near Lou's Village)

COMPLIMENTS CHIPMAN

OF Chemical Company, Inc.

Mr. and Mrs. John Peters PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA

197 SAN JOSE'S Prime Rib GHISELLI BROS.

RESTAURANT and COCKTAIL LOUNGE Fruit and Produce

Famous for Its GROWERS, SHIPPERS AND EXPORTERS PRIME RIBS, CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS and SEA FOODS

It's San Jose Favorite Rendezvous and SAN FRANCISCO a Traveler's Must.

SAN JOSE • HONOLULU 1330 The Alameda CYpress 4-7141

Compliments of COMPLIMENTS Jack Mieuli, Jr. '37 and Staff OF SANTA CLARA TLcwMl FIRESTONE STORE Since 1885 Famous /or Fine Flowers SAN JOSE

GLOBE PRINTING WELCOME SMOKE SHOP

CO. L. C. LUCAS, Proprietor

1445 South First Street FRANKLIN STREET SANTA CLARA SAN JOSE

193 .

"The Photographer of Men"

TOM COLLINS STUDIO

Photographs in "REDWOOD" Available at Any Time

When Your Wedding Day Arrives REMEMBER

It Costs No More to Get the Finest ..

A TOM COLLINS WEDDING ALBUM

179 O'Farrell Street Telephone

SAN FRANCISCO YUkon 2-0651

Lou's VILLAGE 1465 West San Carlos

San Jose's Favorite Supper Club Allied • DINING Container • DANCING • BANQUETS • LUNCHEONS Corporation

Factors in Packaging

WOOD • PAPER

Compliments Tenth and Rosa Streets

of SAN JOSE, CALIF.

MR. WILLIAM MORGAN CYpress 3-3628

199 Lots COMPLIMENTS of OF Luck Fellows BETTENCOURT'S MARKET

2380 El Camino Real

SANTA CLARA

760 EAST SANTA CLARA

For the Finest . . . YOU'LL ALWAYS FIND A ROYAL WELCOME srw/<^ AWAITING YOU AT THE JEWELERS

DIAMONDS • WATCHES WATCH REPAIRING

394 S. First Street CYpress 3-5652 SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA AND LEADING HOTEL

cX 3bDuhu ^cdJuDuuL West Coast Carpet &

REAL ESTATE Linoleum Company INSURANCE CONTRACTORS LOANS Phone CHerry 3-2345

1445 The Alameda CYpress 2-3343 2360 El Camino Real Santa Clara

200 Greetings from the KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS

y^ K of c m^ X

Compliments of

SAN JOSE COUNCIL 879

San Jose, Calif.

OUR LADY OF FATIMA COUNCIL

Sunnyvale, Calif.

BISHOP O'DOWD COUNCIL

Los Gatos, Calif.

MISSION SANTA CLARA COUNCIL 3523

Santa Clara, Calif.

201 BEST LUCK

TO THE

uiivEnsiTY OF Slim mu

FROM

THE CITY OF SANTA CLARA

WILLIAM P. KIELY MAYOR

FRANK J. BUCHER COUNCILMAN

WILLIAM NICHOLSON COUNCILMAN

ANTHONY R. TOLEDO COUNCILMAN

JOSEPH J. REBEIRO COUNCILMAN

VICTOR E. SALBERG COUNCILMAN

FRANK J. BARCELLS COUNCILMAN

202 AMERICAN TRUST COMPANY ® BANKING fince 1854

MANY OFFICES SERVING NORTHERN CALIFORNIA

MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

McGUIRE & HESTER

Pipeline Contractors OAKLAND CALIFORNIA

Compliments of SANTA CLARA SMITH PRINTING CO. THEATRE

B. C. Smith For the Best Entertainment Throughout the Year 227 North First Street AX 6-6056 SAN JOSE CALIFORNIA ART ALLREAD, Manager

203 Compliments of

l^uttk o( Ktntvitu NATIONAL JXV mos ASSOCIATION MCMICR FCDCRAL PCPOSIT INSURANCE CaRPORATION • HEMIEII FEBKML RESERVE SYSTIM

W. W. KENVILLE Manager

Santa Clara Branch

SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA

Best of Luck Compliments of from Peerless Laundry Coquille Firestone

San Francisco Coquille Oregon

Compliments of A FRIEND

204 Compliments of ASSOCIATED STUDENTS

of the

UNIVERSITY

of

SANTA CLARA

205 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES

Following is a list of the donors whose conti'ibutions made possible the financial success of

this, the 1953 Redwood. To these patrons and patronesses — and to any whose name may have been

unintentionally omitted — is extended our lasting gratitude.

Mr. Gerald F. Allen Mr. and Mrs. John A. Cronin

Mr. and Mrs. Erasmo Anchondo Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Delucchi

Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Arnatou Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dempsey

Mr. and Mrs. D. Banducci Mr. and Mrs. Nick Draklich

Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Beaulieu Mr. and Mrs. Adolph F. Edden

Mrs. Peter L. Bellaschi Mr. and Mrs. Ray T. Edwards

Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Bengtson Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Escover

Mr. and Mrs. John D. Bernie Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Falcone

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Borelli Dr. and Mrs. John B. Farley

Mr. and Mrs. A. Bottero Mrs. Emily C. Fay

Mr, and Mrs. Thomas F. Bowen Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Ferrini

Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Brunkow Mr. and Mrs. William S. Flynn

Mr. and Mrs. J. Buschini Mr. and Mrs. William A. Ford

Mr.andMrs.W.P.Busher Mr. and Mrs. Abel B. Freitas

Mr. and Mrs. T. N. Carlson Mr. and Mrs. Fred X. Fry

Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Conley Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Garibaldi

Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Cotter Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ghiringhelli

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C. Cotrell Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gilligan

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Cheatam Mr. and Mrs. Melchior Gil

Mr. Frederick L. Clock Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Ginella

Mr. and Mrs. M. Cravalho Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Gleeson PATRONS AND PATRONESSES

[Continued]

Mrs. Mary Goldblatt Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Lopes

Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Gomez Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Lucas

Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gornick Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Lynch

Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Hartman Mr. and Mrs. Wallace R. Lynn

Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Heffernan Mr. and Mrs. B. P. McMahon

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Heier Mr. and Mrs. L. R. McNamee

Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Heisel Mr. Joseph McSherry

Mr. and Mrs. Dean R. Hurley Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Marnett

Mr. and Mrs. Roberto B. Iniguez Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Martin

Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Isola Mr. and Mrs. George A. Martin

Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Jose Maria Martinez

Mr. and Mrs. G. Kaelin Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Meyer

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph V. Miick

Mr. and Mrs. Edward T. King Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Minton

Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert U. Kraemer Mr. and Mrs. Henry Morello

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kropp Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Moss

Mrs. Herman C. Kruse Judge and Mrs. Francis W. Murphy

Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Kuehler Mr. and Mrs. Philip Murphy

Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Kump Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nardinelli

Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Laney Mr. and Mrs. James L. Nellis

Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Leahy Mr. and Mrs. Neal F. O'Boyle

Mr. and Mrs. S. Lelli Mr. and Mrs. Kiyoshi Okamoto

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Liccardo Mr. and Mrs. William T. Olson

207 PATRONS AND PATRONESSES

fContinuedJ

Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Ospina Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Sweeney

Mr. and Mrs. G. Ottaviano Mr. and Mrs. L. Tarabini

Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Padget Mr. and Mrs. Don S. Tarvid

Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Peters Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Terry

Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Peters Marian D. Thomas

Col. and Mrs. E. L. Pugh Dr. Pedro R. Tinoco

Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Quinn Mr. Frank Tonin

Mr. and Mrs. Irwin T. Quinn Mr. and Mrs. M. Torres

Mr.andMrs.W.J.Raffanti Mr. and Mrs. Fred I. Tourtelot

Mrs. Anna T. Reilly Mr. and Mrs. Jack Trily

Mr. and Mrs. x\ntonio V. Rocha Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Trout

Mr. and Mrs. James M. Rowe Marjorie Trumbo

Mr. and Mrs. Ray R. Salazar Mr, and Mrs. Norman T. Vadnais

Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Scanlan Mr. and Mrs. Esteban Vlasich

Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Schleich Mr. and Mrs. John R. Volpatti

Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Scurich Mr. and Mrs. James A. Waterbury

Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Shlemmer Mr. and Mrs. Martin Welp

Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Sieve Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Weseloh

Mis. Andrew Siri Mr. and Mrs. John D.Wilde

Mr. and Mrs. John J. Stanton Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Wirts

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald B. Stoney Mr. and Mrs. George A. Wiswall

Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Orval Wood

Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Sweeney Mr. and Mrs. M. Bayard Young

Mr. and Mrs Dominic A. Zanette

208

I