Skip to main content

1966 Greystone yearbook.pdf

Media

Part of Greystone 1966

content

·
Was
-
preserved and nou~ished,
guarded from the spray
·
Of selfishness and the chill of hate •.•
Fed on the fuel of self - giving •.•










This spark then grew, brightening and blazin
~
No longer sheltered
from
the elements,
But braving them with strength almost
Now able to burn on a fuel
of
its
Own
finding;
...
I
divine
,









But convinced that it must be part
Of a greater,
·
massive conflagration - -
One which shall consume
·
the
·
earth and skies
In its unquenchable desire to envelop
All things in itself, . ~.
·







And to trans(
orm
that darkness
From whence it came
,
Into a flam,ing white hot hymn
Of glory rendered to its
Sovereign source
·
and Lord.



(




Bro. John A. Allen
I





LOVE IS GROWTH . .
.
IT RISKS PA
I
N.






















:>,:
~
"¢

,
~
/ '


. /
:,->'~
:' ·X,
~-.
\
...
.
.

t
"
Bro. Joseph
S. Bianco







Do not
become a mere recorder
of
facts, but try to
penetrate
the
mystery
of
the
ir
origin
(Pavlov) ...
since
..
. Science is
not an accessory occupation
but
an essential activity
( Chardin).





Bro. John P.
B
r
oderick
...











Tlwr,,
i::-
a
1·t·rtai11
"-
«'ll~itivity
to
tht•
dPep
down things that
if
l~u-king,
011<·,
altl11,11~h
~iving
every evidence of
lifo,
will
be
11othin~ morf' than
a
bn·athin~ corp~t•.





I









Reflection ··
In
act ion,
s
ometimes, to be first or last is no
t
the
way
of the wise.
·
R
ather,
i
t i
s
good
lo
be
nei
t
her firs
t n
o
r la
s
t.











The e
sse
nt
i
al qu
a
l
i
t
y of all men lies
alone
in tho
s
e depths
where to each man
t
h
e road is opened
by
freedom to attain to
God
by
leading
an
e
thical
li
fe.




LIFE IS WHAT YOU MAKE
IT.










I
Bro. David W. Cooney
)
~
__ .. - / ~
:✓(
~--
$•··< --~




















I
pa
~
s
thr~ugh
~hi
s
world
hut
once
·-
if,
therefore, there is
any
good
tha
t
I
call
do, any kindness
that
T
·
can
show
to any human
'
,.,,
'
being
·
let
m~ doit
now;
let
me not
.
defer nor neglect it,
for I
shaU
::iot pass this
way
again.










Our
own per:'onal
problems, which
seem so
·
oyerwhelmi'ng when
we regard
them, often
fall into oblivion when, out ofloye, we
become involv~d intimately in the lives of those around us.




Bro. Jerome
T. Daly








The Woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
{;
And miles to go before I sleep,
·
,
And
miles to go before l sleep
..




I
I


















If
tht'
""rld i,,
,irdinary
all(I
1101
;:o
intt-n~,;tin~,
it
will
lw
a
dialleng<· to
our d1arit\'
tll
rnakt•
it
a
bt•tt1•r
pL11
·

to
li\t'
in:
for uur,,·h ,
...
aml f11r out
rwighbor-.
..
.







Bro.
Gerald P. Doherty
~
~
~
~
d-f,4























I
Bro. Woodrow
B
.
Duke
·-
. '
{
.
-----
;
;!_
(\,\
~
---
'
(L---!.~1.'¥'{-...-i
~
..,..,
~
-<-'
(!,_
)
_,
,c,.;:...,
J
C,
..
(
!:"




























T
o share in
the life
of
Cod
is,
in
a sense,
to
share
in t
hat
: .
perma
rwnce:
it
is to
have, under
all
the pai
.
n
that time inflic
ts,
a d
ee
p
sc
nst"
of
the abidinµ:tH•ss of things, because i
t
is to
live,
with
Cod, iu tlw
.-1ernal
prt>sent. So it is to
be
at
pt"ace, to
ha
v
e
t
hat p
t>ace
which
tht- world
(·annot ~ive: to
fall
in love is n
ot
prima
rily to havt>
sonwthin)!:
rww,
but
to
hf'
something
new;
thi
s
joy
t
hal I have,
tht•
adual
prt>;.;f'rw1·,
the sight and
hf"ar
ing,
these
can he
taken
from nw;
hut
if
all
my
love
is
par
t
o
f
my
love
of God,then
tlw
joy
that
I
.t
.
H,
tht> joy that can
beco
m
e
as
it
w
e
r
e a part. of 1nt', that mn~t
ahirlf',
and
distance
can
not
affect
it.
.
,_,
1
'
,



Bro. Raymond Faucher




















The more man becomes man,
the
·
more he
will
become prey
to
a need,
a need that is always
more
explicit,
more
subtle
and
more magnificent,
the
need
to
adore.
To
adore ...
That
means
to
lose oneself
in
the
unfathom
-
able,
to plunge into the
inexhausti•
hie,
to find
peace in
the
incor-
ruptible, to
he
absorbed in
defined
immPn
sily,
to
off
Pr
oneself to the fire and
'
thf'
trans-
parency,
to
annihilate
011C
i:-l
f'lf
in
proportion as orw
b1·comt>s more
deliberatd
y
conscious of
oneself,
and
to
give
tlf
rnw'
s
deepest
hf
that whose depth ba
s
no
end.
Whom, then,
can
we adore?




I
Bro. Dennis M. Freaney








The affirmation of one's own
life,
happin
ess,
growth,
freedom
is
rooted in one's
capacity
to love.
(














.

.
EvPry man
n1ust have
an
ideal-something which is
t
o
be
for him
'
both the motivation
and
the
goal of
life:
:
°This
"
ifr;.
~i
l
l
th
en be one of
dedicated
activitv and the
constant search
into its
,
bou
n
d
less
possibilities.


















1
1
I
It
l
Bro.
Bernard
J .
.
Gra:y
.
1?
,

c
'\N\_
,
C<,
,
\
,
~{
1
~
'
~~t_r








Ht> th
at would
bring home
the wealth
o
f
the Indies,
must
ca
rry
the
wealth
of
the
Indies
with
him.











lu
the Universe
stars
leap
outward
from
common
primordial
origin.
Stars
unique
individual
brothers
journey
exploration
light
Warmth.
Perhaps
·
collision
then
s
eparation
or
union
burning
la
s
ting.
Journey over
exploration ended
s
ubstance
c
on
s
um
e
d
tran
s
formed
a returning

·
tran
s
cending time
•·
to primeval
origin ....

hart fm
s












Br,o.
fonald
J.
Haughey
/4
,
ryn,tUR_
;
.
~'~













Wh
en
I got ready
tu
d
,
,
"-(Jll11•thi
:,r
f,
,
r myself,
by
my
self
, with





Bro.
Thomas
J.
Heckel














,y.._.,
Then
\
i~
an
·
·
appointe<l
tirne
-
for
everything, and
a
time
for
every
.,
affair
under the
heavens.










Bro. Joachim
Heng
trtJ-
.
·.
_J
& v - C ~
~
.










The
Christian
stands in a $pt'cial posjtion hefore the world.
-
He i
s
comm
issioned
to he the
WITNESS
of Christ, to be the
SPOKESMAN
of
the
underprivileged. With a firm
CONVICTION
based on
Faith and Love, he
COMMITS
hi1rnwlf
unre
s
ervedly and
irreversibly to
the realization
of
tl1e CO'.\'.VERGENCE
of all
Mankind
in
CHHIST.



Bro. Sumner F. Herrick








You mu
s
t love nothing hut God, or you insult your Maker;
you must love all things, or you
in
su
lt
their Maker. He sees
God
aright
who
sees Him in ALL things; and
he
sees
thing
s
aright who
sees
God'
s
pre
s
ence
in
them.









· nor atiuk
Br
.
Ronald Wm
u
b
,t
___ ,,








~
:/':~~;
·,:
"'
,1,












I
I
Bro. Anthony M. lazzetti
.
fh,o.
u~f;~~
'fn
.
~ a , ~





'Be
for
t
ot
_
hers a road once travelled, and then forgotten.




Bro. William
R. Kawka








."'
,,,
~
We have now come to the
time where achievement costs us
effort. This is the stage when a person develops through the
use of his free will. Virtue, in a dimension not often realized,
is acquired
by
ourselves.









Bro. Richard
M. Keenan
11,,·u
.
-;JJ~k,d;
~
:Jjr2-JU1
.,
ri__,




The things that were gain to me, these,
for the sake of Christ,
I have counted loss.








I
Bro. Michael
A. Laratonda

_
,














































Lm"
-----
thi,;
is the
secn"'l
of t
h
e
univer
s
e.
But
we must
not
a
ll
1nv
thi-
-.,

n d
to
r
emain
h
idde
n;
w
e
mu
s
t share
it with others.
·
M
an
·
,-
1,·Lt1i,,n,liip
with
others ca
n
o
nly come
under thi
s
con-
t
ex
t
-----
t!w
r,·LitiPn--hip
of
lo
ve
.
T
oo
many times,
man's
inhu-
manit
v
t11 :n.ir
1
1--
r:111hi11/:'.
b
u
t
a
l
a
ck of awarr
nc
ss
of
th
e
other,
.
.r
a l
ac
k
,1f
-
,
·
11-
i1
l\
it\
to
th,· o
th
er,
a
la
c
k
of caring
about
the
o
tl
wr, a
I,,.
k
,
,!
I,>\,.
/,"
dw n
t
h
er. An awakening
is
of
the
grea
t
P;;t
n,.,
·
.,--
11
\
,
.. ,
,
I,
1ndi\ id11:il
m
u
:-
t
r
e
a
li
ze
the need
to
t
a
k
e
u
pon him
,
,
·lf
,t
;1,·.tt
r,·-r
,,.1
1--
dJil
it
v
tht
!
rf'spon
s
ibility
to
b
e awa
r
e aud
to
lw
.
--1·ri-
ll1\
1
·.
t
o,
.1r
,
·
;m
d
I
n
hne.








Br. Paul Lim
/~
-
/ ~ A,
,t,:
-
j,~







Man ean only
meet the demands of outer necessity
if
he is in
harmony
with
h
imself.







Man
is
the
only
animal
who, in any
considerable
measure, be-
queathed
to hi
s
descendant
s
the accumulated wisdom of past
generations.
But
for all his wisdom
Cain
is
still
killing Abel






Bro
.
Marcos R.
'
Loqgoria





That
day dawn
t
o
which
we arc
awake.















Bro.
Joseph P.
Madsen
\!,,
1,0
~
u
J..
.
Y
Al\
c.J.;
J;.w-.


























lh·
\\hP rq~a
r<l
th
day, reg
ar
d-..
1
:
!,,
,
tlw
l.
1,nL and
he who
,·at
,
.
,·a
t, for
th Lord,
for
h
e giv
,
-.
th,1111..
,.
It

(
...
it
.
\11d
l
w
whn
do<'
11
11
1 1•u1
,
ab
.
l
ain
f
r
th L
rJ,
and
µi,
,
.
,
tl
,.u
,
L
-




Bro. Edward
F. Martin












du not claim to have the
mas
tery
already,
but this
at
least
I
do;
forgetting
what I
have left behind, intent on what
lies
b
efore me, I
press on
with
tlw
goal in view,
eager
for the prize,
Cod
\;
heav
en
ly
summon
s
in Chr
i
f.t
J
esus.
S
t,
Paul
to the P,hilippians :3:13-14.







Bro. Alfred
D. McKee
I
I
nrc;~






I love
irresi;;tibly all
that
your continuous
help, God, enables
me
to bring each day iuto reality. A thought, a material improve•
ment, a harmony, a particular
expression
of
love, the enchanting
complexity
of a
,
smile
or a
look, all the new beauties that appear
for the first
time, in me
or around me on
the human face of
the
earth.
























."ize
i
~
<
11ly
a ompari
,i
on.
In
a ,
o
riel
of
minutiae,
en•ry-
hi11~
:<1'<'111
,
g
rgan
tu:111
an
d
<'
ntcial.
·
e
art>
headed
for a new
, urld,
a
world
that
h1
>
u
:-
f'
'-
bi~ a
.
wrll
a
,

mall.
Lt't
u
s
hop
hat
wt•
rna
lu,,
e
thr
di
:-:e
ri1ni11ation
t
o
flu
1-
h
out
tht•
big
thing
.
,
ht>
1
·
111ira~t
t
J
th
,~
111.







j,
Bro
.
Thomas
P
.
Mallen























The
!if
t'
of a Christian
i-:
f·entnt•d
011
prayt>r and work. A
t
:
hristian mu:<-t
pray
to
~ain th,·
a,-,-i,-tarw1•
of
(
:hri:-:t
and
re-
mind
him
of hi,-
idn1tit~. ur
n·lation
to
Christ.
He must
\,nrk in
onit•r lo
gi,,•
v,
·
itw•,-,.
to
.lesui,;,
to bring Him
lo
others.
(
Jiri,.:t f•n<low,,d
u:-
with
:111
apo,-tolic
activity: and our lives
,-hould he lived ac('ordinj?; to
n:-rtain
rules or principles which
.Ht-
pla{
·
ed
on
all
d
ll:-
dtw
to our
'-late
in life,
that is, due to
our incorporation into ( :liri:-L
r





Br. James
A.
Mulvey

























~
'*
\~
"
~
·.•·
>:"'>-
''
t
Man
t>,i,.1.:.
iu a
perma111•11I
tern-ion
lwtwPen the
pa'-1
and the
prt'
·
'
S
f'rll.
\t
e\NV
momt'tll
lw
j._
c
onfronted
with
an
alternative.
Fitlwr
Ii,
·
11111-.t
i
mmt·nw
him
i
wlf in a
c
on
c
rete
world
of nature
a
nd
..
thu~ inevitably lnrnw his individuality or
he
must abandon
all
sen1rity
and
<
·
01nmit him
s
elf unn·servedly
t(1
the future and
thu
\
alnrw
ac-!1i1·,
t'
hi'-
authenti
c
being.





Bro. Thomas
Ng










Man
is the world
prfr
,-t
1n
th
e
foot
ste
p
s
of
C
hri
st;
his
work
••divinizc-,"
him, and at
the
same time
th
e
universe. Th.i
s nwans
th
at
to
create, whether wi
th
h
ands
or brain, i
s
to
athance
th
e
Kingdom
of
God,
ha
s
tening
the
hour when
the
world
w
ill
be
mysteriously
tr
i
msfigured
by
the
Spirit.





Bro.
John J.
Quinn
















'
My
food
i~
to do
t
he
will
of him who
se
nt
me,
to
accomplish
hi
s
wo
r
k.
Do
you not
say
·'
'
I'her
e
are yet
four month
s
and
then
comes
the harve
st'?".
Well, I
say
to
you, lift up your
e
yes and
behold
that the fields are
already
white for the harvest.




Bro. John H.
Raeihle










Every man
mu~t have
an
ideal--something
which is to
be
for him both th
e
motivation
and the
goal
of
life. This
life w
ill
then be one of dedicated
activity and
the
constant
search into
it
s
bound
l
ess possibilities.




















I
I
Bro. Paul
Ste
ngel
/
I
0twi
j
~a,
f
_.r'
,
~⇒.
;tJ"
l
T
~



















It
is not
by
s
tepping
away from
the
world that man
will
cooperate
in
its
transfiguration,
hut
by
s
tepping
fully
within it, and
by
inveMing it
with
crea•
tive activity.
Creativity posit:- the o,·<'urrence
of
novf'hy in tlw unin•rsf' for it
admit:.
that
.
the world is not
ready-made
from
all eternity but
arises
out of non-heing
-ex
nihifo-as
a world or possibil-
ities.
Creativity
nece
1<sitah•~
f
rn
·
dorn
for
freedom
is
li
cN1:-1•
lo t't't't\lf•
tlw
~ood,
the authentic,
tlu·
valuativt•.











Bro. Joh
n Sullivan
<~
j
ri1
_,,.JA,L
L
,4,,.,
,_
,






The Clouds
that gather round
the
setting sun
Do take
a sober colouring from an eye
That hath
kept watch o'er rnan's mortality;
Another
race hath be('n, and other palms are won.
Thanks
to
the
human heart
by
which we live
Thanks
to
its tenderness, its joys and fears,
To me the meanest flower that hlows can give
Thoughts
that do often lie
loo
deep for tears.
--William Wordsworth














I
Bro. Robert
J
.
T
ripaldi
B
!',A)
K
~
-
(~
--
11~~



H:VER GIVE UP!







Bro. Edward
J.
Williams
f
















I
...
,,..
,

.
.
Can't
you be gratef uJ for the
road
tbmigh
it
be
rough
and u
certain?
It
does all a road was ever meant to
do.
Jt
t~kes
y<
home.
...










We
spend
too much time thinking, supposing that
if
only
we weigh
every
possibility in advance, everything
will
somehow
happen automatically.
We learn a bit too late that action
springs
not
from
thought, but
from
a readiness for responsibil-
ity.
We
he
s
itate
over
what is within our power, aryI
fail
to
gra;;p
boldly
what
lies before us
realizing
that growth is our
only moral
end.












I
Bro. Brian C. Yehle
,:3
,<
,{
~;/,.7
c
1
~~;;
l~
/
i








Wht·11
tht'
~oing gets
l~ugh,
1h1• loup:h
get
going.









Bro. Charle
s
A
.
Zoeller
Q_



Every
life
i
s
highly
remarkable, not only because God
has
breathed into
it,
but because God has lived and lives on.




Bro.
Michael A. Goldrick









Bee
a
us
e
Christ
has
acted
so
decisively for
my
brother,
before
I b
eg
in to
ac
t, I must
rneet
hi1n only as the per son
that he already is in Christ
'
s
e
yes.
This is the meaning
of
the proposition th
a
t
we
can
n1eet
oth
ers
only through
and
in
Jesus
Christ.
..












.
I
.
:>,,
L
c:::::::::r
~The
Class
of
1967








BB. C. Bowden;
J.
Kinsella;
M
.
Marotti; G. Donnellan






BB
.
E. Luttrell
;
K
.
Hugh
es
;
.l.
Hager; F. Zaglauer: A
.
Keller











rm
.
A.
Chua:
P. \llt•n-
\I.
DPan:
K.
C
urtain;
D. Gray













BB.
C.
f>f'rna;
S.
\la
l1orwy:
J.
Lf'e: :\.
Lana;
J.
Adams

-
.... · 1
rm









Bro. IL Bahr
BB. P. Sullivan:
J.
Rcillv:
J.
Meehan;
C.
Piotrowski;
J.
Cunni
ngham


















!
,.
/
/
!)
l
h
r
t1wtt:
·
B
.
Hor
:
·
'
R. C,•orge
H Anmtn
i
n~:
·
-ii
f.:
r






\
/
/
\







·
The
.
Class
of
'
1968
.
































;
j
l
i
I
I
/
!
'
i
j
I
!
Bro. D. Rivas
;✓
~
\
BB.
R C'l
• , a<.s·
P F
· ····'
·
·
orsvth
• D H
·
-
· ever•
H
s

,
'
·

aw1cki
1
,
I















\,
.
\
\
·
BB
.
A
.
Serw

L H
u~~n;
.l
.
Mulli
ga
n
:
R
.
Lafontain,·:
1'
.
llng
a
n











\
\
\
\
\
\
.
\
..










-
~
...
~::_,,.,-
l;:::
:::;:::::'.'.';:::--
i
~ { " "



























.
.
p
\\'.
'
<Jf,tl,-:
R
.
"
I
.
l
<)u11111
.
·
-
-
BB
.
\1.
~
rt-.
1.

.
I
I
I
/
_
'
--
\\
\\
\
\





' - - -
j
_j




\
\























I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Bl1
.
J
.
Krau
s
; M. Dr
isc
oll: T. N
o
l
a
n: E. Denworth; F. Sambor
--------·-···
____
,..
....
..
----·-·,;,::;...~
\
\
'



















I
..
·:·;.r;,::-
-----~wt.:,4
~
/
/
I
!
I
I
j
I
BB.
J.
Conklin;
A.
Ciccolella:
P.
Collins;
R. Bauer;
J.
Norton









I
I
LOVE
FIRE
SONG
MOTION
"'







».,;_Ao
,•::
~
~
,














..
·······
- ·
-
...
.:;,::-
.
••
,~
:
·
?
~
::







J'
C
I






























.a.
't''t'
.............
'f .....,
ANGRY
MEN
by
Reginald
Ro
se
IAMPAGNAT HALL
\RIST COLLEGE
•UGHKEEPSlE. N.
Y.
..
,
,
:
:
q-:
,:
.
:r

ACT TWO
A
few
seconds later
CHAMPAGNAT HALL
MARIST COLLEGE
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.
OCTOBER
28.
29, 30
/





















































































TW
ELVE
A
NGRY
,,
<
'
..
,
A
'
'
..
r
his
Jar
r
t
we,tle
MEN
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
OF THE
THEATRE
GUILD
PRES!DE'ii
.....
...
.
....
............
...............
..
..............
Walter V
.
Behrman
SECRETARY
.........
.
....
..
..
..
..
.
..
...
............
.
....
..
............
..
......
.
.
Peter Petrocelli
Rt:ASURrn
....
....
.
.....
.
....................................
.
.............
Richard Furnari
.S
PO
'.\
DING
SECR[T
A
RY
•..
....
:
.
.
...............
..
........
..
......
..
Joseph Walsh
.............
..
........
.
...........
Alexander
Areno
.
.......
.......
... ;
.
....
.
...
..
............
Bro. Stephen
A. Lanning,
fms
irector ..
.....
..
............
..
...........
.
...
....
.
......
..
.......
Mr. James
Britt
PRODUCTION STAFF
DmFCTOR
...........
.
....
.
......
....
.......
Michael Laratonda,
f
m
s
)Dl
.'
CTJO:.
MAl\'AGCR
..........................................
Gerald Doherty, fms
A:\
·
\GE
R
.
.
........
..
.......
.........
..
.....
.
.....
....
..
John Sullivar1, fms
......... .....
y
Iazzetti, fms
Hau
g
hey,
fms
:adrowski,
fms
Jh Hager
,
fms
l
Stengel,
fms
mingham,
fms
Faucher
,
fms
1
1-:i
m
ella, fms
Denworth
,
fms
kMorrow
,
fms
th
Cu
rtin
,
fms
,me
Daly,
fms
Za
gl
auer,
fros
rd
Brown,
fms
afontaine,
f
ms
inkeJm,...,
.,, ..
.....
.
..
. .
i~1~
~
:
/.•j
i 1 /
;!-shu}
!
-
~'.S
t

_·_
;
:
:
.-. .
.
_
.............. •
.• ..
-
-.-
·
.
...
...
~
o/
u
y
23, 1~65
·
\
:
A.~ut
1
a,r
1 •~
-~
.
.
1net1
.
1 emper'
!
P
r
fl/
f~r+
·
..,
>:,\,
,..
0
·,.
~
/
~r
missi































EXECl'TlVE
COMM
Pt<ESIOENT
.......
.
.................. .
SECR.:T
\RY
......... • ..
·
·
···-······
TREASl.'HER
....
...
...........
.
.... ,.
..
f.ORHESPOM>ING
St::CRETARY
Pl'HLICIT
MA1'AG£H
...
DIRECTOR
..........
.
,
I'll(
~ f \ f
.•
-~
.
.....
..
........
.
......
....
Jam,.
·
\FF
........
Ken,
William Fadrowski,
F.M.~
..
.
.
.
..
.
Emil
Denworth,
F.M.5
....
...
Michael Marotti, F.M.5
Frederick Sambor,
F.M
.
5
...
.
Raymond Fau&ier, F.M.5
..
Jame
s
Cunningham,
V •
·
c;;,,
Thomas Cor-
n
~






















R
OSS
'
·
\
IT
()
F
L\ WR
f."
.. .
st
h
e
,STHI CTJO-:
.
/
-un Francis,
F.M.S.
iatr.
E
sopus
.
N.Y.
)ou!!hkrepsie
\lilitary
Academy
u[!
he
~
.
F.M.S
.
.
R.A.F











































































































l
\lulli
i
:rnu
.
F
.,
rome
Oal
y.
F.M
.S.,
ael Parrin
o.
f'
.
M.S.
,
Thoma
s
Peti
t
t
e,
F
.M.S .
... .........
....
..
.
..
,.
..............
Roy
Geor
ge, F.M.S .
.
....
.
................
.....
..
.
..
.
..
. James Meehan, F
.
M
.S.
\:OWLED
G
EMENTS
hillips.
ARAJ\KO
Marotti
/ '
·
/··
-
.....
....
·
..
·•.
·-
•..
'•
·····
...
ROSS
c,.
.
:,,<?
,lo~
1q
~o
IJ
,t
~Iv~
-lo.1
~<l
<i'/~
~')
A
<IIJ
~
,t,
.
,
P
.
,
p
✓,
<it",·
lfe,71 04
·41.'s, ·~
O,.f
C,{
9-;
1
,P •
A
IJ
l(J
:
~

p
A-
•4/:
.(). ttlJ/
r
'.>-.,
:/"~<Q
'•7-~
•.
•$,
<i'
"IJ

~l'p
'l,
p
,
p
.
.
'00.
l,s
.,$i;
el>(/,
•~
-~
'11')
I';
c>
.s-
,t,
<?J-1,
q~~
·S:
·S.
~

~01')
Ol't.
qt"lf: ,
p
"
&
:;.-
o✓
,
p
·4,:
-
14"
<'t"q
r,
¼IJ/ ,. }';,.~
·ks
·s:
s,
t.>4.,
_
/Jo
·
7. "
·
.
-~
..............
~
:
·
...
.
..
l\oger Lafontaine,
F.M.S .
........................
..
.
Kenneth
Hogan, F.M.S .
................
..
William Fadrowski,
F.M.S .
..........
.
.
.. ..........
Emil
Denworth, F.M.S

..... .
.. .
............
Michael
.Marotti, F.M.S.
Frederick
Samhor, F.M.S .
... ........
Raymond
Fautiher, F.M.S .
..
...
.......
Jame
s
Cunningham,
F.M.S.
1,
F.M
.S
.,
Th
o
mas Connors,
F.M.S.
.
.
.
.....................
Denis
Hever, F.M.S.
.
.. . . .
.
..
.
.............
.
Francis Zaglauer,
F.M.S.
1e
Daly. F.M.S.,
Joseph
Conklin, F.M.S.
....
.. ...............
Michael
Dean, F.M.S
.
, F.M.S .
.
M.S .
..
s
.
.
.
.
s
.

















l





~












ue
a.
~
to -
-








BROTHER HUGH
E.
SHERIDAN
~
~
DIRECTOR













,
~;

BROTHER
MAURICE
G. BIBEAU
-
-
- - -
SUB-DIRECT
OR















tpattt«de
to
tie
~
/ldmt11t4t,,at«Ht,
Rev. Br. Charles Raphael F.M.S.
Superior
General
. .
. who provide for the per-
8bnal
growth and fulfillment of this
commun
i
ty of Scholastics as well as
for the world-community of Marists.
Rev
.
Br
.
Paul
Ambrose F.M.S.
Assistant General







Rev
.
Br
.
Leo Sylvius
F.M.S.
Provincial
BR. KIERAN THOMAS F.M.S.
Provincial












BR PETER HILARY F.M.S.
Ma,ter
of No'1ices
... whose example more
than
their words led to
the beginning
of
our
spiritual formation as
true
Christians
and as true Marists.
BR
.
DAVID
OTTMAR F.M.S.
Master
of
No'1ices







ADMINISTRATION
PRESIDENT
Brother Linus
R.
Foy.
ACADEMIC
VICE PRESIDENT
Brother Edward
L.
Cashin







Br. John
L.
O'Shea
Academic
Dean
Mr.
Herch
e
l M
or
t
e
n
se
n
Dr. John
Schroeder
Dean of the
Evening
Division
Bro.
Paul Stokes
Dean
of Men
Mrs.
O'Brien
Recorder









Mr. John Do
u
gh
e
rty
Director
of
Development
Br. William
J.
lvhrphy
D
irector of Teach
er
Education
Mr
.
Thom
as
Wade
Mr. David Flynn
Mr.
Ant
hony
Campilli











Br.
Nil us V. Donnelly
Directo
r of Const ruc
tion
Miss
·
Mary Travis

Br.
Adrian
Perreault
Librarian
Br. Tarcisius
Marist. Pre
ss
Mrs. Nicho
ls
Assistant Libraria
n
Mrs
.
E. R
imai Fisher
-
Artist
in Residence









BIOLOGY
Dr. George
Hooper
Mr. D
a
nie
l
Bean
BUSINESS
Br.
Cornelius
Russell
Mr.
John
K
e
lly








H
CHEMISTRY
H
Br.
Andrew
Molloy
Dr. Florence Tabor
Dr. M
.
Crawford
Br.
Richa
rd L
a
Pietra
Mr. Leo Richard






ENGLISH
Dr. George Sornmer
M:r.
Robert Norman
Br• Stephen Lanning
Mrs. Marie Tarver
Mr.
Robert Lewis
Dr.
Milton Teichman











CLASS/
CAL LANGUAGES
Br. Joseph Robert
Br.
Thomas
Maes
tro
Br. Gerard
Weiss
1v1r.
Casimir Norkeliuna
s
Br. Joseph Belanger








Mrs Tina
Gioielli
M
r
F
e
lix
Guigon
Mr
Edward
German
Mr MarioRuggeri
















HISTORY
\
~
~l
l
'l
f
\'
o
i
Mr.
John White
Mrs. Eileen Drennen
Mr
G
e
org
e
Skau
Dr. Roscoe
Balch
Dr.
Yuan Chung T
e
n
g








Mr. L
ucian
Vl
erni.
c
k
Mr. Lloyd Boo
krn
e
v
er
MATHEMATICS
Br
.
K
ev
in Ca
r
o
l
an
Br. Mi
c
h
ae
l K
e
lly
Mr.
James Thomas






PHILOSOPHY
Dr. Donald Drennen
Br Richard Anselr:n
Br John McMahon
Mr. Thornas
Casey





























PHYSICS
PHYSICAL
EDUCATION
Mr
.
P
a
ul Arold
~
-
,
,
~.
\,
f
.
,
it
.
1.·.
·
•, 't
·
,
'
.~

,
:•···
~-~~?-
~
~~
B
Bri
a
n D
esi
l
ets
r
.
Dr.
How
a
rd Golcun
an





PSYCHOLOGY
Br. Daniel Kirk
Mr. David
Miller
Mr. Edward O 'Keefe










THEOLOGY
Br. Fe
l
ixShurk
u
s
R
e
v.
J
a
mes Drisco
ll
Br. Martin
Lang
Fr.
Jo
hn
D.
C
a
mpb
e
ll
















/
\
C
K
NO
WLEDGE1v1ENTS
Hro
T
an
;:
isius Va11icres,
fms
lVlr
.
Ern
e
st lVJarotti
Mr. Arthur
Brook
Uro. Daniel ;\llen
.. fms
Bro.
Paul Le
v
endush"Y,
frns
Bro. Patrick
Forsyth, fms
Bro. Henry Sawicki,
frns





Let
Everything
Be Consumed
by
the fire
in
the
Something
of Value
May
Be
Left
Which
Can Be
Riddled
Out of
the
Ashes ...