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Varied Vie'1Vs Sho"\tV
Marist
In Perspective
Perspective: a complex pattern of attitudes, values and percep-
tions which together give an ordered view of the situation.
By using "perspective" in this sense, some aspects are necessarily
displayed more prominently in the foreground while others are
pushed to the background. The most dominant traits are then
rated according to their importance to the total picture.
Because Marist is an educational institution, the most important
thing is each individual student and his relationship to the academic
life of the College. This includes the curricula, academic standards,
and the scholastic interests and values of the students.
Although this is
·
by far the most important part of a
·
college,
there are other areas which point out the attitudes and values of
the students and faculty. Activities reflect taste. The amount of
emphasis placed on activities and sports also reflects the intel-
lectual atmosphere-or lack of
it.
Religious and cultural events
further pin-point student attitudes by providing a background for
all-around development.
With every glance at Marist a different picture is seen through different per-
spective
.
Every look is composed of some common elements, however, for MOTH
is
composed of some unchangable things
:
the outer-The Fox, its cleverness and
wisdom; football games, watched by many Poughkeepsites as well as students;
the
inner-reflected
in the faces of the faculty
.
•two•
1969
Reynard






















t
a "'
T
~4
59
Marist College
Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
Contents
Introduct
i
on
. .
. .
.
. • • .
.
. . .
.
• .
. . . .
.
. . . .
1
Ded
i
cat
i
on
.
........•
..
...
.
.
.
...
..
...
16
Administration .
....
:
.
......•...
.
....
. 30
Faculty
...
.
.
.
..
.
...
.
....
.
••..
.
...
.
.
.
36
S
e
n
i
ors
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
.
.
• . . . . . . . . . .
58
Unforgettable
year
..•...
.
..•.....
.
...
126
Sports
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
. . . . . • . . . . . . . . . .
140
Campus Life ..
.
.
.
.
••
.
.....
. . . . . .
.....
178
P
ot
p
ourri
...
.
.....
•.....
.
.•
..
..
.....
222
Evening Division
. . . . . . . . .
..
. . . . . . . . . . .
232
Activities
..
.....
...
•.......
....
...
.. .
240
Underclassmen ...
.
..•.
.....
.
.
. . . . . . . .
268
St
op
the p
r
esses
..
.
...•......•..
.
.....
286
Index and
C
redits . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
.
.
292
• three•







• four •
No Single Image Defines
Marist
The 1969 REYNARD has tried t0 present
the "complex pattern of attitudes, values
and perceptions" which make up today's
college student and the way he and those
viewing the campus from the outside relate
Marist to the community.
Marist students compare activities, cur-
ricula, professors and facilities with those
of their colleges and rate the education
they receive from all angles.
In the same way, others pass judgment on
MOTH even though they see only a small
part of the whole. People of the city and
those outside compare MOTH with other
colleges. The opinions they form may be
completely different from the opinions of
those who see more of Marist.
Each person evaluates from a different
viewpoint and rates according to his inter-
ests. One person might emphasize that Marist
recently received a grant from IBM for En-
vironmental Studies. Another may wonder
whether the Marist hoopsters won the cham-
pionship of the Central Atlantic College
Conference.
Because of this, the staff has tried to
present MOTH from two viewpoints: outer-
the way the public sees Marist; inner-the way
the students see it. Combined, these two per-
spectives, converge towards a wider glance;
the true perspective. The views of the students
and those outside the college which to-
gether give an overall picture of MOTH
.





A look at Marist sees the student in two perspectives
.
Not
only is he patterned against all that Marist stands for, but,
individually
,
he stands out from all of the others.
•five•





Activity
Life
And Spirit
Present A Wider
Marist
At the intersections of the North Road
and the Arterial Highway in Poughkeepsie is
an incessantly blinking four-way traffic light.
From this vantage point the casual motorist
receives his first view of the trees and moun-
tain range which typifys the Hudson Valley
and Marist-On-The-Hudson. It does more
than educate its students, for it adds to the
lives of the people of the community.
Marist does not stand alone. It is not an
isolated institution devoted only to learn-
ing. For, though education is its main pur-
pose, the College also attempts to convey
the spirit of its students to others.
It does not reflect only buildings and
classes. Instead, in an indirect manner, the
tradition, the ideals, the spirit of MOTH are
transmitted. In this way, those not associated
with Marist see it not in a stiff, formal way,
but in the way it is.
They see sports and plays as a part of
MOTH, as a service to the community and as
a reflection of the College. They are able to
look beyond the outside of Marist-within
-to see it clearly.
•six•



• seven •






From Inside:
A
Deeper Look
To
many, Marist is but a college. It presents little
more than the image of an institution. It is buildings
and people and professors. Few bother to explore
the expanding, progressing image of Marist. A look
inside will reveal this and much more; it will reveal
the true MOTH, a new breed of students caught in a
search for perspective.
Much about thP. college will never be evident to
any except Marist students. Only they will really
know MOTH for they are the only ones who are a
true part of Marist. Their environment is diverse,
their minds are open, their goals are high. This can
be seen by a casual look at the school. Only they,
however, can see MOTH not from the outside in,
but through the college, from the inside out.
To students, MOTH is a feeling. It is an atmos-
phere, a smile from a friend, a cigarette at the cam-
pus center. It is more than a complex of buildings
which turn out 300 college-educated men each year.
It is dozens of exams sweated out each year. It is
joy at good marks and inner dissatisfaction at bad
ones. It is the first snowfall that blankets a some-
times fairyland campus and a soggy springtime that
turns the campus into puddles.
MOTH is more than an image and tradition. De-
veloped on these, based on these, growing through
these. Marist is also the little things known only to
its students.



• nine •





Our Personalities
Are Developed And Our
Perspectives Are Widened
Across the campus every face represents a per-
sonal world composed of dreams and goals and
mistakes from the past which will become experience
to mold the future. Yet each personality mirrors
the frustration and joy of the present. Typical of
collegians universal, each student at Marist is vitally
aware and strongly certain of personal values.
Because each person's views and values are dif-
ferent, the campus has become a kaleidoscope of
personalities. The individual has always paced
Marist. The atmosphere on campus is one where
ideas mature and develop. Led by classroom discus-
sions and bull sessions in the Rathskeller, these ideas
become manifestations of countless personalities.
The vigor that has so characterized the present is
felt strongly at Marist. The vitality of dynamic per-
sonalities is reflected in the casual air of Marist-On-
•ten•
The-Hudson.
One of the most vital parts of the Marist experi-
ence is learning to live with other people. There is
nothing else at MOTH that can provide the per-
spectives given simply by being honest with our
peers. Although MOTH is a small and sometimes
disturbingly close community, it would be impossi-
ble to graduate without ever knowing the people
and being affected by them. Each person has been
allowed to develop his personalities to the fullest.
The result is an individual student who reflects for-
ever Marist, a college which has grown, is growing,
and will prosper on the individual personality.
Learning to understand the philosophy of our as-
sociates and learning to respect them for the
people they are may be the most important part of
what we learn at Marist.



• eleven •


Some come to Marist inhibited and with-
out confidence and leave as leaders. Some
arrive with a definite idea about their futures
and graduate with their intentions in a state
of fluctuation. Some come to MOTH with
preconceived notions about their athletic
prowess, and while there find themselves
to be artists.
We are thrown into a microcosm in which
we must adjust to daily routine, find diver-
sions, and gain a perspective on ourselves
in relation to our peers. Meals, classes,
athletics, and study are the unfailing com-
ponents of every day unless we are spared
by a holiday or the "tube".
But at Marist we mature, metamorphose,
and develop within the complexity of the
opportunities offered us.
•twelve•


• thirteen •






It is the nature and obligation of youth to ques-
tion, and as a senior class nears graduation it again
gives serious consideration to subjects which we
have debated individually and
·
collectively many
times before: has Marist equipped us for our fu-
tures? Are we sure of the direction we are taking?
Have the challenges Marist presented been sufficient?
Have we surmounted them? The professors, stu-
dents and alumni hold many varying viewpoints, but
there is agreement on one point: Marist imparts . . .
... Four Memorable Years
In Which We
• fourteen •









Move Rapidly And Change
Much.
Although our community is not large, the opportunities presented
to the
in
quir
ing
mind are vast
.
The
facilities are modern, the people
varied, and the years enlightening
.
The restless student can find fault
easily, but
the
advan
_
tages to the MOTH experience are great.
• fifteen •



• sixteen •






Tribute
The job of Dean of Students is not enviable. It is berated. It is blas-
phemed. It is condemned. It can be tedious, exhausting, and without end.
Little, if any, appreciative understanding goes with it. Every mistake is
immediately recorded. Each success is quickly forgotten. It involves the
supervision of all dormitory residents, the orientation of the freshman
class, all activities, the organization of all functions and all the trouble.
Its rewards are few except those that are personal and unknown. Add
to all of this only little cooperation and a student body that sometimes
does more talking than thinking. There is no reason to sentimentalize an
explanation for this dedication. There remains only long overdue credit
and appreciation. Therefore, the Class of
1969
dedicates the REYNARD
to Mr. Thomas W. Wade because it is our privilege to do so. We might
talk of duty and service of one man who has given much of himself to
Marist College, and the men around him. Now, however, the simplest
thing is the most eloquent. So we say, "Thank you, Mr. Wade; thank you
for always being there." You will be remembered.

seventeen




No man is good enough to govern another man without that other's consent.
Abraham Lincoln,. Speech at Peoria, Ill.
October 16, 1854



ADMINISTRATION





HAROLD D.
,
SPENCER, CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
DR. CHARLES C. GRIFFIN, SECRET ARY
ALEXANDER ALDRICH
JOSEPH D. EDWARDS
BERNARD GARRETT, F.M.S.
PARTICK E. MAGEE, F.M.S.
JOHN
A.
ROOSEVELT
RENE N. GREGOIRE, F.M.S., TREASURER
THOMAS P. BRENNAN
CHARLES J. GARRAHAN
ORIN LEHMAN
DR. JOHN J. McMULLEN
LINUS R. FOY, F.M.S., PRESIDENT OF THE COLLEGE









LINUS R. FOY,
F.M.S., Ph.D.
,
LLD
.
Pr
esi
d
e
nt
o
f M
arist Co
ll
ege
EDWARD
L.
CASHIN, F.M
.
S., Ph.D
.
Academic Vice-
P
reside
n
t

twenty-one








JOHN
L.
O'SHEA, F.M.S., M.A.
Academic
D
ean

twentv-two

THOMAS W. WADE, M.S.
Dean of Students
JOHN SCHROEDER, Ed.D.
Evening Division Dean











BRE
NDAN GINNITY, F.M.S., B.B.A.
Dir
ec
t
or o
f R
es
id
e
nc
e
MRS. ELIZABETH O'BRIEN
Recorder
MRS. HELEN O'CONNOR, R.N
.
N
u
r
se
HERSCHEL MORTENSEN
,
M
.
S
.
R
egis
t
ra
r
\

t
we
nty-three






REV. EMILE GUILMETTE, S.M., S.T.L.
Chaplain
MARION C. NICHOLAS, M.L.S.
Associate
Librarian
• twentv-four •
REV. AUSTIN VEROW, S.M.
Assistant to
Chaplain
GABRIEL F. HORES, F.M.S., M.L.S.
Assistant
Librarian
ADRIAN N. PERREAULT, F.M.S.,
M.L.S.
Director of Library










THOMAS CASEY, M
.
A.
D
irector of American Studies Program
BERNARD FLOOD, F.M.S.,
.
M.A.
Dir
e
c
tor
of T
ea
ch
er
Educat
i
on
JOSEPH BELANGER, F.M.S., M
.
A.
Director of Foreign
S
tudies
LOUIS ALPERT, M.S.
Dir
e
ct
o
r
of
P
re-e
n
gi
n
eeri
ng
JOHN SHERLOCK
,
M
.
B
.
A
.
D
irector of
P
lacement

twenty-f
ive







DAVID MILLER, M.S.
Director of Counseling
MICHAEL SABINI, B.C.S.
Office Manager
• twenty-si
x

ANTHONY V. CAMPILII, B.A.
Business Manager
CORNELIUS
J.
RUSSELL, F.M.S.,
M.A.
Controller
ANTHONY N. DANGELO, B.B.A.
Bookstore Manager




JOHN J. DOUGHERTY, M.A.
Development Director
THEODORE PRENTING
Systems Analyst
EUGENE GUMIENNY
Senior Programmer
NILUS V. DONNELLY, F.M.S.
Director of Computer Center
JOANNE CICALE
Programmer
• twenty-seven •






DAVID M. FLYNN, B.A.
Director
of Admissions
JAMES BRITT
Director of Dramatics

twenty-eight

RICHARD A. RANCOURT,
.
F.M.S.,
M.A.
Alumni Director
WILLARD McNARY
Director of Chorus
t
HOWARD GOLDMAN, Phys. Ed. D.
Director of Athletics





RAYMOND SEAMAN
Campus Post Office
VALLIERES TARCISSIUS, F.M
.
S.
Marist Press
ARTHUR GREENE, A.A.S
.
Saga Food Ser
v
ice
ANDREW PAVELKO
Dir
e
ctor of Maintenance
EDWARD LIPSKI, A.B.
Saga Food Serv
i
ce

twenty-nine




No one is so rich that he does not need
another's help; ...
. . . And the disposition to ask assistance from
others with confidence, and to grant it
with kindness, is part of our very nature.
Pope Leo XIII, Graves de Communi January 18, 1901



STAFF

















CAROLYN T. ALFONSO
Secretary
Business
Office
MICHAEL B. CONKEY, M.A.A.
Library
Clerk
---
- - -
·
'.'
·
- - - - - -
ISABELLE V. CASTRONOUVO
Business Office Clerk
ANNE A. BENVIE
Library Secretary
~
-·~,
.'.J.:•: .
fJ)
..
FRANCES DANGELO
Bookstore Clerk














CAROL
A.
DEYO
Secretory
to
Academic V
ice-
Pr
esident
GAYLE
S
.
KRAKOWER
Secretary
to
D
e
an
o
f Stu
dents
SANDI E. DOXEY
Secr
e
tary Teach
er
Education
JOY KUDLO
Secretary
to
Faculty
and Reg
i
strar
DOLORES
A. GALLO
Receptionist
EILEEN
M. LEONE
S
e
c
re
t
ar
y D
eve
l
op
m
e
nt
O
ffice

thirty-three





MARGARET B. NYHOF
Secretary Admissions
Office
THERESA ROSS
Receptionist

thirty-four

LINDA W. PARKS
Secretary
to
Academic
Dean
VIRGINIA SEBETH
Secretary
to
Recorder
HELEN A. POLLARD
Secretary to
Placement
and
Counseling
ANDREJ. SEDLAK
Electrician




MARY J. SOZIO, A.A.S.
Secretary Business Office
MARY E. TRAVIS
Secretary to the President
MARION H. STRICKLAND
Secretary Business Office
BETTY M. WEATHERWAX
Library Typist
JOHN TOTH
Campus Barber
ANNE M. WEISS
Secretary Upward Bound

thirty-five




The wise man will want to be ever with him
who is better than himself.
Plato: Phaedo 360 B.C.



FACULTY








E. RIMAI FISHER, B.A.
Artist in Residence
GEORGE HOOPER, Ph.D.
Professor of Biology
Chairman Biology Department

thirty-eiqht

Art
EVA PLAUT, N
.
D.D.
Lecturer in
Art
Biology
ASHA S. GUPTE, M.Sc.
Lecturer in Biology













WILLIAM T. PERROTTE, Jr.,. M.S.
Education Department
Assistant Professor of
Biology
HUGH TURLEY, F.M.S., Ph.D.
Instructor in Biology
Business
And Economics
JOHN
C.
KELLY, B.S.S.
Assistant
Professor
of
Economics
Chairman
Business and
Economics
::S:'·
-
.--•:.:.--.
V',
..... -: ... :·-:'-"":•".•
9
JAMES B. FAY, M.B.A.
Lecturer in Business





EDWARD F. GERISH, M.B.A.
JOHN J. GRIFFIN, M.B.A.
Adjunct Professor of Business
Assistant
Professor of
Business
THEODORE PRENTING, M.B.A.
Assistant
Professor
of
Business
CORNELIUS RUSSELL, F.M.S., M.A.
FRED VAN TASSELL, M.S.
Lecturer in Business
Instructor
in
Business

fortv







Chemistry
RICHARD LA PIETRA, F.M.S., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Chairman Chemistry Department
EDWARD R. LINNER, Ph.D.
Adjunct Professor of Chemistry
WALTER FOUCHER, Ph.D.
Lecturer in Chemistry
LAWRENCE MENAPACE,
.
Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
• forty-one •









J
ROBERT E. REHWOLDT, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
FLORENCE S. TABOR, Ph.D.
Adjunct Professor of Chemistry
Classics
JOSEPH R. LECLERC, F.M.S., M.A.
Adjunct Professor of Latin
THOMAS MAESTRO, F.M.S., M
.
N.
Assistant Professor of Classical
Languages






GEORGE
J.
SOMMER, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
Chairman English Department
ROBERT P. LEWIS, M.A.
Assistant Professor of English
English
STEPHEN
L. COX, F.M.S., M.A.
Instructor in English
AUGUSTINE
J.
NOLAN, F.M.S.,
M.A.
Assistant Professor of English

forty-thre
e





ROBERT C. NORMAN, M.S.
Assistant Professor of English
MILTON TEICHMAN, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
• forty-four •
RUTH STORM, B.A.
Lecturer in English
JOHN SCHROEDER, Ed.D.
Professional Diploma in English
Professor of English
EDWARD P. WATERS, M.A.
Education Department
Assistant Professor of English








GEORGE
H. SKAU, Ph.D.
Assistant Protessor ot History
Chairman History Department
AUTHUR D. BUTTS, M.A.
Lecturer in History
History
ROSCOE BALCH, Ph.D.
Professor
of History
CAROLYN LANDAU,
M.A.
Assistant Professor of
History and Political Science

f
orty-fi
v
e





PETER O'KEEFE, M.A.
Instructor in History
JOHN G. WHITE, M.A.
Assistant Professor of History

forty-six

VINCENT TOSCANO, M.A.
Assistant Professor of History
Education Department
YUAN CHUNG TENG,
Ph.D.
Associate Professor of History
LOUIS
C. ZUCCARELLO, M.A.
Assistant Professor of History






Mathematics
LOUIS ALPERT, M.S.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Chairman Mathematics Department
LINUS R. FOY, F.M.S., Ph.D., LLD.
Lecturer in Mathematics
KEVIN CAROLAN, F.M.S., M.S.
Associate Professor of Mathematics
JOHN LUMIA, M.A.
Instructor in Mathematics
;
• forty-seven •




JOSEPH M. RODGERS, M.A.
Instructor
in
Mathematics
ROBERT VIVONA, M.A.
Assistant Professor of Mathematics

forty-eight

JUNE TATE, B.S.M.E.
Instructor in Mathematics
Education Department






Modern
Language
GERARD WEISS, F.M.S., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Spanish
Chairman Language Department
MAURICE G. BIBEAU, F.M.S., M.A.
Instructor in Spanish
JOSEPH BELANGER, F.M.S., M.A.
Assoc
i
ate Prof
e
ssor of Mod
e
rn Language
Education Department
SIGRID BRANDIS, Diploma
Lecturer in German

for
t
y
-n
ine







J
• fifty •
MARY T. CONNELL, B.A.
Diplome d'Etudes Superieures
Lecturer in French
TINA M. GIOIELLI, B.A.
Certificate University of Florence
Lecturer in Italian
EDWARD H. GERMANN, M.A.
Certificat d'Etudes Franca
i
ses
Associate Professor of French
JULIAN M. LAMA, M.A.
Instructor in Spanish











BETTY MARCUS, M.A.
Lecturer in French
MARIO P. RUGGERI, M.A.,
Fulbright Fellow
Lecturer
in
Italian
CASIMIR NORKELIUNAS, M.A.
Assistant Professor of German
and Russian
~
(\\ii1
r.f:]r\
\J~U
'
(J
MIRIAM SWIDLER, Diploma
Lecturer in French

fifty-one







RICHARD RANCOURT, M.A.
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Chairman Philosophy Department
KEVIN DONOHUE, F.M.S., M.A.
Instructor
i
n Philosophy
• fift
y
-t
wo

Philosophy
THOMAS CASEY, M.A.
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
ITALO BENIN, F.M.S., Ph.D.
Instructor in Philosophy
D. A. DRENNEN, Ph.D.
Professor of Philosophy








Physical Education
HOW ARD GOLDMAN, Doctor of
P.Ed.
Associate Professor of P.Ed.
Chairman Physical Education
D~partment
RONALD
J.
PETRO, M.S
.
Instructor in Physical Education
WILLIAM AUSTIN, M.S.
Instructor in Phys
i
cal Education
• fift
y
-thr
ee









BRIAN H. DESILETS, F.M.S., Ph.D.
Associate Professor of
Physics
Chairman
Physics Department
JOSEPH
MARCHESSAULT,
F
.M.
S.,
Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Physics

fifty-four

Physics
HELMY H. EL-SHERIF, Ph.D. E.E.
Lecturer in Physics
PAUL TEICHMAN, M.S.
Assistant
Professor of Physics







DANIEL KIRK, F.M.S., Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology
Chairman Psychology Department
WILLIAM R. EIDLE, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Psychology
ANNELLA DALRYMPLE, M.A.
Lecturer in Psychology
Education Department
EDWARD
J.
O'KEEFE, M.A.
Assistant Professor of
Psychology
I,

fifty-five








Social Studies
CHARLES P. BRAMBILLA, M.S.S.
Lecturer in Sociology
JOHN B. NORMANDIN,
.
F.M.S.,
S.R.L.
Assistant Professor of Theology
Chairm
a
n Th
eo
logy D
e
partment

fi
f
t
y-six

VINCENT F.
KOTSCHAR, M.A.
Instructor in Geography
Theology
AIDAN
F. FLANAGAN, F.M.S.,
M.A.
Instructor in Theology



REV. EMILE R. GUILMETTE, S.M.,
M.A.
Instructor in Theology
STEPHEN
L. SULLIVAN, F .M.S.,
M.A.
Instructor in Theology
JEROME REMENICKEY, M.A.
Instructor in Theology
JOHN F. HARTY, F.M.S., B.A.
Certificate
in
Religious Sciences
Instructor
in
Theology
REV. R. RHYS WILLIAMS, Th.D.
Lecturer
in
Theology

fifty
-seve
n





" ... By virtue of the power granted to Marist College by the University of the State
of New York, and delegated by the trustees of the college to me, I confer upon you
the degree; Bachelor of Arts, with all the rights and privileges attached thereto ... "
LINUS R. FOY, F.M.S., Ph.D., LLD.
President of Marist College
r




SENIORS
I,







RICHARD
A.
AINSWORTH
Physics
LEONARD T. ANDERSSON
Physics

six
t
y

FLOYD
J.
ALWON
French
HARRY G. ANDERSON
Bus
i
ness
ROBERT
C.
ANDREWS
History
I,




THOMAS J. ANNUNZIATA
Mathematics
JOHN ARCHIMEDE
Mathematics
CHARLES J. ANZALONE
Mathematics
FRANK ASPELL
Business

six
t
y
-one







JOHN J. BAKER
English

s
i
x
t
y
-t
w
o •
VINCENT AVALLONE
Business
ANTHONY G. BASTIAN
English
RAYMOND J. BACKUS
Business




MAX P. BASYE
H
i
sto
r
y
RICHARD P. BERG
Biology
FREDERICK BECKERT
Business
THOMAS
L.
BERNIER
Bus
i
ness
LOUIS
J.
BENTIVEGNA
History
I,

sixty-three




GERARD T. BERTERO
Biology
RICHARD M. BLAIR
Economics

sixty-four

NEIL H. BISBEE
English
DAVID G. BOOTH
Biology





STEPHEN BORCHARDT
Business
MICHAEL W. BRADLEY
Business
JAMES V. BRADY
Mathematics
LOUIS A. BRACCO
Mathematics
FREDERICK BRAND
Mathematics

sixty-five






DENNIS J. BRESLIN
History

sixty-six

MARK
A.
BRECKENRIDGE
Mathematics
TIMOTHY G. BRIER
Economics
JOHN E. BREITENBACH
Business
GERALD M. BROWNE
Social Studies








VINCENT E. BUONORA
Spanish
RICHARD F. BRUNO
History
JAMES E
.
BURDA
French
JOSEPH E. BUCKLEY
Business
I,

sixty-seven






FRANCIS R. BURKE
Business
JOHN CALABRESE
History

sixty
-eight •
JOSEPH D. BURNS
Business
CHARLES H. BUTTON
Mathematics
JOSEPH R. CANALE
Psychology






MICHAEL C. CANN
Chemistry
IGNAZIO CAPUANI
Business
NELLO R. CAPONE
Biology
RICHARD CARN
English

sixty
-nin
e




RICHARD CASTINE
Business
HARRY J. CARROLL
History
JOSEPH F. CELIC
Mathematics
THOMAS J. CASTEEL
Mathematics





THOMAS J. CERNIGLIA
Mathematics
President Evening
Council
PETER E. CLARRY
Business
GABRIEL P. CICALE
Business
WILLIAM F. COBY
Psychology
KEVIN T. CLARK
Psychology

seventy-one








LENNIE COCCO
Chemistry
RICHARD
J
.
COLE
Business
co\/onh,_hA/f""'\
DANIEL M. COFFEY
Mathematics
MICHAEL G. COLLINS
Mathematics




ARTHUR R. CONNOLLY
History
CHARLES D. CONWAY
Economics
NORMAN D. COSTA
Psychology
JAMES J. CONROY
History
JOHN R. COUTURE
French

seventy-three







ROBERT
J.
CUMMINGS
Business
• seventy-four •
PHILIP COYLE
History
MARTIN P. CURTIN
Mathematics
FRANCIS G. CRIMMINS
Social Studies
STEPHEN
A. CURTO
History
.,



DUDLEY A. DAVIS, JR.
History
DENNIS J. D'AMICO
Biology
THOMAS P. DAVIS
Biology
RONALD K. DAMANDA
History

seventy-five



JOEL T. DEGRANDIS
Business
RENE J. DELORME
History
• seventy-six •
WILLIAM J. DELAHOYDE
Psychology
JOHN P. DELESSIO
Business
STEPHEN J. DENNISON
Biology





JAMES J. DEVINE
English
JOHN F. DOHERTY
History
President Class of
1969
RICHARD
A.
DICKINSON
Biology
THOMAS F. DOLAN
History

sP.ventv-sevP-n






JOHN P. DREISER
English
• s
eve
nty
-e
iaht •
FRANCIS J. DOLCEMASCOLO
Biology
ERWIN K. DUDEK
Mathematics
THOMAS M. DOWD, 111
History


EDWARD J. DUFFY
Mathematics
WILLIAM T. ECKHOFF
Psychology
JAMES DUNCAN
Business
JAMES M. EICHNER
Biology
JOHN EBERTH
Chemistry



DANIEL FITZPATRICK
Business

e
iaht
v

MICHAEL E. FLYNN
English
BRIAN B. FLANAGAN
History
JAMES
C.
FOLEY
History







BARRY
J.
FRASER
Psychology
LAURENCE F. FREIN
Psychology
CLAUDE GAIER
Physics
FRANK W. FREDERICKS
Physics
LEONARD I. GALLO
Span
ish

e
ighty-on
e





CHARLES J. GAREAU
English

eighty
-t
wo
~
BERNARD J. GANNON
English
PAUL V. GEARY
History
JOSEPH K. GARDNER
Chemistry
MICHAEL N. GEMMEL
Mathematics



LAWRENCE B. GIBBONS
Economics
DANIEL B. GERDES
Biology
JOHN K. GILHOOLY
English
DAVID
L. GIANNASCOLI
Psychology

eighty-three






ROBERT GLANT
Eng
li
sh
FREDERICK J. GOODWIN
Bus
i
n
e
s
s

eighty-four

PHILIP F. GLEASON
History
CARLTON J. GOOD
History
JAMES F. GORMALLY
Math
e
matics






RICHARD W. GORMAN
English
SAMUEL GRECO
Business
WILLIAM GOWEN
History
GERARD M. GRETZINGER
Spanish

eighty-fi
v
e



KENNETH
J.
HAASS
French

e
ight
y
-s
ix

CHESTER
J.
GROHOWSKI
Mathematics
DENNIS HAND
History
FRANCIS E. GRUEBEL
Business






JOHN R. HAND
Business
ROBERT E. HATFIELD, JR.
History
THOMAS
A.
HANLON
History
WILLIAM C. HENN
History
EDWARD W. HARTMANN
Mathematics

e
ighty-
seven







EDWARD J. HERESNIAK
Business
JOHN
L. HINES
History

eighty-eight

JOSEPH J. HERNANDEZ
Spanish
WILLIAM B. HOLMES
History
I,




FREDERICK
A. HOUSE
Business
ALAN D. HULETT
History
President Student Council
ERNEST R. INCITTI
English
MICHAEL J. HRENYO
Mathematics
GERARD E. JACQUES
History

eighty-nine




JAMES M. JOHNSON
Business
• ninety •
JAMES R. JAROS
Economics
RICHARD E. JOHNSON
Physics
DONALD R. JILLISKY
History
STEPHEN
L.
JOHNSON
History




RAYMOND JURINA
History
PHILIP
A.
JOYCE
Business
JOSEPH S. KASTRUP
Business
VICTOR G. JUNKE
History

ninety-one





EDWARD J. KEANE
Psychology
TIMOTHY P. KENEALLY
History

ni
n
e
t
y-
t
wo

\
MICHAEL KELLY
Biology
ROBERT J. KELTOS
Biology
PAUL KERIAZES
Phys
i
cs




ARTHUR
J.
KIERNAN
H
ist
ory
GREGORY
J.
KING
Psychology
DENNIS KING
Business
PETER R. KING
Economics

ninety-three










ANTHONY
J.
KONDYSAR
Business

ninety-fo
u
r

ROBERT F. KING
Psychology
MYRON KORYKORA
Physics
CHARLES G. KLEM
Chemistry
a,
.~'.
fa
.





DAVID KOZERSKY
Biology
GERALD J. LANDERS
Business
FRANCIS X. KRAEMER
Economics
JAMES W. LARKIN
History
JOHN R. LABUZETT A
Business

ninety-five





PAULL. LARKIN
History
RAYMOND M. LEFEVRE
Bus
i
ness
• n
inety
-
six

RICHARD
J.
LASPINA
Biolog
y
THOMAS P. LENNOX
History






GARY J. LINDSTROM
Physics
JOSEPH P. LIZARAZO
Mathematics
EDMUND W. LOHSE
Mathematics
DANIEL
C.
LINSON
Business
LESTER
F. LOMBARDI
Engli
s
h

ninety-seyen





KEVIN F. LOVER
Mathematics

ninety-
e
ight

VINCENTE. LOMBARDO
English
EDMUND J. LUEKEN
Business
ALFRED LONG
Mathematics
JOHN E. LYLE
History





WILLIAM J. MCCALL
History
JOHN J. LYNCH
History
JOHN
L. MCCANN
Business
ROBERT
A.
MCBRIDE
Biology

ninety-nine





FRANCIS
J.
MCMAHON
Business
WILLIAM G. MACOMBER
Mathematics

one
hundred •
ROBERT J. MCNEIL
Psychology
PETER P. MACK
Biology
DANIEL R. MAHONEY
Mathematics








PAUL 5. MANKA
FRANK M. MAPES
Mathematics
Business
MELVIN MARCUS
COLEMAN
F
.
MARTEL
Economics
Busi
ness
• on
e
hundr
e
d o
ne






BENJAMIN P. MAYO
Business

one
hundred two

LEONARD P. MARTIN
History
RICHARD
A. MEASEL
Biology
PATRICK
MASTERSON
Physics



ROLAND H. MELLEN
Business
NORMAN MIDDLETON
Psychology
ROBERT MENNONNA
History
MICHAEL
J.
MIGLIORE
Chemistry
NICHOLAS C. MESCIA
Chemistry

one
hundred three





LOUIS M. MILANO
History
GEORGE G. MILLS
English

one hundred four

RONALD MILLOVITSCH
Mathematics
GEORGE D. MINE
Mathematics








JOHN R. MOCCIO
Histo
r
y
V
IN
C
EN
T
MOONE
Y
Engl
i
sh
DAVID
J.
MORAN
Psychology
FRANCIS J
.
MOCEK
Mathematics
JOHN J
.
MORAN
Bio
l
ogy

one hundred five










~
..
· .... s;
'""'•"
JOSEPH MURTAGH
Business

one
hundred
six

~
RICHARD
A.
MOURINO
Business
ROBERT E. NEARY
Economics
WILLIAM C. MULVIHILL
History
WILLIAM J. NEVINS
History






DENIS W. NOONAN
History
JOSEPH C. NOBILE
Chemistry
JOHN D. NOONAN
Biology
CHARLES
A. NOBLE
Mathematics
5
• one hundr
e
d seven •



ARTHUR T. NORMAN
English
RICHARD J. OBERLE
Psychology

one hundred eight

EDWARD
L. NOVAK
Biology
JOHN J. NUNZIATA
English
THOMAS J. O'GORMAN
Business



CHESTER OLDAKOWSKI
Physics
JOHN D. O'LEARY
Business
EGON OLOFFSON
French
HUGH O'NEAL
History

one
hundred
nine





JOHN F. PASHLEY
Biology

one hundred
ten •
SEAN J. O'NEILL
History
JERRY G. PATRICK
Business
BRUCE OREMUS
Social Studies







JOHN
C.
PERERA
History
ROBERT
A.
PLIMLEY
Chemistry
GASPARE PERRELLO
English
CHRISTOPHER POPRAVAK
Psychology
THOMAS PIAZZA
Mathematics
e!f7

one
hundr
ed e
l
eve
n •








PAUL F. PURPI
Business
GRANVILLE
A.
RAMBO
Mathematics

one
hundred twelve

ROBERT
C.
PURVIS
History
ROBERT READ
Spanish



ANTHONY REDA
Biology
GLENN REICH
History
CHARLES H. RHODES
Economics
JAMES REDUNSKI
French
ANTHONY RIGOTHI
History
• one hundred thirteen



RICHARD RIZZIELLO
Spanish
• one hundred fourteen •
LOUIS P. RINALDI
History
JOSEPH P. RIZZO
English
JEFFREY F. RIVA
Business
WILLIAM J. ROWLEY
History


JAMES G. SAHAKIAN
Mathematics
FRANCIS RUSSO-ALESI
Psychology
FRANCIS G. SAINSBURY
Physics
PAUL H. RYAN
English

one
hundred fifteen •




EDWARD ST. GERMAIN
Psychology
ALLEN I. SHARKEY
Math
• one hundred
sixteen •
ANDREW P. SANTULLI
Economics
MICHAEL J. SHANLEY
History
JOHN V. SHEEHAN
Chemistry








PHILIP SHEEHAN
Bus
i
n
es
s
RUSSELL R. SMITH
Bus
i
ness
STEPHANIE L. SIU
English
THOMAS
J.
SMITH
Business

one
hundred
seventeen







JOSEPH H. SOMMERS
Biology
ROBERT SNELSON
Economics
EDWARD
C.
SPAIGHT
Business
WILLARD
SNYDER
Psychology





RICHARD J. STANULWICH
History
JAMES P. SUREAU
Business
DEAN
A.
STEW ART
Business
CHARLES
A.
T AML YN
History
JAMES
H. SULLIVAN
History

one hundred nineteen










THOMAS TINGHITELLA
Biology
DANIEL T. TUTAK
Mathematics
A
r,n
o
h11nrlrPrl
t
wP.
ntv •
GARY G. TRABUCCO
Business
JAMES M. TRIMBLE
Mathematics
BERNARD G. VEIT
History



DENNIS
A. VERNOIA
English
JAMES B. WALSH
Business
PETER M. WALSH
History
JAMES V. VICTORY
History
GORDON
A. WALTON
Business
• one hundred twenty-one





THOMAS
J.
WARD
Business
• one hundred twenty-two •
GEORGE P. WARD
History
ROBERTW. WATSON
H
i
story
KERMATH F. WARD
Business
CHARLES P. WESTMILLER
History
I,






GERARD WILHELM
Psychology
MICHAEL YABLONSKY
History
TERRENCE R. WILLIAMS
Business
RAYMOND
J.
YARISH
Economics
GERARD WOODS
History
• one hundr
e
d t
w
enty
-
three •








one hundred twe
nt
y-
fou
r

Around the corner I have a friend,
In this great city that has no end;
Yet days go by, and weeks rush on,
And before I know it a year is gone,
And I never see my old friends face,
For life is swift and terrible race.
He knows I like him just as well.
As in the days when I rang his bell.
And he rang mine we were younger than,
And now we are busy tired men;
Tired with trying to play a game,
Tired with trying to make a name
.
"Tomorro," I say, "I will call on Jim,
Just to show that I'm thinking of him."
But tomorro comes-and tomorro goes,
And the distance between us grows and grows.
Around the corner! -yetmiles away ..... .
"Here's a telegram, sir" ..... .
"Jim died today."
And that's what we get and deserve
in the end:
Around the corner,
.
a vanished friend.
-Author Unknown







~n ~emoriam
LOUIS
A.
VALINOTTI
March 16, 1948
December 21, 1967
JEFFREY G. WEIR
January 13, 1947
February 27, 1968
CLASS OF 1969

one hundred twenty-five




On December 23, 1989, nestled by your wife and children beside a warm fireplace,
you will pick up this yearbook and begin thumbing through it, reminiscing about your
college life at Marist. To better recall these years, we will try to call back yesterday, bid
time return "for these special nights of the future".
The world we lived in during our college years was one of chaos and disorder, hope and
desire, violence and war, concern and determination. It was an era of change and altruism
and it evolved around a spirit of convulsive unrest. It may be better described in the words
of Charles Dickens; "it was the best of times and it was the worst of times". Turn the page
now and let's take a look at some of the more significant events that were shaping the
world we lived in during our senior year ...




... THAT
UNFORGETTABLE
YEAR
1968 - 1969








1968
- 1969
SHOWS
US ...
... THE
STYLES ...
l

one hundred twenty-eight •





... THE QUEST FOR POWER ...

one hundred twenty-nine





..
..





















































... 'I'll
EJ
V10T'o:l-In1LL
Y
...
Op
B'wayJoe
Jolts Colts
By 16-1
Joi' • • amalh, who belittled the
hii:hly-
touted Baltimore defE'nse in
pre-,r,m1e
interl'iew•, grins
his
vindication
in
Miami dres•iny room after the
game.
Burned
tork IJeneath hi. eye• I.
to
,·ul
down glare of
the
•un.
He
rompleted
17
of 28 pa Hses-\\·ilh-
out
an
interception-for
196
yardi<.
Fullb11tk .Matt Snell rarrled 30 tlme.•
for
121
)·ar<ls
and a touchdown. The
Jpl
tot;,I ru,hinll' y1trdaQ"e '"" 13:!.
)fcanwhik. the
Jc•l defonse. tops in
t
hi' A FL. rushed
SUJlCr-s11h ~;art
Morrall
into thr1-e
ke)' intcrecplions.
Ther stole
nnother
on
the
auhbinP!
Johi1n)
l
1
11it11•
.
The
Hl
1
;-poi11t
fa-
rnrit,•., hacl
to •t1·11mhle
h1
11rot·~
hef<>n•
th,·
finish.
The
J~is·
16-7
.. litter l~u\'
I triumph
WR~
w,tne~1i1ro
hr 7:t,::17 Orutt
)!C"
t:md fan-<
and a
nation\\
hit: 'IV
auclit•tw~
of million-1.
Other sto
ries,
editortal
page 60;
other pix
centerfold, boclc
page.
Slain Coed Had
an
Abortion
Stories
oa
~
e
'
I
I
I




.... AND THE AGONY
OF DEFEAT ...






... THE
''GOOD-BYE''
OF THE
OLD ADMINISTRATION ...
• one hundred thirtv-eioht •




... AND THE ''HELLO'' OF A
NEW FIRST FAMILY.
• one hundred thirty
-
nine •



"The obvious difference between men is not the lack of strength nor lack
of knowledge, but rather lack of will. The perfectly disciplined and educated
will is a direct result of competitive sports."
Vince Lombardi



SPORTS










THE VIKING TEAM: First Row (left to right), D
.
Jillisky, W. Holmes, F
.
Kraemer, J
.
Conroy,
co-captains T
.
Dowd and G
.
Browne, E. Oloffson, J. Eberth, J
.
Calabrese. Second Row
:
W
.
O'Reilly, W. Rooney, W. Leber, W
.
Paccione, D
.
Gestal, J. Fantauzzi, J
.
McDonnell, D
.
Hinchey, H
.
Blum, D. Brady
.
Third Row
:
F. Attonito, W
.
Iacobellis, K. Doherty, J. Hurley, T.
McCuttchan, D
.
Ronchi, P
.
DeCabia, R
.
Harper, T
.
Cooney, M
.
Rowinski. Fourth Row
,
K
Donnoley, W
.
Connoll
.
y, J
.
Tyne,
.
M
.
T~wers, P. Gl~nnon, E
..
Cooke, C
.
McNamara, F
.
S~ott:
W. Moody
,
W. Dourd1s,
A.
Herzing
.
Fifth Row
,
J. Ritz, J
.
Wintenburg, H. Smith, J
.
Walsh E
Fogarty
,
B
.
Scott, G
.
Rakow, G
.
Garey, W
.
McGarr
.
'
·






Football is a game to be played in pain. The
'68 Viking season was indeed most painful. A pre-
season victory over Fordham, confirmed with the
experience of the Viking
'
s, beckoned Marist into
an optomistic season
.
Pain, both physical and
mental, broke the optimism in a series of narrow
margin loses and crippling injuries. Still the Vik-
ings played, played in pain
.
One could ask no
more, they could do no less
.
At right, the Viking's head coach, Ron Levine
.
FORDHAM SCRIMMAGE
14-0
IONA 24
MARIST
21
MARIST
6
MARIST
13
MARIST
26
PROVIDENCE
13
SEA TON HALL
28
KINGS (PA.)
7
SIENA
26
NIAGARA
18
MARIST
12
MARIST
12
CATHOLIC UNIV
.
-Snowed Out
• one hundred forty-five •




one hundred forty-six







At the Viking Award Dinner, senior Frank Kraemer was awarded the sportmanship trophy and senior James
Conroy was voted most valuable player of the Viking squad. Frank and Jim are flanked by Mr. Robert
Norman,
(
left
l
, assistant professor of English, who broadcasted the games heard over WHVW and Ron Levine,
head coach
.
• one hundred forty-eight •








THE SOCCER TEAM: Kneeling
(left
to right), Nick Muula, Joseph Emmanul, John Breiten-
back, co-captains Daniel McCleary and Gordon Walton, James Sureau, Robert Morley,
James Snyder.
·
Standing: Coach Howard Goldman, Robert Krenn, Dennis Vernoia, John
Murphy, Robert Keltos, Richard Mease!, David DeRosa, Isadore Sabeta, Gary Black and
Manager, Raymond Jurina.
RIST










Run, sweat, ache, score! Soccer! Hours of prac-
tice and dedication, this is the name of the game.
From Danbury to Sacred Heart, unity and maximum
effort are the products from a group that never
lacked pride and intestinal fortitude
.
Our Morist
soccer team did well for our name, and in this we
take pride!
ADELPHI-SUFFOLK
MARIST
5
MARIST
4
WESTERN CONN. STA TE
5
MARIST
0
BLOOMFIELD
PATERSON STATE
0
MARIST
2
N.Y
.
MARITIME
2
MARIST
2
MARIST
0
KINGS COLLEGE
2
NYACK MIS~IONARY
2
MARIST
0
MARIST
3
NEWARK ST A TE
6
MARIST
3
FAIRFIELD
2
MONTCLAIR ST A TE
2
MARIST
0
MARIST
6
MANHATTAN
0
SACRED HEART UNIV
.
MARIST
3
PACE
0
MARIST
• on
e
hundred fifty-one •




I
r,r,







THE SAILING CLUB MEMBERS: Sitting (left to
right
)
, Robert King, Bro
.
Brian H. Desilets, Com-
modore, Kenneth P.
Quinn
.
Standing; Phillip
Crawford
,
John DeSouter, Richard Castine, Mat-
thew Bianco, Peter Hultzen, Vice-commodore, John
J.
Kren, Donald B
.
Pizzuto, Fred Emken.
• on
e
hundr
e
d f
i
fty-four •






WRESTLING
:
Sitting
(
left to right
)
, Ted Brosnan
,
John Eisenhart, Kevin O'Grady
.
Kneel-
ing: Pete Masterson, William Moody, Bernie O'Hare, Robert Krenn. Standing
:
Fred Wag-
ner
,
John Lomitola
,
Jack Walsh, William Dourdis, William McGarr, Leo Larkin.




All of us need to learn, and need help in learn-
ing, to make ourselves do what is difficult and
unpleasant. Wrestling demands the ultimate in out-
thinking one's opponent, sacrificing one
'
s pleasant-
but-poor eating habits, keeping one's body and
mind in clean, efficient competitive trim.
You learn to face difficult situations time after
time ... entirely on your own
.
No one else can be
held responsible
.
Your errors are clearly defined;
their correction is therefore certain
.
Your achieve-
ments are your own, the team's and Marist's as
well. No sport can give one better training.
Wrestling is a demanding sport
.
Not everyone
has the guts to participate. To excel, a boy must
make himself "all man", must train and tune his
strength, ref I exes and attitude to maximum effec-
tiveness. The young man who competes in this sport
is worthy of esteem in the spectator's eyes.
At right, wrestling coach, Jerry Patrick.




one hundred fifty-eight •




'
d d fifty-nine


one hun re



THE CROSS COUNTRY TEAM: Kneeling (left to right), Stephen Sawicki, John Martin,
Michael Murphy, James Ambury, Jerry Wildner. Standing: Coach Len Olson, Stephen
Kopki, Robert Meyerhofer, Gregory Howe, Robert Andrews, Phil Cappio, William Kalish,
Michael Moran, Joseph McMahon, Michael Bell, Edward Walzer, Joseph Porcaro, and Man-
ager, Arthur Quickenton.








What makes a person want to run 5 miles? What
does it take to be a good distance runner? Obvious-
ly, one needs a little natural talent, but most of all
it takes a deep burning desire for greatness, and
the guts to punch through the pain barrier and strive
for perfection. To put oneself through tortuous train-
ing
.
sessions day after day requires an effort of
mind-a combination of willpower plus an attempt
to enjoy it. In many ways success in cross-country
· is very similar to success in life.
If
a person is willing
to work hard enough, he can always reach his goal.
Exterior glory is rarely heaped upon a cross-country
·
runner; however, it is more richly rewarding to be
satisfied within. It is one of the most pleasing sights
in the world to see a person smile at the end of a
good race, although he is sick with fatigue. It is that
exhilarating freshness that comes with success, that
feeling of solid joy which one experiences when a
goal
is
reached, that makes up for all the physical
punishment that a runner must endure. It is then, at
the end of his race, that he knows for certain why
he wants to run.
Pictured below is Robert Andrews, captain, who
paced the harriers to a fantastic 20 wins and 5 lose
record. The team finished third in the National Inter-
collegiate Athletic Association meet and first in the
Central Atlantic Conference.
• one hundred sixty-one •





















u
j
~~RISt
22
VARSITY HOOPSTERS
:
Kneeling
(
left to right
)
;
Ken Thompson, Bob Ullrich, James
Brady
(
co
-
captain
)
,
Larry Gibbons, Ray Charlton
;
Standing; Coach Ronald Petro,
- - - -
0\
~~AISt
50
'
~
}
~RIS
}
\
J
"t~AIS1
44
Tom Waldbillig
,
Ray Manning, Joe Scott
,
William Gowen
(
co-captain
)
,
William
Spenla and Manager Barry LaCombe
.




Basketball at Marist had a new
look this season, characterized by a
fast, hustling, but more important,
winning team. With only two return-
ing lettermen, the Red Foxes had a
young team consisting of seven sopho-
mores
.
After a slow start the team
started to click and won its second
consecutive CACC title. During the
course of the season the team won
the Oswego Tournament, won more
games and more consecutive games
than any other Marist basketball
team.
Much credit has to be given to
coach Ron Petro for having such a
successful season with a relatively in-
experienced team
.
With help from a
talented freshmen team and the re-
turning lettermen they should con-
tinue to produce winning teams.
• one hundred sixty-three •


hundred sixty-four •
• one



I,





Coach Ronald Petro presents
William
Gowen
with
the game
ball after scoring
his 1000th point of his career.

one hundred sixty-seven







FRESHMEN BASKETBALL
:
Kneeling
(left
to right
)
, Billy Johnson, John Courtenay,
Fred Lichwidt, Ron Wilson, Jerry Fitzgerald, Rick Taveli. Standing
:
Coach Jim
Foster, Mike Paino, Terry McMackin, Ray Clarke, Dennis Curtin, Joe Scott, Steve
Shackel, Brian McGowan, Mark Schmidt, Joe Wilson
.





Although the frosh five amassed an outstanding
record of 15-3, we hope the only thing remembered
·
about the 1968-1969 freshmen basketball season
.
will not be a simple won-loss record. No single sta-
tistic can encompass the total human effort put out
by every player on the team during any given game.
From big Joe Scott's 31 points and 31 rebounds,
to Brian McGowan's sizzling 35 points against a
previously unbeaten Iona, the frosh squad showed
that they could use teamwork while producing out-
.
standing individual performances. Congratulations
to coach Jim Foster and the team
.









\
'
l
• one hundred seventy

••r:t
hiiW






VARSITY CREW:
(
L-R
)
Bernie McGovern, Greg Nesteroke, Joseph Ritz, Steve Sepe, James
Walsh, William
Stoudle, Michael Arteaga, Joseph Ryan. Coxen, Peter Masterson





VARSITY
:
Co-Captain James "Bubba" Walsh
Coach, William Austin
VARSITY: Co-Captain Michael Arteaga
Crew has few triumphs and perhaps needs no
more. It is not that anyone cares to shout the praise
of crew, it is that anyone who really knows crew
does not need to shout about it
.
For an orsman,
crew becomes a discipline, a way of life. Crew is
devoid of glory, there is little interest in eight name-
less orsmen
.
The unity of the boat, the fanaticism
and religious ardor of getting eight men to think
and act as one-this is crew.
The season begins in September and continues
through May. The length of the season itself typifies
crew at Marist, which can be summed up in one
word, sacrifice. Sacrifice breeds victory and for the
Marist crew there is no substitute for victory.
• one hundred seventv-three •









J
.
V.
BOAT:
(
L-R
)
Richard Gorman,
Jam
es
M
c
loughlin
,
Mik
e
Camardi, Steve
Pal
enscar,
Joe
McD
ermo
tt
,
Rick Reusch
l
e,
John Clancy
,
Wi
lli
am
Ro
w
ley
,
Jos
e
ph
Sommers
.
Cox
e
n
,
J
im
Le
ary


Many hard and long hours prepare the Marist oarsmen for
the annual Florida regatta.
• one hundred seventv-five •



FRESHMAN CREW:
(
L-R
)
Matt O'Brien, Peter LaComb, Morty Torrey, Ronald Palumbo,
Paul Olsen, Daniel Cappio, John Weis, Stephen D'Arienzo
.
Coxen, Joseph Bevilacqua





Home rs not where you live but where they understand.
Christian Morgenstern





CAMPUS
LIFE
I,



• one hundred eighty •





Marist-On-The-Hudson is a small world
of individuals whose lives are centered
about the campus: a world within a world.
It is filled with innumerable daily occur-
rences, some of which we live, others we
hear about. The individual is, of course,
a concerned member of the world com-
munity, but, if for only a short time, he is
involved in a much more intimate, more
dynamic, and yet equally confusing, tur-
bulent, and diversified community; if, for
only a brief moment, he is more intensely
involved in the politics of the microcosom;
if for only what seems like a few seconds,
he has become caught up in a symbiotic
interchange of ideas, ideals, and person-
ality which has permanently stamped Mar-
ist as him, and him as part of Marist
.
Few know Marist like the people who
live, study, and work there. Few but the
citizens of MOTH see the inner part of
Marist and feel its true spirit, feel the hap-
piness when it smiles, and the sadness
when
it
frowns. Only they can hear its
laughter and see its sights. They reflect the
sometimes private world, open to many,
yet shared by them alone, in and between
classes, at the library,
in
the rathskeller, or
at work in the office.
Life at Marist may be reflected by a
concert or by a Symphony Mass in the
MARIST
The Inner Vie"\V
College Chapel. Its concern for humanity,
is demonstrated semi-annually by the Stu-
dent Government Blood Bank drive
.
Mar-
ist is more than this however, and almost
impossible to describe in a few pages.
Marist-On-The Hudson is a place in our
lives where we grow in knowledge and
human understanding. It is a special envi-
ronment where social awareness is made
more acute and our cultural, spiritual, ac-
ademic, and athletic abilities are further
developed. In the next forty or so pages we
shall try to present the sometimes big and
yet little things that help to make Marist
what it is.
• one hundred eighty-one •




To the citizens of Marist, registration sig-
nifies more than the start of a new semester.
It is an exasperating experience of long lines,
course cancellations, complaints, and filling
out countless cards. However, without the ef-
forts of one, Mrs. O'Brien, her dedicated staff,
a cooperative faculty and Student Govern-
ment, a new semester would never become a
reality.
• one hundred eighty-two •









Academic enrichment is, above all, the purpose of Marist. This is
the perspective in which the students and faculty are most directly
involved
.
The academic life of the student is directly influenced
by the faculty under which he studies and the environment in
which he lives. Every graduate of Marist will be expected to show
competence in areas of study which have long been recognized
as important in the development of the well-rounded Christian
personality
;
classical or modern language, English, economics, his-
t
ory, mathematics, philosophy, psychology, theology and science.
In each of these areas of human knowledge Marist will challenge
the student to exert his own powers of imagination and intelligence.
He w
i
ll be expected to meet the demands of precision, organiza-
.
tion, and independent judgement
,
and to interpret the "larger
issues" that shape human experience, that in so doing he will pre-
pare himself for a productive and rewarding life
.
Because Marist
is a liberal arts college offering a liberal education it is hoped that
the student will discover his heritage of freedom through responsi-
bility.

o
n
e
h
u
n
dred ei
ahtv-fo
u
r •





• one hundred eighty-six •






...
..
Since the technological advances of
this century, we have done away with
the ancient barriers of time and dis-
tance, twentieth century man must
learn to communicate with all other
men on this shrinking planet. Today,
facility
in
language has assumed a
basic importance. To meet this need,
Marist's modern language program,
with its two laboratories, emphasizes
the spoken word
.
• one hundred eighty-seven •



The Cardinal Spellman Library, located in Donnelly Hall, offers a ready
source for reference material. Although many critical areas of develop-
ment still lie ahead, the library, under the direction of Brother Adrian
Perreault, has grown greatly in the past few years. Its four levels now
provide over 50,000 volumes, along with a subscription to 385 professional
and cultural periodicals. The library provides the Marist student a special
place of solitude and quiet in which to study.
• one hundred eighty-eight •








'
-;;;;.i,i9
1 .

*
I~-~■
I
■ ,'!I
.
• one hundred eighty-nine •





one hundred ninety
·











The academic life of Marist is further enhanced
by its many public lectures, some sponsored by
the Student Government and others by the chair-
man of each academic department.
The first major lecture, featuring Floyd B. Mc-
Kissick, former National Director of CORE, was
sponsored by the Student Government Cultural
Committee under the direction of Bernard Jacques
.
Mr. McKissick spoke about "The Problem With
America".
On the issue of the presidential campaign, Mc-
Kissick minimized any difference between the can-
didacies of Hubert Humphrey, Richard Nixon and
George Wallace. In speaking more directly on
"Black Power", McKissick discounted political of-
fice as a means to power. He felt that politics
such as integration are meaningless to the negro
"if
he doesn't have any bread in his pocket"
.
Mr
.
McKissick stressed the fact that the negro needs
economic strength within the black community.
On this basis, he explained, he has established
"Floyd B. McKissick Enterprises, Inc.", which is
dedicated to the building of Black Economic
Strength within the black community. Mr. Mc-
Kissick called on the student body of Marist to
help in this program. He said he's welcome both
black and white.
The annual Franklin D. Roosevelt Symposium,
now in its fourth year under the direction of Dr.
George Skau, present chairman of the History
and Political Science department, has become
part of Marist itself. The theme of this year's sym-
posium was "F.D.R. as Politician and Campaigner
.
"
The symposium held in the campus center on Sat-
urday, October twenty-sixth featured as its main
speakers; Professor Frank Friddle of Harvard Uni-
versity and Professor Joseph Hutchmacher of Rut-
gers University. The topic of Professor Friddle's
talk was "The Ups and Downs of a Champion
Campaigner." Professor Hutchmacher delivered a
lecture in which he casted Roosevelt in an entire-
ly new light, "that conservative rather than lib-
eral." Both addresses were followed by panel dis-
cussions led by Professor Charles
C.
Griffin of
Vassar College.
Rev
.
Malcom Boyd, lecturer, author, and fellow
of Yale University, addressed the student body
and presented his ideas on world problems
.
He
discussed the Black-White situation, birth control,
dope and many of the problems facing todays
college students
.
At the conclusion of his address
he answered questions and discussed a book he
plans to write on Hugh Heffner.
Marist College was further honored this year
by being the first of many colleges and universi-
ties to sponsor a program involving a major math-
ematical breakthrough
.
The lecture arranged un-
der the auspices of Mr. Louis Alpert, Chairman of
the Math Department, featured Dr. Leopoldo Tora-
balla of Marist in a talk entitled, "A General
Upper left
,
Floyd B. McKissick; left, Rev. Malcom
Boyd
.







Geometric Theory of Surface Area"
.
Dr. Torabal-
la's new theory presented, for the first time
,
solu-
tions to important historical problems whose origins
may be traced to 330 B
.
C. He demonstrated how
his theory gave the first constructive solution to the
famous Geocze problem which dates back to the
turn of the
·
century.
The English department, with the assistance of
one of its members, Mr. Robert Lewis, sponsored
the lecture "Modern Poetry and the Modern
Times
"
delivered by Dr. Rosenthal
,
Professor of
English at New York University.
"Werewolves, Vampires, and Their Next of
Kin" was the theme of a spellbinding lecture ren-
dered by Dr
.
Hoyt, chairman of the English de-
partment at Bennett College
.
Professor Hoyt delved
into the supernatural with a fine tooth comb. The
lecture, sponsored by the Student Government
Cultural Committee and under the direction of
Joseph Francese
,
was well rece
i
ved
.
Other lectures presented th
i
s year were: "The
World Christian Community" delivered by Cyprian
Rowe, f
.
m
.
s
.
, a former English teacher at Marist,
and Max Collier, a fellow student of Brother Cy-
pr
i
an at Howard University
;
"The Development of
Chemical Symbols" delivered by Dr
.
Michalson,
sponsored by the Chemistry Department; and "The
Question of Contraception" sponsored by the Bi-
ology Club and delivered by Dr
.
Seymore Stahl,
a gynecologist at Vassar Hospital, Poughkeepsie,
New York
.
Ab
ove,
D
r.
D
avid Ka
hn
;
b
e
l
ow,
Dr
.
C
h
ar
l
es
Hoyt
.
• one hund
r
ed n
i
nety
-
three •







'
Sunday, December eighth, brought the Hudson Valley Chamber Players, conducted by Claude
Monteux, and the Mid-Hudson Madrigal Singers, conducted by Beatrice Bright, to Our Lady of
Wisdom Chapel to perform the third in a series of college concerts
.
The Symphonic Mass, celebrated
by Rev
.
Emile Guilmette, S.M., included selections from Schubert, di Lasso, and Handel.
• one hundred ninety-four •



• one hundred ninety-five •






The Knights of Columbus of Marist College wish to thank the members of Long Island
Sing Out for coming to Poughkeepsie and pr
_
esenting "UP WITH PEOPLE"
.
• one hundred ninety-six •





Miguel Reyna:
In Concert



• one hundred ninety-nine •








The 1969 edition of WHO'S WHO AMONG STU-
DENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COL-
.
LEGES will carry the names of twenty-three seniors
who have been selected as being among the coun-
try's most outstanding campus leaders.
Campus nominating committees and editors of
the annual directory have included the names of
these students based on their academic achievement,
Students' names this year from Marist are:
SITTING
(
L-R
):
Gordon Walton, Dennis Vernoia, Thomas
Dowd Ill, Sean O'Neill, John Moccio, Bernard Jacques.
ROW II
:
James Brady, Daniel Mahoney, Michael Shanley,
Alan Hulett, Robert Mennonna, Daniel Fitzpatrick, Fred
service to the community, leadership in extracur-
ricular activities and future potential.
They join an elite group of students selected from
more than 1,000 institutions of higher learning in
all
50
states, the District of Columbia and several
foreign nations in North and South America.
Outstanding students have been honored in the
annual directory since it was first published in 1934.
House, Michael Collins
.
ROW Ill: Paul Purpi, John
"Doc"
Doherty, Lester Lombardi,
Robert Andrews
,
Dudley Davis, Floyd Alwon, Robert' Neary
.
Missing from photo, Timothy Keneally, Stephen Curto
.
• two hundred one •



,,
• two hundred two •






Decorated like a wonderland, a false softness
lures you into the cold
.
Winter is frustrating, exhila-
rating, it can bite through a person's skin
.

two hundred t
h
ree




• two hundred four •
A mountain in the dark, piercing, frozen; an artist
with a flawless brush-Snow
.





• two hundred
five •








Sitting
(
L-R
)
: Chuck Meara, Sec.; Robert
Mennonna, Pres.; Bill
Dourdis, V.
Pres.
Standing: Steve Wysowski, Jim Sureau,
Richard
Anderson,
THE RESIDENT BOARD
entered
its
fourth and
final
year
legislating
and enforcing regulations per
t
a
inin
g
to the Resident Halls
.
In a
student referendum,
the
Resident Board was given a vote
of confidence and
the
same
board will finish out the
year
.
Next year,

two hundred
six

Peter Dwyer, Peter Masterson
,
Kevin Lover, Bryan Maloney
.
Missing, Jim McLaughlin
.
the Resident Board will give way to a new House
System; however, the role of the student will be in-
strumental in determining matters regarding life on
campus, academic atmosphere in the dormitories
and related matters
.



• two hundred seven •





two hundred eight •







Each of us has his own maze. A labyrinth of
choices. cramming .
.
. a letter from home . .
.
centerfolds . . .
clean sheets
..
.
dirty laundry
.. .
coffee
spoons ...
judy
collins
.
.
.
"laugh in" ...
no
hot water
..
.
borrowing notes
.
.
.
empty beer cans
. . .
unfinished letters
. . .
phone calls
. . .
sleep to
the
accompaning noise of melting
ice
cubes
...
los-
ing
your dime
in
the soda machine
. . .
Each of us
needs
to find his own shelter.

two hundred nine




















rou11d

two hundred ten

LOST
ON
HAYRIDE:
?Ow~Ds
R
IJL UC.
Sw,..8ATE:R
/00
iC
SH
ETLANt>
/tlAbE
IN
SC.oTLIINI>





• two hundred
eleven






two hundred twelve

Freshman hazing, now in its eighth year at Marist, was originated to
foster and build the school spirit so essential for starting one on the
right path in his college career.




• two hundred thirteen










two hundred fourteen

HG[
n
flA
In
7
Q





I
I
)

two hundred fifteen









1he
freshmen Clas,
.
freseAlfs ..
• two hundred
sixteen






Some signs of our changing times are
evident today
.
Week long trips in space
point up the progress of society. However,
other indications of modern development
are not as clear
.
Only the Marist student who has gone
through five days and nights of classes can
tell you what a Friday or Saturday night
mixer is. It's a way of forgetting the last
exam you flunked or the one you will
flunk on Monday
.
It's a dark place filled
with noise, smoke and people
.
It's a blonde
with blue eyes and a date for next week-
end
.
It's something you talk about on Sat-
urday and Sunday and forget about on
Monday. It's a place to be yourself or a
way to escape from reality. It's a detrac-
tion from the every day problems of col-
lege life. But most of all, a mixer is people
.









FACULTY
.
.. the man up front
...
class prepara-
tion ..
.
Monday morning 8
:
30's
. . .
endless cuts
. . .
late term papers ..
.
whimpering students .
.
.
free periods .
.
.
APC
.
. . M.A. . .
.
office hours
. . . grading tests
. . .
books on reserve
.
..
Ph.D
.
. .
.
family
.
.
.
classes continue .
..
another day
.
.
.
• two hundr
e
d n
i
n
e
t
ee
n •








GSK: tww
SD:bbf
• two hundred twenty •
From the tower of Greystone to
lower Donnelly, and all the places in
between, dwells the Marist Secretary
.
Between 8:30 AM. and 5:00 P.M.
she applies her secretarial skills to
the fullest whether the task at hand
be glorious or not; by, transforming
her boss's seismographic handwriting
into a legible letter
...
visualizing a
utilitarian purpose for the packing
crate someone else threw out
...
bal-
ancing the budget, appointments, dic-
tation,
payroll,
maintenance,
and
class schedules
...
lugging material
to and from the Print Shop
..
.
de-
veloping kinks while filing R through
Z ... collating and stapling 20 stacks
of 8½ x 11 paper on a
4
x
6
table
top. And as if that were not enough,
she still finds time to, give a sympa-
thetic ear to sorrowful tales
...
per-
form minor repairs on any model
typewriter or ditto machine and not
have parts left over
...
buy Booster
Club tickets, bake cakes for fund
raising sales, lend her voice not only
at basketball and football games, but
in
Chapel ... dispense aspirin, Kleen-
ex, bandaids, and common sense ...
and, oh yes, squeeze in one more
typing emergency
.






JC:nd
NRO,eso
CAD
:
bbd
• twn h11nrfr,arl tw,,ntv.nni> •



"You will do foolish things,
but do them with enthusiasm."
Colette







POTPOURRI
.. ,.~Q
••••••
0
..






The bookstore,
ty\arist's
own
$5
and
$10
store is
located in the lower level of the campus center
.
The
Marist
student and faculty member can
purchase besides books, sweaters, sweatshirts, beer
mugs,
toothpaste,
matches, all sorts of interesting
paraphernalia
.
• two hundred
twenty-four





two hundred twenty-five






"z-z-z-z-z"

two hundred twenty-six







- · · · · · · ·
·
·
· · · · · · • • & •




"If you think this party is good, wait and see what I've got
planned for l 00 days!"
Th
e
1969 REYNARD
"Wi
de-Track
of
the
Year"
award goes to John Sheehan, center
.
John is flanked on the left by Joe
"
Fot
zo"
Barone
and
Joe
"Rolly-Polly"
Francese, 2
wide-track
runner ups
. (
Photographer's note
:
A 28 mm wide-angle
lens
had
to
be used
.)





"CAPITAL H, CAPITAL A, CAPITAL W, CAPITAL K .
.
. end of sentence .
..
now, read that back
.
"
"Did you hear about the senior last night who tried to stir some bash at a party with his thumb .
..
yeah
,
like
this and .
..
"





I don't want to attempt a caption far this picture
.
Substitute your own.
"35 - 23 - 34"
• two hundred thirtv •










"WHEN
DA IRISH EYES ARE SMILIN" . .
.
(sung
in an ltalian-
Brooklynese accent
) . . .
HEY
!
PLUG THIS MIKE BACK IN!"
• hMn
h11nrl,-t:),,-I
thir-h,_l"'\no




Day unto day utterth speech,
and
night unto night showeth knowledge,
Old Testament
King James Bible



EVENING
DIVISION



The soul and spirit of the evening division student
is emulated by the singular work of the Evening
Division Student Council. Faced with the task of
earning a livelihood, these students further give of
themselves by making the elongated stay of the
EVIE
(
a phrase here first coined) a more tolerable
and enjoyable experience. Every evening division
student has formed the comardraie permiating the
Student-Faculty Mixer and Dinner Dance, a very
worthwhile and sobering experience. With hope for
the future and a confidence only known to this
breed, the council will continue to furnish a fine
body of representatives for the evening division
student for years to come.
• two hundred thirty-four •







..

twn
h11nrlrnrl thirtv-five





• two hundred thirty-seven •



• two hundred thirty-eight •



The Evening Division Council members are
,
Seated: Juli~ Rigothi,
Secretary, Mary Ejercito, Rep. from English Dept. Standing: Erwin
Dudek, President, Dominic Frisone, Rep
.
from English Dept., Joseph
Crimmins, Treasurer, and Don Vleming, Rep
.
from Physics Dept.
• two hundred thirty-nine •




The spirit of activity
is often hard to find
r
But once it is found,
it can never be compensated for.
Author Unknown


CLUBS AND
ACTIVITIES





• t
w
o hundred forty-two •
Perspective implies depth: depth of interest in the
community in which one lives. Activities, the domi-
nant phase of student interest, correlate academic
endeavor with the basic college experience. Each
activity provides an outlet for the enthusiasm pos-
sessed by all the people in the college environment.
Activities are as valuable to the student as studies
are, for they, too, are a phase in search of per-
spective
.





two hundred forty-three











Student Government
The 1968-1969 Student Government members are, Seated:
Jack Lehman, f
.
m
.
s
.,
Treasurer; Les Lombardi, Vice-President
;
Alan Hulett, President
;
Jack Corcoran, Corresponding Secre-
tary. Standing: Jim Daly, Freshman Rep.; John Wynne, Re-
While the driving thirst for
"student
power" drove
other colleges to violence and strife, the Student
Government at Marist managed to avoid all the
emotionalism of the quest and earn a respected
voice
in
the administration of college affairs. And
so, taking one step at a time, the Student Govern-
ment gained a strong voice in academic affairs,
students were seated on the college Budget Com-
mittee, and the faculty and administration came to
hold a vacillating respect for the student requests
and Student Government assertions.
Student Government plays an
important
part in
the life of the Marist student
.
Student Government
is
a
service to the student providing activities
in
all
• two hundred forty-four •
cording
Secretary
;
David McDonald, Junior Rep.; John Kaley,
Sophomore Rep
.;
Peter Tortorici, Sophomore Rep.
;
Michael
J
.
Shanley, Senior Rep.
;
Dudley
A. Davis, Jr., Senior Rep.;
Tom Walsh
,
Freshman Rep
.;
Tom Ulasewicz, Junior Rep
.
aspects of college life-social, athletic, academic and
in various services. It is not an organization telling
students what to do, but providing them with some-
thing to do.
The Student Government has jurisdiction over all
student activities on campus. The president, vice-
president, and cabinet constitute the executive de-
partment. The student council made up of representa-
tives of all the classes is the legislative body
.
The
judicial branch consists of a student court.
Through the energy and cooperation of many
students, Student Government has progressed to new
heights
.
(
Photo
at right
)
Under the
auspices
of the Student Govern-
ment are
various
committees comprised of the Social Athletic,
Student Opinion Board and Student Academic Committees;
members
are
:
Seated
:
Joe Francese, John Calabrese, John
Moccio, Dave McDonald
.
Standing: Peter Tortorici, Dan Ma-
honey, Bob Andrews, Vin Winsch, Bob Neary, Ted Brosnan.
Camera Shy-Tim
Keneally,
Gerry Walls, Dick Mulvihill, Jim
Dorian'.




The Judicial arm of the Student Government has as its
job the trying and judging of students or clubs when they
are not complying with laws as presented by the Student
Government Constitution
.
The judicial members are
(
L-R
)
,
Robert Meidenbauer
,
Stephen Curto, Anthony Parga.



Student Government elections
.
A week of cam-
paigning
. . .
platforms
. . .
issues .
..
jammed bul-
letin boards
.
.
.
windows . . . the tension . . . all
nighters
..
. 200 stencils .
..
1,793 pieces of paper
...
speeches
.
.. voting .
..
counting
.
.. the migra-
tion to the Lombardi household
.
• two hundred forty six •



• two hundred forty
-
seven •




THE CHANGE OF POWER
The 1969-70
Student Council members are, Sitting
(
L-R),
Sal Piazza,
Corresponding Sec.; Joe Francese, President; Art
Quickenton,
Vice-President; Jack Wawrzonek, Treasurer.
Standing
:
Jorn
Walsh,
Soph
.
Rep.
;
Jim Daly, Soph
.
Rep.
;
Larry Abramoski,
Junior
Rep
.;
Chuck
Meara, Junior Rep
.;
Tom Ulasewicz, Senior Rep
.




During Les Lombardi's
(
pictured below
)
term of
office as Vice-President and Blood Bank Coordi-
nator, the Mar
i
st Blood Bank collected over 400
pints of blood. The second phase of this year's pro-
gram set a school record by collect
i
ng 187 pints in
one day
.
We wish to congratulate Les on a job well
done this year and best of luck
·
to Art Quickenton
for next year.




Theatre Guild
ROW I
(
L-R
):
John Kelly, f
.
m.s.
,
Diana DiGrandi, Robert
Warren, f
.
m
.
s., Merwyn Romeyn, James Britt, Director
.
ROW II
:
Debbie Elder, Bill Castellane, Jim Steinmeyer, f
.
m.s,
Joe Fitterer
,
Richard Nestler
,
Ann Berinato.
,
• t
w
o hundred fifty •
ROW Ill
:
Lou Miressi, Brian Nerrie
,
Bob Trahan, Phil Di
-
Grandis, Jackie Hughes
.
ROW IV: Bill Cotter
,
Andrew Zoccoli, Richard Flynn
.






Before The Curtain
Many tense moments occur during hours of rehearsal and on
opening night before the curtain goes up. The production staff
"irons out" technical problems before the final and fascinating
work of
"making
up" begins
.
But every facet of the production
is under the control by the time actors put on their lipstick
and eyebrow pencil
and
step into the spotlight.
Rises

two hundred fifty-one







Stephen
Lanning,
f.m.s.,
Marist English
professor, revisited
the
campus
to
add
his theatrical
experience
to
the produc-
tion
of
The Detective
Story.

two hundred fifty-three




two hundred fifty-four














Paul
J.
Browne
• two hundred fifty-s
ix

THE
News-making events on campus as well as off,
were covered this year by the 1968-69 CIRCLE
staff
.
Many consider this year to be the most suc-
cessful in the college's newspaper history
.
The news-
paper went weekly for the first time, and the CIRCLE
staffers managed to ignite interest and issues in and
around campus
.
From editor-in-chief on down, the CIRCLE staff
felt three-pronged pressure from students, faculty,
and administrators ... They candidly admit that's
what kept them and the paper going.
1Hf
•CIRCLE
Editor-in-Chief ..
.....
...
.
.
.
..
.
..
.
.....
.
..
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
...
.
.
..
.
.
.....
.
..
...
Paul Browne
Managing Editor
.
...
.
.
.
...
.
......
..
..
.
........
.
..
.
..
.
Patrick McMorrow, fms
Sports Editor
.
.....
.
...............
.
..
.
.
..
..
.
..
.
.............
.
.
.
. Joseph McMahon
-
Feature Editor
.
.
.
...
.
..
.
.
..
.
...
.
.
........
.
.........
..
.
.
...
...
..... Joseph Thorsen
Photography Editor .
.
........
.
........
.
...........
.
..
.
..
..
John LaMassa, fms
Circulation ..
.
.........................
.
..
..
.
.
...........
..
.
.
....
..
..
..
David DeRosa
Financial Manager .
.
.......
.
..
.
.............
.
..
....
....
.
..
.
........ Thomas Bagu
News Staff:
Tom Buckley, Nick Buffardi, Charles Clark, Phil Coyle, Richard
Dutka,
Phil
Glennon, Jeremiah Hayes, Anne Berinato, Otto
Unger, Bob Miller , Bdan
Flood
Feature Writers:
Tim Brier, Vincent Buonon, Vincent Begley, Richard Gorman,
Richard Bruno
Sports Staff:
William Baker, Joseph Gebbia, Joseph Nolan, Joseph Rubino,
Robert Sullivan, Roger Sullivan, Joseph Thorsen, George Bassi
Layout:
John Rogener, fms, Tom Tinghitella,Jms
Typists:
Laurence Basirico, Bob Gurske
Photognphers:
Fred House, Kevin Buckley, fms, Tom Tinghitella, fms, Daniel
Waters, fms, John
Pinna,
fms



• two hundred f
i
fty-seven •








Dudley
A.
Davis, Jr
.
James H. Sullivan
In the
Autumn
of
1968
the REYNARD was just a dream,
something
that
seemed
so
far away and so impossible to
complete.
Gradually
we
got into the swing of
things
and
everything started to move
. .
.
slowly but surely. Every
day
we
found ourselves in that twenty by fifteen institutional
green room! That
'
s
where
it all happened
. . .
some days
we
argued
,
some
days
we
laughed, but we all became a
family. In the beginning most of us just about know each
other's name; it was the most divergent group brought
together to do one
job.
As we got to know each other
...
we opened up and progress was eventually made
. . .
but
no one will ever realize the things that went on down
in
thcit crazy little room
.
.
.
the late hours, the quarts of
coffee from the Rat, the IBM typewriter with the broken
"u", Dudley's bulletin board, Fred forever developing and
drying pictures, the phone bill, and lastly Gayle, who criti-
cized like Ralph Nader, laughed like Jack Benny and danced
around the office to Camelot
.
.
.
no one will ever know
...
except those involved and we will never forget
.
Credits should be mentioned-so here goes
. . .
The man
that's most responsible for the book is Fred House, Editor-in-
Chief. He did so much, so well
;
he took and developed all
the pictures and then Joyed out half the book. Fred was
assisted by Kevin Devine,
who
contributed greatly to the
layout of the book. Dudley Davis provided a stabilizing
in-
fluence
in
times of instability and kept all records of this
year's
work.
Dick Davis assisted both Fred and Dudley in
areas of layout and design of the book. Jim Sullivan did
a little bit of everything but h
_
e was mainly on the telephone
trying to raise money to pull the REYNARD out of the red;
he
was
assisted by both Bob Keller and David McDonald
.
Tom Ulasewicz sold the book, an unev
i
able job but one
which
he
w
as
w
ell equipped to handle.
·
1
ca.1't e
x
plain
Gayle, she
w
as there
whenever we
needed her and did all
the typing in the book
.
Last but not least
,
Les Lombardi,
(
day-hop in residence
)
our proof reader and polish man;
he
was
there many a late night!





J
Kev
i
n
J
.
Devine
Gayle S. Krakower
Thomas A. Ulasewicz



















Some of them fall like snowflakes
in the winter chill.
Some of them fall with no sound at all
and just roll down the hill.
Some of them fall like acorns
in the forest dense,
strung on a line of steel so fine
that makes a barbed-wire fence.
And some of their names are Eddie
and some of their names are Joe;
I can't say why some of them die ...
that's not for me to know.
Rod McKuen



UNDERCLASSMEN








• two
hundred
seventy •
Class Of 1970
I
j
Joe Francese, President
;
Art Quickenton
,
Vice-Pres
i
dent
.
The thesis reads
:
the vitality reached in Junior Year is never attained
henceforth. The class of 1970 bears this maxim with impatient collegiate
certitude. While the Seniors' gasp
"was
I like that," these men plan, scheme
and inevitable succeed
in
their varied endeavors. From scholarship to
politics, this Class of Juniors has established an enviable record. Although
it
may seem unfortunate that they must ascend from this plateau of
pleasant social memories and academic accomplishments, they should
revel
in
the collegian's ultimate happiness-Senior Year.





ROW I
(L-R):
Matthew Kiszelewski, Peter Varel, Dom LoBosco, Rich Rossi.
ROW II
:
Bill Leber, Michael Lug, Larry Kazemier, Rich McGee.
ROW I
(
L-R
):
Ted Brosnan, Bill Nolan
.
ROW II
:
Bill Dourdis, J
i
m Elliott, John Clancy.
• two hundred seventy-one •




ROW I
(
L-R
)
: Peter Studva, Jack Corcoran, Bill Knutson, Bob Bur~
Bill Foley.
ROW II
:
John Rush, Austin Sansone, Paul Gould, Joseph G. Arcie
(
L-R
)
: Bob Keller, Frank Lankford, John Kelly
,
John Nunziata,
Bob Wolfe
.
Kevin O'Grady, Francis Attonito, Ted Brosnan, Pete Master-
son, B
i
ll McGarr, Joe Ritz, Pete Dwyer.
• two hundred seventy-two •









Alex
Doroski, Patrick McKee, Neal
Sondergaard,
Roger
Sullivan,
Paul Pietzykowski,
Bernie
McGovern.
ROW I
(
L-R
1
, Chris
Meyer, Joe
Woody,
Dave DeRosa,
Bill
McKinstry, Tony
Romano
.
ROW
II, Jock Nytransky, Dan
Walsh, Bernie O'Hare,
Ray Norton,
Stephen Gratzel.
• t
wo
h
u
ndred se
ve
nty
-
three






Class Of 1971
SOPHOMORE EXECUTIVE BOARD
Seated
(L-R
)
:
Jahn Mauskapf, Vice-President; Terry Mooney, President; Jack Wawrzonek, Treasurer, Peter Tortorici, Council
Representative. Standing
(L-R
):
Terry McGowan, Recording Secretary, Lou Belby, Corresponding Representative; John Kaley,
Council Representative
(not
shown).
One step closer of greatness stands the Class of 1971. This step, their
second, was taken with a firmer conviction that they will persist and suc-
ceed. With a skeptical eye of the upperclassmen scanning their every
action, the Sophomores continued building their reputation that the Class
of 71 bears watching as one which will enhance the tradition of their
predecessors and earn themselves a classification as one of the best. While
certifying their mental abilities, the Sophomores displayed their social
acumen by wholehearted support of not only their own activities, but
of their upperclassmen's as well.
• two hundred seventy-four •




ROW I
(
L-R
)
: Mike Bell, Dan Becker, Dean P
.
Gestal
,
Don Sampogna.
ROW I
(
L-R
)
: Paul Pasult, Bob Gurske, Paul Novak,
Brian Flood, Ed Barry.
ROW II
:
Dan Raffaele, Tom Voelker, Walter Sales.
ROW I
(
L-R
):
Joe Rubino, March Vogel, Den Claire, Tom
Sullivan, Walt Mclncrow
.
ROW II
:
Peter Vellucci
,
Dave Martin,
John
Witter,
Laurence
Basirico
.

two hundred seventy-five





Steve Wysowski,
Lou Fratto,
Tony Vaccarelli.
K
evi
n J. De
v
ine, Vin Sterlacc
i,
Bill Moody, Don Kuhnert,
Jack
Walsh,
Terry
Nash,
Don Hinchey.
Thomas
Gryczan, G
e
rard Eisenman, Gary Westfall.






J
ROW I
(
L
-R
)
:
Rick Micoli,
Greg
Howe, Jim Heaney
,
Robert Mallano.
RbW II:
Stephen Kopki,
Rob
er
t Ullrich
,
Sal
Piazza
.
Neil Dra
ves,
Ralph DiC
arpio,
Bob Bukontis.

two hundred seventy-seven





Gerald Malavet, Robert Yurch, Bill Rooney, Steven Runberg
.
• two hundred seventy-eight •
ROW I (L-R
)
: Tony Gatto, Mike Fantauzzi, Larry Abramoski
.
ROW II: Winfield
J
.
Ritzert, Walter Mullaney
.



Mar
i
e Diodato, Loretta Sette
.
Anne Berinoto, Eileen Weit.
ROW I
(
L-R
):
Vincent Kramer, Paul Crifasi, Bill Thonack,
Pete
Kassebaum.
ROW II
:
Ma
r
k DesJard
i
ns
,
Jerry Miller
,
Mike Radzevich, Biff Barry
.

two hundred se
v
enty-nine










Class Of 1972
SITTING
i
L-R
,
,
Thoma
s
McDonald, Edward Velez.
STANDING
I
L-R
,
, J
a
m
e
s Dal
y,
Thomas
W
alsh, James Barone, Robert Carniaux,
John Hand.

two hundred
eiahtv

A spirit of apprehension and acclamation was
in
evidence
as
the Fresh-
men
approached their
career at Marist.
For two
semesters
in a
world
at
once new and, exciting,
the
Class of '72
dispelled this apprehensive air
and began
to
build, each in his own way, the
type
of men
that
Marist
has been
producing. While engaging in myriad activities and enjoying
endless social events with a youthfulness and vitality
indicative of
their
spirit as
Freshmen,
they have assured
themselves
of
fond memories
and
a feeling that their Class
is well on
its
way
to
writing
an
active, scholar
ly
and
admirable history in
the tradition
of Marist.






Bob Reilly, Mike
Condon, Beaver Carnioux, Bill
Potenza, Emmett
Cooke.
SITTING
(
L-R
J
:
Joseph F. Jakob, Glenn Lehman, Joe McKee
.
STANDING: William Romito, Richard C. Anderson.
ROW I
(
L-R
):
Dennis
Alwon,
Tom
Walsh,
Joe Mannese.
ROW
II:
Bryan
Maloney,
Willaim Anderson,
Mike
Walsh.
• two hundred eighty-one




ROW I (L-R
):
Ralph Cerulli, Don Bowden, Paul Forti, Steven Mink.
Tom McDonald being hazed by sophomores Lou Randal and Kevin Devine.
Pete Kaiser, James Landolfe, Malcom LeRoux.
• two hundred eighty-two •





ROW I (L-R
)
: Dennis Alwon, Robert Sullivan, John Barry, Henry Blum, Al Schabot
.
ROW II (L-R
)
: Francis Scott, Thomas Tierney, Peter Holtzen
,
Mike Paino, Vince Coda
.
John Courtenay, Bruce Beaudette, Danny Zelinski, Richard H.
Davis, Paul DeCab
i
a
,
Willie Reilly
.
Richard Costello, Daniel Capp
i
o, Ron Palum-,
bo, Jim Phillips, Leo Canale
.




ROW I
(L-R
)
:
Robert Sullivan, Joseph Bevilacqua, Stephen
Sawicki.
ROW II:
John
Bubenko, James Sarsfield, Mark J.
Schmid,
Joe
Bennici, Edward Clare, Denis Campion.
ROW I
(
L-R
I
: Charles Alfano, George Alberti,
Jim
Ambury.
ROW II: Mike Argentieri,
John
Whiteman, Steve
Callan, John Slaver
.
ROW I
(
L-R
)
:
Thomas F. McDonald, 111,
Stephen
P.
Shackel, William
Campion, Ed Santimauro.
ROW II: Mike Rafferty, Bob Philpott, Jim
Cosentino.
• two hundred eighty-four •









ROW I
(
L-R
I
:
Brian
Wynne,
John
Weis,
Richard Bala, Frank
Vanacore
.
ROW
II
:
Stanley
Bojarski,
William
Burrell.
(
L-
R
):
D
ennis Curtin, Mike Murphy, Ed C
o
n-
no
lly
,
R
a
y
Clarke, Ray
_
De
l
maestro.
(
L-R
)
:
Jim Andrews, George Rivera, Joe
Wilson,
Bob Brook
.

two hundred
e
i
nhtv-f
i
""'






"Bury
me on my face,
for in a little while everything
will be turned upside down."
Diogenes
l ,




r
STOP THE
PRESSES




two hundred eighty-eight •



The year 1968-69 will be remembered for in-
numerable events, one of which is the seculariza-
tion of many members of religious communities. For
either one reason or another certain individuals of
religious orders have come to the decision that they
can lead more fulfilling lives as laymen. The Marist
Brothers are one of these many religious bodies in-
volved in this above fore-mentioned change.
Brother Edward Cashin, Academic Vice-President,
Brother John Harty, of the Theology Department
and Brother Daniel Kirk, Chairman of the Psychology
Department are three members of the Marist Brothers
who have decided to make this decisive change in
their lives. All three of these men have devoted a
great deal of their lives to Marist College and its
eventual success! To these men we offer our grateful
thanks for all their endeavors in Marist's behalf and
best wishes for success in the future
.

• two hundred eighty-nine •


































































..

J
7
I

two hundred nin
e
ty

Pe
rs
pecti
v
e:
.
,,
'
<
,
,.,.
-,
,•
.
~
...
,
;
.
~
~
-~
'
.
,,
·,
·
i'
.
·
..
f
.
·
r
·~
I

.
l<
~
I
._
I
I
V
I
,
,
..
..
.
..
.
-
\
I
t
.
.
.
,r
~
:::••
H
·'!
;
w







patterns against the '1Vhole
Perspective captures the moods of Marist. It pre-
sents each phase, every facet of life at Marist.
Be-
cause each sees in a different perspective, every
glance, every deep look into Marist illuminates some-
thing new, something different, something uniquely
a part of
the
College.
Physical growth, paralleled by the changes of a
progressive administration, easily fills a glance at
Marist. But, this growth and progress is merely an
outer characteristic; it is merely what an outsider
sees upon looking in.
A part of the spirit and feeling
of
Marist is
not
felt by the viewer until he
takes
part in
the things
which make up Marist. Until he participates in
some
of the things that
Marist
students participate in,
until he cheers the red foxes onto victory, he does
not know even part of Marist.
This
middle relationship does not, however, reveal
the
whole College.
It
does not reveal the heart of
Marist, it doesn't show
the
pattern of the students, as
a body, as
individuals,
against the College. For,
it
is only they
who
feel the feelings, who
ever
sense the
presence of the things
which
make
Marist what
it is
.
Theirs
is an inner knowledge; it is a knowledge of
memories, of long days of hard work, of times
which
would be willingly repeated. Theirs is a
world
of
traditions
and ideals, a unique world
which
allows
them
to view Marist from a unique perspective
.



Order is heaven's first law.
Alexander Pope.
THANK-YOU




INDEX
AND
CREDITS








Abramoski,
L.
248, 278
Ainsworth, R.
60
Alberti,
G. 284
Aldrich,
A.
20
Alfano,
C.
284
Alpert,
L
.
25,47,192,219
Alwon,
D
.
281,283
Alwon,
F. 13
,6
0
,20
1
,260,
266
Ambury, J.
160
,284
Anderson, B. 281
Anderson,
H
.
60
Anderson,
R
.
206
,28
l
Anderson, W. 13
Andersson,
L
.
60
Andrews,
J.
285
Andrews, R. 60,
160
,
161,201
,244,26
6
,26
7
Annunziata,
T
.
11
,6
1
Anzalone,
C.
61
Arcieri,
J.
G. 272
Archim
ede,
J.
61
Argentieri, M. 284
Arteaga, M.
172
,
173
Aspell, F. 61
A
tt
on
it
o,
F
.
13
,
144
,272
Austin, W.
53,73
Avallone,
V.
62
Backus, R. 62
Baker,
J
.
62
Bala, R. 285
Balch, R. 45
Barone,
J
.
215,228,264,280
Barry, B.
263,283
Barry,
E.
275
Barry,
J.
228
Basirico, L. 217,275
Bastian, A. 62
Bayse, M. 63
Baumback,
R.
265
Beaudette, B. 283
Beach, G.
150
Becker, D. 261,265,275
Becker, F. 63
Bed, Messy 211
Belanger,
J.
25,49
Bell, M. 160,266,267,275
Benin,
I.
52
Bennici
,
J.
284
Bentivegna,
L.
63
B
e
n
vie,
A. 32
Berg, R
.
63
Berinat
o,
A.
180
,250,27
9
Bernier,
T
.
63
Bertero, G. 64
Bettencourt,
J.
261
Bevilacqua,
J
.
264,284
Bianco, M. 154
Bibeau, M. 49,219
Bisb
ee,
N. 64
Blair, R
.
64
Blum,
H
.
144
,283
Board, Bulletin 246
_
Bojarski,
5. 285
Booth, D.
64
Borchardt, 5
.
62
Boyd
,
M
.
192
Bracco, L
.
65
Bradley, M
.
65
Brady
,
D
.
144
Brady, J
.
65,162,164
,2
01
Bramb
e
lla,
C.
56
• two hundred ninety-four •
Brand
,
F. 65
,
239
Brandis, 5
.
49
Breckenridge, M
.
66
Breitenbach
,
J. 66
,
150
,
227
Brier, T
.
14,66,267
Brennan, T. 20
Breslin, D
.
66
Britt, J. 28,250,251
Brook, B
.
285
Brosnan, T. 156,244
,
263,267,271
Bro
w
ne, G. 66, 144
Bro
w
ne, P
.
256
Bruno, R
.
67
,
264
Bubenko
,
J
.
284
Buckley
.
J. 67
Bukantis
,
B. 276
Buonora
,
V.
67
Burda
,
J. 67
Burke, B. 272
Burke, F. 68
Burns
,
J
.
68
Burns
,
Sleeping 226
Burrell,
W.
285
Button
,
C.
268
Butts, A.
45
Calabrese,
J. 68,144,244
,2
63
Caldera, L
.
191
Callan
,
5
.
284
Camardi, M. 174
Campilii,
A.
26
Campion,
W.
284
Campion, W.
284
Canale, J
.
68
Canale, L
.
283
Cann, M
.
69
Cappio, D
.
283
Cappio, P. 267
Capone, N. 69,261
Capone, R
.
264
Capuani,
I.
69
Carey, B
.
176
Carn, R. 69
Carniau
x
, R
.
264,280,281
Carolan, K
.
47
,
218
Carroll, H
.
70
Casey, T. 25
,
52
Cashin,
E.
21,289
Casteel,
T
.
70
Castellane, B
.
250,260,264
Castine, R
.
70,154
Castronuo
vo,
I. 32
Cedeno, D
.
261
Celie, J
.
70
Cerniglia, T
.
71
Cerulli, R
.
264,282
Charlton, R
.
162,164,166
Cherry, P. 260
Cicale, G. 71
Cicale, J.
27,221
Claire,
D
.
275
Clancy,J.
174
Clare, 284
Clark
,
K.
71
Clarke, R.
168,225
Clarry,
P
.
71
Coby
,
W.
71
Cocco,
L
.
72
Coda, V
.
283,261,264
Coffe
,
D.
72
Cole, R.
72
Collins
,
M
.
72,201
Condon
,
M
.
281
Conkey, M
.
32
Connell, M. 50,187
Conn
e
lly, E
.
285
Connolly, A. 372
Connolly,
W.
144
Conroy
,
J. 73,142
,
144
,
148
Conway
,
C.
73
Cooke, E. 144,281
Cooney, T. 144
Corcoran, J. 211
,
244,272
Cosentino,
J.
284
Costa, N. 73
Costello, R. 283
Cotter,
W.
250
Courtenay, J
.
168
,
213,283
Coutur
e,
J
.
73
Cox, 5
.
43
Coyle, P. 74
Crawford, P. 154,261
Crifasi, P
.
279
Crimmins
,
F. 74
Crimmins, J. 239
Cummings
,
R
.
74
Curtin
,
D
.
168
,
285
Curtin
,
M. 74
Curto
,
5.
74
,
201,245
Damanda,
R.
75
D'Amico, D. 75,187
,2
61
Daly, J.
244,248,260,280
Dalrymple
,
A.
55
D
'A
ngelo
,
A.
26
Dang
e
lo
,
F
.
32
Davis, D. 75,201,244,258
Davis, R. 283
Da
v
is
,
T.
75
Dawson, G
.
261
DeCabia, P. 144,
283
DeGrandi
s,
J.
76
Delahoyde
,
W. 76
Delessio, J
.
76
DellaRocca, J. 264
Delma
es
tro
,
R. 285
Delorme, R
.
76
Denni
son,
5
.
76
,
229, 261
DeRosa, D
.
150,
264,
267,
273
DesJardins, M. 279
Desilets, B
.
54, 154
DeSouter, J. 154
Deucher, B. 260
Devine, J
.
77
Devine,
K.
215, 259
,
277,
282
Deyo,
C.
33, 221
DiCarpio
,
R. 276
Dickinson
,
R
.
77, 261
DiGrandi
,
D. 250
DiGrandis, R. 259
Diodato
,
M. 279
Doce, F
.
265
Dohert½J.
77,227,228,231
Doughert½J. 27,201
Doherty
,
K. 144
Dolan, T.
77
Dolcem
ascolo;
F.
78, 261
Donnaley, K. 144
Donnelly, Nilus 27
Donohue, K. 52, 218
Dorian
,
J
.
244
Doroski
,
A. 273
Dourdis, W. 144, 145, 146, 148,156,206









Do
w
d
,
T
.
78,144,146,201
Do
x
ey, S
.
33,220
Draves, N
.
27 6
Dresier, J
.
78, 180
Drennen,
D
.
A. 52
Dudek,
E
.
78,239
Duffy,
E
.
79,227
Duncan, J
.
79
Dwyer,
P
.
206
,
214,272
Eberth, J. 79
Eckhoff
,
W.
79
Edwards, J. 20
Eichner
,
J. 79,261
Eidle,
W.
55
E
i
senman, G
.
277,260
Eisenhart, J
.
156
Eberth, J
.
144,277
Ejercito, M
.
239
Elder,
D.
250
Elliott, J
.
260,271
El
-
Sharif, H
.
54
Em
e
ry
,
L
.
266
Em hen
,
F
.
154,265,263
Emmanuel
,
J
.
150
Fantauzzi
,
J
.
144,278
Fay, J
.
39
Fay
,
R
.
215
Fine & Ten 224
Fish
e
r
,
E
.
38
Fitterer, J. 250
Fitzgerald
,
J
.
168
Fitzpatrick
,
D
.
80,201,262
Fitzpatrick, T
.
176
Flanagan,
A
56
Flanagan
,
B
.
80
Flood
,
B
.
25
Flood
,
B
.
275
Flynn,
D
.
28
Flynn, M
.
80
Flynn, R
.
250
Fogarty
,
E
.
144
Foley
,
J
.
80,263
Forti,
P.
282
Foster, J. 168, 169
Foucher
,
W
.
41
Foy
,
L
.
20,21,47
Francese
,
J
.
l 92,2
l
4
,
2 l
5,228
,
244
,
248,270
Fraser, B. 81
Fratto,
L
.
249,260,261,277
Fredericks, F. 81
·
F
r
ein,
L.
81
Friddle, F
.
192
Frisone, D
.
239
Gaiser
,
C. 81
Gallagher,J
.
174
Gallo, D. 33
Gang, Andy's 203
Gannon, B
.
82
Gardner, J
.
82
Gareau, C. 82
Garey, G. 144
Garrahan, C. 20
Garrett, B
.
20
Gatto, T
.
278
Geary,
P
.
82,263
Gemmel,
M
.
82
Gerdes,
D
.
83
Gerish,
E
.
40
~rmann, E
.
50
Gestal, D
.
144
,
174,213
,
275
Giannascoli,
D.
83
Gibbons
,
L
.
83,162
,
166
Gilhooly, J
.
83
Ginnity, B
.
23
Giolilli,
A
265
Giolilli
,
T
.
50
Giant, R.
84
Gleason, P
.
84
Glennon, P
.
144
Goldman, H
.
28,53,
142
,
145
,
148,150,153
Good,
C. 84
Goodwin, F
.
84
Gormally,
J
.
84
Gorman
,
R. 85,
174
Gould
,
P
.
272
Gowen
,
W.
85,143,162
,
165
,
167
Gratzel, S. 273
Greco, S
.
85
Gr
e
ene,
A
29
Gregoire, R
.
20
Gretzing
e
r, G
.
85
Griffin
,
C. 20
Griffin
,
J
.
40
,
219
Groho
w
ski, C. 86
Gruebel,
G. 86
Gryczan, T.
277
Guier, E
.
267
Guilmette,
E
.
24,57, 194,195
Gumienny,
E
.
27
Gurske,
B.
275
Gupte,
A
38
Haass, K
.
86
Haedrick
,
B
.
265
Holtzer, P
.
283
Hand
,
D
.
86
Hand
,
J
.
87,280
Hanlon
,
T
.
87
Harty,
J
.
57,289
Harper,
R
.
144
Hatfield, R
.
87
Hartmann,
E.
87
Hawk
229
Headache
216
Heany
,
J.
261,265,276
Henderson, P
.
191
Henn,
W
.
87
Heresniak
,
E. 88
Hernandez,
J
.
88
Herzing,
A
144
H
i
nchey, D
.
144
,
263,277
Hines, J. 88
Holt,
J
.
264
Holmes,
W.
88,144,
148
Hooper
,
G
.
38,219,261
Hores
,
G. 24
House, F
.
5
,
89
,
201,225,303
Howe, G
.
l 60,266,267
,
276
Hoyt,
C.
192,193
Hrenyo,
M
.
89
Hughes, J
.
250
Hulett
,
A
89,201
,
244,248
Hultzen, P
.
154,265
Hurley, J
.
144
Hutchmacker, J
.
192
Iacobellis,
W.
144
lncitti, W.
144
Inch,
L
.
265
Index
293
Jacques, G
.
89, 192,20 l
Jakob
,
J. 281
Jaros, J
.
90
Jillisky, D
.
90
,
142
,
144
,
267
Johnson, J. 12,90
,
209
Johnson
,
R. 90
Johnson
,
S
.
90
,
266
Johnson, W
.
168
Joyce,
P
.
91
Junke, V
.
91
Jurina
,
R
.
91,150,263
Kaiser, P
.
176
,
282
Kaley,
J
.
244,274
Kalish,
W.
160,260,266
,
267
Kassenbaum, P. 279
Ka
s
trup, J
.
10
,
91
Ka
v
anagh,J
.
260
Kazemier, L
.
271
Kean
e,
E. 92
Keller
,
B
.
272
K
e
lly, J
.
272
,
260
,
262
K
e
lly
,
J.C. 39,14
,
219
Kelly
,
J. 250
Kilmer
,
L.
13
Keltos
,
R
.
12,92
,
150
,
267
Keneally, T. 92,201
,
227,244
Kennedy
,
R. 265
Kenny, R. 262
Kerianze
s,
P
.
92
Kiernan,
A
93
King,
D
.
93
King, G
.
93
King, P
.
93
King, R
.
94,154,264
Kirk, D
.
255
,
289
Kiszele
ws
ki
,
M
.
271
Klem
,
C. 94
Knutson
,
B. 272
Kondysar,
A
94
Kopki, S
.
166
,
266,267
,
276
Korykora, M
.
94
Kotschar, V
.
56
Kozersky, D
.
11, 95
,
261
Kraimer, F
.
95
,
144
,
148
,
228
Krako
w
er, G. 33
,
220
,
259
Kramer
,
V. 264
,
279
Kren,J
.
154
Krenn, R
.
150, 156
,
267
Kudlow, J
.
33
Kuhnert, D. 277
LaBosco, D
.
264,271
Labuz
e
tta
,
J. 95
LaCombe, B
.
162
Lama,
J
.
50
LaMassa, J
.
257
Landau, C. 45
Landers,
G
.
95,247
,
265
Landolfe
,
J
.
264,282
Lankford, F
.
272
Lanning,
S. 251,253
LaPore,
L
.
265
Larkin, J
.
95
Larkin,
L.
156
Larkin
,
P
.
96
Lasko,
F
.
266
LaPietra,
R
.
41
LaSpina, R
.
96,261,
264
Leary,
J
.
174
Leber, W
.
144

two
hundred
ninety-five







LeClerc, J. 42
Lefevre, R. 96
Lehman, G. 281
Lehman, J.
244
Lehman,
0.
20
Lennox, T. 96
Leone, E. 33
LeRoux, M. 282
Levine, R. 145,146,148
Lewis, R. 43, 192
Lichwidt, F. 168
Ligatino, M. 176,261
Lindstrom, G. 97
Linner,
C.
41
Linson, D. 97
Lipski, E. 29
Lizarazo, J. 97
Lohse, E. 97
lombardi, L. 97,201,244,247,249
Lombardo,
V.
98
Long, M. 98
Luehen, E. 98
Lug, M. 271
Lumia,
J. 47,218
Lyle, J.
98,263
Lynch, J.
99
Mack, P. l 00
Macomber,
W.
l 00
Maestro, T. 42,218
Magee, P. 29
Mahoney, D. l 00,201,227,230,244
Mallano, R
.
278
Malonet, G. 278
Maloney, B.
206,260,263,28
l
Manka, P. 101
Mannese,J. 13
Manning, R. 143,162
Mapes, F. 101
Marchessault, J. 54
Marcus, B. 151
Marcus, M. l
O
l
Martin, D. 275
Martin, J. 160
Martin,
L.
l 02
Masterson, P. l 02
Masterson, P. 156,159, 172,206,272
Mayerhofer, R. 160
Mayo, B. 102
Meara,
C.
206,248
Measle, R. 12, l 02, 150,266,267
Meidenbauer, R. 245
Mellen, R. 103
Menapace,
L.
41
Mennona, R. l 03,201,206,267
Mescia, N. 103
Myere,
C.
273
Micali, R. 276
Middleton, N. 103
Migliore, M.
103
Milano, L. l 04
Miller, D. 26
Miller, J. 279
Miller, J. 182
Miller, R. 265
Millovitsch, R
.
l 04,227
Mills, G. 104
Mine, G. 104
Mink, S. 282,264
Miressi, L. 250
Moccio, J. 11,105,201,231
• two hundred ninety-six •
Macek, F. l 05
Moody,
W.
144,156,157,277
Mooney, B. 260
Mooney, T. 274
Mooney,
V.
12, l 05
Moran, D. l 05
Moran, J. l 05,229,261
Moran, M. 160
Morley, R. 150
Mortensen, H. 23
Mountie, 217
Mourino, R. l 0, l 06
Mullaney, W. 278
Mulvihill, D. 244
Mulvihill,
W.
106
Murphy,
J.
150
Murphy, M. 160,285
Murtaugh, J. l 06
Muula, N. 150
McBride, R. 99,264
McCall,
W.
99
McCann, J. 99
McCleary, D. 150
McCuttehan, T. 144
McDermott, J. 174
McDonald, D. 244
McDonald, H.
McDonald, H.
McDonald, T. 2 l 5,247,280,282,284
McDonnell, J. 144
McGarr,
W.
144,156,158,272
McGee, P. 273
McGee, R. 271
McGovern, B. 273
McGowan, W. 168, 169, 172,267
McGowan, T. 263,274
Mclncrow, W. 275
McKee, J. 281
McKinstry,
W.
273
McKissick, F. 192
McLoughlin,J. 174,206
McMachin, T. 168
McMahon,
J.
260,266,267
McMahon, F. 100
McMahon, J. 160
McMorrow, P. 257
McMullen, Dr.
J.
20
McNamara,
C.
144
McNary, W. 28
McNeil, R. 100
Nash, T. 277
Neary, B. 106,201,244
Nerrie, B. 250
Nesteroke, G. 172
Nestler, R. 250
Nevins, W. 7, l 06
Nicholas, M. 24,191
Nobile, J. l 07
Noble,
C.
l 07
Nohe, S. 247
Nolan,
A.
43,218
Nolan, B. 271
Nolting, J. 266
Noonan, B. 260
Noonan, D. l 07
Noonan, J. l 07,261
Norkeliunas,
C.
51,219
Norman,
A.
l 08
Norman, R. 44,148,218
Normandin, J. 56,218
Norton, R. 273
Novah, E. l 08,261
Novah, P. 275
Nunziata, J. 108,272
Nyhof, M. 34,235
Nytronsky, J. 273
O'Brien, E. 23, 182
O'Brien, M. 176
O'Brien, N. 183,221
·
Oberle, R. l 08
O'Connor, H. 23
O'Gorman, T. l 08
O'Grady, K. 156,272
O'Hare, B. 156, 159,267,273
O'Keefe, P. 46
O'Keefe, E. 55
Oldahowski,
C.
l 09
Olen, P. 176
Oloffson, E. l 09, 144
Olsen, L. 160
O'Neal, Hugh 109
O'Neil, Sean 110,201,262
O'Reilly,
W.
144,213
Oremus, B. 110
O'Shea, J. 22
Paccione, W. 144,260
Paino, M. 168,283
Patrick, J. 110,157,229
Palenscar, S. 174
Palumbo, R. 283
Parga,
A.
245
Parks, L. 34
Pashley, J. 110
Pasult, P. 275
Pavelko,
A.
28
People, Up With 196, 197
Perera, J. 111
Perrault,
A.
24,188
Perrella, J. 12,111
Perrotte, W. 39,261
Petro, R. 53,162,163,167
Phillips, J. 283
Philpott, B. 284
Piazza, T. 111
Piazza, S. 213,247,248,276
Piccionie, N. 260
Pietzykowski, P. 273
Pizzuto, D. 154
Plaut, E. 38
Plimley, R.-111
Pollard, H. 34
Papravah,
C.
111
Porcaro, J. 160
Potenza, B. 281
Prenting, T. 24,40
Purpi, P. 112,20 l
Purvis, R. l 12
Quickenton,
A.
l 60,248,260,263,267,270
Quinn, K. 154
Radzevich, M. 279
Raffaele, D. 275
Rafferty, M. 284
Rakow, G. 144
Rambo, G. 112
Rancourt, R. 28,52
Read,
A.
113








Read, R. 112
Redunski, J
.
113
Rigothi, J
.
238,239
Rigothi,
A.
113
Re
wold
t, R
.
42
Reich, G.
113,263
Reilly,
B
.
281
Reilly,
W.
283
Remenicky, J
.
27,155
Reuschle,
R.
172
Reyna, M
.
198
,
199
Reynard 1,288
Rhodes, C. 113
Rinaldi
,
L
.
114,263
Ring, 1 OK,
200
Ritz, J. 144,272
Ritzert,
W.
278
Riva, J. 114
Rivera, G. 284
Rizziello
,
R
.
114
Rizzo
,
J
.
114
Rodgers, J. 48
Romano, T
.
273
Rom
eyn,
M
.
7,250
Romito,
W. 281
Ronchi
,
D
.
144
Rooney,
W.
144,278
Roose
ve
lt, J. 20
Ross, T. 34
Rossi, R
.
271
Rowe, C. 192
Rowinski, M
.
144
Rowley
,
W.
144,172,267
Rubino, J. 260,275
Ruggeri
,
M. 51
Runberg, S
.
13,278
Rush, J.
272
Russert
,
C. 263
Russell
,
C.
26,40
Russo-Alessi, F. 114
Ryan
,
J
.
172
Ryan, P
.
114
Sabeta
,
I. 148
Sabini, M
.
26
Sainsbury, F. 115
Sahakian, J. 115
Sales
,
W.
275
Salvia, J. 264
Sampogna, D
.
275,264
Sansone,
A.
272
Santoro, G. 264
Santulli,
A.
116,267
Sarsfield, J
.
284
Sawichi, S. 160,284
Schabot,
A.
283
Schmid
,
M. 284
Schroeder,
J. 2,22,44
Scott, F. 144,283
Scott, J
.
162,168,169
Scott, R
.
144
Sczerba, T. 266
Seaman, R. 29
Sebeth, V. 34
-Sedlak,
A.
34
Sepe, S. 172
Sette, L. 279
Shachel, S
.
168,284
Shanley, M. 116,201,227
Sharkey,
A.
116
Sheehan, J. 116,228,251
'-
Sheehan, P. 117
Sherlock, J. 25,219
Siu, S. 117
Skau, G. 45,192,218
Slaver, J. 284
Smith, H. 144
Smith, R
.
117
Smith, T
.
117
Snelson,
R.
118
Snyder, J. 150
Snyder,
W.
118
Sommer, G. 43
Sommers, J. 118,267
Sonderguard
,
N. 273
Sozio, M. 35
Spaight, E. 118
Spencer
,
H. 20
Spenla,
W.
143
,
162
,
165,166
Stanulwich, R. 119
Stahl, S. 193
Staudle
,
W.
213
Steinmeyer,
J.
250
Sterlacci, V. 277
Stewart
,
D. 119
Storm, R.
44
Strickland, M. 35
Studva, P
.
272
Sullivan, J. 119,258
Sullivan, R. 283,284
Sullivan, R. 273
Sullivan, S. 57,219
Sullivan, T. 260,270
Sureau,
J. 119,150,206
,2
67
Swidler, M. 51
Tabor, F
.
42,219
Tamlyn,C. 119
Tate,J
.
48
Tarcissius,
V. 29
Tave/Ii, R. 168
The Fasul 97,201,244,247,249
Teichman, M. 44'
Teichman, P. 54
Teng,
Y.
46,218
Tierney, T. 283
Tinghitella, T. 120,261,264
Thompson
,
K. 162, 165
,
166
Thonach, B. 279
Torabella, L. 192
Tortorici, P
.
244,274
Torrey, M
.
176
Toscano, V. 46,219
Toth, J
.
35
Towers, J. 261
Towers, M. 144,267
Trabucco, G. 120
Tractor
,
Marist
203
Trahan, B. 176,250,264
Travis, M. 35
Tree, Big 185,291
Trimble, J. 120,180
Tringali, E
.
260,264
Turley, H. 39
Tutah, D
.
120
Tyne, G. 144
Ulrich, R. 162,276
Ulasewicz, T
.
208,244,248,259
Vaccarelli, T. 260,264,277
Vanacore, F. 285
Van Tassell, F. 40
Vaughn,
J. 261
Veit, B. 120
Velez,
C. 280
Vellucci,
P. 275
Vernoia, D. 121, 150,152,201
Verow,
A.
24
Victory, J
.
121
Vivona, R. 48
Vleming, D. 239
Voe/her, T. 275
Vogel, M
.
275
Varol, P. 265,271
Wade, T. 16,22
Wagner, F. 156
Waldbillig,
T
.
162,166
Walls,
G. 244
Walsh, D
.
273
Walsh,
J.B. 14,121,172,173,267
Walsh,
J
.
144,156,158,277
Walsh,
M.
263,281
Walsh,
P
.
6,121,211,251
Walsh,
T
.
244,248,263,289,281
Walton,
G. 121,150,153,201
Walzer,
E
.
9,160,266,267
Ward, G
.
122
Ward,
K
.
14,122
Ward,
T
.
122
Warren,
R. 250
Waters,
E. 44
Watson,
R. 122
Wawrzonek, J
.
248,260,274
Weatherwax,
B
.
35
Wis,
J. 285
Weiss,
A.
35
Weiss,
G
.
49
Weit,
E
.
190,260,279,280
Westmiller,
C. 122
Westpi/1,
G
.
277
White,
J. G
.
46,238
Whiteman, J. 284
Willey, B. 186
Wildner, J. 160
Wilhelm,
G. 123
Williams,
T. 123
Williams,
R. 57
Wilson,
J
.
168,285
Wilson,
T.
264
Wilson, R. 168
Winsch, V. 244
Witter, J
.
260,275
Wolfe,
B
.
272
Woods,
G. 123
Woody,
J.
273
Wynne, B. 285
Wynne, J. 244
Wysowski,
S. 206,277
Yablonsky,
M. 123
Yarish, R. 123
Yurch,
R. 278
Zelinski, D. 283
Zoccoli,
A.
7,250
Zuccarello, L
.
46
• two hundred ninety-seven




Donors
L. G. BALFOUR JEWELRY COMPANY
TAYLOR PUBLISHING COMPANY
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES






Patrons
Washington Growers
&
Distributors, Inc.
De Groodt Brothers
Seaman's Photo and Hi-Fi
--





Sealtest Foods Inc.
National Beer Distributor Inc.
Hudson Valley Acoustical Co. Inc.
M. Schwartz and Co. Inc.
The Brown Derby
Mid-Hudson Chevrolet, Inc.
"Compliments of a Friend"
Minute Car Wash
S
&
S Excavating Co. Inc.
Ace Liquor Store
Kohl Motors, Inc.
Forbes and Wallace, Inc.
H. H. Redl's Garage
Capitol Bakery Inc.
Arax Photo
Saga Foods Inc.
Armour Inc.
Dutchess Quarry
&
Supply Co.
Hamilton Reproduction
Beverage Discount Center
Mt. Ellis Paper
Pierson and Son
Sun Wallpaper Co.
Franks
Rapid
Reproduction
Avis








Benefactors
Mickey
&
Louise Collins
The Sureau Family
George
&
Leonia King
Mr
.
&
Mrs. R. V. Brady
Mr.
&
Mrs. F
.
Backus
The Tinghitella's
A Friend
Mr.
&
Mrs. Kermath B. Ward
Mr.
&
Mrs. Robert Johnson
Mr.
&
Mrs
.
C. F. Purpi
Mr.
&
Mrs. Gerald J. Landers
Mr.
&
Mrs. Richard Cann
Mr.
&
Mrs. Vincent J. Mooney
Mr.
&
Mrs. James M. Read
Mr.
&
Mrs. Hugh O'Neal
Mr
.
&
Mrs. Ernest Middleton
Mr.
&
Mrs. James H
.
Lyle
Mr.
&
Mrs. John J. Moran
The Curto Family
Mrs. James Browne
Mr.
&
Mrs. Dudley Davis
Mr
.
&
Mrs. Charles Bastian
Mr.
&
Mrs. Elmer Johnson
Mr.
&
Mrs. Dan Cole
Mr.
&
Mrs. Fred Lombardi
Mr.
&
Mrs. M. Kelly
Thomas J. Gleason
The Goodwin Family
Mr.
&
Mrs. Robert F. Mennonna
Mr.
&
Mrs
.
John Trimble, Jr.
Mr.
&
Mrs. James J. Dennison
Mr.
& Mrs. James R. Sullivan & Family
Mr.
&
Mrs. Harry F. House
John Murtaugh
&
Family
Mr.
&
Mrs. Vincent Victory
Mr.
&
Mrs. George Alwon
Mr.
&
Mrs. C. Donelly
J.
&
M. Casey
Dr.
&
Mrs. Michael Bevilacqua
Robert Stanley Family
Mr.
&
Mrs. Louis Costello
Frank X. McElroy
Lena Reda
Kathleen M
.
Cooke
Mr.
&
Mrs. Fred Haab
Jody Jakob
Mr.
&
Mrs. John S. Bubenko
Mr.
&
Mrs. Irving T. Nerrie
Patrick Clarke Tracey
McKinnon Family
Mr.
&
Mrs. Joseph Smith
A Friend
Richard Beaudette Family
Mr.
&
Mrs. James Carniaux
E
.
J. LaCombe
A Friend
Dr.
&
Mrs. Katavolos
Mr.
&
Mrs. Jack Leone
Mr.
&
Mrs. T. F. McDonald
Mr.
&
Mrs. R. Keller
Mr. Carmen DeCabia
James
&
Geraldine Mannese
Mr.
&
Mrs. William Holmes
Mrs. Ann Sheppard
Mr.
&
Mrs. John Shannon
Mrs
.
Gayle Doherty
Mrs. Bridget Davis
301







REYNARD
Editor-in-Chief
Photographer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Frederick A. House
Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.
. . . . . Dudley A. Davis, Jr.
Advertising Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . James H. Sullivan
Associate Editors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Richard H. Davis
Kevin J. Devine
Sales 0anager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Thomas A. Ulasewicz
Advertising Assistants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert R. Keller
David E. McDonald
Vincent R. Winsch
Secretary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Gayle S. Krakower
Literary Consultant . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Lester F. Lombardi

three hundred
two •







In September, 1968, this book was nothing more than idea in the minds of few students.
This idea became a reality when many hands, hearts and minds began the difficult task
of capturing into three-hundred four pages all aspects of the Marist experience
.
With a unity of purpose and a desire for perfection, they gave their talent and their
time to produce a volume representative of Marist.
"Was it worth it?" It's a difficu°lt question to answer
.
If the 1969 REYNARD brings back
fond memories five, ten or even twenty-five years
f
ram now, I can answer,
,
"it was worth
it!"
I would especially like to thank the staff for their long and tedious hours in Room 168
.
Also, Thanks to
..
.
. .. PARAPHERNALIA for the photo on page 128 .
.
.
. ASSOCIATED PRESS for the photos on page 129 .
. . . NASA for the photos on pages 130-131
.
.
.
. The Biafra Relief Fund for the photo on page 132
.
.
.
. Michael J
.
O'Neill, managing editor for THE DAILY NEWS for per-
mission to print the photo on page 136
.
. . .
Hamilton Fish, Jr
.
for his assistance in obtaining the photos on
pages 138- 139
.
.
.
. Nick Drakides for his artistic contributions
.
. .
. Rev. Austin Verow for compiling the index .
.
. . Mr. Harry House, my father, for helping me when I got behind in
my printing
.
.
. .
Mr. Charles Clegg of Bradbury, Sayles, O'Neill for his invaluable
help and assistance.
If I can ever be of assistance to anyone, feel free to contact me at the Naval Air Station,
Pensacola, Florida
.
~ a . ~
• three hundred three •



















Maristiana
T
5
4
•·
R459
Reynard,
v.9,
1969
DATE DUE
SPELLMAN LIBRARY
MARIST COLLEGE
POUGHKEEPSIE
,
N
.
Y. 12601




SENIOR
WEEK
AND
GRADUATION





Ill







VI







SENIOR WEEK STATISTICS
SUNDAY
4 kegs, 300 hot dogs
MONDAY
8 kegs, 300 hot dogs, 300 hamburgers, 73 lbs. peanuts
TUESDAY
8 kegs, 300 hot dogs, 200 ham sandwiches
WEDNESDAY
150 Aiko Seltzers
THURSDAY
5 kegs, 36 quarts of rye, vodka, scotch and gin; 400 hot
dogs, 400 hamburgers, 2 bushels of clams,
l O
cases of soda
FRIDAY
96 quarts of rye, rum, vodka, scotch and gin
l
08 quarts of champagne
The Class of 1969 did "a hellava job" of drinking.
The next "rally"-Homecoming!
VII







VIII
May, 1969
Dear Marist College,
The seasons have come and gone, and we have grown. Days have slipped into
months and months into years. It seems like only yesterday; we first arrived on campus
with our caravans of relatives and friends, carrying the hundreds of unnecessary neces-
sities to our new college environment. We have again met the caravans, only this time to
vacate the campus, leaving behind those useless trinkets so meaningful during our college
career. Yet those wonderful years live on, the days have passed, but the years are with us.
Years of work and desire, of good times and friends
.
Yes we have left the campus,
but the memory of those "all nighters" before exams, those senseless but hillarious water
fights in the halls, those afternoons and evenings spent with the boys and the river, those
millions of memories both in and out of the classroom will always live on
.
Marist, bastion of higher education, you have given us more than just a degree. You
have inst.ructed and aided. You have rewarded and
-
disciplined us
.
You have given us a
chance and an atmosphere to become what we are, the Class of 1969
.
For this above all
we thank you
.
The day has come and gone, we have left your fertile soil to face the unsheltered
w
orld. Some to a definite future, some to an uncertain future, but all of us to a better
future because of what you have helped us make ourselves
.
It is with a sincere and grateful heart that we say "good-bye and thanks."
Sincerely yours,
THE CLASS OF 1969
l
1
l














~~~~
;:Y
~
~-G7+
~~~~~~
.at~
-G7~1l~ciae.v
~4~~
J I _ ( ' ~ ~
~-/JU?U:/
_ , d . 4 , w ~
I
X





Senator Charles Godel!



XII



XIII






... ''Where Have All the Good
GRADUATE
SCHOOL
William
Rowley
Michael
Migliore
Francis Russo-Alesi
John Moccio
Richard Blair
James Victory
Vincent Mooney
Mark Breckenridge
Charles Westmiller
John
Moran
Robert Buckley
Roger
Wetzer
John
Murry
Michael Cann
Gerald
Wilhelm
Bruce Oremus
Nello Capone
Gaspare Perrello
Thomas Cerniglia
James Redunski
Kevin Clark
EDUCATION
Gerard Rosolie
C:ha rles Conway
John Sheehan
Stephen Curto
Robert
Andrews
Willard Snyder
Richard Dickinson
Thomas Annunziata
Joseph Sommers
Francis Dolcemascolo
Max
Basye
Thomas Tinghitella
John Dreiser
Louis Bentivegna
Dennis
Vernoia
William Eckoff
Richard Berg
Robert Warren
James Eichner
Marianne Boyce
Michael Yablonsky
Daniel Fitzpatrick
Frederick Brand
Leonard Gallo
Dennis Breslin
Joseph
Gardner
Barbara Brown
BUSINESS
David
Giannoscoli
Vincent
Buonora
Richard
Gorman
Vincent
Catella, FMS
Harry Anderson
Edward Heresniak
Leonard Cocco
Leonard Anderson
William Holmes
Michael Collins
Frank Aspell
·
Ernest lncitti
Stephen Contursi
Frederick Beckert
Richard Johnson
Francis Crimmins
John Breitenback
Victor Junkie
Richard
Curiale
Francis Burke
Raymond Jurine
Dennis D'Amico
Joseph Burns
Edward
Keane
Stephen Dennison
Charles Button
Dennis King
Michael
Flynn, FMS
Richard Casteel
Gerald Landers
Timothy Fowx
Joseph Celie
James Larkin
Bernard Gannon
Gabriel Cicale
Kevin Lover
Gerard Gretzinger
Peter Clarry
John Lyle
Thomas Hanlon
James Conroy
Nicholas Mescia
Robert Hatfield
Ignazio Cupani
George Mine
Joseph
Hernandez
Joel DeGrandis
Robert Minyard
Edward
Jennings, FMS
William Delahoyde
Sam Mirto
Barry
Keaveney
John Delessio
John Noonan
Patrick Keilty
Erwin Dudek
Arthur Norman
Robert Keltos
Edward Duffy
Margaret Puzewski
Edward
Lohse
James Farrell
Granville Rambo
Lester Lombardi
Brian Flanagan
Glenn Reich
Vincent
Lombardo
Claude Gaier
Anthony Rigothi
Leonard Martin
Robert Giant
Louis Rinaldi
Norman Middleton
Samuel Greco
..
XIV











M
G
,,
en
one ...
Chester Grohowski
NAVY
RELIGIOUS VOCATION
John Hand
Edward Hartmann
Tom Bernier
Carsten Martensen, FMS
Peter Idema
Jim Brady
Peter Lapoli, FMS
Joseph Kastrup
Joe Canale
Christopher Popravak, FMS
Anthony Kondysar
Dudley Dav
i
s
Myron Korykora
Paul Geary
Paul Larkin
Fred House
SOCIAL WORK
Joseph Lizarazo
William McCall
Daniel Mahoney
James Walsh
George Biolsi
Paul Manka
Gordon Walton
Philip Coyle
Melvin Marcus
Charles Gareau, FMS
Roland Mellen
Stephen Johnson
Joseph Nobile
AIR FORCE
George Mills
Charles Noble
David Moran
Chester Oldakowski
John Baker
Robert Neary
JohnO'~
Gerald Bertero
Sean O'Neil
Egon Oloffso
Robert King
John Pavick
Richard LaSpina
Gerald Peterson
Art Michel
UNDECIDED
Thomas Piazza
Dan Tutak
Allen Sharkey
Richard Ainsworth
Thomas Smith
MARINES
Floyd Alwon
Richard Stanulwich
Richard Castine
Dean Stewart
Donald Jillisky
Will
i
am Coby
Gary Trabucco
James Sahakian
Daniel Coffey
Raymond Yarish
James Sureau
Joel Duling
Thomas Ward
Craig Evans
Francis Gemmel
MILITARY SERVICES
NATIONAL GUARD
James Johnson
James Jaros
ARMY
John Hines
Paul Keriazes
Andrew Santulli
John Labuzetta
Ray Backus
Thomas Lennox
\
Tony Bastian
Walter Long
Gerald Bro
w
n
LAW ENFORCEMENT
Peter Mack
John Goegel
William McComber
F
r
ancis Gruebel
John Doherty
·
John Pashley
Tim Keneally
Robert Plimley
John Lynch
Joseph Rizzo
William Nevins
MEDICAL SCHOOL
Paul Ryan
Charles Tamlyn
Ed Novak
G
e
o
rg
e Ward
Thomas Davis
x
v





SENIOR




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