Ec66 class booklet

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TEDAAN'S

Compliments of

Established 1911

ALUMNI HOUSE

GOOD FOOD AT POPULAR PRICES

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY SUMMER SCHOOL 1964 Two Sessions: June 16-July 24 July 27-September 3 •

Over 300 Undergraduate and Graduate Courses

Air-conditioned classrooms and dormitories

Special programs for teachers

Summer programs abroad Salzburg, Austria - July

l -

August 8

Dijon, France - July 6 - August 15 Guadalajara, Mexico - July 6 - August 15 Send for Bulletin and application to: Dr. Rocco E. Porreco Dean, The Summer School Georgetown University Washington 7, D.

C.


Compliments of

The Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service Dean William E. Moran

Compliments of

THE SCHOOL of BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION Director Raymond Pelissier

Compliments of

THE INSTITUTE of LANGUAGES and LINGUISTICS Dean Robert Lado -1-


- Ir�,,,_�

PATRONS Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.

and Mrs. Philip Barth and Mrs. W. E. Bittner and Mrs. James F. Boyle and Mrs. Francis B. Bushey Ricardo Cesani and Mrs. A. M. Cigarran ond Mrs. John J. Courtin and Mrs. Rudolph M. Decatur ond Mrs. Jomes J. Fauteux and Mrs. Philip J. Feick and Mrs. Robert 0. Fickes and Mrs. Joseph Gasior and Mrs. John B. Geasland and Mrs. E. J. Golab and Mrs. Arthur F. Grimes and Mrs. Raymond T. Hartman and Mrs. Albert J. Hewitt

Capt. and Mrs. William H. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Kane Mr. William Keeler Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Kole Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Kraemer, Jr. Mr. Justin Mack, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick V. McEvily Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mc Keown Mr. and Mrs. George J. McMonagle Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert McNeil Mr. ond Mrs. Ira Morion Mrs. M. F. Nearing Mrs. Georgina Nunez Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Osterman Mr. and Mrs. 0. Jackson Peorre Mrs. H. Purcell Col. and Mrs. W. Robinson

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rodriguez Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore Russoniello Mr. and Mrs. John Schindler Mr. and Mrs. Andrew H. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Snyder Dr. and Mrs. Francis P. Sonntag Mr. and Mrs. Walter Starinshak Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Starke Mr. and Mrs. Frank V. Staropoli Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Tsukayama Mr. and Mrs. Zygmunt S. Turowski Mr. and Mrs. Louis Verveer Mr. and Mrs. L. Waterhouse Lcdr. and Mrs. F. H. Wilson

SPONSORS Mr. and Mrs, Charles Ayres Mrs. Julia Bidus Mrs. Fronces Brady Mr. and Mrs. F. Milmoe Brown Mr. and Mrs. John A. Burridge Mrs. F. M. Callohan

Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr.

ORGANIZATIONS

BUSINESSES B'nai Sholom

East Campus Class of 1967

Dixie Liquor, 35th and M Streets, N.W.

College Class of 1966

East Campus Sodality

Georgetown Carry-Out Shop, 1340 Wisconsin Ave., N.W.

Eost Campus Class of 1964

The HOYA

East Campus Class of 1965

People-to-People

Angelo's Barbershop, 1234 - 36th Street, N.W.

Sugar's, 3500 0 Street, N.W.

\,

Mrs. Margaret Pulman Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Rosenberg Miss Anito Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Julian M. Wright Compliments of a friend

ond Mrs. T. E. Dunman and Mrs. W. Durham and Mrs. William T. Ellis and Mrs. H. R. Griffith Dona Id C. Knopp

"Wisdom and Discovery for a Dynamic Wodd"

Anniversary House 175th Anniversary Headquarters congratulates The Class of 1966 and invites its members to return to celebrate

GEORGETOWN'S BICENTENNIAL in 1989

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Rev. Paul L. Ciolfi, S.J. Class Moderator

As priest, professor, counselor, moderator and friend: at the altar, in the classroom, on the corridor, Father Cioffi holds a unique position for all of us in the Class of 1966. Father was born in Brooklyn (!), on July 21, 1928, moving, in 1940, to Summit, New Jersey. He attended Seton Hall Prep in South Orange and upon graduation in 1946 entered the Society of Jesus. He took his vows on August 15, 1948 at the Jesuit Novitiate in Wernersville, Pennsylvania where he also made his college studies. After Philosophy, at Woodstock, Maryland and Plattsburg, New York, he spent his three­ year Regency at Loyola High School in Towson, Mary­ land from 1953 to 1956. In 1957 he returned to Wood­ stock for Theology and was ordained there to the Sacred Priesthood on the twenty-first of June, 1959. He re­ mained at Woodstock for the fourth year of Theology and then went to Europe for his Tertianship at Tronchi­ ennes, near Ghent in Belgium. He did graduate work in catechetics and liturgy at Lumen Vitae, the International Centre for Studies in Religious Education at Brussels. And since September, 1962, he has been· at Georgetown. Those of us who have encountered him but briefly, or the growing number who count him among their valued friends, have their own individual impressions: Father's sense of humor, his distinctive and warmly imitated accent (be it in English, French or Latin), the excite­ ment of a challenging discussion - whether you agree or not, or the friendly greeting on the familiar streets of Georgetown. But it is essentially and rightly as a priest and a religious man that every one of us admires him the most. What he has done in the creation of a unique spirit at

the University Community Mass, or the uplifting experience of the Mass of the Holy Spirit at the opening of the academic year which brought to the entire University Family an incomparable joy in the beauty of the Liturgy and the hallowed traditions of Georgetown in her one hundred and seventy-fifth year, has renewed our dedkation to the goals of a truly Theocentric life. Whatever other place he holds for each of us, it is the example of his personal commitment, as a man and as a priest, to the essence of the ideals of St. Ignatius and to the deepest meaning of the Catholic Faith which makes him the special person we know him to be.

Tom Kane Joe Snyder ASSOCIATE EDITOR••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••Phil Verveer MANAGING EDITOR ••••••••••••• ••••••• . ••••••••••••• Jack Geasland LITERARY EDITOR. • • •• • • • • • •• • • •• • • •• •• •• • ••• • •• • Murray Deutchman PHOTOGRAPHER • • •• Charles Arnhold ART EDITOR . •• • • • . . • . •• • . • • • . • •• • • • • •• • . • •• • • • •• • • Dennis Yena BUSINESS MANAGER • ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• Mike Hewitt STAFF SECRETARY. ••••••• Shannon Hogan MODERATOR ••••••••••••••• ' • ••••••••••••••••• Rev. Paul Cioffi, S.J. CLASS PRESIDENT. •• •• • • • • • • •• • • •• •• ••• • ••• • •• • •• •• • • • EDITOR. ••• • • ••• • • • •••• • • •• • • •• • • . • • ••• •• • • • • • •• ••

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Phyllis Kaminski, a French major from Baltimore, Maryland, has acted as President of Kober-Cogan Resi­ dence Council and has participated in the Sodality for two years. Thomas Kane, a Management major in the Business School is from New York City. He has headed the Class of '66 for two years as President. Beyond this, he has worked as chairman of Orientation and of the Sophoinore Parents' Weekend Committee, and on the Business Ad­ ministration Committee. Dan McCarthy is an accounting major from Rochester, New York. He has served as co-chairman of both che Publicity committee and the Orientation Committee. He has also been active on the dance committee and other class projects. Dan McCarthy, Tom Kane, Phyllis Kaminski

What Is The Class of 1966? What is the East Campus Class of 1966? It is best defined by a look at the people who make it up and what they do. The pervasive tone of the East Campus is international. One need only look at the function of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, precociously (and fortunately) founded in 1919, and of the Institute of Lan­ guages and Linguistics. It is these two schools, together with the School of Business Administration - which emphasizes the borderless scope of modern commerce - that have molded

our East Campus Image. That image shows true in the light. With vital activities like the People-to-People program, run this year by the Class of '66, and several lecture series covering particular aspects of the world-wide scene in government, in business, and in the arts, we have shown an eagerness to broaden the scope of our interests beyond the limits of our homeland. That is not to say that we have been inattentive to the home front. This year the East Campus Class of '66, aware of the needs of the com-

munity around it, established the first class-run tutoring service for underprivileged children in the area. At various times throughout our first two years, we of the Class of '66 have responded to the call for vocif­ erous action on civil rights and (pro and con) on various issues in foreign policy. The maturity of the class was happily evinced by the sobriety and thoughtfulness with which the several presentations of opinion were carried out - a particularly satisfying note in these days of wild and dis­ orderly demonstrations.

Frank Staropol i, Melanne Starinshak, Joe Snyder Coming from Rochester, N.Y., Frank Staropoli is an accounting major in the School of Business Administra­ tion. Frank has served as Vice President of the Class both years, and his presence at the Student Council meetings has had a marked influence in East Campus affairs. He has also organized our famed "class blasts" which have helped put our treasury in the good position it is today. Melanne Starinshak, a Russian major in the Institute from Ranshaw, Pennsylvania, has been vice-prefect of the Sodality and a member of the class booklet com­ mittee. She also spent a summer in Mexico with the Lay Mission Group. Joseph Snyder, an International Affairs major from New London, Connecticut, has been active on the Protocol, and Parents' Weekend Committee, and as editor of the Class [Jooklet. He has also participated in the Sodality and French Club.

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An International Affairs major in the Scho ol of For­ eign Service, Robert Fickes of Chicago has served on the Orientation, Class Booklet, and high school alumni committees. He has been on the Dean's List and an officer of the East Campus Sodality. Jae k Geaslan d is an International Affairs major hailing from Harriman, Tennessee. As a Freshman he served on the Protocol staff. In his Sophomore year he was active in the Canterbury Club, served on the Parents' Weekend Committee and was layout editor of the Class Booklet.

Robert J. Fauteux, International Affairs major from Yonkers, New York, has been active in debate, having been a member of both the Gaston-White and Philodemic societies. Bob has also lent his support to the I.R.C., the dass Social Project, and the Parents' Weekend and Class Booklet Committees. He has also been on the Dean's List for the past two years. Bob Fickes, Jack Geasland, Bob Fauteux

Suzanne Barth of Buffalo, New York, a French Major, has contributed to People-to- People, Class Service Projects and the Orientation and Publicity programs. She is also a member of the Women's Service Committee. Anne Poeppelmeier of Glastonbury, Connecticut, an International Affairs Major, has been secretary of People-to-People and the Kober-Cogan Residence Coun­ cil. She has also been active in Protocol, Class Serv­ ice Projects, Orientation program, Class Directory, and the Women's Residence Committee. Susan Williams, a transfer student from Phoenix, Arizona, is an International Affairs Major. Sue has served as a varsity cheerleader and as a reporter fof the Courier.

Sue Williams, Anne Poeppelmeier, Sue Barth Linda Russoniello, Suzy Collins, Mary C. Courtin Attractive Mary Catherine Courtin has served faith­ fully as Secretary of our class for two years. A Spanish Major from Buffalo, New York, she also belongs to the Spanish Club and worked on Frosh Orientation. Linda Russoniello, an International Affairs major from Trenton, New Jersey, has served on the Student Council Secretary Corps for her two years at George­ town. Active in Frosh Orientation this year, she spent last summer in Mexico with the G.U. Lay Mission Group. Suz:y Collins, a Spanish Major, has been the girl Friday for the Courier and Protocol during her two years at Georgetown.

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Glen Singleton, International Affairs Major, is a resi· dent of Cleveland. Co-founder of the Canterbury Club, he has also been active in the Arnold Air Society and the Young Republicans. Richard Muller, from New York City, is an Interna­ tional Affairs Major. Dick has participated in the Inter­ national Relations Club, Young Republicans, French Club, and the Orientation Committee. He also helped with the Congressional Reception. From Rochester, New York, comes Paul Wright. Paul, active on Orientation, Parents' Weekend, and the Class Booklet, is a member of the School of Business.

Paul Wright, Dick Muller, Glen Singleton

Mary Ann Haney, a Spanish Major from Buffalo, New York, has served as Treasurer and President of the Spanish Club and as Freshman Representative in Kober­ She has also been active in the Band, the Cogan. People-to-People, and the Lay Mission Group in Mexico. William Johnson, an International Affairs Major, is a resident of Sayville, Long Island. As a freshman, Bill was co-chairman of the Publicity Committee. He is also active in Alliance Francais, the Ray Charles Com­ mittee, and the present Publicity Committee. Bill is corridor Representative for first Copley. Raymond Hartman, an International Affairs Major from Falls Church, Virginia, has been active in the Glee Club and the International Relations Club. He served on the Orientation Committee and has been a member of the French Club and the Canterbury Club.

Bill Johnson, Ray Hartman, Mary Ann Haney Christopher Glynn, Bernadene Sch/ien, Charlie Arnold Chris Glynn, an International Affairs major from Port Jefferson, New York, played both soccer and lacrosse during his freshman year. As a sophomore, he was active on the Career Conference Committee, the Class Booklet and the Walsh Lecture Series. Bernadene Sehlien, an Italian major in the Institute from Arlington, Virginia, has been a secretarial support of the Protocol. Beyond this, she has been active in both the Italian and Spanish Clubs. Charlie Arnhold, an International Affairs major from Lisbon, Portugal, has served faithfully as photographer for the Class Booklet. He has also worked as photog­ rapher for the Courier and Protocol, as Feature Editor of the Courier, has participated in the Italian Club, and has played on the soccer team.


Stephen Ayres of Syosset, New York, an International Affairs Major, has been active in the East Campus Stu­ dent Council Publicity Office. He has also been a member of the French Club, the International Relations Club, and the New York Met Club. Richard Downing, a resident of Jacksonville, North Carolina, is an International Affairs Major. Dick, who is chairman of the Class Social Service Projects, has also been active in the International Relations Club, People-to-People, and the Orientation Committee. WiIIiam Bortz is an International Economics Major from Patuxent River, Maryland. Bill has served as chairman of the High School Contact Committee, Cor­ ridor Representative to the Student Council and Class Council. He has also served on the Social Service Committee, been a member of the Varsity Rifle Team and been in the International Relations Club.

Bill Bortz, Dick Downing, Steve Ayres International Affairs major Lou Rosenberg, from Chi­ cago, Illinois, is chairman of the influential People-to­ People Program, and is also a member of the I.R.C. and the Young Democrats. Phil Verveer's participation in the life of the Uni­ versity as well as the Class of '66 has ranged from Class Council to Sodality to WGTB, from Foreign Serv­ ice Committee to Orientation and Publicity Committee. An International Affairs major in the Foreign Service School, he is from Downers Grove, Illinois and lately of 4th. New South. Mike Travis is an International Affairs major in the Foreign Service School. Out of class, Mike can be found singing for the Glee Club or at People-to-People. In addition, he is President of the Sugarcreek, Ohio Club.

Lou Rosenberg, Phil Verveer, Mike Travis Linda Osterman, Tom Patrick, Hal O'Connell Tom Patrick, from Royal Oak, Michigan, is an ac­ counting major in the School of Business, is Prefect of the Sodality, works on the committee for Civil Rights, and sits on the Student Activities Committee of the Student Council.

Active Linda Osterman, a Spanish major in the Insti­ tute, is from Buffalo, New York. She was co-chairman of the Class Directory, Treasurer of the Spanish Club, and worked in the People-to-People Program. She also participated in the Frosh Orientation Program. Hal O'Connell of Arlington, Massachusetts is a Lin­ guistics major in the Institute. Aside from being chair­ man of the Student Council Ways and Means Committee, Hal has also participated in the Mask & Bauble, Lin­ guistics Club, and Student Council Institute Committee.


Class officers:

Frank Staropoli (Vice-President), Mary Catherine Courtin (Secretary), Tom

Connolly (Treasurer), Tom Kane (President). Mr. Miller speaks at a class meeting.

The Class of '66 presided over the fall riot, otherwise known as the orientation picnic, in September of 1963.


A new student experienced the joy of regis路 tration during freshman orientation week.

Caribe/

Sternbergh took an active part in

orienting new students to the rigors of I ife at Georgetown.

ORIENTA TION Owen Gillen, Ted Stazeski, and Joe Kraemer bask under the admiring gaze of Madie Brown at the freshman orientation picnic.


Last September, it became apparent to many sophomores that their doss /,ad accomplished a great deal. This Booklet is an attempt to create a permanent record of these accomplish­ ments. First row: Jack Geasland, Dennis Yena, Phil Verveer, Linda Marion, Melanne Starinshak, Joe Snyder, Charlie Arnhold, Mike Hewitt, Mary C. Courtin. Second row: Tam Kane, Bob Fickes, Chris Glynn, Heiner Giese, Murray Deutchman, Paul Wright, Steve Ayres, Bob Fauteux, Bob Willard.

We study, too. The high calibre of the students in the Class of '66 has been the subject of favorable com­ ments by university o fficials on nu­ merous occasions. There has been a high level of individual achieve­ ment, and a committee has been formed to work with the administration in making such achievement even more widespread.

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Paul Wright, Hal O'Connell, Terry O'Neill, and Joe Kraemer represent the Class of '66 on the Ways and Means Committee, which handles investigations for the Student Coun• c:il. Missing is Art Charles.


ACTIVITIES

Ted Dunman and Chris Gasior headed the High School Alumni Committee, an organi• zation set up to interes.t high school grad­ uates in Georgetown.

Hal O'Connell, Terry McMonus, J3ob Nunez, John Donahoe, and Ray Hartman are the Class of '66's representatives in the Glee Club.

Dean's list First row: Hal O'Connell, Bob Fauteux, Joe Kraemer, Phil Verveer, Heiner Giese, Bob Fickes, Paul Wright, Kevin Dolan, Joe Snyder. Second row: Jill Babcock, Ellen Donelan,

Mary Turowski, Marsha Smith, Barbara Bucklin, Chris Gasior, Phyllis Kaminski, Carol Golab, Melanne Starinshak, Linda Marion, Joan Walton. Third row: Ted Dunman.


New York attorney Jomes B. Donovan ad­ dresses Georgetown students and their parents at the Parents' Weekend banquet. The 1964 weekend was co-directed by the Class of '66.

The part1c1pation, the activity of this class in the business of acquir­ ing a university education is at the very least an extensive and exhaustive exercise, and, at its heights, an ex­ citing and fulfilling one. To round out our education, we have made our mark in the founding of a student­ sponsored lacrosse team, and in strong support - moral and financial for crew, basketball, polo, track and the whole range of university pro­ grams. Further, with highly success­ ful dances and parties, the Class of '66 has earned a prime place in Georgetown's social sphere. Com­ bining the serious and the social, the class conducted an outstanding Ori­ entation Week, introducing neophyte collegians to the wonders of George­ town life. The Parent's Weekend, co-sponsored under the Student Coun­ cil by the class, further spread the word in bringing together the parental, professorial and social elements of our education for two interesting and enlightening days.

Suzy Durham and /,er parents. The Saturday night dance was sponsored by the Sophomore class for Parents' Weekend.

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Anne Poeppelmeier, Sue Barth, Melanne Starinshak, Carol Golab, Linda Marion, Frank Staropoli, Paul Wright, Dan McCarthy, Murray Deutchman, Bob Fickes, Joe Kraemar.

Hannah Ni/on exhibits the typical spirit of the Class of '66 at the Parents' Weekend cocktail party held on the steps of White足 Gravenor.

PARENTS' WEEKEND

First row: Joe Snyder, Pat Halloran, Judy Costello, Karen Cob/in, Hannah Ni/on, Mary C. Courtin, Jock Geasland. Second row: Tom Kane, Bob Fauteux, Art Johnson, John Houff, Bill Bortz, Steve Ayres, Austin Rinella, Bob Willard.

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The Career Conference Committee provides lectures by different individuals concerning the possible careers open to a college grad足 uate.

Chris Glynn and Heiner Giese

The Publicity Committee is a comp/ex organization dedicated to keeping both students and faculty informed of university events. Top: Bob Willard (Chairman), Sue Barth, Karen Cob/in, Cherie Loustaunau, Judy Costello, Hannah Ni/on, Bill Johnson. Middle: Mike Hewitt, Austin Rinella, Bob Fickes, Frank Reilly, Linda Osterman. Bottom: Bob Tsukayama, Steve Ayres.

With a genuine and devout concern for spiritual matters, members of the class are active in the Sodality. In addition, non-Catholic class members have participated in such groups as the Canterbury Club, the Wesley Club, and B'nai Shalom. A precise definition of what makes the Class of '66 is impossible. The class is changing constantly, growing and reaching. Even as you read these words, the Class of '66 is not what it was when this was written. We hope though, that by whatever time you read this, members of the Class of 1966 will be that much nearer the goals to which they aspire - at Georgetown, in the community, in the nation, in the world and before their Creator. Robert J. Fauteux Christopher M. Glynn

Bill Johnson and chairman John Houff discuss t he Adminis足 trative Reception with freshmen Virginia Straub and Mary Ne/son. The reception provided an excellent opportunity far brief but effective communication between students and administration.

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Dick Downing, chairman of the class service project, emphasizes o paint during the course of on hour and o quarter study period at Junior Village, an orphanage in Washington.

SERVICE PROJECTS

Mike Korb and John Crowley aid their charges at Junior Village during a weekly tutorial session sponsored by the class. Dan Grant is in the background.

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The Wesley Club is the religious organization on campus for Methodists.

Mike Travis, Bob Tsukoyomo, Dennis Yeno.

The Sodolity is the campus religious organization for Catholics.

It not only sponsors religious

activities but also works in the areas ol ecumenism and socio/ we/fore.

First row: Me/onne Storinshok (Vice-Prelect), Tom Patrick (Prelect), Barbaro Metz (Secre­ tory), Kathy Marvin. Second row: Joe Snyder, Phyllis Kominski, Coro/ Golob, Pete Moron. Not shown: Tom Gilmartin, (Treasurer), Phil Verveer, Terry O'Neill, Joan Walton, and Bob Fickes.

The Canterbury Club, o re/igious organization

for Ang/icons,

began the year as the lirst

non-Roman Catholic Christion organization on

Under the leadership ol the Fronk Durkee, the club's activity hos been primarily aimed at discussion ol theo• logical and moral concepts. a Jesuit campus. Rev.

Dave Beach, Ray Hartman, Sue Williams, Jack Geasland, Glen Singleton.


The Society for the Advancement of Manage足 ment is a Business School organization which attempts to acquaint its members to the world Members of the Class of '66 participating in the People-to足 People international student organization included chairman Lou

Tom Parrington,

Rosenberg,

Jacques De

Sure,

Knapp, Carolyn Jackson, and Mike Travis.

B'nai Shalom, the religious organization on campus for Jewish students, provides planned

lecture meetings and inlormal discussions concerning the Jewish faith. Mark Sendrow, Neal

Cohen

Nuner.

Dave

Henig,

(President),

Linda Marion,

Dick Muller,

Bob

Don

of industry and management. Mike

Bushey,

Tom Smith.

Bob

Tomlinson (President),


East Campuďż˝ students played on important on the Sophomore intramural football team. Here is some typical action. role

SPORTS

Varsity Baseball Dave Ingram. (Missing: Johnson, Steve Piron)

Varsity Tennis John Pellegrin and Dick Hanford.

Terry O'Neill, Art


Varsity Swimming Bill Sandweg and Richard Sonntag

The Class of '66 was much in evidence in /ending vociferous support to the bos/cetbo// team. Anne Poeppe/meier and Liz Oberscho//.

Non-residents John Crowley and Dic/c Downing poss time between classes in the basement of Nevils.


Another fascinating, attention-ho/ding class. Vic Lutz, Claude Clement.

Barbara Metz, Bill Bortz, and John Pellegrin enjoy one of Georgetown's many parties.

Kathy Roseborough shoots down another Jesuit during the course ol a typical George足 town social evening.

Carefree days ol youth - a Xavier beer party! Fran/c Starapo/i, Joe Hauc/c, Jim McMonag/e.


Compliments of

THE SOCIETY for the ADVANCEMENT of MANAGEMENT Compliments of

THE EAST CAMPUS STUDENT COUNCIL Frank Gannon, President Richard Porter, Vice President William Ebersold, Treasurer Helga Leukert, Secretary


1J89

a uniiue jervice lo our Univerjif'I


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