Slow news month for frosh

Our class was pretty much absent from the first Chronicle of 1961. Of course, there was Christmas break and apparently a lot of snow since the last issue.

Three storms in only a few days in mid-January, the January 27, 1961, Chronicle said, resulted in one day off (January 16), but also the cancellation of the sophomore dance, basketball game against Classical, and several typing exams. Students also would have had January 20 off because of snow, but school was already closed that day so we could all watch JFK’s inauguration, on one of the coldest days in Washington, DC, for that event.

012761_JwebbJerome Webb as our sole representative in Chronicle pictures, at right. Jerome was on the chess team that had just defeated Longmeadow 7-0(!) to remain undefeated at 4-0.

In the first Literary Supplement of the school year, the class was represented with items by Ernest Gaudette, Lawrence Landry, and Dorothea Hammond.

In sports, basketball coverage started including freshman Gene Ryzewicz among the starting five. That wouldn’t change for four years, except for injury.

Here’s the January 27, 1961, Chronicle

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Face-plant for frosh

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The last Chronicle of 1960 featured an amusing item involving a classmate. The photo above (from page three) shows a somewhat embarrassed Joe DeCaro after falling, rather than jumping athletically, through the hoop at a basketball rally. (Gene Ryzewicz, No. 11, looks bemused.)

In the “Sports Briefs” column below the photo, the Chronicle said this (with the original punctuation errors retained): “Frank Wynn, general chairman of the second annual Catholic Hooperama and Charlene Cabana designed and decorated the ‘hoop,’ through which the Cathedral team was to make its appearance. However, Joe DeCaro leading his band of pint-sized freshmen, across the court and throughout the hoop ahead of the team, tripped and actually fell through the hoop landing flat in the center of the court.”

Joe now shares his slightly different memories of that event and of some other fun times as a team manager.

WWise“This particular event was one of the milder hazing adventures Mr. Wise, Sr. (I would never call him “Bill”) [physical education instructor and coach, photo at right] put me through that year. He had recruited me to be one of the team ‘managers’ cum water boy, cum snapping-towel target, of football, hoops and baseball teams. Alas, my ‘career’ ended the afternoon I skipped out on detention and was pulled by the ear from the baseball field by a particularly unhappy Sister. But, I digress. Contrary to the article, there were no other ‘pint-sized freshmen,’ although I’m grateful for the reporter thinking of me as an army of one :).

“Mr. Wise had a bit of Barnum & Baily in him and decided he wanted his ‘manager’ to lead the team out on the court. I did not want to do it. Mr. Wise had a particularly effective technique of persuasion–threatening to have me thrown out the gym doors nekkid! I was not a fast runner, and complied.

“Either my nervousness or the distraction of being smiled at by Carolyn and Charlene caused me to miss their lifting the hoop ever so slightly off the floor in preparation for my burst through the paper. Years before the movie, I demonstrated that white men can’t jump, tripped on the bottom of the hoop and did a perfect face-plant on the CHS gym floor.

“It could’ve been much worse; Mr. Wise originally placed [Anthony] ‘Bumpy’ Scibelli’s shoulder pads on me. The Patron Saint of Perpetual Hazing must’ve changed his mind.

“Thinking back, the camaraderie of a locker room with ‘Bumpy’, Bob Buoniconti, Walt Jujuga, the Rogan brothers, Tim Sullivan, and the teasing of the upper class cheerleaders on bus trips around the district are pretty good memories. Well, most.

“Mr. Wise pulled one that worried me. Returning on the team bus from North Adams, I fell asleep next to Carolyn Vose. Mr. Wise took her lipstick and made a few dashes on my cheek. Unaware of what he’d done, as I departed the bus he made a scene about the lipstick on my cheek and wondered what would happen when Carolyn’s boyfriend heard about it. I think I skipped school for three days! Carolyn’s boyfriend (now husband) was Bumpy!”

Here’s the December 23, 1960 edition of the Chronicle
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Happy 4th!

Happy July 4th. Hope the storms in the Northeast clear up for a nice weekend.

Backyard_fireworksRemember how back in the day we often celebrated this holiday with family, neighbors, and friends with cookouts and fireworks in the backyard or at a lakeside cabin? You see a lot more sophisticated fireworks at the major events these days, but there is something especially memorable about even the small stuff going off close by. Personal pyrotechnics . . . in lots of places, a skill and thrill of the past.

November Chronicle freshman year
We got a little more mention in the Chronicle as we moved into the fall of freshman year. About time!

A bottom-page-4 article in then November 23, 1960, edition refers to us as “Eager Beavers” and cites scholastic activity of several members of the Class of ’64: Vincent Brown, David Rucinski, Maryellen Rooney, Diane Dillon, William Ligouri (sic), Thomas Roberts, Ellen St. Clair (sic), James Boucher, Paul Donahue, William Danoff, Mary Hurley, John Sheehan, Patricia Johnson, Mark Sullivan, Barbara Shean, Dennis Jacobi, Carol Organek, Alan Sponburgh, Gary Bushey, Patricia Canning, and Carol Forgemie.

Even the sports pages did not mention any members of the class, like, say, Gene Ryzewicz. That changed soon thereafter.

Here’s the November 23, 1960 Chronicle.

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Frosh Day, i.e., hazing

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Early on, we participated, apparently willingly, in “Frosh Day.” On that day each year, seniors were able to lord it over freshmen, requiring them to perform various chores and silly acts, e.g., walk backwards, carry seniors’ books, sing, etc. I believe that is George Shannon at left in the photo above from the Springfield newspaper. Recognize anyone else? Is it Jim Montanari in the middle?

FroshDay_102860Page four of the October 28, 1960 Chronicle had a picture of “frosh Edward Page” (at right) wearing the big bow that marked first-year students and an article recounting the various humiliations faced by the Class of 1964. Okay, so they weren’t “humiliations,” but I bet there were a few instances where freshmen were not having “fun” and I doubt this tradition existed for a whole lot longer in the same manner.

Anybody remember Frosh Day? Good times? Not so pleasant memories?

But, in the ways traditions such as these kept going, we were able as seniors to lord it over the Class of 1967, as shown in this picture from our PantherPix.

FroshDay

Below is the October 28, 1960, Chronicle. This was the issue right before the November 1960 election between John Kennedy and Richard Nixon. A poll of CHS seniors in history classes (page two) showed a strong preference for Sen. Kennedy (88 percent) over Vice President Nixon (12 percent), and for the Democratic Party, by the same percentages. Yet, interestingly, 80 percent of those polled said they would vote for President Dwight Eisenhower if, hypothetically, he was running.

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Back to the beginning

Fifty years ago last week, we graduated from Cathedral. Our celebration of the 50th anniversary of that, however, doesn’t take place until mid-October. What does Purple Panthers ’64 do until then? . . . We go back to the beginning, September 1960.

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WMM_1960_CHSThe Chronicle of September 30, 1960, in its page two cartoon (above), presented us as babies. Based on the picture at right of this manly example of a freshman boy, that was about right. I was 13 when this picture was taken and, as I look at it now, I think “Didn’t we have mirrors in the house?” That hair . . . those glasses . . . that nose! Thank goodness for puberty.

Is anyone else willing to dare to send in his or her picture from freshman year. Please!

Freshmen were not mentioned by name in that first issue of the Chronicle (below). No surprise, we had been there only a few weeks. But we already had a big impact as a class. The page one article announcing a record enrollment of 2,600 students said freshmen numbered 800, largest of any class. Lots of round numbers used, so those were likely beginning-of-the-year estimates.

Upcoming are editions of the Chronicle from 1960-1, 1961-2, and 1962-3. We won’t be tying topics any longer to their occurrence a half-century ago. Here we go, with the first Chronicle we saw as freshmen.

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‘A time we’ll treasure through the years’

There’s a time for joy
A time for tears
A time we’ll treasure through the years
We’ll remember always
Graduation day
— The Four Freshmen

Graduation_invitationJune 10, our graduation day, was a Wednesday in 1964. The event began at 3 pm, at the Eastern States Coliseum, West Side, at least according to the invitation (at left). Probably started a little late.

Graduation_articleWhile the Four Freshmen make a confident assertion above, I, at least, remember . . . not much at all about graduation day. The last issue of the Cathedral Chronicle (see below) came out the same day as graduation, so no pictures of the event were published in it, just a preview picture of our top three students in caps and gowns. The only copy of newspaper coverage we have (at right) is brief and includes no pictures.

Who has pictures? Even better . . . movies!

What memories do you have? Exciting day, boring ceremony? Special evening out with family and friends? I remember an extended family get-together soon after graduation where I received my first tangible benefits from graduation, in the form of cash and checks from dutiful family members.

Last Chronicle
Our last issue of the Chronicle had a two-page spread of photos of “Senior Class activities” (pages three and four) from throughout our senior year and a farewell to the classmate called “Mr. CHS Athlete” in the article (page five) by Reid Oslin. I think we all know who that was. Hint: His initials were E. R. Yeah . . . Eugene.

This photo from the issue shows the “action” in the Model Senate, featuring George Shannon as president pro tempore, Diane Dillon as senate clerk, Tim Swearingen and Judy Maloney, Mike Reavey getting back to his seat, and Kevin O’Malley looking off to the right from his front row seat.

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Gene_Dick_trophyIf I don’t remember our graduation ceremony, I do remember how bad we all felt when our Purple Panthers took second place in the 1964 Western Massachusetts basketball tournament. In another picture in that last Chronicle, the faces of our co-captains, Gene Ryzewicz and Rich Murphy, mirror the expressions of all Cathedral fans that night.

 

 

Here’s the Chronicle of June 10, 1964

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Penultimate Chronicle

In the next-to-last issue of Cathedral Chronicle during our years, May 28, 1964, the big news was of our top two scholars — Barbara Shean and Paul Donahue. The lead story reported that each had been named National Merit Scholars, the only two from Springfield schools that year. Paul went on to Dartmouth and Barbara to Middlebury.

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As for some of “the rest of us,” the Chronicle had pictures of Bill Devlin and John Dubiel with the project they would be showing at the national JETS fair (page four), a small feature on Ed “Doc” Verroneau wrapping up 🙂 his four years as athletic trainer (page five), announcement of Dennis Finnerty winning the Chronicle‘s good sportsmanship award (page five), and notice that Cathedral’s first musical — Brigadoon, with Frank Hurley, Rita Arsenault, and Janice Perry in major roles — would open that Friday (page four).

Also, Paul Langlois and Leonie Cormier are in a page one photo doing chemistry with Sr. James Francis, several seniors are successful nearing the end of their time as Panthers (page five), and three seniors are among the Western Mass.-champions Mathletes (page six).

One more issue to go, and that’s in only a couple of weeks!

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Just another May 19 . . . 50 years ago

As seniors, we were reminded that money for invitations to graduation must be paid by May 25. There would be an assembly on Wednesday at 9, a talk on Father Pio, for freshmen and sophomores.The girls in the dance number of Brigadoon would have rehearsal in the cafeteria at 3.

CHS Daily Bulletin, May 19, 1964

CHS Daily Bulletin, May 19, 1964

This, and more, was in the Daily Bulletin for May 19, 1964. Click on the image at left to read. Was the Daily Bulletin how we learned of the daily goings-on at school? Was it read in the morning over the loudspeaker? Posted on bulletin boards? Read in our homerooms? All of these?

Thanks to Jacqui Artiano Ruest for preserving this mimeograph memory.

Prom Night

This was Prom Night 50 years ago at CHS (this date was a Friday in 1964).

Joseph McClellan and Marilyn O'Day (later Mr. and Mrs. McClellan)

Joseph McClellan and Marilyn O’Day (later Mr. and Mrs. McClellan)

We have another prom picture! Marilyn O’Day McClellan sent in the picture, taken at the prom, I’m pretty sure, of her and Joe McClellan. Joe, who went on to a most distinguished career as a physician, sadly died in February 2011. Many thanks, Marilyn, for the photo.

 

 

 

Jacqui Artiano and Elisabeth Malcolm

Jacqui Artiano and Elisabeth Malcolm

Jacqui Artiano Ruest and her BFF, Elisabeth Malcolm, had their picture taken in their gowns. You can see the ladies with their dates in the post below.

With whom did you go to the prom? What did you do after? Go home? To the beach? Misquamicut? Hammonasset? When did you get home? Was it the beginning of a great weekend?

What do you remember about the prom? Or are the memories more about before and after?

BIG week

“Class Day” for the Class of 1964 took place on this date our senior year. (It was a Monday that year.) At an assembly at which members of the Junior Class were “guests,” our class will, ballot, history, and prophecy were announced.

Anyone remember the details of those?  Nothing of a will, ballot, etc., is known now to exist.

Later in the week, after Class Day, Honors Night (May 12), Class Banquet (May 13) and the Senior Opera (May 14) came the Senior Prom on May 15. The cafeteria was transformed into a “Colonial Cotillion,” with music from Dar Horr and his orchestra. After dancing, the class enjoyed a smorgasbord supper in the gym. And after that . . . !

Heading off to the Senior Prom, May 15, 1964, front left: Tom Guberski, Jacqui Artiano, Elizabeth Malcolm, and Betsy's date from Chicopee High.

Heading off to the Senior Prom, May 15, 1964, front left: Tom Guberski, Jacqui Artiano, Elisabeth Malcolm, and Betsy’s date from Chicopee High.

Jacqui and close friend Brian Long. Check out those decorations.

Jacqui and good friend Brian Long, at the prom. Check out those decorations.

Any mementoes of that week? Programs? Prom pictures? There were tons of pictures taken, usually at the girl’s house, if I recall correctly. Jacqui Artiano Ruest shares two from her prom night.

Send yours in! Send scans, or if that’s not convenient, contact the blog and we’ll talk about how to share your pictures.