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.

1961, 1962 Minstrel Revue programs

Now we’re going way back. 🙂

Added to the “Back Then” page (click on the title in the line above, under the header photo) are scans of the 1962 and 1961 Mi61MRCover1nstrel Revue programs, when members of the Class of 1964 were sophomores and freshmen.

In 1961, the show included only a few specialty performers from the Class, best I can tell. Performing as freshmen were Mary Lou Lattinville, Rita Arsenault, and Dan Cotter. There was stronger representation behind the scenes with Fran Liro beginning his stellar career in lighting, and Patrica Bagge, Bill Fleming, Richard Joseph, Jean Matthew, Kathleen McDonald, and Jim Montanari helping with make-up.

By sophomore year, the Class was much more active. The 1962 show featured the first group composed only of classmates — “Chattanooga Choo Choo” — with Elaine Ambrose as “directress” and featuring 24 fellow sophomores. But other groups included class members among their participants. Look in the 1962 program at pages 49 and 52-54 for listings.

Another Chronicle, from ‘today’

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From Chronicle: "Directing Glee club members in preparation for the production of "Brigadoon," May 29 and 30, is Theodore Piekos accompanied by Carol Horr, pianist. Rita Arsenault, William Gotha, Marilyn Quill, and William Griffin are singing in the play.

From Chronicle: “Directing Glee club members in preparation for the production of ‘Brigadoon,’ May 29 and 30, is Theodore Piekos accompanied by Carol Horr, pianist. Rita Arsenault, William Gotha, Marilyn Quill, and William Griffin are singing in the play.

The page one article on events coming up for CHS seniors in Class of 1964 began: “Rounding their last bend . . . .” Indeed we were.

In less than seven weeks, we would graduate. During those weeks would be Class Day, Honors Night, the Class Banquet, the senior opera(?), the Senior Prom, and . . . oh, yeah . . . classes, papers, exams . . . as well as dates, parties, trips to the beach, etc. Sometimes, things got pretty hectic.

Among the highlights of the April 24, 1964, Chronicle:
Brendan Montano and Janice Perry (page 1) get gold medals in the Massachusetts State Speech Festival
042464_rjosephphotoFrank Hurley and Rita Arsenault (page 1) ready for lead roles in the upcoming Glee Club presentation of Brigadoon
Paul Rieker (page 2) pens a column examining the efficacy of “trial by jury”
John Dubiel and Bill Devlin (page 3) win superior ratings in the JETS (Junior Engineering Technological Society) Science Fair (“Once you’re a Jet . . . “)
Richard Joseph (page 4) is a sensation as Satan (right) in the Drama Society’s presentation of the 14th century “The True Mistery (sic) of the Passion.”
John Collins (page 5) begins his outstanding senior season as Cathedral’s fastest human
Gene Ryzewicz (page 6) excels on a very different field, as he takes top honors at CHS in the National Prize Math exam.

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The Revue goes on . . . for our last time

From PantherPix: "Please Don't Eat the Daisies," request Mary Perrin, Marilyn McCarthy, and Sue Rouillard to Tim McManus, Ed Callahan, John Moore, Paul Greely, "Fuzzy" Dufresne, and Eddie Lambert.

From PantherPix: “Please Don’t Eat the Daisies,” request Mary Perrin, Marilyn McCarthy, and Sue Rouillard to Tim McManus, Ed Callahan, John Moore, Paul Greely, “Fuzzy” Dufresne, and Eddie Lambert.

On this day (the third Friday in April) 50 years ago, members of our class participating in the Minstrel Revue were anticipating, maybe gladly looking forward to, closing night of the four-day 1964 show. (In 1964, Friday was April 17 and Easter had been celebrated on March 29.)

Thanks to Jacqui Artiano Ruest, we are able to present Minstrel Revue programs from 1964 (and 1963, at which the pictures in PantherPix used in this post were taken). The scans, available on the “Back Then” page (click in the bar just below the main blog header photo), are of program page spreads, two at a time.

Theme of the show was “Cathedral’s version of the World’s Fair” and among the groups performing were “South of the Border,” “Our World’s Fair,” “That’s Amore,” “Hut Sut Group,” “Japanese Group,” “Irish Dancers,” “Typically English,” “Polish Dancers,” and “In an Old Dutch Garden.”

Class president Jim Montanari was master of ceremonies. Among classmates performing specialty numbers were Bill Danoff, Jean Landry, Dianne Dillon, Robert Fitzgerald, Larry Dempsey, Brendan Montano, Mike Reavey, Peggy Morneau, Mary Lou Lattinwille, and Rita Arsenault. Group directors were Ellie Mayotte, Peggy Morneau, Roberta Quiriy, and Theresa Yesu. Jacqui Artiano was supervisor of the make-up crew.

Does anyone have pictures from the 1964 show, or related to it? Or of any other Minstrel Revue? We’ll be putting up the other two programs from our time at CHS very soon.

The programs themselves are telling, of course. Cost $.10. Notice the ads. Some from institutions long gone. No zip codes, but “zones.” No area codes, but “telephone exchanges.” Were you an “RE” or a “ST”? Dreikorn’s bread, in the orange wrap, boasts “Untouched by human hands.”

Were you a performer at the Minstrel Revue? (I doubt they would call the show that now.) Were you a backstage assistant? What do you remember about Minstrel?

From PantherPix: Slipping back into their "barefoot days" are performers Diane Girouard, Mary Lyons, Kathy Kirwin, Joanne Moore, Betty Gordon, Linda Louraine, Ellie Mayotte, Linda Nickerson, Susan Barrett, Ellen McCaffrey, Rosemary Hickey, and Ann McGinity.

From PantherPix: Slipping back into their “barefoot days” are performers Diane Girouard, Mary Lyons, Kathy Kirwin, Joanne Moore, Betty Gordon, Linda Louraine, Ellie Mayotte, Linda Nickerson, Susan Barrett, Ellen McCaffrey, Rosemary Hickey, and Ann McGinity.

From PantherPix: CHS Rockettes include Kathy Hamel, Betty Gordon, Jackie LaPlante, Peggy Morneau, Georgia Gotha, and Sue Know.

From PantherPix: CHS Rockettes include Kathy Hamel, Betty Gordon, Jackie LaPlante, Peggy Morneau, Georgia Gotha, and Sue Know.

From PantherPix: "Tico-Tico artists" from the 1963 Revue are Diane Kruger, Rory Lyons, Bonnie Keane, Sue McKenna, Louise Brochu, Roberta Quiry, Mary Ulrich, and Joanne Carroll.

From PantherPix: “Tico-Tico artists” from the 1963 Revue are Diane Kruger, Rory Lyons, Bonnie Keane, Sue McKenna, Louise Brochu, Roberta Quiry, Mary Ulrich, and Joanne Carroll.

‘Today’s’ Chronicle — 50 years ago

CCheader032564The March 25, 1964, edition of Cathedral Chronicle led with an article about an upcoming annual science seminar that would bring together student representatives of 11 Catholic high schools, and feature about 40 workshops. Some 60 CHS students were involved.

RyzewiczThe front page also included an article about the two-day convention of the Massachusetts Association of Student Councils, due for April 3 and 4, and the announcement that “Cathedral’s version of the World’s Fair” would the theme of annual Minstrel Revue. Inside, there was a feature on fashion by Charlotte Chartier, an item about “Beatlemania,” a list of classmates accepted into colleges and nursing schools, and brief reports on the fates of the CHS basketball teams. The “Fem Hoopers” finished 6-3, and the boys’ team ended its season with a two-point loss in the Western Massachusetts championship.

Below are links to jpg’s of each of that Chronicle‘s six pages. Thanks to Mitchell “Mick” Ogulewicz, who was able to provide all editions of the Chronicle 1960-64, except for the May and June 1964 editions. Nancy Thompson, however, was kind enough to keep those two issues and provide them, too. (Please let us know if you have any problems viewing these pages.)

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These pages are somewhat crudely put together by combining scans of half pages. In time, I hope they are better presented. I hope to be able over the next few weeks to be able to put up links to all of the 1963-64 editions and then to all those from our freshman, sophomore, and junior years. They are an incredible treasure. Thanks again to Mick and Nancy!

Washington, DC trip

Fifty years ago, 47 members of our class traveled to Washington, DC, with stops in Philadelphia on the way south and New York City on the way north. Our group was led by faculty member Sr. Maria de Lourdes, Sister Anita Mary (?), Mr. Michael Gelinas and Mr. Donald White.

DCtrip_advanceMy memory is less than what it once was, or so I like to think, but I will do my best to recount the itinerary. But I encourage those with more vivid recollections of the trip to post them. Please consider this a draft and not a final product. The article from the Dec. 20, 1963, Chronicle at right may also help. (Click to enlarge)

We traveled, as always, on a Peter Pan Bus. Our first destination was in Philadelphia where I recall seeing the Liberty Bell. We may have visited Constitution Hall as well. Then on to Washington, DC.

I do not recall our hotel, how many days we were in Washington or all the places we visited. So you are encouraged to post insights and opinions, factual additions or modifications as you want. I recall we visited:

(1) The Capitol where we were greeted by Congressman Boland and Senator Ted Kennedy. Several of us sat in Senator Goldwater’s seat in the Senate Chamber. I think Kevin O’Malley was bold enough to open the desk top out of curiosity. (Editor’s note: Here are identifications, including a couple of what we hope are good guesses. Comment if you have changes or answers.)

1- Brendan Montano, 2 - George Shannon, 3 - Richard Minnie(?), 4 - John Moore, 5 - John Dion, 6 - Edmond Crowley, 7 - Mark Rivest, 8 - Bob McCann, 9 - Joe Fallon, 10 - Paul Donahue, 11 - Bob Stroshine, 12 - Jeff Powers, 13 - Kevin O’Malley, 14 - John Stocks, 15 - John Foley, 16 - Sen. Edward Kennedy, 17 - Sister Marie de Lourdes, 18 - Sister Anita Mary, 19 - Rep. Edward Boland, 20 - Mike Reavey, 21 - James Gastone, 22 - Joe Gelinas, 23 - Bill Danoff, 24 - Tom Counos, 25 - Richard Grogan, 26 - Bill McDonald, 27 - Paul Bueker, 28 - Ed Callahan, 29 - Paul Greeley, 30 - Barbara Deknis(?), 31 - Maureen Pollard, 32 - Barbara Karzmarczyk, 33 - Suzanne Rouillard, 34 - Marty Axt, 35 - Kathy Modry, 36 - Peggy Morneau, 37 - Andrea Hayes, 38 - Patricia Manning, 39 - Kathy Williams, 40 - Mary Clark, 41 - Lynn Albano, 42 - Janet Szczebak, 43 - Pat Raimondi, 44 - Mary Ann Popec, 45 - Donald White, 46 - Michael Gelinas, 47 - Angelina Cardaropoli, 48 -  Judith Salmond, 49 - Mary Perrin, 50 - Patricia Matthews, 51 - Barbara Mooney, 52 - Joann Moore, 50 - Kathy Kirwin

1- Brendan Montano, 2 – George Shannon, 3 – Richard Minnie(?), 4 – John Moore, 5 – John Dion, 6 – Edmond Crowley, 7 – Mark Rivest, 8 – Bob McCann, 9 – Joe Fallon, 10 – Paul Donahue, 11 – Bob Stroshine, 12 – Jeff Powers, 13 – Kevin O’Malley, 14 – John Stocks, 15 – John Foley, 16 – Sen. Edward Kennedy, 17 – Sister Marie de Lourdes, 18 – Sister Anita Mary, 19 – Rep. Edward Boland, 20 – Mike Reavey, 21 – James Gastone, 22 – Joe Gelinas, 23 – Bill Danoff, 24 – Tom Counos, 25 – Richard Grogan, 26 – Bill McDonald, 27 – Paul Bueker, 28 – Ed Callahan, 29 – Paul Greeley, 30 – Barbara Deknis(?), 31 – Maureen Pollard, 32 – Barbara Karzmarczyk, 33 – Suzanne Rouillard, 34 – Marty Axt, 35 – Kathy Modry, 36 – Peggy Morneau, 37 – Andrea Hayes, 38 – Patricia Manning, 39 – Kathy Williams, 40 – Mary Clark, 41 – Lynn Albano, 42 – Janet Szczebak, 43 – Pat Raimondi, 44 – Mary Ann Popec, 45 – Donald White, 46 – Michael Gelinas, 47 – Angelina Cardaropoli, 48 – Judith Salmond, 49 – Mary Perrin, 50 – Patricia Matthews, 51 – Barbara Mooney, 52 – Joann Moore, 50 – Kathy Kirwin

(2) The Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.
(3) The JFK grave at Arlington Cemetery.  I was privileged to lay a wreath at the grave on behalf of our group.

DCtrip_wreath(4) The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier(s).
(5) The Army Mess Hall at Arlington. Army food was not a recruiting tool, in my opinion.
(6) The memorials for Presidents Washington, Lincoln, and Jefferson. Had there been a Franklin Roosevelt Memorial at the time we would have spent several hours there channeling Franklin and Eleanor.
(7) The “Catacombs”?

We had some free time in the evenings and I recall visiting the Goldwater for President Headquarters  with Bill McDonald (?), Kevin O’Malley and John Moore (?) where we collected campaign paraphernalia for future distribution.

Our trip home included an overnight stop in New York City where we stayed at the Commodore Hotel (now Trump Tower) located at Lexington and 42nd Street. I think we visited the American Museum of Natural History and The Guggenheim Museum of Modern Art. We enjoyed lunch at an Automat. Incredibly, we were permitted to roam NYC streets after dark. I recall some of us (all?) visited Times Square and saw some pretty strange stuff. I do not recall who else visited these precincts, but that is just as well.

While driving north several of us displayed Goldwater for President posters in the bus windows only to incur the wrath of Sr. Maria de Lourdes who ordered us to remove them.

 

 

‘Ladies and gentlemen — the Beatles!’

For four weeks up until February 1, 50 years ago, the #1 song in the U.S. was “There! I’ve Said It Again” by Bobby Vinton. Then things changed. For the next 14 weeks, the #1 song was a Beatles song. First, “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” then “She Loves You” and “Can’t Buy Me Love.”

Beatles_Ed1964Sunday, February 9, 50 years ago, attention riveted on the Ed Sullivan Show and the Beatles’ first appearance on American TV. Did you watch? The February 28, 1964, edition of Cathedral Chronicle had no mention of the Beatles. How big a deal were they at school? Among your friends?

Sandra_BruschiRingo_autographThe March 25, 1964, issue of the Chronicle, however, contained an article (click image of article to enlarge) about classmate Sandra Bruschi getting an autograph of Ringo, through the auspices of a family friend, while Sandy and her family were vacationing in Miami Beach. The Beatles were in Miami Beach at the time as well.

She brought a photo of the “Fab Four,” with the inscription “To Sandy and Helene [her sister], with love, The Beatles, Ringo Starr,” to school where it was on display for a day in Fr. Bourque’s classroom.

The Minstrel Revue senior year, in April, did not ignore the Beatles, certainly. In a segment entitled “The English Cross the Channel for a Visit,” there was a “Typically English” group, the song “Charade,” and “The Four Chaps” doing “Something Sophisticated.” Bill Danoff, Larry Dempsey, and Brendan Montano often performed for us. But the Beatles were not a trio. On this one occasion, they added Mike Reavey.  Mike recalls they wore wigs and probably performed a Beatles song, though, as he says, “I did not sing a note.” Early lip synch.

This is a picture of The Four Chaps (l-r): Larry Dempsey, Bill Danoff, Mike Reavey, and Brendan Montano, culled from the Minstrel Revue program and slightly edited.

4chaps_BeatlesAnyone remember more about their performance? Oh, for video cameras back then. Did anyone ever take “movies”?

 

CHS maze

CHSmap_1stfloor

CHSmap_upperfloorsThe Student Handbook contained schematic drawings of Cathedral, which many of you must have used, at least as freshmen, to get around. . . right. What a maze it was and what a crowded one!

Schedlue_classesAs the schedlue (sic) at right shows, we were given _four minutes_ to get from class to class. Not too bad if you’re going from 212 to 308 or something. But what about when you had class in the science wing and had to get back into the main section, a floor or two down? Or worse, the gym! ‘Scuse me! Coming through!

Very early losses

We lost two classmates before they even became juniors.

RMcGurkFifty-two years ago, on this date, a Thursday then, we awoke and learned, or came to school and found out, that Richard McGurk had died the night before. Richie had been wounded when he and his brother, Raymond, a freshman at Cathedral, were, according to the police, “horsing around” in the family kitchen. It was sad and shocking news, as the headline in the January 18, 1962, Springfield Union shows.

RMcGurk_Uhed

RMcGurk_UtextThe article, at right (click to enlarge), reported that Richie had died on a Mercy Hospital operating table at 9:29 pm the previous night, less than two hours after he had been stabbed, near the heart. His brother, Ray, the article said, “collapsed from shock following the accident” and was admitted to Mercy Hospital in fair condition.

RMcGurk_obit_DN011862We didn’t have official grief counselors come to school to help students and teachers in their grief, as is common today. But it is likely that nuns and priests, and fellow students, played that role and likely well. Perhaps there were official gatherings at school at which prayers were said, and prayers said in various classes, but many students probably went through that Thursday and Friday, and then the wake Friday night and funeral Saturday morning, in a daze. Richie’s obit, from the Daily News of January 18, 1952, is above left (click to enlarge).

GPlanteGPlante_CC092961No mention of Richie’s death appeared in the Cathedral Chronicle, perhaps because of the tragic circumstances and because most everyone knew what had happened. There was, in the September 29, 1961, issue of the Chronicle, a few months earlier, notice of the death of Gerard Plante on August 27 (above right, click to enlarge). The tribute to Gerard bore the rather odd title “Frosh Departs . . .”

Gerard had been hospitalized for several weeks prior to his death. His death, then, was less shocking than that of Richie McGurk’s, but no less sad. As an indication of his pleasure at being a student at Cathedral and a member of our class, he was buried in his uniform blazer.