Fall 2014 - Regis High School

Transcription

Fall 2014 - Regis High School
REGIS
A L U M N I
N E W S
M A G A Z I N E
I S H I G H 1S C H O O L
2
VOLUME
80R E| G
NUMBER
FALL 2014
Contents
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President’s Report
Faculty & Staff
The Regis Centennial Celebration:
Still A Work of Mercy
Income, Expenses, and the Regis Fund
Alumni Order of the Owl
Alumni Class Totals
Alumni Parents Order of the Owl
Friends & Widows Order of the Owl
Foundations & Corporations
Strong to Endure:
Second Century Campaign Donors
Matching Gift Companies
Patricia Hannon Ignatian Educator
Award Winner
Prowlings
Milestones
Events Calendar
Regis Renews New York City
Landmark Status on 100th
Anniversary
REGIS
James E. Buggy
Vice President for Development
Thomas A. Hein ’99
Director of Communications
Vincent Catapano ’96
Alumni Director
Noel Selegzi ’84
Annual Fund Director
Paul Atkinson ’71
Major Gifts & Planned Giving
Brianne Kilpatrick
Database Manager
Jennifer Reeder
Executive Assistant
Melanie Seltzer
Special Events Coordinator
Regis High School and The Office of
Development reserve the right to publish
and edit all submissions as space permits.
Submissions must be sent to:
Regis High School
The Office of Development
55 East 84th Street
New York, NY 10028-1221
Phone: (212) 288-1142
Above: The Regis Quadrangle lightpoles showcase centennial year banners.
On the Cover: U.S. Senator Charles Schumer addresses students at a September 15
ceremony re-dedicating Regis High School as a historic landmark, and lauds “the next
100 years of great Jesuit education here in New York City.” Read more on page 31.
(Left to right) Rev. Philip G. Judge, S.J. (President), Peter Labbat (Chair, Regis Board
of Trustees), Brian Kavanagh ’85 (New York State Assemblymember),
U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, Gary Tocchet (Principal), Christina Davis (Chair, NY
Landmarks Preservation Foundation), Daniel Garodnick (NYC Council Member),
U.S. Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney, Meenakshi Srinivasan (Chair, NYC
Landmarks Preservation Commission)
FA L L 2014
President’s Report
Happy Birthday to Us!
We have been celebrating the Regis
Centennial since our kick-off at the
Stock Exchange last January. The first
day of our second century of classes,
however, actually fell on September
15th, which is as close as we can come
to celebrating an actual birthday.
We commemorated the occasion by
unveiling a new landmark designation
plaque and ringing the first “school
bell” of our next hundred years.
Celebrations will continue to stretch
ahead, particularly with our sold-out Gala dinner at the Waldorf
and our Centennial Mass of Thanksgiving with Cardinal Dolan.
The anniversary events will live on as happy memories for a long
time. While highpoints mark great moments, I remain more
grateful for the steady and quiet support our alumni, family and
friends continue to offer.
The Foundress and her family began and sustained for many
years an incredible project. We made it to our hundredth year,
though, only because of the support Regis receives from you
each and every year, along with funds raised through capital
campaigns, like the Strong to Endure Second Century Campaign
highlighted in these pages, and planned gifts. In an age of great
uncertainty for Catholic education, it is only because of you
that we can march forward with great confidence into a second
century. Think of the legacy we celebrate:
• Over 11,000 graduates who received the finest Catholic
secondary education available for free
• Almost 500 immigrant and inner city middle school boys
given a real shot at excellence in the first decade of the REACH
program
• The dedication and loyalty of an exceptional faculty: together,
the legendary Fr. Stephen Duffy and Mr. John Connelly ’56
alone gave more than a century of service to Regis!
Happy birthday, indeed—may there be many, many more!
As always, this fall issue of the Regis Alumni News provides
an opportunity to highlight the gifts of the past year, and in a
special way the financial gifts that are absolutely essential to our
ability to provide the full scholarships that have given so many
promising young men an exceptional formation for service. We
should all take justifiable pride that in a year where we concluded
a $41 million dollar capital campaign we also managed to
grow the Annual Fund by 6%, and exceeded our goal for the
Centennial Gala in a big way, with sponsorships and receipts in
excess of $2 million. What an incredible realization of generosity!
Extraordinary as it is, we know also that continuing the legacy
means sustaining this level of commitment in the years ahead.
The Regis Fund, the investment fund that we rely on to make up
the difference between annual giving and the school’s operating
costs, is still smaller than we require to fund the 50% or so of
operating budget we need it to. We continue to look for major
gifts and bequests to build up the fund. In the meantime we look
for a growth in annual generosity every year to keep ahead of our
operating needs and to keep up with inflation and improvements
to our academic program. Please never doubt that whatever gifts
you make are essential to Regis and its work.
Any anniversary offers an invitation to look back in wonder and
gratitude. A hundred years provide a lot to review. In the spirit of
the Ignatian Examen, we look back primarily to notice where God
has been at work, particularly when we have missed him in the
midst of ordinary busy-ness. Please know that the Annual Report
listing of names and gifts here and online provides me with
moments of profound gratitude, not so much for the donations
which we have received, as much as for the love and concern for
the work of a Regis education that they signify. With that love
and concern to rely upon, I am not only grateful but extremely
hope-filled as we begin the next century of service. Please know
you are in my prayers as we continue to celebrate!
• Service to the Church including ten Archbishops, Bishops and
Abbots and hundreds of priests, that continues today with
Regis alumni seminarians for the Jesuits, New York, Rockville
Center, and Trenton, to name a few.
• Outstanding achievement in fields from medicine to law to
government and diplomatic service to education to business
and the arts and contributions to society recognized with
awards from the Presidential Medal of Freedom to the Pulitzer
Prizes to Tonys and Oscars.
Philip Judge, S.J. ’80
President
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REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Faculty & Staff
ADMINISTRATION
ACADEMIC DEPARTMENTS
The Office of the President
Rev. Philip Judge, S.J. ’80 (14)
President
REACH Program
Mr. Todd Austin (10)
Director
Mr. Donald Allison (7)
Vice President for Finance
Mr. Douglas Eickman ’05 (5)
Academic Dean for Mathematics
Rev. James Croghan, S.J. (4)
Director of Ignatian Identity Programs
Mr. Alan Garcia ’08 (1)
Dean of Student Recruiting & Admissions
Ms. Johanna O’Hare (8)
Business Office Accountant
Mr. Kyle Mullins ’05 (3)
Academic Dean for English/Langauge Arts
Ms. Rachel Rivin (6)
Human Resources Administrator
Information Technology
Mr. Joseph Amatrucola (14)
Director of Technology
Mrs. Elisa Zamora P’01 (11)
Administrative Assistant to the President
The Office of the Principal
Dr. Gary Tocchet (9)
Principal
Mr. Christopher Croce (11)
Web Developer/DBA/Inf. Manager
Mr. José Machuca ’92 (7)
Senior Systems Administrator
Rev. Ian Gibbons, S.J. (1)
Assistant Principal
Mr. Joshua Travatello (2)
Systems Administrator
Mrs. Mary Henninger P’93’98 (17)
Academic Services Coordinator
Library
Mrs. Diane Del Priore (7)
Librarian
Mrs. Aida Mergeche (16)
Administrative Assistant to the Principal
Mrs. Patricia Peelen P’81 (35)
Main Office Coordinator
The Office of Development
Mr. James Buggy (13)
Vice President for Development
Mr. Thomas A. Hein ’99 (4)
Director of Communications
Mr. Vincent Catapano ’96 (7)
Alumni Director
Mr. Edwin Galarza (2)
Library Aide
Maintenance
Mr. Eric McGregor (15)
Superintendent
Mr. Anthony Keith (19)
Staff Supervisor
Mr. Andrzej Jaworski (13)
Mr. Demetrius Whistleon (10)
Mr. Terrence Boone (5)
Ms. Tammy Williams (3)
Mr. Noel Selegzi ’84 (2)
Annual Fund Director
Mr. Paul Atkinson ’71 (2)
Major Gifts & Planned Giving
Ms. Melanie Seltzer (2)
Events Coordinator
Ms. Brianne Kilpatrick (4)
Database Manager
Ms. Jennifer Reeder (13)
Executive Assistant
Admissions
Mr. Eric DiMichele (33)
Director of Admissions
Mrs. Mary Henninger P’93’98 (17)
Assistant to the Director of Admissions
RELIGIOUS FORMATION
Campus Ministry
Rev. Mark Lane, C.O. (1)
Director of Campus Ministry
Rev. Anthony Andreassi, C.O. (12)
Ms. Carol Remsen (15)
Mr. Jeffrey Marcucio (4)
Ms. Robyn Prezioso (9)
Ms. Mary Katherine Sheena (7)
Freshman Retreat Coordinators
Christian Service Program
Rev. Anthony Andreassi, C.O. (12)
Director
Ms. Christine Badi (7)
Mr. Edmund Dee (4)
Mr. Justin Kiczek (4)
Ms. Meghan Kiernan (8)
Computer Science
Mr. Joseph Amatrucola (14)*
Ms. Caroline Christie (10)
Mr. Christopher Croce (11)
Mr. José Machuca ’92 (7)
English
Mr. Brendan Coffey (3)
Rev. Philip Judge, S.J. ’80 (14)
Mr. James Kennedy ’02 (7)
Mr. Justin Kiczek (4)
Mr. Kyle Mullins ’05 (3)
Mr. Joseph Quinn ’04 (4)
Dr. John Tricamo (44)*
Mr. Michael Vode (34)
Fine Arts
Ms. Karin Lewis-Miller (4)
Mr. James Phillips (31)*
Ms. Robyn Prezioso (9)
History
Rev. Anthony Andreassi, C.O. (12)
Mr. Andre Anselme (31)
Rev. Arthur Bender, S.J. ’67 (25)*
Mr. Eric DiMichele (33)
Ms. Kaitlin Landrein (1)
Mr. John Murphy (27)
Ms. Gena Reisig (5)
Dr. Gary Tocchet (9)
Foreign Languages
Mr. Pedro Acosta (14)*
Ms. Donna Basile (21)
Mr. David Bonagura ’99 (1)
Dr. Fernando Gomez Herrero (2)
Mr. John Hannon ’05 (2)
Dr. Eelka Lampe (22)
Mathematics
Ms. Lee Chua (11)
Mrs. Donna Davis (7)
Mr. Douglas Eickman ’05 (5)
Ms. Meghan Kiernan (8)
Mr. Brendan MacDonnell (18)
Ms. Irina McNamara (12)
Ms. Carol Remsen (15)*
Physical Education
Mr. Kevin Cullen (25)
Mr. John Donodeo (33)*
Science
Mr. Frank Barona (21)*
Dr. William Carew (14)
Ms. Kathryn Humora (5)
Mr. Jeffrey Marcucio (4)
Dr. Luca Matone (8)
Dr. Ralph Nofi (24)
Mr. Carl Webster (2)
Theology
Mr. Anthony Conti (30)
Rev. James Croghan, S.J. (4)
Rev. Ian Gibbons, S.J. (1)
Mr. Thomas Hannon ’76 (33)
Fr. Mark Lane, C.O. (1)
Mr. James Scacalossi ’83 (24)*
Ms. Mary Katherine Sheena (7)
Dr. Maureen Wallin (15)
STUDENT SERVICES
The Office of the Dean of Students
Mr. Bradley Serton (6)
Dean of Students
Mrs. Mary Ellen Brockmeyer P’96 (8)
Administrative Assistant to the Dean
Department of Athletics
Mr. Kevin Cullen (25)
Director
Mr. Kyle Mullins ’05 (3)
Assistant Director
Mr. Andre Anselme (31)
Advisor
Guidance Department
Mrs. Maura Skrapits (9)
Director of Guidance
Ms. Christine Badi (7)
Guidance Counselor
Mr. Edmund Dee (4)
Guidance Counselor
Mr. Christopher Febles (7)
Senior Guidance Counselor
Ms. Hee-Sun Hong (22)
Director of College Counseling
Ms. Kelly Rodriguez (1)
Administrative Assistant
Mr. Daniel Adler ’10 (1)
Alumnus Mentor
Mr. David Desrosiers ’10 (1)
Alumnus Mentor
Psychologist’s Office
Dr. Ralph Nofi (24)
Clinical Psychologist
Bookstore
Mr. Andre Anselme (31)
*Denotes Department Chair
FA L L 2014
T H E R E G I S C E N T E N N I A L C E L E B R AT I O N
Still a Work of Mercy
Why do we maintain a concern for
serving families with financial need?
The simple answer, of course, is that
it’s in the DNA of Regis. But this deserves
more explanation and reflection.
by Todd Austin
Director, The REACH Progam
The founders of the very first Jesuit colleges
in mid-16th century Europe engineered
the basic genome of Jesuit secondary
education. These schools shared the
following traits: a curriculum emphasizing
the humanities and Christian formation;
funded by major gifts of public or private
benefactors; staffed by Jesuits who would
not accept remuneration for their work;
free of charge; and in the words of Ignatius,
“for everybody, rich and poor” (and
presumably all those in between).
Regis is the rare Jesuit school founded
after the 18th century to adopt the model
of free education. Its Foundress and
her Jesuit partners established an allscholarship school for reasons similar to
those of the first schools: they wanted to
ensure that families with modest incomes
would not incur the heavy burden
of purchasing a Jesuit education and
guarantee that poor families would have
access to such a quality education. In the
tradition of Jesuit ministries, Regis would
be an enduring work of mercy.
Regis continues to place a special emphasis
on serving families with financial need
because we recognize that gifts of mind
and spirit are not restricted to the children
of the wealthy, the highly educated, or the
privileged; rather God’s grace distributes
these gifts without regard to social status
or ethnicity. Our ministry is to prepare
young men with these gifts to serve the
well-being of the Church, the city, and the
world by increasing their learning and
virtue. To do this well in New York City
in 2014 it is not enough to simply offer a
free education; we need to seek out those
exceptional students with the greatest
need wherever they are. Otherwise, Regis’s
Upper East Side location and academic
reputation put us at risk of drawing too
many sons of well-positioned Catholics
and too few sons of those striving to secure
a foothold in our society. Ultimately,
we share with all other Jesuit schools a
conviction that Jesuit education benefits
rich and poor students alike as they learn
to lead in their own distinct communities
and in those they share in common, all
in great need of reform. Helping souls—
students directly, and others indirectly—
remains Regis’s first aim.
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REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Regis also emphasizes serving families with
financial need in order to maintain in the
21st century its historical commitment
to serving the Catholic immigrant
community in New York City. Unlike the
earliest organizers of Jesuit schools, Regis’s
Foundress did not establish the school
to bring free Jesuit education to a city
that had no Jesuit schools, but to bring
free Jesuit education to a city where four
already existing Jesuit high schools charged
tuitions that the majority immigrant
population among Catholics could not
afford. It does not appear that Regis
intended at the outset to offer a curriculum
different from those at the other Jesuit
schools; however, not long after the doors
opened it became clear that the free school
could be more selective in its admissions
and would assemble from the immigrant
communities an academically stronger
Reflections on REACH
BY JIM POWER ’57
Jim Power ’57 served on the Regis Board of
Trustees for eleven years, and was Board Chair
when the REACH Program was established.
I am privileged to have attended most of
the ten REACH graduation ceremonies
held to date. The most recent took place
last May when three dozen academicallygifted eighth graders [all from very modest
economic circumstances; many foreignborn] gathered in the Regis auditorium
to celebrate the completion of their threeyear journey. Honors were awarded; high
school scholarships/grants were announced;
Regis faculty and students high-fived their
individual mentees; parents and siblings
cheered; and each REACH graduate
presented a red rose to a teary-eyed mother
as he left the stage with his diploma.
The festivities were preceded by a slide
show of numerous photos taken of the
young men at various stages along their
REACH journey. While these photos vividly
confirmed the physical development one
would expect of adolescents over a threeyear span, they failed to depict the far
more marked changes that the REACH
program had made in these young men’s
lives. Their latent intellectual abilities
had been honed. Virtually every boy had
student body. Over time, the rigor of its
curriculum would also gain in strength.
Initially, though, it was Regis’s accessibility
to an immigrant or working-poor
population that would set it apart from the
other schools.
If the Jesuit colleges of the 16th century
engineered the genome of Jesuit secondary
education, we might say that Regis’s
founders reengineered this genetic code in
order to meet an early 20th century need
in New York City—providing the highachieving sons of Catholic immigrants
with an education that would help them
become good servants in the Church,
good civil leaders, and good citizens. An
education capable of producing these
ends for these boys would include the
added benefit of an improved social status
for them and their families. If Regis’s
gained acceptance to a prestigious high
school – overwhelmingly Jesuit schools,
fifteen to Regis! Their self-confidence had
been enhanced by exposure to a variety
of athletic activities, cultural enrichments
and team-building exercises during three
summers of “boot camp” at Scranton
University. Their academic skills had been
reinforced by Saturday advanced placement
sessions conducted by Regis faculty and
student mentors. Their spiritual formation
had been strengthened by exposure to
Ignatian ideals and Jesuit role models.
Individual issues and deficiencies—
academic, emotional or social—had been
identified and addressed by professionals.
And, in all things, these young men had
been constantly reminded that the essence
of leadership is service to others!
As at prior graduation ceremonies, I
had the opportunity to converse with
some of these students and their parents
at a post-graduation reception in the
Regis quadrangle. Once again, as on
prior occasions, I was astounded by the
pride, self-confidence, eloquence—and
appreciation—that these young men
exuded. Their parents’ delight and gratitude
was no less palpable.
In 1914 at Regis’ founding, Catholic New
York was teeming with recent immigrants
who couldn’t conceive of the possibility
Foundress were alive today, she would
certainly see what was a need of the early
20th century is still an urgent need. In
1910, 41% of city residents (1.94 million
people) were foreign born; in 2011 the
city’s immigrant residents accounted
for 37% of the population (3.07 million
people). Although city studies do not
consider the religious affiliation of its
immigrant residents, we can cautiously
estimate that more than 1 million of the
immigrants living in the city today come
from countries with populations that
are overwhelmingly Catholic. Needless
to say, there is no shortage of immigrant
Catholic families in the city who cannot
afford a Jesuit high school education. These
circumstances compel Regis to serve the
high-achieving sons of these Caribbean,
Latin American, Eastern European, West
African, and Pacific Islander families just
that their children might attend a private
college preparatory school. One hundred
years later in a still demographically
diverse New York, these young REACH
graduates confirmed for me the wisdom
of Regis’ foundress in establishing a
tuition-free school. It was truly a gift that
continues to give. About one-third of
REACH’s graduates have earned admission
to Regis over the past ten years. They
constitute about ten percent of today’s
student body. Their academic performance
mirrors that of the student body as a
whole. Without their presence, Regis
would be a much less diverse institution
and a much less representative model of
the Ignatian ideal of tuition-free education
for rich and poor alike.
By any measure, the REACH program has
been a resounding success and has validated
Ignatius’ emphasis on cura personalis as
an essential element of holistic Christian
education. The REACH program is now a
proven model on which Regis can continue
to build in accomplishing its mission of
serving the needy - without compromising
its well-earned reputation as an academic
meritocracy. More importantly, there are
now several hundred young REACH
graduates who have enjoyed a life-altering
experience that will impact them, and
society as a whole, in ways that we cannot
begin to imagine.
FA L L 2014
as the school served similar sons of Irish,
German, and Italian families in the first
decades of the 20th century, continuing a
very American Catholic project.
In the very make-up of Regis and the
earliest Jesuit colleges one can find an
animating force that continues to direct
the growth of our educational community
and encourages our commitment to
serving families with financial need.
Ignatian spirituality—centered on
mission with Christ, the liberating power
of the Holy Spirit, and the ultimacy of
God’s reign—calls us as individuals and
institutions into right relationships with all
of creation, especially with those persons
whose development or full participation
in society is at risk for reasons related
to historical injustices, contemporary
inequalities, or other adverse conditions.
Reflections on REACH
BY FR. CHRISTOPHER
DEVRON, S.J.
Fr. Devron, President of Fordham Preparatory,
served as the first Director of the REACH
Program from 2002 to 2004.
Certain encounters in an educator’s life
make the passage of time and therefore
age painfully clear. I experienced such
a moment last week. I was at the 25th
birthday party of Elliot Ikheloa ’07 when I
ran into two other Regis alumni from the
Class of ’09. As we cheerfully toasted each
other with cold cans of Budweiser, it struck
me that I first met these two young men,
Matthew Ulloa ’09 and Ruben Garcia ’09,
when they were 9 and 10 years old. They
were each members of the inaugural class
of REACH—the group of students I first
recruited to found the program in 2002.
Back then, I had to use all of my persuasive
powers to convince them, and their
understandably protective single mothers, to
embark on a three-week residential academic
camp experience 110 miles away from the
Bronx, at the University of Scranton. Suffice it
to say there were tears, drama, and emotional
distress on the 85th Street sidewalk as buses
pulled away, Scranton-bound.
Thirty-one rising sixth graders joined
Matthew and Ruben that summer, and they
all graduated from REACH three years later.
For Regis, this means prioritizing the
efforts to include these families in our
community, serving their sons well by
meeting them where they truly are,
learning to see the world from their unique
perspectives, and finally welcoming the
mutual transformation that results from
our interpersonal encounter. The more
we strive for the Kingdom in this way, the
better we teach its values to our students
and others.
For all the reasons stated above, Regis gives
special consideration in its admissions
process to competitive applicants from
families who cannot afford a Catholic
education. And REACH, of course,
stands in the vanguard of Regis’s effort
to increase the number of these students
in the school’s applicant pool. Today, the
median income of our REACH families
A dozen earned Regis scholarships. Most
of the other participants were admitted
with sufficient scholarships and financial
aid to attend Xavier, Fordham Prep, the
Loyola School and several other Catholic
high schools throughout New York City.
Matthew and Ruben, after successfully
graduating Regis, matriculated at the
University of Delaware and Marist College,
respectively.
REACH’s success was recently reported
in The Wall Street Journal. The program’s
graduates are now thriving at top tier
colleges and universities—often the first
in their families to earn a degree. It’s been
extraordinary to see some of them now
as recent college graduates. Matthew is
currently employed at Deloitte, and Ruben is
currently seeking a position in the financial
services industry (calling all Wall Street
Regians: he would be a great addition to
your team!).
Since 2002, Matthew and Ruben have
come a long way from their Bronx
neighborhoods and grammar schools,
even though both still live in the borough.
Similarly, I have journeyed away from the
Bronx but find myself back here on the
fertile ground where I recruited so many
of the early REACH members. Now as
president of Fordham Prep, I am thrilled
we have accepted and are able to assist five
REACH graduates in our Class of 2018.
is $44,000, and 92% of the 95 students
have at least one immigrant parent. As
Regis continues to celebrate its Centennial
year, REACH has also achieved its own
century mark. This year, the total number
of Regis scholarships won by REACH
graduates in our first ten years of high
school placement surpassed 100 and now
stands at 102. One can imagine that if
we compared these 102 Regians to the
240 Regians who enrolled in 1914, the
contours of their family stories and the
content of their aspirations would look
much the same.
Much work awaits us in the next ten years,
and the next one hundred, as we share the
gift of a Regis education in accord with our
history and mission.
God’s love and grace lead us onward.
In 2002, I couldn’t have imagined cracking
open a Budweiser at a party with Matthew
and Ruben. I do, however, recall another
vision—even more compelling and
powerful than the successes and accolades
that the program and its graduates have
achieved. I imagined that REACH would
do more than merely create educational
access for the sons of immigrants and
working class families of modest means.
I envisioned an experience through which
these young men would become leaders:
men for others who would help new
generations of young men from families
like their own. I believed REACH, and
Jesuit high school education, would
help them become committed to justice;
generous in their choices to serve those who
suffer; and dedicated to God’s greater glory.
At the birthday party, Matthew told me
that he recently volunteered to serve as
an interviewer for fifth graders applying
to REACH, giving back to the program
which means so much to him. He shared
that he was astounded and amazed by an
encounter with some parents after finishing
his interviews. He had introduced himself as
a founding member of REACH. One of the
fathers told Matthew that his wish, dream
and desire are that someday his son will grow
up to become like him. Suddenly, the painful
awareness of my age disappeared, replaced
by gratitude that God gave me a vision, and I
could see it realized before my very eyes.
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REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Income, Expenses, and
the Regis Fund
The Regis Fund is the investment fund established by Regis alumni, parents and friends. The proceeds of that fund are used to cover the gap
between annual income the school receives and the costs associated with providing a tuition-free Jesuit education to Roman Catholic young men.
OPERATIONS
Revenue and Support
2014
Annual Fund, Alumni Association,
$ 5,508,550
and Parents’ Club
Income from Founders Fund
180,000
Student Activities & Auxiliary Services
1,085,302
Special Programs, Fees, and other Income 978,954
REACH Program
77,535
2013
$ 5,290,778
Sub-Total
$ 7,354,751
Withdrawal from Regis Fund
$ 7,830,341
180,000
1,007,632
750,165
126,176
5,163,454
5,457,535
$12,993,795
$12,812,286
Expenses
2014
Instruction
$ 6,244,070
Administration
2,512,755
Operations and Maintenance
763,764
Development
1,478,957
Student Activities and Auxiliary Services 1,502,794
REACH Program
491,455
2013
$ 6,316,265
2,568,560
765,955
1,284,530
1,397,276
479,700
Total Expenses
$12,812,286
Total Revenue & Support
$12,993,795
REGIS FUND
Amount Invested, Beginning of Year
$58,971,417
$54,517,769
Contributions
Investment Income,
Realized and Unrealized Gains/Losses
7,179,617
9,941,813
5,572,413
6,295,968
Withdrawal to Cover Operating Expenses (5,163,454)
(5,457,535)
Transfer to Money Market Fund
Capital Expenses
(1,772,000)
(554,305)
(921,902)
(404,625)
Amount Invested, End of Year
$67,765,351
$58,971,417
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Mr. Peter Labbat ’83
Board Chairman
Partner, Energy Capital Partners
Rev. Philip G. Judge, S.J. ’80
(Ex-Officio)
President, Regis High School
Dr. Gary J. Tocchet
(Ex-Officio)
Principal, Regis High School
Mr. Dennis M. Baker, S.J.
Society of Jesus, New York Province
Mr. John F. Barry ’96
Executive Director, J.P. Morgan
Mr. Martin S. Bell ’99
Assistant U.S. Attorney,
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of New York
Mrs. Caroline F. Berry
Assistant Headmaster,
The Buckley School
Rev. Christopher J. Devron, S.J.
President, Fordham Preparatory School
Mr. Adrian E. Dollard ’88
Chief Operating Officer,
Qatalyst Partners
Mr. Thomas P. Hanrahan ’68
Partner, Sidley Austin, LLP
Richard W. Johnson, M.D. ’79
P’08’10
Principal, Neuroaxis
Neurosurgical Associates
Mr. Brendan R. McGuire ’94
Assistant U.S. Attorney,
U.S. Attorney’s Office
Southern District of New York
Mr. Gary J. Mezzatesta ’76
President & CEO,
UPP Entertainment Management
Dr. Margaret M. Minson P’88
President, Bishop Kearney High School
Rev. Vincent L. Biagi, S.J.
(Ex-Officio)
Provincial Assistant for
Secondary Education,
NY Province of Sociey of Jesus
Mr. Thierry Porte, ’75
Operating Partner, J.C. Flowers &
Co. LLC
Mr. J. Andrew Bugas P’06 ’08
Partner, Radar Partners
Rev. James Stoeger, S.J.
President, Jesuit Secondary
Education Association
Ms. Kristin A. Cupillari
Dean of Students, Loyola School
Mr. Michael P. Curran ’75
Director, Towers Watson
Mr. Brian G. Smith ’84
Mr. John R. Walsh ’88
Partner, Ernst & Young
Rev. George M. Witt, S.J.
Pastor, Church of St. Ignatius Loyola
FA L L 2014
Alumni Order of the Owl
FOUNDRESS’ CIRCLE
$30,000 +
Mr. Thomas B. Burke ’85 P’17
Mr. Kevin M. Burke ’68
Mr. Vijay B. Culas ’91
Mr. William P. Dickey ’60
Mr. Anthony J. DiNovi, Jr. ’80
Mr. Kenneth C. Hellwig ’51 †
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Judge ’47 †
Mr. Thomas M. Kopczynski ’89
Mr. Peter Labbat ’83
Mr. Martin J. Mannion ’77
Mr. Thomas P. Mulvaney ’42 †
Mr. Joseph L. Reilly ’47 †
Mr. Joseph D. Russo ’60
Mr. John A. Werwaiss ’60
DAVID H. HEARN, S.J. CIRCLE
$15,000 - $29,999
Anonymous (2)
Mr. Paul F. Anderson ’55
Mr. Joseph A. Barbosa ’53
Mr. Robert E. Del Col ’61
Mr. Leo E. Denlea, Jr. ’50
Mr. Anthony J. Domino, Jr. ’80 P’08
Mr. Donald F. Donahue ’68
Mr. Michael J. Dowd ’77
Mr. Henry J. Ferrero, Jr. ’59
Mr. Warren P. Finnerty ’82
Dr. Thomas W. Griffin, M.D. ’64
Mr. John C. Hall ’74
Mr. Kevin S. Huvane ’76
Richard W. Johnson, M.D.’79 P’08’10
Mr. Edward T. Lee ’40 †
Mr. Michael J. McGovern ’80
Mr. Raymond V. O’Brien ’45
Bernard J. Owens III, M.D. ’64
Mr. Timothy M. Reilly ’95
Mr. John J. Roche ’53
Mr. Gerard F. Rubin ’50
Steven W. Ryder, M.D. ’68
Dr. Edward J. Skiko ’53
Mr. Joseph Squarzini, Jr. ’57
Mr. Joseph P. Sullivan ’54
Mr. Lawrence R. Vitale ’80
DISTINGUISHED MEMBER
$7,500 - $14,999
Mr. John F. Barry ’96
Mr. Stephen J. Blewitt ’78
Mr. Curtis W. Brand ’62
Mr. Robert M. Cilento ’02
Mr. Kevin F. Condon ’85
Mr. Michael T. Crimmins ’57
Richard J. Cronin, M.D. ’56
Richard A. D’Amico, M.D., P.A. ’68
Mr. Joseph R. Daly ’36 †
Mr. James S. DeGraw ’80
Mr. Adrian E. Dollard ’88
Mr. Lawrence J. Fey ’75
Mr. Patrick J. Fitzgerald ’78
Mr. Thomas J. Flannery, Jr. ’92
Mr. Fabian J. Fondriest ’79
Mr. John L. Githens ’55
Mr. Thomas P. Hanrahan ’68
John D. Horgan, M.D. ’79
Mr. Kevin P. Kavanagh ’86
Mr. Joseph F. Kelly ’28 †
Mr. James P. Klein ’65
Mr. Robert F. Kopp ’72
Mr. Michael J. Kunz ’81
Mr. Frederick J. Lynch ’82
Joseph A. Mannino, M.D. ’83
Mr. Patrick J. McCarthy ’40
Mr. Peter L. Melz ’80
Mr. Gary J. Mezzatesta ’76
Mr. William J. Miller ’89
Mr. Edwin J. Mills ’70
Mr. Arthur T. Minson, Jr. ’88
Mr. Richard W. Morgner, Jr. ’88
Mr. Daniel F. Murphy, Jr. ’68
Michael A. Nocero, M.D. ’58
Mr. Raymond V. O’Connor ’41 †
Mr. Raymond P. Ohlmuller ’57
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Power ’57
Mr. Sean Reddington ’82
Mr. Mark A. Riely ’68
Mr. Marcos A. Rodriguez ’79
Mr. Anthony J. Salvatore ’71
Mr. and Mrs. Brian G. Smith ’84
Mr. Robert G. Sumberac ’86 P’15
Mr. Charles J. Vaughan ’55
Capt. Thomas E. Walsh , M.D. ’61
Mr. George J. Ziegler ’54 †
MEMBER
$2,500 - $7,499
Anonymous (3)
Mr. Brian Abamont ’94
Mr. Lolan P. Adan ’89
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth F. X. Albers ’45 †
Mr. Morgan R. Aldinger ’95
Mr. John D. Alexander ’67
Mr. Ross F. Amann ’60
Mr. Mark V. Andriola ’10 (J)
Mr. Sean M. Angeles ’99
Mr. Paul C. Atkinson ’71
Mr. Anthony J. Aulisa ’98
Mr. Bruce W. Baber ’72
Mr. Ronald J. Bajit ’84
Mr. Kevin G. Bannon ’87
Mr. Kevin J. Bannon ’70
Dr. James M. Barry ’65
Mr. William A. Bautz ’56
Mr. George W. Bearese ’67
Mr. Arthur J. Beaver ’71
Rev. Msgr. Austin P. Bennett ’41
Mr. Kenneth M. Berger ’80
Mr. William J. Black ’93 (R)
Mr. Kevin Boda ’98
Dr. John T. Boorman ’59
Dr. William M. Bowling ’83
Mr. Daniel K. Boyle ’70
Mr. Richard J. Boyle ’61
Mr. Robert F. Brantl ’71
Mr. Joseph E. Bringman ’76
Mr. Richard Brockmeyer ’97
Mr. David F. Browne ’97
Mr. Benjamin L. Buchanan ’08 (J)
Mr. Francis M. Buono ’83
Philip J. Butera, M.D. ’71
Mr. Thomas E. Butler ’84
Mr. John M. Butler ’88
Mr. John J. Butler ’58
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Byrne ’98
Mr. William C. Cagney ’68 P’98
Mr. Rene M. Calderon ’00
Mr. Anthony P. Canale ’90
Mr. Darren S. Carroll ’89
Mr. Mauro C. Casci ’68
Mr. Kyran E. Cassidy ’80 P’18
Mr. Andrew J. Cavanaugh ’65
Eugene F. Cheslock, M.D. ’57
Mr. Kevin A. Cheung ’09 (J)
Mr. Richard P. Chian ’12 (J)
Mr. James J. Chin ’90
Mr. Kevin F. Clancy ’99
Mr. John P. Collins ’67
Mr. Patrick M. Connorton ’99
Mr. Kevin J. Conroy ’04
Mr. John M. Conroy ’54 P’86’88’96
Mr. John P. Conway ’82
Mr. Shane M. Conway ’97
Mr. James A. Coppola, CPA ’81
Mr. Todd G. Cosenza ’91
Mr. Neil P. Coughlan ’56
Mr. Frank R. Cowan, IV ’95
Mr. William E. Craco ’82
James J. Cummings, M.D. ’74
Kevin J. Curley, M.D. ’86
Mr. Michael P. Curran ’75
Mr. Thomas G. Curran ’67
Mr. James P. Curry ’87
Mr. John Daltner ’56
Joseph C. D’Antonio, M.D. ’68
Mr. Joseph G. Davis ’83
Robert P. DeCresce, M.D. ’67
Mr. Jeantou A. DeGrammont ’93
Mr. Harry B. DeMaio ’52 P’80
Mr. Christopher A. DeMarco ’83
Mr. Charles S. Detrizio ’84
Mr. Egidio E. DiBenedetto ’08 (J)
Mr. Brendan Dignan ’93
Mr. Donald F. Dodd ’54
Mr. Charles F. Dodge ’91
Mr. Michael G. Doheny ’87
Mr. Adrian W. Doherty, Jr. ’70
Mr. James F. Donohue ’90
Mr. Edwin J. Dorchak ’69
Mr. Desmond M. Douglas ’88
Richard L. Doyle, M.D. ’53
Mr. Martin F. Doyle ’74 P’11
Mr. Sean M. Doyle ’11 (J)
Mr. Kevin O. Driscoll ’91
Mr. Thomas E. Dudar ’74
Thomas B. Edwards, M.D. ’75
Mr. Christopher M. Elms ’02
Mr. James C. Elustondo ’12 (J)
Mr. Daniel Ennis ’98
Mr. Stephen R. Esposito ’98
Mr. Harold C. Eylward ’94
Mr. Donald J. Fager ’48
Mr. Kieran J. Fallon ’84
Mr. John D. Feeley ’79
Dr. Michael J. Feiler ’90
Mr. William H. Ferguson ’83
Dr. Eugene M. Ferraro ’73
Mr. John H. Ferris, III ’07 (J)
Mr. Christopher G. Ferzli ’11 (J)
Mr. John D. Finnegan ’67
Michael P. Fitzgerald, M.D. ’70 P’10
Mr. Brian P. Fitzgerald ’53
Mr. Robert A. Flatow ’12 (J)
Mr. Thomas F. Flood ’85 (R)
Mr. John J. Flynn ’56
Mr. James P. Fogarty ’86
John V. Forrest, M.D. ’58
Dr. and Mrs. Edward E. Foster ’57
Mr. James E. Foy ’68
A. Peter Frank, Esq. ’60
Mr. Alexander Gallagher ’09 (J)
Mr. Kevin G. Galligan ’01
Mr. James J. Gartland ’97
Mr. C. Travers Garvin ’93
Mr. Brian F. Gavin ’87
Mr. John Giambrone ’13 (J)
Mr. Frederic J. Giordano ’88
Mr. Sean J. Glennan ’01
Mr. Ramon Javier Gonzalez ’08 (J)
Mr. Peter J. Gordon ’73
Mr. Alexander J. Gray ’75
Mr. Cornelius J. Grealy ’76
Mr. Donald W. Gross ’43
Mr. Rene M. Haas ’67
Mr. James J. Hagan ’51
Mr. Leland A. Harrs ’83 P’15
Joseph P. Hart, M.D. ’86
Mr. Vincent W. Hartnett ’67
Mr. Anthony A. Hauck ’83
Mr. Robert J. Hausen, Jr. ’11 (J)
Mr. John R. Hein ’02 (J)
Mr. Christian D. Hernandez ’11 (J)
Donald T. Hess, Jr. M.D. ’82
Thomas J. Hickey, P.E., Esq. ’53 GP’10
Mr. John J. Higgins ’51
Mr. James K. Higgins ’63
Mr. Roland Hlawaty ’83
Mr. William J. Hogan ’85 P’15
Mr. Kieran J. Hughes ’94
Mr. Emil A. Iannaccone ’60
Dr. William T. Irwin ’88
Mr. Andrew H. Jackson ’57
Mr. John D. James ’62
Mr. David V. Janny ’79
Mr. Colin K. Jost ’00
Mr. Michael E. Kane ’78
Mr. Thomas M. Kasputys ’61
Mr. Philip J. Kehl ’68
Mr. Robert T. Kelley ’93
Mr. Thomas E. Kelly ’64
Mr. Francis J. Kelly ’72
Mr. Thomas R. Kelly ’68
Mr. William M. Kelly ’71
Mr. Christopher G. Kelly ’77
Mr. John P. Kelsh ’85
Mr. John G. Kemmer ’60
Mr. J. Donald Kennedy ’68
Mr. Stephen M. Kenny ’88
Mr. Henry V. Kensing ’51
Mr. Peter L. Kern ’58
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Kilkelly ’78
Hon. John G. Koeltl ’63
Mr. Dan C. Kozusko ’96
Mr. Alan E. Kraus ’71
Mr. William A. Kwan ’99
Thomas G. Larkin, M.D. ’77
Mr. Gregory Larsen ’77
Mr. Luke C. Latella ’10 (J)
Mr. Jonathan R. Lavy ’97
Mr. Patrick J. Lawler ’57
Dr. John P. Lawler ’51
9
10
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Mr. Ryan T. Lawless ’12 (J)
Mr. John C. Lellis ’63
Mr. Robert M. Leonard ’70
Mr. Gregory D. Liguori ’07 (J)
Mr. Stephen T. Loebs ’78
Mr. Joseph P. Logozzo ’88
Mr. Walter A. Looney ’68
Mr. Christopher R. Lowney ’76
Eugene M. Lugano, M.D. ’67
Mr. Joseph T. Lynaugh ’57
Mr. Michael P. Lynch ’01
Mr. Stephen A. Malone ’67
Mr. Thomas C. Mandia ’80
Mr. Michael C. Mangan ’95
Mr. Paul T. Manwell ’95
Dr. Joseph P. Marchese ’50
Mr. Robert S. Marjan ’72
Mr. John E. Martin ’70
Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Martin ’59
Edward L. Marut, M.D. ’66
Dr. Romeo B. Mateo ’81 P’13
Mr. Michael J. Mazzeo ’07 (J)
Mr. Joseph C. McAleer ’77
Mr. Michael F. McCabe ’00
Mr. Ed J. McCabe ’01
Mr. George G. McCann ’67
Mr. Kevin W. McCarthy ’85
Mr. Donal F. McCarthy ’51 P’81
Mr. James F. McCue ’89
Mr. Vernon C. McDermott ’85
Mr. Robert N. McDonald ’70
Mr. William J. McGill ’45
Raymond J. McGoldrick, M.D. ’84
Mr. Brendan T. McGovern ’94
Mr. John O. McGuinness ’82
Mr. Brendan R. McGuire ’94
Mr. Raymond G. McGuire ’56
Mr. Robert J. McKee ’80
Mr. Sandro McMullan ’10 (J)
Mr. Kieran B. Meagher ’62
Mr. Joseph M. Mecane ’90
Mr. John L. Miscione ’70
Mr. Kevin T. Molloy ’88
Mr. Francis G. Montgomery ’88
Dr. Thomas J. Moorehead ’65
Dr. Gerard T. Moran ’66
Mr. Edward G. Moran ’56
Mr. George D. Morison ’46
Mr. Christopher J. Moroney ’69
Mr. Peter C. Morreale ’87 P’16
Mr. Timothy J. Morris ’00
Mr. John M. Morriss ’55 P’81
Mr. Dennis M. Moulton ’64
Dr. George J. Moussally ’62
Mr. Timothy M. Murphy ’79
Mr. Gerald E. Murray ’49
Mr. Charles P. Nastro ’60
Mr. John T. Newman ’12 (J)
Mr. John G. Nicolich ’70
Mr. John M. Nonna ’66
Mr. Thomas M. Noone ’96
Mr. Christopher J. Nooney ’00
Francis J. O’Brien M.D.’74
Mr. J. Michael O’Brien ’95
Mr. Thomas M. O’Brien ’50
Mr. Michael J. O’Connor ’50 P’84
Mr. Timothy G. O’Connor ’66
Mr. William P. O’Connor ’61
Mr. Michael P. O’Donnell ’91
Mr. John P. O’Donoghue ’04 (J)
Mr. Robert A. Oliva ’68
Mr. Michael J. O’Malley ’90
Patrick G. O’Malley, M.D. ’83
Mr. Philip F. O’Reilly, Jr. ’86
Mr. James F. O’Reilly ’88
Mr. Michael P. O’Rourke ’72
Mr. John J. O’Rourke ’62
Mr. Michael O’Sullivan ’88
Mr. Michael F. Page ’46
Mr. William G. Passannante ’80
P’10’14
Mr. Dennis E. Petito ’71
Mr. John M. Petitto ’62
Mr. Joseph C. Phayer ’45
Dr. Charles Pignatello ’66
Mr. Carlos A. Pisierra ’84
Gregory M. Pitaro, M.D. ’82 P’16
Mr. Thomas S. Pluta ’85
Christopher P. Poje, M.D. ’77
Mr. Joseph A. Pollicino ’12 (J)
Roger G. Pollock, M.D. ’77
Mr. Robert J. Porada ’91
Mr. Thierry G. Porte ’75
Mr. James P. Power ’86
Mr. John W. Prael ’63
Mihael Puc, M.D. ’83
Mr. Paul D. Quinlan ’95
Mr. Kieran P. Quinn ’67
Mr. John Racanelli ’62
William R. Rate, M.D. Ph.D. ’71
Mr. Louis A. Recano ’66
Mr. Steven T. Rehm ’67
Mr. Henry J. Ricardo ’85
Mr. Edward J. Riedl ’88
Mr. Peter A. Rivera ’74
Michael J. Rizzo, Esq. ’77
Mr. Emmanuel O. Roble ’92
Mr. Michael J. Rocks ’49 (R)
Mr. Brendan Rogers ’13 (J)
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Rogers ’72 P’13
Mr. James G. Rooney ’98
Mr. Joseph G. Roosevelt ’66
Mr. Kenneth J. Ruchala ’91
Mr. David M. Russo ’96
Mr. Martin P. Russo ’86
Mr. Edward J. Ryan ’62
Mr. John K. Ruszczynski ’08 (J)
Mr. Ciro A. Salcedo ’95
Mr. Edward F. Salib ’98
Raymond L. Schettino, M.D. ’76
Mr. John T. Schiavone ’85
Mr. Robert Schirling ’81
Mr. Robert A. Schmidt ’79
Michael J. Schneider, M.D. ’72
Mr. Michael L. Schwarz ’71
Mr. Steven P. Seagriff ’75
Mr. John J. Sesody ’63
Mr. Robert C. Sexton ’74
Mr. Douglas A. Sgarro ’77
Mr. Mark R. Shanahan ’67
Mr. Robert K. Sharp ’67
Mr. Frederick I. Sharp, IV ’80
Mr. John J. Shay, Jr. ’62
Mr. Steven E. Shekane ’93
Mr. Bernard M. Sheridan, Jr. ’50
Joel E. Sherlock, M.D. ’55
Mr. Matthew J. Smalley ’07 (J)
Mr. Matthew S. Smyth ’80
Alumni Class Totals
For a listing of all class gifts, class giving totals, and class
participation totals, visit regis.org/annualreport
Top 10 Most Improved
Class Participation Total
Top 10 Most Improved
Class Giving Total
Class
1999
1945
1952
1951
1987
1940
1966
2001
1980
1954
Class
1960
1966
1953
1957
1964
1979
1954
1976
1958
1987
2013
48.6%
48.1%
61.4%
58.1%
23.4%
26.7%
44.2%
31.1%
76.1%
58.8%
2014
86.0%
68.2%
73.9%
70.0%
34.3%
37.5%
54.0%
36.1%
81.1%
62.1%
Inc.
37.4%
20.1%
12.5%
11.9%
10.9%
10.8%
9.8%
5.0%
5.0%
3.3%
2013
$83,650
43,652
44,935
54,842
50,173
67,657
22,425
39,543
20,724
17,676
2014
$133,565
68,968
70,046
79,027
74,018
86,892
40,760
56,837
37,775
32,775
Increase
$49,915
25,316
25,111
24,185
23,845
19,235
18,335
17,294
17,051
15,099
Mr. Benjamin J. Sokolow ’82
Robert T. Stack, Esq. ’67
Mr. Joseph A. Sullivan ’72
Mr. James D. Sullivan ’85
Mr. John J. Sullivan ’86
Mr. Kevin F. Sullivan ’89
Mr. John J. Sullivan ’97
Mr. John A. Sym ’83
Mr. Edward P. Taibi ’91
Mr. Christian M. Talbot ’93
Ronald J. Taylor, M.D. ’77
Mr. John Thomas ’98
Mr. Robert A. Thoms ’66
Mr. Robert T. Tobin ’57
Mr. Phillip J. Trainor ’54
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Troiano ’88
Dr. John A. Tuccillo ’63
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Turk ’66 P’94
Mr. Joseph V. Tursi ’99
Mr. John F. Tweedy, Jr. ’63
Mr. James T. Tynion, III ’74
Mr. Ludwig J. Umscheid ’55
Mr. Joseph A. Vaccarino ’60
Mr. John N. Van Name, Jr. ’66
Eric J. Velazquez, M.D. ’84
Mr. Benjamin D. Ventura ’93
Mr. Nicholas A. Vernice ’14 (J)
Mr. Sergio J. Villegas ’96
Mr. John R. Walsh ’88
Mr. Christopher Webb ’84
Mr. Johannes W. Weber ’97
Mr. Richard J. Weber ’79
Mr. and Mrs. W. Jeffrey Weinlandt
’64 P’10
Mr. John W. Weiser ’49
Mr. William F. Werwaiss ’57
Mr. John A. W. Werwaiss ’91
Mr. Kevin T. White ’85
John R. Wiencek, Esq. ’85
Mr. Rugare P. Zvoma ’07 (J)
(J) Junior Order of the Owl member
(R) Gift made to the REACH Program
Top 20 Class Participation
Top 20 Class Totals
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
1999
1980
1952
1951
1945
1967
2002
1954
1957
1983
1955
1959
1997
1956
1949
1966
1953
1946
1993
1964
$ 31,520
156,259
21,520
34,601
27,550
73,238
24,647
40,760
79,027
123,139
50,631
38,738
61,917
40,435
24,527
68,968
70,046
9,950
42,775
74,018
86.0%
81.1%
73.9%
70.0%
68.2%
64.0%
63.3%
62.1%
60.7%
59.4%
59.4%
55.7%
55.4%
54.6%
54.6%
54.0%
53.9%
52.6%
52.4%
52.0%
1968 $160,407
1980 156,259
1960 133,565
1983 123,139
1977 101,290
1989 95,145
1985 87,175
1979 86,892
1988 84,256
1991 81,567
1957 79,027
1964 74,018
1967 73,238
1953 70,046
1982 69,950
1966 68,968
1997 61,917
1970 59,946
1976 56,837
1995 55,742
43.6%
81.1%
37.0%
59.4%
40.4%
48.5%
37.8%
49.5%
39.8%
36.4%
60.7%
52.0%
64.0%
53.9%
32.8%
54.0%
55.4%
41.8%
42.9%
36.8%
FA L L 2014
11
Alumni Parents Order of the Owl
DAVID H. HEARN, S.J. CIRCLE
$15,000 - $29,999
Mr. and Mrs. George Austin P’95
Mr. Robert J. Hausen & Ms. Rosemary Berkery P’11
Mr. and Mrs. Alberto Luzarraga, Jr. P’13
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Scagnelli P’04
DISTINGUISHED MEMBER
$7,500 - $14,999
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. J. Andrew Bugas P’06’08
Mr. Manus Clancy and Ms. Margaret Meara
Clancy P’06
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Howe Jr. P’07’12
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Nesi P’05
MEMBER
$2,500 - $7,499
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Buchanan P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Cahill P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Campen P’92’95
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Cannon P’10’11
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Conroy P’04’07’10
Mr. and Mrs. John Dearie P’01
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. DeMarzo P’13
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Elustondo P’12
Dr. Michael G. Faust & Dr. Lizabeth Kopp-Faust P’13
Mrs. Mary Anne Ford P’82’98 GP’12’15 (M)
Mr. and Mrs. Javier Gallardo P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Giannetto P’08’11
Mr. and Mrs. Roger H. Goodspeed P’12
Prof. and Mrs. David L. Gregory P’06
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Griffin P’98
Mr. and Mrs. Sean Harrigan P’98’03
Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Hill P’07
Mr. and Mrs. Gerard Jacob P’09
Dr. and Mrs. Robert C. Jarin P’12
Mr. Donald Judd P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. King P’13
Mr. and Mrs. Sacha Lainovic P’10
Drs. Donald and Maureen Landry P’10
Mr. and Mrs. John Lane P’03
Mr. and Mrs. Luke P. LaValle, Jr. P’95’97
Mr. and Mrs. L. James Lewis P’04
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Lumbra P’12
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lynch P’01
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony R. Malloy P’13
Mr. and Mrs. George McCartney P’97
Mrs. Mary McGinn W’68 P’02’05
Mr. and Mrs. James V. McLaughlin P’12
Mr. and Mrs. Kiaran P. McLaughlin P’12
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Meyer P’04
Drs. Jo Ann and John Middleton P’88’90’92
Mr. Charles Mikulka and Ms. Lisa Milazzo P’06’08
Drs. Craig and Lisa Monsen P’04’11
Mr. Richard O’Connell & Ms. Karen Yost P’99’00’07
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Pereira P’13
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Pitta P’04
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Porter P’99
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Purvis P’96
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Ross P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Rubsam P’71
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Schmitt P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen W. Smith P’04’06’08
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stark P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stenger P’02’06
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Talbot P’05
Mr. and Mrs. Mario Tucciarone P’72
(M) Memorial Gift
Friends & Widows Order of the Owl
FOUNDRESS’ CIRCLE
DAVID H. HEARN, S.J. CIRCLE DISTINGUISHED MEMBER
MEMBER
$30,000 +
$15,000 - $29,999
$7,500 - $14,999
$2,500 - $7,499
Mrs. Anne L. Brant W’35
Mrs. Diana O’Keefe W’52
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Friedlander GP’09
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Murphy GP’10
Mrs. Patricia Kennedy W’49
Mrs. Kathleen Morris W’29
Mrs. Martina Gistaro W’53
Mrs. Mary Tierney W’62
Dr. Elizabeth Serow W’63
Ms. Zita Millett
Ms. Ellen Dunn
Foundations & Corporations
Ahold Financial Services
Amazon
American Endowment Foundation
Broadway Video
Central Park Management
Charitas Americas Foundation
Citizens Bank Foundation
Cupillari Charitable Foundation
Dalio Family Foundation
David A. and Mildred H. Morse Charitable Trust
Dominican Academy
Employee’s Community Fund of Boeing Company
IBM Employee Services Center
Ienterprises, Inc.
Ikaria
Josephine Lawrence Hopkins Foundation
Legal Leads & Sales
Masonite Mission of Manhattan
Maxim Group LLC
McMahon Martine & Gallagher
Men’s Day, Inc.
Mulvaney Family Foundation
Mutual of America
Network For Good
View the full listing for all Annual Report
categories online at regis.org/annualreport
New York Community Trust
New York Province of the Society of Jesus
Patrick J. Broderick Memorial Foundation
Pelham Council Knights Of Columbus
People’s United Financial, Inc.
Richard J. Powers Charitable Lead Trust
Roche Family Foundation
Sagacious Consultants LLC
The Inner Circle, Inc.
The Hasey Foundation
Time Warner Cable
Time Warner Foundation, Inc.
12
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
A Comprehensive Listing of All Donors to Strong to Endure: The Second Century Campaign
Capt. Frederick F. Burgess, Jr., USCG
’54 (R)
Mr. John M. Conroy ’54 P’86’88’96
Alumni
$25,758,045
Alumni
$15,747,997
David D. Nicholas, M.D. ’54
Foundress Estate 10,500,000
Foundress Estate
0
Mr. William F. Noval, Jr. ’54
(Final Disbursement)
(Final Disbursement)
Mr. Richard J. Ward, Jr. ’54
Regis Parents
3,662,257
Regis Parents
2,510,928
Mr. Edward N. Wilson, J.D. ’54
Friends & Widows 758,982
Friends & Widows 750,315
Mr. Edward J. Ahearn ’55
Mr. John C. Edge ’55
Total
$40,679,284
Total
$19,009,240
Mr. John L. Githens ’55
Mr. Donald R. Lyons ’55 †
Mr. Ben Mastrototaro ’55
ALUMNI
Mr. William J. Allingham ’50
Mr. Thomas M. McBride ’55
Mr. Paul L. Giuffre ’50
Mr. John J. McDonnell, Jr. ’55
Anonymous (26)
Mr. Leo A. Egan ’50 †
Mr. Eugene J. McGuire ’55
Maj. Norman E. Fitzgerald ’25 †
Dr. Joseph P. Marchese ’50
Mr. John M. Morriss ’55 P’81
Mr. Philip V. O’Brien ’33
Mr. Bernard M. Sheridan, Jr. ’50
Mr. Joseph R. Ramos ’55
Prof. Joseph A. Calamari ’35
B. Gen. Walter J. Donovan, USMC
Richard J. Cronin, M.D. ’56
Mr. Ovid D. DiFiore ’35
(R) ’51
Mr. John J. Dowling ’56
Mr. Cuno J. Von Campe ’35 †
Mr. Georges-Marie Guertin ’51
Rev. Robert P. Imbelli ’56
Mr. John R. McCarthy ’39
Mr. Kenneth C. Hellwig ’51 †
Mr. William P. Kelly ’56
Richard J. Casey, Esq. ’40
Mr. John J. Higgins ’51
Mr. John J. LaBonte ’56
Mr. Raymond A. Bruntrager ’42
Dr. Martin W. Molloy, MBA ’51
Mr. Gregory F. Leiher ’56
Mr. Richard J. Powers ’43 †
Mr. William V. O’Connor ’51
Dr. Francis E. Reilly, M.D. ’56 †
Rev. Joseph A. Stulb ’43 †
Mr. James A. O’Rourke ’51 P’87
Mr. John P. Shea, Jr. ’56
Severino J. Ambrosio, M.D. ’44 †
Mr. Michael J. Pierce ’51
Dr. Richard C. Theuer ’56
Mr. Donald J. Dougherty ’44 P’86’87
Joseph D. Saccio, M.D. ’51
Mr. Frederick T. Brown ’57
Mr. John J. Grady ’44
Mr. Lawrence J. Boland ’52
Dr. Thomas A. Buser ’57
Mr. Robert F. Morison ’44
Mr. Edward T. Kelly ’52
Eugene F. Cheslock, M.D. ’57
Hon. James P. O’Connell ’44
Mr. Albert P. Kenneke ’52
Mr. Daniel F. Daly ’57
Mr. Edward J. Ritter ’44
Mr. Thomas M. Malafronte ’52
Mr. Dennis M. Flannery ’57
Mr. Vincent J. Villa ’44
Mr. Robert M. Tomasulo ’52 †
Dr. Edward E. Foster ’57 †
Mr. Kenneth F.X. Albers ’45 †
Mr. Gerald J. Cassidy, Jr. ’53
Mr. John J. Garvey ’57
Mr. John P. McCall ’45
Raymond F. Gehan, Esq. ’53
Mr. William P. Gillen ’57
Rev. John F. Talbot, S.J. ’46
Thomas J. Hickey, P.E., Esq. ’53 GP’10 Mr. John S. Hannon, Jr. ’57
Mr. John A. Collins ’48
Col. Edward M. Jentz, Jr. (Ret.) ’53
Mr. John J. Kane ’57
Mr. John J. Dwyer, Jr. ’48
Mr. Edward J. Kapp ’53
Mr. Patrick J. Lawler ’57
Mr. Edward V. Ryan ’48
Dr. Gerhart M. Karg ’53
Mr. Raymond P. Ohlmuller ’57
Mr. Myles V. Whalen, Jr. ’48
Mr. James I. McGuire, Jr. ’53
Mr. and Mrs. James E. Power ’57
Mr. Joseph F. White ’48
Dr. Joseph F. Merklin ’53
Mr. Vincent J. Rosivach ’57
Mr. Joseph L. Zecca ’48 †
Mr. John J. Roche ’53
Rev. Patrick J. Ryan, S.J. ’57
Dr. Alexander J. Burke ’49
Mr. Thomas A. Rossano Jr. ’53
Mr. William F. Werwaiss ’57
Mr. George V. Franks ’49
John F. Russo, M.D. ’53
Mr. Vincent J. Zichello ’57
Howard R. Gould, M.D. ’49
Dr. Ronald W. Tobin ’53
Dr. Casimir P. Eubig ’58
Mr. Andrew J. Hernon ’49
Mr. John P. Wallace ’53
Mr. James T. Higney ’58
Mr. Alan E. Pinado ’49
Mr. Denis J. Woods ’53
Mr. Peter L. Kern ’58
Mr. George W. Roos ’49
Dr. J. Robert Bergen ’54
Rev. Joseph T. Lienhard, S.J. ’58
Mr. Gerard P. Watson ’49
PLEDGE TOTALS
RECEIVED AS OF JUNE 30, 2014
Dr. Kevin T. Mansfield ’58
James J. M. Moran, M.D. ’58
Michael J. Napoliello M.D. ’58
Mr. Thomas P. Ryan ’58
Mr. Henry J. Ferrero, Jr. ’59
Mr. Bernard M. Fox ’59 †
Dr. Douglas J. Futuyma ’59
Mr. Martin E. Gavin ’59
Mr. Donald P. McDonough ’59
Edwin M. Montell, M.D.’59
Mr. and Mrs. Leo F. Tymon, Jr. ’59
Mr. Ross F. Amann ’60
Mr. Kenneth F. Bailie ’60
John J. Barnosky, Esq. ’60
Msgr. Patrick P. McCahill ’60
Mr. Brian R. Morrow ’60
Mr. Charles P. Nastro ’60
Mr. James A. Paduano ’60 †
Mr. Joseph D. Russo ’60
Mr. Lawrence L. Squeri ’60
Peter J. Wantoch, M.D. ’60
Mr. John P. Ward ’60
Mr. John A. Werwaiss ’60
Mr. Richard J. Boyle ’61
Thomas J. Daley, M.D. ’61
Mr. Robert E. Del Col ’61
Dr. and Mrs. David L. Eitelbach ’61
Dr. Gregory E. Gardiner ’61 †
Dr. Thomas J. Hargrove ’61
Oliver J. Harper, M.D. ’61
Mr. John J. Lively ’61
Rev. Thomas P. McCreesh, O.P. ’61
Rev. Philip J. Rossi, S.J. ’61
Mr. Dennis C. Thelen ’61
Mr. David A. Birch ’62
Dr. Joseph J. Connors ’62
John P. Docherty, M.D. ’62
Mr. Thomas J. Fay ’62
Mr. Ronald J. Ferreri ’62
Mr. John D. James ’62
Mr. James L. Kohlwey ’62
Mr. Wayne J. Merritt ’62
Dr. George J. Moussally ’62
Mr. Joseph J. Mullaney ’62
Mr. John J. O’Rourke ’62
Mr. Edward J. Ryan ’62
Mr. John J. Shay, Jr. ’62
FA L L 2014
Dr. Richard J. Tarrant ’62
Mr. Joseph A. Torregrossa ’62
Dr. Thomas F. Brereton ’63
Mr. Daniel M. Burns ’63
Dr. Paul P. Freddolino ’63
Mr. Carl M. Haub ’63
Mr. James K. Higgins ’63
Mr. John M. Kelly, Jr. P.E. ’63
Hon. John G. Koeltl ’63
Mr. John C. Lellis ’63
Mr. Kenneth E. Lynch, J.D. ’63
Mr. Kevin J. Morris ’63 P’98
Mr. Peter J. Roidakis ’63
Mr. John J. Sesody ’63
Mr. John M. Stack ’63
Mr. John F. Tweedy, Jr. ’63
Amb. Timothy A. Chorba ’64
Dr. Michael T. Christy ’64
Mr. Joseph W. Cirrito ’64
Dr. Paul E. Czuchlewski ’64
Mr. Dennis M. Moulton ’64
Mr. Brian S. O’Leary ’64
Dr. Daniel J. Pukstas ’64
Mr. Thomas P. Reilly ’64
Mr. Kevin Rodgers ’64 P’05
Dr. Robert A. Schmidt ’64
Mr. Frank J. Silvestri ’64
Mr. and Mrs. W. Jeffrey Weinlandt
’64 P’10
Dr. John C. Wirth, Jr. ’64
Mr. Jeffrey W. Davis ’65
Mr. John E. Fogarty ’65
Mr. Richard J. Gabriele ’65
Mr. Kenneth Z. Koziak ’65
Mr. Paul S. McAuliffe ’65
Dr. Peter M. Nardi ’65
Mr. Brunello C. Nucci ’65
Mr. Robert C. Serow ’65
Mr. Stephen J. Sopko ’65
Mr. Ronald J. Statile ’65
Francis L. Belloni, Ph.D. ’66
Hon. Stephen J. Bogacz ’66
Kevin R. Cooper, M.D.’66
Mr. Ken Kellaher, P.E., PTOE ’66
Edward L. Marut, M.D. ’66
Mr. Peter E. Matthews ’66
Mr. John M. Nonna ’66
Mr. Timothy G. O’Connor ’66
Dr. Charles Pignatello ’66
Mr. Daniel R. Zirker ’66
Mr. John D. Alexander ’67
Mr. William R. Armbruster ’67
Rev. Arthur C. Bender, S.J. ’67
Robert V. Blake, M.D. ’67
Terence L. Chorba, M.D. ’67
Mr. Christopher V. Connell ’67
Mr. John F. Cordes, Jr. ’67
Mr. Thomas G. Curran ’67
Robert P. DeCresce, M.D. ’67
Mr. John D. Finnegan ’67
Mr. Robert W. Grunseich ’67
Mr. Ernest G. Harris, Jr. ’67
Mr. Vincent W. Hartnett ’67
Mr. William C. Hauck ’67
Mr. James B. Keaney ’67
Mr. John G. Kelly ’67
Mr. Kevin P. Logan ’67
Eugene M. Lugano, M.D. ’67
Mr. George G. McCann ’67
Mr. Raymond L. McLoughlin, Jr. ’67
Rev. Joseph M. McShane, S.J. ’67
Mr. Kieran P. Quinn ’67
Dr. Robert J. Rienzo ’67
Gerard J. Schiraldi, D.M.D. ’67
Mr. Mark R. Shanahan ’67
Mr. Victor J. Skowronski ’67
Joseph D. Verdirame, M.D. ’67
Mr. Kevin M. Burke ’68
Mr. William C. Cagney ’68 P’98
Joseph C. D’Antonio, M.D. ’68
John W. Davren, M.D. ’68
Mr. John G. Di Liberto ’68
Mr. and Mrs. Brian T. Foley ’68
P’95’00
Mr. James E. Foy ’68
Mr. Thomas P. Hanrahan ’68
Dr. Jack M. Hyzak ’68
Mr. Philip J. Kehl ’68
Mr. Thomas R. Kelly ’68
Mr. Robert J. Minutoli ’68
Steven W. Ryder, M.D. ’68
Mr. Richard J. Stockton ’68
Mr. John P. Whiteman, Jr. ’68
Dr. Robert V. Chircop, M.D. ’69
Mr. Francis X. Colford ’69
Capt. John E. Fink, USN Ret. ’69
Mr. John B. Kearney ’69
Mr. Kevin A. McCabe ’69
Mr. Robert E. Olwell ’69
Mr. John A. Schnedeker ’69
Mr. Adrian J. Slywotzky ’69
Mr. Kevin J. Bannon ’70
Mr. Daniel K. Boyle ’70
Dr. John C. Brasunas ’70
Thomas M. Burns, M.D. ’70
Kevin P. Conboy, Esq. ’70
Mr. Adrian W. Doherty, Jr. ’70
Michael P. Fitzgerald, M.D. ’70 P’10
Mr. Roger E. Flahive ’70
Mr. Robert E. Hallinan ’70
Joseph LaMantia, M.D. ’70
Mr. Robert M. Leonard ’70
Mr. John E. Martin ’70
Mr. John L. Miscione ’70
Mr. John G. Nicolich ’70
Mr. John R. Potapchuk ’70
Mr. Charles C. Radcliffe ’70
Mr. Edward B. Ruggiero ’70
Mr. Mark G. Tronco ’70
Mr. Paul C. Atkinson ’71
Mr. Arthur J. Beaver ’71
Mr. James J. Bigos ’71
Mr. Raymond A. Brown, III ’71
Mr. Paul J. Donato ’71
Mr. Peter G. Fanelli ’71
Mr. William J. Ferns ’71
Dr. Thomas A. Filipowicz ’71
Mr. Luke T. Garvey ’71
Mr. Thomas M. Herlihy ’71
Mr. John E. Holwell ’71
Mr. William J. Javetski ’71
Mr. John J. Kearney ’71
Mr. James P. Kelly ’71
Mr. Alan E. Kraus ’71
Mr. George J. Limbach ’71
Dr. Edward P. Miller ’71
Mr. Roger J. Moran ’71
Bruce E. O’Neill, Ph.D ’71
Mr. Michael J. Piscitelli ’71
William R. Rate, M.D. Ph.D. ’71
Mr. Roger P. Rooney ’71
Mr. Stewart A. Schoder, III ’71
Mr. John F. Schopfer ’71 P’07
Mr. Michael L. Schwarz ’71
Craig Smith, Ph.D. ’71
Dr. Christopher M. Burns ’72
Mr. Kevin J. Farrelly ’72
Kevin M. Gil, M.D. ’72
Mr. Francis J. Kelly ’72
Mr. Michael P. Morris ’72
Mr. Michael P. O’Rourke ’72
Mr. Richard T. Potter ’72
James M. Provenzale, M.D. ’72
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Rogers ’72 P’13
Mr. John D. Schipisch ’72
Michael J. Schneider, M.D. ’72
Mr. Joseph A. Sullivan ’72
Mr. Richard A. Wickman ’72
Mr. Robert W. Billings ’73
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Emmons
’73 P’13
Mr. William P. Farley ’73
Mr. Peter J. Gordon ’73
Mr. Michael V. Milito ’73
Mr. James A. Montagnino ’73
Louis J. Saporito M.D. ’73
Mr. John K. Smalley ’73 P’07
Mr. Vincent A. Auger ’74
Carl Barbera, M.D. ’74
Mr. Anthony J. Ceritelli ’74
James J. Cummings, M.D. ’74
Mr. Martin F. Doyle ’74 P’11
Mr. Thomas E. Dudar ’74
Mr. John C. Hall ’74
Thomas M. Naughton, M.D. ’74
Mr. Carl A. Popolo ’74
Mr. Andrew J. Turezyn ’74
Mr. James T. Tynion, III ’74
Mr. Lawrence K. Cagney ’75
Mr. John F. Carberry ’75
Mr. Joseph F. Clyne, Sr. ’75 P’12
Mr. John J. Colgan ’75
Mr. Michael P. Curran ’75
Mr. Lawrence J. Fey ’75
Mr. Alexander J. Gray ’75
Mr. Ralph J. Long ’75
Mr. Thierry G. Porte ’75
Mr. Joseph M. Santi ’75
Stephen A. Tranchina, M.D. ’75
John J. Zurlo, M.D. ’75
Mr. Peter J. Baecher ’76
Mr. John J. Barrett ’76
Mr. John P. Berti ’76
Mr. Joseph E. Bringman ’76
Mr. Richard C. Crowe ’76
Dr. Anthony P. Cunningham ’76
Mr. Hugh P. Finnegan ’76
Dr. Robert J. Franco ’76
Mr. Cornelius J. Grealy ’76
Gregory P. Harris, Sr., M.D. ’76
Mr. Peter F. Honchaurk ’76
13
Mr. Kevin S. Huvane ’76
Mr. Louis D. Jerome ’76
Arthur F. Kavanaugh, M.D. ’76
Mr. Paul J. Kiernan ’76
Mr. Clarence X. Koo ’76
Mr. Christopher R. Lowney ’76
Mr. Christopher J. Lynch ’76
Dr. Loris A. Magnani ’76
Mr. Patrick P. Mauro ’76
Mr. Robert A. McCaffery-Lent ’76
Mr. Peter C. McFadden ’76
Dr. Kevin D. McKeegan ’76
Mr. Andrew R. Merola ’76
Mr. Gary J. Mezzatesta ’76
Mr. Peter J. Moerler ’76
Bart B. Musial, M.D. ’76
Mr. Luke F. O’Keefe ’76
Mr. Steven P. Pecorini ’76
Mr. James A. Piccolo ’76
Mr. Frank V. Pietrantonio ’76
Mr. Jonathan E. Powers ’76
Mr. Richard G. Slattery ’76
Mr. Edward A. Taylor Esq. ’76 P’04
Mr. Michael J. Tupone ’76
Mr. Michael I. Verde ’76
Mr. Donald J. Wink ’76
Frank Cetta, Jr., M.D. ’77
Rev. Vincent P. DeCola, S.J. ’77
Mr. Martin F. Dowd ’77
Mr. Michael J. Dowd ’77
Mr. Andrew A. Dzerovych ’77
Mr. Shawn K. Feeney ’77
Mr. Thomas W. Gillespie ’77
Timothy J. Harkin, M.D. ’77
Mr. Charles N. Hayward ’77
Mr. Michael J. Holden ’77
Mr. Christopher G. Kelly ’77
Thomas G. Larkin, M.D. ’77
Mr. Thomas J. Leonard ’77
Mr. Martin J. Mannion ’77
Mr. Mark A. Nelson ’77
Mr. William J. Neville ’77
Anthony N. Passannante M.D. ’77
Christopher P. Poje, M.D. ’77
Michael J. Rizzo, Esq. ’77
Mr. Vincent N. Schiraldi ’77
Mr. Douglas A. Sgarro ’77
Dr. and Mrs. James A. Shanahan
’77 P’10
Ronald J. Taylor, M.D. ’77
Mr. Michael F. Berube ’78
Mr. Stephen J. Blewitt ’78
Mr. Thomas A. Burgess ’78
Mr. Kenneth J. Carroll ’78
Mr. Seamus E. Carroll ’78
Mr. Thomas P. Doyle ’78
Mr. Lawrence E. Ehmer ’78
Mr. Patrick J. Fitzgerald ’78
Frank J. Giancola, M.D.’78
Mr. John J. Goggins ’78
Mr. Philip J. Guarco ’78
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Kilkelly ’78
Mr. Stephen T. Loebs ’78
Mr. Joseph C. Marconi ’78
Mr. Edward B. Marrinan ’78
Martin M. Matzuk, M.D. ’78
Mr. Joseph J. Mauro ’78
14
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Mr. James M. Olivo ’78
Mr. Robert A. Ragazzo ’78
Mr. Albert F. Rocco ’78
Mr. Stephen M. Ruvituso ’78
Russ B. Altman , M.D., Ph.D. ’79
Mr. Peter P. Barrasso ’79
Mr. David C. Bowen ’79
Mr. Arthur Del Buono ’79
Mr. John D. Feeley ’79
Mr. Fabian J. Fondriest ’79
Mr. Patrick Galizio ’79
John L. Haddad, M.D. ’79
Dr. Edward F. Hayes ’79
Mr. Richard C. Henderson ’79
John D. Horgan, M.D. ’79
Mr. Timothy M. Hughes ’79
Mr. David V. Janny ’79
Richard W. Johnson, M.D.’79
P’08’10
Mr. Nicholas J. Marini ’79
Mr. Peter J. McAliney ’79
Michael V. McConnell, M.D. ’79
Mr. Juan C. Montes ’79
Mr. John F. Morgan ’79
Mr. Timothy M. Murphy ’79
Mr. Raymond Ressy ’79
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. Rochford ’79
Mr. Robert A. Schmidt ’79
Mr. John A. Scola ’79
Mr. Brian M. Sheehan ’79
Mr. Dominic J. Sorresso ’79
Mr. Thomas F. Swift ’79
Mr. William F. Tietjen ’79
Mr. Richard J. Weber ’79
Mr. Kenneth M. Berger ’80
Mr. Jean-Luc Briguet ’80
John L. Buckheit Esq. ’80
Mr. Kevin M. Cahill ’80
Mr. Kyran E. Cassidy ’80 P’18
Robert G. Collum, M.D. ’80
Mr. James S. DeGraw ’80
Prof. and Mrs. Giuseppe Del Priore,
M.D. ’80 P’14
Mr. Andrew B. DeMaio ’80
Mr. Anthony J. DiNovi, Jr. ’80
Mr. Anthony J. Domino, Jr. ’80 P’08
Mr. Mark E. Garbowski ’80
Mr. Arunas E. Gudaitis ’80
Mr. John K. Hayden ’80
Rev. Philip G. Judge, S.J. ’80
Mr. Denis T. Keane ’80
Mr. William R. Kirwan ’80
Frederick F. Lang, Jr., M.D. ’80
Mr. Michael G. Lavallato ’80
Mr. Hubert M. Lem ’80 P’17
Jonathan A. Lucas, Ph.D ’80
Mr. Patrick J. McGreal ’80
Mr. Robert J. McKee ’80
Mr. David E. Mollon ’80
Mr. Mark J. Moss ’80
Mr. Patrick M. Muldowney ’80
Mr. Peter D. O’Driscoll ’80
Mr. John C. Parr, Jr. ’80
Mr. William G. Passannante ’80
P’10’14
Mr. Alfredo J. Pastro ’80
Mr. Manuel E. Ribot ’80
Mr. John F. Schorn ’80
Paul A. Sidoti, Jr. M.D. ’80
Mr. Matthew S. Smyth ’80
Mr. Paul D. Squire ’80
Mr. Lawrence R. Vitale ’80
Mr. Michael J. Waters ’80
Mr. Timothy C. Wong ’80
Mr. Richard J. Anderson ’81
Mr. Norberto M. Barba ’81
Mr. John P. Barry ’81
Mr. Alan L. Bloodgood ’81
Mr. Mark Bowen ’81
Mr. Gerard T. Bradley ’81
Mr. Carl A. Catauro ’81
Mr. John M. Conlon ’81
Mr. James A. Coppola, CPA ’81
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Dieffenbach
’81 P’09’12
Dr. Dominic J. Ferro ’81
Mr. Edward J. Gillespie ’81
Mr. Thomas R. Gramaglia ’81
Mr. Gustas G. Haracopos ’81
Mr. Brian J. Hegarty ’81
Andrew J. Infosino, M.D. ’81
Mr. John A. Jurkovic ’81
Mr. Albert J. Kiss ’81
Mr. Michael J. Kunz ’81
Mr. Frederick J. Martin, III ’81
Neil S. McCarthy, M.D. ’81
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. McCluskey ’81
Mr. Terence W. McCormick ’81
Mr. J. Drew McDonald ’81
Mr. Mark M. Mitchell ’81
Mr. Bruce F. Monte, Jr. ’81
Mr. Michael J. Morriss ’81
Mr Joseph J. Napolitano ’81
Mr. John P. O’Toole ’81
Dr. Joseph J. Pizzimenti ’81
Mr. Pedro A. Ramirez ’81
Mr. Michael J. Rendich ’81
Dr. Jose M. Rios ’81
Mr. Robert Schirling ’81
Mr. Leonard T. Scicutella ’81
Mr. Robert M. Scott ’81
Mr. Patrick B. Shalhoub ’81
Mr. Arthur J. Smith ’81
Mr. Mark A. Torre ’81 P15
Mr. Richard J. Truta ’81
Mr. Crescent R. Varrone ’81
Mr. Robert S. Vitale ’81
Mr. Paul M. Walczyk ’81
Mr. Mark P. Walter ’81
Mr. Eric W. Beaton ’82
Mr. Lev W. Chapelsky ’82
Mr. John P. Conway ’82
Mr. William E. Craco ’82
Mr. Timothy D. Cremin ’82
Mr. Joseph E. DaGrosa, Jr. ’82
Carlo M. DeLuna, M.D. ’82
Br. Christopher Derby, S.J. ’82
Mr. Edward J. Donahue, Jr. ’82
Mr. Edward C. Fargis ’82
Mr. Warren P. Finnerty ’82
Mr. James F. Frawley ’82
Mr. Timothy D. Gallagher ’82 P’16
Mr. Edward Gonzales ’82
Donald T. Hess, Jr. M.D. ’82
Mr. Jonathan S. Lawlor ’82
Mr. Frederick J. Lynch ’82
Mr. Dennis P. McCooe ’82
Mr. John F. McElroy, III ’82
Mr. Patrick A. McGoldrick ’82
Mr. Joseph C. Peiser ’82
Gregory M. Pitaro, M.D. ’82 P’16
Mr. John A. Porada ’82
Mr. Sean Reddington ’82
Mr. Joseph J. Ryan, Jr. ’82
Mr. Benjamin J. Sokolow ’82
Mr. Anthony J. Spina ’82
Mr. John C. Stepper ’82
Mr. Mark D. Young ’82
Mr. Joseph Michael Accetta ’83 P’14
Mr. John H. Alessandri ’83
Dr. William M. Bowling ’83
Mr. Francis M. Buono ’83
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. Burke ’83
P’13’16’17
Mr. Andrew C. Carnase ’83
Mr. Eduardo Castell ’83
Mr. Denley Y. S. Chew ’83
Mr. Patrick G. Clarke ’83
Theodore D. Conliffe, M.D.’83
Mr. Edward W. Conlon ’83
Mr. Joseph G. Davis ’83
Mr. Robert G. DiMartini ’83
Mr. Salvatore J. DiMartino ’83
Mr. Thomas R. English ’83
Mr. John P. Fargis ’83
Mr. William H. Ferguson ’83
Mr. Christopher W. Franz ’83
Mr. Peter M. Gallagher ’83 P’16
Mr. Robert P. Gallagher ’83
Mr. Leland A. Harrs ’83 P’15
Mr. Anthony A. Hauck ’83
Mr. Edward V. Heiskell ’83
Mr. Roland Hlawaty ’83
Mr. Stewart M. Joe ’83
Mr. Michael J. Kelly ’83
Mr. Peter Labbat ’83
Mr. Sean H. Lane ’83 P’15
Mr. Lawrence J. LaSala ’83
COL Patrick J. Mahaney, Jr. ’83
Joseph A. Mannino, M.D. ’83
Mr. Eugene P. Mazzaro ’83
Mr. Raymond F. McLean ’83
Mr. Robert Monti ’83
Mr. Joseph E. O’Hagan ’83
Patrick G. O’Malley, M.D. ’83
Mr. James J. Panos ’83
Mr. David G. Pohle ’83
Mihael Puc, M.D. ’83
Mr. Vincent A. Romeo ’83
Mr. James J. Scacalossi ’83 P’15
Mr. John A. Sym ’83
Mr. John J. Twomey ’83
Mr. Ronald J. Bajit ’84
Mr. Thomas E. Butler ’84
Mr. Patrick J. Coffey ’84
Mr. Albert F. De Grasse ’84
Mr. Charles S. Detrizio ’84
Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Donodeo ’84
Mr. Peter D. Doyle ’84
Mr. Kevin G. Duggan ’84
Mr. Kieran J. Fallon ’84
Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel C. Grillo ’84
P’13’15
Mr. Steven M. Herd ’84
Mr. Stephen M. Ksenak ’84
Mr. Vipul K. Lakhani ’84
Mr. Marc V. LaPlace ’84
Mr. Kevin M. Lee ’84 P’14’16
Raymond J. McGoldrick, M.D. ’84
Mr. Michael P. McHugh ’84
Mr. Michael J. Murphy ’84
Mr. Michael P. Murphy ’84
Stephen E. O’Donnell, M.D. ’84
Mr. Thomas F. Ryan ’84
Mr. and Mrs. Noel S. Selegzi ’84
Mr. and Mrs. Brian G. Smith ’84
Daniel J. Sullivan, Ph.D. ’84
Eric J. Velazquez, M.D. ’84
Mr. Robert R. Venchiarutti ’84
Mr. Peter C. Villapol ’84
Mr. Daniel G. Walsh ’84
Mr. Christopher Webb ’84
Mr. Juan E. Aponte ’85
Mr. and Mrs. David A. Barbrack ’85
Mr. James S. Boylan ’85
Mr. Edward P. Boyle ’85
Mr. Thomas B. Burke ’85 P’17
Mr. Anthony V. Calenda ’85
Mr. Frank P. Carbone ’85
Mr. Andrew P. Clifford ’85
Mr. Kevin F. Condon ’85
Mr. Glenn P. Cummins, CPA, CFA ’85
Mr. Marcelino de Santos ’85
Mr. James R. Dobson ’85
Mr. Craig L. Farlie ’85
Mr. Frederick J. Fields ’85
Mr. Thomas F. Flood ’85
Mr. John M. Garbarino ’85
Mr. Peter A. Giacone ’85
Mr. David V. Gravano ’85
Mr. Walter G. Hanchuk ’85
Mr. William J. Hogan ’85 P’15
Jean-Max Hogarth, M.D. ’85
Mr. Christopher A. Howley ’85
Mr. Brian P. Kavanagh ’85
Mr. Patrick M. Kelly ’85
Mr. John P. Kelsh ’85
Mr. James M. Krebs ’85
Mr. Antonio Larino ’85
Dr. Paul E. Li ’85
Dr. Pacifico A. Magahis ’85 P’17
Mr. Kevin W. McCarthy ’85
Mr. Vernon C. McDermott ’85
Mr. Joseph Molloy ’85
Mr. Rocco Papandrea ’85
Mr. Thomas S. Pluta ’85
Mr. Aloysius Rho ’85
Mr. Henry J. Ricardo ’85
Capt. Kenneth L. Rosenquest ’85
Mr. Jerome E. Sabatino ’85
Mr. John T. Schiavone ’85
Mr. Marko J. Slyz ’85
Mr. Eric P. Stonier ’85
Mr. Edward K. Straka ’85
FA L L 2014
Joseph P. Taverni, M.D. ’85
Mr. Daniel P. Twohig ’85
Mr. Ricardo M. Urbano ’85
Mr. Patrick J. Walsh ’85
Mr. Bryan Whalen ’85
Mr. Kevin T. White ’85
John R. Wiencek, Esq. ’85
Dr. Alain G. Bertoni ’86
Mr. Colin F. Boyle ’86
Mr. Anthony T. Cahill ’86
Mr. Ronald A. Chung-A-Fung ’86
Mr. William H. Crosby ’86
Kevin J. Curley, M.D. ’86
Mr. Daniel Dougherty ’86 and
Ms. Hee-Sun Hong
Mr. V. M. Fitzgerald ’86
Mr. James P. Fogarty ’86
Mr. Armando F. Fox ’86
Mr. Gerard J. Gallagher ’86
Mr. Alexander N. Golimbu ’86
Mr. Mark P. Hannafey ’86
Joseph P. Hart, M.D. ’86
Mr. Michael J. Higgins ’86
Mr. Kevin P. Kavanagh ’86
Vincent F. Macaluso, M.D. ’86
Dr. John R. McArdle ’86
Mr. Brendan G. McLoughlin ’86
Mr. Philip F. O’Reilly, Jr. ’86
Mr. James P. Power ’86
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney P. Prezeau ’86
Mr. Martin P. Russo ’86
Mr. Joseph A. Sack ’86
Mr. Benjamin P. Stein ’86
Mr. James W. Sullivan ’86
Mr. John J. Sullivan ’86
Mr. Robert G. Sumberac ’86 P’15
Mr. Frank G. Turano ’86
Mr. Kevin G. Bannon ’87
Mr. Edward F. Barry ’87
Mr. Sean P. Casey ’87
Mr. Kevin J. Cassidy ’87
Mr. Stephen J. Conlon ’87
Mr. James P. Curry ’87
Mr. Michael G. Doheny ’87
Mr. David G. Dowd ’87
Mr. Michael J. Flynn ’87
Mr. Brian F. Gavin ’87
Mr. Peter G. Geis ’87
Mr. Matthew J. Lawlor ’87
Mr. Peter J. McEntegart ’87
Mr. Peter J. McNally, Jr. ’87
Mr. Joseph S. Melillo ’87
Mr. Peter C. Morreale ’87 P’16
Mr. James P. O’Rourke ’87
Mr. Michael C. Petronio ’87
Mr. Raymond P.R. Quirolgico ’87
Capt. Orlando A. Acosta ’88
Mr. George B. Brickfield ’88
Mr. John M. Butler ’88
Mr. Emmet W. Conroy ’88
Brian J. Cook, M.D. ’88
Mr. Michael G. Coyne ’88
Mr. Raymond R. Crespo ’88
Mr. Timothy J. Doheny ’88
Mr. Adrian E. Dollard ’88
Mr. Matthew K. Fallon ’88
Dr. Robert E. Ferris ’88
Mr. Gerson Gilles ’88
Mr. Frederic J. Giordano ’88
Dr. William T. Irwin ’88
Mr. David M. Johansen ’88
Mr. Rory T. Keenan ’88
Mr. Michael O. Kennedy ’88
Mr. Stephen M. Kenny ’88
Mr. Michael J. Lawlor ’88
Mr. Joseph P. Logozzo ’88
Mr. Edward P. LoPresti ’88
Mr. Roger T. Ma ’88
Mr. Michael F. Malone ’88
Mr. James P. Masterson ’88
Mr. Kevin G. McNally ’88
Mr. John R. Middleton, Jr. ’88
Mr. Arthur T. Minson, Jr. ’88
Mr. Kevin T. Molloy ’88
Mr. Francis G. Montgomery ’88
Mr. Richard W. Morgner, Jr. ’88
Mr. Paul R. Muccigrosso ’88
Mr. Edward G. Myer ’88
Mr. Michael O’Sullivan ’88
Mr. Alphonse J. Porcello, II ’88
Mr. Edward J. Riedl ’88
Mr. Winston R. Sapigao ’88
Mr. James E. Sciutto ’88
Jonathan A. Stiber, M.D. ’88
Mr. Eugene M. Suh ’88
Mr. Richard G. Sumberac ’88
Mr. and Mrs. John G. Troiano ’88
Mr. John R. Walsh ’88
Mr. Edward J. Young, III ’88
Mr. James S. Abramson ’89
Mr. Lolan P. Adan ’89
Thomas J. Bryce, M.D. ’89
Mr. Christopher J. Calamari ’89
Mr. Stephen P. Carbone ’89
Mr. Robert J. Chantemsin ’89
Mr. John T. Devlin ’89
Mr. Matthew J. Dowd ’89
Mr. Kevin A. Fox ’89
Mr. James P. Freeley ’89
Mr. Kevin B. Gerrity ’89
Mr. Francis N. Gleeson ’89
Mr. T. Giles Kavanagh ’89
Mr. & Mrs. David J. Kennedy ’89 P’16
Mr. Richard T. Koo ’89
Mr. Thomas M. Kopczynski ’89
Mr. Robert J. Liubicic ’89
Mr. Joseph J. Macchiarola, Esq. ’89
Mr. James F. McCue ’89
Mr. Matthew J. McGeary ’89
Dr. Matthew M. McGowan ’89
Mr. Michael E. McTiernan ’89
Mr. William J. Miller ’89
Mr. Dennis J. Nolan ’89
Mr. Edmund C. O’Brien ’89
Mr. Kieran J. O’Shea ’89
Mr. Alexander J. Passantino ’89
Mr. Martin G. Perrin ’89
Mr. Anthony Pillari ’89
Mr. Marco J. Ricci ’89
Mr. Roger C. Rigaud ’89
Mr. Gerald J. Russello ’89
Mr. Timothy Shields ’89
Mr. Kevin F. Sullivan ’89
Mr. Anthony P. Canale ’90
Mr. James J. Chin ’90
Mr. Richard W. Chun ’90
Mr. Jason A. Creux ’90
Mr. Kevin J. Delaney ’90
Mr. James F. Donohue ’90
Mr. Michael M. Egan ’90
Dr. John Farrelly ’90
Mr. Edward A. Gamarra, Jr. ’90
Mr. Dennis W. Haug ’90
Mr. Peter Huh ’90
Mr. Michael P. King ’90
Mr. Joseph B. Kuroly ’90
Mr. Joseph M. Lechowicz ’90
Mr. John H. Lee ’90
Mr. Ron C. Llewellyn ’90
Mr. Michael P. Lorraine ’90
Mr. James J. Lyons, III ’90
Mr. Joseph M. Mecane ’90
Mr. Jeffrey E. Middleton ’90
Mr. Kevin P. Moclair ’90
Mr. Michael G. Mulreany ’90
Mr. Christopher J. Ocampo ’90
Mr. Michael J. O’Malley ’90
Mr. Jerome J. Park ’90
Mr. Matthew C. Peters ’90
Mr. William F. Porter ’90
Mr. Peter T. Rooney ’90
Mr. Antonio Sanchez ’90
Mr. Gregory S. Schwartz ’90
Mr. Joseph M. Sciabica ’90
Mr. John F. Scroope ’90
Mr. Thomas P. Scully ’90
Mr. David J. Stalter ’90
Mr. Stephen H. Urgola ’90
Mr. Robert G. Walsh ’90
Mr. James P. Wilson ’90
Mr. Francisco J. Acoba ’91
Mr. Drew M. Bancroft ’91
Mr. Michael A. Cialdella ’91
Mr. Todd G. Cosenza ’91
Mr. Vijay B. Culas ’91
Mr. Thomas J. Downey ’91
Mr. Kevin O. Driscoll ’91
Mr. Jonathan W. Gannon ’91
Mr. William J. Harrington ’91
Mr. Kieran P. Hennigan ’91
Mr. Ronald P. Inserro ’91
Mr. Jonathan E. Iwaskow ’91
Mr. Kevin C. Lucey ’91
Dr. Patrick F. Maloney ’91
Mr. Brian P. McConaghy ’91
Mr. Robert B. McGovern ’91
Mr. James L. McGovern ’91
Mr. Martin R. Mroz ’91
Mr. Andrew G. Muccigrosso ’91
Mr. James H. Murphy ’91
Mr. Michael P. O’Donnell ’91
Mr. John P. O’Meara ’91
Mr. Kevin J. Patariu ’91
Mr. Robert J. Porada ’91
Mr. Edward J. Reardon ’91
Mr. Kenneth J. Ruchala ’91
Mr. Tremaine A. Sayles ’91
Mr. Nolan E. Shanahan ’91
Mr. Joseph M. Spillane, Jr. ’91
Mr. Jason A. Stiber ’91
Mr. Matthew G. Watts ’91
Mr. John A. W. Werwaiss ’91
Mr. Joseph A. Acevedo ’92
Mr. Ramon P. Alcala ’92
Mr. Michael E. Allison ’92
Mr. John F. Barrett ’92
Mr. John C. Briody ’92
Lt. Michael J. Brons ’92
Mr. Richard K. Campen ’92
Mr. Daniel N. Chen ’92
Mr. Michael T. Chin ’92
Mr. James A. Comer ’92
Mr. Robert J. Cosgrove ’92
Mr. Thomas R. Crotty ’92
Mr. Daniel J. Degnan ’92
Mr. Stephen N. DeMaio ’92
Mr. Johnny F. Diaz ’92
Mr. Eric DiGiacomo ’92
Lt. Col. Chris Dougherty ’92
Mr. James M. Downey ’92
Mr. Brian T. Finn ’92
Mr. Glenn C. Fitzgerald ’92
Mr. Thomas J. Flannery, Jr. ’92
Mr Joseph A. Formaggio ’92
Mr. Craig J. Geneve ’92
Mr. Michael D. Gill ’92
Mr. Gregory M. Grimaldi ’92
Mr. Ryshard Grzanka ’92
Mr. Owen D. Harvey ’92
Mr. Cedrick G. Heraux ’92
Mr. Brian Iwano ’92
Mr. Richard Kang ’92
Mr. Michael D. Keenan ’92
Mr. Jeffrey J. Kirchner ’92
Mr. Michael V.S. Kullen ’92
Mr. Mark D. Lardner ’92
Mr. David B. Lat ’92
Mr. Patrick T. Levens ’92
Mr. Andrew S. Liteplo ’92
Mr. Matthew J. Lorraine ’92
Mr. and Mrs. José A. Machuca ’92
Mr. Mark T. Mazzetti ’92
Mr. Michael J. McCarthy ’92
Mr. Joseph O. Mudho ’92
Mr. Lawrence J. Myer ’92
Mr. John F. Nogueira ’92
Mr. Timothy M. O’Sullivan ’92
Mr. John J. Pacor ’92
Mr. Gilbert Pajela ’92
Mr. Martin Palma ’92
Mr. John A. Paxton ’92
Mr. Jean-Paul Pinzon ’92
Mr. Daniel Pipitone ’92
Mr. Scott M. Porter ’92
Mr. Todd C. Prince ’92
Mr. Steve M. Raffaele ’92
Mr. Joseph W. Reiter ’92
Mr. Theodore D. Rieper ’92
Mr. Emmanuel O. Roble ’92
Dr. John G. Samanich ’92
Mr. Jacob P. Sheehan ’92
Mr. Thomas R. Sullivan ’92
Dr. Gerard J. Tepedino ’92
Mr. Ellery F. Wong ’92
15
16
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Mr. Erich G. Anderer ’93
Mr. Joseph J. Barretto ’93
Mr. William J. Black ’93
Dr. David R. Capiola ’93
Jomo M. Coddett, M.D. ’93
Mr. Michael P. Daly ’93
Mr. Jeantou A. DeGrammont ’93
Mr. Martin T. Dengler ’93
Mr. Brendan Dignan ’93
Mr. Robert J. Domingo ’93
Mr. Kieran P. Donohue ’93
Mr. Sean A. Gardner ’93
Mr. C. Travers Garvin ’93
Mr. Nicholas R. Gugliuzza ’93
Mr. Hieu T. Hoang ’93
Mr. John M. James ’93
Mr. Robert T. Kelley ’93
Mr. Andrew Lee ’93
Mr. Ernesto Lombardi ’93
Mr. Brendan K. Loonam ’93
Mr. Javier M. Luna ’93
Dr. Evin J. McCabe ’93
Mr. Gerard T. McCarthy ’93
Mr. Matthew J. McGough ’93
Mr. Joseph T. Mecca ’93
Mr. Peter J. Michalik ’93
Mr. Mark A. Nogueira ’93
Mr. Jason R. Norton ’93
Mr. Brian M. O’Neill ’93
Mr. Erik A. Pena ’93
Mr. Thomas J. Quinlan ’93
Mr. Brian C. Reilly ’93
Mr. Stephen M. Schmidt ’93
Mr. Steven E. Shekane ’93
Mr. Gerald S. Smith ’93
Mr. Michael D. Smyth ’93
Rev. Anthony P. SooHoo, S.J.’93
Mr. Matthew G. Sullivan ’93
Mr. Christian M. Talbot ’93
Mr. Matthew A. Thomas ’93
Mr. Daniel J. Turner ’93
Mr. Benjamin D. Ventura ’93
Mr. Frank A. Vigorito ’93
Mr. Christopher P. Wiedmann ’93
Mr. Brent C. Bell ’94
Mr. Stephen P. Boykewich ’94
Mr. Patrick J. Burns ’94
Mr. Gregory A. Cote ’94
Mr. Timothy F. Creedon ’94
Mr. Ronald Espiritu ’94
Mr. Harold C. Eylward ’94
Mr. William D. Foley, Jr. ’94
Mr. John F. Giordano ’94
Mr. Matthew M. Guiney ’94
Mr. Robert P. Gutierrez ’94
Mr. Matthew G. Heinz ’94
Mr. Thomas J. Howe ’94
Mr. Kieran J. Hughes ’94
Mr. Eric B. Javier ’94
Mr. Basil R. Kolani ’94
Mr. Matthew R. Lasek ’94
Mr. Dennis M. Machado ’94
Mr. Thomas G. Maloney ’94
Mr. and Mrs. Brian P. Manning ’94
Mr. Frank A. Martignetti ’94
Mr. Darryl J. Maxwell ’94
Mr. James J. McGrath ’94
Mr. Brendan R. McGuire ’94
Mr. Andrew B. Murray ’94
Mr. Paul F. Narain ’94
Mr. John J. Notaro ’94
Mr. Daniel O’Neill ’94
Mr. Thomas J. Peveraro ’94
Mr. Christopher J. Pohlmann ’94
Mr. Jason G. Sardinas ’94
Mr. Daniel A. Silverio ’94
Mr. Gregory P. Vadasdi ’94
Mr. Santhosh G. Varughese ’94
Mr. David A. Vermillion ’94
Mr. Melvin Acevedo ’95
Mr. Morgan R. Aldinger ’95
Mr. Robert J. Alexander ’95
Mr. Nicholas J. Anderer ’95
Mr. Peter L. Austin ’95
Mr. Robert J. Boller ’95
Mr. Denis T. Brogan ’95
Mr. Michael R. Brown ’95
Mr. Mario C. Bruschi ’95
Mr. Robert A. Campana ’95
Mr. Geoffrey E. Campen ’95
Mr. Frank R. Cowan, IV ’95
Mr. Paul J. Cummins ’95
Mr. Terence O. Dwyer ’95
Mr. Trevor P. Foley ’95
Mr. Mark V. Francisco ’95
Mr. Matthew P. Garvey ’95
Mr. J. Guthrie Garvin ’95
Mr. James W. Gormley ’95
Mr. Todd E. Johnson ’95
Mr. Joseph J. King ’95
Mr. Imre L. Knausz ’95
Mr. Kin Wah J. Koo ’95
Mr. John S. Macken ’95
Mr. Michael C. Mangan ’95
Mr. Paul T. Manwell ’95
Mr. Stephen McGrath ’95
Mr. Jeremiah F. McGuire, III ’95
Mr. Scott D. Milne ’95
Mr. John Morrison ’95
Mr. J. Michael O’Brien ’95
Mr. Daniel O’Connor ’95
Mr. Ronald F. Paone ’95
Mr. Paul D. Quinlan ’95
Mr. Spencer L. Reames ’95
Mr. Timothy M. Reilly ’95
Mr. Gerardo Russo ’95
Mr. Ciro A. Salcedo ’95
Dr. and Mrs. Giandomenico D.
Sarolli ’95
Mr. Michael A. Spinelli ’95
Mr. Michael A. Triunfo ’95
Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. Tully ’95
Mr. Scott R. Usiak ’95
Mr. Nicholas N. Abou-Daoud ’96
Mr. William D. Amarosa ’96
Mr. Michael F. Autuoro ’96
Mr. Andrew J. Barbera ’96
Mr. John F. Barry ’96
Mr. Orlando Benitez ’96
Mr. Michael J. Boyle ’96
Mr. Brian G. Brockmeyer ’96
Mr. John S. Cahalan ’96
Mr. Carlos M. Capellan ’96
Mr. Vincent F. Catapano ’96
Mr. Rodney P. Coe ’96
Mr. Gregory M. Conroy ’96
Mr. Kieran D. Darcy ’96
Mr. Matthew P. Day ’96
Mr. Terrence J. Ellison ’96
Mr. Brian P. Gibbons ’96
Mr. Matthew J. Gnolfo ’96
Mr. John R. Gugliuzza ’96
Mr. Brian P. Guiney ’96
Mr. Daniel G. Habib ’96
Mr. Ryan C. Heffernan ’96
Mr. James G. Hein ’96
Mr. Dan C. Kozusko ’96
Mr. Norman F. Law ’96
Mr. Brian S. Lennon ’96
Mr. Anthony G. Macapugay ’96
Mr. Brian J. Manning ’96
Mr. Alexander J. Meyer ’96
Mr. Brian P. Mitchell ’96
Mr. Soichiro M. Moro ’96
Mr. Thomas M. Noone ’96
Mr. Michael J. O’Leary ’96
Mr. Edward F. O’Reilly ’96
Mr. John P. Quinn ’96
Mr. James M. Radigan ’96
Mr. Christopher Ribeiro ’96
Mr. David M. Russo ’96
Mr. Nicholas Vincent Scaletta ’96
Mr. Justin P. Skaferowsky ’96
Mr. Michael T. Stefanelli ’96
Mr. Anthony Trani ’96
Mr. Sergio J. Villegas ’96
Mr. Stephen J. Barsi ’97
Dr. James M. Barsi ’97
Mr. Richard J. Biddulph ’97
Mr. Edward D. Bosek ’97
Mr. Christopher B. Boylan ’97
Mr. Richard Brockmeyer ’97
Mr. David F. Browne ’97
Mr. Daniel P. Carty ’97
Mr. Pierre Chavez ’97
Mr. Nicholas J. Connors ’97
Mr. Shane M. Conway ’97
Mr. Christian C. Cutul ’97
Mr. Brian A. Devaney ’97
Mr. Donald Elivert ’97
Mr. Chidi O. Ezeolu ’97
Mr. John J. Garnevicus ’97
Mr. James J. Gartland ’97
Mr. John P. Gordon ’97
Mr. Clinton J. Greiner ’97
Mr. D. Brian Healy ’97
Mr. James P. Langstine ’97
Mr. Kevin M. Lardner ’97
Mr. Michael P. LaValle ’97
Mr. Jonathan R. Lavy ’97
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Leraris, Jr. ’97
Mr. Christopher Lo ’97
Mr. Benjamin F. McAnaney ’97
Mr. Matthew C. McCann ’97
Mr. George F. McCartney ’97
Mr. Shaun M. McElroy ’97
Mr. Thomas F. McIntyre ’97
Mr. James M. McNicholas, Jr. ’97
Mr. Anthony J. Minko ’97
Mr. Scott D. Moringiello ’97
Mr. Patrick W. Mulligan ’97
Mr. Erik A. Netcher ’97
Mr. Thomas D. O’Hara ’97
Mr. Patrick F. O’Keefe ’97
Mr. Andrew Pagano ’97
Mr. David J. Palladino ’97
Mr. Matthew G. Rosenblatt ’97
Mr. John M. Rossiello ’97
Mr. Nealon M. Scoones ’97
Mr. Andrew R. Snow ’97
Mr. John P. Soliman ’97
Mr. and Mrs. John Stufano ’97
Mr. Daniel J. Sullivan ’97
Mr. John J. Sullivan ’97
Mr. Ricardo Tapia ’97
Mr. Paul P. Tedeschi ’97
Mr. Michael C. Toth ’97
Mr. Stephen P. Turley ’97
Mr. Michael R. Volonnino ’97
Mr. Johannes W. Weber ’97
Mr. Luke P. Amentas ’98
Mr. David M. Anfora ’98
Mr. Anthony J. Aulisa ’98
Mr. Brian J. Bavosa ’98
Mr. Kevin Boda ’98
Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Byrne ’98
Mr. John D. Cagney ’98
Mr. Eric J. Califano ’98
Mr. Russell Capone ’98
Mr. Michael C. Casey ’98
Mr. Francesco Cipollone ’98
Mr. Geoffrey B. Clyne ’98
Mr. Jordan J. Corlett ’98
Mr. Justin T. Dillon ’98
Mr. Daniel Ennis ’98
Mr. and Mrs. Rolando R. Garcia ’98
Mr. Glen D. Gregorio ’98
Mr. Michael J. Griffin ’98
Mr. Gerard P. Hammond ’98
Mr. Sean M. Harrigan ’98
Mr. and Mrs. Sean P. Kennedy ’98
Mr. Daniel D. Kirchoff ’98
Mr. Joseph R. Kondel ’98
Mr. Thomas J. Lennon ’98
Mr. Stephen T. Loiaconi ’98
Mr. Aleksander K. Mehrle ’98
Mr. John F. Michlik ’98
Mr. and Mrs. John P. Morris ’98
Mr. Ryan P. Mulderrig ’98
Mr. James E. Murphy ’98
Mr. James F. Peiser ’98
Mr. John M. Power ’98
Mr. John Thomas ’98
Mr. Steven R. Turner ’98
Mr. William J. Ulrich ’98
Mr. Christopher E. Walsh ’98
Mr. Patrick A. Wickman ’98
Mr. Michael R. Zanetti ’98
Mr. Michael R. Aherne ’99
Mr. Richard B. Akalski ’99
Mr. Robert M. Alarcon ’99
Mr. Peter M. Anderer ’99
Mr. Sean M. Angeles ’99
Mr. Paul Baginski ’99
FA L L 2014
Mr. Brendan F. Barker ’99
Mr. Martin S. Bell ’99
Mr. David G. Bonagura ’99
Mr. John J. Brady ’99
Mr. Thomas Brennan ’99
Mr. Robert A. Cacace ’99
Mr. Patrick J. Carr ’99
Mr. Kevin F. Clancy ’99
Mr. Sean J. Cloonan ’99
Mr. Ricardo Colon ’99
Mr. Sean P. Colvin ’99
Mr. Patrick M. Connorton ’99
Mr. Mark E. Cummins ’99
Mr. Omar S. Delgado ’99
Mr. James P. DuVernay ’99
Mr. Michael J. Fedigan ’99
Mr. Nazareno J. Fontanilla ’99
Mr. Matthew F. Fristachi ’99
Mr. Peter F. Gigante ’99
Mr. Brendan C. Griffith ’99
Mr. Matthew H. Hansen ’99
Mr. David P. Harman ’99
Mr. Patrick F. Heffernan ’99
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Hein ’99
Mr. Andrew W. Horner ’99
Mr. Vincent Indelicato ’99
Mr. Nicholas J. Johnson ’99
2LT Benjamin W. Klay ’99
Mr. Waldemar P. Koscielny ’99
Mr. John P. Kuehn ’99
Mr. William A. Kwan ’99
Mr. Peter J. Lasorte ’99
Mr. D. Alexander Lavy ’99
Mr. Christian G. Mariano ’99
Mr. Anthony F. Montaruli ’99
Mr. Peter A. O’Connell ’99
Mr. Alexander B. Patterson ’99
Mr. Dylan J. Patterson ’99
Mr. Kyle P. Payne ’99
Mr. Christopher D. Pergolizzi ’99
Mr. Robert M. Piotrowski ’99
Mr. Andrew C. Porter ’99
Mr. Christopher J. Reenock ’99
Mr. Owen D. Reidy ’99
Mr. Patrick M. Shaw ’99
Mr. Raymond J. Stahl ’99
Mr. C. Ian Stevenson ’99
Mr. Joseph V. Tursi ’99
Mr. Edward Venturanza ’99
Mr. Michael E. Williams ’99
Mr. Brian R. Arena ’00
Mr. David S. Byrnes ’00
Mr. Sean Kevin Driscoll ’00
Mr. Terence P. Kannengieser ’00
Mr. Matthew W. Knox ’00
Mr. Robert Madison ’00
Mr. Michael F. McCabe ’00
Mr. Michael A. Memoli ’00
Mr. Timothy J. Morris ’00
Mr. Steven J. Pallonetti ’00
Mr. Richard L. Rivero ’00
Mr. Eric Samson ’00
Mr. Michael P. Spillane ’00
Mr. Kevin K. Abels ’01
Mr. Kevin P. Carmody ’01
Mr. Gerard T. Drumm ’01
Mr. Justin A. Gallagher ’01
Mr. Kevin G. Galligan ’01
Mr. Timothy D. Houghton ’01
Mr. William A. Lavy ’01
Mr. Ed J. McCabe ’01
Mr. Christopher B. McClellan ’01
Mr. Thomas S. McGivney ’01
Mr. Michael J. Palitz ’01
Mr. Michael S. Palmieri ’01
Mr. Daniel J. Peveraro ’01
Mr. James P. Sutton ’01
Mr. Michael D. Botta ’02
Mr. Christopher M. Elms ’02
Mr. John R. Hein ’02
Mr. Matthew W. Meyer ’02
Mr. Thomas C. Nash ’02
Mr. David J. O’Donnell ’02
Mr. David Rodriguez ’02
Mr. Steven M. Wyszinski ’02
Mr. David W. Denton ’03
Mr. Jean-Claude Desrosiers ’03
Mr. Vincent DiMaggio ’03
Mr. Kevin Farrell ’03
Mr. Edward J. Garnett ’03
Mr. Mark E. Guffanti ’03
Mr. Ryan Harris ’03
Mr. Gregory W. Hills ’03
Mr. Keith E. Hoffman ’03
Mr. Alexander H. Hogan ’03
Mr. Mark A. Joinnides ’03
Mr. Peter A. Luccarelli, III ’03
Mr. Michael S. Masullo ’03
Mr. Carlos A. Mercado ’03
Mr. Michael J. Mortorano ’03
Mr. Nicholas G. Nikic ’03
Mr. Pablo S. Torre, III ’03
Mr. Etienne C. Toussaint ’03
Mr. Paul Ryan B. Tumambing ’03
Mr. Ronald S. Zuvich ’03
Mr. Charles C. Davis ’04
Mr. Scott S. DeBenedett ’04
Mr. Andrew W. Goodwin ’04
Mr. Richard J. Martinelli ’04
Mr. Daniel R. McCartney ’04
Mr. Rory J. Payne ’04
Mr. Vincent B. Penge ’04
Mr. Daniel A. Rios ’04
Mr. Christopher J. Seneca ’04
Mr. John P. Taddei ’04
Mr. Nicholas T. Campolettano ’05
Mr. Richard M. Fogal ’05
Mr. Stephen J. Giordano ’05
Mr. John B. Johnsen ’05
Mr. Noel P. Mangan ’05
Mr. Fiore Mastroianni ’05
Mr. William V. McGuinness, IV ’05
Mr. Nino Mihatov ’05
Mr. Kyle V. Mullins ’05
Mr. Joshua A. Narciso ’05
Mr. William J. Sonnemann ’05
Mr. Abel N. Alvarez ’06
Mr. Patrick M. Bugas ’06
Mr. Kyle P. Dempsey ’06
Mr. William N. Haddad ’06
Mr. Nader J. Khorassani ’06
Mr. Michael R. Mitchell ’06
Mr. Luke J. Mondello ’06
Mr. Michael J. Ragone ’06
Mr. Nicholas G. Santangelo ’06
Mr. Donald M. Whitley ’06
Mr. Robert L. Brochin ’07
Mr. Brendan T. Carroll ’07
Mr. Michael J. Dunn ’07
Mr. Cristian A. Espinal ’07
Mr. John H. Ferris, III ’07
Mr. Christopher J. Fox ’07
1Lt. Brian C. Hahn ’07
Mr. Stephen A. Lauria ’07
Mr. Gregory D. Liguori ’07
Mr. S. Tully McLoughlin ’07
Mr. Kevin M. Wallace ’07
Mr. John T. Bugas ’08
Mr. Stephen V. Costanza ’08
1Lt. Patrick D. Coughlin ’08
Mr. Lorenzo C. De Boni ’08
Mr. Thomas A. Decina ’08
Mr. Daniel R. Friel ’08
Mr. Michael K. Gocksch ’08
Mr. David E. Jean-Baptiste ’08
Mr. Kevin D. Keogh ’08
Mr. Philip A. Mercadante ’08
Mr. Jack P. Moran ’08
Mr. Stephen F. Raiola ’08
Mr. John K. Ruszczynski ’08
Mr. Robert L. Sobecki ’08
Mr. Ryan M. Werner ’08
Mr. James D. Dieffenbach ’09
Mr. Joseph Gasperetti ’09
Mr. Chris A. Insana ’09
Mr. Brendan T. Kelly ’09
Mr. Thomas C. McKenna ’09
Mr. James Sayer ’09
Mr. James R. Simmons, Jr. ’09
Mr. Daniel M. Adler ’10
Mr. Michael A. Berger ’10
Mr. Nathaniel R. Hahn ’10
Mr. Christopher R. Kelly ’10
Mr. James E. Stark ’10
Mr. Thomas J. White ’10
Mr. Neil J. Hannan ’11
Mr. Robert J. Hausen, Jr. ’11
Mr. Patrick S. Heaney ’11
Mr. Nathan W. Klein ’11
Mr. Daniel J. Morris ’11
Mr. Julian J. Wong ’11
Mr. John A. Balletta ’12
Mr. Matthew J. Dieffenbach ’12
Mr. Daniel A. Echevarria ’12
Mr. James A. Elliott ’12
Mr. Robert A. Flatow ’12
Mr. Michael A. Glasser ’12
Mr. Ryan C. Greene ’12
Mr. Taehoon Kim ’12
Mr. John Giambrone ’13
Mr. Christopher Haddad ’13
Mr. Ryan McEvoy ’13
Mr. Brian Gallagher ’15
Mr. William Hogan ’15
17
PARENTS
Anonymous (4)
Mr. & Mrs Brian Abamont P’94
Ms. Patricia Keegan Abels P’01
Mr. and Mrs. Meliton A. Acoba P’91
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Acosta P’88
Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Agredo P’07’16
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Ames P’11
Mr. & Mrs. Salvatore Anfora P’98
Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Angeles P’99
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Anthony
P’14
Mr. and Mrs. Mehmet E. Ayverdi P’17
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Balletta P’12’14
Mr. and Mrs. Jose S. Bandera P’06
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Bartolini P’99
Mr. Mark A. Becue P’17’18
Ms. Rita Bigelow P’16
Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Bingham P’14’17
Mr. & Mrs. William Black P’93
Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Boak P’15
Ms. Dorothea Boerrigter P’11
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Boylan P’97
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Boyle P’86
Mr. and Mrs. John Boyle P’96
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bozek P’70
Mrs. Barbara Brennan P’90
Mrs. Mary Ellen Brockmeyer P’96
Ms. Mona Browne P’12
Mr. and Mrs. John Buckley P’82
Mr. and Mrs. J. Andrew Bugas P’06’08
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Burke, III P’14
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis Byrnes P’00
Dr. & Mrs. Nicholas V. Cagliuso P’17
Mr. & Mrs. Brian E. Campbell P’16
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Campen P’92’95
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Cappabianca,
Sr. P’03’08’17
Ms. Nancy J. Cascella P’12’15
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond Chevallier P’01
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J.
Cimaszewski P’17
Mrs. John Conlon P’81’83’87
Mr. and Mrs. John Connorton P’99
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Conroy
P’04’07’10
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crotty P’92
Mr. and Mrs. John Cummins
P’95’99
Mr. & Mrs. Mark Cunningham
P’01’17
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D’Avanzo P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Jaime Davila P’03
Mr. & Mrs. Cornelius Degnan P’92
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dempsey P’06
Mr. and Mrs. Jean-Claude Desrosiers
P’03’10
Mr. and Mrs. Allen A. Deur P’14
Ms. Elaine M. Donlin P’92
Mr. and Mrs. Kieran P. Donnelly P’15
Mrs. Mona Duggan P’84
Mr. and Mrs. John DuVernay P’99
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Eagan P’09
Mr. and Mrs. Sean I. Egan P’06
Mr. and Mrs. James Farrelly P’02’04
Mr.& Mrs. Carmelo Feliciano P’96
18
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Mrs. Susanne Ferris P’88
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fields P’77’85
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Fink P’12
Mrs. Mary Fitzpatrick P’93
Mrs. Mary Anne Ford P’82’98
GP’12’15
Mr. & Mrs. Alvaro Forero P’90
Mr. and Mrs. John Fouhey P’07
Mr. & Mrs. James Freeley P’89
Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Fulford P’11
Mrs. Renata D. Gallagher P’83
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Gallotta P’05
Mr. and Mrs. John T. Garnevicus
P’97’99’02
Mrs. Elizabeth Gillespie P’88
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Glasser P’12
Mrs. Myra Goggins P’78’83
Drs. Cornelia & Mircea Golimbu P’86
Mr. and Mrs. Jose Ramon Gonzalez
P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Roger H. Goodspeed
P’12
Mrs. Carmela Granata P’74
Mr. Alexander Gray P’75 ’77
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony M. Graziano
P’14
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Greene
P’12
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Guiney
P’94’96
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hahn P’07’10
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Hannan
P’11’14
Mr. and Mrs. William Hannigan
P’91
Mr. and Mrs. John Hannon P’16
Mr. & Mrs. Ferenc Harangozo P’79
Mr. Robert J. Hausen and Ms.
Rosemary Berkery P’11
Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Heaney P’11
Mr. and Mrs. James Hein P’96’99’02
Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Hinners
P’89’90
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Hoffmann
P’07
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Hone P’14
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Irzyk P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Scott J. Jandora
P’15’17
Mr. and Mrs. Hassan John P’08
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Johnson P’95
Dr. Barbara Judge P’01
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kahn P’01
Mrs. Annamma Kampil P’91’96
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Kannengieser
P’97’00
Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Keane P’13
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Keating P’16
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Keenan
P’06
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Kelly P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Kelly
P’09’13’15
Mr. & Mrs. William Kelly P’85
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Kennedy P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Kilkelly P’78
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Kinsella P’16
Mr. and Mrs. William Klay P’99’01
Mr. Bill Klein and Ms. Jane Tylus
P’08’11
Mr. and Mrs. Mark T. Koehne P’15
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Krause P’04
Mr. & Mrs. James Kuroly P’90’93
Mrs. Elvira LaFleur P’81
Mr. and Mrs. John Lane P’83 GP’15
Ms. Marie-Noelle Langan P’15
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen A. Lauria P’07
Mr. and Mrs. Luke P. LaValle, Jr.
P’95’97
Mr. and Mrs. Roger M. Lavan P’13
Ms. Lise Martina and Mr. Peter
Lindseth P’17
Doctors F.G.and Remedios Louie
P’86
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald E. Lumbra
P’12
Mrs. Dolores Macapugay P’96
Mrs. Mary Macchiarola P’89’90
Mr. and Mrs. Clemente Machuca
P’92
Mr. and Mrs. William Madden P’96
Mr. and Mrs. James Mahaney P’81
Mrs. Josephine Mahaney P’83
Mr. and Mrs. Francois Maisonrouge
P’03
Prof. and Dr. Corrado Manuali P’17
Dr. and Dr. Markus Y. Mapara P’17
Hon. Victor Marrero and Ms.
Veronica White P’07’10
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Martis P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Masi P’09
Joseph J. Massaro, D.D.S. P’79
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Masullo P’03
Mr. and Mrs. Steven J. Mazzari P’13
Mr. and Mrs. John McArdle P’86
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McEvoy P’13
Mrs. Mary McGinn W’68 P’02’05
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis McManus P’11
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. McNelis
P’79’88
Mrs. Joan Meade P’99
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Megley P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mercadante P’08
Mr. and Mrs. William Meyer P’02
Mr. and Mrs. Yves Michaud P’13
Mr. and Mrs. James Minogue P’04
Mr. and Dr. Arthur Minson P’88
Mr. and Mrs. Keith J. Misciagna P’14
Ms. Margaret Moerler P’76
Mrs. Elizabeth M. Moss P’80’84
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Mowbray P’10
Mr. & Mrs. John Mulreany P’87 ’90
Mrs. Josephine Murphy P’83
Mr. and Mrs. William Murray P’00
Mr. Brian E. Murray P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Jesus N. Navarrete
P’16
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Nowak P’11
Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Noyes P’14
Mrs. Ellin O’Brien W’44 P’74’76’81
Mrs. Regina O’Brien P’80
Mr. and Mrs. William O’Brien P’14
Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J.
O’Connor P’16
Mr. and Mrs. William A. O’Daly
P’16
Mrs. Veronica O’Donnell P’02
Mrs. Teresa O’Neill P’71
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin O’Reilly
P’87’91’93’05
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Owens P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pak P’05
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Palmieri P’01
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Palmieri, Jr.
P’14
Mr. and Mrs. Scot Parrish P’10’15
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Phelan P’17
Mr. and Mrs. John Porada
P’81’82’91
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Porter P’99
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Potepa P’05
Mr. and Mrs. David Pryor P’05
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Purvis P’96
Mr. and Mrs. Denis Quinn P’06
Mrs. and Mrs. Brian D. Quinn P’14
Hon. Reena Raggi Denton P’03
Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Raucci P’84
Mrs. Lillian Reda P’01
Mrs. Mary Reilly P’85
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Ricci P’89
Mrs. and Mrs. Patrick F. Rice P’13
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Rigatti P’12
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rodi P’91
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Rogers P’00’03
Mr. Eliseo Rojas and Ms. Kathy
Theroux-Rojas P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Romano P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Russo P’95
Mr. and Mrs. Peter V. Rybchuk P’13
Mrs. Mary Ann Samanich P’92
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Santariello
P’12
Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Schiller P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Schoder P’71
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Schweitzer P’08
Mr. and Mrs. John Semczuk P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Serrone P’10
Mr. Arthur Shapiro and Ms. Ellen
Rehm P’00
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio B. Silva P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Sniffin P’15
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Snow P’97
Mr. and Mrs. John Spiezio P’14
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Spillane
P’91’00
Mrs. Carmela Stabile P’71
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stark P’10
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stenger
P’02’06
Mr. and Mrs. James J. Stricker P’16
Ms. Connie M. Sullivan P’08
Mr. and Mrs. Edward F. Sweeney,
Jr. P’79
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew G. Sweeney
P’17
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Talbot P’93
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Tana P’99
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Tedeschi P’97
Mr. and Mrs. Bert J. Thomas P’07
Mr. David B. Thomas P’11’14’17
Drs. Pablo and Evita Torre P’03’05
Mr. and Mrs. Viet Anh Tran P’15
Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Trevetten P’98
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Truhon P’69
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tursi P’99
Mr. & Mrs. Louis Usarzewicz
P’78’81
Dr. and Mrs. Jose M. Villarin P’06
Mr.. and Mrs. Louis R. Vuoncino P’11
Ms. Susan Wengler P’09’13’15
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas White P’10’14
Mrs. Theresia Wolz P’79
Ms. Margaret Wozny P’10
Mr. Bernard P. Yozwiak and Ms.
Teresa Jankovic P’07’16
FRIENDS
Mrs. Phyllis Haertel W’42
Mrs. Margaret McKelvey W’43
Mrs. Jacquelyn Byrne W’47
Mrs. Abigail Connolly W’47
Mrs. Diva Muller W’47
Mrs. Carol McCormack W’48
Mrs. Eleanor Stanton W’53
Mrs. Jean Dinatale W’72
Ms. Margaret Ott W’79
Rev. Vincent Biagi, S.J.
Ms. Caroline F. Berry
Ms. Kristin Cupillari
Dr. and Mrs. Gary J. Tocchet
Mr. Joseph Amatrucola
Ms. Jennifer L. Reeder and Mr.
Pasquale Cesare
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Walsh
Ms. Hee-Sun Hong and
Mr. Daniel Dougherty ’86
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
Mr. Frank Ciulla
Ms. Zeena Abdulahad
Mulvaney Family Foundation
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Rogers
GP’09
Ms. Gretchen Borges
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Creamer
Mr. Thomas Gallagher
Ms. Anna T. Hughes †
Mrs. Eileen Mobbs
Mr. Patrick O’Connell
Mr. Francis Piderit
Ms. Joyce Pietrowski
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pollicino
GP’12’13
Ms. Mae Rooney †
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Totilo
GP’92’94
Ms. Julanne Werwaiss
The Brooklyn Prep Alumni Assn.
Mr. John H. Driscoll
United Way of New York City
Brian Foley & Company, Inc.
FA L L 2014
19
Matching Gift Companies
A+E Networks
Abbott Laboratories Fund
Advent Software
AIG Matching Grants Program
Airbus Group, Inc. Matching Gift
Alliance Bernstein
Altria Employee Giving Program
AXA Foundation
Bank of America Matching Gift
Program
Barclays Educational Gift Matching
Program
Baxter International Foundation
Benevity Community Impact Fund
BlackRock Matching Gift Program
BNY Mellon
Boeing Gift Matching Program
Capital One
Chevron Humankind
Chubb & Son Matching Gift
Program
Colgate-Palmolive Company
Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation
Doris Duke Charitable Foundation
Expedia, Inc.
GE Foundation
General Mills Foundation
Goldman Sachs Foundation
Google Matching Gift Program
Honeywell (has merged with
AlliedSignal)
IBM Corporation Matching Gifts
Program
Ingersoll-Rand Charitable
Foundation
Jacobs Asset Management
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Kellogg’s Matching Grants
Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co. L.P.
LexisNexis Cares Matching Gift
Program
Macy’s Foundation
Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.
Mass MutualLife Insurance Company
MasterCard International Matching
Gifts
MBIA, Inc.
McGraw-Hill Companies
Mercator, Inc.
Merck
Microsoft Matching Gift
Mizuho USA Foundation, Inc.
Mobil Foundation
Morgan Stanley Annual Appeal
Motorola Foundation
Mutual of America
Nomura America Foundation
NYSE Foundation, Inc.
Och-Ziff Capital Management
OdysseyRe
PepsiCo Foundation
Pfizer Foundation Matching Gifts
Program
PG & E Corporation Foundation
PNC Foundation
PSEG
RBC Foundation - USA
RBS Citizens
Rockefeller Brothers Fund
Samson Capital Advisors
Shell Oil Company Foundation
State Street Global Advisors
Textron, Inc.
The Bank of Tokyo - Mitsubishi, Ltd.
The Clorox Company
Patricia Hannon Ignatian Educator
Award Presented to Ms. Carol Remsen
At the Mass of the Holy Spirit
on September 5th, faculty and
students paused to celebrate
faculty achievement with the annual
presentation of the Patricia Hannon
Ignatian Educator Award. This year's
award was presented to Ms. Carol
Remsen, long-serving member of
the Mathematics Department.
Named in honor of the late Mrs.
Patricia Hannon, the Ignatian
Educator Award recognizes a faculty
member whose dedication to his
or her students fosters a learning
environment that is the model of
Ignatian pedagogy.
Ms. Remsen has taught at Regis for
14 years. She arrived in the 20002001 academic year with 12 years
of teaching experience. She holds a
bachelor's degree in Mathematics
from Fairfield University, an M.A.
in Administration and Supervision
with a certification as a Teacher of
Mathematics from St. Peter's College,
and an M.A. in Religion and Religious
Education with a concentration in
Spirituality and Spiritual Direction
from Fordham University.
Ms. Remsen has certainly made
her mark as an innovative teacher
at Regis, leading the Mathematics
Department through a number of
transformations and curriculum
changes over the years. In her 14
years at Regis, she has taught every
math course currently offered.
She has served as the department
chair and is an academic advisor,
a member of the Regis Academic
Committee, Campus Ministry, and
the Religious Formation Committee.
She has also served on the Regis
Admissions Committee, as a retreat
leader, and has taught math for the
REACH Program.
A plaque honoring all previous
winners of the Patricia Hannon
Ignatian Educator Award currently
hangs in the 84th Street Foyer.
The Dorsey and Whitney Foundation
The Duke Energy Foundation
The J.P. Morgan Chase Foundation
The Northrop Grumman Foundation
The Prudential Foundation Matching
Gifts Program
TIAA-CREF Employee Giving
Foundation
Time Inc.
Time Warner Matching Grants
Program
Times Square Capital Managment,
LLC
Transamerica Foundation
Transatlantic Reinsurance Company
Travelers Insurance
UBS
United Technologies Matching Gifts
Program
Verisk Analytics
Verizon Foundation
Wells Fargo Educational Matching
Gift Program
XL Capital Assurance
20
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
Prowlings
1938
Jim Holahan, 5 Mohegan Trail,
Saddle River, NJ 07458
1939
Kevin Tubridy, [email protected]
3524 Taft St., Wantagh, NY 11793
1941
William Carroll, [email protected]
4254 Via Verde, Cypress, CA 90630
1943
Don Gross, [email protected]
41 Strickland Place, Manhasset, NY 11030
1944
Tom Sheridan, S.J., [email protected]
515 East Fordham Rd, Bronx NY 10458
In the last issue Jake O’Connell suggested
that surviving vets from our class send a
postcard to our class rep listing data like
when, where, whom we saw, etc. Well Jake
led the way by doing just that. Jake served
in the Navy from 12/15/44 to 4/30/46. After
basic training he went to Quartermaster
(Q/M) School. On V-J Day, 8/14/45, he
was on a troop ship to the Philippines.
Shortly after arriving there he met Marty
Murtagh, who was in the Navy “SeaBees”
on Samar Island (Marty went to China
ten days later). A month later Jake joined
the Minesweeper YMS 340 (“Iron Men
on Wooden Ships”) as QM3/C., charged
with cutting and destroying harbor mines
in Lamon Bay (eastern side of the Island
of Luzon, P.I.) until 3/20/46. He left ship
a week later for the troop transport S/S
Typhoons en route to the U.S.A. On the
way they stopped at Guam, where he met
Art Barret, who was on the S/S ATR 16,
an oceangoing tug (he has not seen Artie
since that date). Arriving back in the U.S.A.
he went to Manhattan Beach, N.Y. where
he received an honorable discharge as
QM 3/C on 4/30/46. Time overseas was
206 days (9/27/45 to 4/22/46). He then
used the GI bill to go to Fordham College
and then went to St. John’s for Law. He
retired in 1992 after twenty-three years as
a federal administrative law judge. After
graduation Bill Bahret joined the army
and after basic training in artillery at Fort
Sill in Oklahoma found himself working
with mules and horses as part of the
mountain troops, quite a change for a guy
from a bedroom community in Queens,
N.Y. who had only seen mules in movies.
Then it was on to Leyte in the Philippines
by sea and assignment to the Americal
Division for a D-Day type landing on Cebu
to retake it from the Japanese. Bill says
“I cannot describe how it was for an 18
year old guy, only six months out of high
school, to be thrown into this business,
but any combat veteran knows what I
am talking about.” His assignment was
as radio operator for a “Forward Artillery
Observation Team” – about four guys who
went out, either with the infantry or on their
own, to locate the enemy and direct fire
as needed to spoil their day and save our
guys, a job made difficult by the fact that
they never knew where the enemy was. But
the enemy knew where they were, and they
barely escaped with their lives. Then it was
intensive training in LSTs for the landing
on Japan proper. But when the war ended
with the explosion of the atom bombs in
August they were soon on their way to
occupation duty there. The next 8 months
were spent working in places in northern
Japan – Honshu, Hokkaido – mostly doing
radio relay work and then home safely in
August 1946. Of his experience in combat,
Bill quotes a veteran who said, “You will
never want to be in combat a second time,
but you will be mighty proud to have done
it once!” Please note: this is a severely
cut down version of Bill’s own account
of his service, which will be reprinted in
its entirety in an upcoming edition of the
Centennial eNews. Finally, in 1944 WWII
was continuing and, as we have seen, many
of our classmates were going off to join the
armed services. But that summer others of
our classmates went off to do battle with
a different kind of enemy. This summer
three of these, Gene Rooney, Tom Murphy,
our senior year class president, and Tom
Sheridan completed seventy years as
members of the Society of Jesus. As already
reported on in Prowlings, Gene has been
active all these years organizing libraries
in this country as well as in Uruguay and
especially Chile. Tom Murphy spent about
a quarter of a century in the Philippines,
pursuing some of his studies there early on
and then, after ordination to the priesthood
in 1957 and graduate studies at Fordham
University, he returned to the Philippines to
become dean of discipline at the Ateneo de
Davao. It is not known whether his model
there was Father Cerrute or Father Parrell,
but no matter; after one year in that job
he was made principal. He later served as
principal at the Ateneo de Naga and, for a
longer period, at the Ateneo de Manila. In
1971 he returned to Alma Mater Regis to
serve, briefly as the school’s first Director
of Admissions, and then as President from
1972 until 1976. It was in that capacity
that in 1975 he took the important step
of adding six laymen to the hitherto allJesuit Board of Trustees, a situation which
continues to this day. Tom then spent
the next twenty years as a much beloved
parish priest at St. Margaret of Cortona
Parish in the Bronx, eventually moving to
Murray-Weigel Hall, the Jesuit retirement
community on the Fordham U. campus,
where he was joined by Tom Sheridan in
2014. Tom also spent most of his Jesuit
life in education. As a scholastic he taught
French and Latin at our old rival on 16th
Street, but later was professor of Theology
first at Fordham U. and then at St. Peter’s
in Jersey City. Upon retiring from teaching
in 1999 he ministered to immigrants in
federal detention.
1945
Will O’Brien, [email protected]
92 Riva Ave., North Brunswick, NJ 08902
1946
Roman Chapelsky, [email protected]
7 Clinton Pl., Cranford, NJ 07016-1938
Charles Schneider,
[email protected]
112 Fenway, Rockville Centre, NY 11570
Bill Clarke reports that the class has
recently lost two more of its members.
Dominic R. Butler died Monday, August 4,
2014 in Ozone Park, NY. After Regis Dom
went to Manhattan and retired as a Section
Chief in Engineering. Arthur M. Dillon died
Saturday, August 16, 2014 in the Bronx.
After Regis Artie went to Fordham, became
a Captain in the Air Force and retired as VP
and Associate General Counsel at Equitable
Life. Please remember both Dominic and
Arthur and their families in your prayers.
1947
Joe Miranda, 269 Sparrow Dr. Estates I,
Manhasset, NY 11030, [email protected]
1948
Joseph Breen, [email protected]
960A Heritage Hills, Somers, NY 10589
US House member Lois Capps of Santa Barbara poses for a photo with Ron Tobin ’53,
flanked by Regis classmates Jim Shea ’53 on the left and Denny Woods ’53 on the right.
In the evening class (’58)at Fordham Law
School there was a study group consisting
of Bernie Joyce, Terry Ryan, Tommy Noone,
Joe Breen,and Tom Healey, all of whom
attended Regis in the mid 1940’s.The group
would study in the conference room of
the firm of Emmet Marvin and Martin at
48 Wall where Joyce, Noone, and Breen
worked as clerks while attending Fordham.
In preparation for the Bar the group would
meet after attending the Marino Bar Review
sessions. During the last week before the
exam the group would meet in the bar of
the NYAC. Every member passed both parts
of the exam on first try. Ryan and Breen
still survive and Ryan actually still practices
law.The study group fathered a total of 35
children. “Noble hearts strong to endure.”
Joe Breen writes: “St Therea’s Church in
Briarcliff was filled 8 rows on each side with
the family of Bernie Joyce at his funeral
mass. On my discharge from USMC
September 1954 I visited an old friend of my
father, G.W. Martin and he offered me a job
as a law clerk at his firm of Emmet Marvin
& Martin.I worked for E Graham whose
husband had graduated from Regis. My
father and Martin had become true friends
in the battle of the Argonne forest in 1917.
With much help from E Graham I held my
own and was asked to find someone from
the Fordham law school night division who
might like a clerk’s job. I sent up Tommy
Noone. Next I was asked if I knew someone
at Fordham law who would like to fill a job
as an accountant at EM&M and I sent up
Bernie Joyce and the rest is history. For 4
years Tommy, Bernie, and I did a major
share of the profitable work at EM&M and
became the managing partners in our early
30’s. After 22 years during which EM&M
flourshed and grew, in order to become
the President of a banking client, I left the
firm in the capable hands of Tommy and
Bernie. The firm was partial to any applicant
who had gone to Regis. Dave Mahle ’60
became a partner. After Tommy Noone
retired, Bernie as Senior partner managed
EM&M and the firm never missed a beat,
and continued to expand and flourish.
His obit shows what good work he did. At
a golf reunion at Canada Lake I met the
middle son of Andy Healey ’46 with whom
I played basketball, dead ringer for his old
man. Coach Don Kennedy put together a
foursome, Barry Sullivan, Gerry Rooney,
Jack Cardwell and me. Barry belonged to
maidstone and playing there was a treat.I
invited Barry, Don Kennedy, Cardwell, and
Gerry Rooney up to my course, Sakonnet
Point (directly across the river form
Newport,RI, which was clearly seen from
my deck. Don told my sons that Regis
won the Eastern States Tournament in
Newport, looking through the clear fluid of
his martini, and gesturing at the De La Salle
Prep school, where the tourney took place,
he said, ”We moidered ’em, we controlled
the boards, and whatever passes didn’t end
up in the Rooneys’ scoring layups, Barry
would pop one in from the outside.Those
were the days, my friends—winning the
Jesuit tourney, beating St. Francis Prep in
The Garden, beating the NJ State Champs
in Newark, losing to no high school team,
and culminating in destroying La Salle on
the way to the ESCIT Championship. Regis
had a great team this year befitting the
centennial, but the 1948 team still should
be considered the best.” (Editor’s note: It is.)
FA L L 2014
1949
Andy Hernon, [email protected]
60 Sutton Place S., Apt.#10, NY, NY 10022
An Apology Is In Order. In the Summer
Prowlings I failed to include among the
ladies in attendance at the 65th Reunion
the wife of Howie Gould, Barbara. Mea
culpa, Barbara. On the Road. Bob Byrnes
writes life is good in Vermont where he
summers. I guess he could write the
same about Florida where he has been
wintering of late. His plans for October
include attending both the Class MiniReunion and the Regis Centennial Gala at
the Waldorf-Astoria. Pat and Alan Pinado
traveled most of July in addition to their
June stay in Las Vegas. Alan, arthritis
permitting, and Pat plan to head to Los
Angeles for Thanksgiving to visit with
their eldest granddaughter, a freshman at
the University of Southern California, and
to attend the USC- Notre Dame game.
Margarete and Warren Roth expect to
arrive home in Illinois early in October after
a busy summer spent in Germany where
they worked on their second book for the
People’s Resource Center, a book they hope
to see published in November. Their latest
book “is a collection of interviews with
refugees and immigrants to the United
States. Collecting these interviews has been
an eye opening as well as an emotional
journey for us. It is one thing to read about
the hardships of people getting away from
war, discrimination and poverty, but quite
another to sit across the table and have a
person tell you about losing a child or a
sibling”. For those of you wondering about
the whereabouts of Art Romagnoli, he has
been in China since mid-June. His first
three weeks were spent in Guangzhou and
then he moved on to Jinzhou, where he
was, at last report. This is not Art’s first trip
to China; previously he had visited there
for two months in late 2008.His visa will
not expire until April 2015 and he has put
the welcome mat out for any classmates
and other Regians who might want to
join him there. You can contact Art on
the internet at [email protected]. Art
wants you to know that “I love the Chinese
people and their country. Americans have
so many misconceptions about that very
advanced country. Believers in American
exceptionalism, if they could view it
objectively, would feel humbled by China’s
achievements”. On the Move. In August
Claudia and Joe Garon left Manasquan,
New Jersey for their new home on Cape
Cod where they will be able to keep in
close touch with two of their daughters. By
October 1st Connie and Ken Keating expect
to complete their move from Wilmington,
Delaware to Cokesbury Village, a retirement
community facility in Hockessin, Delaware,
located halfway between Wilmington and
the Pennsylvania state line. On the Mend.
Having broken his pelvis in a fall in midMay, Charlie Zumba was finally discharged
on July 22nd. At home, he feels”much
better off without the institution’s dozen
meds a day”. In Need of Prayers. Bob
Sexton called me in early August to express
his regrets at being unable to join us for
the October Mini-Reunion. His wife and
21
he, together with a son, have been dealing
with significant health issues which have
impaired their mobility. Please add Bob and
his family to your prayer list. Again, MiniReunion. Thursday October 16th at 2PM
Hurley’s Saloon on West 48th Street.
1950
William Allingham, [email protected]
5 Jill Drive, Holmdel, NJ 07733
It has been a slow summer with little news
to mention. Jack Cina is recovering from
major surgery. We regret to report that
Joe Purtell’s daughter, Deanna Gaston,
passed away in Oklahoma in August.
Please remember Jack and Deanna, and
Joe and his family, and all of our deceased
classmates, in your prayers.
1951
Donal McCarthy, fi[email protected]
22 Shorehaven Ln., Manhasset, NY 11030
The authentic class notes according to
McCarthy: Age and fecklessness conspire
to limit these class notes. Your class
correspondent’s misplaced ambition as
a gardener resulted in a broken bone in
the pelvic region, to wit, a pubic ramus.
The injury was aggravated by an attack of
the lazies, But we promise better results
in the Winter RAN. By that time, both Jug
Night and the Centennial Dinner will be
behind us and we may have some news.
Currently on tap (so to speak) for Jug Night
are several NY area classmates, Bernie
Tracey, Tom Fahey and Jim O’Rourke.
Don McCarthy will be absent. Who needs
a guy showing up with a walker to guzzle
beer? Just a few are also signed on for the
Centennial Dinner in October. A further
episode of How We Nearly Lost The Cold
War: The late Ernst Muller was a US Army
lieutenant in the Transportation Corps and
was stationed – appropriately enough – in
Germany. On occasion, his work would put
him in charge of a shipment of soldiers’
personally owned vehicles (POVs, in Army
Speak) on the Hamburg docks. So here we
are at the docks. And look, there are the
POVs. But where is Lt. Muller? Ah, there he
is, catching some shuteye in a handy POV.
And that’s what makes America great. Here
ends the Official McCarthy Text.
1952
James McGough, [email protected]
12 Highland Ave., Sleepy Hollow, NY 10591
Harry DeMaio, [email protected]
From Jerry Kappes: On August 10th, I
was happy to join Bette Quintavalle and
three generations of her family for another
birthday...her 98th! God bless her, “strong
to endure.” Lee Sculti would like to extend
massive congratulations to Regis for the
recognition (Wall Street Journal 8/19/14,
“Taking The Longer View Of Diversity” of
the REACH program. While our “leaders”
dream up huge extravagant programs
that usually disappoint, Regis quietly
implements a simple plan, close to home,
and it is succeeding fabulously! Hats off
to all those who designed the plan, and
Katia and Al Galanek ’58 at a book signing with Col. Oliver North.
who have made it work through the years.
THERE’S A BIG LESSON IN THERE
SOMEWHERE. From Larry Boland: In
1948 she was only 34 years old, quite good
looking, very inviting, and yet somewhat
mysterious. I never dreamed I’d see her
100th birthday. She is still quite good
looking, very inviting, and somewhat
mysterious. I plan to celebrate at the
Waldorf Astoria with other Regians in
October. My only regret is that the party
isn’t on 84th St. Ted McAniff: June 29th
was my 80th and the family gathered (all
21 save 2 at soccer camp) at our place in
the wilds of central Oregon. Not really so
wild, about 13 miles south of that major
metropolis, Bend which is logically named
for the bend in the Deschutes River,
logically named for its Falls. Who would
have thought French trappers got so far!
Joe Schineller: I was invited to join two
of my sons and their families vacationing
on Cape Cod. As we were about to start
playing miniature golf, my son said I
should read the sign regarding the rules. As
I’m straining to do so, “out of the corner
of my eye, out of the woodwork” appear
ALL eleven grandkids and ALL their moms
and dads. All had come long distances,
8-12 hour drives for my 80th birthday! I
was flabergasted! The next two days were a
series of parties, bumper boats, barbecues,
the beach etc. Wow. A Very Interesting Offer
from Lew Bowlby: My wife, Rosemary, and
I are conveners for the Scottish District
Families Association (SDFA). We attend
the Highland Games and Scottish Festivals
in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont
setting up our tent in the ’Clan Village’
sections of the events. There, armed with
various research materials, we encourage
festival attendees to see if their family’s
surname qualifies to wear a Tartan; and
if it is linked to a ’clan’ or a ’district’.
Historically, only 30% of people of Scottish
heritage were associated with a Clan Chief.
The remaining 70% trace their ancestry to
a ’place’. In broad strokes the Clans were
originally an insular association confined
to the remote and wild mountain valleys
of the Scottish Highlands where family
and neighbors agreed to a Clan Chief’s
sway in return for both defensive and
offensive leadership; while the remaining
more educated and stable populations
along the coasts and in the lowlands had
no need for such a social arrangement.
Should our research into their surname
reveal a ’district’ connection we then
attempt to get them to officially become
members of the SDFA. As we have just
completed our visits to the Maine and
Vermont games and are planning to attend
the three day New Hampshire Highland
Games in late September, which is one
of the largest on the East coast (upwards
of 30,000 visitors over the three days) I
thought it might be interesting to do a
bit of research on our fellow classmates.
The results were interesting and not
unexpected. Including me, seventeen of
us qualify to wear District Tartans. I am
aware that at least one of the persons on
this list is deceased. There may be others.
However, their families, especially children
and grandchildren, might be interested
to learn more about their Scottish
background. Here they are: James Bellew,
Aberdeen District; Lewis Bowlby, Lochaber
District; James Colligan, Dundee District;
Donald Corke, Lennox District; Thomas
Cox, Argyll District; Frank Dunn, Angus
District; James Grant, Strathspey District;
George Hasse(n), Glasgow District;
William Lundy, Fife District; Michael and
Larry Murray, Strathern District; John and
George O’Connor, Dundee District; Francis
Nolan(e), Inverness District; Gerald Shea,
Lorne District; and Martin Ward, Roxburgh
District. Each of these districts has been
assigned its own official tartan. The 56
Districts composing the SDFA are loosely
defined geographical areas, but easily
identified on a map of Scotland. Should
anyone on the list want to investigate
further or join the association (it’s only
$15.00 for a single and $25.00 for a family
membership), I would welcome any
inquiries. I would also be happy to look
up any other surnames in your family’s
history to see if they qualify. Mother’s
and grandmother’s surnames are just
as important as those on the ’male’ side
of the family ledger. You can write me at
P.O. 47, East Parsonsfield, Maine 04028;
email: [email protected]; or
call 207-625-5066. Happy hunting. Harry
DeMaio has signed a contract with London
22
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
based MX Publishing to issue his five book
alternate universe mystery series – The
Casebooks of Octavius Bear. “Book One—
The Open and Shut Case” is a re-issue
and is available on Amazon September
22. “Book Two—The Case of the Spotted
Band” arrives on December 10th. Books
Three, Four and Five come out in 2015.
Centennial Gala: As you firm up your plans
for the events, please keep Jim McGough
informed at: [email protected].
Happy Birthdays to All! Next Prowlings
input needed no later than December 15 for
the Winter issue! Send to Harry DeMaio at
[email protected].
1953
Thomas Hickey, [email protected]
474 Kossuth Street, Paramus, NJ 07652
In early July Ron Tobin traveled from
his Santa Barbara, Calif. home to
Washington, DC to receive a gold medal
for contributions to the promotion of
French language and literature from
La Renaissance Française, which was
founded almost a hundred years ago as
a private organization to promote French
culture. This is the latest of several awards
Ron has received from the French for
contributing to appreciation of French
culture. The event took place in the
Washington DC residence of the French
Ambassador, who welcomed Ron and the
five other 2014 medal recipients, followed
by the awards themselves and a reception.
Although the weather was typical of DC in
July (98 degrees and 95 percent humidity),
spirits weren’t dampened and US House
member Lois Capps of Santa Barbara,
who nominated Ron for the award, also
joined in. The picture shows Ron enjoying
the event with Rep. Capps, flanked by
Regis classmates Jim Shea on the left and
Denny Woods on the right. Afterwards
Ron treated the Regis contingent and
their spouses to a delicious dinner at La
Chaumiere, a French restaurant in nearby
Georgetown. During his visit Ron stayed
with Phyllis and Jim Shea at their home in
nearby Arlington, Va. They were joined by
Denny Woods and his wife Eileen Dooley,
who traveled from Shepherdtown, West
Virginia to attend the ceremony and stay
overnight with the Sheas. Ed Jentz and
Maura had also planned to come up from
the Richmond, Va. area for the ceremony
and to join in the mini reunion, but had
to cancel when Maura had a health issue.
Everyone spoke to Ed on the phone,
filling him in on what had happened, and
wishing him and Maura well. Ron and
the Woods greatly appreciated the Sheas’
hospitality, including being treated to a
royal brunch by Phyllis the day after the
awards ceremony. Ron then stayed in
Washington a couple more days to meet
with friends and colleagues before heading
back to sunny California. Joe Junker writes:
“My “gimlet” short story Summer’s End
was published in the Bethlehem Writers
Roundtable Magazine. My Naval Academy
short memoir, Honor is scheduled to be
published in the December edition of
Hippocampus. My vasectomy short story,
Snip, Snip, was accepted for publication
by Emerge Literary Journal and will be
published in their Stitches issue.”
1954
John Conroy, [email protected]
180 Forest Avenue, New Rochelle, NY 10804
Sorry to have to report the sad news of the
death of Tom Cahill’s wife, Myrtle, on July
28th and of Bill McGovern’s wife, Mary,
on August 9th. Please keep the Cahills
and the McGoverns in your prayers. Dick
Schneider’s wife, Fran, also writes seeking
our prayers: “It goes without saying that
Dick Schneider will not attend. He is ever
so slowly marching toward the end of his
Lewy Body Disease journey. Usually it takes
5 - 7 years, but with Dick we are in our 11th
year. Please all pray for us.” Finally, in a
letter entitled “A Job to Complete for Father
Burke!”, George Jeffers writes explaining
why he will not be able to attend the 60th.
“Unfortunately, my wife, Fran and I will
not be able to attend the celebration. Our
oldest living son, Jeff, has recently been
diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and is
presently receiving a course of chemo at
Stanford University Hospital to reduce the
size of a tumor on his pancreas, adjacent
to his liver. The doctors have scheduled
his operation to remove this tumor for
the week of October 20th. I am sure you
understand Fran and I will be with Jeff in
California the weeks before, during and
after his surgery to support him and to
do whatever we can to assist his wife
with the various issues associated with
the surgery, including driving him to and
from his final round of chemo. His wife is
a high school Social Studies teacher and
has a limited number of personal leave
days. Please include Jeff in any prayers that
may be offered at our class mass for our ill
and deceased classmates and our family
members. Fran and I adopted our 4 sons
from Angel Guardian Home in Brooklyn in
1966. They are the 4 youngest of a family
of 14 Native American children, members
of the Dakota Sioux Tribe, who were
abandoned by their parents in Texas, where
their parents and older siblings worked
picking crops. Angel Guardian did not have
any information about the health history
of our sons’ natural parents. However,
given Jeff’s recent cancer discovery and the
health history of Roger, our youngest son,
who was diagnosed with bladder cancer
four years ago, it appears cancer runs in
our boys’ natural family. Thankfully, three
years ago, Roger completed successful
surgery to remove his bladder and recently
celebrated his third cancer free year!
Unfortunately, four years ago, we lost our
oldest son, Sandy, due to an accidental fall
in his apartment in Minneapolis, where he
lived alone, after returning to Minnesota
and the Dakotas to reunite with his natural
family. Thank God, our third son, Jack, who
lives and works in Valley Cottage, N.Y. is in
good health. We will be visiting with him
in Stony Brook, NY over the Labor Day
weekend. We also have 4 grandsons and
one granddaughter. All are in good physical
health. Our granddaughter lives in Chicago
and our grandsons live in Ft. Myers, St.
Paul, New City and Scranton. I will be
happy to complete the information form
you recently sent, if you wish these forms
to be completed by class members who do
not attend the reunion. Please count me in
on any special financial gift our class may
decide to make to Regis to commemorate
the 60th anniversary of our graduation.
I appreciate the great gift I was given to
attend Regis. I always tell Fran and my sons
how much Regis and the Jesuits, especially
Farther Burke, changed the course of my
life! I hope to see you both in the future,
since Fran and I travel to N.J each summer
to visit her family in Leonardo, which is
near Ben’s home and to Rockland to visit
my son, John. Thanks again for the gift of
your time and talents to our class and for
your friendship over the years! George” Just
before these notes came in, Ben Trigani and
I were talking about starting a prayer group
for our class. We hope to present that
possibility at our REUNION on October
18th. Hope to see you there.
1955
John Morris, [email protected]
3 Salem Pl., Valhalla, NY 10595
Paul Lennon, [email protected]
17 Pine Ridge Road, Larchmont, NY 10538
Wayne Merritt ’62 and Paul Spagnoli ’62
still enjoy playing the national pastime,
a more vigorous sport for athletes who
refuse to age!
Sean Moroney visited New York City in
early July after two weeks on the Regis
Ignatian Pilgrimage in Spain and Italy. He
met Jack Prael, Luke MacCarthy, and John
Tweedy for some brews and reminisces at
the Blind Tiger in the Village on July 7th.
John Githens ’55 also joined them.
Centennial Memories: Joe Quintavale’s
passionate/infectious teaching of Freshman
Latin; James J. Carney, SJ,’s pinpoint
teaching of English and no-nonsense
coaching of the Freshman Basketball Team;
Jim Klingel’s upbeat teaching of Algebra
and no-nonsense coaching of the JV/
Varsity Basketball Teams; Dave Carroll,
SJ,’s supportive teaching of Geometry;
Stephen Duffy, SJ,’s zest for Classical Greek;
Martin J. Neylon, SJ,’s lively teaching of
English and Latin; William O’Leary, SJ,’s
impassioned teaching of American History
and the Roaring Twenties; James J. Daly’s
mastery of Lingua Latina; Eugene Culhane,
SJ,’s emphasis on Conversational French
and Bob Clancy’s impeccable French
accent; Ed Maly, SJ,’s university-like lectures
on English and Vergil’s Aeneid; the beloved
Tom Burke, SJ, Student Counselor and
“Mr. Regis,” addressing the entire student
body in the Quad and one-on-one, after
which we were missioned for life; the
Quad, where minds were lifted, dreams
dreamt, friendships forged. Regis was more
than a high school; it was four years of
secondary and two years of college, like a
French lycee, which grants the graduating
lyceens a baccalaureat. In two years of
university they can obtain a maitrise, or
Master’s degree. How European/Jesuit
Regis was! The curriculum was contentrich, mind-stretching, life-lasting. Regis
was an academy of learning, led by highly
educated, professional, excellence-driven
teachers who viewed their profession not
as a job, but as a vocation akin to the
ministry. How fortunate were we to benefit
from their total dedication! “Blessed were
we…!” O tempora, o mores! Sic transit gloria
mundi! Ave atque vale! In July 2014, Judy
and John Morriss, with their son, daughter,
and their families, visited family in Killarney,
Co. Kerry, Ireland. Son, daughter, son-inlaw, and daughter-in-law bikeathoned for
charities, with their Irish cousin, on the
Ring of Kerry Charity Cycle (112 miles/9600
cyclists/$2 million raised for charities).
Enda Kenny, Irish PM, also cycled. Ireland
never disappoints, re relatives, people,
scenery, emotions! A gem among the
nations, and God’s Green Earth!
1957
Packy Lawler, [email protected]
44 Beaver Pond Rd, Lincoln MA 01773
Brian Carney writes: “I am still alive
and kicking in Eastern Hungary. In early
August, my three grandchildren visited me.
Kieran, Phiippine-Indian-Irish, who lives
in Donegal, Ireland; Milly , who is all Irish
and lives in Kinsale, Ireland; and Maxim,
who is Hungarian-Ukrainian. I expect a
French Canadian-Irish grandchild next year,
and a Chinese-Irish one also. Go forth and
populate the world, the Lord said. I just
got carried away, I guess.” Whew! Joe Vaira
reports that he and wife Anita began their
second half-century of life together with a
memorable trip from sunny California to
chilly Alaska. The trip included a dog-sled
ride, with Joe as musher, as well as trips
by both helicopter and airplane to view the
local glaciers. At Sunday mass, they were
greeted warmly by the indigenous Alaskans,
asked to bring up the Offertory gifts, and
renewed their vows for another 50 years.
Tom Lippman and Sidney welcomed their
fifth grandchild into the world at the end
of July. “The first four are boys; this one is
a girl, at last. Her name- I kid you not- is
Indiana. Such is life these days among the
trendy young couples who live in parts of
Brooklyn that we wouldn’t have even gone
to when we were their age.” A few weeks
later, a much more traditionally named
Frances Lucille became the third grandchild
of Packy Lawler and Judith. She does,
however, live in a building once the home
FA L L 2014
of Thurgood Marshall and Roy Wilkins;
the city lives on. Ed Sayre is off to the IEEE
Ethernet meetings in Kanata, Ontario. This
is a regular meeting where the future of
the internet is discussed and standards for
the future of the web are developed. This
is a great opportunity for Ed to stay current
and creative. Wife Vivien went to France to
co-lead a quilt and textile tour with a longtime colleague. The tour includes visits
to quilt and textile exhibits in Paris and
southern France. Peter Schineller, S.J. took
a step back in time by visiting the Gonzaga
Retreat House in Monroe, NY, site of our
senior retreat. It no longer is owned by
the Jesuits, but is now Gonzaga Park, a
recreational area of Orange County and the
Town of Monroe. The round chapel is the
only one of the old buildings still standing,
but it is abandoned and surrounded by a
fence. Pat Ryan, S.J. writes: “I made two
trips this summer, the first to visit relatives
in Tipperary, and the second to Ghana.
There, I preached at the first mass of two
Ghanian Jesuits, 40 years after I arrived
there as the country’s first Jesuit, and 50
years after Jay Madden (Regis ’56) and I
were the first Jesuit scholastics assigned to
Nigeria. There are now well over a hundred
Nigerian and Ghanian Jesuits. No Ebola in
Ghana thus far and a very limited spread
in Nigeria. Pray for the people in Liberia
(where the Jesuits have a parish), Guinea
and Sierra Leone.” Having relocated
with his parents and brother Conall from
Reno, NV to Olney MD, Dennis Flanney’s
grandson Cian (11) took his leave from the
Reno Little League Muckdogs and signed
on with the Olney Pirates. In his debut with
the Pirates, Cian batted cleanup, went two
for three with three rbis, stole two bases,
struck out three in a one inning relief stint,
and capped things off with a spectacular
diving catch in center field. An auspicious
east coast start for the Reno kid.
1958
Michael Napoliello, [email protected]
Carlos Arnaldo writes: “The golden
’Third Age’ has been re-activated for me,
as I teach 150 freshmen this semester
at Enderun Colleges, a culinary and
management institute in McKinley,
Taguig City, Philippines. It is what the
College calls a ’general course,’ covering
English writing and speaking, preparation
of term papers and thesis, methods of
presentation. Sounds oversimple, but it
is to ensure graduates also gain language
and presentation proficiency at a high
management level. A bit similar to our
freshmen orientation course at Regis, but
extended over a semester as there are no
further ’props’ to this kind of learning in the
four year program. My students comprise
22 Koreans, 2 Japanese, 8 Chinese, a
Nigerian basketball player, a Kenyan girl, an
Australian lad - a very mixed international
group. about a fourth are on scholarship,
so highly motivated; others have some
foundation or corporate support. I felt it
was a little bit like going back to Regis, as
it recalled to me how Frs. Ed Horgan, Joe
Murray, Walter Brown, Cookie McKusker,
Gerry McCann and others used to teach
us, and how Fr. Rector could deliver such
flowing ex-temporaneous sermons with
Jim Ross ’65, Jim Derham ’65, Hal Holbrook, and Rich Constabile.
Photo by Bruce Guthrie.
meaning and depth in such simple words!
Sometimes, I feel I am playing the part
of the late Robin Williams in the Circle of
Dead Poets! At 74, life is beginning all over
again! Very gratifying to see Dr Anthony
Fauci (our classmate and forward captain
of the Regis basketball team) speak on
international CNN (Manila 22:42-26) just
now on the Ebola epidemic and possible
sera for curing it! Our grads are really
making breakthroughs and serving the
world community!” From John Friia: “While
Barbara has been away at a conference
in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, I’ve been
working on the follow-up to my Latin Made
Easy, Part I, as well as working on solving
two conundrums: one, how a town in Sicily
is associated with the Irish Saint Brendan
and two, the etymological relationship
between grates and gratias since they
both express “thanks,” albeit the former
to the gods and the latter to a person, but
belong to two different Declensions”. From
Al Galanek: “Just got back from a book
signing with Colonel Oliver North. I asked
him to write Deo et Patriae in the book. He
questioned my spelling and I helped him
to understand the declension. He then
looked at me and said “Dominus vobiscum”
and I, of course automatically, replied “
Et cum spiritu tuo”. We both laughed and
congratulated each other on what little
Latin we still remembered. If anyone is
interested, part of the price of his books
goes to an organization he started in 1990
called Freedom Alliance which provides
educational scholarships to children of
American military personnel who have
been killed or permanently disabled in
service to our nation. It also helps those
recovering from injuries.” Matt Hassett
writes: “My wife’s MS has progressed
to the point that she must live in the
skilled nursing facility of our continuing
care retirement community (CCRC). Her
movement ability has declined enough
that she cannot transfer on her own and
lives in a wheelchair with a call button for
nursing assistance. . She also is in the early
stages of MS dementia, but I am having
some success in helping to structure
her days. We are very lucky that we had
moved to a CCRC, since I can continue to
live here normally while she gets quality
skilled nursing care for little extra cost.
I am able to continue as a teacher. I do
23
Buzz Doherty ’70, Kevin Bannon ’70, and Bob Leonard ’70 met
for a round of golf at GlenArbor in Bedford, NY. Paul Atkinson ’71
rounded out the foursome and played photographer.
some volunteer English literacy tutoring
and go to the ASU campus to work with the
actuarial program, and this is a blessing.”
Peter Kern writes that he recently corrected
the grammar of a lawyer. With bemused
embarrassment, the solicitor (Holy Cross
University Class of ’62) remarked “You
probably had a Jesuit education”! Kern
replied “Regis High School – New York
City” “Figures!” was the response. Pete
sends his appreciation to Regis for the
wonderful education he received. He is
President of the Allentown (PA) Symphony
Association and mentor for the Chess Club
of the St. John Neumann Regional School
in Palmerton, PA. He is also Treasurer
of the Palmerton Area Historical Society
and President of the Palmerton Area
Chamber of Commerce. “Retirement?
What is that?” From Paul O’Keefe: “Bob
and Melinda Nobbs are celebrating their
50th anniversary 6 September with a mass
at St. Malachy’s and a luncheon at the
Park Lane Hotel. Daneen and I will attend
and I may bring my Owl picture because
while Manhattan is no special place for the
owl, after all these years it’s almost terra
incognita to me. My oldest child turned 50
this month (August). My youngest turned
43 the same day. I know I’m old enough,
but Daneen isn’t.” Jerry and Barbara
Sullivan visited Savannah in July to see
David and Noreen Healy. Noreen, who is
Jerry’s sister, and Dave were celebrating fifty
years of marriage. They live on Skidaway
Island and play golf several times a week.
Jerry and Barbara live in Seattle, where Jerry
taught at the University of Washington for
thirty-four years. Jerry says “Seattle is full of
Regis grads, and we have a cocktail party
every year or so. However, I’m the only
’58 grad here, and Tom and Megan Ryan
have been our only ’58 visitors. If anyone
is passing through Seattle, contact me and
we’ll get together. We love showing Seattle
off to visitors. Seattle is like a great summer
camp; only your parents never come to
make you go home.” Martin Wielgus
writes: “I hope I have recovered enough
from the surgery in January and the chemo
and radiation that followed, to continue
working on the Economics degree. I have
one semester left, and I have to write a
research paper on a topic of my choosing.
I have been inclined to look into income
inequality and its causes, but I meet with
the department head tomorrow to discuss
this. Hope I make it.”
1959
Leo Tymon, [email protected]
6 Greenwood Rd., Mountainside, NJ 07092
On March 13, our classmate Don Gorman,
who attended a number of our reunion
gatherings, passed away in Florida. Don is
survived by his wife, Valerie, two sons and
four grandchildren. In May, Marie-France
and Leo Tymon traveled to Pullman,
WA for the commencement ceremony
at Washington State University, where
their daughter Lydia was awarded her
Ph.D. in plant pathology. They all then
went on to Seattle for a proud Mother’s
Day celebration and were joined by there
by their younger daughter Severine, her
husband, and granddaughter Beatrice.
John Verdon has published the fourth
in his series of thriller novels featuring a
retired NYPD detective who just happened
to have attended a prestigious Catholic
high school in the upper east side of
Manhattan. This latest novel was published
in August and is titled Peter Pan Must Die.
Doug Futuyma writes: This year started
with a visit to the National University of
Singapore, to help assess the biology
department; the level of bureaucratic
control, of both university and country, is
astonishing, and it was a relief to escape to
the more human environment of Malaysia
for a few days of birding. The real travel
highlights were birding/ecotouristic trips
to Uganda (including the rightfully famed
mountain gorillas) and Peru (including
marvellous Machu Picchu). I had had to
decide whether or not visiting Uganda
was ethically right, in view of its vicious
new law on gays (life imprisonment), but
indigenous LGBT activists had issued
pleas not to boycott their country. I did
find it a friendly, quite progressive country
in many ways, and the national parks are
treasures. I am now beginning my 45th year
as a university faculty member, and will be
contributing some lectures for a course
I haven’t taught before, on “Darwinian
medicine.” My last Ph.D. student finished
this summer, which I guess marks a
step toward eventual retirement, but I’m
still active on some editorial boards and
am taking steps toward what I hope will
24
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
be two new books. An update from Al
Schmitt: We are relocating from Southern
California to North Carolina at the end of
the month[Sept.’14]. This move will bring
us back to the East Coast and closer to our
kids and grandkids. I have retired from my
second career of 16 years as a member of
the San Diego Sheriff’s Department Senior
Volunteer Patrol and will be looking for
opportunities in NC.
1960
Ken Bailie, [email protected]
32 Country Ridge Drive, Rye Brook, NY 10573
Dick Pyatok Weber reports that Random
House Alibi will publish three of his novels
in 2015: IN FLAMES (Feb), F TRAIN
(June), and FANATICS (Oct).
1961
Dave Eitelbach, [email protected]
2830 Cascadia Ave. S, Seattle, WA 98144
Bob Esposito sent this note: “On August
8th, ’Bubbles’ and I celebrated our 50th
Wedding Anniversary. We renewed our
marriage vows at a Mass presided by our
pastor (who also celebrated the renewal
of our 25th wedding anniversary vows !)
The event was planned by our 7 children,
all of whom attended with their spouses
and our 19 grandchildren. Our sisters
and cousins from Florida, Virginia and
New York City, all of whom were in our
wedding party, helped us celebrate for an
entire weekend. Peter Madori, who served
as an altar boy (!) at our wedding mass
in Latin 50 years ago, once again sent us
a beautiful bouquet of flowers as he has
done every year. Our cup overflows with
God’s love.” John Waters also reported
happy news. “My second grandson,
James Patrick Hutchings, was born
on Wednesday, August 13.” Your class
correspondent is pleased to report that
his only son, the younger David Eitelbach,
has just returned to Seattle after a 3 year
stint in New York City. Though he enjoyed
his time in the big city, he is relieved to be
back in the lush, green Pacific Northwest.
Peter Carter continues to enjoy retirement
on the Atlantic beaches of southern
Delaware (Lewes, Rehoboth) where Tom
Walsh also has a house, with occasional
return visits to New Jersey as an
Educational Consultant. Greg D’Alessio,
who seems to be our class historian,
observed the 2,000th anniversary of the
death of Caesar Augustus on 19 August
2014 by dining at an Italian restaurant
called Trattoria di Franco in Old Town
Alexandria. “It is owned by the only
Roman (i.e., born in Rome) I know, Chef
Franco Abruzzetti. Naturally I ordered
the Caesar salad. “Ave Caesar! Morituri
est te salutamus!” During 2014, dozens
of events in 14 countries, especially
Italy, have and will commemorate this
anniversary. I am sure that our Latin
teacher, Mr. Joseph T. Quintavalle, A.B.,
M.A., would have approved.”
1962
Ron Ferreri, [email protected]
4776 Alberton Court #2702, Naples, FL 34105
Five members of the Class, John James,
Kieran Meagher, John O’Rourke, John
Racanelli and John Shay attended the May
29 recognition dinner for major donors to
the Centennial Campaign. (On behalf of all
of us, thank you for your great generosity to
Regis.) It seems Italy has been a destination
for several members of the Class this year.
Since all roads lead to Rome, it seems that
Ken Gavin, S.J. has been busy dealing with
those of us passing through. In July Pidge
and John James visited with him while
touring the Italian countryside and cities.
As John said “we ended our month long
Europe trip with a visit with Ken Gavin at
the Jesuit Curia. He gave us a great tour
and we then went to one of his favorite
neighborhood restaurants for a wonderful
meal. He looks great and continues to
do very significant work with JRS. We had
the tour just a few weeks before Pope
Francis visited the Curia, so we felt very
special. A great end to our 70th birthday
trip for Pidge! In September Pat and Ron
Ferreri caught up with Ken at a wonderful
restaurant near the Piazza Navona while
Adeline and John O’Rourke planned to
meet with him in early October. It is a
good thing that Ken likes to walk and hike.
Wayne Merritt writes “Paul Spagnoli and
I respectfully submit the attached photo
for Prowlings. We know that most of our
classmates send in photos of their golf
outings, a very sedate sport and appropriate
for most aging athletes. But Paul and I
still enjoy playing our national pastime, a
more vigorous sport for athletes who refuse
to age! Paul and I have also been having
lunch together now that we are both retired,
and live close by. Not limiting ourselves to
baseball and food, we enjoyed an exhibit
on Gerard Manley Hopkins, S.J., at Boston
College (I am sure you remember, “The
world is charged with the grandeur of
God”). Peter Mooney reports that he spent
an August week in Ireland where he worked
as an economist for the Irish government
between 1970 and 1980. He spent time
with relatives and former colleagues while
experiencing “one of the highlights of the
trip - throwing back a few pints of Guinness
at a pub near Ellen’s [his sister] house in a
little town called Cross. The pub is known
for having the best pint of Guinness in
Ireland, other than the ones you can get at
the Guinness brewery in Dublin. I can now
say I’ve sampled both.” Ed Petruzzello
wrote that “I have relocated to San Diego
where there is perfect weather with lots
of sunshine and very low humidity. I am
studying the Italian language at the Italian
Cultural Center in Little Italy. I just returned
from a 3 week hiking adventure in the Swiss
and Italian Alps. I invite any fellow Regians
to stop by and say hello when they are in
the area. My new address is: 700 W E St,
Unit 904, San Diego, CA 92101.” Richard
Tarrant reports:” My most recent book, a
commentary on Book 12 of Virgil’s Aeneid,
has received the Charles J. Goodwin Award
of Merit from the American Philological
Association (the largest US organization
of classical scholars). I first learned to
love Virgil’s poetry in Mr. Clancy’s fourthyear Latin class at Regis, and I am happy
to have done something to repay his
wonderful teaching. In April I was elected
to the American Philosophical Society, the
nation’s oldest learned society, founded
by Benjamin Franklin in 1743. It has about
1,000 members (US and international)
and includes scholars from all areas of the
sciences and humanities.” (Congratulations
on these outstanding achievements,
Richard.) At the time of this writing (August
30), 21 members of the Class are slated to
attend the Centennial Dinner at the Waldorf
on October 25: Regis Amann, Mary Ann
and Dave Birch, Judy and Curtis Brand,
Bobbi and Ned Butler. Jeanne Lemlin and
Eddie Curtin, John Docherty, Pat and Ron
Ferreri, Pidge and John James, Rosalind
and Gary Kendellen, Charlie Lynch, Lynn
and Tony McGuire, Judyth and Kieran
Meagher, Cathy and George Moussally,
Adeline and John O’Rourke, Joy and
John Racanelli, Esther Mills and Allan
Service, John Shay & Guest, Beth and Bob
Sheehan, Sandy and Brendan Thompson
and, of course, the former President of
Regis, Rev. Ken Gavin, S.J. Many thanks to
John O’Rourke for coordinating the effort!
John Facciola will not be attending due to
celebrations honoring his retirement from
his position on the U. S. District Court; John
has given his seat at the Gala to our great
teacher Jerry Kappes ’52. (Congratulations
to John on a job well done!)
1963
John Tweedy, [email protected]
26 Huron Rd., Floral Park, NY 11001
Jack Prael, [email protected]
34-06 81 St.,Apt.#1, Jackson Heights, NY 11372
1976’s Frank Pietrantonio, Kevin Koestner, Peter Moerler, Steve Seagriff ’75, Hugh Finnegan,
and Pete McFadden with former faculty member Frank Walsh.
In early July Fr. Ray Sweitzer, S.J. was the
celebrant for the funeral Mass of his
younger brother John who died suddenly.
May John rest in peace. Deacon John St.
George assisted at the Mass, also attended
by John Tweedy. Kevin Morris reports that
his daughter Colleen will be married on
September 20 in Spring Lake NJ. Colleen’s
dad (’63), brother John (’98), cousin Tim
(’00), and uncle Gregory (’68) will celebrate
with her and Jared. Justin Arrechi says “We
spend every summer at our home in Spain.
After two more years of our youngest,
Giovanna’s college at Gloal College (LIU)
we’ll spend even more time in Spain.” Bill
Reibling notes “I will be retiring October 1
from PPL generation after 45 years in Power
Plant Engineering and Construction
management. Lucy and I have acquired a
winter home in Wellington, Florida so my
golf will be year-round!” Bob Gardella
hopes all his dear old friends and their
families are happy and well. Tom Dorney
says “Two new grandchildren this summer,
Keenan &Colin. Our four grandchildren are
with us often and keep Dorrie and me
young!” Andy Phelan attended Rich
Minogue’s biennial Mt Emily Blues Festival
in LaGrande OR in July. Frank Rossini and
Lynn also joined in. Andy says “It was so
much fun that we all got together at Frank
and Lynn’s the next weekend for wine and
beer tastings, as well as a trip to the Oregon
Country Fair, one of the last bastions of
hippie culture.” Mike Delia says “My
children are all taller than me and moving
on in the world. Danielle, my oldest just
completed her first feature film as costume
designer; Jesse announced her engagement
to be married; our son Jaime is managing
our family business, and Olivia just took her
MCAT exam for med school. Maggie and I
are well and looking forward to reducing
our engagement with our business. Rich
Johnsen sees Mike Gillan from time to
time and supports a movement for a 2015
reunion. Dick Chiarello says “Barbara and I
are renovating a home in Austin in
anticipation of retirement next year. We are
drawn to Austin by two daughters, a great
son-in-law and two-year-old granddaughter
Olivia. I have sold my pediatric practice but
will work for the new owner part-time until
next year.” Pete Roidakis has recently
discovered jazz (specifically New Orleanstype jazz). John Tuccillo joined with Jack
Stack and Bill Brown last May for four days
of golf in Hilton Head. His second crime
fiction novel, “The Dance”, was recently
published. Dennis Black chimed in with
some amusing comments in our recent
email chain, but says “I really do love you
all.” Fred and Jill Kuehn recently welcomed
a new grandson. Paul “Dino” Swinton says
“I’m living in a rural place named Devil’s
Elbow in Missouri. I retired from the Postal
Service and the US Army in 2006 and own
a landscaping and nursery business in St.
Robert, MO. I’ve spent much of the last
four years in Afghanistan. If I ever really
retire, I’m thinking I’ll either get into standup comedy, or politics. Oh, wait, aren’t they
about the same? And yes, I still sing, but
without The Idylls behind me, and John
Tuccillo’s bass, it’s just not the same. My
best wishes to all my classmates”. Joe
Christian reports “After thirty-five years of
living in the suburbs of Boston, with a
three-year stint in Hong Kong nestled
among those years, my wife, Nancy and I
FA L L 2014
moved back to New York City in July. Our
two sons live in Brooklyn, and our daughter
lives in Richmond, VA. Being in Manhattan
gets us a lot closer to all of them.” “I
practiced commercial real estate law for
thirty years. Then in 2008, I joined a global
firm and relocated to Hong Kong. We
returned from Hong Kong at the end of
2011, and I have been a fellow at the
Harvard Kennedy School since then,
researching, writing, and speaking about
the industry, and doing consulting and
some legal work as well.” “Nancy had a
career as a psychiatric social worker, until
we moved to Hong Kong, where she
enjoyed the life of a ’lady who lunches’.
Since returning to the U.S., she has been
studying to become a yoga instructor. We
are both looking forward to writing this new
chapter in our lives, trying never to have a
dull moment.” Mark Olesnicki says “I’m
feeling older day by day but in good health.
Jim Higgins retired from DuPont’s Legal
Department in Wilmington, DE five years
ago. “I had a fine 36-year career with
DuPont, being involved in major
transactions and travelling extensively
around the globe.” “My wife, Barbara, and I
had two girls and a boy and have been
blessed with four granddaughters and three
grandsons. Like their mother, two of our
children are Duke grads. The third went to
UNC at Chapel Hill. It’s always been an
exciting time in the Higgins household
when Duke and Carolina play basketball!”
“A large slug of my time since DuPont has
centered on the Osher Institute of Life-Long
Learning. I am on the governing Council of
the Institute, and I teach Latin grammar
and lead Greek and Roman reading
seminars...in the original Greek and Latin!
Needless to say, doing Latin and Greek
brings back memories of 84th Street. Folks
like Fr. Bob Kelly, Mr. Vinnie “the Whale”
Cooke, and Bob Marasco...among many
others.” According to Pete McDonald “I
graduated from St. John’s Law School,
spent five years with a small firm and then
22 years as a Bureau Chief in the Nassau
County Attorney’s Office. In 1978 I married
Jane Rayner, a widow with nine children,
three afflicted with Cerebral Palsy. Jane was
a Barnard grad with a PhD in English from
Columbia. She taught at Columbia, Hofstra
and NYIT before becoming Director of
Women’s Services for Nassau County. In
2009 she was taken ill and passed away in
early 2013. We had a wonderful life together,
and I have six remaining stepchildren. In
addition, I am a proud grandfather of 12
and a great-grandfather of three. About half
of these are local (Malverne in Nassau).
Life while different is still a blessed journey.
I always remember my high school days as
some of the best ever.” Don Gannon says
“I entered the Jesuits after Regis. In 1969 I
went to the University of Washington for a
PhD program in math. 10 weeks later I was
teaching Math at St Peter’s Prep. After
ordination I worked at the Jesuit retreat
house in Manhasset for eight years, then
seven years at our Syracuse novitiate,
followed by 15 years at Nativity parish on
the lower east side, four years at the Jesuit
community on 14th Street and now
finishing three years at our parish in
Oceanside Long Island.” “Sorry I missed
the 50th. Had the opportunity to spend five
weeks with my brother and his wife walking
the Camino de Santiago in Spain. Some
important experiences in my life were
working with people from the Dominican
Republic since 1992 and losing my nephew
and godson in Iraq in 2004.” Pat (Vinnie)
Gallagher would like us to consider a class
reunion weekend at some kind of live-in
facility, which he suggests might give us
more opportunity to connect. Bob Dillon
says “Madeline and I moved to the Bay
Area last August and settled north of the
UC Berkeley campus in the gourmet ghetto.
The many music and theater activities in
the area keep us stimulated, to say nothing
of landing in a new urban place with a
different culture. We get together with our
two kids in SF and one in LA frequently.”
Paul Freddolino notes “My older son just
began a research position at the University
of Michigan Medical School. At a faculty
orientation a new colleague came up to him
and asked if he was related to Paul
Freddolino. After answering in the
affirmative his new colleague said, ’I went
to Regis High School and Notre Dame with
your dad!’ This provides evidence that Dan
Burns is alive and well, on faculty at U of
M.” “I am starting my 36th year in the
School of Social Work at Michigan State
University with no plans yet to retire. I do
like to travel, however, and that’s one thing
that my wife Donna and I do a lot. My older
son’s new position in Ann Arbor brought
his wife and three grandchildren close
enough to see frequently. Our younger son
just got married in Seattle.” Sean Moroney
reports that he is currently designing a
curriculum for a start-up university that is
targeting the Pacific Rim with online
programs in nutrition, business, and
psychology. He also notes that his son, Jon,
has just started his Master’s program in
Information and Computer Science at U of
Hawaii. Bernice and John Sesody happily
report that they now have a grandson Matteo Amadeus - born August 30.
1964
Jeff Weinlandt, jeff[email protected]
After the last issue of the RAN was received
by all, another MIA ’64 classmate surfaced
in an email. Bill Janofsky wrote that he “has
been retired for a year now from 45 years
of playing with computers for the Defense
industry. I am enjoying the freedom to
travel with my gorgeous ex-fiancee and
wife of 46 years, Dorothy. We’ve lived all
over the country but have been settled
in the Philadelphia suburbs for over 30
years.” When asked about missing the 50th
reunion, he responded that “as for MIA, it
has certainly been an extended absence for
me. For some inexplicable reason I wasn’t
anxious to visit Regis while at Manhattan
College. Shortly after graduation, we moved
to Southern California and then Omaha.
After I got out of the Air Force, we moved
to northern Virginia and then to Concord,
MA. Finally arrived in Philly in ’82 and I
must admit that, after all that time, when
I thought about the reunion I wasn’t sure
I’d remember anyone or they me. We have
6 children and 8 grandchildren. I wanted
to proudly mention that our youngest son
has just graduated from Pitt’s Medical
School and is en-route to his residency at
25
Mark Moss ’80 and his family stopped in
Buffalo on their way to a vacation north of
Toronto, and met up with Jackie and Jim
Mikoley ’80 at the Anchor Bar for some
original buffalo wings
Kevin and Ryan Lee displaying the Regis
owl at the Tralee Golf Club in Kerry, Ireland
Yale while our middle daughter just got her
PhD in Public Health from UNLV. On the
subject of JUG, I always believed that Fr,
Neville really hated the color of the tiles in
the hallway outside his office and was just
using us to wear it out.” Like Bill Janofsky,
other classmates have also recently joined
the list of retirees. Kevin Rodgers retired
this past May from Clarion Partners where
he was a Senior Vice President / Portfolio
Manager. Clarion Partners is a 30+ year-old
entrepreneurial partnership, building and
managing portfolios of commercial real
estate. Ed Hattauer retired from St. John’s
University on June 30th after serving for
many years as the Director of University
Counseling Services at St. John’s. He has
already cleaned out his place in Queens
and is now settled up in the Boston area…
but hopes to still get down to NYC for a few
of our dinners. In mid-July Regis posted an
online trivia quiz about the school for all
alumni. Marty Besant immediately jumped
onto it but then emailed that “I was
amazed by how much I do not know about
the history of Regis. But I do know that
one of the questions under Alumni has an
error about our class. I sent the following
to the Alumni Office: “Reading the trivia
quiz (many of which answers I do not know.
Need to buy Fr. Andreassi’s book). But I do
know that John Nonna was not a member of
the class of 1964. When I checked Wikipedia
(definitely not the most authoritative of
sources), I could see that he was too young.
Checking the Alumni directory, I found
him in the class of 1966.” Tom Hein ’99,
Regis Director of Communications, sent
me a note acknowledging the typo. Not
that it would be a big deal except for us
64’s and probably the 66’s.” Marty’s email
continued that “summer is the season
to enjoy Buffalo. Festivals every weekend
and events every day and night. We sail
about 3 days a week with some trips to
Canadian marinas and bays overnight.
Race a boat every Wednesday…theatre
often at the Shaw Festival in Niagara on the
Lake (capital of Canada during the War of
1812)…very large veggie garden of heirloom
varieties…so, yes, enjoying summer. Most
NYC trips for us are spur of the moment
but I will try to find a reason when you
have a dinner organized.” A group of 16
of us gathered for a summer dinner on
July 16th at the scene of our 50th Reunion’s
Friday night cocktail party…Brendan’s Bar
& Grill. The cast of characters doesn’t
change too much at these dinners since
proximity to NYC (for most) is a usual
prerequisite. We did have a wonderful
time and a good many stories were told
about the Reunion itself and running into
classmates who had not surfaced for the
past five decades. Our group included
Bob Metz, Bob Shullman, Dave Ritchie
Jr., Dennis Moulton, Frank Silvestri, Jeff
Weinlandt, Joe Cirrito, Joe Coyne, John
Boden, John Steinmuller, Ken Kelly, Kevin
Rodgers, Lou Fuoco, Rob Haberski, Ron
Tristal and Jim Pielli. We did get regrets
from several classmates who couldn’t
attend the dinner. Ed Murphy emailed that
“I am looking forward to attending one of
these shindigs in the future, but for now, I
am neck-deep in a major editorial project (I
write and edit for college textbooks) and in
the preparations for my wedding (August
30th), and so attendance this time is out
of the question. At a future date, I plan to
attend and to be accompanied by my new
bride, one Amy Henry. My fiancee and I
met later in life, in 2007, a few years before
I underwent a liver transplant (2010), and
her presence in my life helped to make that
operation a success. Since then we have
lived together, traveled widely (including a
visit to Tom Reilly in San Francisco), and
been incredibly happy. This is not a first
marriage for either of us, and we each have
two grown kids of our own, but it is certain
to be our last marriage and the start of
many years, we hope, of happy living. We
will spend our honeymoon in Europe (two
weeks in London with three weeks in Italy
– Venice, Padua, Bologna and Florence.”
By the time you are reading this edition of
the RAN, Regis’ Centennial Jug Night on
September 26th will have come and gone.
Two classmates who wanted to attend but
couldn’t were Ken Kelly and Joe Coyne.
Ken emailed that “I’ll think of you guys on
9/26 when Joan and I are in Oslo.” Joe
sent a note that “you know the powers that
be have moved Jug Night to September
26th. For 7 years I have been going to a
conference in the fall and this year we leave
on…September 26th!! A Happy 50th Jug
Night to all my fellow ’Golden Owls.’” We
decided to schedule our Christmas dinner
26
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
earlier rather than later in order to assure
us the reservation. We will be dining on
Wednesday, December 3rd, at Brendan’s Bar
& Grill at 42 West 35th Street (212-564-5405).
The reservation is at 6:00 PM for 20 diners
upstairs at one long table…but we can
certainly increase that number. It would be
a wonderful surprise for us if some of those
who were MIA from the reunion decided
to show up for this smaller gathering…
classmates such as Charlie Sitler (NYC),
Gary Kinasewitz (OK), Charlie Cornell
(MA), John Posch (OH), Jim (Fuzzy)
Ferlazzo (NY), etc., etc. It’s a long list! If
you have never joined us for a dinner, you
can respond to the email address at the
top of this paragraph or just show up at
the restaurant…it would be great see new
“old” faces!
1965
George Griffith, [email protected]
Dick Denecker writes “ Maria and I are
still here in Midlothian, Virginia (a suburb
of Richmond). Been here now a total of
37 years (almost a native). I continue to
function as a financial planner/wealth
manager in my team practice (The
Denecker/Daly Wealth Consulting Group)
at UBS Financial Services (this is my 31st
year in the business). Our son Scott who
was diagnosed with colon cancer in 2008
is now five years out of chemotherapy
and doing very well and works as an
IT professional. Please encourage our
classmates to contact me if they are going
to be in this area. Would love to catch up
and provide some “Southern hospitality.””
Jim Derham and Jim Ross joined Rich
Constabile and Hal Holbrook at the
world premiere of a documentary about
Holbrook’s 60 years of performing as Mark
Twain. The premiere was the gala opening
night of the American Film Institute’s
annual documentary film festival, AFI Docs,
held in Washington, DC. Rich has been
Holbrook’s stage manager and traveled
with him for 14 years and is featured in
the film along with Sean Penn and others.
Jim Ross had four vertebrae in his neck
fused together in late June to correct a
degenerative condition exacerbated by
an accidental injury in February and is
healing well. He and his wife, Ginger,
retired simultaneously in October or, as
Jim put it, “we’re going out together.” Their
son, Alex, was commissioned in August
as an officer in a uniformed service, the
United States Public Health Service Corps,
was congratulated by the Acting Surgeon
General, and will serve in NIH’s clinical
center for the next two years. After his
commissioning, Alex was given a three-star
pin that belonged to Ginger’s father, who
was a Medal of Honor winner and Vice
Admiral. Also, Jim published an article
Getting the Last Word in the August issue
of online literary journal Pif Magazine about
taking care of his mother in his home after
her stroke and dealing with her dementia
and seeing her through hospice. Jim retired
after a 40-year career focused on child and
adolescent health research. Jeff Davis is
heading to the Regis 100th anniversary
celebration at the end of a bike trek from
Maine to Washington DC -- he’s pedaling
right through NYC a month earlier, still
can’t get his timing quite right. He’ll be
back for the class’s 50th next June, at the
start of next year’s cycling adventure. He
suspects he holds the record for most bike
mileage by a Regian, at 130,000 miles and
counting. Half that has been on a tandem
with his wife Louise. Bob Carlina writes “I
sent my youngest child, Dominic, off to
grad school at the University of Kansas in
Lawrence the last week in May. He’ll be
taking his Masters in Student Affairs while
working in that program simultaneously.
It is a bittersweet moment when each
child tries its wings and leaves the nest.
It is even more so when it is your last. I
am happy and proud he has come so far
but a bit saddened that life slips by so
quickly seeming not to give us enough
time to treasure “those moments”. George
Griffith and his wife Eileen are enjoying
their retirement, spending time travelling,
being with family, and doing volunteer
work. George is involved in his home
parish of St. Catharine of Alexandria in
Blauvelt, New York as a lector, member of
the church choir, and of the parish council.
He is a Hospice volunteer, and is currently
beginning training as an Ombudsman,
an advocate for senior citizens in assisted
living and nursing homes.
1966
Bob Mollenhauer, [email protected]
In August, CNN’s Jim Sciutto, Regis class of 1988, interviewed Dr. Anthony Fauci, Regis
class of 1958 and Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
1967
Chris Connell, [email protected]
The summer’s news from the tribe was
upbeat, save for two strange but similar
episodes with happy endings. Not long
after returning from Italy and his Catullus
sight reading, Terry Chorba was rushed to
the emergency room at Emory Hospital
after what seemed like a mild virus erupted
into violent, shaking chills. It turned out
to be sepsis and it was touch and go for
several days in the ICU. Terry, a career
CDC physician and administrator, later
wrote in a reconstruction for friends that
he recalled thinking at that moment this
was “an unexpected but worthy learning
opportunity. I have often remembered from
childhood a roller coaster in Rye, NY, the
Big Dragon. It had gears that spat out an
awful racket as the chain of cars climbed
to a peak 85 feet at the start, and as you
descended, you cruised into a tunnel with
the body of a dragon, passing first through
its gaping mouth beneath fierce eyes that
lit up, with steam blowing from its nostrils.
I always dreaded taking that ride, but it was
a necessary rite of passage for adolescent
social acceptance. As the nurse transported
my stretched into the elevator to the
ICU, I heard those same gears grinding.”
Terry had somehow been infected with
an E.coli strain resistant to drugs. An
allergy to penicillin made it difficult to
treat. Eventually a drug of last resort,
carbapenems, did the trick, but not before
Terry requested and received Last Rites. He
credits wife Lindy, a nurse, with recognizing
the sepsis and making the life-saving,
late night 911 call. In the Bay State, Bill
Hauck went through a similar ordeal that
started on a solitary nighttime drive from
Connecticut back home to Brookline when
he fell ill, stopped and somehow wound up
in his driveway with no recollection of how
he drove the last 75 miles. He was rushed
into surgery in the morning with a raging
infection in a knee that had been replaced
a year earlier. He is back on his feet, still
on antibiotics and under the watchful eye
of an infectious disease specialist who
thinks the bout may be related to repeat
infections he got from a bug bite on a
Costa Rican vacation several years earlier.
Bill Armbruster, like the rest of us, reached
the milestone birthday that opens the door
to lifetime, universal health insurance for
Americans. Seldom does turning one year
older feel so good. Bill also, on a trip to
Boston, broke bread with both Hauck and
Bill Laughlin, whose retirement routine
includes daily 5-10 mile, ambulatory
peregrinations around Beantown. Bill L.
was among the first sign-ups for a new,
free, online EdX course on Dante’s Divine
Comedy being taught this fall and into the
spring by Frank Ambrosio and Georgetown
University colleagues. Check it out at bit.ly/
YDlFC8; it’s not too late to enroll. EdX, led
by Harvard and MIT, is one of the university
consortia sharing their educational riches
with the masses. Bill L. has already
“sampled courses on world architecture,
the science of food and cooking, and Walt
Whitman. To some extent I just enjoy
watching people try to figure out how to
use the medium. And I learned just from
sampling, even if my knowledge acquisition
was haphazard.” Virginia and John Dowd
have joined the ranks of grandparents with
the birth of Finley Michael Palitz. “He has
a good Regis pedigree, being the son of
Virginia (Dowd) and Michael Palitz ’01,
and the great-grandson of John Dowd
’38,” says John. “Ginna, Mike and Finn
are in Rockville Centre, a half hour from
us. I am still doing COBOL programming
and waiting for the tap on the shoulder
from the HR man, telling me it’s time
for Social Security.” Paul Litka’s older
son, Andrew, and Bernice Halladay tied
the knot on the family ranch in Salt Lake
City in September. Jim Keaney, Andrew’s
godfather, flew out for the festivities held
on the Litkas’ South Jordan ranch, and for
the ritual autumnal fishing trip with the
groom’s father. Paul also reports that he
has taken up the study of Biblical Hebrew
and that Pearl is still kicking. Karen and
Jack Alexander “have been greatly enjoying
the summer in Avon, New Jersey. We are
busily working on our tans, and while the
end of summer will be a disappointment,
we look forward to a cruise in October
from Athens to Singapore. Many exotic
ports of call, and possibly some dangerous
ones, starting with Crete, Israel, the Suez
Canal, and stops in Egypt, Jordan, Oman,
India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Malaysia,
Thailand and finally Singapore. We leave
right after Jug Night, but will miss the
Waldorf gala.” Speaking of the gala, word
on the street is that the keynote speaker
will be Joseph McShane, S.J., in probably
the Fordham president’s highest pressure
engagement since throwing out the ball at
Yankee Stadium in July 2009. Art Bender,
S.J., began his 25th year on the Regis
faculty this September. As planned, Steve
Malone and the cutout Regis Owl made it
to Godafoss, the Waterfall of the Gods, in
chilly north Iceland in August. “According
to the Icelandic sagas, in the year 1000, the
lawspeaker of the Althing (the Parliament)
made Christianity the official religion of
Iceland and commemorated the decision
by tossing statues of the Norse gods into
the waterfall. However, the sagas don’t say
whether he was immediately struck down
by a thunderbolt thrown by Odin or not.
Iceland today is over 95 percent Christian.”
Steve spent three years stationed in Iceland
with the U.S. Navy in the early ’70s.
1968
James Sherwood, [email protected]
1969
Bart Robbett, [email protected]
1970
Kevin Conboy, [email protected]
Jack Regan, [email protected]
Phil Gandolfo tells us “My wife Marianne
and I have been married 40 years. Married
on June 8 1974 three weeks after LeMoyne
graduation. Have 2 daughters and 4
grandkids. Number 5 on its way being
delivered on August 14. Retired since April
2010. CFO and COO of an insurance co.
Still dabble in consulting and participate
on some not for profit boards.”Gerry
McDermott writes, “My wife and I were
blessed with recent news of our eighth
FA L L 2014
grandchild. I am still at Roanoke College in
Virginia teaching religion. In April Oxford
University Press published my co-authored
Trinitarian Theology of Religions. Would
love to hear from Regians near and far.
Does anyone know what happened to Vern
Cassin?” We have also heard from Rick
Antosh, who reports, “Remarried last fall
in Nyack to Lynn Grefe, who heads up the
National Eating Disorders Association. I
still maintain one leg in the resort business
as consultant, and one leg launching
The Gift of Living Donation, which raises
awareness about being a kidney or liver
donor to a friend or family member in
need. The GOLD had a letter published
last week in the NYTImes, and an Op-Ed in
Newsday earlier this summer. All interested
parties are welcomed to contact me.” Tom
Quinlan reports “I’m still working at Reed
Smith in SF and sometimes Palo Alto. Not
enjoying it as much as I did when I was
younger but it is interesting. Hoping to
retire in 3 years or so. Married 30 years next
week. Kiera is our middle child. Sean is 28
and is a software engineer at Facebook.
Kiera is a nurse at Stanford Hospital and
Phoebe, 22, is still on the payroll, taking
the slow route to a degree.” This in from
Dan Gonzalez: “Hi, guys, I may have been
the first in our class to hit 40, because
I graduated a semester early, thanks to
Richard Nixon’s volunteer army (my draft
number was 19). We have a son and
daughter, 25 and 17, Stuyvesant, Fordham
at Lincoln Center and Marymount. David
came with me on the tour of Verona and
Venice mentioned by the class of 67 in
RAN. I still run, 20 consecutive Boston
Marathons, 33 Bostons in all. Good
round numbers to maybe give it up.Cross
country in the fall at Van Cortlandt,
but not last year because I was injured
(long story).” And finally, Kevin Bryant
chimes in: “My daughter Annie is just
beginning her freshman year in the Honors
Neuroscienceprogram at Northeastern.
She’s also set to play flute in the school
symphony and to play club tennis. Most
important, she’s actually planning on
attending her classes and doing the work
associated with them, unlike a certain
father who shall remain nameless.” Kevin
Bannon, Buzz Doherty and Bob Leonard
met for a round of golf at GlenArbor in
Bedford, NY in support of the Boys &
Girls Club of Northern Westchester. Kevin
is a past President and a member of the
Board of the Mt. Kisco based Club, which
offers educational and athletic programs to
children of diverse backgrounds throughout
the community. Paul Atkinson ’71 rounded
out the foursome and played photographer.
1971
Luke Garvey, [email protected]
Roger Rooney, [email protected]
1972
Michael Davies, [email protected]
1973
Robert Billings, [email protected]
John Collins leads off with his golf trip
of a lifetime to Scotland this summer.
Over 10 days he played, among others,
Carnoustie, Royal Aberdeen, Cruden
Bay and St. Andrew’s (old AND new,
of course!) Weather was surprisingly
pleasant and seaside vistas amazing.
He managed to squeeze in visits to local
pubs and distilleries when not chasing the
little white ball. Family milestones from
Jim Montagnino: daughter Alex turned
21 and son Max, 18. So Max need not
abide by his dad’s solomonic wisdom any
longer, but Jim is counting on financial
independence from his newly-minted
adult daughter! Speaking of sons and
daughters, Brian Donahue had one of
each touring Villanova this fall and got to
watch the Fordham Rams get pasted in
football, 50-6. Lefty also determined that
Tom Grehl had been detected crossing
into the U.S. So Tom felt compelled to
share with us: He spends most of the
year in Asia; between Shanghai, where he
has a company and two of his children
work, and Taipei, where his wife was born
and where they have lived for the last 14
years. He’ll be back in Cherry Hill, NJ in
December and promises to reconnect.
Wait ’til he finds out they closed OLA!
Rich “Z” Zielinski was recently named
“Legal Malpractice Defense Lawyer of
the Year” in Boston by peer reviewed
Best Lawyers in America. Normally I
would make a very funny comment here,
but I’m still angling for Bruins’ tickets.
The rest of you, go ahead. Peter & Patti
Gordon hosted a summer BBQ with Paul
& Eileen Coppola and Gene Ferraro in
attendance. Eileen should be retired from
PriceWaterhouse by the time you read
this, but Paul hasn’t made the leap yet.
Good for you, Paul! Keep working while
the missus stays home. Seriously, their
retirement home in Jacksonville awaits.
Proving again that athletic talent skips
a generation (his words,) Bob Emmons
reports that youngest son Kieran made
the Regis soccer team. And, in more
legal news, Bob will be teaching Criminal
Justice at Fordham this fall. Busy summer
for Rich Sloper. He and his blushing
bride celebrated their 25th with a month
in Italy. They covered the entire “boot,”
including his in-laws’ ancestral home
in the mountains (slopes?) of Calabria.
Daughter Briana completed her Masters at
St. Thomas Aquinas and is looking for full
time teaching while serving as an assistant
basketball coach at Kellenberg High. Sister
Allison got her BS at Molloy and will stay
right there for her MS. She has a year of
eligibility left, so playing soccer pays some
of Rich’s bills. I’m pretty sure we had a
great time at the Yankee game. (more
next time) The Paul Coppola retirement
ceremony was very touching. Hmmm…I
think I’m done but something’s missing.
Of course - Vin Maher presented 2 papers
at Cambridge, 1 at Brighton and 2 more
at Baku, Azerbaijan! Way to pile up those
miles, Vin. Whenever did you find time to
get to the Cape?
1974
John Canavan, [email protected]
Anthony Fischetti’s wife Natalie got her
doctorate in Nursing some time ago and
is teaching Nursing for the New York
City University system. His daughter
27
Ted Capuano ’89 (with sons Gianluca and Matteo) and Edmund O’Brien ’89 (with wife
Dana and children Spencer and Amy) at a recent gathering in Central Park.
just graduated Villanova University
Business School with a Finance degree
and is now living and working in CT. His
son also moved out after getting his
Masters degree and a teaching job at a
local college, and they are now empty
nesters. Carl Barbera is a partner in
Orthopedic Associates of Dutchess with
1 daughter in Dental School, 1 daughter
in Vassar College and 1 daughter working
as a paralegal in New York. Michael
McCauley and his wife Carol moved back
to New York from beautiful, but not very
exciting, Manheim, PA. They are now
in Nesconset, LI. One daughter lives
in Pompano Beach, FL and two live in
Bayside, NY. They are all in healthcare,
their youngest being an EMT. Thomas
Naughton is spending this entire year as
a visiting professor at the Alaska Family
Medicine Residency Program which is
based in Anchorage. Larry Earley and
his wife Debra participated in the recent
Pilgrimage to Saint Ignatius in Spain
and Rome along with Regians from class
of 55 to 08 together with Father Judge.
Larry and Debra just retired from Los
Alamos National Laboratory. On August
30th there was an annual reunion party
at Don Ende’s house. In attendance
were Mike McKeon and Julie, Steve
Sullivan and Roberta, Ralph Menendez
and Jill, Dominick Pagnozzi and hosts
Don and Janice Ende. Kevin Moffit and
Marcello Sozio managed to get out of
it, sparing themselves the usual ridicule
and abuse inflicted over the past 44
years. A great time was had by all. Joseph
Davis retired 5 years ago and is now a
full time grandparent along with his wife
for their 3 year old granddaughter. Joe
says “it doesn’t get any better than this!”
Len Scarpinato writes: “After graduating
college in three years and helping to win
the Rose Bowl for Michigan State, my son
Mario just started MD Medical school at
the Medical College of Wisconsin (where I
used to teach for 13 years) formally known
as Marquette, yes the Jesuit Marquette
University.” Andrew Harris lost his wife
of 34 years, Cookie, who died suddenly
August 28th. They have five children and
two grandchildren. Please keep their family
in your prayers. Michael McKeon and his
wife Julie celebrated the wedding of their
son, Ray, on September 6th to the very
lovely Melissa Badiali at the New Haven
Country Club in Hamden. He also began
a new job as an Underwriting Consultant
with the Jacobson Group. Joseph Ochoa’s
father passed away in April after a brief
illness. His youngest daughter went off
to graduate school to pursue a Masters
in Film and Media at Sacred Heart
University. William O’Connell is a senior
medical physicist with GE Healthcare.
Wife Lynne is wrapping up her Doctorate
in Education at Fordham. Daughter Kate
is at Pace Law - focusing on intellectual
property rights. Son Dan is working
on his accounting degree at Fordham.
Alberto Acosta writes “Regis has been and
still is integrated in my life. My mother,
who just turned 94, still lives across the
street from the school. My daughter, Ana
Sophia (a junior at Marymount) was in
a musical this past spring with several
Regis students. One of her best friends
is the daughter of Gene Grossi (class of
1974). Likewise, one of my son Nico’s best
friends is the son of Jim Curry (class of
1987). Professionally, I work very closely
with Bill Murray (class of 1970) who is
the Senior Associate General Counsel at
Ingersoll Rand Co. where I serve as the
Executive Director of Medical Services.
Too much of a good thing is wonderful!”
John Canavan and Gail moved to Wyckoff,
NJ in July and he is currently starting two
new businesses in life settlements and
merchant services. Thanks to all for their
contributions to this issue of prowlings.
1975
Steve Tranchina, [email protected]
Michael Del Rosso, [email protected]
Steve Tranchina writes: “Sal Principe
retired (yes, we have reached that age) from
teaching in NJ and is now living in Florida.
Alan Mele emailed the happy news that his
daughter, Allison, is getting married this
September and, in a surprising twist, the
deacon who will be officiating turns out to
be Tom Wadolowski. Apparently, Tom
refrained from discussing Alan’s high
school years with his daughter. A good
idea to say the least. On a personal note,
my son Stephen is entering Georgetown
this fall. He didn’t want to attend Regis but
eventually the Jesuits find you.”
28
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
1976
Jon Powers, [email protected]
Frank Pietrantonio, Kevin Koestner,
Peter Moerler, Hugh Finnegan and Pete
McFadden rounded out a group of the
class of ’76 in an impromptu reunion in
NYC. They were joined by Steve Seagriff
’75 and Frank Walsh, retired teacher
from our days. They had a great time and
shared a photo attached in this Prowlings.
A few Regians checked in with their
milestone anniversaries. James Piccolo
and his wife Rosalie celebrated their
30th anniversary on a Bahamian cruise,
including ziplining in St. Thomas. Jon
Powers and his wife went back to Maui
for their 30th, but decided to snorkel while
their two older girls ziplined.
1977
James Shanahan, [email protected]
1978
Bernie Kilkelly, [email protected]
1979
Rich Weber, [email protected]
1980
William Passannante,
[email protected]
Hubert Lem just came back in July from
the Ignatian Pilgrimage with Father Phil
Judge S.J. ’80 and Vincent Catapano ’96
to Spain and Rome. It really was pretty
amazing. Hubie’s group had 21 members,
with alumni from Class of ’55 to Class
of ’08 participating. The group visited St
Ignatius’ birthplace, his cave in Manresa
and his tomb in Church of the Gesu,
Rome. They had dinner with former Regis
Presidents Father Ken Gavin S.J. ’62 and
Father Tom McClain S.J in Rome after
visiting them at the Jesuit Curia. Hubie
suggests that maybe us oldsters can plan
a class of ’80 / 50th jubilee Walking the
Ignatius Trail in 2030!” Charlie Mitchell
is starting his 22nd year as Professor of
American Studies at Elmira College, an
institution Charlie suggests few if any of
us knew existed when we were on the
college admissions hunt. Charlie knew
that Elmira had a prison where they always
sent the hapless bad guys at the end of
episodes of Barney Miller. Charlie says
“But here I am, here I have been, here I
will be” (a variation on Veni, vidi, vici).
This year, Charlie and a colleague received
a grant from the National Endowment
for the Humanities in their “Enduring
Questions” program to develop and
teach a course on “Why the Arts Matter.”
The “arts” in question include literature,
the fine arts, and theater, and Charlie
finds himself thinking back to those
classes with Fr. Lavin and Ms. O’Connell
and Mr. Mullen and Mr. Walsh and Mr.
Moeleski and Mr. Kappas, and how the
value of those experiences accrued and
compounded over the years beyond
anything my sixteen-year-old self might
have imagined at the time. That is the
gratitude, albeit retrospective, Charlie
hopes to nurture in his students. Other
than that, Charlie reads like a fiend,
buries himself in cookbooks, indulges
various cocktail recipes, harvests shishito
peppers from the garden, and awaits
the apocalypse. Not bad for “an average
kid from Long Island.” Mark Moss and
his family stopped in Buffalo on their
way to a vacation north of Toronto, and
met up with Jackie and Jim Mikoley at
the Anchor Bar for some original buffalo
wings. Bill Passannante and Judith note
that daughter Grace is starting her junior
year at Sacred Heart in Greenwich and
is playing Varsity Basketball this year as
well as running cross-country; son Will
’10 is working as a legal assistant for the
Justice Department in the United States
Attorney’s Office for the Southern District
of New York; and son Luke ’14 is starting
his freshman year at Williams College.
1981
John Dieffenbach, [email protected]
Tom McCluskey is completing his
Masters of Arts in Education and his
administrative credential at Cal State
Northridge. He is writing a textbook
on Video Production with another arts
teacher for Peachpit Press and has joined
the Board of Directors of MELA, an
educational non-profit focusing on issues
in Media Education. Daughter Lia starts
Pre-K in the fall!
Viking Funeral - (l to r) 2002’s Andrew Darcy, Tom Nash, Tim McKernan, Mike Botta,
Luigi Naguit, Neil Keenan, Matt Quigley, Steve Wyszinski, Dalelyn Wyszinski, Ryan
Huber, Lisa Huber, John Hein, Jon Picarello, and Becky Rossel gather to celebrate a more
successful RABL season.
1982
1985
John McGuiness, [email protected]
Thomas Flood, thomasfl[email protected]
1983
A posthumous son was born on August
5 to Kenneth Allaire who died on May 9,
2014 and his wife Rebeca Rodriguez. The
baby’s name is Kenneth Richard Allaire
Rodriguez. As we celebrate the 100 year
anniversary of the great gift of Regis to all,
we as the Class of 1985 are in a year where
we will celebrate our 30th anniversary.
Yes, 30 years ago we graduated from alma
mater. This spring, we will gather as a
class, bring our spouses, and reminisce,
reconnect and reunite. We hope to
have information and details about the
celebration out some time soon. Our
goal is to have as many of us gather as
possible – and who knows, maybe we will
have some surprise guests – 85ers who
started with us, went elsewhere but are
forever associated and welcomed to Class
of 1985 gatherings. In honor of the 100th
anniversary of Regis, and in celebration
of our 30th anniversary, let’s go for 100%
participation this fiscal year! Let’s tell all
that Regis was a gift, a gift that we want
passed on to others for many years to
come.
Joe Accetta, [email protected]
1984
Michael Horowitz, [email protected]
Ray McGoldrick, [email protected]
Back in June, Kevin Lee took his son,
Ryan ’14, to Ireland to play some golf as
a graduation gift. Tagging along were two
of Ryan’s Regis classmates: John White
and Tim Hannon and their fathers. They
played Waterville, Ballybunion, Tralee
(Kevin’s personal favorite), Lahinch, and
Doonbeg. Kevin reports, “the weather was
fantastic, and the boys enjoyed their “first”
legal adult beverages.” At the conclusion
of the summer, Ryan headed off to Boston
College. Bill Dunn checks in with: “My
wife, Maria, and I recently went to see
Paul McCartney at the last event ever to be
held at Candlestick Park in San Francisco,
which was the last place that the Beatles
played an ’official’ concert, in 1966. He
played for almost three hours and was
phenomenal, especially considering the
fact that he is 72 years old. We also got to
710 Ashbury Street, which was home to
the Grateful Dead. It was a fun trip.” As
you maybe have noticed in that update
from Bill, he is now married, as he tied the
knot last year in Greenwich Village, at St.
Veronica’s Church, the same church where
his grandparents were married in 1925.
Congrats Bill! Jaroslaw Kiciuk recently
took a job at a small biotech research
company--ContraFect. In July, the company
went public and was selected to ring the
opening bell at NASDAQ. The CEO invited
all of the employees to join her. Jerry (his
professional name(!)) was lucky enough to
get a picture of himself as it was displayed
on the screen outside the building in
Times Square. In his spare time, Slawch
also ran his second half-marathon on Park
City, Utah in August Fred Donodeo reports
that “This summer, I was promoted to
Communications Director of the National
Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
at NIH. My wife Kathleen and I have two
boys, Mikey (12) and Joey (7) and we
spend our...ahem...leisure time shuttling
them to their endless sports events and
music lessons. With Mikey approaching
high school, we’re looking carefully into
the two Jesuit options in DC - Gonzaga
and Georgetown Prep. Unfortunately,
unlike our beloved alma mater, they each
carry an annual tuition of $20K or more!
Can we start a fundraising campaign?
Or a daily Regis shuttle van from DC?”
And finally, please keep Mark Coyne and
his family in your prayers as his dad,
Richard, passed away in August. As many
of our classmates offered their prayers
and condolences to Mark during this
difficult time, he passed along these kind
sentiments in return: “Thanks to everyone
for their very kind words. The farther I get
from my days at Regis, the more I realize
what a treasure it was to grow and learn
there with all of you. There’s none better,
and damned few as good.”
1986
Bob Sciarrone, [email protected]
Allan Powe, [email protected]
1987
Dave Curley, [email protected]
1988
John Middleton, [email protected]
1989
Lolan Adan, [email protected]
Santiago Vazquez has settled in nicely in
Portland, OR; still re-living his glorious
soccer days (and recently tore his ACL).
Ted Capuano and sons Gianluca &
Matteo recently beat Edmund O’Brien
and children Spencer & Amy at a recent
soccer game in Central Park; Edmund’s
wife, Dana, refereed. Along with wife
Stephanie & daughter Claudia, Ted lives
in London and works for UniCredit’s
structured debt capital team. Edmund
resides in Chicago where he teaches
improv and writing at The Second City
Training Center; he also helps incarcerated
youth and paroled young adults turn their
stories into musicals with Storycatchers
Theatre. Kevin Fox recently bumped into
Sabino Augello at Sesame Place. Sabino
is a gastroenterologist and practices in
Astoria. Kevin is General Counsel for
Sharp Electronics USA. Matt Dowd and
family went on several trips this summer,
including Gettsyburg, Lancaster County
& Hershey Park. Matt ran into John
Harnisher and family at Hershey Park.
John is now settled in at Westfield, NJ.
After two months of re-Americanizing
in Florida, Roger Rigaud and family
have returned to northern Virginia for
ten months of language training at the
Foreign Service Institute. Roger is keen
on connecting with some local Regians.
Jerry Russello and family spent a few
FA L L 2014
weeks in Maine this summer. Jerry also
managed to catch up with Mr. Mullin and
Mr. Connelly at the latter’s recent farewell
bash. This summer, JP Freeley took his
family on a week-long Disney cruise,
swam with dolphins and schmoozed with
the princesses. Finally, sources say Mike
McTiernan has experienced big changes
within the last two years or so: marriage,
partner in big law firm, new baby at home.
Congrats, Mike!
1990
James Donohue, [email protected]
Joseph Sciabica, [email protected]
1991
Nolan Shanahan, [email protected]
1992
Mike McCarthy,
[email protected]
www.rivercityvethospital.com, and they
have been blessed to be very busy from
their opening day. Michael Volvonnino
reports that after finishing his Ph.D
at The University of Texas-Austin,
he moved back East to become the
principal of Archbishop Williams High
School, a Catholic school in Braintree,
Massachusetts, just outside of Boston.
He hopes all is well and looking forward
to getting caught up with folks now that
he is back home, so to speak. Nora Olivia
Soliman born on May 14 2014 to Kerry
and John Soliman (who is complaining
his name is always misspelled). New
address is 415 Crestwood Ave., Tuckahoe
NY 10707 if you want to stop by. Lastly,
Erik Netcher recently accepted a position
at The National Review as their Director of
Review. Honored to be working with Jack
Fowler ’76 (publisher) and Edward Craig
’86 (NRO managing editor),
1998
1993
John Morris, [email protected]
Brendan Loonan, [email protected]
Dan Roche, [email protected]
Joe King writes: “My wife Susan and I
welcomed Lucy Bell King on August 19th.”
A voice cries out from the wilderness—and
Dan DeLuca writes in from points East:
“After completing doctoral degrees at
Harvard, Yale, and Brown, I created my own
university but only decided to complete a
Master of Arts program. At the completion
of schooling, I spent the following years
collecting hair samples from the Yeti,
perfecting the omelet, jogging in place,
and completed an industrial psychology
study for the Long Island Railroad entitled,
Regarding the effects of alcohol on the
judgement of approximate distance from
Penn Station to Nassau County when
deciding to induce sleep. Honestly... I hope
everyone from 1998 is doing well. I am
actually a certified rehabilitation counselor
and work as a vocational evaluator at the
Viscardi Center in Albertson, NY, assisting
adults with varying disabilities in figuring
out a vocational plan. I am married, have a
21 month old daughter, live in the cultural
hub of America known as Levittown, am a
long-term contributor to the obesity crisis,
still keep it real in the metal scene (was
anyone at the Meshuggah concert at the
Best Buy Theater in June?), and still suffer
as a fan of the New York “Close But No
Cigar” Rangers. If anyone wants to catch
up, send me an e-mail at ddeluca7@
hotmail.com”
1996
1999
Mike Boyle, [email protected]
Brian Lennon, [email protected]
Tom Hein, [email protected]
Brian Hughes, [email protected]
Jay Barry and his wife Aileen welcome
their second son, Charles Francis, on June
4, 2014. Charlie is doing great and Jack
is proud to be a big brother. They also
just moved out of NYC to Manhasset,
following classmates the Lennon’s and
the Gibbons.
File this one under better late than never:
last September 27 (2013), Rob Cacace and
his wife, Megan, welcomed into the world
Mia Gates Cacace. Mia arrived as —and
remains—the beloved little sister of James
Cacace. Fr. Bender ’67 celebrated her
baptism in the Regis Chapel on December
22. The happy foursome live in DC, where
Rob works for Georgetown University
Law Center (where there’s a great Regian
presence among the student body) while
Megan keeps the family afloat as a civil
rights lawyer. Chris Pergolizzi lives in
Seattle. He is working for the lead singer of
the Grammy award winning pop-rock band
Train. He hears Drops of Jupiter every night.
1994
Matt Guiney, [email protected]
Bill Foley, [email protected]
After canvassing the class of 1994 via
email and Facebook, we received a
grand total of zero updates! That’s right,
not a single one of you had anything
interesting to share with the rest of the
Regis community. For shame. Get those
updates in to us...kids’ first day of school,
promotion at work, feats of personal
strength, random celebrity sightings, new
address, or anything else of note. Hope
to see many of you at the Centennial JUG
Night on September 26th. If you did not
receive an email concerning Prowlings
Updates, we don’t have your correct email
address (or your SPAM filter is blocking
our emails). Please send updated email
addresses to [email protected].
1995
Stephen McGrath, [email protected]
John Zadrozny, [email protected]
1997
Erik Netcher, [email protected]
Anthony O’Sullivan and his wife Heather
welcomed their second child, Claire
Addy O’Sullivan. They also started their
own Veterinary Hospital in Richmond
Virginia. River City Veterinary Hospital,
29
Photo of a wedding uniting two Regis families: Peter DiFolco ’00 to Ali McCue (Sister ’89,
’95) on July 26th. The two met at Regis as kids among other things, during a Regis Rep play
directed by their brothers. Left to right: Brian Arena ’00, Michael Izquierdo ’96, Colin Jost
’00, Tim Baker ’00, David Byrnes ’00, Frank Bruzese ’00, Phil Judge, S.J. ’80, Pete DiFolco
’00, Craig DiFolco ’95, Matthew McCue ’95, Larry Lonergan ’82, Jim McCue ’95
Patrick Connorton married Jennifer Ellen
Stybel on October 12, 2013 at St. John’s
Chapel at the Groton School in Groton,
Massachussetts. Mark Cummins and Ray
Stahl served as groomsmen, while Brendan
Barker, Rob Cacace, Kevin Clancy, Matt
Hansen, and Joe Tursi acted as ushers.
There were definitely too many ushers.
Father Judge ’80 officiated the ceremony.
Martin Bell has now officially done more for
dinosaurs than Sam Neill and Jeff Goldblum
combined. For details, see “The Black
Market for Dinosaurs” in the June 7, 2014
issue of the New Yorker. Mike Williams
writes: “After seven years in Washington,
DC working at the US Department of State,
my wife Barbara, son Alex, and I moved
to Mexico City last October for Barbara’s
two-year assignment at the U.S. embassy
here. We’re loving it and I would highly
recommend this often overlooked (and
massive) city to anyone who loves urban
tourism mixed with amazing history and
a top-notch dining scene (not to mention
street tacos!). While still consulting on
occasion for State, I’ve recently begun
teaching several courses in the International
Relations department at the local campus
of Tecnólogico de Monterrey. It’s an
impressive school and I’ve been having a
blast trying something new.”
2000
James Walsh, [email protected]
Colin Jost just completed his first season
anchoring Weekend Update on SNL. He
continues to do stand-up, and a recent set
at Caroline’s on Broadway was attended
by classmates Dan Aviles, Scott Callahan,
Mike Memoli, John Hammer and Joseph
Forte. The group was coming from the
housewarming of Scott and his fiancee,
Brittany Winteroff. The two are set to
wed in 2015. Speaking of marriages, Dan
forgot to report his own, to Teresa Priolo,
in October 2013 at St. Ignatius. Best man
Callahan gave a speech that one attendant
said was “gut-busting and transcendent.”
That attendant was Scott Callahan. John
and Joe are both new fathers. John’s wife
Lauren recently had a daughter, Caitlyn,
to go with older brother Johnny, and Joe
and his wife, Elise, are proud parents of
baby Laura. Kevin Bailey has two future
Regians in sons James and Daniel, as
does Michael Sansone and his wife, Kathy
who live in Charlotte,, S.C. with sons
Matthew and Christopher where Mike is a
professional bodybuilder and wristwatch
model. Ollie Browne married Dalya Alomar
on September 20th amongst friends and
family in Marrakech, Morocco. The couple
was thrilled that several Regians were able
to make the trip, including: Ollie’s older
brother, David Browne ’97 and classmates
Rory Boyle, Toma Dedaj, Denis Lyons,
Frank Novick, Chris O’Leary and Divino
Paran. A quick update on those guys:
single, single, married - 2 kids, married dog, single - one or more black eyes, and
married - “working” from home in LIC.
Matias Lazzari and his wife, Courtney, are
expecting their first child, Spencer Robert,
in October. The new family will be moving
to Houston in January, where Matt hopes
to catch on with the last place Astros as
a crafty situational lefty who inspires the
team to greatness. He hopes to sell the
rights to Disney and have Vince Vaughn
portray him in the movie. It hasn’t all been
marriages and birth announcements since
the last 2000 update. Dr. Justin Ratcliffe
completed his cardiology fellowship in June
and has embarked on another at Mount
Sinai Beth Israel. To quote the good doctor,
“I was tired of breaking hearts, now I just
want to fix them.” Mike Memoli continues
his work as a journalist in D.C. He covers
Congress and national politics in 140
characters or less. I’m sure I missed a lot
of milestones, but a lot happens between
quadrennial updates. Send updates and
news to [email protected].
2001
Mike Schimel, [email protected]
Kevin Galligan, [email protected]
30
REGIS HIGH SCHOOL
2002
John Hein, [email protected]
Luigi Naguit, [email protected]
Eric Tseng will be getting married on
October 10—ahead of schedule—to
Lina Ko. The wedding will be in Napa,
as planned. The soon-to-be newlyweds
also went to Brazil earlier this summer
to watch a few World Cup games. They
saw Columbia vs. Uruguay, France vs.
Ecuador, and Russia vs. Belgium, wearing
questionable USSR attire for the latter
game. Michael Schneider, still in the
midst of his “gone country” phase of life,
went offshore fishing in the Gulf of Mexico
near Surfside Beach, TX, and boy, are his
arms tired! Mike downplayed his efforts
in catching Black Tip Shark (including one
weighing in at close to 100 lbs.) and gave
the guides most of the credit. The real
secret to catching fish? Saying a Hail Mary
before he goes out on the boat. That, and
grabby hands. Nicholas Punzalan and his
wife, Pheobe, welcomed a baby daughter,
Penelope, in May. She is their first. Chris
Plentus and his wife traveled to Europe
this summer to do the Tour du Mont
Blanc, a 100+ mile hike crossing through
Switzerland, Italy, and France. Chris is also
leaving his job as a school counselor to
become an educational consultant for a
publishing firm based out of NYC. He’ll
be traveling and working from home, but
hopes to catch up with fellow Regians
whenever he’s in the city. Thomas Chen
married Allison Rivers on July 18. Terence
Fitzpatrick, Rob Gestone, Rob Diamond,
Chris Bellinger, Achilles Stamatelaky,
and Joe DeLessio were classmates in
attendance. Aidan Sleeper reports that his
dog, Sheila, caught and killed a muskrat
over the summer. Aidan and his wife,
Emilie, are submitting it to the world
festival of found art in Vienna this fall. It’s
expected to compete and capture upwards
of 35 Swiss francs at auction. In sporting
news, Emilie and Aidan took Mexico’s
World Cup failure particularly hard. They’re
looking forward to a snowy winter. In
August, Ryan Huber and his wife, Lisa,
graciously hosted the 2002 RABL team at
their home for the second annual Viking
Funeral to say farewell to what was a very
successful season in which the team won
more than one game—and even made the
playoffs. Luigi Naguit flew in all the way
from L.A. just to partake in Ryan’s worldfamous brats, burgers, and dogs. He then
promptly shunned himself from the rest
of the party to “sun” himself on a lawn
chair. Tom Nash came out of hiding to
make a cameo appearance and discuss his
political future; we hope he makes more
cameos in the future. Others on hand to
discuss glory days gone by and Ryan’s
foray into local politics included Mike
Botta, Andrew Darcy, John Hein, Neil
Keenan, Tim McKernan, Matt Quigley,
Jon Picarello and his girlfriend Becky, and
Steve Wyzinski and his wife Dalelyn. We
look forward to seeing more classmates at
and after games next season.
Franz-Mary Francoeur has passed the
Certified Public Accountant Exam for the
state of Massachusetts. Greg Hills has
left San Francisco, the land of fog and kale
smoothies, and returned to NYC after a
4 year West Coast hiatus. He’ll continue
working for the data-driven marketing
startup TellApart where he was one of
the first employees. Brian Matthews
has moved down to Atlanta, GA and is
pursuing an MBA at Georgia Tech. Alain
Miguel and his company, Modalyst, are
a part of the inaugural class of Grand
Central Technology, a tech accelerator
started by Charles Bonello and Matt
Harrigan. Modalyst was selected from
a pool of over 500 applicants. Matthew
Murphy recently completed the European
Master of Public Health after studying at
the Escuela Andaluza de Salud Publica
in Granada, Spain, the Ecole des Hautes
Etudes en Sante Public in Rennes, France
as well as working at the World Health
Organization in Geneva, Switzerland.
This caps several years of work on global
health issues and vulnerable populations
that has included a Schweitzer Fellowship
working with survivors of torture and
political oppression, a Fulbright Research
Fellowship analyzing the National HIV/
AIDS program in Morocco, several
international projects in Honduras, Egypt
and Costa Rica as well as numerous
publications. He was recently named an
AMA’s Physician of Tomorrow and plans
on graduating from medical school in
2015 and pursuing a residency in internal
medicine with a focus on global health.
e
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Events
Calendar
DECEMBER
2
Boston Regional Reunion
29 College JUG Night
JANUARY
21 San Francisco Reunion
Chris Seneca, [email protected]
2010
2005
Tim Leddy, [email protected]
Aidan Tansey, [email protected]
On June 14th, Fr. Andreassi officiated
the wedding of Lou Foglia and his
Syracuse classmate, Aimée deSimone.
The newlyweds are both television
producers—Lou at CNN and Aimée at
CBS. Jim Loperfido is proud to announce
the opening of CrossFit Solace, a premium
amenity CrossFit and Yoga facility opening
in the Murray Hill area of Manhattan
this fall. Anyone that would like to learn
more can check out the website at www.
crossfitsolace.com or contact Jim at
jim@crossfitsolace.com.
2006
Ed Walsh, [email protected]
Daniel Denicola, [email protected]
2007
Jimmy Burbage, [email protected]
Tully McLoughlin, [email protected]
2008
Nick Domino, [email protected]
John Wachowicz, [email protected]
2003
2009
Nick Nikic, [email protected]
Bennet Chan, [email protected]
Will Marra, [email protected]
Phil Gillen, [email protected]
Justin Hunte, [email protected]
BIRTHS
Kenneth Richard on August 5 to
Rebeca Rodriguez & Kenneth Allaire ’85 †
Lucy Bell on August 19, 2014 to
Susan and Joe King ’95
Michaela Rose on September 16, 2014 to
Elizabeth and Michael Ardini ’96
Charles Francis on June 4, 2014 to
Aileen and Jay Barry ’96
Jack James on May 14, 2014 to
Carrie and Jim Hein ’96
Liam Connor on September 16, 2014 to
Katie and John O’Dea ’96
Kaelin Yin Hong on June 11, 2014 to
Amy and Kieran Lau Boyle ’97
Claire Addy to
Heather and Anthony O’Sullivan ’97
Nora Olivia on May 14, 2014 to
Kerry and John Soliman ’97
Kieran on April 1, 2014 to
Colleen and Dan Sullivan ’97
Mia Gates on September 27, 2013 to
Megan and Rob Cacace ’99
Penelope in May 2014 to
Pheobe and Nicholas Punzalan ’02
22 Los Angeles Reunion
2004
Evan O’Brien, [email protected]
John Calhoun, fl[email protected]
Milestones
Mike Berger got engaged to Carley
Schmidt in Disney on May 23, 2014, and
the two are planning their wedding for the
Spring of 2015.
MARRIAGES
Ed Murphy ’64 and Amy Henry
on August 30, 2014
Patrick Connorton ’99 and Jennifer
Ellen Stybel on October 12, 2013
Ollie Browne ’00 and Dalya Alomar
on September 20, 2014
2011
Thomas Chen ’02 and Allison Rivers
on July 18, 2014
Bobby Hausen, [email protected]
Eddie Kelly, [email protected]
Lou Foglia ’05 and Aimée deSimone
on June 14, 2014
Dan Lehane represented the United
States at the 2014 Australian Football
International Cup in Melbourne this
past summer. The US went 3-2 in the
tournament, and Dan was named
to the World Team, the tournament
All-Star Team. Additionally, he was
awarded the MVP title for team USA.
Jonathan O’Neill wrote and directed
“My Personal Hell,” which appeared
at the New York International Fringe
Festival during August. The cast and crew
included four Regis alumni in addition to
Jonathan: Giancarlo Milea, Christopher
Pedro, Vincent Pellizzi, and Patrick
McCarthy. The production received
excellent reviews and was attended by
many in the Regis community.
2012
Evan Lumbra, [email protected]
Joe Pollicino, [email protected]
2013
Hao Lam, [email protected]
DEATHS
Rev. Robert A. Haus, S.J. ’42
on July 12, 2014
Raymond A. O’Hara, Jr. ’45
on August 11, 2014
Dominic R. Butler ’46
on August 4, 2014
Arthur J. Dillon ’46
on August 9, 2014
Pierce J. Power ’46
on September 8, 2014
Richard J. Minasz ’57
on July 31, 2014
FA L L 2014
31
U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, Rev. Philip G. Judge, S.J. ’80 (President), Congresswoman
Carolyn Maloney, Peter Labbat (Chair, Regis Board of Trustees), Meenakshi Srinivasan
(Chair, Landmarks Preservation Commission), and Christina Davis (Chair, NY Landmarks
Preservation Foundation) unveil the new Regis High School landmark plaque.
Regis Renews New York City
Landmark Status On 100th Anniversary
Regis High School opened its doors to
students for the first time on September
14, 1914, so it was fitting that early Monday
morning, September 15, 2014—the first
school day of Regis High School’s second
century—the school opened its doors with
both a salute to the past and a celebration
for its future.
At approximately 8:00 a.m. on the steps of
55 East 84th Street, Rev. Philip G. Judge,
S.J. ’80, President of Regis High School,
welcomed a large crowd consisting of
students, faculty, New York City neighbors,
and local media outlets. The crowd had
gathered to witness the re-dedication of
Regis High School as a New York City
landmark, and to symbolically “ring in” the
school’s second century with the ringing of
the first school bell of the day.
Joining in the ceremony were federal, state,
and local officials including U.S. Senator
Charles Schumer, U.S. Congresswoman
Carolyn Maloney, NYC Councilmember
Dan Garodnick, NY State Senator Liz
Krueger, NY State Assemblymember
Brian Kavanagh ’85, Meenakshi Srinivasan
(Chair, NYC Landmarks Preservation
Commission), and Christina Davis (Chair,
NY Landmarks Preservation Foundation).
“It is a great day,” began Senator Schumer
in his remarks to the audience. “100 years of
providing top-notch education in New York
City. 100 years of providing tuition free
education in New York City. Regis is the
best, the best of New York City.”
“The combination of opportunity and
quality is what has made New York City the
greatest city in the world to this day, and
Regis embodies that,” added the Senator. “It
is so fitting and appropriate that everyone
in New York City—and so many of us who
represent New York City—celebrate this
100th anniversary.”
“And beyond academics,” the Senator
continued, “Regis is a school that teaches
values. Values that make students a success in
life. More than that, values that instill a sense
of duty to enrich the lives of others. And that
is the inestimable value of a Jesuit education.
It’s a holistic education. An education that
nurtures the man as well as the mind. And
that’s the spirit of the Jesuit order.”
Before concluding, the Senator added,
“While we celebrate today the achievement
of the 100 years past, let us look forward to
the next 100 years of great Jesuit education
here in New York City.”
Following Senator Schumer,
Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney
presented Regis with a Congressional
Resolution honoring the school.
“In honor of this great achievement,” stated
Maloney, “this resolution will be archived in
the Library of Congress, and will be a lasting
testament celebrating Regis High School’s
100th anniversary and its many contributions
educating leaders and contributors to our
great city and our great nation.”
After the new landmarks plaque was
unveiled, Senator Schumer rang a
commemorative school bell to represent the
“first bell” of Regis High School’s second
century. The ceremony concluded with the
student body enthusiastically singing the
alma mater to the crowd of neighbors, news
crews, and onlookers.
At the conclusion of the ceremony, there
was just enough time for students to
hurry off to morning advisement, a subtle
reminder that punctuality is still a priority
100 years after the founding of Regis.
To watch the ceremony, and to view additional
photos, visit regis.org/landmark.
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION
U.S. POSTAGE
55 E AST 84 TH S TREET | N EW Y ORK , NY 10028
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
PAID
PERMIT NO. 6698
NEWARK, NJ
www.regis.org
U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, along with other New York
officials, joined Regis students and faculty in “ringing in”
the second century. The first bell of the second century rang
following the September 15 ceremony re-dedicating Regis
High School as a New York City landmark.