Word: patrick
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Elected were: Donald N. Bach, of Eliot House, government; Gregory W. Brumfiel, of Leverett House, mathematics; Patrick A. Curtin, of Kirkland House, biology; John D. Fay, of Lowell House, mathematics; Donald E. Gerson, of Eliot House, anthropology: Alan Gilbert, of Kirkland House, social studies; David M. Gordon, of Adams House, social studies; and James M. Herzog, of Quincy House, social relations...
...issued only one brief instruction on Mass revisions, and at least one parish will make no changes at all until next spring. "It's no big deal here," said one priest. Other bishops will conform to the spirit of the new regulations gradually. In Washington, D.C., Archbishop Patrick O'Boyle has insisted that pastors introduce the changes with 16 weeks of explanatory sermons. Says Msgr. Robert Arthur, a Washington liturgist: "You can't just take 350,000 people and shake them and say-look, you did this today, but you're going to do that tomorrow...
Gerhart grabbed the youth, looked at the name tag in a protruding shirt, and dashed into the building to see if the shirt's owner was present. "It was Pat's shirt [Patrick E. Ciccone '66]," Gerhart said, "and his room was empty, so I knew right away something was fishy...
Adams scored early on a dash by Mike Patrick and later added a touchdown on Arnold's Arvante...
...Standin. Born in Buffalo, N.Y., the son of a New York Central conductor, John Dennis Patrick O'Brian showed early signs of an incisive critical taste. Soon after he joined the Buffalo Courier-Express as a cub reporter, O'Brian was assigned to audit a performance of the local philharmonic orchestra. Offended by a guest appearance of some juvenile accordionists, O'Brian took the orchestra so severely to task that the incident became a civic cause celebre. When the orchestra changed hands shortly thereafter, O'Brian, with obvious satisfaction, claimed part of the credit...