Hawk Pride
We are proud of our school's history.
The straight line that runs through it is
top quality education,
traditions built by the student body,
and affinity for 'Hudson' that lasts a lifetime
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For the Glory of God and Service to Man | |
Yet Another First in the Annals of
Hudson Catholic
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Sixty years on, and Hudson Catholic continues to churn out ‘firsts’.
135 incoming freshmen will supplant a graduating class of 120 in the student body this September, bringing the student body to a total of 500 on the nose, which his good news in and of itself.
But the historic news about this freshman class is that, for the first time ever, this class will contain a female majority! The 69 girls entering Hudson Catholic, along with 66 boys, represents a 51%-49%, Girls majority in our Freshman Class!
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This Year’s Annual Fund Appeal,
"Building Our Hawks' Tomorrows, Today"
Provides Choices for Directing Your Gifts
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As you are probably well aware, tuition revenue set in our annual operating budget does not cover the full cost of providing the transformational Lasallian educational experience for our 500 Hawks. Our planned fundraising is needed to cover that gap, which widens by the end of the year due to tuition write-offs that invariably arise due to a variety of family hardships.
To assure that we address this ever-present need throughout the school year, we are highlighting Tuition Assistance as one of a variety of options for designating your gifts as they are made to this year’s Fund for Hudson Catholic. And setting a specific dollar goal for it, and for five other designated priority initiatives.
We think that donors to Hudson Catholic might prefer to have more specific choices toward which to designate the use of their gifts. As a result, we present a menu of options, along with our targets for each, for your consideration. Most of the options will support components of our operating budget, such as Tuition Assistance, STEM Education, The Arts, and General Operations.
New this year, we are also presenting two other options aimed at addressing some pressing needs that never seem to make it into the budget, therefore have not been able to be addressed in recent years. They are Student Retreats and Air Conditioning the Gym (for year-round use and new revenue generation).
At hudsoncatholic.org/1964, please enter your designation in the Details box. The default for no designation will be General Operations.
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Show us what is important to you by voting with your gifts
Click below:
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Farewell to
St. Nicholas Grammar School
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On August 6th, the Archdiocese of Newark announced that St. Nicholas Catholic School on Ferry Street in Jersey City, serving students in grades Pre-K to 8, would not reopen in September, leaving a profound impact on students, families, and staff. The decision to permanently close the school was attributed to declining enrollment primarily, with teaching staff vacancies and growing fiscal challenges also playing a role.
From September 2021 to June 2024, school enrollment declined by 30%, and in late July, registration for the coming year had declined an additional 12%. The resulting loss in associated tuition revenue produced the ultimate financial strain.
St. Nicholas School remained operational through August 31st to provide special tuition assistance to help families transition to other archdiocesan schools at which their new tuition was higher. And, archdiocesan Schools Office staff met with teachers and staff wishing to continue working in archdiocesan Catholic schools to assist them with transitioning.
Possible solutions were considered, including a potential merger with neighboring St. Joseph School, but could not be worked out due to teaching vacancies for the 2024-2025 academic operations.
Let this be a lesson to all Catholics, and a reminder to all Hawks who experienced the threat of a school closure 16 years ago, of how fragile Catholic education can continue to be in an urban environment. Bear in mind, then, that those of us who love Hudson Catholic and want to see it continue to thrive and serve our community for many years to come, have an obligation to actively support our school. Please continue, or start, to give generously and often, so that Hudson Catholic may be assured that its best days are yet to come.
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Interview with Our Chief Recruiter | |
Jaime de Leon II is Dean of Enrollment Management at Hudson Catholic, having served in his role since 2018. He not only recruits your children to The Home of the Hawks, but he also sends his own -- Annalise DeLeon ’26!
BTL: How do we ‘find’ most of the young hawks who ultimately enroll at Hudson Catholic?
JD: Most of our students these days come from public and charter schools. You may have heard that many of the Catholic elementary schools in Jersey City have closed, and this is unfortunately a disturbing trend that we must fight against more and more. Where there were over 20 catholic schools in Hudson County, we are down to just five in the 2024-2025 school year. I spend a good portion of my days reaching out to counselors and teachers at the various public and charter schools. While the catholic schools have closed, the number of students in Hudson County has not dipped. Our various events, whether they be Open House, our Preview Days or things like the musical and sporting events are crucial for enrollment.
BTL: How has the enrollment management process evolved over your tenure here?
JD: The shift toward public and charter school enrollment has been significant. A few years ago we were competing with St. Peter's Prep and St. Dom's, but now our most significant competition comes from High Tech and County Prep. Since our 8th graders are in free schools now, they are encouraged to stay in Jersey City public schools. While our programs are top notch -- I'd put them up against anyone including the #1 school in the state, McNair -- we are ultimately competing against free. This is why donor dollars are and will continue to be crucial to our long-term success.
BTL: What’s this we hear about a ‘Waiting’ or ‘Standby’ List?
JD: In the past few years we have, in fact, run a wait list. Because we enroll year-round, there are times in the year when we can no longer guarantee that there will be open seats in a class and so we must place students on a waiting list.
BTL: What is the student capacity at Hudson, and how would you define our ‘sweet spot’ with regard to class sizes?
JD: While we would like to truly serve the LaSallian mission of inviting as many students as possible, the reality is that we do have a limit. If we had more than 130 students per grade we would run into issues with classroom space and would need to hire more faculty and staff. As it is, the vast majority of our faculty, staff, and administration wear multiple hats -- most teachers also coach, most administrators serve in multiple roles beyond their functional job titles, and our guidance department has had to grow to meet student needs.
BTL: How have you managed to smooth out fluctuating class sizes that have presented significant challenges to us in the past?
JD: I've spent a great amount of time and attention on the enrollment management part of my job. It's not as simple as just accepting students; I have to ensure that our school remains viable long term. When I first arrived in 2018 our class sizes were jumping all over the place, meaning that the size of one graduating class might not be fully replaced by an incoming class or might be followed by a smaller junior class. I'm proud to say that this is no longer an issue, but it remains something that I pay close attention to on a daily basis. It is essential to maintain a strong handle on retention (the number of students coming back to us each year) to help keep each class year strong.
BTL: What do you view as Hudson Catholic’s competitive advantages?
JD: I truly believe that Hudson Catholic is the best school in the area. We have the best mix of everything- academics, athletics, extra-curriculars. There simply isn't a better program out there than our Dual Degree program with St. Peter's University. Nowhere else are students in the college classroom, mixed in with college students and professors. What better way is there to be prepared for college than to do it early on in high school? Students in Dual Degree or ACE (Accelerated College Experience) have that opportunity. Similarly, students can take part in a number of programs at Stevens Tech, most notably the Art Harper Academy, a free program that allows students to take classes at Stevens with college professors and get a head start on experiencing Engineering at the collegiate level. We offer all that, as well as top-notch athletics, the best theater program around, and all the expected staples, such as student council, cheerleading, yearbook, and chess club. No other school has this combination working for students.
BTL: Tell us a favorite experience of yours involving a student.
JD: My favorite thing about working here is the relationships I make with our students. They come to us during an important time in their development and we serve as second parents to them. While I treasure many memories I make with the kids, nothing beats the thrill I get from registering a student and family that I've worked with through the process. Having been here as long as I have, I have gotten to watch students go from 8th graders to Hudson Catholic alumni and even college alumni in many cases. My absolute favorite moment though was a poem that one of my students once wrote to me as a class assignment in 2021. Most of the time kids don't realize the impact that they have on us, and this note is something that I keep by my side as a reminder that our relationships go both ways.
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Click on the logo to register to play, congratulate, or sponsor | |
The Tampa Premier of the newest film
from Film Producer PJ Leonard '80
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Click on the logo to register and pay | |
Click on the logo to register and pay | |
Hollander Hotel, St. Petersburg
Same site as last year
Contact Darren Scarpa '80 at djs713@duck.com
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Rescheduled
Now: Saturday, November 9
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Click on the logo to register and pay | |
Reunion Reminders
1975 Planning Underway
Contact Frank Martineau at 201-238-7753
2000 / 2005 / 2015
It is time to start thinking about your milestone.
Contact Jill Cypher at jcypher@hudsoncatholic.org
to express interest in having / helping with your class reunion
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The start of a new school year is always my favorite time in education! I always say that Hudson Catholic is simply a cinderblock building without students. The students ARE Hudson Catholic. While many look forward to the Summer Break, I don’t. The building is too quiet; the laughter too rare; the energy too low. The students are the lifeblood, they are the heart.
This year, we welcomed 135 members of the Class of 2028! If I didn’t feel old already, writing Class of 2028 certainly accomplished the job! This is the first class in which we have more girls (albeit 2+) than boys and it is confirmation of just how important the co-ed initiative was to the future of the school back in 2009. Our enrollment has topped 500 once again, reflecting the health of our institution.
None of these things are possible without the commitment of our stakeholders. As we start the new school year, let me say Thank YOU for opening doors to opportunity for our students. You are changing lives through your continued commitment to our Lasallian school. May God bless you all! Now let’s hear our Hawks make some noise!!
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For the nearly 800 Hawks who have joined our mailing list
over the past year, we invite you to have a look at our
'Stay Educated' video.
Created three years ago,
it still resonates on what it feels like to be a Hawk.
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How About Those HATS!?
Hawks at the Shore Flock to 'Hawks at the Shore'
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With over 50 Hawks in attendance, the fourth annual HATS event was another great gathering in legendary Belmar. And check out this year's swag! Bucket HATS.
Once again, we were blessed with the presence of beloved Faculty of our times, Frank Becht, Jack Campion, Neil Gargiulo, and Frank McGady.
Don Daly '75, Ret. USAF gets the Furthest Travelled Award, coming up from Virginia, although his classmate Steve Cuccinelli '75 tried to cop the award with a grueling one-hour ride from LBI!
Jim Lannon '70 receives the Most Selfless Award for the gracious giveback of his $500 50/50 Drawing winnings!
Of note, the Class of '69 utilized our annual gabfest as an unofficial 55th year reunion for the nine class members who made it to the event.
We are grateful as always, for our hosts, The Friendly Sons of the Shillelagh, Bob Quirk '73, and honorary Hawk 'John Carr at the Bar'. We look forward to returning next summer, if they'll have us!
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Alumnae
Elena Rodriguez '16
& Mariam Fouad '14
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The Brothers Quirk:
Ed '69 Bob '73 Whitey '74
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Hawks of '69: seated, L. to R.: Mr. Frank Becht, FAC, Ed Quirk, Steve Liptak, Tom Bender, Bob Stroebel; standing, L. to R.: Mark Mai, Charlie Benedict, Bob Shipman, Jack Ryan, Dennis Dran. | |
Annual Report is Going Digital | |
As we continue to transform to digital communications, our most noticeable next step will be the move to a digital version of our Annual Report which has been published on our website for the preceding three years in addition to being printed and mailed, originally to all donors, then most recently to select donors.
This transformation has enabled us to reduce our publishing expenses by thousands, thereby economizing on the Advancement budget - to do more with less.
There will be more to announce soon enough on the digitization of Advancement initiatives, all designed to increase fundraising revenue on an ongoing cost-effective basis, so that we may continue to direct a higher and higher percentage of gifts to assisting students and their families in need.
We thank you for understanding the change to our means of communicating, in the best interests of efficiently allocating our limited resources.
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Our gridiron Hawks returned to action on September 7th, to start an eight-game schedule, and emerged victorious, 22-18, against Newark Collegiate Academy at Caven Point. Coach Lamar McKnight earned his first victory as Hawk Coach by way of heroics from Soph QB Kyle Mercorelli and Receiver Amori McNeil, who connected on a 40-yard winning TD pass on 4th and 21 in the 4th quarter. McKnight is encouraged by the size of the turnout for this year's team, as our Hawks compete in the Super Independent Football Division. The Hawks currently have 57 student-athletes on the roster. The schedule is highlighted by games at Hoboken under the Friday Night Lights on Sept. 13th at 6pm, and at Catholic powerhouses, Immaculata, Oct. 4th 7pm, and Morris Catholic, Nov. 1st 7pm. Win or lose, it will be a great sight to see the Black and Gold back on the football field this fall.
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The story of Girls Rugby at Hudson Catholic would not be complete without noting the receipt of a $5,000 gift from the United States Rugby Foundation, meant as start-up funding, as part of their mission, along with USA Youth and High School Rugby, to expand the reach of the sport at the high school level. We are thankful that the US Rugby Foundation recently highlighted Hudson Catholic in its communications, for our “remarkable progress and significant achievement in a short time.” They then went on to feature, as we did in the past two issues of ‘BTL’, our four seniors who will all be going on to play at the university level. | |
Dr. Frederick Bonato PhD, is now the former Executive Vice President & Provost of St. Peter’s University, after announcing his acceptance of a role as Interim Dean of the College for Community Health at Montclair State University. This is a research doctoral institution ranked in the top tier of national universities with a reputation as New Jersey’s premier public service university. The College is focused on the many health issues that exist in the community. We wish Dr. Bonato continued success, as his departure from SPU is also a departure from the Hudson Catholic Board of Consultors. President Matthews is expected to name a new representative of SPU to our Board shortly.
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HCRHS Joins in Yankee Stadium Honors
for Jack Curry '82
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YES Network personality and Hudson Catholic Hall of Famer Jack Curry '82 was honored recently at Yankee Stadium for his induction into the Irish American Baseball Society Hall of Fame, and Hudson Catholic was on hand both as an event sponsor and in support of one of our own. President-Principal Terry Mathews and Director of Enrollment Jaime DeLeon were on hand to convey the best wishes of the Hudson Catholic community. | |
The Hudson Catholic Mission bears repeating | |
“The mission of Hudson Catholic Regional High School, a college preparatory school serving a diverse community, is to educate the students entrusted to our care in a Catholic environment through a comprehensive and demanding curriculum, emphasizing spiritual and social values complemented by an integrated program of extracurricular activities, all designed to encourage individual development and responsibility to the community.” Terry proved that his love for Hudson Catholic and Jack knows no boundaries as he willingly entered Yankee Stadium, despite being a lifelong Mets fan! | |
Alumni Spotlight
Leadership, Service, Achievements
(and occasional whimsy)
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Masterful. Christian Spiegel '13 received his Master’s of Science degree in Supply Chain Management from the University of Minnesota.
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New Gig. Mike Lubanski '90, former member of the Hudson Catholic Board of Consultors and volunteer advisor for the school's technologies during the days of transition to a co-ed institution, is starting a new position as Senior Azore Solutions Architect at 3Cloud.
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A Higher Calling. Anthony Luna '89 is happy to announce that his professional search has resulted in his acceptance of a role as Director of Philanthropy at the Catholic Foundation of Eastern Pennsylvania. In his role, Anthony will be cultivating individuals and organizations to make 'forever gifts' by creating endowments for their favorite Catholic schools, parishes, and organizations so they can fulfill their missions - in Perpetuum.
Hey, Anthony, can you streeeeetch that role to Jersey City?!
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Distinguished credential. Peter Ferdinandi ’88 has earned a Certification from the Chief of Staff Association at the Said Business School of the University of Oxford in Oxfordshire, England. Peter is presently a Managing Director and Chief Operating Officer at Hanover Street Capital in NYC.
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Hero and Servant. Jack Dunne ’83 has received the UNICO National DeFilippo Freedom Award at their 101st National Convention, given to an individual “who goes beyond the call of duty.” (Sounds like a Hawk in service to others, to us!) Jack was the recipient for his meritorious service in the Global War on Terror while with the U.S. Air Force. He also served in the U.S. Marine Corps, and continues his commitment (Semper Fi) as a leader of the world’s largest veteran organization, the American Legion. He knows sacrifice is the pinnacle of patriotism, fond of saying: “Freedom is not free.” Jack, we salute you and thank you for your service!
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Two Hawks Elected to the Hudson County Sports Hall of Fame | |
Two Hawk alumni will be inducted into the Hudson County Sports Hall of Fame on October 2nd. They are the first Hawk alumni to be so inducted since Dwayne Sabb '87 in 2016, and the ninth and tenth overall.
Ed Hochstadter '88 was a 1988 Hockey All County First Team Goalkeeper who led the Hawks in compiling a 49-14-7 record over his four-year career, and compiled a County-leading 1.25 Goals Against average, featuring nine shutouts. In 1987 and 1988, the Hawks won the Handchen Cup, awarded to the playoff champion in the NJ Interscholastic Hockey League American Division. Unfortunately, due to league configuration, Ed was not able to face off against Stan Gutt of Bayonne, who that year became the all time single season goal scorer in NJ state history, with 79, breaking the record set by our own Bruno Bisiacchi '84 four years earlier. Ed was joined on the All County First Team that year by younger brother Scott Hochstadter '90, and by Dean Gasser '90. And they were coached by the next inductee, Ken Such '80. Ken was a member of the fledgling second-year Hawk Hockey program. Following his graduation, he took up the Hawk coaching reins in 1983, for five seasons through 1988, building the Hawks into a very respectable and competitive program, ending his tenure with those consecutive Handchen Cup wins in 1987 and 1988. He then moved on to coach at that school down the hill but, hey, his membership card is still good at Hudson! Ken coached the Prep for 6 years, and then took another stint starting in 2017 through today. He also coached Prep football as an assistant for 25+ years. Ken is being inducted in recognition to his many years of successful coaching in multiple sports. Ken also served an NHL scout for the Philadelphia Flyers, Minnesota North Stars, and Winnipeg Jets. He has spent the majority of his career working the Union City Schools System, from which he retired this past summer.
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For the Kids -- David Carbone ’74
A True Lasallian Man In Service to Others
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David Carbone '74 PhD (SUNY Albany) - Volunteer Court Advocate for four foster kids, Big Brother, Mentor, and Prison Educator, has spent a lifetime making a difference in kids' and young adults' lives, borne out of difficult circumstances in his own childhood. And it has taken many forms.
Dave has found, from both personal and applied experience, that virtually all kids can succeed, given a customized mix of challenges and nuanced support menu. That recipe worked for him from an early age as a consequence of his own difficult home life that fractured the family.
At Hudson Catholic, his experience working with Hawks who tutored difficult kids at a poor Catholic grammar school became an instructive experience for, in 2006, creating a program tutoring young, poor kids at the Sam Naples Community Center in Trenton. He solicited donations from local organizations like the Yankees’ Trenton Thunder, to purchase academic supplies and hold celebrations to reward and reinforce the good behaviors of rambunctious kids.
Dave's service as a NJ State Planning Associate, for Discretionary Grants began in 1998 and continued through his retirement, providing technical assistance for schools, community-based organizations, and institutions of higher learning toward the effective implementation of their grants in compliance with federal and state requirements.
Over the years, by virtue of his roles as a Good Samaritan, Dave has mentored a number of boys and girls who, without such guidance, could easily have gone astray. Instead, his ‘kids’ have thrived. Among one family of four kids, they are now a firefighter and professional artist, a mom, a businessman, and an editor for a NYC magazine.
In 2001, Dave became a Big Brother in Mercer County and was assigned to four boys. He continues to remain in the lives of two, who are now 28 and 26, and a medical doctor and police officer /National Guardsman.
In 2006, Dave became a volunteer Court Appointed Special Advocate for four foster kids. He helped them to graduate high school, and succeeded in placing an autistic sister into a special school - she is now involved with the State Division of Developmental Disabilities.
And then there are the truly troubled members of society - the incarcerated. From 2000 to 2023, he taught 84 college courses to 1,053 inmates, likely more than anyone in the history of the state. About 200 inmates took multiple classes with him, with a few even saying that they may not have ended up in prison had they met someone like him in their youth. Dave’s father had been imprisoned while Dave was young, and Dave visited him at Rahway State Prison, once during grammar school and once more while at Hudson. When he later taught a class at Rahway State, he reflected that had it not been for generational differences, his Dad might have been one of his inmate students.
Dave believes that having a network of support throughout one’s schooling, along with a few good friends, and a couple of other caring adults along the way, and then continuing to build that network throughout the adult years, is an important formula for meeting with personal success throughout life. And as an adult, it can be a blessing to be part of the network for kids and young adults.
Continuing to be of more service to others, Dave today is Hudson’s volunteer Mentorship Leader who liaises between the Student/Partner Alliance and Hawk alumni to identify and match up alumni with Hawk students as part of the mentorship aspect of the S/PA’s operating model. Thank you, Dave!
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A ‘Hawk Pride Party’ broke out at Coach Ed Agresta’s Festival of Life Party. Exchanged ‘war stories’ were: L. to R., Bruce Bock ’75, Coach Jerry Caputo, Mrs. Kathy Agresta, Coach Ed Agresta, Ed Roselle ’80, Mrs. Nancy Roselle, Ken Such ’80, Bill Venezia ’70, Kevin Lynch ’69, and former Faculty Jake O’Halloran. | |
Former Faculty Ed Garland recently reunited with his fellow former Hockey coaches, Joe Pelliccio ‘84 and Mark Pica.
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Devin Mirlas ’15 is a graduate of Quinnipiac University, holding a bachelor’s degree in Health Sciences who is presently a part-time Medical assistant at NJ Med, PA in Elizabeth, with experience in electrocardiography and patient vitals. She is seeking a full-time role within a patient care setting in the Northern New Jersey area. She is also intent on continuing her education in the nursing field. If you can make a referral, send it to advancement@hudsoncatholic.org
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In response to our social media post about this throwback HC class ring circa 1972, we received a plethora of comments, mostly, as you might imagine, claiming that their ring had been lost, stolen, or thrown out by their mother! Such clichéd Hawks. And a few others, from the ridiculous to the sublime.
We had Hawks pointing the finger at each other! Larry Sansevere ‘75 said: “Lost mine the summer after graduation at [classmate John) Lypen’s house on Long Island.” Sounds like a real-life Amityville horror!
David Fugel ‘78 shared perhaps the most poignant story of how he became separated from his class ring. “My daughter lives in Paris and wears mine on a chain. I was shocked that she asked me for it. Would rather have her closer, but a part of me and of Hudson is walking on the Seine.” Just a hunch, he wants it back!
Some Hawks felt they could not be trusted just to say they still had their rings, so they provided proof.
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Who are these Hawks? What Class Year is this? Where was this snapped? What might have been the occasion? Responses to advancement@hudsoncatholic.org. Answers in next issue. | |
’74 Trivia, but not Trivial | |
In honor of the upcoming reunion of our 50th anniversary Class of ’74, we present this stroll down their athletic memory lane. In their senior year, Mr. Jim Gannon was AD. They had the first undefeated team in school history: 1970 Frosh football, and the first team in school history to win 20+ games: ‘74 Varsity baseball. They had multiple sport Varsity starters in Bruce Bevacqua (football, baseball) and Joe "Moon" Castagna (football, basketball), and a four-year Varsity starter, Brian Altano, in baseball. All County performances were delivered by Peter Morales, 1st team baseball; Frankie Ford, 2nd team football; Phil Zacche, 3rd team football; and Castagna,1st team All Conference football. Mark Dorsey received a Division I scholarship to play football at Villanova. And, the Jersey Journal published caricatures of star athletes Paul Santasieri, track, and Franny Constantinople, baseball. | |
The Hall of Fame trailblazing Class of 1968 not only holds the distinction of being the First Graduating Class in the history of Hudson Catholic, but 18 members of that class who went on to and graduated in 1972 from then-St. Peter's College, became members of SPC's Centennial Class that year, and in 2022, were honored as such during the now-St. Peter's University's 150th Year Celebration!
They are Tom Davidson, John Dineen, Matt Donohue, Peter Farrell, Patrick Finucane, Mike Garner, Bob Gironda, Thomas Hahner, John Lane, Mark Lott, Jerry McCann, Stephen McMahon, Dennis Murphy, Rich Muzikar, Brian Nodine (dec.), Gerard Norcia, Arthur Schwank, and William Tamko.
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You can help Hudson Catholic
with 'likes' & 'shares' of our posts to your networks, from
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No Hawk Left Behind
We lose touch with some of our graduates who move around, go off to college, start careers, get married, etc. In some cases, they retire, having used their work email to receive ' BTL', and forget to notify us of a personal email address. Help us find them again and make it harder for us to lose touch. Many on this list have siblings who are Hawk alumni, so turn them in at advancement@hudsoncatholic.org or send them to hudsoncatholic.org/stay-connected to update their contact info.
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Tom Farrell ‘68
Gary Caporale '69
John Kelly ‘72
Mark Milczarski ‘72
Ken Francis '74
Chris Kearns '74
Mark Callori ‘77
Ronald Kascic ‘77
Charles Kosc ‘77
Jude Metcalf ‘77
Kevin O’Callahan ‘77
Salvatore Valvano '77
Patrick Alburtus ‘78
Louis Barcarola ‘78
Greg Broslawski ‘78
Kenneth Emmich ‘78
James Farrell ‘78
Scott Dorsey ‘80
John Duncan '80
Steven Dunn ‘80
James Golestos ‘81
Louis Fusaro ‘81
Kevin Galvin ‘81
Peter Hernandez ‘81
James Jewusiak ‘81
Joseph Buchalski ‘82
Mike DiTore ‘82
Joseph Doyle ‘82
John Menke ‘82
Peter Radomsky ‘82
James Grosso ‘83
Samih Ibrahim ‘83
James Latella ‘83
Ron Marshall ‘83
Anthony Mastrofillipo ‘83
James Nimon '83
Andrew Gegenfurtner ‘84
David Finnerty ‘84
Michael Hussein ‘84
Joseph Lynch ‘84
Xavier Martillo ‘84
Marty Bouteloupt '85
Sung Park ‘85
Charles Salgado ‘85
George Scarpa ‘85
Brian Sullivan ‘85
Michael Sullivan ‘85
George Gonzalez ‘86
James Lovero '86
Thomas Mark ‘86
Ron Mulcahy ‘86
John Reynolds ‘86
Ted Abramo ‘87
Vincent Altieri ‘87
Keith Borelli ‘87
Ralph Broderick ‘87
David Brown ‘87
Gerard Kosloski ‘88
John Kruse ‘88
Richard Mendyk ‘88
Danny Montoto ‘88
Michael Warrick ‘88
Craig Greenwood ‘89
Brendan Joy ‘89
Robert Kucks ‘89
Frank Poli ‘89
Mario Puerta ‘89
John Edgar '90
Juan Elizalde ‘90
Joseph Maione ‘90
Brian McGovern ‘90
Ralph Moran ‘90
Ron Tredo ‘90
Lorenzo DeGuzman ‘91
Arnold Gonzalez ‘91
Dennis Lang ‘91
Michael Lee ‘91
William Palestis ‘91
Chris Begbie '92
Edwin Johnston ‘92
George Mercurio ‘92
James Mitchell ‘92
Mike Mulcahy ‘92
Raul Sanchez ‘92
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Michael Podela ‘93
Andrew Pyrtej ‘93
James Solivan ‘93
Kevin Thompson ‘93
Richard Vizuete ‘93
Oscar Danzey ‘94
Michael Fagan ‘94
Allen Hudson ‘94
Chris Majewski ‘94
Juan Martinez ‘94
Eric Lorfink '95
Anthony Spina '95
Lamar West '95
Rakem Bell ‘96
Christopher Caporale '96
Ramon Melendez ‘96
John Rogers ‘96
Emmanuel Roldan ‘96
Hiren Patel ‘97
Brian Roach ‘97
Michael Sarro ‘97
Nicholas Girardi ‘98
Michael Kilinski ‘98
Michael Andreula ‘99
Ramon Aponte ‘99
Tim Carroll '99
Thomas Cinquegrana ‘99
Justin Dembowski ‘99
Alexander Nosal ‘99
Brian Pullaro ‘99
Fernando Piney ‘99
Kevin Ricardo ‘99
Ricardo Rodrigues ‘99
Neil Seecharan ‘99
Kenneth Sugrue ‘99
Dennis Torres ‘99
Sean Western ‘99
Pietro Barberi ‘00
Matt Deslonde ‘00
Justin Fahey '00
Bruce Neves ‘01
Michael O’Connell ‘01
Julian Sanchez ‘01
Marcos Sarno ‘01
Anthony Valentino ‘01
Victor Kotynski ‘02
Juan Rolon ‘03
Bismark Korentang ‘04
Frank Lombardo ‘04
Nicholas Macchia ‘04
Jonathan Mecka ‘04
Christopher Mendoza ‘04
Eric Montelibano ‘04
Richard Na ‘04
Daniel Ramirez '04
Darren Salinardi ‘04
Hammid Sandhu ‘04
Doug Stoveken ‘04
Chris Urban ‘04
Alex Villon ‘04
Asaru Wright ‘04
Robert Zapata ‘04
Victor Michel ‘06
Oscar Padilla ‘06
Nick Percontino ‘06
Edward Perez ‘06
Shawn Salerno ‘06
Keith McGrath ‘07
Allen Gomes ‘08
Gerald Marafioti '10
Angelo Orlando ‘10
William Hanna '11
Jackeiry Diaz ‘13
Abner Espejo ‘13
Jordan Hagins ‘13
Andres Hernandez ‘13
Daniel Jiminez ‘13
Kaylin Warren '16
Sean Lynch ‘17
Tomatse Ogedegbe ‘17
Anan Belel ‘18
Edwin Gonzalez ‘18
Justin Glover '21
Diamante Holiday ‘21
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FYI
Notes:
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Obtain or donate a yearbook through The Yearbook Exchange
Convey an obituary notice
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'Hawk' Yearbooks being added as time permits:
1988, 1989, 1991, 1994-1996, 1999-2002, 2004-2006, 2009-2024
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Do you have a newsworthy item or something from the present or past to share with the Hawk community?
· Landed your first job? Taken a new one?
· Received a promotion or honor?
· Gotten engaged or married?
· Celebrated a milestone anniversary?
· Welcomed a child or grandchild?
· Reminisced with fellow Hawks recently?
· Relocated?
· Retired from your last job?
Hudson Catholic welcomes any and all news about your career, education, family life, and reconnecting with other alumni.
Submit a note and share photos with the Hudson Catholic community at
advancement@hudsoncatholic.org
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Anonymous Words of Wisdom | |
"I don't believe in luck or magic. I believe in God, His mercy, His grace, and His blessings."
“Doing the right things for the wrong reasons is far WORSE than doing the wrong thin for the right reasons."
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Requiescant in Pace
Vita Mutatur Non Tollitur
(Life is changed, not ended)
_______________________________
Mrs. Ann Carroll,
mother of Keith '86 and Kevin '86
_________________________________________
Will be remembered in the annual
Alumni Mass of Remembrance
on November 3rd, 2024
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We Thank
Our Alumni Sponsors
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