2024 - Xaverian Winter Magazine
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The Magazine of Xaverian Brothers High School | Winter 2024
Together WE RISE
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781-326-6392, ext. 6607 or email mgelso@xbhs.com.
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THANK YOU.
Xaverian Magazine
800 Clapboardtree Street
Westwood, MA 02090
781-326-6392
www.xbhs.com
averian
X THE MAGAZINE OF XAVERIAN BROTHERS HIGH SCHOOL
Dear Friends of Xaverian,
Tis edition of Xaverian Magazine is aptly titled,
Together We Rise. Inside these pages you will read
about members of our varsity football team who
supported each other through the ups and downs of
a thrilling season, navigating their personal struggles
and triumphs as a team. With a State Championship
trophy to show for their efforts, now their next
chapters are just beginning. Meet eight of our phenomenal senior Hawk football
leaders, starting on page 2.
You will also read about a new internship program called RISE, or Ryken
Internship Student Experience. Tis past summer marked the inaugural class
of student interns through this competitive program, offered by Xaverian in
collaboration with alumni, current parents, and parents of alumni. It was a
phenomenal success for our student interns and employers, and we’re looking
forward to our second class of RISE interns this summer. Check out the story
on page 8.
ADMINISTRATION
Head of School
Jacob A. Conca ’94, Ph.D.
Principal
Michael G. Nicholson, P ’29, Ed.D.
Assistant Principal for
Teaching and Learning
Stephen W. Dacey ’95, Ed.D.
Assistant Principal for Academics,
Grades 9 – 12
Lauren R. Hill, M.Ed.
Assistant Principal for the
Francis Xavier Division, Grades 7 & 8
Joseph D. McGilvray III, Ed.D.
Assistant Principal for Student Life
Joshua M. Tranfaglia, M.Ed.
Dean of Students
John A. Guinan, M.A.
OFFICE FOR SCHOOL
ADVANCEMENT
Chief Administrator for
School Advancement
Christopher J. Vasta ’00, Ed.D.
Advancement Services Manager
Linda M. Calabrese, P ’20
Director of Data Management
and Operations
Pamela J. Fothergill, P ’07
Advancement Office Assistant
Marissa A. Gelso, P ’19, ’21
Director of Annual and Leadership Giving
David J. Nelson ’02
Director of Alumni and
Parent Engagement
James J. Scholl ’03
OFFICE OF STRATEGIC
COMMUNICATIONS
Director of Strategic Communications
Ann E. Alsfeld
Assistant Director of
Strategic Communications
Kathryn E. Hickey
Digital Marketing Coordinator
Heather M. Schnabel
Graphic Design
Margaret Galeano
© 2024 Xaverian Brothers High School.
All rights reserved.
All of the stories you will read
in this magazine reflect our
mission, a mission that would
be impossible without the
support of our community.
To help keep our mission strong, consider
making a gift to the Fund for Xaverian at
www.xbhs.com/support today!
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Our fall theatrical production, Treasure Island, was a
thrilling example of the power of collaboration as students
poured their hearts and souls into bringing the show to
Xaverian. Cooper Marino ’27 was a brand new student
here when he snagged the leading role. Learn more on
page 6 about how Cooper found his place in Xaverian
theater, as written by Treasure Island crew member,
Joseph Martucci ’24.
Since 1963, Xaverian Brothers, faculty, staff, students,
parents, alumni, and parents of alumni have worked
tirelessly to make our school what it is today. Now 60 years
into our story, Xaverian is truly on the rise. Our fidelity
to providing the best possible academic and formative
experience for our students prevails. Our enrollment is
strong. Philanthropic support powers our mission. Our
faculty employ cutting-edge, science-informed teaching
practices. Our facilities are top notch. And our students
continue to excel both inside and outside the classroom.
Pictured on the cover l to r are Gregory Celestin, Jr. ’24, Jonathan
Monteiro ’24, Andrew Dufault ’24, Mike O’Connor ’24, Denzil Pierre ’24,
Charlie Comella ’24, Henry Hasselbeck ’24, and Caleb Brown ’24.
Te photo above was taken by Quinn Fitzpatrick ’25, a member of the
Communications Corps.
However, the most critical aspect of Xaverian is the power
of our mission. Ours is a lived mission, where every member
of our school community collaborates to do their part in
providing an exceptional experience for our students and
their families. In short, together we rise. We couldn’t do it
without you; thank you for being a part of our Xaverian story.
Respectfully yours,
Jacob A. Conca ’94, Ph.D.
Head of School
Winter 2024 Xaverian Magazine
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Together WE RISE
he 2023 Hawks football team was
something special, and it’s not
because of the rings they earned at
Gillette Stadium. Tis group of young men
truly understood the meaning of “team.”
Tey supported one another through season-
ending injuries and the tragic loss of family
and friends. One minute they were in the
weight room and on the field practicing, and
the next they were in suits and ties filling
buses en route to funerals. Trough it all,
they lifed each other up ensuring that no
one was lef behind. As one teammate fell,
another was ready to take his place and carry
the line. Each young man brought his own
story and his own dreams...and each young
man set them aside for the betterment of the
team. Together they rose until they reached
the pinnacle as the 2023 MIAA Division 1
State Champions. Here are just a few of
their stories.
CHARLIE COMELLA ’24
harlie Comella came into his senior season as a Xaverian Hawk with his star
blazing. He had committed to Boston College for football and baseball and was
gearing up as co-captain for a final run for the State Championship that had eluded his
team for the past three years. However, Charlie’s season ended before it even began. He
was playing 7 on 7 with his teammates in a summer workout, received a pass, got the
touchdown (he notes with pride), but broke his collarbone in the process. He was out
for 10 weeks of play and returned in a game against Malden Catholic. Only four plays
in, he was dragged down by the defense and broke the same collarbone.
With his bouncing curls and signature smirking smile, you could easily mistake
Charlie’s demeanor and think sitting the season out didn’t bother him. You’d be wrong.
“I tried to put on a smile the entire year. I got excited for my teammates. But when
I was just standing there watching those guys play, I was like, ‘Damn, I can’t believe
I’m not out there.’ You work year round to get ready for the next season, you finally get
there, and you can’t play.”
Te injury didn’t stop him from showing up for his teammates. Instead of
supporting his fellow Hawks in the games on the field, he tried to be there for them
out of the spotlighted glow of stadium lights. “I tried to be like a coach this year. I tried
to show up to everything I could and help my teammates. We still had one common
goal and still had to get it done.”
According to Charlie, that’s what leadership means. “It’s simple - it’s being there for
your teammates no matter what.” And when the Hawks won the State Championship,
Charlie was there in the glow of the Gillette Stadium lights, smiling alongside his
teammates with the trophy secured.
GREGORY CELESTIN ’24
is teammates know him as “Junior” or “June Bug,” but at 6’4”, 295 lbs with a 6’8” wingspan,
those diminutive monikers don’t quite do him justice. Gregory Celestin, Jr., came up
the football ranks with teammates Jonathan Monteiro and Caleb Brown, competing with
the Brockton Raiders as youth athletes before joining Xaverian’s Class of 2024.
Greg’s daily reality straddles two worlds, his hometown of Brockton and his time here in
Westwood. “When I talk to my Brockton friends, they tell me how much of a struggle it is over
there. I’m grateful I am here at Xaverian and I have this blessing. My mom didn’t want me to have
distractions. She wanted me to focus on school and football, instead of being in Brockton where
there are distractions lef and right. I hear about deaths and people getting caught up in bad
things. But I go to Westwood every day; I don’t have to worry as much.”
For Greg, the differences between the two communities are reflected in how people refer
to him. While everyone here calls him Junior or June Bug, his childhood friends just call him
Greg. Teammate Jordan Wilson ’25 and Greg are close friends, both inside school and at
home in Brockton. Teir friendship goes back to kindergarten, and Greg appreciates having him
here. “Te community is very different here, but at the same time, I feel like it’s still the same
me. Jordan sees ‘Greg’ and ‘Junior.’ Same thing with Micah Amedee ’25. I grew up by him
in Brockton, and I told him to come over here. Now he plays football with us and he’s making a
difference, too.” Greg’s little brother Kyle ’26 is also a Hawk, and he says it meant a lot to him to
make it to Gillette playing on the same team as his brother.
“Every single day, I’m grateful I’m out there with my team. It’s a special year this year.
Everybody is a family. Everybody is together. It’s a team, and we made it far.”
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HENRY HASSELBECK ’24
enry Hasselbeck is the “golden boy” of Xaverian football, or so his teammates call
him when they’re giving him a hard time. Put him on a football field, and he seems to
instinctively know what to do. He even knows what to say, defly navigating post-game press
interviews like a seasoned professional. It’s in his genes, but saying that takes something away
from him that he deserves to own for himself. Yes, Henry’s grandfather, father, and uncle all
played in the NFL, but he’s earned his own accolades through hard work, a good attitude, and
a strong competitive streak. What he didn’t get from his family, he found here at Xaverian:
brothers worth fighting for.
“Before every game, Greg Celestin is the last kid to run out of the tunnel. I say to him,
‘I got your back, you got my back.’ Ten he says it back to me, and throughout the game we’ll
say that to each other. It became a cultural thing in the team this year. It’s ‘I am going to do
everything I can for you, and I expect the same. You lif me up, I’m going to lif you up.’”
Henry fielded multiple offers for college play, including Michigan State and Boston
College, before ultimately committing to UCLA. He was looking for the best place to establish
his own name as, at both Xaverian and BC, he’s the son of Matt Hasselbeck ’93, and
nephew of Tim ’96 and Nathanael Hasselbeck ’00. But he doesn’t think of that as
“pressure” to succeed. He says instead, it’s support. “You have so many more people cheering
for you and wearing your colors. My grandfather and my father (who both coached at
Xaverian this year) don’t ask me to be an NFL quarterback. Tey don’t ask me to be a Pro
Bowler. Tey just ask me to be myself, treat kids with respect, and be a good leader.” Tat said,
Henry wants to be an NFL quarterback and a Pro Bowler, and he’s working toward that goal.
“I really want to play in the NFL; that’s been my dream goal forever. I see it as a possibility,
where others see it as ‘only 1% of people do that.’ But if I do everything right, I believe I can
get there. If that is the case, bless the Lord. And if it’s not, I’m going to be the best person I can
be, the best husband I can be, the best friend I can be, and possibly the best investment banker
in New York City…you know, ‘GET BREAD’.” he says in an unnaturally tough voice, hoping
for a laugh. And with that you get a peek at the trademark Henry goofiness you see off the
field. Not a golden boy, just a teenager looking to be himself and spend time with his brothers.
CALEB BROWN ’24
“I
t’s never too late I guess,” Caleb Brown says of his first touchdown as a
Hawk. It happened in his senior season against Catholic Memorial. Prior to
that moment, he was feeling down on football. “Freshman year, I came in with a
pretty big head,” he says. “I came in thinking I was going to start on varsity. Tat
didn’t happen. Sophomore year I didn’t get any playing time. It humbled me. You
take a beating every day in practice and then you don’t play in the game. It weighs
on you, physically and mentally. I started questioning myself, because football
was a pretty big part of my dreams. You’re kind of forgotten, because you’re not in
the spotlight. It was hard to keep grinding and doing all of those workouts with
nobody watching.”
Caleb kept working, and he kept showing up. And when two of the team’s
spotlight players went down with injuries, Caleb was ready to make plays. It
turns out, people had been watching: his coaches and his teammate, quarterback
Henry Hasselbeck. When it came time for the Super Bowl, Caleb Brown
became the unlikely hero. He added three more touchdowns to his record when
it mattered most, helping power the Hawks to a 31-25 victory over St. John’s Prep.
Te crowd was chanting his name, his teammates were shouting, “We love C.L.B.”,
and reporters were standing by to shine a spotlight on him. “I’m definitely going
to remember this,” he told them. “It feels like a dream.”
Caleb, consistently an honor roll student with a knack and fondness for math
and physics, hopes to study engineering in college. He’s exploring his options
with multiple offers, looking for the right combination of academics and football
for the next four years. Te goal, he says, is to go to college for free. “Te better
I do in football, the more scholarship I can get, and the more I can help out my
parents.” His parents are his rock, his reason, and his role models. “When I am
down, or when I don’t want to go further, I think about my parents and how
much they’ve sacrificed for me. Tey gave me life and they continue to give.
Excelling in football and as a man is my tribute to them. I can never fully pay
them back.”
Winter 2024 Xaverian Magazine
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Together WE RISE
JONATHAN MONTEIRO ’24
onathan Monteiro likes to put on a show, and he wants an audience to do it.
Tat’s how he ended up at Xaverian. “Te reason I picked Xaverian is because
we have the biggest bleachers, and I wanted to play for the biggest crowd. When I’m
playing, the crowd makes me feel electric–electricity going through me–because
everyone is here for one reason and that’s to watch us play.”
But Jonathan’s showmanship is about more than applause. He wants to be an
example. “Where I’m from, nobody ever made it this far,” he says. “I’m trying to
show them that there’s a lot to this world. You don’t have to live like this. You can
come out here, you can get a good job. Someone is going to be there for you. Tat’s
the person I want to be. Moral of the story, I want them to see something and
realize they can be more in life than what they’re bound to be right now.”
Jonathan is committed to play at Liberty University next year. He’ll be the first in
his family to attend and graduate from college. It’s his family he credits with helping
him to see the opportunities in front of him. His mom gives it to him straight. “She
is someone who is going to tell you if you’re wrong whether you like it or not, no
matter how bad the situation is.” His dad, he says, showed him the way out. “He
definitely has his ups and a whole lot of downs. Even with that, he showed me the
life you can live when you work hard and you do the right thing. He showed me
that if you play your cards right, keep a clean record, stay out of trouble with the
law, go to college for free, and get a degree, you can expand yourself on an absurd
level. You never know what type of opportunities will come your way.”
For Jonathan, Xaverian was one of those opportunities. “Just being here is a
benefit,” he says. “Te teachers I have had here, Mr. MacKinnon, Mr. Watson, Mr.
Bowers, Mr. Iannoni, those teachers really helped me become a better student and a
better person. Tis place definitely feels like home.”
ANDREW DUFAULT ’24
ndrew “Hammy” Dufault had a singular purpose this year; to win the state
championship. Considered one of the best high school football long snappers in
the country, Andrew was selected for the U.S. Army All-American Bowl and committed
in August to play at Penn State. With that locked down, his senior season was all about
securing the MIAA Division 1 trophy at Gillette Stadium. His game plan? Discipline.
Discipline. Discipline. Tat’s how he earned the co-captain title and a spot on the
starting line of the varsity team, and that’s what he knew it would take to hang the State
Championship banner in the varsity gymnasium.
“Tere are two different types of players,” Andrew explains. “Tere are the ones who
come and lif in the morning, do all of the right things, get sleep, etc., and there’s kids
who don’t. Tree times a week I get up at 5:00 a.m., come here at 6:00 and lif until 7:00,
and then have a three-hour practice afer school. It’s not easy. Discipline isn’t doing the
right thing when Mr. Guinan (Dean of Students) is walking around. It’s ‘are you willing
to do what you need to succeed, to make yourself different from everybody else, to rise
to the top?’. Whoever is in front needs to be able to get everyone corralled and doing the
right thing, to be the best version of Xaverian.”
Rising to the top is something Andrew has been doing since middle school, when
he’d been told he was too small to play offensive line. He took up long snapping as a
result, and started at Xaverian in seventh grade. By freshman year, he was playing varsity
and learning from the strong captains and players who came before him, like Jack
Funke ’22 (BC), Mike Berlutti ’21 (Tufs), and Jon Mould ’23 (Harvard).
When it came time to take the field at Gillette and lead the Hawks as one of this
year’s captains, Andrew says it was nerve-wracking at first. He settled down once
the game got underway and then it was all business. “It was definitely something I
won’t forget, when it finally ended and I could celebrate on the field. It really put into
perspective how much work we put in over the course of the season.” It was all worth it
as they lifed that trophy overhead to the cheers of classmates, family, and friends.
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DENZIL PIERRE ’24
he future for Denzil Pierre is more up in the air than his fellow Hawks,
but it’s not for lack of talent or drive. Te truth is that Denzil took a risk
coming to Xaverian, and it cost him a whole season.
Denzil was a junior year transfer to Clapboardtree Street, and he knew
there was a possibility that the MIAA might not give him a waiver to play
football - his sport, his passion, and what he sees as his (and his family’s)
ticket to a better future. He knew his junior season was critical to getting looks
from NCAA schools, but the MIAA denied his request. Faced with the choice
between continuing in Boston Public Schools and playing his junior season,
or transferring to Xaverian and losing his chance to play, he says, “It was an
easy decision.”
But life hasn’t been easy for Denzil — being evicted, having utilities cut
off, losing his sister to violence, and having neighborhood friends die far too
young. He’s someone you would expect to have a chip on his shoulder, but
instead he praises God for his blessings. Denzil is playing the long game. “No
matter where you’re from, you can make it to where you want to be if you put in
the effort,” he says.
While he couldn’t compete with the Hawks his junior year, he could practice
with them, and he put in the effort year-round. He took the gridiron by storm
when he finally got back out under the Friday night lights this year, helping
power the Hawks to a D1 State Championship. And now he waits for a college
offer. Te scholarship money would be a game changer, and he wants to make it
to the NFL so that he can provide for his mother and his extended family.
“Being a young kid in today’s society, it’s hard to figure out what you’re
going to do in the future or how you’re going to beat the giant in front of
you. But God gives me peace of mind, knowing that everything will be OK in
the end.”
MIKE O’CONNOR ’24
ike “Okie” O’Connor joins Charlie Comella and Henry
Hasselbeck on the gridiron as football legacies…all three of their fathers
having donned the blue and gold in the 1990s. As co-captain, he’s a leader on
the field, but he’s also a leader for all Xaverian students as Class President of the
Student Council, a role he has held for four years.
While Mike says football is his passion, it’s not a career goal for him. Instead,
it’s a pathway to college. He’s committed to Trinity College in the fall and says he
is excited about the academic opportunities he will find there. “I know I am not
going to the NFL, but it’s a dream come true to be playing for four more years.
I wanted to use football to get me to a college that would have been difficult
for me otherwise. I was looking for good academics along with a good football
team I could call my family. Once football is over, I want to be lef with a strong
foundation and with connections for networking.”
Just as Mike’s college plan involves a well-rounded approach, he experienced
Xaverian the same way, exploring opportunities in leadership, campus ministry,
athletics, and academics. “I came with football in mind,” he says, “but once
you get here, you open your eyes and realize there’s way more to Xaverian than
football. It’s just a small aspect of the opportunities available to you, and I’ve
learned that by getting involved in different aspects of the school.”
When Mike says he’s looking for a family out of Trinity football, he means like
the family he found as a Hawk. He notes, “Tere are so many times during the
season when Coach says, ‘Look at the guys around you, recognize the family you
have, and have that be what you’re playing for, rather than making yourself look
good.’” says Mike. It took on an even deeper meaning for this year’s team when
two players tragically lost family members. “I think in a week’s span, we had Will
Benting ’25 lose his brother and Matt Spaulding ’26 lose his father, back-
to-back. It was really beautiful to see how we all came together to support one
another, and then how we went out on the field and played for one another. We
played for the lost members of our teammates’ families.”
Winter 2024 Xaverian Magazine
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Written by Joseph Martucci ’24, Communications Corps
ooper Marino ’27 had only been at Xaverian for several weeks
when he managed to nab the lead role of the fall play Treasure
Island. Tis isn’t something he takes lightly. Although he’s been a
member of several prestigious acting companies in Massachusetts,
Cooper has finally found a home in Xaverian theater.
At the young age of five, Cooper was first introduced to the theater,
having been cast in ensemble roles at the Franklin Performing Arts
School. He then switched to the Un-Common Teatre Company and
earned his first significant role as John in Peter Pan. However, success
would not come easy for Cooper, as the COVID-19 quarantine forced
him to put his passion on pause. He returned by joining LRC Stage
Productions in middle school and serving in Beauty and the Beast and
Spongebob as Cogsworth and Squidward, respectively.
Cooper joined the cast of Montrose’s Te Sound of Music
performance in eighth grade two weeks before the show. It was here
that he first heard whisperings of Xaverian’s theater program. Te
Montrose actors spoke so highly that he was inspired to attend the
Xaverian open house. Cooper says he was sold from there: “I knew at
that moment that Xaverian was where I was meant to be.”
Te first thing Cooper did at Xaverian was try out for the fall
production of Treasure Island. Expecting to work his way up to
significant roles one year at a time, like in his previous theater
FINDING A HOME IN
averian Theater
experiences, he was dumbstruck when Xaverian’s theater director,
Ms. Julianne O’Connor, cast him as the lead character, Jim Hawkins,
alongside Thomas Sullivan ’25 in the role of Long John Silver.
“Cooper stood out as someone who had that youthful energy that
I was looking for, and I knew from his background in theater that he
would be able to take on this kind of role,” says Ms. O’Connor. “I don’t
cast by seniority, and that’s something that I’m actually very proud of. I
felt that everyone was put in the role they fit the best.”
On November 17 and 18, afer months of rehearsals, line
memorizing, and cue perfecting, the cast and crew of Treasure Island
delivered two memorable performances of the classic tale. Tere were
Xaverian students from grades 7-12 represented in the cast alongside
young women from area schools, as well as 20 Hawks running the
technical aspects of the show. Xaverian theater fans eagerly await the
spring production of Pippin, which will open on March 22 and run
through March 24.
Pictured above are Cooper Marino ’27 as Jim Hawkins and Jonathan
Cimino ’25 as Billy Bones with (l to r) Zachary Vidalis ’29, Jack Pitts ’25,
Dom Izzo ’27, and Colin Cahalane ’29.
Photo credit to Mike McMath ’69
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Clockwise: Tomas Sullivan ’25;
Tomas Sullivan ’25 and Cooper
Marino ’27; Daniel Poggi ’28; Tarun
Kancharla ’25; Cooper Marino ’27;
Poster design by Katie Hickey
Winter 2024 Xaverian Magazine
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n the fall of 2022, Xaverian Head of
School Dr. Jacob Conca ’94 sat
down with Mr. David Nelson ’02,
Director of Annual Fund and Leadership
Giving, Mrs. Barbara Mitchell, School
Counselor, and Mr. James Scholl ’03,
Director of Alumni and Parent Engagement,
and tasked the unlikely trio with creating a
program that would help set Xaverian students
apart in the college applicant pool. “You’re
always looking for the differentiator,” says
Mrs. Mitchell, “especially at some of the most
competitive schools where everyone who is
applying has great grades and high test scores.”
Te outcome was the creation of a new
internship program with the goal of giving a
few highly qualified students the opportunity
to engage in valuable, hands-on, real-world
experiences. Mr. Nelson, Mrs. Mitchell, and
Mr. Scholl sat down for their first planning
meeting. Te first item on the agenda was to
name and brand the program they had begun
envisioning. “Te name piece was a Holy
Spirit moment,” says Mr. Nelson. “We were
bouncing names around and Jim said, ‘What
about ‘Ryken Internship Student Experience?’
and Barb said, ‘Oh, the acronym is RISE,
that’s perfect.’”
On February 6, 2023, all Class of 2024
students received an invitation to apply for
RISE. Internships in the fields of law, health
technology/computer science, business
and project management, supply chain
management, construction management,
architecture, and sports management were
offered to students. “Tey were only allowed
to apply to one,” says Mrs. Mitchell. “We were
making them be very purposeful in thinking
about what their future might look like and what
type of career they want.”
Te process wasn’t an easy one. Describing
it as “intense,” the trio says that students
had to submit an application, a statement of
purpose, and had to take part in one or two
interviews depending upon how far they got in
the process. In the end, 33 students applied for
the seven spots, though afer seeing the caliber
of candidates, three internship sites offered to
take two students each. Although it wasn’t a
requirement for RISE employers, all sites for
the inaugural year made the decision to pay
their interns.
Te participants still had a long way to
go, however, before their six-week summer
Dana Guzzi-Bartholomew ’24 at UDA Architects
RISING TO THE top
Students Find Success in
Xaverian Internship Program
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