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The trumpet sound that summons you today is a sad one. Our beloved
Mr. C has passed away after a fight with Lukemia. Few are the band
alumni who don't look back on their years in the Purple Valley with
fond remembrance of the Saturday mornings spent strutting down Spring
Street and the afternoons spent hurling verbal and musical
encouragement down onto the field. Mr. C was an integral part of
those memories because he was the cornerstone of the band; now we are
left to wonder what the band's future will be without his presence.
Anyone would would like to download this graphic or the smaller
one on the main page and place it on their website, feel free to do so.
If anyone has anything else they'd like to add to this page (personal
statements, pictures, etc), send it to me.
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"I feel strongly that we ought to do something
to ensure the Band's future, because that's the
best thing we could do in Mr. C's memory."
- Jeremy Fox '95
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Contributions to the Francis C. Cardillo Memorial Music and Marching
Band Endowment, a.k.a. Francis C. Il Duce His Holiness Subcommandante
Armadillo Cardillo Music and Marching Band Endowment can be mailed to:
The Francis Cardillo Memorial Fund
c/o Donor Relations
Williams College
P.O. Box 231
Williamstown, MA 01267
Direct your questions to the gift recording office at (413)-597-4992.
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There can never be another Cardillo, and as much as
we might hope otherwise, things will never be quite the same. Trying to
specify the criteria for his successor is a wonderful way to remember the
best about Mr. C. But we're never going to find someone who can fill his
shoes, create exactly the same spirit, etc...
When you come right down to it, Fran was a teacher and a charismatic
leader -- he taught in the Williamstown public schools for many years; he
coached sports at various institutions around the Berkshires; he taught
and tutored many students in the clarinet; and he taught all of us in the
Band -- and lots of people in audiences over the years -- innumerable
ways to smile and have a good time while working hard and performing
successfully. He was involved with a local scholarship fund for North
Adams youths, for which his family requested memorial donations at the
time of the funeral...
The Band is always among my fondest memories of Williams...
A hundred years from now, when none of us is here, but the Cardillo Fund
(or whatever it is ultimately called) continues to provide aid to a band,
a student, a college performing group, or all of these, won't that be the
real legacy we want to leave -- always in Fran's name, and always in a
way that someone will be impressed that a group of his disciples (or
perhaps, wards from the asylum over which he presided) loved a
non-tenured faculty advisor so much as to create something enduring for
the institution he served and the college community through which we all
passed? That's my hope.
...We should someday have a get together to share our most memorable
recollections of Fran -- like, for example, the day in '70 or '71 when,
On the way back from the away football game against Union College in
Schenectady, the Band motorcade (yeah, we travelled in style in those
days --in addition to the chartered bus, there were typically a number of
Band members' cars -- the purple VW bug of Craig Anderson '71, my
predecessor as student leader; later, my scarlet '67 Mustang; always
especially bright colors and, when possible, any band members'
convertibles) -- anyway, the motorcade was stuck at a messy intersection
of two major roads outside the garden spot of Troy, NY. Fran, whose
patience was legendarily short (as you'll all remember), got out of the
car, proceeded to stop traffic, and directed the Band bus and motocade
through the intersection, taking a well-deserved bow before his cheering
wards. No wonder we called him our "Fearless Leader."
...I do miss him. Visits to Williamstown, football weekends, and the golf
course will never be the same.
- Richard Levy '74
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Fran was one of the most genuine, warm and friendly people I have
ever met. He had a sense of humor that would not quit, and loved
working with his kids, the wacked out members of the Moo Cow Marching
Band. I loved playing in the band and kidding with him as he gently
prodded us to pull something entertaining together for each half-time
show. But he was far more than a great band leader, or a good joke
teller: he was a friend.
- Michael Prigoff '73
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This page was put up by Lisa
Michaud, clarinet player from the class of 1995.
The musical graphics on this website come from Moyra's Web Jewels.
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