The William Gaston Chair
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THE GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Offers The William Gaston Chair Designed for the men of Georgetown and their D escendants $2495 $1295 In Ordering, Specify Finish Desired: BLACK AND GOLD • MAHOGANY AND GOLD • ANTIQUE MAPLE RED MAPLE • CHERRY • LIGHT PINE • DARK PINE Other (Unlisted finishes as specified by yott at 10% increase in p1'ice) The WILLIAM GASTON CHAIR (Height 31", width 23%.", depth 20", seat 177fl"x18%,") Weight 20 Jbs . Express collect. The WILLIAM G ASTON JuNIOR Chair (Height 2112:', width 17", depth 16", seat 12 1h"x14%") Weight 11 Jbs. Express collect. DETACH AND MAIL TO ALUMNI HOUSE 3604 0 ST., N.W., WASHINGTON 7, D. c. Draw checks to Geo1'getow11 University Alumni Association Enclosed is my check in the amount of ...... ........ 'for .. ..... .. William Gaston Chair(s) @ $24.95 each and for .......... William Gaston Junior Chair(s) @ $12.95 each. Finish .......... .... .... ...... ...... .... Name Shipping Address ....... .... ...... ... ... .... ........ (EXPRESSMAN WILL COLLECT SHIPPING CHARGES) EORt;ETOWD UUIUERSITq LUmnl mA(jAZIQE Member of the American Alumni Council • EDITORIAL BOARD JULY 1953 VOL. OF ALUMNI MAGAZINE 6, NO. 2 JOHN C. BRUNINI, '19 CONTENTS DONALD F. FLAVIN, '28 JOHN T. FLYNN, '02 The State of Your Association __________ ____ ____ ___ 2 MARTIN S. QUIGLEY, '39 New Medical School Administration ------------------- 3 DR. Tmon KEREKES-Faculty 1953 Commencement Review ___ ________ - ----------- 7 REv. GERARD F. YATES, S.J.-Faculty Athletics ----------------------------------------- 5 JAMES S. RUBY, '27, E xecutive Secretary and Editor Class Notes --------------------------------------- ll • Note on the Cover Picture ]AMES P. CuMMISKEY, Jn. and • ]. PHILIP CAHILL, of the Silver CONTRIBUTORS Jubilee Class of '28 arrive for TO THIS ISSUE thei1· reunion. Question: where's the other skate? JAMES S. RUBY, '27, is Executive Secretary of th!! .Georgetown University Alumni AssoCiation. CHARLIE STEELE, '52, former Sports Editor of the Hoya is a student at the Law School. Copjf1·ight. 1953 Ge01·ge town Unive1·sity Alumni Magazine GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE: Published each two months by the Georgetown University Alumni Ass?ciat'ion lf!-C., Washington 7, D. C. • Sustaining ~embe1·ship $25.00 per yea1·, Regular Memb.ership $5.00 per year, of whtch $3.00 ts for subscription to the Alumni Magaztne. • EnteTed at the Post Office at Washtngton, D. C., as . Second Class matte1· Februa1·y 24, 1948 ttnde1· the act of March 3, 1879. • Editorial and E xe~utive offices: GEORGE TOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Alumni House, 3604 0 Stree t, N. W., Washtngton 7, D.C. The State of Your Association Henry W. Sweeney and Co., Certified Public Account samples to non-members on a rotating basis. During the ants of Washington and New York have submitted their year, also, we published the first .of a series of Depart report on the finances of the . Georgetown . University mental Alumni Directories, that of the Dental School, Alumni Association, Inc. for the fiscal year, May 1, 1952 which was sent without charge to every graduate of that to April 30, 1953, to the President of the Association and department and to every Dental student also. The Di the members of the Board of Governors. The report shows rectory was well received and we are now beginning total receipts of $41,551.81 in our operating account, work on the second of the series, that of the School of and disbursements of $41,202.97 during the fiscal year, Medicine. giving us an excess of receipts over disbursements of Aside from these routine operations, we were happy to $348.84 for the period. Membership dues, which ideally welcome some 1200 Alumni visitors to Alm:nni House to should carry the entire cost of operating the Association, provide guided tours of the new Gymnasium for some SOO fell somewhat short of the need since dues alone amounted individual callers, to arrange for 325 hotel reservations to only $32,066, and the difference had to be made up out for Alumni aside from those for Reunion week-end, to of the receipts from advertising in the Alumni Magazine, provide business, professional and governmental contacts profits on Georgetown merchandise, and gifts designated for 411 and to assist more than two hundred sons and for operating use. friends of Alumni in their dealings with the various Ad Aside from our general operating account, we have two missions offices of the University. Just to illustrate the separate funds, The McDonough Gymnasium Fund and minutiae we like to handle, we arranged to expedite three the Alumni House Fund. During the year $32,862 was emergency passports, helped hasten the immigration of contributed to the Gymnasium Fund and $1,448.56 to one German national, and took the necessary steps to the Alumni House Fund. Operating the Alumni House provide seven audiences with the Pope, all at the request cost your Association $1,045.93, for utilities, cleaning of our members. service, maintenance and insurance. During the fiscal year, your Officers and the Alumni It is obvious that the prime need of the Association Board of Governors and the Senate met four times, at at present is an increase in the income from membership the Westchester Country Club in Rye, N. Y., twice in dues. During the period covered by the audit, 3523 Washington and once in New York City. All of the meet Alumni paid dues as Regular Members, 406 as Sustainng ings were well attended and much business was accom members and 43 as members of the Council of 100, giv plished which will ultimately bring many good things to ing us a total membership of 3972 alumni. During that the University. Each Georgetown man owes a debt of same period, our mailing list had a total of approxi gratitude to the unselfish members of the Alumni admin mately 20,000 names and addresses, which indicates that istration who give so much of their time and their funds only one in five Alumni supported the work of the As in their faithful attendance at these meetings. sociation. If the membership rolls could be increased to Finally, during the year, your Association conducted provide for 4500 regular members, 530 Sustaining mem two major functions in Washington of which all Alumni bers and 58 members of the Council of 100, the resulting should be very proud-the testimonial dinner in honor of income which would total $41,550 would enable us to the Golden Jubilee of the Reverend Edmund A. Walsh, meet all of our operating expenses, and the income from S.J. as a Jesuit, and the Second Annual John Carroll advertising, merchandise, etc. could be ·used to improve Dinner to honor Georgetown's distinguished sons. and enlarge the magazine and in general to increase the · . This is the report of our stewardship. When you have value of the Association to the members. finished with this issue of the Magazine, show the report to some Georgetown man among your friends who is Alth<?ugh your Association operated during the year on not now a member. Perhaps it will persuade him to join a necessarily closely limited budget, we managed to turn and help us to reach our goa] of more than 5000 members out a heavy flow of information and services to the in the current fiscal year. Alumni. Class Reunions, in June of 1952 were the most successful we have had since the Sesquicentennial Re unions of 1939. Most of the labor of mailing invitations, arranging with local hotels for room reservations, din ners., etc. naturally fell to our lot, as did the arrangements on campus for the various functions of Reunion week-end. BEN A. BUSCHER During the year we edited and published six issues of the Alumni Magazine which went not only to the paid membership, but 3500 copies of each issue were sent as Electrical Contractor 3906 Yuma St., N. W. 3207 Grace St., N. W. Compliments of a Friend EM. 3-0060 wo. 6-0095 2 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE New Medical School Administration ALUMNI HOUSE The promised "before and after" feature concern ing the enlarged Alumni House, which was to have appeared in this issue of the Magazine, has been postponed for the best of all possible reasons. The addition to the House is not as yet completed to t he point where it can be photographed. The next issue, which will appear in September, will give you full details. Meanwhile, we can report some progress in our FATHER O'Do NELL DR. FORSTER efforts to furnish the addition. T he announcement is to be enlarged has brought us A change of administration at the Georgetown Univer that the House sity School of Medicine became effective on July 1 with $2,519.50 towards the needed total of $3,500, and the appointment of the Rev. Thomas J. O'Donnell, S.J., gifts are still coming in. as Regent and Dr. Francis M. Forster as Dean. The Rev. Paul A. McNally, S.J., who was Regent and Dean of the school from 194,7 to 1953, and who was forced to re linquish his position because of ill health, became Dean Emeritus and Director of the Georgetown Medical Center. Father O'Donnell, who for the past year has been As THE GEORGETOWN PHARMACY sistant to the Dean, was born in Baltimore in 1918 en tered the Society of Jesus in 1938, was graduated from + Woodstock College in 1944., and was ordained to the Reliable Prescriptions-Prompt Delivery priesthood in 1950. He has taught at St. Joseph's High School in Philadelphia and at Georgetown Preparatory + School. Along with his new post he will hold the position WISCONSIN & 0 STREETS, N. W. of Dean of Students.