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Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus

NOTKE DAME iimii SEPTEMBER, 1969 NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL

80 Years of Thunder Another time . • • A strong hint of autumn laces the air as the September issue of ALUMNUS leaves campus for dissemination among Notre Dame's sons. The University Vd. 47 No. 6 has roused itself following a three-month period of reflection, solitude and September, 1%9 preparation, and it's an exhilarating feeling to see the place return to its true Juincs D. Cooney status. EXECUTIVE SECRETAKV This issue brings news of the University as it embarks on its 127th year ALUMNI ASSOCIATION and, as in decades past, substantial change will mark the new semester. Our John P. Thurin '59 lead story capsulizes the overall ND situation, with emphasis on enrollment EDITOR figures, the incoming frosh class, faculty changes, the increased coeducational Tom Sullivun '66 MANAGI.N'G EDITOR opportunities shared with St. Mary's, and other changes on campus that will Sandra Lonsfootc be apparent during the fall semester. ASSISTANT EDITOR Caroline Hambuiscr Father Ted Hesburgh, as many are aware, is a sensitive, articulate and Bill Mitchell '71 brilliant man. His leadership as president of ND is evident in the esteem in ^ John McDennolt '70 EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS which the University has come to be held during his 17-year tenure. He has M. Brace Harlan '49 cogent opinions about many of the important issues and problems of the day CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER and we are running a story based on an informal interview Father granted to ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS a reporter earlier in the summer. The interview should give the reader new Richard A. Rosenthal '54 perspective about the man who leads Notre Dame. HONORARY PRESIDENT The ND Law School, which celebrated its centennial last year as the Leonard H. Skoglund '38 PRESIDENT nation's oldest Catholic law school, has another big year on tap. Integrated Edu-ard G. Cantwcll '24 with "SUMMA: Notre Dame's Greatest Challenge" is a $6-million fund VICE-PRESIDENT drive, slated to be used to build a new center and expand total enrollment Edivard B. Fitzpatrick Jr. '54 to about 600. The drive was inaugurated Sept. 19. Its story is included. VICE-PRESIDENT John J. Reidy '27 Also covered in this issue is Project Reach, a government-sponsored VICE-PRESIDENT program designed to stimulate adult education in the uses of communications James D. Cooney '59 media; summer activities on campus; and construction of a new life science EXECUTIVE SECRETARY center. More information about the ND ROMAN ESCAPADE can be DIRECTORS TO 1970 Edu-ard G. Cantwell '24 (PUBLIC RELATIONS obtained simply by utilizing the clip-out coupon on page 11. AND DEVELOPMENT) 700 Binns Blvd., And, of course, we offer our yearly football feature. In attempting to Columbus, Ohio 43204 Edward B. FiBpatiick Jr. '54 (STUDENT AF­ attack the story from a different angle, we thought it might be interesting to FAIRS) Wishing Well Farm, Old Brook- capsulize ND's first 80 years of gridiron history. The highlights we've come ville, N.Y. 11545 John J. Reidy '27 (ACADEMIC AFFAIRS) 11850 up with should -be a useful reference to ND football buffs. Here I would pay Edgewater Dr., Lakcwood, Ohio 44107 a special note of thanks to Chet Grant, of the Memorial Library Sports and Richard A. Rosenthal '54, P.O. Box 200, Games Collection, whose memory I plumbed continually in my search for South Bend, Ind. 46616 Leonard H. Skoglund '38 (ATHLETIC, SE.NATE the highlights. RELATIONS) 426 Dover Ave., LaGrange We on the staff are happy to welcome back to the fold our two student Park, III. 60525 writers. Bill Mitchell '71 and John McDermott '70, who will again tackle the DIRECTORS TO 1971 task of keeping us—and you—on top of the campus scene. Dick Conklin will W. Jerome Kane '38, P.O. Box 37U7, Seattle, also continue to contribute his stimulating column and Messrs. Skoglund Wash. 98124 and Cooney will speak to alumni about alumni matters. Walter M. Langford '30, 1315 Otsego St., South Bend, Ind. 46617 All in all, it looks like another great year under the Dome and we look Donald F. O'Brien '42. 1113 Rocky River forward to bringing it to you. Rd., Houston, Tex. 77027 FrancU J. Wilson '28, 6105 Howe St., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15206 DIRECTORS TO 1972 Robert A. Erkins '47, P.O. Box 546, Buhl, Idaho 83316 John T. Massnlati '56, 3917 Broadway, Kansas Tom Sullivan City, Mo. 64111 Managing Editor Frank L. McGinn '52, 900 BIdg., Pompano Beach, Fla. 33062 Robert L. McGoIdrick '56, 15 Drary Lane, West Hartford, Conn. 06117 Leonard H. Tose '37, 64 W. 4th St., Bridge­ CONTENTS port, Pa. 19405

1969 Notre Dame ALUMNUS, University of University p. 1 On Record p. 40 Notre Dame, all rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without wTitten permis­ Class News p. 10 Alumni Speak p. 41 sion is prohibited.

Clubs p. 33 Alumni Ask p. 42 The Notre Dame ALUMNUS is published monthly, except January, March, May, Graduate Schools p. 37 Feature p. 43 August and November, by the University of Notre Dame. Second.class postage paid at Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. UNIVERSITY

The march is on: ^69 style

New is the word which might best Graduate School enrollment was academic honors. One hundred and characterize activities and faces expected to top 1,500 and the Law fifty-two freshmen, or 9 per cent of around ND as the University heads School greeted about 350 students in the class, were named either valedic­ into its 127th academic year. New early September. torians or salutatorians at their high buildings, programs of study, student This year's freshman class came to school graduations last June. Twenty projects, faculty members and de­ ND with impressive high school per cent of the ND frosh were among partment chairmen greeted students records in academic achievement, the top five students in their high when classes began Sept. 17. Even a leadership experience and athletic school classes. Three hundred and football opponent that hasn't faced competition. Over half of the new twenty, or 19 per cent, of the members the Irish in almost 20 years appears ND men ranked in the top 10th of of the University's newest class were on ND's '69 schedule. their graduating classes, and over 93 either National Merit Scholarship Total University enrollment for the per cent of the Class of 1973 were in finalists, semifinalists or recipients year was expected to set a new record the top 30 per cent of their high of letters of commendation. at 8,050, compared with last year's school classes. The '73ers have 114 former editors- 7,841 students. Some 1,670 freshmen Individuals within the new class in-chief of school newspapers or arrived for orientation Sept. 12. The have also achieved their share of (continued on page 2) yearbooks among them, and ISO examination schedule. The presidents fcMiner presidents of student bodies or of both institutions have emphasized senior classes. Over 53 per cent of that no merger of the schools is the class are former National Honor contemplated. Society members. Among structural innovations at ND's athletic fields and courts can ND this year is the University Fonun, expect to see a lot of the new class announced last year by Rev. Theodore during the next four years. Fifty- M. Hesburgh CSC as a sounding seven per cent of the freshmen earned board for the entire University varsity letters in one or more sports community. Composed of students, during high school. Almost 20 per faculty, administrators, alumni and cent of the freshmen led high school trustees, the forum discusses issues of athletic teams as captains or co- common concern and refers its captains. And the frosh athletic consensus to already existing groups leaders are a versatile group, repre­ with legislative, judicial or executive senting a variety of sports: football, power. basketball, baseball, track and cross­ The University's program for the country, golf, wrestling, tennis, study and practice of the nonviolent swimming, and soccer. resolution of human conflict began The ND faculty roster for the full operation in mid-September when 1969-70 academic year includes 129 four sections of the first course in the new names in various positions, new curriculum opened. The program, ranging from assistant professional supported in part by a Gulf Oil gift of specialists to full-time professors. $100,000, is the result of a proposal Twenty-five faculty members have made last spring by a cross section returned from leaves of absence, while of ND students. 28 have begun their leaves. One Another student-initiated endeavor, hundred and six faculty members the Robert F. Kennedy Institute, has IMW center have left ND. begun its first full year of operation at Five departments of the University ND. The institute, an organization Plans for a new five-floor building to opened the year with new chairmen: for the coordination of student social Kwang-Tzu Yang, aerospace and action, sponsored a community study house an expanded student body, mechanical engineering; Paul P. of a failing Texas town as its first faculty and library collection were Weinstein, biology; Don A. Linger, specific project. announced Sept. 19 at a campus din­ civil engineering; George Brinkley, ner inaugurating a nationwide, $6 government and international studies; Forty-seven architecture and art million Notre Dame Law Center and Nicholas Fiore, metallurgical students left New York shortly before Program. the start of the fall semester to engineering. Erwin N. Griswold, solicitor general inaugurate a foreign studies program Two new twin-towered, high-rise in Rome. of the United States and former dean residence halls were "almost" ready of the Harvard Law School, was for 1,068 undergraduates to occupy The Tulane University Green Wave, the principal speaker at the event in an opponent that has been absent - when school began. A construction the Monogram Room of the Athletic ; delay, caused by wet winter weather from ND's football schedule since and Convocation Center. 1950, will face the Irish in New and work stoppages, has put off the . Law School Dean William B. Law­ Orleans on the night of Oct. 25. The completion of one of the towers until less announced at the dinner that 1969 gridiron slate also sets the Irish mid-October. Students moving back with the support of the Law Center up against their four traditional rivals into the older residence halls also Program, the school's student body in four successive weeks. On Sept 27, found some undoubtedly welcome will be expanded from 268 to 600 the team met Purdue's BoilermaJcers changes. A $717,000 renovation during the next five years, the faculty in a 1969 version of a contest that program to alleviate overcrowding will be increased from 13 to 25, and dates back to 1896. Oct. 4 will bring and inadequate facilities was com­ the law library will be enlarged from the Michigan State University pleted during the summer. 70,000 to 160,000 volumes. Initial steps toward coeducation Spartans to South Bend, and the There were approximately 350 with nearby Saint Mary's College following week the Irish will travel guests present at the dinner, includ­ have started this fall, with 245 ND to New York City to battle the Army ing ofiicers and directors of the 3,300 freshmen and an equal number of Cadets. The Southern California member ND Law Assn., members of Saint Mary's first-year students sharing Trojans, minus Mr. Orenthal James the Law School's Advisory Council, classes in four liberal arts courses Simpson, will meet the Irish in ND national leaders and city chairmen of taught on both campuses. The Co- Stadium on Oct. 18. The week after the Law Center Program, members Exchange Program, which in the past the Tulane game, ND's oldest con­ of the St. Joseph County Bar Assn. permitted students from both institu­ secutive rival, the Navy Midshipmen, and University trustees and ofiicials. tions to take classes on the other will be in South Bend to continue the campus, is being expanded at the series that started in 1927. Dean Lawless, who became the t, sophomore, junior and senior levels. The University's 127th year thus sixth head of the nation's oldest The two schools are also working began with a uniting of the old and Catholic law school last year after |;^ toward an identical academic calendar, the new—^promising to provide fresh serving on the Supreme Court of I'' an integrated class schedule, a com­ excitement at a school that still honors New York, said the projected $3.5 I. mon grading system and a harmonized traditions. million building, to be built near the i;!'>" '4 sSSs*!

. AM Seienee eenter Construction was begun in eariy August on the newest section of the Paul V. Galvin Life Science Center, »-A -~sV the biology building. The building, ./iii partially financed by a National Science Foundation award of $1.2 -^4?^ million and a $690498 grant under the Hi^r Education Facilities Act, is expected to be completed by April, 1971. The $3.6 million structure, designed by EUerbe Architects, St. Paul, ^^.'f^-iJv-S^ Minn., will replace the Wenninger- Kirsch Biology Building, built in 1937 and now slated for remodeling to house the department of psychology. The new building will contain a total of 103,000 square feet in three floors and a basement The basement and first floor will house instructional areas and specialized laboratories, while floors two and three will contain faculty offices and research labs. The air-conditioned facility will feature the latest teaching equipment drive kicked off throughout its laboratories, classrooms and seminar rooms. Among its Memorial Library, "will be not only a of the ND Law Assn. and director innovative features will be controlled center for legal education, but also a of labor relations for the General environment facilities •where manip­ hub for expanded research in the Motors Corporation, Detroit; John ulation of temperature, light and critical legal problems of our time and W. Dorgan, Chicago attorney and humidity will enable researchers to a source of service, notably continu­ chairman of the Advisory Council; study organisms under a variety of ing education, to the practicing bar." Rev. Edmund P. Joyce CSC, exec­ conditions. The Nieuwland Her­ David M. Thornton, Tulsa attorney utive vice-president and acting pres­ barium will be moved to the new and national chairman of the Law ident of ND; Rev. John E. Walsh building, which will also house a Center Program, said the $6 million CSC, academic vice-president, who zoological collection room. ND's fund-raising effort will be conducted delivered the invocation; and Rev. widely known Mosquito Genetics principally among lawyers who hold William Lewers CSC, of the Law Project will also move to the new undergraduate or law degrees or both School faculty, who gave the bene­ building. from the University. Stressing that diction. The toastmaster was James Other special features include a the program is integrated with SUM- E. Armstrong, who served as ND unique suite for electron microscopy, MA, a $52 million, University-wide alumni secretary for 41 years until sterilization and wash rooms, walk-in development program launched in his retirement two years ago. cold rooms, an aquarium, and radio isotopes laboratories for tracing' 1967, Thornton said that ND lawyers Thornton said the Law Center work. A 3,000-square-foot library is who have not made substantial com­ Program will be conducted in 13 also to be housed in the new mitments to SUMMA will be asked cities this fall with ND lawyers in building. to make capital gifts, projected over other communities to be contacted a period of five years or longer, to later. Serving as vice-chairmen of the Another buSding beghu to rise. the Law Center Program. coast-to-coast development effort Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC, are Dorgan; Joseph A. Tracy, New en route to the annual meeting of York City attorney and former NDLA the International Atomic Energy president; and Camille Gravel, who Agency in Vienna, issued a state­ practices law in Alexandria, La. ment commending the Law Center Program "to Notre Dame lawyers The dinner, in addition to inaugu­ everywhere. ... It seeks capital com­ rating the program nationally, also mitments at a time in our national served as the local "kickofF' for the life when the cry for justice has South Bend area campaign. never been so insistent, when men Dean Lawless, James W. Frick, the of competence, concern and compas­ University's vice-president for pub­ sion are needed in the legal profes­ lic relations and development, and sion as never before," he said. national leaders of the Law Center Joining Griswold, Lawless and Program began to address dinner Thornton on the speaking program meetings of ND lawyers in 12 other were George B. Morris Jr., president cities on October 2. One man's opinions

A university president, like the head Noting that he is a member of the of many institutions, is frequently a President's commission for an all- man of strong opinion. But too often volunteer army, Fr. Hesburgh said only the leader's views on a few, that the study group hopes to report worn-out topics concerning his own by November on the feasibility of a realm are publicized. Brian Healy, of volunteer army. the National Catholic News Service, Although he is president of the talked with Hev. Theodore M. Hes­ International Federation of Catholic burgh CSC while the ND president Universities, Fr. Hesburgh told Healy was in New Zealand in July. Fr. that he sees the future of Catholic Hesburgh was evidently in a talka­ universities as "rather dim at the tive and informal mood, and the moment" In Hesburgh's opinion, this conversation between the two touched is simply because "universities are many controversies of contemporary just tremendously expensive things." Church in the intellectual life of life, ranging from the draft to Leo The ND president noted that the mankind," the president told Healy. Cardinal Suenens. U. of Montreal has just decided that Turning to the controversies in Speaking of the draft, Fr. Hesburgh it is no longer a Catholic university which the contemporary Church is said, "Some people take it for granted and that Quebec is considering the involved, Fr. Hesburgh called Leo that the draft in the U.S. is the normal same step. The Belgian bishops have Cardinal Suenens of Malines-Brussels thing. But it's abnormal. In 90 per now given up their control of Louvain. "a kind of prophet in the modem cent of our history we have been Thus, all three are totally state- Church." Hesburgh said that in the without it" He advocates students financed, Hesburgh pointed out controversy over Cardinal Suenens' doing community service for a year Despite difBculties, Hesburgh still wdely publicized criticisms of aspects as a substitute for military service. sees a vital need for Catholic uni­ of Church government, the Belgian Hesburgh said the great bulk of versities—^"not a lot of them but prelate showed himself to be "a students consider it more patriotic to some good ones. I would hope that person with great courage saying what serve their country "through some every region of the world would have I think are very rational things." kind of betterment of society than by one or two good ones, because I think However, Hesburgh added, "you going into the military." they symbolize the interest of the can't say things like this without ruflSing a litde fur." Terming Cardinal Suenens "a very 1 honest critic," Hesbur^ stressed that the Cardinal's basic themes are those of the Second Vatican Council and that it is for the good of the Church that they be implemented as soon as possible. "What Cardinal Suenens is asking for will eventually come," Fr. Hesburgh stated. "His big point is coresponsibility—every­ one responsible for the whole Church."

Soaw people take it for granted that Ibe draft in the U^. is the tfaii^. Bat if s abnormal. It is a monumental task to chaise the vision of tiw 600 minion Catiiolics in tiw Clinicii.

Fr. Hesburgh also gave Healy some of his personal opinions about the changes in the Church. "I feel the same about the Church as I do about civil rights," he said. "We've made incomparable progress in a short period but we started almost from a dead stop." Rather than a wind, Hesburgh said, the council almost let a tornado in. He said he views the central crisis of the Church as "a kind of total vision of where it is going, what its vision is of itself and its task and what it should do to realize this mission." Fr. Hesburgh said that it is a monumental task to change the vision of the 600 million Catholics in the Church, but he said he is optimistic because he has seen more change in the last several years than Fr. Hesburgh estimated that 90 year just on armaments. Our budget previously in his lifetime. "The whole per cent of Negro students are on for the space program next year is direction, I say, is good," he con­ scholarships. Asked how many Negro $4 billion, against $80 billion for cluded. students are at ND, he gave a figure defense." Regarding his work on the Civil of 100 out of this year's 6,000 under­ Discussing today's youth, Hesbur^ Rights Commission, which he heads, graduates. The small number, he said, "I think the Church has a great Fr. Hesburgh said that when it was explained, is against a 70 last year. necessity today to be sensitive to started in 1957 under President "So we're gradually building it up," young people. It is my feeling ... Eisenhower "there hadn't been a civil he noted. that young people in America are rights law for 80 years." Since this Speaking on the retarding effect of veiy disaffected with what they call time, the commission has been the institutional Church—the same as instrumental in having four major the Vietnam war on some of Amer­ ica's domestic programs, Fr. Hesburgh they are somewhat disaffected with laws passed, covering voting, employ­ institutional government" ment, justice, education, public said he did not know of anyone who accommodations and housing, he said. did not want the war ended quickly. Hesburgh told Healy that at ND Hesburgh remarked that some 80 "You can't spend $70 million a day in he has told students that he will stand per cent of the commission's recom­ Vietnam and have a lot of money left up for law and order, but this does mendations for federal legislation over for anything else," he remarked, not mean just reflecting the status and noted that the U.S. defense has been enacted. quo. He said he encourages students budget has gone up to $80 billion, Fr. Hesburgh admitted that Negroes almost half of it for Vietnam. to put forward ideas. If they have a living in the ghetto areas still have good idea for bettering the educa­ Asked if the space program also a long way to go. But he noted that tional process or suggesting what the there are more Negroes in colleges in had a retarding effect, Hesburgh replied, "The space program's a small University can do in the way of the U.S. than there are students in the social study and action, he will back whole university system of England. potato. The total space program is it. Hesburgh said, "This (^len attitude He said the basic aim of the Civil $25 billion. The countries of the Ri^ts Commission is "equality of world will spend $150 billion this has paid c^." opportunity for every American in aU 50 states. We've pretty well licked the problem of voting and public accommodations and, to some extent, the administration of justice," he Yon can't spend $70 mfllion a day m Vi and have said. But education, housing and a lot of money left over for anytiu^ else. employment are the great trilogy of interlocking problems that yet must be beaten, according to ND's chief administrator. ! Busy summer at ND

Over 71,350 people visited the Uni­ The next day, Aug. 25, the versity of Notre Dame campus during American Accountants Assn. moved a three-week period at the close of into the Center for Continuing the summer. Their official reasons Education with over 1,000 members for being on campus were varied, to begin the 53rd national convention Blaek studies ranging from viewing mobile homes of the organization. The three-day An Ethnic Studies Program may to seeking sanctuary and requesting affair drew accountants from industry, be instituted in the University cur­ funds for blacks. government and education. riculum by the fall of 1970. The Most of the visitors were at ND for Aug. 30, more than 1,000 delegates program has been developed from a the Midwest Mobile Home and were on hand in the Athletic and proposal for a Black Studies Program Recreational Vehicle Show during the Convocation Center for the opening by an ad hoc committee formed last week of Aug. 17. The event, tagged of the Special General Convention II December by Rev. Theodore Hes- "the largest trade show on earth." of the Episcopal Church. The burgh CSC and composed of faculty drew an estimated 68,000 persons to gathering attracted representatives members and black students. the Athletic and Convocation Center, from major newspapers and news where some 800,000 square feet of services across the nation, and some of Dr. Thomas E. Stewart, assistant to space was used to exhibit $3,783,000 its sessions unexpectedly became the president for planning and analy­ worth of vehicles and equipment. controversial meetings. sis, said: "There is nothing formal set The six-day show was responsible for At a Sunday night session, a group up for this year. Any proposal for pumping an estimated $S million into of black spokesmen interrupted the something like this must go through the community's economy. Motels scheduled speaker and aired their the formal processes of the University and hotels within a 50-mile radius of grievances. Their leaders. Rev. Paul and it is not promised that it (an South Bend were filled by convention M. Washington, former chaplain of Ethnic Studies Program) will exist." guests and exhibitors. The show was the convention's House of Deputies, He added: "The University is cogni­ so successful that after its completion and Mohammed Kenyatta, of Phila­ zant of the needs and aspirations of the Indiana Mobile Home Assn. delphia, walked to the platform and black students to include the study announced plans to return the event took the microphone while the of their culture and social problems to South Bend next year. deputies and House of Bishops were that have bearing on their lives." Overlapping the mobile home show in a joint plenary session. Kenyatta Dr. Stewart said a decision regard­ was a four-day national convention asked the church to lead the way in ing the proposal is pending from the of the Christian Family Movement. "repaying America's debt to the black Arts and Letters College Council and, Over 600 married couples and 150 people." Monday morning, the if approved, will be sent to the religious were on campus for the spokesmen returned to the platform Academic Council for final endorse­ parley from Aug. 20-24. and asked for reparations in the form ment. He said the program could not be implemented before the fall of 1970. Delays have been caused by the difficulty the administration has had in hiring a director for the program. "We've had several good prospects," Dr. Stewart said, "but they've been unable to leave their present positions." The director of the program would be involved in recruiting and counsel­ ing minority students. Meanwhile, he said the University "has gathered together a block of about 26 courses already in the curriculum—courses from such departments as history, sociology and economics and from the Law School —that should be of immediate utility in the black studies area." David Krashna, a black junior English major from Pittsburgh who is Human Affairs Commissioner for the ND student government, described Dr. Stewart's explanation of the delay as "just another case of the great white father image of paternalism which black people have been ex­ periencing since the first black men arrived on the soil." The Episcopalian Convention (left), the circus (right) and the Midwest Mobile Home f COLUMN ever an anesthetic appeared advisable, many used a hypodermic needle to inject gin or vodka into oranges of funds—to the sum of $200,000— or grapefruit and munch-sucked their to be channeled immediately to the way pleasantly through a 3-2 Black Economic Development Con­ home season. ference for administrative purposes. Things are somewhat different Kenyatta again criticized the church, today. Now it is the undergraduate calling it "an apologist for racism," sophisticate who feigns an indiffer­ and accused the convention of ence toward football (but never misses participating in racism, thus "exploit­ a game). Some say they are em­ ing the Master." barrassed by what they claim is a "football factory" image of Notre Other sessions of the conference Dame but overlook the fact that the were not without surprises. Tuesday University is second to Yale in the morning, two soldiers absent without number of NCAA post-graduate leave from their posts in Hawaii asked FaU felicity scholarships given its varsity athletes. the convention for sanctuary and It is a fact that in the early days urged church support of moves to end by Richard W. Conklin of the University, football built Notre the war in Vietnam. About 200 con­ Director of Public Information Dame. It gave an obscure school vention delegates accompanied the in northern Indiana national ex­ Gls to the platform in support of their I can sense it •when the ivy which posure, contributed money to lean opposition to the war. At another spreads from my chimney across the coffers and attracted the interest of session, about 30 young people dem­ front of my home starts to turn; an non-alumni who were able to help the onstrated against the war with placards accountant friend of mine says institution financially. While Notre and by reciting the Lord's Prayer. he can feel it when he leaves his Dame still commands major space on the nation's sports pages and football Thus, the ACC and the entire ND downtown office on Friday and steps into the tense anticipation on the still contributes a welcome profit to campus closed out the summer by the institution's sorely pressed balance hosting thousands of visitors from all street; on campus one can hear it about four o'clock when the band sheet, no one can deny that the over the nation and world. And, academic pre-eminence accorded just for good measure, another event, struts to its practice field; the man in Eddie's crowded bar on Friday night the University has been earned the more traditional "greatest show outside the stadium. on earth," came to town. The Ringling knows it when that fourth martini slides numbingly into the bloodstream Some changes are for the best. The Brothers, Barnum and Bailey circus presence of St. Mary's women in presented four performances under and he can't remember the point spread. the student section can be expected to the ACC big tops in the middle of curb some of the outright boorish- September. Football season has come back to Notre Dame. ness which passed for masculinity in I missed the undergraduate indoc­ the past, and the disassociation of trination into Notre Dame football, football from religion is to be and when I arrived to seek an M.A. in heartily welcomed. the fall of 1958 I had to ask some­ Yet the nation will continue to tip one what the zesty monologue on slightly on home football Saturdays, the restaurant jukebox was. "That's filling South Shore trains at Chicago's Knute Rockne's famous half-time Randolph Street Station, overflowing talk," he said, charitably resisting the the Indiana toUway's South Bend temptation to add, "you jerk." exit lanes into temporary gates, To be a graduate student in good crowding St. Joseph County Air­ standing in those days, only two port with private planes. These are things were necessary: 1) to hate the people who spill on campus undergraduates and 2) to hate foot­ to sip ice-cold manhattans from tail­ ball. The first I did, sitting and gates, buy sandwiches from residence drinking stale beer in the dilapidated hall entrepreneurs or dine at the (and now defunct) Tilman's Tap, President's VIP luncheons for the where proper graduate students sought Morris Inn guest list. Color, excite­ refuge from the undergrads who ment and a gut feeling of expecta­ jammed Frankie's. As for the second, tion are shared by the lineman I had always been a football fan glancing at the uplift signs in the and could not give it up, even under dressing room, the sportswriter peer-group pressure. I joined a small settling into his niche in the press box, group of dissident grad students and the usher handling the usual who went to every game. last-minute influx. In the 6-4 season of Terry There is, for a few hours on a fall Brennan's last year, I must admit, afternoon, a semblance of unity on going to football games almost came campus. And in a day when such to appeal to the reverse snobbery moments are rare, who is to complain show made it a busy summer at ND. of our Tilman's Tap crowd. When­ because sports supplies it? Juggler shul; down The Juggler, a magazine of the arts founded at ND in 1947, was closed during the summer by .the Vice Presidents Council. In a letter to three students who wrote to him protesting the shut-down of the magazine. Father Hesburgh explained: "The fact is that we are facing a deficit of over a half million dollars in our University budget next year and must seek every possible way of reducing expenses so that the University does not go under. This may sound quixotic, but it is not a remote possibility. In the course of these conversations which involved all of the Vice Presidents Council, there was a long list of University activities which did not seem indispensible to the life of the University. The Juggler happened to be one of them." The Juggler's yearly budget has been $4,000. Father Hesburgh continued: "In the case of the Juggler, it was felt that there was not an actual return com­ mensurate with the money spent. Fewer and fewer students seem to Adults in "Project Reach" classes learn about television skills. buy the Juggler and it seemed to degenerate into a cozy activity of a very few writers and readers. This may speak badly for the state of the arts at Notre Dame, but it does seem to be the fact. In addition, those who Neir TV program aimed have read the Juggler in recent years seemed to feel that, while it did A two-year experimental program at full-time "para-professional" positions, contain some good writing, it did ND designed to reach undereducated such as video tape operators, lighting seem to depend more and more upon adults in the South Bend area through personnel, cameramen, assistant the four-letter words for effects. I television has received an initial grant cameramen, audio operators and realize that this is true of much of of $120,403 from the U.S. Office of assistant producers and directors. modern art. Education. "These para-professionals," "One could have a long conversa­ Samuel D. McClelland, an McClelland says, "will bring the ideas tion on this subject, but I am simply instructor in communication arts, and aspirations of the underclass into telling you the situation as it was is directing "Project Reach," which is the program and they also will be discussed. In effect, the Juggler seemed aimed at the estimated 25,000 adults effective ambassadors for adult to have few defendants. My approval in St. Joseph County who have less basic education among their peers." then was simply a recognition of a than eighth-grade educations. Following a 12-week training rather universal judgement." The project has three basic goals: workshop, the crew will produce film At press time. Juggler Editor to train adult education students in and tape promotional materials for Michael Patrick O'Connor was gather­ television skills; to use their produc­ use on local television and radio. ing support among students and tions in broadcast campaigns to boost "The broadcast promotions will not faculty to rejuvenate the magazine. In enrollment in adult basic education be at all like the highly polished, his letter to Father Hesburgh, programs; and to combine closed- •slick' commercial product," Mc­ O'Connor wrote: "I cannot believe circuit television and individual Clelland explains. "Rather, they will that you in all sincerity believe that instruction to teach classes of adults be simple documentary testimonies of a magazine of the arts is not an grouped into various achievement local people telling it 'like it is,' people integral part of the university. I levels. with whom our target audience can believe that a magazine like the The first step of the new program is identify." Juggler can be made an integral part recruitment of past and present During the latter part of the first of the community and I would like students of the community's adult year of the project, attention will be the opportunity to seriously try." education program for training in given to the development of the

8 BRIEFS

Rosenstiel Foundation of New York Neic Feilow City, which provides for permanent Rev. Paul E. Waldschmidt CSC, Jewish studies at the institute. president of the U. of Portland, has been elected a member of the Fellows of the University of Notre Dame. Fr. Waldschmidt, a 1942 ND gradu­ Goal Near ate, replaces Rev. John J. Cavanaugh ND's third-consecutive capital funds CSC, a former president of the drive, SUMMA, will observe its University who recently resigned as second anniversary in October, with a fellow. over $45 million, or 87 per cent of its $52-million goal, raised. National Chairman Dr. O.C. Carmichael Jr. NU Artist reported that 29 areas have officially Robert Leader, artist and professor surpassed their goals, including. of art at the University, is painting Albany, Appleton (Wis.), Atlanta, a 36 X 10-foot mural in the main Baltimore, Boston, Columbus, Cin­ entrance of the new science hall at cinnati, Dayton-Springfield, Denver, the College of St. Scholastica, Duluth, Evansville, Green Bay, Hartford, Minn. The work was commissioned Indianapolis, Kansas City, Louisville, by the college to depict historical Muskegon, New Jersey, New Orleans, and contemporary aspects of the Pensacola, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, sciences. Poughkeepste, Providence, Quad Cities (Davenport, East Moline, Molina and Rock Island), Rockford- Grant Totals Freeport, San Francisco, Tulsa and Youngstown. Gifts and grants of $9.2 million were received by ND during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1969, according to Dr. Frederick Rossini, vice-president Lau) Adciaers for research and sponsored programs. Two faculty members from ND's Law at adults Government grants accounted for School have recently been named to 87 per cent of the awards and the Indiana advisory groups. Professor television curriculum. These televised remaining funds were gifts of John Broderick was appointed to a lessons will be highly visual programs philanthropic foundations, groups, task force which will study steps designed to teach undereducated businesses and individuals. The funds necessary for upgrading law enforce­ adults the basic principles of each topped last year's awards by $2.1 ment personnel in Northern Indiana. skill—such as addition—and will be million, Rossini noted. Thomas L. Shaffer, associate dean of used in conjunction with individual the Law School, has been named a instruction and practice. member of the Indiana Constitutional New Scholar Revision Commission, a study and Actual television instruction of the review body formed to suggest ways adult basic education students will The dean of humanities at the in which Indiana's 117-year-old con­ begin in the second year of "Project Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Dr. stitution can be updated. Reach." Classrooms will be located in Zwi Werblowsky, has been appointed the Studebaker-Wellington Corp. a fellow of the Institute for Advanced offices recently donated to the South Religious Studies at ND. A professor Bend Community School Corp. of comparative religion at the Hebrew Benefaction McClelland says the project will be U. since 1956, Werblowsky has The University has received the carefully evaluated during the two- served as the chairman of the Israel second half of a million-dollar year experimental program by using a Interfaith Committee and has been personal gift from Frank M. combination of action research, adult prominent in Jewish and Christian Freimann, president of the Magnavox basic learning pre- and post-tests, ecumenical affairs. He received his Co. until his death in March, 1968. audience research and content doctorate in literature from the U. Rev. Edmund P. Joyce CSC, acting analysis. of Geneva in 1951 and taught at president, accepted the check, " 'Project Reach' is a first step Leeds U. and the Institute of Jewish representing an unrestricted bequest. which could lead to an all-out effort Studies in Manchester, England. The first half-million dollars was given to reach the nation's more than 24 Werblowsky is the first fellow to be to ND in 1962, with the bulk of that million undereducated," the director appointed to the institute on a grant donation going toward construction states. from the Dorothy H. and Lewis S. of the Memorial Library. CLASSES

Father O'Donnell "in action" at the front. A medal ivinner makes his mark

Rev. Joseph O'Donnell CSC '56 has Fr. O'Donnell was awarded the fliers. Participating in some of the no formal parish. He has no modem, Navy's Commendation Medal in San fiercest fighting of the war, the group comfortable building in which to Diego last May. was involved in Bold Mariner, the offer Mass. His communicants are Fr. O'Donnell arrived in Vietnam biggest amphibious landing since soldiers and his church is frequently in September, 1968, and was stationed Korea. a battlefield. for six months on the U.S.S. Tripoli, The troops were usually in combat, Unlike the numerous lists of cas­ the largest of eight ships of the spending little time on the ship. ualties, Fr. O'Donnell's work rarely Amphibious Ready Group, a mobile, Thus, the priest frequently went captures the attention of headline autonomous, completely supplied ashore and said Mass close to the writers, but he is one of the men attack force of the Pacific fleet. His front lines. Often his "church" was playing a significant role behind the ship operated off Da Nang, South surrounded by mine fields, rice paddies scenes in Vietnam. And, for offering Vietnam, carrying a battalion of 2,000 and military vehicles. Attempting meritorious service as a naval chaplain combat Marines and about 16 to describe some of the conditions with the United States Seventh Fleet, helicopters manned by 400 Marine in which he worked, Fr. O'Donnell said, "The smell of the water here is pretty hard to describe, but— referring to Chicago—if you took a combination of the stockyards, the Lever Brothers plant out on Indi­ anapolis Blvd. and all the sewers in the city, you might begin to get an idea of what it's like." When his battalion began to suffer ROME casualties, which were airlifted back to the Tripoli, the chaplain returned to the ship to be ready to care for A Notre Dame Escapade the wounded. He marveled at the speed and efficiency with which the wounded were cared for. Within 20 minutes after a Marine had been hit on shore, he would be aboard ship and ready for the operating table. A nine-day tour to the eternal city Fr. O'Donnell said that some of the ship's hospital equipment was so modem that it is not yet available in U.S. hospitals. • During Holy Week, March 23-31, 1970 The navy lieutenant flew to Da Nang from Chicago and was im­ pressed with the great contrast Chartered TWA jetliners between the two cities. He described Da Nang as "all military." The air­ port, which he says is busier than O'Hare Field, is home base for First-class hotel accommodations, including meals dozens of different types of airplanes, ranging from huge jets, fighters and bombers to tiny spotter planes * Guided tours and helicopters. Fr. O'Donnell him­ self travels by helicopter when he visits various ships for Masses. His method of deplaning, however, is a • A stop at Vince McAloon's ND Hospitality House little unusual. When there is no landing pad on the ships, he is dropped to and picked up from the boats the same way astronauts Hosted by Mr. & Mrs. James E. Armstrong are—by lines. The planes everyone likes to see in Da Nang, says the chaplain, are the • For ND alumni and their immediate families Pan Am jets, for their appearance means someone is going home. The wounded fly home on Air Force jets. • Total cost $369 per person (plus $14 taxes, services and gratuities) The city itself, according to Lt. O'Donnell, is filled with military vehicles. Some civilians have motor bikes, but seldom is a civilian car seen. The barbed-wire checkpoints and bombed-out buildings serve as Cut Here constant reminders that the enemy can come any time. The priest says that the endless stockpiles of American To: Mr. James D. Cooney Notre Dame Alumni Association merchandise—including suntan Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 lotion—indicate that the American way is there, in contrast to the pov­ Please send me more information about the NOTRE DAME ROMAN ESCAPADE. erty of most Vietnamese. Fr. O'Donnell is now in San Diego with his unit and will remain there Name until deployed at the end of the year, probably to Vietnam. There he Street will again confront the "face of suffering," which he says he sees all Town - State . Zip . Class . over the country. WOULD YOU BELIEVE?

Two Can Give As Easily As One

Mr. Notre Dame:

More than 400 business concerns, from small research organiza­

tions to industrial giants, are now matching dollar-for-doUar, and some­

times more, the contributions of their employes to higher education.

Here is an excellent way for your gift to trigger a double impact. Your

annual investment in Notre Dame is tangible evidence of your faith in the

future of the University and is encouraged by your employer. His matching

gift says that he wants to join you in this support in recognition of the

role this University has played in your development. If your employer is

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watch us double our speed toward becoming an even greater Notre Dame.

12 Companies That Will Match Employee Gifts Abbott Laboratories (all; n-a) Chemical Construction Corp. (1,2) Firemen's Mutual ln& Ca Abex Corp. (all; n-a) Chrysler Corp. (all; sp) (1.2; ap; n-a) Aeroglide Corp. (1,2; lim) Cities Service Company (1; sp; n-a) Firestone Tire.& RUMMT Co. Aerojet-General Corp. (all; n-a) Citizens & Southern Natnnal Bank (all; sp: n-a) Aetna Life & Casualty (all; sp-w; n-a) (all; n-a) First Nat Bank of Hawaii Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. Clark Equipment Co. (all; n-a) (all; lim; n-a) (1A n-a) Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. (all; n-a) First Nat City Bank of N.Y. Air Reduction Co. Inc. (all; n-a) Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co. (all; epi; n-a) Allegheny Ludlum Steel Corp. (1,2; (all; n-a) The Rrst New Haven National Bank n-a) Cleveland Inst, of Electronics (all; n-a) Allied Chemical Corp. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) First Penn. Banking and Trust Co. Aluminum Co. of America (all; n-a) Clevite Corp. (all; epi; n-a) (all; n-a) American Bank & Trust Co. of Pa. James B. Clow & Sons, Inc. (all; n-a) Fluor'corp. Ltd. (1^; n-a) (1,2; Ipi; n-a) Coats & Clark Inc. (all; n-a) Ford Motor Co. (all; n-a) American Enita Corp. (all; n-a) Colonial Parking, Inc. (1> n-a) Ford Motor Co. of Canada, Ltd. American Express Co. (all; n-a) Columbia Gas System, lnc.( all; n-a) (1.2: n-a) American & Foreign Power Co., Inc. Columbian Carbon Co. (all; sp; n-a) Forty-Eight Insulatkxis. Inc. (1,2) (1.2; n-a) Columbus Mutual Ins. Co. Foster Wheeler Corp. (1,2; n-a) American Home Products Corp. (all; sp; n-a) H. B. Fuller Co. (all: n-a) (1,2; n-a) Combustion Engineering, Inc. (all) American Metal Climax Found., Inc. Commercial Solvents Corp. (all; n-a) Conn. General Life Ins. Co. E&JGalloWineiy(all) (all; n-a) Gardner-Denver Co. (1,3; n-a) American Optical Co. (all; sp; n-a) (1,2; epi; n-a) General Atronics Corp. (all; n-a) American Potash & Chemical Corp. Conn. Light & Power Co. General Electric Co. (all; n-a) (1,2; n-a) (1,2; Ipi; n-a) General Foods Corp. (all: sp; n-a) American Smelting and Refining Co. Conn. Mutual Life Ins. Co. General Foods Limited (1,2; sp: n-a) (all; n-a) (1,3; epi; n-a) General Learning Corp. (all; sp: n-a) American Standard, Inc. (all; epi; n-a) Consolidated Coal Co. (1) General Mills, Inc. (all; n-a) American States Insurance (1,2; epi; Consumers Power Co. (all; n-a) General Publk: Utilities Corp. sp-w; n-a) Container Corp. of America (all; n-a) American Sterilizer Co. (1,2) (all; Ipi; n-a) Continental Can Co., Inc. (all; n-a) General Telephone & Electronics American Sugar Co. (all; n-a) Corp. (1,3: n-a) American Tobacco Co. (all; sp) Continental Ins. Cos. (all; n-a) Continental Oil Co. (1,2) General Tire & Rubber Co. (all; n-a) Arkwright-Boston Manufacturers M. A. Gesner of Illinois, Inc. (all; n^) Mutual Ins. Co. (all; sp; n-a) Cook Foundation, Conn, (all) Cooper Industries, Inc. (all; n-a) Getty Oil Co. (all; n-a) Armco Steel Corp. (all; n-a) Gibbs & Hill, Inc. (1; lim: n-a) Armstrong Cork Co. (1; n-a) Copley Press Inc. (1,2; sp; n-a) Copolymer Rubber & Chemical Corp. Gillette Co. (all: n-a) Ashland Oil & Refining Co. (1,2; n-a) Ginn & Co. (all; n-a) Associated Box Corp. (all; epi) (1; n-a) Girard Trust Bank (1,2; n-a) Associated Spring Corp. (all; n-a) Com Products Co. (all; sp; n-a) B. F. Goodrich Co. (all: n^) Athos Steel and Aluminum, Inc. (1,2; Coming Glass Works (all; n-a) W. T. Grant Co. (1: n-a) n-a) Crompton Co., Inc. (all; epi) Great Northern F^per Co. (all; n-a) Atlas Chemical Industries, Inc. (all) Crouse-Hinds Co. (all) Griswold-Eshleman Co. (1,2) Atlas Rigging and Supply Co. (1,2; Cutler-Hammer Inc. (1,2) Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America epi) Cyprus Mines Corp. (1,2; epi; n-a) (all; epi; sp: n-a) Gulf Oil Corp. (1: r>-a) Bank of California, N.A. (all) Dayton Malleable Iron Co. (1,2; n-a) Gulf States Utilities Co. (ail; n-a) Bank of New York (all; sp-w; n-a) Deering Milliken, Inc. (1,2; epi; n-a) Guy Gannett Broadcasting Services Bankers Life Co. (all; sp; n-a) Diamond Alkali Co. (all; n-a) (all) Barton-Gillet Co. (all; n-a) Diamond Crystal Salt Co. (1,2; n-a) Bloch Brothers Tobacco Co. (all) Diamond Shamrock Oil & Gas Co. Blue Bell Inc. (all; n-a) (1; n-a) Hamilton Watch Co. (1.2; n-a) Bowen, Gurin, Barnes & Roche, Inc. A. B. Dick Co. (all; n-a) Harris-lntertype Corp. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) Dickson Electronics Corp. (1; n-a) Harris Trust and Savings Bank (all) G. A. Brakeley & Co., Inc. (all; n-a) Difco Laboratories (all; n-a) Harsco Corp. (ail; Ipi; n-a) Bristol-Myers Co. (all; epi; n-a) Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc. Hartford Electric Light Co. Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. (all; n-a) (all; sp-w; n-a) (all; n-a) Dow Chemical Co. (all; lim; n-a) Hartford Insurance Group (all; n-a) Brown & Root, Inc. (1,3 n-a) Dow Coming Corp. (all; lim; n-a) Hawaiian Telephone Co. Buriington Industries, Inc. (all; n-a) Draper Corp. (1,2) (1,2; lim; n-a) Business Men's Assurance Co. of Dresser Industries, Inc. (1,2; n-a) Hayes-Albton Corp. (all; n-a) America (all; n-a) Wilbur B. Driver Co. (all; n-a) Hercules Incorporated (1,2: n-a) Business Press Int'l., Inc. (1,2; n-a) Dun & Bradstreet Group Cos. Hershey Foods Corp. (all; sp; n-a) Butterick Co., Inc. (all; sp; n-a) (1.2; n-a) Hewlett-Packard Co. (1,2: n-a) Hill Acme Co., Ohio (1,2; epi) Cabot Corp. (all; n-a) Eastern Gas & Fuel Associates Hoffman-La Roche, Inc. (all; epi; n-a) Callanan Road Improvement Co. (all; n-a) Honeywell, Inc, (1^2; sp: n-a) (all) Easton Car & Construction Co. Hooker Chemk»l Corp. (all; n-a) Campbell Soup Co. (all; sp; n-a) (1.2; epi) Hoover Company (all: n-a) Canadian Gen. Electric Co., Ltd. (1) Eaton Yale & Towne, Inc. (all; n-a) J. M. Huber Corp. (ail; sp: n-a) Carttorundum Co. (1,3; n-a) Ebasco Industries, Inc. (all; n-a) Hughes Aircraft (ail) Carpenter Steel Co. (1,2; n-a) Ebasco Services, Inc. (1,2) Humble Oil & Refining Co. (all) Carrier Corp. (all; n-a) Electric Storage Battery Co. (1,2) Carter-Wallace, Inc. (all; n-a) Ensign-Bickford Co. (1,2; n-a) IngersolHtand Co. (all) Cavalier Corp. (all; n-a) Equitable of Iowa (all; n-a) Insurance Co. of Nortti America Central Illinois Light Co. (1,3; epi; n-a) Esso Education Foundation (all) (all; epi; sp; n-a) Central & South West Corp. (1,2; n-a) Ex-Cell-O Corp. (1,2; n-a) Interchemical Corp. (all: n-a) Cerro Corp. (all; n^) Intemattonal Bus. Machines Corp. Champion Papers (all; n-a) Federal-Mogul Corp. (all) (all; n-a) Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A. (all; n-a) Federated OepL Stores, Inc. (all) IntemathNtal Ravors & Fiagrances Chemical Bank N.Y. Trust Co. (all) Ferro Corp. (1,2; n-a) Inc. (all; epi; n-a) 13 international Tel. & Tel. Corp. Miehle-Goss-Oexter, Inc. (all; n-a) Reader's Digest (all) (all; n-a) Mobil Foundation Inc. (all; n-a) Reliance Ins. Co. (all; sp-w; Ipi; n-a) Irving Trust Co. (1,2) Mohasco Industries, Inc. (all) Rex Chainbelt, Inc. (all; n-a) itek Corp. (all; n-a) Moog, Inc. (all; n-a) R. J. Reynolds Foods, Inc. (all; n-a) Morgan Construction Co. (1; n-a) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. (all; n-a) Jefferson Mills, inc. (lim) Motorola Inc. (1) Riegel Paper Corp. (all; n-a) Jefferson Standard Broadcasting Co. Munsingwear, Inc. (all; n-a) Riegel Textile Corp. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) Mutual Boiler & Machinery Ins. Co. Rk> Algom Mines Ltd. (1; lim) Jefferson Standard Life Ins. Co. (all) Rochester Germicide Co. (1) (all; n-a) Mutual Life Insurance Co. of N.Y. Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Inc. Jewel Companies, Inc. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) (all; sp; n-a) John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Mutual of Omaha-United of Omaha Rockefeller Family & Associates Co. (all; sp; n-a) (all; sp; n-a) (all; sp; n-a) Johnson & Higgins (all; epi; n-a) Martha Baird Rockefeller Fund for Johnson & Johnson (1; n-a) National Biscuit Co. (all; sp; n-a) Music, Inc. (all; sp; n-a) S. C. Johnson & Son, Inc. (all; n-a) National Cash Register Co. Rockwell Manufacturing Co. (all) Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. (all; epi) (all; sp; n-a) Rockwell-Standard Div. (1; n-a) National Distillers & Chemical Corp. Rohm & Haas Co. (all; n-a) Kaiser Steel Corp. (1,2; n-a) (all; n-a) Rust Engineering Co. (1,2; sp; n-a) Kendall Co. (1,2; n-a) National Lead Co. (all; n-a) Kerite Co. (all; n-a) National Steel Corp. (1,2; n-a) Kern County Land Co. (all) Nationwide Ins. Cos. (1,3; n-a) SCM Corporation (all; n-a) Kersting, Brown & Co., Inc. (1; n-a) Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America SKF Industries, Inc. (1,2) Walter Kidde & Co. (1,2) (all) Sadtler Research Laboratories, Inc. Walter Kidde Constructors New England Gas & Electric Assoc. (all; n-a) (all; sp; n-a) (all; n-a) SL Regis Paper Co. (all) Kidder, Peabody & Co., Inc. New England Merchants NaL Bank of Sanders Associates, Inc. (all) (all; lim; epi; n-a) Boston (1,2; epi) Schering Corp. (all; n-a) Kimberly-Clark Corp. (all) New England Mutual Life Ins. Co. Scott Paper Co. (1,2; n-a) Kingsbury Machine Tool Corp. (all; n-a) Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Inc. (all; sp) Newhall Land and Farming Co. (all; n-a) Kiplinger Foundation, Inc. (all; n-a) (1,2; n-a) Sealright Co., Inc. (all) Richard C. Knight Ins. Agency, Inc. New York Times (all; n-a) Security Nat Bank of Long Island (all; epi; sp) The New Yorker Magazine, Inc. (all; epi; n-a) Knox Gelatine, Inc. (all; sp; n-a) (all; n-a) Security Van Lines, Inc. (all; sp; n-a) Koehring Co. (all) Northeast Utilities Service Co. Seton Leather Co. (all; sp) H. Kohnstamm Co., Inc. (all; n-a) (all; Ipi; n-a) Sherwin-Williams Co. (all; sp; n-a) The Koppers Foundation (all; n-a) Northwestern Mutual Life Ins. Co. Signal Oil & Gas Co. (1; epi; n-a) (all; n-a) Signode Corp. (all; n-a) Lamson & Sessions Co. (1; n-a) Northwestern National Life Ins. Co. Simmons Co., N.Y. (all; n-a) Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Co. (all; n-a) Simonds Saw & Steel Div. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) Norton Co., Mass. (all; n-a) Sinclair-Koppers Co. (all; n-a) Lehigh Portland Cement Co. (1,2) John Nuveen & Co., Inc. (1,2; n-a) Sinclair Oil Corp. (all; n-a) Lever Brothers Co. (all; n-a) Singer Co. (1,2) Lorillard Corp. (1,2; n-a) Oklahoma Gas & Electric Co. Smith Kline & French Laboratories Lubrizol Corp. (all; sp; n-a) (1,2; sp) (all; n-a) Ludlow Corp. (all) Olin Mathieson Chemical Corp. Lummus Co. (1,2) Smith-Lee Co., Inc., N.Y. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) Sperry & Hutchinson Co. (all; n-a) Oneida Ltd. (1,2; n-a) Spruce Falls Power & Paper Co., Ltd. M & T. Chemicals Inc. (1,2) Owens-Coming Fiberglas Corp. MacLean-Fogg Lock Nut Co. (1; epr; n-a) (all; n-a) Squibb Beech-Nut, Inc. (all; n-a) (1,2; n-a) Slackpole Carbon Co. (all; n-a) Mallinckrodt Chemical Works PPG Industries, Inc. (all; n-a) Standard Oil Co. (Ind.) (1,2; n-a) (all; n-a) Parker-Hannifin Corp. (all; n-a) Standard Oil Co. (N.J.) (all) P. R. Mallory & Co., Inc. (all; n-a) Paul Revere Life Ins. Co. (all; n-a) Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) (all; n-a) Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. Pennsalt Chemicals Corp. Standard Pressed Steel Co. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) (all; epi; n-a) Stauffer Chemical Co. (1,2; n-a) Manufacturers Mutual Fire Ins. Co. Pennsylvania Power & Light Co. Steriing Drug Inc. (all; n-a) (all; epi; n-a) (1,2; n-a) J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc. (all; n-a) Marathon Oil Co (all; n-a) Penton Publishing Co. (all; n-a) Stone & Webster, Inc. (1,2; n-a) Martha Washington Kitchens Petro-Tex Chemicals Corp. (all; n-a) Suburban Propane Gas Corp. (all; n-a) (1.3; n-a) Phelps Dodge Corp. (all; n-a) Sunray DX Oil Co. (all; n-a) Marine Corp. (all) Philip Morris, Inc. (all) W. H. Sweney & Co. (lim) Marine Midland Grace Trust Co. of Phillips Petroleum Co. (all; n-a) N.Y. (all; epi; sp; n-a) Pickands Mather & Co. (all; n-a) Mass. Mutual Life Ins. Co. (alt; n-a) PillsBuiy Co. (1,2; fv«) Taylor Corp. (all; sp; n-a) Malalene Surgical Instruments Co., Pilot Life Ins. Co. (all) Tektronix, Inc. (all; n-a) Inc. (all; epi) Pitney-Bowes, Inc. (all; n-a) C. Tennant, Sons & Co. of N.Y. Maytag Co. (1; n-a) Pittsburgh NaL Bank (1) (all; sp; n-a) McCormick & Co., Inc. (all) Preformed Line Products Co. (1; n-a) Tenneco, Inc. (all; n-a) McGraw Edison Power Systems Div. Provident Life and Accident Ins. Co. Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. (1.2; n-a) (1,2; n-a) (13* n-a) McGraw-Hill. Inc. (all; n-a) Provident National Bank (all) Textile Machine Worics (1.2; n-a) Medusa-Portland Cement Co. Prudential Ins. Co. of America Textron Inc. (all; n-a) (1.2; epi; n-a) (1.2; n-a) J. WaHer Thompson Co. (1,3; n-a) Mellon Nat Bank & Trust Co. (1,2) Pullman Inc. (all; n-a) J. T. Thorpe Co. (1,2) Merck & Co., Inc. (all; n-a) Putnam Management Co., Inc. Time, Inc. (all; n-a) Metropolitan Ufe Ins. Co. (all; n-a) Towers, Perrin, Forster & Crosby, Inc. (1.2; sp; n-a) (all: n-a) Middlesex Mutual Assurance Co. Quaker Chemical Corp. (all; sp; nni) Towmotor Corp. (all; n-a) (all; n-a) TRAGOR, Inc. (all) MMIand-Ross Corp. (all; n-a) Ralston Purina Co. (1.2; sp; n-a) TiBn»Worid Airilnes (all; n-a) 14 Travelers Insurance Companies Victaulic Co. of America (1,2) Weyertiaeuwr Ca (ail: epi; M) (all; n-a) Vulcan Materials Co. (all; n-a) Whirtpool Corp. (ail; IM) Turner Construction Co. (1,2) White Motor Cwp. (all; iKi) Wallace & Tieman Inc. (all; n-a) Joim WHay A Sow, inc. (ali: n-a) Union Oil Co. of California (1,2; n^) Wallingford Steel Co. (1,2; n-a) Wamer Brothers Co., Conn. WHIiams & Ca. Pann. tan) Uniroyal, Inc. (all; n-a) Winn-Oixie SlofMi inc. (ali; sp; IM4 United Aircraft Corp. (1,2; n-a) (1,3; epi; n-a) Warner-Lambert Pharmaceutical Co. Wohwrine WMId Wide. inc. (1; n^) United FmIt Co. Foundation, Inc. (all; n-a) Worihinglon Corp. (1,2; n-m) (all; n-a) Wamer & Swasey Co. (all; n-a) WyarHMIa Ctiemicals Coip. United Illuminating Co. (all; sp; n-a) Washington Nat Ins. Co. (all; n-a) (1Alpi;iMi) United States Borax & Chem. Corp. Watkins-Johnson Co. (1,2) (1,2; epi; n-a) C. J. Webb, II (all; n-a) Xerox Corporation (all; sp; n-a) United States Trust Co. of N.Y. Welch Grape Juice Co., Inc. (all; n-a) (all; Ipi; n-a) Young & Rubicam, inc. (all; epi; n^) Upjohn Co. (all; n-a) Western Publishing Co. (all; n-a) Westinghouse Air Brake Co. (1,2; n-a) Total: 404 Varian Associates (1,2; n-a) Westinghouse Electric Corp. (1,2) fteviaed November, 1968

KEY TO THE LISTING Remember that while neariy every program will match a gift to an institution, its alunmi fund or recdving foun­ dation, most exclude from matching such things as chib or association dues or publication subscripti(»s. As a general rule, the program of a parent firm will sq^ily to its divisions, subsidiaries and affiliated companies. To receive more complete infonnatim on your com­ pany's program, contact it directly. To assist you in If you are contributing to the University of Notre Dame identifying the important provisioas of these programs, and are associated with one of the companies whose some information has been coded in parentheses after names appear in this listing, you can arrange to have a each corporate title, as firilows: second gift sent to your alma mater, courtesy of your company. 1 Four-year colleges and universities are eligible Sound easy? Well, it is. 2 Graduate and professional schools are eligible Periiaps the most pleasant aspect of gift-matching, next 3 Junior colleges are eligible to the good such contributions do, is how easily you can ail All three of the above are eligible arrange to have them sent. Once you have made your gift, just inform the appropriate persons at your company epi Program excludes public institutions that you've done so. A matching check will be sent to ipi Limited program for public institutions; per­ your college soon thereafter, indicating that your gift centage of public suppcHt or ca^tal gifts may made the matching gift possible. be restricted; regular program for private in­ In effect, by matching your gift, your employer is recog­ stitutions nizing the contribution which you, as an educated per­ epr Program excludes private institutions son, are making to your company. It's the boss' way of saying "thanks" to the college which helped to provide Ipr Limited program for private institutions; regu­ your education. lar program for puUic To be sure, gift-matching is only one way in which lim Program is informal or restricted to a limited businesses and corporations are assisting education. But number of ^lecified instituti(»s or employes it has become an increasingly significant source of an­ sp Companies which will match gifts of a apoux nual support (husband or wife) of an digiUe emplpye Won't you check over this listing to see if your company sp-w Companies which will match gifts of a wife has such a program? If it does, take a moment to have of an eligible emphqre your gift matched. You may be sure that both gifts will be gratefully received. n-a Will match gifts at non-alumni his widow; his son, Bruce; one brother. Dr. Chamberry Circle, Louisville, Ky. 40200; CLASS NOTES Austin Hebenstreit Waupan, Wise.; four Oct 9, THOMAS C. HUGHES 'II, 1738 grandchildren and two great-granddiildren. Upas St, San Diego, Calif. 92103; Oct 10, '15 NEWS FROM NOTES BRUCE HEBENSTREIT, the son, is also LOUIS E. WAGNER Ph.BC. '18, 17 Wood A welcome note from RAYMOND J. an ND graduate. St, Danbury, Conn. 06812; Oct 13, MAXI­ KELLY, Detroit, Mich., saying "I was not PAUL E. NEVILLE '42, executive editor MILIAN G. KAZUS LL.B. '18, 101 Knox able to make the June meeting but hope to of the Bugalo Evening News, died June 22. Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 14216; Oct 14, be there next June, as 1 have another Since his graduation he served as political JOSEPH T. RILEY LL.B. "18, 715 Hackley grandson graduating. My oldest grandson, editor, sports editor and managing editor of Union, Muskegon, Mich.—^wedding anni­ 1st Lt Kelly, who graduated a few years the South Bend Tribune. He joined the versary, Oct iO; Oct 19, H. THOMAS ago, (1964 I think) will be returning from Evening News in 1957. LAVERY LL.B. '19, 1733 W. 106 St, Vietnam this summer, after two years in I would Uke to be of service to members Chicago, III. 60643; Oct 29, WILLIAM A. Vietnam. So hereafter, with two sons and of classes back to 1893 and thereafter. GRADY '17, Box 596, Carrollton, Tex. two grandsons who are graduates, I will I welcome communications, hopefully 75006. probably be able to flag a ride, as I think containing information of interest to fellow Wedding anniversaries: Oct 8, HUGH S. they are all in different five-year groups. I alumni and others in the large ND family. CARROLL, B.S.-M.S. '18; Oct 26, JAMES have retired (I'll be 75 on Nov. IS) and am GORDON WALLACE Ph.B. '18. taking life easy with the help of several Albert A. Kuhle Our sincere sympathies go to DAN doctors, etc.—but I mean Quiet, Quiet This 117 Sunset Ave. "TEXAS" BILL GRADY—phoned from is not much news but it keeps you aware LaGrange, III. 60525 airport about the passing of Mrs. Hilgartner, that I am still here." wife of DANIEL E., eight days after A note from JOHN A. WELCH: "It is '17 IS THAT THE TRUTH? celebrating their golden wedding anni­ certainly an unusual pleasure to receive versary. Also, the passing of JAMES birthday greetings from a friend I haven't 1969 REUNION McMAHON LL.B. '17 and CHARLES G. seen in more than SO years. It seems to me First Old Crad: Well, well, SAY this is CORCORAN '17, whose birthday was to that you were in Corby when I was, from swell be Oct 29. 1913-15. I had been in Carroll Hall from Second Old Grad: How are you, pal—^y'r Pleased to hear Max Kazus and wife, 1911-13. King Farley was reigning and I lookin' well with two grandchildren, enjoyed June was in chemistry lab with ROCK—^what a First O. G.: The same to you, by gosh reuiuon. Had visit with Rev. CON HAC- guy! He was waiting on tables in our GERTY CSC and Rev. CHARLES J. refectoiy in 1911 before be was put on the I'm glad to see you here; How are you, lad? You WILLIAMS. Having had a "windfaU" as training table. He had the concession on two Max called it—he presented check to the pool tables in Corby recreation room, and know I told my wife, Marie, you were one guy law department CARLETON D. BEH— when he went on football trips he asked me still has box D-14 at Gate 14—stop by and to collect the nickels, and I was proud. I I would like to see. say hello. appreciate your card, and may the wind be Second O. G.: G'wan, get out; is that Have not heard about anyone being on at your back." John says he has a grandson the truth? I said the same "sick call" and that's good. Can report after in Dillon Hall and two granddaughters at conversation that the following are OK: St Mary's. John is still active in the today to Ruth. First O. G.: Well, I gotta scram to FRANK X. RYDZEWSKI, LAMBERT Q. insurance business. His address is Circle SENG and JOHN J. VOELKERS. Talked Tower, Indianapolis, Ind. 46204. lunch. Remember me to with JOHN A. LEMMER and am pleased Our old friend ALVIN H. BERGER all the bimch. to report that John and Phyllis are en­ Ph.B. 'IS acknowledged a note from me Second O. G.: You bet I will and say joying good health. Also that he heard regarding the death of MARCH FORTH Hello to anyone we used from "WHITEY" NEIL J. WHALEN. "PREP" WELLS and said "as you say, they to know. That's aU. are cutting us oldsters down pretty fast" First—a minute Now whoinel could that He asked "do you ever hear from DOLLY George B. Waage GRAY or where he is or what happened to later: guy be? He acted like he sure knew me. 3305 Wrightwood Ave. him?" If anyone has the information, please Chicago, 111. 60647 send it to me. Second—a minute Well, he knew me but later: I'da swore I never saw "HEINIE" says he didn't get to the the guy before. reunion—has glaucoma and can't see too I* SYMPATHY EXTENDED well at night In the daytime, his sight is —^Paul Fogarty Our alumni secretary has expressed condo­ about three-quarters of normal eyesight We deeply regret to report the passing lence to Mrs. PAUL J. HOGAN, Glendive, "My wife, Alice, and I spent the winter in of Lucile, the dearly beloved wife of Mont, having recently learned of Paul's Eustis, Fla.—^rather a cool winter, but that CHARLES REAGAN of New York City, death in 1968. I find in the Corby Hall is right up my alley, being a 210-pounder." during May. Kindly remember her in your register that Paul was listed as living there I sincerely hope the attendance of the 1915 prayers and may her soul rest in peace. The in 1917. I might assume that he left with class will be something of a record in 1970. book entitled The Modern Notre Dame many of our class for war activities and did Formation by our classmate, CHARLES not return to finish at ND after the war. Our good friend JAMES F. O'BRIEN '13 W. BACHMAN, has been warmly re­ Onr Fr. Pat Haggerty kept Corby Hallers sent a clipping carrying a story about the ceived by sportswriters and book critics on such a friendly basis, thou^ there were life and death of ANTON R. HEBEN- all over the country. It contains an interest­ several room vacancies, that many should STREIT '11, who resided at 200 Laguna ing exchange of correspondence between recall PauL Blvd., Albuquerque, N.M. He died June 28, Bach and Rock. If your book dealer does PATRICK DIXON '67, a monogram after two years of continuing illness, having not have a copy, he will be glad to order man, a lieutenant with three awards for attained the age of 80. one for you, or you can remit SS.2S directly valor, involved in an airborne helicopter Jim O'Brien recalled that "Heb" Heben- to Charlie at 11 Sunset Lane, Pompano operation, was killed in Vietnam May 28. streit and ELMO FUNK '11, whose death Beach, Fla. 33062. Dave Condon told one Quoting his captain and company com­ was reported a year ago, were roommates in million Chicago Tribune readers, "Don't mander, "Pat was the best rffle platoon old St Joe Hall. "I worked out West with miss it if you Uke football." leader I ever saw and in a crowd he was them both after I finished in 1913," Jim the one individual who would stand out and says, "and kept in close touch with both ever Dan E. Hilgartner be recognized by all. His loss was a loss to since. I used to call Heb 'Mr. Albuquerque.' P.O. Box 75 the entire worid." He came there at W.W.I-time as city Harbert Mich. 49115 As lieutenant governor of Illinois and engineer—Plater went into contracting and commander of the first battalion 129th had various other interests. He owned and 'IS AND YEASS ROLL ON Infantry during his National Guard career, operated a radio and TV station there and Birthday greetings to 50-Year Club: Sept 29, SHERWOOD DIXON has given exceptional also in Santa Fe. He was always active in EDWARD F. RIELY LL.B. '17, Minonk, service to the public and received great many civic activities. Heb died in his lU. 61760; Oct 5, LOUIS J. FINSKE LL.B. honors—well-deserved. Sherwood asks adopted home town, the city he helped to '19, Florida State Theatres, Jacksonville, that letteis of sympathy from us be withheld build. It reflects the man's capacity to Fla.; PETER J. RONCHETTI '18, 1242 as so many have been received that more envision both opportunity and future. He Cambridge Dr., Corpus Christi, Tex. 78404; just set them oS again. was one of a rare breed." He is survived by Oct 7, THOMAS H. KING Ph.B. '18. Next June, our SOtb anniversary will be

1< here before we realize it You should have concept from activity to retirement archivist and a professor of histoiy, was the complete list of our class from the FRANK SABINE moved from Saginaw to fotuid dead at 10 ajn. July 7 in Us Alumni Office by August as promised. 211 Wisconsin St, Excelsior Springs, Mo. office in the Memorial libiaiy. He.was Start now to prepare for the reunion — 64024; and LEWIS J. FRICKE from one appointed director of the Unimsity contact and persuade the more he»tant residence to another in South Beivd—^new Archives in 1929, and it became an ones to come. address is 118 E. Calvert 46613. important source of documentation in the Don't wait to move to get your name in area of eariy Cathidic Chnreh UsUny James H. Ryan class notes. If you sneeze hard and blow out in the U.S. Fr. Tom was the antbor 2470 East Ave., Apt. 314 your upper plate, let us know about it How and editor of sevenl books on this subject Rochester, N.Y. 14610 many are still able to have "only one His volume, 77ie Gnat Crisis in American cavity, daddy"? How many can still use a Catholic History, 1885-1900, won the •22 FR. FISCHER HONORED comb to spruce up the roof? Is anyone John Gilmaiy ^lay prize for history upon We have a report from EDWARD J. willing to admit wearing a wig? Well publicatk>n in 1957. He had just fimshed GOTTRY of New York City that he publish it; we dare you. working on page ptoOb of a forthcoming attended the grand occasion at North More sedately, we report that THOMAS general history of the Cfaurdi in die U.S. Dartmouth, Mass., in mid-June, when our EDWARD COOKE was recently elected You fellows who arc in your "retiied classmate. Rev. GEORGE B. FISCHER president of the Chicago Building Congress. stage" or "on the job," take time to send CSC celebrated his 40th anniversary of FRANK J. O'BOYLE, 2000 Malvern Ave., me news of yourselves. ordination and received a wonderful tribute Dayton, Ohio 45406, has enjoyed retirement from friends among the religious and laity from Ohio Bell Telephone since 1962. He is John P. Huriey for his splendid missionary work. With the planning to visit the campus in the fall. 2085 Brookdale Rd. exception of the first five years after ordina­ Maybe some others might make it a date Toledo, Ohio 43606 tion, when he was doing parish work in and meet Frank there. He says, quite South Bend, his whole priestly efforts "frankly," that he hasn't attained great 17 ANOTHER ND FIRST have been with the Holy Cross Mission honors, but he has had a very pleasant life, A few months ago I passed on some news Band, Eastern Province. Fr. George's a wonderful wife and a son without strife. of EVERETT C. BROWN, whose address territory extends from Nova Scotia to the You picked the best route for living, Frank. is presently Rambla Gen. Franco, 107, Virginia Capes. He has frequent assign­ MATT ROTHERT informs us his family is Santa Cruz, Tenetife, Islas Canarias, ments at Saint Patrick's Cathedral in New grown, his oldest son is "helping" (quote Spain. The Alumni Office has now re-, York. The good priest is a great lover of marks are the editor's) in his business and ceived further word from him. He has a music—vocal and instrumental. He, as a Matt is beginning to retire. I.et go of the suspicion that he was the first hombre student at ND, was a member of the Glee reins. Matt your son is probably anxious to of ND alumni to visit aboard the Queen Club and the Glee Club quartet Of course, initiate some modem ideas. Matt trades old Elizabeth the Second. He says, "This we are only dreaming, but who of 12 would U.S. paper money and other numismatic gracious lady made Santa Cruz, Tenetife, not like to see Fr. George at the podium items . . . any classmates interested? a port of call on her sh^tedown cruise." directing the great Paulist Choir of happy Wish the Honorable JOHN KILKENNY Everett also feels that black histoiy, memory, and don't think for one moment hadn't switched classes from "24 to "25. He although an inflammable subject should he would not make a go of it is always good for a news item. Perhaps you not be curtailed. His letter goes on, "I read of his appointment by President Nixon Our genial class president RALPH have found on one of my Afirican safaris to judge of Federal District Court of some on-rich Arabs, descendants of the CORYN, and Mrs. Coryn, who were visiting Appeals. Originally from Pendleton, Ore., their married daughter and family in To­ original Arabs who deprived the first John will retain his address in Portland, American slaves of their birthri^t by ronto in late May and early June, stopped Ore., even though bis official judicial head­ off in South Bend on the homeward capturing them and sdling them to the quarters will be the West Coast District— Southern {banters. So I maintain that journey and had dinner with FRANK San Francisco. John would have made it to BLOEMER of Florida and Louisville. Also, the indemnity for loss of birthii^t should the Supreme Court by now if he had first come from this source of descendants, they had a surprise meeting with EDMUND stayed with us '24ers. "RED" SHEA "23 at the same place. rather than to aruioy the present-day Wondering about some of the '24ers we churches et al. Take it or leave it" The DAN YOUNGs of Dtexel HUI, Pa., haven't heard from, we picked out a few ARNOLD B. PETERSCHMIDT sends were visiting Cape Cod and Nantucket names at random. What's new? . . . word that after being associated with Island, Mass., in late June. HUGH BLUNT, PAT BUELL, OWEN the U. of Portland for 42 years as a facidty There is an up-to-date permanent address DESMOND, CLARENCE KERWIN, member and dean of the college of busi­ for HEARTLEY W. "HUNK" ANDERSON HUGH MAGEVNEY, CLIFF McINTOSH, ness and controller for 17 years, he has —917 N. Flagler Dr., West Pahn Beach, VERNON RICKARD, JACK RYAN. Last retired as of May 31, 1969. His letter Fla. 33401. In eariy fall, the Andersons will I heard of Hugh Magevney was when he continues, "Some years ago I became be visiting their son. Bill, who is with IBM was on the pitching staff of the New York involved in labor-management relations in Rochester, Minn. Giants soon after graduation. Vernon work and for more than 10 years have been Rickard was flirting with Hollywood talent on the federal mediation and conciliation G. "Kid" Ashe scouts back in the late 20's. service panel of labor aibitratois. Since 175 Landing Rd., N. 1961 I have been on the Oregon Labor- Rochester, N.Y. 14625 James P. Durcan Management Relations Board and for five 5400 S.W. Scholls Ferry Rd. years have been its chairman. The •24 FINDS NO TAKERS, SO . . . Portland, Ore. 97225 appointment was made originally by the There were no takers for the offer to turn then Governor (now Seiutor) Hatfield over this secretarial job, so here we go for •25 BESIDES THE MOON LANDING and reappointment by Governor Tom another round. It is difficult to call these Great to give you a bit of news that should McCall. I expect to continue service in this notes news items because we are compiling make you '25ers "glad" instead of "sad." field. Mrs. Peterschmidt (Josephine them in July for the September issue. Here is the glad news (besides landing Dundon) and 1 have four childien and Here are some changes of address. Class on the moon this Sunday afternoon— 13 grandchndreiL" Arnold's address is 5005 of '24 is still on the move, perhaps a move June 20, '69). JOHN F. KILKENNY has N. Willamette Blvd., Portland, Ore. from activity to inactivity in many cases. If recently been appointed by President JIM COLLINS of Qevdand sent word a you are close enough, you might invite Nixon as a judge on the Ninth Circuit of few weeks ago that TOM BYRNE is in yourself to their housewarmings. RICHARD Appeals in San Francisco. He has served Highlandview Hospital in that dty. DEININGER from Decatur, Ind., to Rt 1, as U.S. District Court judge in Portland, Jim reports that Tom's principle trouble Rome City, Ind. 46784; WILLIAM J. Ore., since 1959. Senate confirmation is arthritis and he had just had an operation CONNERS from Springfield to 813 Ridge is expected. on his hip because of it Tom undoubtedly Ave., Evanston, III. 60202; WILLIAM J. Word from JIM COONEY gives us some woidd like to hear from his classmates. CROOK from Pipestone to Rt Ottertail, sad news. Dr. C. JOSEPH FOLEY died Minn. 56571—sounds like a dog-sled May 2, and his widow has been advised Clarence J. Ruddy delivery route, but the zip code shows bow that both the alumni Mass as well as our 111 W. Downer Place far civilization can reach. PAUL Mc- class Mass will be said for Dr. Joe. Aurora, HL 60504 GARRY's new address in Green Valley, Joe is the father of C. JOSEPH FOLEY Aiiz., is 323 Las Hamacas, 85614. From JR. '65. •2S MISSING KR90N FOUND Ottertail to Las Hamacas conjures up the Rev. THOMAS T. McAVOY CSC, ND GEORGE CRONGEYER was host at a 17 luncheon at the Metropolitan Insurance Co. Helen Wagner wrote advising how much anyway. My cousin, JOHN McGOORTY, in New York City to BERNIE GARBER, she appreciated receiving many fine letteis will be back for his 45th, and another JOHN ANTUS, AL MAHAR and your from WAG's '28 classmates. I also bad cousin, JOHN BUTLER, celebrated his 40th class secretary in June. Al Mahar, who many letters with comments such as "Wag two years ago. This will be my first reunion, has been missing on our class roster for had a fine mixture of humor and serious­ so it's about time 1 retunt I hope to see years, brought us up to date on his ness" from BOB NICKELS in Califoniia, high school classmates CLARENCE JANS, interesting adventures throughout the world. and "I always liked that warm personality JOHN DORGAN, RAY DRYMALSKI Al had just returned from visiting ART of his" from DAVE SMITH in Florida. and grade school classmates IRV COR­ HOLTON in Washington, D.C. John Higgins '21 sent me a clipping CORAN and KARL MARTERSTECK." VINCE CARNEY visited ED FINN in regarding a testimonial in honor of Judge WALTER A. DONNELLY wired as Salida, Colo. I was sorry to hear that THOMAS C. MURPHY, who retired follows on June 7: "Larry, jdease extend Ed's wife died in March. I also regretted after serving as probate judge for 35 years best wishes to alL I regret an extended hearing of the death of General J. F. in Detroit Tom was from South Bend trial makes it impossible to attend." McManmon, a brother of our classmate when he was with our class at ND and ROBERT ALT wired: "My sincere greet­ JOHN McMANMON. TOM LAVELLE's served as treasurer of our sophomore ings and good wishes to all my former son. Rev. John celebrated his first class. Congratulations, Tom, on your classmates and fine friends attending our Mass May 25 in Lafayette ahd received his splendid record of service. I hope you will 40th year reunioit I fully expected to be Master of Divinity degree from St. Meinrad be with us for our 4Sth reunion. with you on this happy occasion but an School of Theology. He is assistant We had a very enjoyable visit with Judge unforeseen circumstance prevented my com­ pastor at St. Thomas Aquinas Church at GEORGE BEAMER in Munster, Ind., ing. 1 regret it particularly as this is Purdue U. Other classmates with sons where we found the judge and his wife my first absence from a five-year event God who are priests include ED McCLARNON, working on their lawn. We spent consid­ bless you all and I do hope that we may JOE FETHG and JOHN CARLIN. Are erable time reminiscing about the late meet again five years hence." there others to be added to this list? Willard Wagner. This news from JACK KEARNS: "1 JOE BREIG advised us that TOM (Bell Plan to attend the '28 class party at want especially to see JIM KENNEDY Telephone) BYRNE had a successful hip JOE DORAN's home near Lafayette after and JOHN COLANGELO; however, my socket operation. BILL MURPHY sent the Purdue game on Sept 27 and our daughter is finishing Marquette May 25 and me a clipping about PHIL PITON, 15th annual Class of '28 party after the my sister's son, WILLIAM McCULLY, is president of the minor leagues, serving on Southern California game on Oct 18 on the finishing ND Uiis year. We plan to make the arbitration board which made the award campus. Advise ED QUINN, 426 N. that commencement and I'm not sure that to the Pacific Coast League for loss of its Sunnyside, South Bend, Ind. 46617, that I can make three weeks in a row. (But Seattle and San Diego franchises. Rev. you will attend. he did.) My older son, JOHN '58, is teach­ ANDY MULREANY CSC visited Bill ing phUosophy at the State U. of New Murphy on his way east in July. Louis F. Buckley York at Buffalo, and my younger one, JIM ALLAN provided another get- 6415 N. Sheridan Rd., Apt 1007 JIM '66, is a first lieutenant in the Army in together of '28 men at a party introducing Chicago, 111. 60626 Germany. Ruth and I hope to visit him in his future daughter-in-law. Classmates July." BUI Murphy, ED McKEOWN, BILL 19 A LOOK AT THE RECORD There is just no easy way to lead into DWYER, HOWARD PHALIN, JOE Let's look at the record. Let me share some those inevitable notices of death. ROBERT HILGER and your class secretary attended. notes that I have from '29eTs who obvi­ K. POLLEY, whose widow resides at I was pleased to see Ed McKeown looking ously were looking toward the campus 2536 W. 102nd Place, Chicago, died last very well again after two bouts with last June 6. From ILLY BYRNE, retired Dec. 30. July 15, 1969, DANIEL 1. surgery. It was also great to hear that educator, San Francisco Board of Educa­ MCCAIN, retired captain C.P.D., who had Marion Hilger, the wife of Joe Hilger, tion: "I have been retired since February, lived at 4300 Marine Dr., Chicago, was has been appointed by the Governor of 1962, because of a heart condition and laid to rest We thank STEVE McPHART- Indiana to the chairmanship of the Indiana emphysema. I'm living on 11th green, LIN for forwarding the information on Welfare Board. FRANK CREADON Aptos Beach Golf Club and trying to keep Capt McCain. Their classmates will took my suggestion in the May ALUMNUS going in spite of two attacks of the fiu. remember them in their prayers and wish and has been in contact with Rev. I'm on the bench but hope to make the me to extend our condolences to those George Dum CSC concerning their mutual long one in June." BOB VOGELWEDE: who survive. interest—music. "Bring back my suit that was missing Remember to make plans to see your BOTTS CROWLEY is keeping busy since when I got out of pest house in 1927. classmates in the Engineering Building retirement doing work for MacGregor, Remember? Say heUo to HUGH McMAN- immediately after the Oct 18 football game Hanna Bat Co., the Cincinnati Reds, etc. IGAL who was so nice to me in 1959. with Southern California. Hie songs are He is visiting my favorite foreign country, I wish you all luck and many years. DAVE ended but the memories linger on. We Sweden, this summer. Our class vice- HICKEY and his wife stopped by recently." repeat our thanks to FRANCIS MEYER president for the West, CHRISTIE who did so much to give us a permanent FLANNIGAN, heard from Fr. Andy From BILL DICK in Denver via record of a memorable weekend. Mulreany who mentioned that GEORGE STEVE McPARTLlN: "Dear Steve, I'd Your secretary has oidy one regret. There LEPPIG's son was graduated from surely like to accept your invitation for were many whom he recalls seeing June S, West Point this year. the June reunion but won't be able to make 6 and 7, but few whom he really visited BERNIE BIRD will attend our '28 party it I haven't heard from CONWAY or with at leisure, and fewer still whom he has after the U.S.C. game with his two sons, HICKEY. My wife and I have heard so news about for the next column. Please, one of whom is completing his residency much about the Northwest — Vancouver, whether you were here or not, send in ophthalmology at Passavant Hospital B.C. — that we plan to take a look. Thanks us news. We need it! after serving in the Medical Corps. The again, I'm sorry that I can't join you for Birds will celebrate the 35th anniversary of a few. Have a tall, cold one for yours truly. Lawrence F. Stauder their wedding in the Log Chapel with I hope that you are feeling much better." Electrical Engineering Dept Howie and Pete Phalin as the other two We have more news directly from Steve, Engineering Bldg. principals. Bill Murphy reports that who was here in June: "Pardon my delay Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Kitty Rice, widow of Chet, will again be in returning my memo of 'early' intent It with us at the "28 party after the was occasioned by an operation in January •SI INCLUDE SOME NEWS U.S.C. game. RUBS SMITH will also on one of my vocal cords. While this You have all received a letter from JOHN be there. was for removal of a nonmalignant polyp F. SAUNDERS, class agent, requesting Jersey journalist GENE FARRELL had a (Deo Gratias!), the resultant annoyance support of the 27th Annual Alumni Drive. good session with Rev. JIM McSHANE of a squeaky voice has been a bit fnistratiiig I hope that when making your return you SJ, who was in the East gathering necessary (particularly to a guy who makes a living will also remember to include some class supplies and equipment for his Central as a salesman). Tiny Hm does all night, news as requested, and this will be for­ American mission. Gene inquired as to but I haven't enou^ hair. I'd like to see warded to me for the 1931 column. whether our class might be interested JOHN ROULET. We were tentmates RAY COLLINS visited with LEO in hdjnng Fr. Jim with movie equipment at Judge Wooten's home the first half of KLETZLEY in Houston during the Serra since he does a lot of his preaching our freshman year, until I stayed out too Intematioiial Convention in June. through films. Drop Gene a line if you late one night and Pepper moved me WILBERT L. TERRE is a chemist with are interested in this proposal. to Howard Hall, where I wanted to go Stanffer Chemical Co., Chicago Heights, 111.

18 Old f at^s • • • nen^ plaees "And how is Zygmund Kucharczuk of the Continuing Education Center these days?" is a question often worked for him as secretary and asked by visiting alumni. Only it timekeeper, and that another student doesn't come out in exactly those worker, named Edmund Joyce, started words — more likely, it's: "Where in the bake shop — he, too, moved the hell is Ziggy?" Ziggy, major- up, to executive vice-president. Says domo of the South Dining Hall since Ziggy happily: "I knew those boys the memory of man runs not to the were going to make it." contrary and maitre d' to a whole Rev. ROBERT LOCHNER CSC firmament of notables, from Pope '37 wore a variety of hats while Pius XII (then Cardinal) to every assigned to ND from 1947 to 1962 coach from Rockne on, recipient of and has had a variety of experieiKes the barbs and blandishments of many since then. On campus he was, generations of students, especially among other things, teacher of the waiters and busboys, is alive and theology, hall prefect and rector, well, thank you. He lives in busy foreign student advisor, director of retirement (since 1965) in South the Marriage Institute, director of Bend. When he isn't visiting his student aid, assistant University children and their families in New chaplain and chaplain to the Hawaiian Ziggy in his old domain. York, Florida, or Tacoma, Wash., he Club. From 1962 to 1965 he was and assistant University chaplain — is a part-time salesman of aluminum stationed at the U. of Portland in for openers. doors and awnings ("the best," he Oregon, where he was director of There are several priests of an says). As a hobby or at the per­ scholarships and of foreign students earlier era at ND who now live in suading of his neighbors and/or and Peace Corps liaison officer. One retirement at Holy Cross House, the customers, he'll install them, and of the most interesting experiences CSC infirmary on campus. Rev. when friends want to do a redesigning of his life, he reports, was a summer PETER FORRESTAL '11. long-time or decorating job on their homes, spent at the U. of Hawaii's Institute teacher of ^lanish and Spanish they often call on Ziggy for help in on Asian Studies. While there, he literature, and rector of Sorin Hall, the kitchen and dining room areas, paid a memorable visit to Rev. still continues his spiritual ministry natch. And he loves to reminisce Damien's leper colony at Molokai, to the Mexican families, both mi^ant about ND: When he arrived from where he took a series of slide and permanent, in the South Bend New York in 1929, he signed on as pictures which have served him well area. Rev. THOMAS LAHEY '11 coffee chef in the dining hall, but in his most recent assignment: taught English, advertising and his knowledge of the languages director and retreat master at the journalism at both ND and St Mary's (Polish, German, Slavic) of other Holy Cross Fathers' retreat house in and was associate editor and staff employes made him a useful mediator Pineville, La. Fr. Lochner also spent writer on the Ave Maria magazine. and he was soon on the way up — to a year as chaplain at St. Edward's His well-known column, "Bits Out of assistant head dishwasher and then High School, Cleveland, and even Life," was always good for a surprise, headwaiter, steward and service managed to get back to the campus an argument or a letter to the editor. manager. For the last 10 years of his for a while to do a spot job on the career, following the departure of CSC archives. Recently, word has Tommy Owens, he held all three jobs. been received of his reassignment to Rev. John Wilson CSC He recalls that Dean Thomas Bergin ND, where he will be a hall prefect Box D Notre Dame, Ind. 46556

His wife, Magdalene Ann, died suddenly there. We have a room adjoining the game this year. We always go up on in December after a short illness. The Monogram Lounge and will look forward Thursday, play golf Friday and go to Alumni Office also advises that two of our to seeing many of you there. An an­ the game Saturday. This year TED classmates, ALEXANDER J. ABROHAM, nouncement will also be made at the game. HALPIN promised me he would meet me South Bend, and FRANCIS W. for the long weekend. Ted calk me BROWN, Denver, Colo., were called to James T. Doyle occasionally. It is usually late at night and their eternal rewards in the past few 1567 Ridge Ave. after be has had a seven-course dinner months. Your prayers are requested for Evanston, 111. 60201 (to him that's two cups of soup and five the repose of their souls. double martinis). Best reguds, Jdbn I received a warm note from EDWARD '32 FROM LETTERS AND CARDS Keaney." T. RILEY, Burlington, Iowa, enclosing I had a nice letter from Dr. JOHN M. Well, John, I hope I get to see you in a check for the Moon Mullins Memorial KEANEY JR. of Louisville as foUows: New York. Gene has two restaurants, Trust Fund, which I am forwarding to the "Dear Flo: Haven't seen you for many a both called Conndly's Restaurant The bank handling this fund. No news on year and probably this is the firsttim e nuun one b at 110 E. 23rd St, in local classmates since the last ALUMNUS. I've written you since '32. I have very Manhattan; the other at 299 3nl Ave. I have been in touch with SPIKE SUL­ little news for you. In fact, the main CaU Gene at 212-777-9783. LIVAN, TOM MONAHAN and MATT reason I'm writing is to ask you for infor­ And a post card from MIKE "KELLY' GARRIGAN regarding our fall reunion fol­ mation. My son, John, is getting married POWERS and fais lovdy wife. Shorty, lowing the Michigan State game on Sept 20, in New York, and of course from the campu»—on a country-wide tour campus Oct. 4, 1969. We have reserved we will all be there for that. As many before settling in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. space in the new Athletic and Convocation times as I have t>een to New York, I have Mike has retired. God bless them. Center for this affair. This building is very never yet been to GENE CONNELLY'S JOHN W. HAMILTON, now in Norco, close to the alumni section of the stadium restaurant Could you tell me where it is La., sends a card asking for news of and will give a firsthand inspection of this or the name? I would like to visit it and DONKILUAN. I think KiDiatt is stiU fine building to those who have not yet had see Gene in September. BOlie (my wife) in West Chester, Pa. an opportunity to attend any functions and I are going to the Michigan State Good news from JOHN JOSEPH 19 JAMESON STAUNTON (that's what the program says) who has just received the honorary degree of Doctor of Engineering from Midwest College of En^eering in Lombard, III. John also writes, "This is a year of anniversaries — 30th for both my maniage and service with my company. I am also four times a grandfather." Congrats Thank you, John. WALTER BLANCHARD has left St. HOWARD C. CUSACK '36 has been Petersburg, Fla., for 11885 Walker, named manager of the office admin­ Seminole, Fla. 33S40. MANSEL MILLER, istration department at the Travelers formerly of Birmingham, Ala., is now at 3630 Hickory Lane, Lafayette, Ind. 47905. Insurance Co.'s Newark, NJ., office. And BADEN POWELL has left San He joined the company in 1941 at Diego, Calif., and is now at Box 235, Brooklyn, N.Y., and in 1954 was Maishalltown, Iowa 501S8. named manager of the Yonkers, N.Y., that's all for now. See you at the Army game. office. He resides with his wife and four children in New York City. Florence J. McCarthy 6 River Rd. PHILIP J. MALONEY '39 has been Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 appointed director of a new National ^3 SEE YOU IN N.Y.C. Housing Center Commission by the Our Army game eve reunion will be at National Assn. of Home Builders. the Vanderbat Suite, Biltmore Hotel, Maloney formerly was deputy assistant 43rd and Madison Ave., New York City, secretary of housing and urban 6 p.m. to 10 p.m., Oct. 10, prior to the N.Y. club's rally. development for Mortage Credit and CEIARLES A. QUINN, chairman of the also deputy commissioner of the reunion, asks that you write him at: Federal Housing Administration. 9 Jochum Ave., Larchmont, N.Y. 10538. Charlie needs to know how many classmates will attend. His home phone is: MARTIN L. INGWERSEN '41, vice- 914-TE4-3557. Mrs. Quinn has graciously president of operations at Lockheed agreed to take messages and to furnish Shipbuilding and Construction Co., information. has been named executive vice- On the reunion committee are SAM HYDE, GEORGE ROHRS and JACK president of the company. He lives SOISSON. Out-of-town members include with his wife and their three children LARRY SEXTON and JACK O'SHAUGH- on Mercer Island, Wash. NESSY. Sam Hyde tells me that he and BILL HIGGINS have talked to a few of the fellows recently about the reunion ROBERT E. FELTES '49, company —including BOB GELHAUS, BOB controller of Container Corp. of DONOVAN and JIM GEREND. So far, America, was elected a vice-president they all think it is a good idea. of the company. He joined the The reuiuon will be informal and you company in 1954 as internal auditor may arrange for your drinks. ED STEPHAN. Rev. CHICK SHEEDY, in the corporate headquarters in ED KRAUSE and BOB CAHILL have Chicago. He has since served as plant been invited to make brief remarks. Class controller in the Fernandina Beach, president. Judge MAURIE LEE, will be Fla., and Los Angeles, Calif., shipping presented with Elks Centennial Jim Beam during the festivities. Please inform container facilities. He now resides Chairman Charlie Quinn of your intention in Glencoe, 111., with his wife and to attend! three children. Sam Hyde confirmed that another old Brownsonite, Dr. JOE EGAN, is dead. Sam and Joe were from LaCrosse, Wis. ED PAUL A. HESSLING '52 has been TROY has escaped the Wisconsin cold by named assistant treasurer of the First setting up a business in suimy California. Bank and Trust Co. in South Bend, JOE DAVEY, the friendly Democrat, is proud of the ND image through all the Ind. In the marketing services student tmrest Joe's oldest son, JOHN '61, division the last one and a half years, is asastant prosecuting attorney for he will direct the computer services Oakland County, Mich. section and master charge card GEORGE J. ROHRS mentions that his son, Chris, just finished his sophomore program. year at ND. George saw JACK HOYT at the Cardinal Cooke reception. PATRICK PAUL J. ROHMAN JR. '54 has been P. BURNS was presented a certificate named to the newly created position of appreciation for his 20 years of service of Eastern financial sales manager for on the Natchez, Miss., draft board. Pat and RED BARRETT taught me to speak the Ford Motor Credit Co. in Dear- with a Southern accent Red has deserted bom, Mich. He will supervise that the Deep South for Paris, Tex. office, as well as the newly formed KARL VOGELHEIM spent Easter in Pittsburgh office. Mexico whae he visited LUCIO MUNIAN luid his lovely wife, Clementina. Ask Liicio to send his address as he is not on the dass mailing list! Kari caUed FRAN WERNER &Dm the airport in Green Bay

20 but couldn't reach him. ED ROXAS, With AC Spark Plug division of General Tom manied Joan Carney SMC '41 le- «4io bounces between Spain and the Motors Corp. P. J. "PAT' CARROLL cently in Sflver City, NJM., lAete he is a Philippines, sent the Vogelheims a card and lives in Nashville, Tenn., and is with a lawyer and senior vice-pie^dent and note at Christmas. Concluding, Kari says division of the Murray, Ohio, Manufac­ counsel for.the Grant Cbonly Bank. He hell be at the Michigan State-ND game turing Co. His son graduated from West also counsds five doldren, C^ia at St and will stay at the Holiday Inn in Elkhart Point in 1961. Has four grandchildren. Mary's. Tom Jr. at ND. pins Muffet, Joe Our classmate, PAUL M. CALLACHAN, Pat hears from BILL BECKLEY once in and Jimmy. And, no doubt, (he (dd Giimd died June 28, 1969. He was the father a while. Knight is doing a gnnd job stiD. of GREGORY '66 and MICHAEL '69. JOSEPH A. CAULFIELD is with Camp­ Lt CoL G. G. Sdiaefer (USAF) kept the A Mass has been celebrated at the request bell Soups in Kansas City. Joe had a cbaiuels of comminiifation opeii writing of our class in his remembrance by Rev. chat with SID STEINBERG on his way from Spain vdMte he is seeUng a doctorate JIM DONNELLY. Condolences may be back to Phoenix. Reports DON DWYER is in lingi^stics at U. of Sevffle since retiring sent to Mrs. Callagfaan at 445 West Main in refrigeration business in New York. from the Air Force last Augost Four St, BeUevue, Ohio 44811. JOE CLARK sent a note from a cloistered of his six children are in Spanish sdKXds JIM McGILL tells me that he sees monastery for nuns in Durham, N.C. "and really entienden eqanoL" If any MAURY DeWALD and JACK O'CON­ EMMETT CONKLING retired from the classmates or alumni ate passing by, NOR in Fort Wayne. CHARLIE QUINN Air Force as a colonel. Now with Boeing Gerry says "onr hospiudity is specifically attended his son's graduation in the new Co. Living at 2500 81st SE—Apt 119, extended." Athletic and Convocation Center and Mercer Island, Wash. 98040. He is an Take him up on it. lads. Two who spoke to Ed Stephan and Fr. Chick Sheedy. engineering supervisor. One daughter at­ hosted my wife, Helene, and me on our re­ ED COUGH was also there to watch tending Barry College in Miami, Fla. cent CFM study tour around the world have his son, PAUL, graduate. Ed saw classmate GEORGE CUMMINGS is with Legallet already been to our home. A Kev. Sasaki, BILL MITSCH and the "old master," Wool Co., Inc.—^Legallet Tanning Co., the father of Boys' Town in Jqan, FRANK LEAHY, who had sons in the P.O. Box 24068, San Francisco, 94124. Has stopped in for a night on his way to Brazil, graduating class. Ed will attend the ND- two children and three grandchildren. and former Philippine congressman Toning So. Cal game this fall and will look BOB DEMER (Robert J.)—a claims de Pio and wife, of Cebu City, spent for the '33 gang. attorney for Nationwide Mutual Insurance three days with us in July. Dr. ED SIEGFRIED, now in Mount Co. at regional office in Harrisburg, Pa. No classmates have shown up, but Oemens, Mich., sends the sad news that ROBERT T. FITZSIMON, manager of they've been on the mne. WILLIAM J. JOHN "PETE" HESS died about two years production engineering, hospital products FISH, the old bowling diafflpion and ago after a series of heart attacks. Ed division of Abbott Laboratories at North quoter of Chesterton, moved from Ohio to and Pete came from Chillicothe, Ohio, and, Chicago. One son an ND graduate of 1960. 1170 W. Wellington Dr.. Deltona. Fla. 40 years ago, lived with me in Brownson ED DULIN—back in San Antonio, FRANCIS J. MEYER left 80 TokcM Rd.. Hall. Jack Soisson will be in touch Tex., with Southwestern Bell Telephone Co., Glen Mills. Pa. (and no questions asked), with JOE BEAN about our Army game reports FitzSimon. HOWARD J. GIL­ for 1600 Ccdina Dr., Oendale, Calif. ROY reunion. BOB JOHNSTON, Harrisburg, LESPIE with Paterson Mack Distributors, KLECKA switched from Tempe to 8211 Pa., who plans to attend the Army game Inc.—P.O. Box 128, East Paterson, NJ. E. Garfield, Scottsdale, Aiiz: JOHN with his family, will be at our reunion 07407. Howard was president of the HURST edged over from Des Plauies, Oct 10. Central Jersey Club. D. BERNARD IlL, to 1139 Juniper Lan^ Mt Prospect, JACK HOiT, our former secretary, HENNESSY—son, DAVID, graduated this HL TOM ATKINSON left Endno, Calif., writes he is extremely busy with the affairs June. Could not come back for reunion. for 13439 Mootpark, Sherman Oaks, of the archdiocese of New York and, in His letter was really beautiful. Calif., and DAN MURPHY followed suit, addition, is counsel to and a director of HENRY SCHAFFER, Newton Square, leaving Endno for 32108 Beachview Lute, the Lawrence Hospital in Bronxville. Pa. — his son, Michael, graduates this year Westlake Village, CaKf. What's with We hope to see you at the reunion. Jack! from ND. JIM FORREST, 429 Williams Endno? JOHN A. PENOTE, our class agent St, Stoneham, Mass. 02180-4ad a stroke a If your football ticket applications are for deferred giving, recently sent to all of few years ago. Red is able to get down returned to you as mine have been, try you an informative letter about including to the shore. JOHN J. HOBAN resides in writing to me. 111 guarantee acceptance— ND in your estate plans. Please give Belleville, III. John has ofiSce in East of news, not ticket apps! If you're lucky the letter your attention and write to John St Louis, III. His son is a junior at to get to a game, caU me. I'm listed in for any additional information needed. U. of Santa Clara. Bell, if not in D A B. As they say in Rev. LLOYD TESKE is happy to be JOHN W. O'NEIL — St Louis — vice- Minnesota. "REMEMBER THE SWEDE!" back at the U. of Portland where he is president of Boatmen's National Bank of assistant dean of the College of Arts St Louis. Married 30 years in October. Bumie Bauer and Sciences. Three children—all college graduates. W. J. 1139 Western Ave. SHERIDAN JR—attorney at law^P.O. South Bend, Ind. 46625 Charles A. Conley Box 98, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone. Bill 100 East Tumbull Ave. has lived in the tropics since 1940. 3f HELLO. JDW Havertown, Pa. 19083 CHARLIE QUINN—attending grad "Hello, Jim. No, not a word from the many school for library science. Summer address: who so vocally promised to fin us iit •34 RECEIVES 35 LETTERS Mineola 16, L.L, N.Y. His daughter, Guess they haven't yet recovered from I do hope you enjoyed the report about the Kitty, is a grad of SMC, teaching now at the effects of the greatest lennian of the men who attended the reunion. Many St Louis U. Medical School. greatest class .. . yes, they're still the did not make an entry in JIM FAGAN's AUGUST VON BOECKLIN—president greatest Glad to hear the brochure will notebook; CHARLEY QUINN was one of of Lifetime Federal Savings and Loan soon be going out Incidentally, as I those. This report is limited to 7S0 words Assn., 1007 Pacific Ave., Tacoma, mentioned so briefly in die last issDe, well and I have 35 wonderful letters to report Wash. 98401. Son, DICK, finished ND in have a social hour over at O'Shan^nesy from. Sorry to say, I can only report 1964. JOSEPH L. WATTERS—dentist immediate^ after the Midiigan State game on the highlights from each letter. I will in Ironton, Ohio 45638. Son, CHRISTO­ Oct 4, so mark your calendar. It will be use them at a later date if possible. PHER, ND '61. Has a master's and doc­ announced again during the game. See JOHN J. BRUST is an architect in Mil­ torate in biology from Princeton and you then." waukee. His son is also an architect did two years of postdoctorate work at the He graduated at the top of his class and U. of Minnesota. Now professor of biology Joe Haiman also has a master's in buaness. ED at Middleburg College in Vermont 1804 Gicenwood Dr. BUTLER is still with Bell TdejAone Co. South Bend. Ind. 46614 of Peimsylvaiiia. Lives on his boat Ed Moran during summer months at Cape Island Moran Supply Co. '4t BOTE SnONGS EIEKNAL Marina, East Basin, Cape May, N J. 2501 N. Central Ave. Let us hope dut widi my relocation and JOHN F. CARMODY has his own law Chicago, III. 60639 getting settled in Soudi Bend all the mes­ practice in Moberly, Mo. Graduated sages the men of '40 have sent ate metety from Harvard Law School, John is a '3* TAKES SECOND MOONWAUC delayed and will readi me soon. diabetic and could not attend our reuiuon. Congratulations to THOMAS P. FOY, Althou^ maity

22 had with Jim, and passed along his also sent along a copy of a note informing it never ceases to amaze iw ham qnicUr greetings. us that A. J. Brockhoif, father of a handfiii of cards can «fi«Tr—T iolo Received word from BOB WARRICK on WILLIAM BROCKHOFF, died June, 1969. one coimnn. I iriU need h^ for Oe next still anotber move for bis famQy (three I'm certain that in each instance even issue—ydknr card or poipie or score prts, four boys). This time it's Charlotte, a quick prayer will mean much to these card. Use anything. Bot send me a note! N.C., and this makes the 10th major move fellow '49ets. for the Warricks. I like the name of the The 1949 ND football team has planned Leo L. Wesley street Here's the ofBcial new address: a reunionfo r the weekend of Oct 31, ISS Driftnood Lane 3531 Johnny Cake Lane, Charlotte, N.C. but the following men have failed to contact Rochester, N.Y. 14617 28211. Appreciated the card. Bob! Leon J. Hart concerning their plans A couple more notes. Bob Heck's to attend: WILLIAM C. BARRETT, PAUL '5» VLEASE-mX CNIT, SEND IN buddy, PAT WEISHAPL, has changed E. BURNS, JOSEPH A. CAPRARA, Throat the Altrnmi Senate we have been locations but remainsi n Colorado. He has RICHARD A. COTTER, ROBERT J. able to institnte a natkaid diiectoiy. moved from Littleton, Colo., to Evergreen, KAPISH, WILLIAM L. McKILLIP, So idease do not pot . His address is with the DuPont Seneca—^works as assistant I have never seen the mail so thin. 47 Avenue De I'Automne, Waterloo, plant manager. Some of you '52er5 are just too modest Belgium. His office is in Brussels. Bob's DON HELLINGHAUSEN is in Midland, to let us know what's going on, so come

24 north for some camping and fishing and Dr., Annandale, Va. In memory of Bill, a Munfoid ChanJber .A. and manager of the San for an Afirican safui George and bb wife Antonio office of Ernst & Ernst lliey adopted a giil last August, and with hide '55 THREE '55EItS DIE have lived in Texas for the last 10 she may become another AJmie Oakl^. Death reached out to claim three men of years. Two children, Mike and Molly, keep TOM KELLEGHAN. his wife^ Baibara '55 in recent months. Rather than ask them on their toes. Jim, president of Joyce, and their fire children live in why, I think we should gain strength the San Antonio club, hopes to see many West Chicago. Tom is engaged in the from the fortitude shown by TOM of you at the Tulane game in New Or­ private practice of law. From 1958 until DORWIN, PAT WAGNER, BILL leans this fall. Their address is 3215 1966, he was an instructiw at St Pro- BURNETT and their families. Woodcrest San Antonio. cophis college. At iwesent he is the Just four short days ago, I received a Don't forget the reunion after the deputy public defender for DoPage Coon^. call from ART DORWIN, one of the Southern California game on Oct 18. in. Active in the DuPage County Bar greatest ND men you will ever meet, telling It's in the Shamrock Room of the Morris Association in maiqr capacities, Tom is also me that Tom had been in special care Iim. Also, make plans now to attend our the editor of its Bar Bulletin. We all for two weeks fighting an infection that ISth reunion next June. remember Tom as the crusading editor had penetrated the colon, liver and of the Record newspaper in Sooth Bend pancreas. He said that he didn't think Paul Fullmer during our Law School years. WeD, he Tom would make it Since our two 1922 Larkdale Dr. hasn't lost the touch since gtaduatimi, families had been waterskiing just a month Glenview, HI. 60025 having authored five articles iriiidi have ago, the news was a real shock. Also, appeared In various bar joamab 'around the news comes a little harder when it's '55L A PROMINENT GRAD the country. Also, he is secretary to die your college roommate—a tough little BOB HEPLER has managed to gain committee on publications of the nirKn Irishman from Wisconsin who had strug­ prominence in two careers since graduation. State Bar Assn. as well as a member gled through freshman days in Zahm, He is a well-known Goshen, Ind., attorney of its editorial board. Congratulations, enjoyed the good life on the second floor and also a Big Ten football ofiBcial. One Tom, on your many credits as an author. of Cavanaugfa, joined the elite on the fourth of the original partners in the law firm of DAN DAILY has been a member of floor of Badin, and found his niche as a Hartzog, Barker and Hepler, Bob is a past the law firm of Hourigan, Kluger and senior and captain of the fencing team. president of the Goshen City Bar Spohter in Wilkes-Barre, Pa, since shortly I jumped in the car and drove to Assn. Currently he is serving as attorney after his graduation, specializing in trial Milwaukee to see him. Tom was still for the Elkhart County Dept of Public work consisting of general ne^igence and battling, but it was apparent this was one Welfare and the County Plan Commission. criminal cases. At the time of Dan's match that he would not win. And I Bob's ofliciating background began back letter, he was trying a murder case. Dan think he knew it I received the news in 1952 as a high school oflicial; in serves on the board of directors of the minutes ago—^just four days since my visit— 19SS, he graduated to collegiate circles, Legal Aid Sode^ of Luzerne County that he had died. I know his widow, being designated as an oflicial in the and is a board member of the Visiting Carol, will provide the leadership that Indiana Collegiate Conference; in 1957, he Nurses Assn. In 1964, he married sons Pat and Mike (and the baby on the became an official in the Mid-American Paula Heffeman of Kiiigston, Pa., and way) will need. But it won't be the same Conference. In 1961, he was named to the presently has two young children. He without "Old Humph." If you'd like to Big Ten official staff. Seemingly, always reports that ED MINARD makes an write Carol, her address is 2180 S. 87th, being assigned to big games, his team occasional visit to Wilkes-Bane. West AlUs, Wis. of officials worked the ND-Michigan State PAT WAGNER, who was one of our game in 1966, which was a 10-10 tie John P. Coyne leaders in journalism by virtue of his prior game and called by many the "game of 810 National a^ Bank Bldg. service and Vetville residence, died May the century." Cleveland, er the Oct. 4 class reunion after will the TV cameras and Jim Feeney records Chicago as his home town, the MSU game. DENNY TROESTER '58, the associate producer of the Feeney was actually-raised in Janes­ has agreed to call in JOHN BARANY American Broadcasting Company's ville, a coinmunity of 30,000. His and have it all set for us. An announce­ ment will be made at the game. college football telecasts. early interests in drama and music CHUCK. GRACE sends a nice note from The pace on the fields is pretty brought him to choose a communica­ Columbus, Ind., where he is cracking rugged and it's no less grinding for a tion arts major and, finally, the the whip for Cummins Engine Co. Chuck football man in a shirt and tie. television industry as a vocation. reports that JOHN REARDON has moved to Columbus where he heads marketing Feeney's job at the ABC studios is In high school, Feeney was long services for Hamilton Cosco Co. John to coordinate the network's coverage and lean, which might have qualified and wife, Ellen, have three children. and work with the various colleges to him as a hurdler on the track team It is noted that two other classmates are make the presentation as lively, or perhaps a flankerback on the with Cummins—JIM WILSON runs a distributorship in Hibbing, Minn., and interesting and smooth-running as football team. "I was long and lean covers the U.P. of Michigan and northern possible. "We go out and do surveys all right," he says, "and also easily Minnesota. JOHN DURBIN purchased at 14 or 15 locations each spring," broken in half." Although Feeney his own Cummins distributorship in the Feeney says of his assignment, doesn't get into hard groundwork Seattle area and together with his wife, "setting cameras at the various with the teams, his action on the side­ Mailene, and four children lives in Seattle. We wish to express our prayers and stadiums, working with the sports lines, in the press box and an)rwheFe deepest sympadiy to TOM DOYLE and his information and athletic directors and else a TV camera might be found family on the death of his son. Chuck, helping the engineering people." certainly ranks him as a top per­ in May. JOHN PETRUSKA has put out Because ND has been a regular former in the sports world. his dentist's shingle in Sturgis, Mich. W. K. THOMPSON is pfloting those stop on the ABC football series, He started with ABC in the sales friendly skies of United and Feeney's trips back to South Bend service department and then moved proudly announces that he and wife, Nancy, are more frequent than the average to the production area in studio have three children, two sons and one Irish graduate's. But even though daughter. services, where the primary respon­ Where is PAT SWEENEY these days? sibilities are the television game JIM PURCELL is principal of Van shows. In the fall of 1964, Feeney Antwerp Medical School, Niskayuna, N.Y., moved to the sports department, and and is the proud father of three sons. Jim received his M.S. in education in '62 he has been working in this capacity from Siena College and now is pushing for as an associate producer with varied a doctorate in educational administration responsibilities — primarily college at the State U. of N.Y, Albany. PAUL football — ever since. Among his JOHNS has been named sales engineer in Chicago for Babcock & Wilcox Co.'s duties are the production of the pre- power generation division. I wonder if game shows, the regular football this has anything to do with Cub Power. telecasts and individual installments The First National Bank of Chicago of the popular Wide World of Sports recently announced that JACK BRENNAN, series. vice^resident, is in charge of their mergers and acquisition division, where It is no wonder that football has Jack will be working with customers and become his favorite sport, and Feeney prospective customers in their merger sees the college game as a growing activities. Jack received his M.B.A. at force in sports. Yet he also believes Indiana U. in '60. Ill have to ask Jack if he has a wealthy, ambitious that a national play-off, similar to customer who would be interested in merg­ those in other collegiate sporting ing with a prospective not-so-wealthy events, would add a more significant customer like myself. dimension to the football program. We extend our condolences to BOB "I think a play-off is definitely HOLLAND on learning that his father died in March. Congratulations to CLYDE needed if college football is to retain BRENNAN, who recently was admitted as a its appeal in a highly competitive member of the Cf A. firm of Haskins market," Feeney commented. "I'd & Sells. D. H. Overmyer Co. of New like to see it not from a broadcasting York, which just recently transferred LEN DiGIACOMO to Chicago, has now taken standpoint but from a fan's point of him away from us to New York where view. I think it would be healthy for he is now vice-president, national sales the sport. Besides, what ND fan manager, heading a nationwide sales wouldn't want to see the team win a campaign. Go get them, Len. PAT SHEERIN reports that he spent a great national championship under those Kentuclgr Derby weekend with BOB ECK- circumstances?" LUND in Louisville. Bob is busy If such a play-off system is devised, designing new buildings, etc. you can bet Feeney will be around George W. Groble for the first series of games — 111 W. Washington St Jim Feeney in ABC telecast booth. complete with ND button and camera. III. 60602 26 '5S SECRETARY TIES KNOT treasurer of the Illinois High School Bank, CUcaao, and a macbtt of itt com- Once again we have a scant supply of news. Fencing Coaches Association, is director of meicial bank and tnot inrcstnieot Surely the explanation must be that the Illinois Junior Olympics and is on the committees. He has also joined Oe staff you are all so busy making news that you faculty at Notre Dame Hi^ Sdiool in of McKinsey ft 0>. Inc., intemational haven't time to report any. How about Niles, III. Fellow classmate ED ROHR- management convihams, as an ii««~-THf dropping us a card? BACH is highlighted in this issue. Ed's Cqit DICK SAW received die Air Votee Your secretary is pleased to announce office in Paris is 15, Rue de Marignan, medal for meiitorioiB senrioe as a scien­ that he was married Aug. 13 to the Paris 8, and he has an apartment that tist at Marietta. OUo. He and Ailene aie former Gertrud Brillinger of Cincinnati, overlooks Notre Dame Cathedral. If your now living at Purdue. FRANK HANSON and that we are now residing at 1610 Fifth local paper missed it, BOB WETOSKA was tbe 1969 rec^ient lA the Mobfl St, La Porte, Ind. 46350. As reported has retired from the Bears and plans to be Incentive Fellomb^ Award. He wiO poisiie previously in this column, I am engaged on campus for all five home games this grad WDifc at Stanford. DICK GRAHAM in the practice of law with the firm of fall. Bob will be guest lecturer on pro was named sales representatiTe for residential Roule & Raelson here in La Porte, as 1 football, 1969, at the reunion after the Ught division of Tlioaias Ind. Inc, have been since 1961, with the exception Northwestern game. Louisville. of a 2Vi-year Air Force stint, which TOM CARROLL continues to advance Break, break: Oct 4, 1969—our informal ended in 196S. with Procter and Gamble, now beads the reunion! Midiigan State, at the Morris Inn. Other news items: JOHN MURRAY is toilet goods division in the Midwest and OLD BUT . . . HARRY MENN. please now residing and teaching in South Bend, has moved his family back to Cincinnati. update. DUANE OTTO HAAG recenred after spending several years in Illinois. GREG DEVERS received his M,S. in MS. from Bradley U. Maj. JAMES Lt Cmdr. RICHARD S. THOMAS recenUy physics from ND at summer cotnmence- SULLIVAN, assistant professor of mifitaty was awarded a second Distinguished Flying ment Greg was able to interrupt his IBM science at tlie U. of Daytcai, received Cross after completing 303 combat missions training program to complete the degree, medal of merit, 1967 to 1968. TOM over Vietnam. He was elected secretary which enabled him to spend the past few CAVANAUGH named etfibttial ait diiector of the Red River Fighter Pilots Assn., summers on campus. Wife, Carol (Feb. 15, of Media-Scope mafKone. He, Efizabeth known as the "Red River Rats." GENE 1969), joined him in South Bend this and Tom Jr. live at 161 Odumbns Dr., PERRY is leaving his position as summer; the Devers await No. 1 child. Ctoster. NJ. JAMES ALLAN HI named head football coach at Brooklyn Prep, JOHN BELLAIRS is aUve and weU in assistant secretary hi tmst department Brooklyn, N.Y., to assume same position at Cambridge, Mass., with wife, PrisciUa, and at Continental lOiiiots Bank. Catholic Central High School, Bingham- in a month or two, their first child. P. F. SHEEDY, after Mayo residency, ton, N.Y., in coming season. The mystery of John's "whereabouts" was was appointed to diagnostic loentgenology. GEP DURENBERGER: "My imports of solved by this correspondent who met the Has to serve USAF in Montsomeiy, Ala. antiques—18th-century furnishings and Bellairs in the Harvard Yard on July 25. He was a recent diplomat of the American objets d'arts—are going well; expansion John joined the Merrimac College faculty Board of Radiology. STEVE DABROW- program well on its way. Still a bachelor, this month. During our conversation, SKI stOl is in Mexico widi P&G as amen. Very involved locally and love it" John and PrisciUa mentioned that one assodate ad manager. ED FE8RARA is JOHN A. BRES: Was married May 2 to CHARLES BOWEN was last seen entering back comirieting his second residency Patricia Wiethoff. He moved to 940 Harvard's Widener Library, researching in internal medicine. As you iMd, he is on Jerome, Detroit, and is now assistant prin­ Gaelic saints. a fellowship in nephrdogy and chief cipal of Gabriel Richard High School in EUGENE J. SLABY, married and two residency. WILUAM GATTI finished Riverview, Mich. RONALD J. KROLICK children, is now director of industrial N.Y.U. residency in otolaiyngology and is is an accounting division supervisor for engineering for the Naval Plant Represen­ now at Great Lakes for two years. Allstate Insurance Co., Michigan, where he tative Office, Bendix missile systems CHUCK EVCES made it to the flatlandsas lives with wife, Suzanne T., and sons division. BOB JEAN is with A. J. Jean asastant professor of mechamcal systems John C. (4) and Matthew R. (5 months). & Son, Jewelers. He and Louise and engineering at U. of Alabama. MIKE Hopes to see Michigan State game Oct 4. children Kathy, Debbie and Diane reside at SULLIVAN (hello der) is an accounting GENTARA MATSUMURA is enjoying 615 Spruce St, Marquette, Mich. JIM supervisor with Allied CbemicaL research work at the Radiation Lab at KENNEDY has been promoted to Toledo Back home again in Indiana is HARRY ND since his return to the States from (Ohio) branch manager of Burroughs HENNING, "... after five with Japan with his wife and two daughters. Corp. His daughter, Karen Ann, was bom USAF teaching Vietnamese to fly and a SCHIELE A. BREWER M.D. is practicing March 2. BRIAN CARROLL M.D. is span as sales manager of a couple of divi­ ophthalmology in Oneida, N.Y. He has practicing anesthesiology in Framingham, sions in tbe Coke company's Boston and five children and the sixth is on the way. Mass. Brian and Lois have three sons. Rhode Island plants. Finally managrd to TIMOTHY J. MURTAUGH, vice-presi­ Anoflter CARROLL, Maj. DENNIS J., get back to what I always wanted to do— dent for civic affairs for the Chicago completed his second tour of Vietnam and law school at ND. Saw FURMAN SMITH, Jaycees, is a partner in the law firm of returned to the States last month. rising young attorney in Atlanta, and also - Murtaugh, Nelson & Sweet in Chicago. Maj. NICHOLAS F. QUINTARELLI RODY SCHIEB, in Chicago ad business. A. W. FEES JR. M.D. married the former returned from Vietnam in May and will GALEN CAWLEY is flying for American Susan Pavex of Miami, Fla., in 1964. be assigned to intelligence duties in the out of Chicago." Moontime, down in He completed residency at St Vincent L.A. area in December, after he completes Lunar Land, JIM POYNTON, Joyce and Hospital and Clinic, Erie, Pa., in the his schooling at Ft Halabud, Baltimore. Mary Beth, Mike and Vicki Ann reside specialty of neurology in 1967. He is DENNIS LANDRY, medical sales at 127 Riviere Rd., Cocoa Beach, Fla. currently stationed at Chanute AFB, III. representative for Eaton Laboratories, He says he's helping Grumman prepare He has two daughters—^Kelly (3) and division of Norwich Pharmacal, left teach­ a lunar module to land a coiqile of lads on Elaine (19 mos.)—and plans to locate in ing in 1968 to join Eaton. JERRY the moon. (SEC. The moon?! Hm|4i! Altoona, Pa. DAVID McSHANE, BECHAMPS M.D. was recenUy honored Poynton's Folly!) previously employed by IBM in Youngs- for outstanding performance for surgery in Where are the CUBS? town, Ohio, as senior sales representative, the Mayo grad school of medicine. PEACE. has opened an Arbys Roast Beef Drive-In in Allentown, Pa. He opened his first Joseph P. Mulligan Thomas J. O'Connell Arbys in 1966, and IS months later Admissions Office 3350 Everett opened his third in the Lehi^ Valley. Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Lake Forest, lU. 60045 Don't forget the class reunion in the Mahogany Room of the Morris Inn follow­ '60 BAH, HUMBUG, EDITOR! '61 HAD QUIIE A TIME ing the U.S.C. game Oct 18. Without further ado, FRANCIS JOHN I was in Holland, Mich., over tbe O'BRIEN JR. with full apologies. If upon Fourth of July and spent the weekend Arthur L. Roule Jr. rereading the previous 12 issues you find widi -nM MONAHAN. He and his wife, 1610 Fifth St no mention of yourself, bah, humbug, Joan, are expecting their fifth diild. La Porte, Ind. 46350 editor! He and Mary Ellen had the stork JERRY McNAMARA and his wife. call again, their second son. John is Connie, were there also widi dieir ttree '59 ELECTED AND RE-ELECTED newly appointed manager of Sales Ed. dau^teisand Aeir son. Jetiy is living Rev. LARRY CALHOUN CSC has been Distributor, services department in Champaign, VL, and working for an elected chairman of the Illinois division of Short and sweet EMMETT MCCARTHY accounting firm. JOHN TULLY and his the Amateur Fencers League, re-elected is a director of the Marquette National wife. Sue, came over tot die dqr while 27 we were there and we had quite a time. space on the maiden voyage. I hope that PETE KELLY and JOHN COSTELLO Tim told me that he had been down to the progress of each of us can somehow decided that it was high tnne for a "get- Sao Paulo, BrazU, to see CHRIS LUND, parallel the progress of our space program. together." The Southern Cal weekend who is doing great I think Tim told me Remember the policy of our cblss (Oct 18) has been selected. As of now, that Chris and Sue were expecting their regarding class reunions after football festivities will center around the Holiday fourth at that time. games: no set game for our class—rather, Inn, 960 South 11th St, NQes, Mich. I got an announcement from JACK just go to the Morris Inn immediately Plans include an informal cocktail par^ at CASTIN, saying that the Castins now have after the game. If the weather is good, the Hob'day Inn on Friday night and a a son named Christian. He was bom look out on the putting green; if bad, go to dinner-dance at the Erskine Park Country in June. I understand that PAUL one of the downstairs rooms. Club in the Bend on Saturday evening. FLEMMING is now married, and 1 was Spent a recent Saturday afternoon at You have to secure your own tickets for sorry I couldn't make it to New York BILL SCANLON's wedding. BiU married the game. For further details, contact John for the wedding. the former Terry Dwyer. In attendance Costello, 2500 Topsfield Rd., South Bend, HAROLD SLANE is now with J. K. at the wedding were BRIAN O'NEILL, Ind—TeL 219-284-2565 (business) or Lasser & Co. as a CJ'.A. He married the JACK CLARK (now in D.C. working 219-291-0365 (home). Should be a good former Joanne LeGrasse of Manhasset, for the government) and BARRY MAKER. time. See you there. N.Y., last December. Harold and Joanne Barry and his new bride, Mary, came up LARRY MANDYCK has moved. He is are living in Bronxville and expecting from Montgomery, Ala., where he is now residing at 4703 Ricbmar Court their first child in September. I also heard employed with a labor law firm. You in Nashville, Tenn. that DAN LYONS was married last should hear Barry's southern accent Did November to Judith Smith in New Jersey. anyone see JOHN DEARIE on NBC's Paul K. Rooney They are living in White Meadow Lake, N.Y. "Password"? John was seen kissing United States Courthouse MATT KELLEHER wrote and told me Agnes Moorehead as the two of tbem Foley Square that he was married May 31 to Jean combined to win $600. New York, N.Y. 10007 JoUiffe. Jean is a graduate of the U. of BRENDAN McCRANE is working in Wisconsin and they are living in Carmel, Washington, D.C, with the Worid Bank. '<3 BITS AND PIECES Calif., where Matt is teaching at the Naval EARL LINEHAN has been promoted to JOHN EDWARD MILES received his juris Postgraduate School in Monterey. BILL manager of manufacture planning doctor degree from the U. of Colorado BRODERICK and his wife, Kathleen, and analysis of Baxter Laboratories. this June. ROBERT M. SMITH finished are back living in the Chicago area. Their JAMES FREEMAN has been appointed four years in the U.S. Air Force as a daughter, Hatie, is now almost two, and as cost accountant, also with Baxter. Capt. captain in December, 1968 (Minuteman Bill is working for Alexander Grant & Co., JAMES NOWAK is attending the Air U.'s Missile Maintenance Officer). He began a C.P.A. firm, as a consultant. BOB Squadron Officer School at Maxwell AFB, work as an associate electrical engineer with BARRON returned from Vietnam last Ala. Capt DICK MEECE was awarded Univac's data processing division in month and is in Baltimore as assistant an Army Commendation Medal for February, 1969, and is living with wife and P.M.S. at Loyola College. The Barrons meritorious service while in Bangkok, two children—^Sean Robert (3) and now have a son, Robert Jr. ThaUand. BRIAN KENNEDY has been Kimberly Ann (1)—^in Plymouth Meeting, made a partner in a Spokane, Wash., law Pa. Capt F. P. DICELLO will complete MIKE GERGEN graduated from the firm. TOM ZLAKET is in Tucson as a one-year tour as an Aimy judge advocate U. of Florida Law School in 1964. He and partner in the law firm of Maud and in Vietnam and will be assigned to his wife, Luann, are living in Lake City, Zlaket Tom and wife, Gloria, now have Washington, D.C, in August Fla., where Mike is practicing law. TOM three children. FRAN GRAU is a CJ.A. MEDLAND is a captain in the Air Force, In October, JOSEPH F. RADFORD JR. now, living in Huntington Station, N.Y. completed two years of service as a Peace teaching Air Force ROTC at ND. Rev. The Graus have three girls. JOHN THOMAS GARDOCKE has been Corps volunteer lawyer in the U.S. trust NEIDHART also has three children and territory of the Pacific Islands. Before transferred from assistant pastor of St. works as a civil engineer in the Buffalo area. John's Holy Angels parish in Newark, Del., returning to the U.S., he spent a month and KEVIN CONNELLY is presently in a half visiting the Philippines, Hong Kong, to assistant pastor of St. Hedwig's parish, Vietnam working for A.I.D. in the Wilmington, Del., a Polish inner-city parish Taiwan and Japan. On the return from pacification and development program. Honolulu to Washington, he stopped for a where he says two Sunday Masses in Capt ROBERT J. KENNY recently Polish and preaches in Polish. SKIP visit with BILL and Carol MORAN in received the Air Force Commendation Chicago. He is currently working as a GALIONE and his wife had their first child Medal for outstanding du^ performance last November, William Paul. Skip is contract negotiator in the contracts division while serving as base information ofiicer of the Peace Corps, Washington, D.C. with the New York Telephone Co. and at Koeba Air Base, Okinawa. Bob is now was promoted to supervising engineer in Army Capt THOMAS E. HARVEY has assistant professor of aerospace studies received the Army Commendation Medal charge of computer services in the at St Michael College, Winooski, Vt DICK Brooklyn office. while serving with the 173rd Airborne HODDER graduated from Cornell Brigade near Bien Hoa, Vietnam. He BILL HALL has moved from Kansas Medical School in '66 and is presently earned the award for meritorious service City, Mo., to St. Paul, Minn., with the practicing in the Army on Okinawa. JOHN as executive officer of headquarters detach­ Hilton chain. He is their resident BEALL was a staff attorney for the ment of the brigade's 173rd Support manager in Minnesota. Bill and Pat had Legal Aid Society of Roanoke Valley, Va. Battalion. Dr. JOSEPH J. D'ONOFRIO their third child, a boy named William. Since May I, 1968, John has been the finished his military obligation with the MIKE EDELMUTH is now in Oklahoma general counsel for the OEO-funded U.S. Public Health Service in July, 1969. City, Okla., in the commercial roofing operation. Then he is heading back to the New York- business, was married about two and Heard recendy from DAVE BERTRAND, New Jersey area to open a private dental a half years ago and has one son, v/ho was appointed principal (along with practice. They had their second child, William Francis. BILL NEAL is assistant TED MIDDENDORF) m the CfJi. another boy, in May—^Andrew. professor of geology at Georgia Southern firm of Haskins & Sells. Both ate woricing PHILIP W. SKWIOT is a stockbroker College. Bill and his wife. May, had their in New York City. JIM HIGGINS writes at Eastman, Dillon Union Securities, third daughter. Heather. from Philadelphia, where he is finishing Chicago office. Married in 1966 and has I hope to see some of you this fall out his Navy tour after returning from one son. Lt DEL SALAZAR is training in at the games. Best to you till then. Vietnam. Jim hopes to return to D.C. and the F4-C Phantom II at Davis Monthan practice law along with new bride, Ida. AFB, Ariz. His wife, Lynn, had a boy Bill Hennegfaan BOB O'LEARY is now working for April 30. GREG FOUST and his wife, 30556 Scrivo Dr. Ethicon, Inc., in Sommerville, NJ., after ShiriQT, just blessed with a son, Christopher Warren, Mich. 48092 completing his Ph.D. at the U. of Texas. Todd, May 27, now a family of four with daughter, Leslie Michelle (2Vi). Greg 'tl NO SET GAME H. James Krauser is manager of Firestone's Fleet, Com­ As I watched our astronauts land on 8301 Garfield St mercial and Technical lire Testing, and the moon, my thoughts went back Bethesda, Md. 20034 resides in Akron. He plans on sedng most to 1962 and a very crowded room in of the ND home football games. Alumni Hall where JOHN POWERS and '«2L OVER TANKARDS OF BEEK Lt ROBERT T. DIGIALIA married the LES TRAVERS played host to about 30 Over "several tankards of beer," JIM former Miss Teny Jane Romagosa of guys as we watched John Glenn rise in STUCKO, GEORGE McANDREWS, Savannah, Ga., Feb. I, in Savannah.

28 Bob terminated military service as a lieutenant in the U.S. Army on July 7. He is an associate with the law firm of Lines, McLouth, Wilkens & Osbom in Rochester, N.Y. WILLIAM J. BENNETT is a contract representative with General Electric Ordnance Systems. His faiiiily consists of Kimberly (6), Christopher (4) and Kevin (1 month). €oii|{rats Capt TOM WILLMENG is serving two years in the USAF as a doctor. Will be in Korea for 13 months, then in Northern GERALD L. SPAETH '56 has been California for 10 months. CHARLES M. appointed vice-president of Bulk HARTMAN was awarded an M.B.A. Tenninals Co. in Chicago and general from U. of Chicago in March. Now living manager of that firm's Lake Calumet at 10 Brooktree Rd., Heightstown, NJ. 08S20, Chuck is assistant to the director for facilities. He was formerly vice- technical planning at Johnson & Johnson. president of operations, manager of C. G. TOPPING JR. was a Lt. (j.g.) operations and manager of marketing USNR from November, 1963, to October, development 1966. He earned an M.B.A. from Columbia U. in February, 1968. He is now employed by Gillette Safe^ Razor Co., RICHARD L. SINNOTT '58, vice- Boston, Mass., in product management He president in charge of marketing for married Elizabeth Jean Sachs of Dayton, Beverly Bank in Chicago, has been Ohio, June 21, 1969. DAVID G. WINTER named a special assistant to the was married to Margaret D. Billings in New Haven, Conn., and they are now Assistant Secretary of Commerce residing in Minneapolis, Minn. FRANK T. (u,ytiti^V..j»!j|i. from charge of congressional relations and U. of Iowa and accepted a position as public affairs for the Economic an assistant professor of child psychology at the U. of Maine, Orono, Maine, for Development Administration of the the fall of 1969. Department of Commerce.

Thomas B. Hotopp THOMAS J. GREENE '60 has been 3121 Colonial Way, Apt B Chamblee, Ga. 30341 appointed as corporate attorney for Western Air Lines. Greene moves to '64 NORTON GOES TO VIETNAM Western from the San Mateo law Capt TOM NORTON was assigned to firm of Hession, Robb, Creedon, Vietnam where he will fly the A-37. Hamlin & Kelly. With his wife and PETER MURRAY has joined Southern two children, he lives in Santa Airways, Atlanta, as manager of economic research. He previously was with Eastern Barbara, Calif. Airlines. JIM MASON and his wife welcomed their third child, Barbara Ann, RICHARD S. JANICKI '62 has in January. They are living in Jackson, Mich. joined the Paul A. Fergus Co., a JACK MUSKA is with Pratt & Whitney in Hartford, Conn. Jack received South Bend advertising agency, as his M.S. from RP.I. He and his wife, executive vice-president. He will Mary Ann, have three sons. PETER supervise total client services for the CLARK is with the U.S. Department of agency and will direct the company's Agriculture in Berkeley. He received new btisiness development. his Ph.D. from the U. of California in chemical engineering and is now doing research on food processing. NICK MEHL Capt. JOHN M. PESTKA '65 of is living in Dallas and is with Dresser Park Ridge, HI., has been decorated Industries. Capt DAN KULAK is now stationed in Vietnam. He received his with the Bronze Star Medal for law degree from Boston College, meritorious service in Vietnam by the DICK VAN BOECKLIN is with Wells U.S. Air Force. He distinguished Fargo Bank in the international division. He himself as a supply inventory officer received his M.B.A. from the U. of while assigned at Tan Son Nhut Air Chicago. DAVID BARLOW has accepted a position as assistant professor of Base. He was cited for his outstand­ psychiatry at U. of Mississippi. He received ing duty performance under hazardous his Ph.D. from U. of Vermont LIONEL conditions. RODGERS received his J.D. from U. of California and LL.M. from Washington U. School of Law. He presently is a DAVID C. TIEMEIER '69 has won first lieutenant in the Army. He and his the 1969 Chemical and Engineering wife, Marilyn Lawrence, have one son. News Award of Merit He was one JAMES O'HARE: In June, he joined the of 13 cited for "providing inspiration international section of the First National Bank of Chicago, after receiving an and encotuagement to all students M.B.A. from Washington U. in St Louis. interested in scientific and engineering PAUL D. SHUFF graduated from St Louis careers." U. School of Medicine, May 30. He will be doing his internship at St Louis U. Group Hospitals. He was married to Maty Flynn Jmie 2, in St Loms. CARL DENNISON: Married the former Jane Patterson June 15, 1968, in New Orleans, » La. Now completing internship with has been promoted to district sales manager York, as second vice-president in the Charity Hospital, N.D. Will be in the for the firm of Hamilton Cosco. His United States Dept In addition to public health service at the Indian Hospital, new position is in Chicago. JAMES D. my corporate banking responsibilities, Rapid City, S.D., from July 1 to June 30 WALSH was married Nov. 29, to Miss I have been doing some M.B.A. recruiting of 1971. Zella Delahoussaye in Church Point, La. for Chase at ND, Stanford U. and the THOMAS O. BENSON: Is legal counsel He is with the Walsh Company, Inc., U. of California. for the Denver Regional Council of Gov­ Atlanta. ernments and living with his bride of JOHN F. SCOTT, 1229 Don Lane, Clay Stephens 10 months, Mary, in Denver. Other '64 Indianapolis, Ind., has been named super­ 206 Marian Ave. grads in Denver include TOM SULLIVAN, visor in the claims department at the Fanwood, N.J. 07023 who just moved from Southern California Indianapolis casualty and surety division with his wife, Carole, to accept a job with office of Aetna Life & Casualty. DICK '65 DOCTORS, LAWYERS, INDIAN Martin Marietta Aviation. GREGORY D'AMICO is with T.R.W. in Los Angeles. CmEFS? COSTA III: Now ser\'ing as a second lieu­ He is a financial analyst with the elec­ CARL GIOMBETTI received his D.O. tenant in the Army Reserve in New Jersey tronics division. Previously he had been degree from the Philadelphia School of and is general division manager of the Costa with American Cement PAUL CHARRON Osteopathy in June and is now serving an Cottage Co., a restaurant chain in is "retiring" from the Navy after five internship at Doctor's Hospital in New Jersey. JOHN COUNSELL has been years as a lieutenant In September, he Columbus, Ohio. Ens. RAY BURKE is a hired as assistant baseball coach and will enroll at Harvard Business School. legal assistance officer on the U.S.S. has moved to South Bend from Capt T. P. OSBORN is stationed at Lexington, home-ported at Pensacola. Since Orlando, Fla. Ft Dix, New Jersey. DAVE NARDONE receiving his J.D. in June of '68 from ED NORTON has a son, Brian, was married June 28 to Mary Ellen Dwyer Fordham Law School, Ray has spent a bom Jan. 30, 1968. He is employed by of Mardela Springs, Md. "ITiey will be busy year attending O.C.S. and justice Price Waterhouse in Rochester. Capt. living for a year in Portland, Ore., and school, as well as being admitted to the JOHN H. PRECHEUR has arrived for duty Dave will then enter the Navy. New York Bar. at Iraklion Air Station in Crete. He had As far as your class secretary goes—I am KEVIN REGAN is working on an been in Korea. DAVID P. RIVOIRA with the Chase Manhattan Bank, New M.B.A. at Ohio State; JIM KELLY is in

Syncopation i^ith an architectural tuist Gene Bertoncini '59 began his the marching and concert bands at musical career as a 14-year-old ac­ ND and was the leader of the campus companist on a Sunday morning dance band. Although his group won children's television show in New no awards in an ND jazz festival, he York. Before joining the Paul Winter did make an important contact and Contemporary Consort, he was a the group was booked to work that featured guitarist with Skitch following summer in a Chicago jazz Henderson's Orchestra on the Johnny room, the Cloister Inn. This, accord­ Carson "Tonight Show." That's coming ing to the guitarist, marked his re­ a long way for a young man who entry into the. music business. graduated from ND with a degree in After graduation. Gene worked architecture. with an assortment of little groups and And the story doesn't end there. big bands, among them Les Elgart, This year. Gene decided to try it Richard Maltby and Dan Terry. His alone, so he formed a trio, recorded most important jazz engagement his first album and embarked on a during this time, he recalls, was at summer concert tour. the then-famous Birdland with Buddy The television studio intrigued Rich. Gene as a child and it was at NBC, After a six-month stint with the The Gene Bertoncini Trio. while appearing on the Horn and U.S. Marines, Gene returned to New may vary, but the young guitarist's Hardart Children's Hour, that the bug York and was immediately employed purpose in performing is always the for the music-show business life took by NBC for the Merv Griffin same: to communicate through music. hold. afternoon television show; he was He says of his work, "I feel there is For SIO a night and all the pizza back in the studios which had a very basic way of communicating he could eat. Gene took his first fascinated him as a child. His musical anything to people, as long as it is regular job at a small club in the career then began to grow by leaps simply and honestly done and it Bronx, where he says he learned some and bounds, and he worked with such expresses something they understand of the rudiments of jazz playing. diverse people as Morgana King, Vic and appreciate deeply." In his per­ Although he had many such jobs, he Damone, Ethel Ennis, Benny Good­ forming he hopes to "impart some of felt they did not provide him with man, Rod McKuen and Tony the many faces of the guitar, to the "right" kind of surroundings for Bennett. Most recently, he had the explore it as a source of many moods, the total development he sought. unique opportunity of performing as a spectrum of musical colors and, Tlius, he enrolled at ND. with the Metropolitan Opera as Berlioz said, 'as a complete His years at the University were Orchestra. orchestra.'" marked with a duality which he still Gene's own trio consists of a bass, And evidently, this architecture feels today. Music and architecture drums and guitar. The trio's music, major-turned entertainer succeeds. A were both important to him, and a although basically jazz-oriented, reviewer for the New York Daily prophecy for the future occurred includes classical works, folk pieces, Mirror said of Gene: "He is a sort when for his thesis he chose to design Brazilian music and contemporary of Segovia of jazz who makes his a music department and fine arts pop songs. instrument sound like an entire or­ center for ND. Gene played in both His instruments and types of music chestra when he really gets swinging."

30 his second year at Columbia Business '67 PAT DIXON KILLED '67L HE'S RIGHT—KOE, ROE YOUR School; and FRANK MAY is working for As was necessary last time, again I must BOAT IBM in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. REX begin the column with sad news. We A fascinating tale from Maiy Jo and KIP LARDNER is working as a copy and have lost another classmate. PAT DIXON ROE. For the Fourth of July weekend commercial production assistant on NBC's was killed in Vietnam May 28. We they traveled to Papa Roe's for a family "Today Show." Rex's primary duties would like to extend our sincere con­ reunion in Vermillion, Ohio. You may involve the rehearsing of all live com­ dolences to his family. It is a great loss recall that that was the area hit by severe mercials and editing the daily news for all at ND. rainstorms and floods. After the entire and sports copy. JACK DONAHUE was married to Mary family spent a harrowing 17 hours JIM AFFELDT received his J.D. last Jo Riccolo SMC '68. Jack is presently on the second floor of the house, they were year from the U. of Iowa Law School with the I62nd assault helicopter co. in rescued by—^you guessed it—a rowboat. and, after a short tour of duty in the Vietnam and will be stationed there (The editor will probably put something National Guard, has settled in Cedar until Sept. 20. dumb like "Roe, Roe Your Boat" at Rapids, Iowa, with his wife, Ruth SMC '65, PAUL ROCHE was recently promoted the top of this column.) It caused more where he is with the Martin, Blackstock to Lt. (j.g.) in the Coast Guard Reserve. that annoyance for Kip, since their car and AfTeldt law firm. Paul had been serving a 10-month tour of was demolished and washed out to Lt. TOM HILDNER graduated last year duty in Vietnam, which he will finish the beach. from the U. of Virginia Law School and early this summer, but he returned to his Happier news from the Roes is that subsequently was admitted to both the home port of Honolulu in late July. Mary Jo is expecting their fourth baby Virginia and New Jersey Bars. Tom I also received word from RANDY in early November. They celebrated their attended M.P. school and now is a civil SUTLIFF. Randy was married to tlie fifth anniversary in August If that's a prosecutor with the military police in former Ann McMahon SMC '68 on Jan, 25. challenge. Kip, the Heinholds have no Okinawa. He welcomes all transients from BOB HODGSON and JAY GRAHAM '68 intention of picking it up. Vietnam to visit TOM HECK, is at were ushers at the wedding. Ann is now It's a boy for the LAZARUSes! Bom Yale completing his Ph.D. in music history, living in Norfolk until Randy finishes May 21, and christened John Fleming, which has included a Fulbright grant to his tour of duty with the Coast Guard. They he joins 2-year-oId Mag^e Ann in keeping Vienna, where he researched early 19th- then plan to return to D.C. Marilyn and Ken busy. Laz transferred century Viennese classic guitar music. I recently received a card from JIM from the criminal division at the justice Tom was married in June of 1968 to BARRY. Jim is now attending St. Louis department to the general litigation Anne Goodrich (Vassar College). Law School where he is serving on the section of the tax division. Before the law journal. He is also working with the transfer he argued a case before a panel in GERRY MILKIE and wife, Maura, brokerage firm of Dempsey-Tegeler the U.S. Court of Appeals that included returned last August after two years of & Co., Inc. the now Chief Justice Burger. Peace Corps service in the Mariana In between all his activities, Jim also Speaking of Chief Justice Burger, JOHN Islands. Gerry is working at Ford Motor found time to get married. June 14, he was HARGROVE tells me that PAUL Co. in Dearborn, Mich., and bought a married to the former Eileen Kelly at ND. MEYER may continue clerking in D.C. house there—18012 Audetle St. Their first He expressed curiosity as to recent under the new chief justice, rather than child, Shana, was born in November. developments among the infamous "Dirty moving to Arizona as previously reported. LARRY O'CONNOR'S wife, Ann, recently Thirty." If anyone has any information, Why not let us know, Paul, when your gave birth to their second daughter, please let us know. plans have firmed? SEAN "003.5" Leigh Elizabeth. Laro' is an assistant I also received a note from LOU KEENAN is still widi the Naval Security cashier in the national accounts division lACOVO. Lou is in the process of shedding Station "somewhere in the District of of Indiana National Bank in Indianapolis. his civilian clothes, having recently been Columbia." Very hush-hush—at least that's CARSON SKAGGS received his M.D. sworn into the Naval Reserve. He left what he'd have you believe. in June from Cincinnati Medical School and for Newport at the end of the summer to Maureen and DAVE FRANCESCANI is interning in sunny California. NICK begin his active duyt. During the summer, have apparently left D.C. for the environs SORDI is living and pracU'cing law in he continued working toward his Ph.D. of New York. Dave will work for a New York and vows to start another at the U. of Wisconsin, which awarded patent firm. JERRY BERTHOLD Italian district with the recent birth of their him an M.S. in nuclear engineering is recently back from Vietnam and we hope first baby girl. 1st Lt MICHAEL READ last January. to hear from him soon. In the same was married in March to Hope Sewell There has been a new addition to the breath we must report that DICK of New Orleans. Mike completed adjutant Gillis family. FRANK GILLIS writes that MUENCH was recently transferred to general officer school and is now a stalf Jan. 26, his wife gave birth to a son, Da Nang. Carol is back in South Bend, and officer in the office of the deputy chief Francis D. Gillis 111. Congratulations! I wish she would get me Dick's address of staff at the headquarters of the U.S.A. BOB SCHEUBLE received his M.S. in for publication. I'm sure he would like in Heidelberg. electrical engineering from Berkeley in to hear from you. MICHAEL CONNIFF was presented December. He is working with IBM at The HARGROVEs are still in San Diego with a son, Michael George, last May by N.A.F.E.C. in Atlantic City as an but were planning a short swing through wife, Diane. Mitch also has a daughter, associate programmer. the Midwest in August. John made Kellie Marie, and in January will receive ALLEN GODIN and Susan Elizabeth the wedding of JOHN "I-CAN-IMITATE- his J.D. from Detroit College of Law. Cerre were married in Grosse Pointe, ANYONE" PUSEY '68L on Aug. 2. ART MIER has been promoted to die state Mich., May 3. Al received his master's in He will also attend the prosecutors' course president of the U-Haul Co. of Florida, finance from the U. of Detroit and is given at Northwestern Law School for a located in Pompano Beach as of last currently working toward his journeyman's week. While in school he will stay with March. BILL FERRENCE is working for card in the tool and die business in Detroit. TOM McDONOUGH (John always Crown Nellerback Corp. in Park Ridge, TONY BERARDI was married to the was one to mooch). When in Chicago, Tom 111. Capt. BILL O'NEILL is in Osan, former Patricia Halasi at ND May 24. Tony has promised a reunion with HARTY, Korea, as a watch officer in the intelligence had been studying clinical psychology SINNARS, CULM, SENG and LARRY indications and warning center after at Ohio U. but was then drafted. He is pres­ FLEMING. On the way back to California, being named the outstanding intelli­ ently a second lieutenant in the Army, John, Janie and Li'l Dave will visit gence officer in Tactical Air Command last having received his commission May 16 (mooch) the SULLIVANS. Pam and Tom February. Bill's wife, Angele, and four from engineering Officer Candidate School. and their two boys are still in children—Mary, Colleen, Bill and Jeannette DICKWIELAND recently dropped us a Jackson, Mich. —await his return next year. note. Dick just passed his comps and is I am preparing a card file on all PHILIP ROTH was married in March to continuing his work at Yale in physics. members of our class, listing address, em­ Carol Pavlik. Phil is a technician in the He writes diat KEVIN KELLY and ployment, family and so forth. But at market analysis department of Merrill STEVE STORCH are both in Ghana this stage of our careers, all of these Lynch, Pieirce, Fenner & Smith. JIM teaching in the Peace Corps. He also says elements are in constant flux. Please help. MAHOOD is a service representative for that RICH NOLL, who is now teaching Moved? A new addition? Getting Pan American after completing a Navy tour. high school in East Haven, Conn., will be married? Let me know. If you want some attending Yale Divinity School in the fall. information on the whereabouts and James P. Hamisch John J. Hughes doings of a fellow grad, perhaps I can help. 863 E. Granville Rd., Apt. B 99 W. 37th St. Because of the delay between my Columbus, Ohio 43224 Bayonne, N.J. 07002 deadh'ne and the pubh'cation of the 31 ALUMNUS, you may feel disappointed admitted to the New Jersey Bar and Well, that's about all the info I have at that news you've sent me is not in the next promptly admitted himself to another bar to the moment, but next month I plan to issue. E.g., news received on July 29 celebrate. Playing football for the attend the nuptial vows of PAUL McCANN will not be published until Oct 27; Tortfeasors finally paid off. Tom failed his and Michael McKeon at ND and should Sept. 16 news will reach you in the De­ Army physical and is now classified 1-Y see a lot of the class there. cember issue. So bear with me and my because of his old trick knee. 1-Y means he editors, or at least with me (I'm not goes after the Girl Scouts get called. Bob Rogers crazy about them). Tom writes that he, DICK MANNING, 6219 Kennedy Dr. RICH HENNESSY and JOHN HAR­ Chevy Chase, Md. 20015 James C. Heinhold GROVE were to be in John Pusey's wedding 34 Wall St. party in August (I am writing this as '69L '69ERS AND BARS P.O. Box 126 the astronauts sit on the moon.) Tom heard At the time I mail this column in for Norwalk, Conn. 06852 from the "Chief recently; he sent publication, a good share of our fellow him 10 ND schedules. classmates arc on the eve of the Illinois Bar '68 A REMINDER Everything's GREAT. We're all GREAT. Exam. MATT DWYER wrote to say Just to remind you •68ers that it will take that he was spending Monday through six days for mail to reach me and six Dennis C. Thelen Thursday of each week at the Chicago "Y" days to get back to you. 7816 Lisa Dr. and taking the bar review course with Apt. 202 GEORGE BURGETT, TONY SIEMER, Pvt. L. Pellecchia Norfolk, Va. 23518 "STAR" STARSHAK, TIM MALLOY, E148-36-8584 "BUCK" RIORDEN, TOM DOWLING 1st Div. Inf. '69 OLD GANG BREAKS UP and MIKE LANNON. Matt also sees qm'te BTRY A 8th BN 6th ARTY I haven't received too much information to a bit of AL REED, who is spending the APO San Francisco 96345 date, except for a little word of mouth summer as a lifeguard at the "Rock" here and there. Last night I heard and studying for the Ohio Bar. •68L LET ME EXPLAIN . . . from VINCENT "CHEESE" KRAFT, who "Star," meanwhile, has written to say that In case some of you are wondering why at the moment is serving two weeks' the olTicial date of his marriage to Sue the news you send doesn't get published summer camp for the Army National Smith will be Oct. 25. He has spent until much later, let me explain that Guard. Also in the service are MICHAEL the summer taking various IRS tax courses the ALUMNUS deadlines are set way "STICK" CERRE at Officers' Basic in addition to studying for the bar. He ahead of the date of publication. So, School, Quantico, Va., and EDDIE informs me that MERLE WILBERDING, though it may take a while, everything I WEINLEIN, who is serving with the Navy REGIS TRENDA and Tom Dowling get will find its way into the column. Please JAG corps in San Diego. all passed the Iowa Bar in June. keep those letters coming. RICHARD MUNSON is still living in Several classmates have dropped me cards Congratulations are due to NORM and South Bend while he finishes work on his to keep me posted of their whereabouts. Jean SMITH on two counts. On Feb. 26 teaching credentials. BERNIE MacDON- Mary Ann and DOUG AUSTIN are living they welcomed another son, Matthew- ALD also expects to be living in South in Lansing, Mich., where Doug works Ross, the best baby so far, according Bend for a while. He and his recent for Fraser, Trevilcock, Davis & Foster. to Norm. His light brown hair favors Jean. bride will both be teaching in the public JOHN STOLTZFUS and his wife are living And with Tracy and Todd "really getting school system there. in Minneapolis, while BILL HASSING and family have settled in SL Paul. big," the Smiths have bought a new Speaking of brides, I understand that old four-bedroom house in the country, close gang of ours is breaking up. A few of DAN HEBERT and his wife have moved to the woods, water and open fields. those now sharing in the happiness of to Glenview, 111., and announce the Norm is really enjoying the practice of marital bliss are TERRENCE "RAT" arrival of their firstborn, Peter John law in Sidney, Ohio, doing everything HANRATTY, JOHN "PIG" QUINN, Hebert Dan is working for Seyfarth, Shaw, except patent, admiralty and labor. He's PAUL KELLY, JIM SEYMOUR, JOHN Fairweather & Glenaldson in Chicago. specializing in lax problems and planning. R. DONAHUE JR., TOM BOYLE, RICK Kris and LANCE RIEMERSMA are AL and Andi BARNARD rate congrat­ ELLINGHAUS. TIM "SPEED" living in Los Angeles and seem to be de­ ulations for the same two reasons. On MESKILL. lighted with life in California. Karen and May 27, Aaron John weighed in at 8 lbs., DAVE LARIMER are presently in 14 oz. And in the beginning of July, the Incidentally, Rick Eliinghaus along with Alexandria, Va., where Dave is studying whole family moved into a new home. JOHN "LUNCHY" LYNCH and JOHN for the New York Bar. Mary Ann and Al has spent the last year with a medium- "PSYCH" LONG will be attending FRANK MURRAY dropped a line to say sized firm in Minneapolis, dividing his time Georgetown Medical School in the fall. they are now in Philadelphia, Pa. Sandy about evenly between corporate and RENE TORRADO is busy working on and "PUMA" McLAUGHLIN, meanwhile, estate matters and litigation matters. Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C. have established their domicile in Bronx, BOB BELLUOMINI is now at Naval MIKE JOYCE is in North Carolina, N.Y., contrary to what we all expected. Justice School, having left Quantico far working with the National Health Service. MIKE DODGE has been studying for behind. On completion of justice school, he 1 saw COLEY O'BRIEN and FRANK the Michigan Bar at his home in Royal will take a few days' leave and then CRINITI in a local gin mill the other night Oak, Mich. BOB GREEN wrote to say head for Vietnam. I just hope the rest of and Coley says he'll be back at ND that he is spending the summer preparing the troops are ready for him. This is no for law school this fall. A few other for the New York Bar Exam and that ordinary marine. Bob reports that ERNIE people will be in law school this fall. he then plans to spend another year ABATE was in the company behind him Among them are TOM BREEN, who hitting the books—this time at N.Y.U.— at Quantico and that Ernie will be heading will attend Loyola in Chicago; TONY for his LL.M. in urban law. for jusu'ce school in September. MacCLOUD will be at Cornell; ART Pat and JIM ZAK have decided to Speaking of Vietnam—after a nine-month DOBSON will be at U. of Denver; LOU remain in South Bend for another year and tour as manpower control oflicer at an EMERSON will be at U. of Houston; Jim will clerk for Judge Grant. Jim Army hospital in South Carolina, FRANK BILL ANDERSON will be at the spent the week of July 21 with me in SMITH heads over there this month. U. of San Francisco. Denver taking the Colorado Bar Exam, What a loss for those Carolina nurses. I Rumor has it that WILLIAM "SNAKE" and next year he plans to move out to can hear their sighs from here. He, CELLA was in West Palm Beach to see God's country. Bob and BOB WILCZEK will be able to that certain someone from "across the I'm still anxiously awaiting word from have their own reunion. That is, if road." MIKE "Q" DAVIS was in town the most of you. At the very least, why not Bob W. is up to it. Molly writes that he other day and is on his way to five just drop me your addresses? I hope was in the hospital for a while in July months' active duty for the Army you all realize that your delay hinders my with some exotic bug he picked up over reserves at Ft. Knox, Ky. CHARLIE attempts to compile a class directory, there. Apparently he is fine now, but "HOSEMAN" BEAUREGARD was an­ and consequently lowers the price I can get Molly had a bit of a scare. other one who took the big step to for it from various mail order smut This country's newest weapon, MIKE married life. PAUL "DRY" JOHNSON publishers. WILLIAMSON, soon heads for Korea. will be attending the U. of Connecticut Capt ANDY TRANOVICH is stationed to work on a master's in business. FRITZ Scot Atwell at Edgewood Arsenal, Md. GAST is taking care of the PACKER 2475 S. York, No. 101 On May 12, TOM CURTIN was in Grand Rapids. Denver, Colo. 80210

32 CHICAGO CLUBS The club's annual golf outing was at the Elmhurst Country Club on Aug. 4, 1969. BILL CAVANAGH '54 and BOB LEE '53, cochairmen, presented the following golf prizes: Perseverance Award (score vrithheld) — JERRY HILLSMAN '55; Long Drive — Mr. Viranek; Low Net — BILL BARRY, score 61; Low Gross (nonalumnus) — , score 76; Third Low Gross — TERRY DILLON '32, score 79; Second Low Gross—J. PIV- NICKA '57, score 77; Low Gross— MARTY McGlNN '59, score 76. President KEN SCHUSTER '49 inUo- duced Ara Parseghian, who briefly outlined the prospects for the 1969 football season. Coach Parseghian stated that he and his staff will have a rebuilding job to do offensively, but the defense should be very experienced. He then introduced GEORGE KELLY, who will handle linebackers and be responsible for recruiting in the Chicago area. George expressed his pleasure to be coaching with Ara Parseghian and his gratitude for the opportunity to be back at ND.

Thomas F. Carey '55 CLEVELAND You probably have heard that JOHN P. MURPHY '12 recently passed away. Great sorrow was felt, I'm sure, both up at school and around the Cleveland area for this beloved man who combined a most successful professional career as a long- practicing attorney, chairman of the board in the Higbee Co. and unselfish humanitarian and civic leader, with always a profound dedication to ND. About 50 of us mourned . in unison at Brown-Forward Funeral home by saying the rosary. We will miss him, as I'm sure ND will. On July 20, we had our annual family picnic at Gilmour Academy. About 250 of us commenced the activities with a guitar Mass starting at noon. It rained all night and morning, with tornado warn­ ings injected into the picture also. It didn't The Notre Dame Club of Cincinnati recently elected officers for the coming year. deter the stalwart band of famiUes that Above, Larry Kyte (center), outgoing president, congratulates John Lynch, who will showed up, however. We had to cancel the head the club during '69-70. The other officers are: (l-r) Robert Hofacre, treasurer; big Softball game that annually closes the Mike Cottingham, secretary; and (far right) Richard Castellini, vice-president. generation gap and revert to a grueling con­ test of underwater polo, with JACK COYNE '55 and family scoring most of the goals. All the other games were equally heated, and the trophies were monopolized by the Clubs plan for fall family of NICK DEVITO '63, whose kids, cousins, in-laws and relatives left the rest BOSTON some fine offensive accomph'shments by of us at the post. The club has made its tentative schedule '69. Congratulations to Chairman JAMES for the major events of the 1969-70 McNAMEE '63 and our presidenette, Mrs. season. We hope that all members will Mike O'Toole '55 Peg Com'gan, who put the whole program make plans to try and attend at least some together. of the affairs. NEIL FOWLER '47 is well BUFFALO On July 24, President TOM CORRIGAN along with his plans for the freshman '57 held his first board of governors' meet­ send-oft dinner in September, the Suffolk Our golf outing happened Aug. 1, instead ing at his home in Westlake, Ohio. Various Downs night will be held in October and of the July 25 date as I reported to you proposals were brought up, such as merging the Communion breakfast will be in last month and the Aug. 8 date that we our club with the Little Sisters of the Poor, December. We are also looking forward to originally planned. Conflicting football a Monte Carlo night on an abandoned the debut of the hockey team in Boston in dates caused the change. No matter—^we river boat and a money-raising touch December, and a reception is planned for had 18 swingers. Low gross won by my football game between the alumnae of St. the team on that occasion. The annual meet­ guest George Steigauff. Low net by yours Mary's, Notre Dame, and their sister ing will be in February, UND Night will truly—67. namesake in Terre Haute. be in April and the annual golf outing will Must praise the All Stars for the nearly close out the year next June. impossible job of coming within two points Patrick J. Cannon '55 Congratulations to John Gillis '72 of the New York Jets. Our Buffalo Bills and Val Madden '73, the two recipients took it on the chin in their first exhibition CONNECTICtlT VALLEY of $500 scholarships awarded by the club. game—Houston Oilers. Better football to A long-promised newsletter has been We are looking forward to a winning come this fall. mailed to all members who have indicated season for the Boston Patriots through the Have more to tell next time. an interest in the organization. It is a short efforts of '52 and JOHN review of the year's activity. Two notes: MYER '65, our new coaches, as well as to John A. Allen '56 The treasury is in the black and there are

33 88 dues-paying members (34% of our member of the board of directors of the include: Bro. RAYMOND DUFRESNE alumni). One significant conclusion: Apathy local club, for his selection as the new CSC '49 with a group of students from to the club's program is still running national president of the Monogram Club. Holy Cross High, River Grove, 111.; grand­ rampant ND alumni are a tough bunch to sons, with grandmother, of RALPH get fired up, except when it comes time for Don Wentland '51 CORYN '22 and HENRY WURZER '24 football tickets. and father BOB CORYN '52 — boys signed Active members have been sent a MUSKEGON as of 77 and 78; Mayor Healey of questionnaire. All who have received the TYLER "Stan the Man" did it again—for Kearney, NJ., brother of Bro. JEROME form are requested to complete it and the 10th time. He's the president of our HEALEY CSC; JOHN GUNTHER, execu­ return it to us so that the records can be local club and this was our 10th annual tive director of U.S. Conference of Mayors, put into order. golf stag held at the Pontaluna Onmtiy and wife; Mayor and Mrs. Joseph Barr BILL MCCAFFREY '59, the chairman Club Links (no pun intended, but I can't of Pittsburgh—Mrs. Barr is the daughter of of the Events Committee for the coming help getting into the act when the Uni­ Mrs. White, a major donor to the ND season, is bristling with ideas and en­ versity sends its fine representatives to our library, and a sister of three ND brothers. thusiasm. Help is always appreciated. Won't fair city each summer to make our annual Also visiting were the parents of Michael you volunteer? More information about the golf outing the huge success it always is 70 and ERIC SAVILLE '67; the calendar will be forthcoming. Support your and was again this year). dau^ter and sister of the CHUCK local alumni association. The good Lord helped a lot, too, and PERRINS '36, '69; Dr. SALVATORE provided lu with a warm imrained-upon FERRARI '34; JOSEPH ABBOTT '29; John McGuire '62 day that saw up to 150 golfers (NDeis and WALTER HILL '62; DAVE CAPPEL- friends of ND—^State men, too) meandering LErn '66; EMMETTE CASEY '59; DALLAS their several ways in, about and aroimd the JOHN KEARNS '29; DAN GALASSO '64; Sandy Lake was the scene of the club's lush green fairways and greens as they LEONARD CALL '20 and wife; JIM '63 armual summer picnic on July 19. Chairman quaffed the amber fluid (courtesy of Stan, and JACK KOLTES '64; Sr. MIRIAM of the event, JIM JUST '59, was ably of course), pumped from a pleasant iMt PATRICK COONEY and MARIA CON- assisted by ED ZILLIKEN '57, JAY stop parkeid along the troubled way. CEPTA McDERMOTT CSC, SMC; DAVE JONES '59, CHICK MARTIN '59, LARRY In the evening, MORSE (Jim) took over, FESKE '63; ALLAN KNAPPENBERGER BEDFORD '57 and Toppo the clown. not the charcoal broiled steak and com and LOUIS LANNERMEYER '69; son of FRED EICHORN '44 was recently but the introduction of the wonderful guests GENE CALHOUN '32; TERRY KEN­ elected to the club's board of directors. from the University—the coaches and Revs. NEDY 71; TOM BENNETT 70; WIL­ Our appreciation and warmest regards Durbin and Fay. 'They represented the LIAM KNAPP 70; Rev. JIM O'DON- go to Rev. MILAM JOSEPH '59, our University well, both on the course and NELL CSC; son of WILLIAM EATON chaplain who was reassigned to a new in the way they presented themselves •44; NORTON SCHONFELD '34 and position in Tyler, Tex. Our new chaplain, throughout the evening. It made one happy NORTON SCHONFELD JR. '67; daughter Rev. Arthur Hughes, is an old friend of and proud to be an ND man. and sister of DON DUGANS '34; grand- the University and the club and we children of BERNARD VOLL '17; son of welcome him in his official role as our Leo L. Linck '43 BOB CRONIN '37; daughter of Dr. TOM padre. HUGHES '38; brother of BILL JAMIESON NEW ORLEANS '66; and 25 Sisters of Holy Cross on Paul Underkofler '58 The New Orleans Club sponsored an pilgrimage to Father Moieau's tomb in evening diimer at the Southern Yacht Club LeMans, France. KENTUCKY on July 10. Among those attending were Papal point PAUL VI '60 holds a public Our annual outing was held this year at JIM CARRIERE '62, REMY FRANSEN audience each Wednesday forenoon. Tickets the Midland Golf Club, Aug. 5. We '58, PAUL HURLEY '56, Dr. JERRY are no longer required. Also, his public wish to thank all our members and espe- RYAN '56 and their wives. Everyone papal blessing is given each Sunday noon. ciaUy LEO REHRMAN and BILL enjoyed the evening. Roman hospitality: Our ND Hospitality REISERT III for making this outing a Local alumni meet for a monthly Center at Ijirgo Brancaccio 82 (TeL: huge success. A lot of new faces were seen luncheon on the first Wednesday of each 730.002) welcomes all comets each week­ at the outing as we welcomed back PAUL month at Kolb's German Restaurant, 125 day from noon to nine. SHARON and DAVE HART from their St Charles Ave., at 12 noon. Alunmi who tours with Uncle Sam. Another of our happen to be in the New Orleans area on Vince McAloon '34 members, PAT DUFFY, is expected back any first Wednesday are welcome. There is from Vietnam in early October. As the no need for advance notice. SAN FRANCISCO BAY siunmer draws to a close we also want to We are looking forward to welcoming The San Francisco Bay Area ND Club thank RUSS RAQUE for his work on the alumni from around the country to New held its annual meeting of members June orphans' picnic and GERRY BOLAND Orleans for the Oct 25 football game 13. Bro. FISHER IWASKO CSC '42, for the freshman send-off party, both of between ND and Tulane. The club has principal of Moreau High School, made which were very successful. planned a party for the Friday night before available the school's facilities for the the game, in the downtown area. function. TOM KERNAN *55 performed Mike Casper '64 admirably as event chairman. Special Joe Drolla Jr. '63 kitchen as^tance was provided by JIM MICHIGAN CITY O'DONOGHUE '58, head chef, and by UND Ni^t was held late in May by the PHULADELPHIA JOHN GRANT '49. Michigan Ci^ area alumni. Dr. JOE A cookout and beer blast was held in Seen elbowing their way to the beer keg BERGAN, chairman of the program, July at BART JOHNSON'S estate, with the during the predinner festivities were ED introduced the honored guest, Edward intent of introducing the undergrads to the MADIGAN '55, FRANK GIAMBRONI "Moose" Krause. Moose entertained the Philadelphia Club. It was an enjoyable '52, JACK DIORON '52 and GENE DE large group with his keen wit and informed evening, and to Bart Johnson's surprise, his LAY '41. Other members observed enjoying the members of current campus events. home was left intact the festivities were TOM BEHAN '37, JIM BILL "ZIP" ZEHNPFENNIG, past local The remainder of the club's attention has RILEY '59 and ANGELO CAPOZZI '56. member, made the trip from Cleveland to been devoted this summer to the prepara­ The social hour and dinner were followed attend this function. WALLY TIMM ate tion of details for the Tulane, New York by brief reports from the club officers. his dessert against Dr. Kubik's advice. (Army) and Pittsburg trips. From early JERRY SMITH '61, club secretary, The "Man of the Year" award was indications, the turnout should be large. reported on the action which the club had presented to BOB MILLER '57 for his For information on all above trips, t^wn to incorporate as a nonprofit orga­ work with the local club and the youth of contact JACK HENRY at 215-MI-2-1161. nization. JOE CLINE '56, club Ueasurer, the commuiuty. President DOMINIC reported that the treasury had successfully MOFFO welcomed several prospective Ray E. Mullen '60 withstood aimther year without serious students who were the club's guests. He dq>leUon. BILL SHERMAN '49, club also outlined the activities for the year, ROME president, annoimced that the club officers including the upcoming Irish Greens to be Dr. GORDON DI RENZO '57 leaves us and board of directors elected to serve for held at the Long Beach Country Club on after a year as Fulbri^t professor of the next year include Bill Sherman '49, July 31. sociology at the U. of Rome. president; Frank Giambroni '52, vice- Congratulations to BOB McBRlDE, a Summer guests gracing our lounge president; Jerry Smith '61, secretary; Joe

34 Cline 'S6, treasurer; James O'Donoghue County Club on July IZ Thirty people which was kdd in eadjr Jnne. JIM EN- '58, Tom Keman '55, BEN OAKES '31 attended and FRANK BEYTACH won the RIGHT dooaled three gifti to cadi at Oe and BRIAN CONWAY, board members. golf trophy. Sixty-three people were present chihben piesent at Ae cookouL The meeting was followed by a viewing of for the dinner in the evening. The Juvenile Upcoming actnitiei: eaiiy SqMember—• the 1968 footi>aU hi^gbts, which con­ Village, a local orphanage in the District of field Mass and fnmir pna^ late Septem­ cluded the planned portion of the meeting. Columbia, was the site for the club's ber—4n open meetinc of Ike dnb; Oct 11 entertaimnent, an all-day cookout —TETE CANNC»4 wil be codninnan of Gerald C. Smith '61 for the orphan children, ages 6-8. The the ND-Aimy trip to New YoA; Oeie wS children are warm and friendly and all be a midwinler piesentatiaa fay Oe ND WASHINGTON, D.C. who participated enjoyed the day Glee Chib. PAT KANE and TIM O'REILLY were as much as any of the children. BILL cochairmen for a golf outing at the Reston HAMILTON was chairman of this function. J. RonaU Lyndi '56

CLUB DIRECTOUY ALABAMA Palm Beach County—^James P. Kintz '54, Terre Haute—Jsbn E. Christen '60. 710 John A. O'Brien Jr. '51, 2133 Vestridge c/o Atlantis Enterprises Inc., Atlantis, Ohio, Teire Haute, Ind. 47801 Dr., Birmingham, Ala. 35216 Fla. 33460 Tri-State—RdbeA E. Griffin '57. Indian In­ ALASKA Pensacola—William L. Soule Jr. '62, P.O. dustries, 817 Maxwdl Ave., Evansvaie^ John S. Hellenthal '35, Box 941, Anchorage, Box 1550, Pensacola, Fla. 32502 Ind. 47711 Alaska 99501 St. Petersburg-Tampa—Roy J. Deeb '50, IOWA ARIZONA 5635 Seventh Ave., North St Petersburg, Burlington—itAta F. CftitSa, '52. 711 Mom- Fla. 33710 ingside Dr., Burlington. Iowa 52601 Phoenix—Chuck Pilon, 5711 N. 12th Place, GEORGIA Des Moines — Joseph Biagnano '59, 2821 Phoenix, Ariz. 85014 Atlanta — Louis T. Loncaric '57, E.F. Patricia Dr., Des Moines, Iowa 50322 rucTOM—Raymond T. TerUzzi '56, 717 W. Hutton and Co., 2 Piyor Street S.W., Dubuque—hovas P. Pfeiler '64, 5S5 Fisdier Chula Vista, Tucson, Ariz. 85704 Atlanta, Ga. 30303 BIdg., Dubuque, Iowa 52001 ARKANSAS HAWAII 5ioiix-Lamf—Raymond B. Duggan. '43, 3244 Fort Smith—James A. Gilker '48, 3715 Free Richard K, Murata '57, 360 Puamamane St., Jackson, Sioux City. Iowa SI 109 Ferry Rd., Fort Smith, Ark. 72901 Honolulu, Hawaii 96821 KANSAS Little Rock—A. J. Wrape Jr. '47, Industrial IDAHO Eastern Kansas—T. Heniy Devlin '49. 2203 Lumber Co., 2200 E. 7th St., Little Rock, WaAo—Francis H. Hicks '49, 1180 Phdps Ark. 72202 CoUege, Topeka, Kan. 66611 CALIFORNIA Circle, Mountain Home, Idaho 83647 So/ino—Albert J. McLean '31, 1410 Hi^ Bakersfield—Robert J. Anspach '58, 6512 Idaho Falls—James M. Brady '29, Box land Ave., Salina, KaiL 47401 Desmond Ct., Bakersfield, Calif. 93308 2148, Idaho Falls, Idaho 83401 ICicAita—Nestor R. Weigand Jr. '6a HO C«n/ra/—Harold A. Bair '29 (secretary), ILLINOIS N. Main, Wichita. Kan. 67202 2430 Tulare SL, Fresno, Calif. 93721 /liirora—Richard Weiler '52, 32 Water, KENTUCKY Los Angeles—John J. Stewart '59, 20324 Aurora, III. 60504 Gerald J. Bdand '63. 531 Garden Dr., Reaza Place, Woodland HUls, Calif. 91364 Central Illinois—Mberl O. Eck Jr. '58, 810 Louisvnie, Ky. 40206 San Francisco Bay Area—^William Sherman Myers BIdg., Springfield, III. 62701 LOUISIANA '49, 430 Mission, San Rafael, Calif. 94901 Cfc/cago—Kenneth R. Schuster '49, 5244 New Orieans—J. PaUick Booker '62, 3401 Orange County—Thomas J. Getzinger '53, Woodland, Western Springs, III. 60555 Ridgeway Dr., Metaiiie, La. 70002 2323 Almira, FuUerton, Calif. 92631 Decamr—John F. Dunn '58, 523 Sheffield Northern touisiana-^Dr. Edward R. Morgan 5acraHien/o—Eugene V. Pongratz '53, 1024 Dr., Decatur, III. 62526 '44, 803 Jordan St, Sbrevepoit, La. 71101 42nd SL, Sacramento, Calif. 95819 Eastern Illinois—Maurice F. Stauder '41, 26 MAINE San D/ego—Donald G. Yeckel '55, 3123 Lake Shore Dr., Danville, III. 61832 Jess F. DeLois '42, R.FJD. 2, Brunswick. Mercer Lane, San Diego, Calif. 92122 Fox Valley—George R. Schmidt "29, 620 Maine 04011 San Joje—Maurice J. DeWald '62, 4878 Summit St., Elgin, 111. 60120 yo/ie/—Richard E. McHugh '43, R.R. 2, MABYLAND Clarendon Dr., San Jose, Calif. 95129 Baltinmre—Doon B. Do^ '55. 4304 Nor­ COLORADO Manhattan, III. 60442 Lake County—Paxil E. Kamschulle '56, 1001 wood Rd., Bammore, Md. 21218 Colorado Springs—Maj. Raymond J. Bubick N. Sheridan Rd., Waukegan, III. 60085 MASSACHUSETCS '54, Qtrs. 6454-E, USAF Academy, Colo. McHenry County—Leo J. Powers '25, 88 Berkdiire County—James J. O'Brien Jr. *65, 80840 Western Mass. Supply Inc. 117 4ili St, Denver—Vincent J. Duncan '44, 1800 Grant St, Crystal Lake, III. 60014 Peoria—Robert K. Gordon Jr. '52, 1106 Pitlsfidd, Mass. 0I20I Security Life BIdg., Denver, Colo. 80202 Parkside Dr., Peoria, III. 61606 Boston—Attbur P. Murphy '60, 381 Wash­ CONNECTICUT Quad Cities—^mard J. Hank Jr. '51, 1812 ington St., Brainlree, Mass. 02184 Connecticut Valley—Fiank W. Lane '54, 37th St Ct., Moline, lU. 61265 Pioneer VtUley—V/iOam A. Huiley '28, 55 260 Oak St., Wapping, Conn. 06087 /Joct/ord—William E. Schirger '63, 1321 Maplewood Ter.. Springfidd, Mass. 01106 Fairfield County—Dermis J. O'Neill Jr. '51, Camp Ave., Rockford, lU. 61103 MICHIGAN 8 Covewood Dr., Rowayton, Conn. 06853 Rock River Valley—James E. Dixon '64, 121 Battle CnwJt—Raymond R. ADen '40. 1009 Naugatuck Valley—^Thomas K. Hubbard E. First St., Dixon, III. 61021 Security National Bank Bldg^ Batde '56, Box 84 South St., Litchfield, Conn. Southern Cook County—Robert N. Caffar- Creek, Mich. 49017 06759 elli '55, 20851 Sparta Lane, Olympia Berrien County—Ht. Paul Leonard '43, 413 New Haven—Or. Robert T. Warner '53, 850 Fields, III. 60461 S. St Joe, Niles. MidL 49120 Choale Ave., Hamden, Conn. 06514 INDIANA Blue Water District—V/iSSam L. Wibon '42, DELAWARE Calumet District—Robert L. Hauler '51, 24 4080 Gratiot Ave., Port Huron. Midi. Paul N. Clemens, 827 Woodsdale Rd., Wil­ Marble St, Hammond, Ind. 46320 48060 mington, Del. 19809 Eastern Indiana—David D. Wilson '54, 222 Deartont—Raymond K. De Fauw '47. 6100 DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA West Main St, Hartford City, Ind. 47348 Oakman Blvd., Dearborn, Midi. 48126 James A. Gammon '56, Molnar 4 Gammon, £/AAart—James E. Hayes '49, 1715 E. Jack­ De/roif—Danid J. KeDy '57, 1201 Indian 2011 "I" St., N.W., Washington, D.C. son Blvd., Elkhart, Ind. 46514 Mound W., Binnittijiam. Mich. 48010 20006 Fort Wayne—Roraii L. Sowers '60, 1630 Flint—Joba J. Kean '51. 830 S. Lenqr St, FLORIDA W. Goldspur Dr., Fort Wayne, Ind. 46808 Fenton, Midi. 48430 Cen/fa/—Norman E. Duke '33, 1340 Oxford Indianapolis—^Leo C. McNamara '48, Box Gogebic itonge—Eugene R. Zinn '40. Wriilit Rd., Maitland, Fla. 32751 20112, Indianapolis, Ind. 46220 4 Zinn, Midiads BMg, Itoawood. Midi. Fort Lauderdale—V/mam L. Dafly '28, 818 Michigan City — EKiminic J. Moffo '48, 49938 S.E. 4th St, Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33301 Roeske Trail, Pottawattomi Park, Michi­ Grand Rapidi and Western Micliigan John Greater Miami—Geoise A. Kennard Jr. '48, gan City, Ind. 46360 TuOy '61. 2504 ADtert Dr. S£. Grand 780 N.W. 197 Terrace, Miami, Fla. 33169 St. Joseph Valley—Jerome B. Keams '61, Rapids. Midi. 49S06 North Florida—Robeit D. Andrew, 3570 1344 E. Wayne St, South Bend, Ind. /acJbon—James A. LeFere '61, 3002 W. Beaucletc Rd., JacksonviUe, Fla. 32217 46615 Mondl. Jackson. Mich. 49203 35 Kalamazoo—^Thomas O- McKinley '58, 1554 OHIO San Antonio—Lawrence L. Keough '61, Academy, Kalamazoo, Mich. 49007 ^kron—Robert N. Stack '41, 2393 Wood- 232 Seford, San Antonio, Tex. 78209 Lansing—Da\id J. O'Leary '53, 403 Bartlett park Rd., Akron, Ohio 44313 UTAH St, Lansing, Mich. 48915 Canton—Sam J. Dominick '62, 631 Church LL Cmdr. Charles A. Bennett '55, Naval Monroe—Mark S. Laboe '64, 311 Colonial SL, North Canton, Ohio 44720 Oceanographic Distribution Office, Qear- Dr., Monroe, Mich. 48161 Cincinnati—John F. Lynch '63, 3823 Broad­ A/uiJte^on—Stanley R. Tyler Jr. '58, 2211 view Dr., Cincinnati, Ohio 45208 field, Utah 84016 Reneer St., Muskegon, Mich. 49441 Cleveland—Victor J. Gulyassy '42, 412 VIRGINIA Saginaw Valley—James H. Howell '60, 3401 Women's Federal Bldg, 312 Superior Frank J. WaUmeyer, 8321 Whistler Rd., Washington, Midland, Mich. 48642 Ave. N.E., Qeveland, Ohio 44114 Richmond, Va. 23227 Top of Michigan—Edward L. Moloney '17, Columbus — John M. Guenin '62, 2781 WASHINGTON Bradner Lodge, Cheboygan, Mich. 49721 Lymington Rd., Columbus, Ohio 43221 Spokane—John G. Heskett '63, S. 2724 MINNESOTA Oarwn—Ronald F. Henne '57, 4353 Brum­ Howard, Spokane, Wash. 99203 Twin CitiM—Albert D. Eilers '53, 1021 La baugh Blvd., Dayton, Ohio 45416 Ww/em—Thomas P. May '55, 4237 85th Salle Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. 55403 Hamilton—Jerome A. Ryan '41, 353 S. "D" Ave. S.E., Mercer Island, Wash. 98040 MISSISSIPPI SL, Hamflton, Ohio 45013 WEST VIRGINIA P. Nicholas "Nick" Harkins '63, 4359 Brook Mansfield — Robert H. Entrup '49, 187 lyest Virginia—CyiH M. Reich '39, 903 S. Dr., Jackson, Miss. 39206 Marion Ave., Mansfield, Ohio 44903 Drew SL, SL Albans, W. Va. 25177 MISSOURI Northwestern—V/ditei R. Bernard *30, 433 Central—John D. Julian '40, Box 2063, Kansas City—William F. Ungashick '43, Johnson Ave., Celina, Ohio 45822 aarksburg, W. Va. 26301 3954 Central SL, Kansas City, Mo. 64111 Sandusky —Kchaii C. Hohler '47, 2603 Ohio Valley—vrmiam J. Buch '59, 42 Lyn- St. Louis—John R. Powers Jr. '53, 1013 Eastwood Dr., Sandusky, Ohio 44879 wood Ave., WheeUng, W. Va. 26003 Tempo Dr., Creve Coeur, Mo. 63141 Tiffin—Fred J. Wagner' '29, 152 Sycamore • WISCONSIN MONTANA SL, Tiffin, Ohio 44883 Fox River Valley—John K. Gschwind '56, Montana — Robert T. O'Leary '54, 2920 Toledo—Viban F. Gradel '58, 2628 Algon­ 319 E. Frances, Appleton, Wis. 54911 Floral Blvd., Butte, Mont. 59701 quin Parkway, Toledo, Ohio 43606 Green Bay—Dr. Frank J. Dega '56, 200 Billings—Thomas L. Doran Jr. '47, 1810 Youngsiown—Emmet J. Tyrrell '60, 1002 Arrowhead Dr., Green Bay, Wis. 54301 Westwood Dr., Billings, Mont. 59102 Union National Bank Bldg., Youngstown, La Crosse—Da\id F. Hyde '40, 230 S. 20th NEBRASKA Ohio 44503 SL, La Crosse, Wis. 54601 Lincoln—George Easley '61, 3144 S. 35th OKLAHOMA Aferri//—Augustus H. Stange '27, 102 S. SL, Lincoln, Neb. 68506 Oklahoma C//>>—Eugene J. Schmit '55, 4804 Prospect St., Merrill, Wis. 54452 Omaha and Council Bluffs—John J. Hughes N.W. 74th SL, Oklahoma City, Okla. 73132 A/Z/ivauA^e—David B. Murphy '57, 5343 N. Tuba—Fariis P. Saffa '40, P.O. Box 3165, '62, 929 S. 131st St., Omaha, Neb. 65154 Kent, Whitefish Bay, Wis. 53217 Tulsa, Okla. 74101 Northwest Wisconsin—Ben M. Sirianni Jr. NEVADA OREGON Northern Nevada—Michael Montelatici '61, '60, 2719 Keith SL, Eau Claire, Wis. Raymond J. Martin '50, 11450 S.W. Berk­ 54701 77 W. 5th, Apt. 7, Reno, Nev. 89503 shire St., Portland, Ore. 97225 South Central—Thomas M. Hinkes '51, 5414 NEW JERSEY PENNSYLVANIA Dorsett Dr., Madison, Wis. 53711 Central—^J. Norris Harding '57, 10 Dewey Central Pennsylvania—Dr. George W. Kat- WYOMING Dr., New Brunswick, NJ. 08901 ter '41, U.S. Bank Bldg., Johnstown, Pa. New Jersey Shore—Richard A. Cordasco 15901 Patrick H. Meenan '49, Midwest Bldg., Box '50, 143 Garden Rd., Shrewsbury, NJ. Erie—Leo J. Brugger Jr. '61, 622 Connecti­ 481, Casper, Wyo. 82601 07701 cut Dr., Erie, Pa. 16505 FOREIGN CLUBS New Jersey—^William H. Crosby '61, c/o Harrisburg—Joseph EUam '58, 4106 HiUs- Brad/—Thomas E. Carroll Jr. '58, 14210 Eastman-Dillon, Union Securities & Co., dale Rd., Harrisburg, Pa. 17112 Alameda Ave., Mianu Lakes, Fla. 33012 1 Chase Manhattan Plaza, New York, Lehigh Valley — NeU F. Kelly '48, 2417 Canada—no president N.Y. 10005 Fairview SL, Allentown, Pa. 18104 CfaVe—Rev. Francis A. Provenzano CSC South Jersey—James B. Carson '56, 624 Monongahela Valley—no president '42, Aven. Pedro de Valdivia 1423, Santi­ Clinton Ave., Haddonfield, NJ. 08033 Philadelphia—George V. Mitchell Jr. '58, ago, Chile, S.A. NEW MEXICO Kidder, Peabody Co., Inc., 123 S. Broad Colombia—J. Ramon de la Torre '57, Calle John L. KeUer '57, 6000 Rogers N.E., Albu­ St., Philadelphia, Pa. 19109 78, No. 8-02, Bogota, Colombia, S.A. querque, N.M. 87110 Pittsburgh—Frank. F. Conte '56, 410 Valley Ecuador—^Temistodes Teran '49, Apartado NEW YORK Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15215 179, Quito, Ecuador, S.A. Albany—Richard B. Cunningham '57, 192 Scranton—^William M. Comerford '49, 1626 £n;/aru/—Donald C. Lueck '50, 99 Eaton Ter., London SWI, England Hudson River Rd., Waterford, N.Y. 12188 Mousey, Scranton, Pa. 18509 Wilkes-Barre—Michael J. Gorham '60, 19 Manila — Lawrence J. Gotuaco '54, Box Bu#o/o—William C. Kane '59, 2075 Colvin I1S2, Manna, Philippines . Rd., Tonawanda, N.Y. 14150 Susquehanna Ave., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 18702 Williamsport—Joseph F. Orso Jr. '55, Box Mexico City—Richard C. Leon '44, Monte Cenrra/—Arthur W. Kanerviko Jr. '60, 206 Kamenun 225, Mexico 10, D.F. Mexico Ludden Parkway, Syracuse, N.Y. 13219 27, WiUiamsport, Pa. 17701 RHODE ISLAND Nicaragua—tioel Pallais '49, Apartado 2119, Golden Circle—James F. McVay '42, 49 Managua, Nicaragua, Central America Parkway Lane, Bradford, Pa. 16701 AND SOUTHEASTERN MASSACHUSETTS Northern European—Frank T. McGuire '35, Mid-Hudson Valley—Dr. Henry W. Fletcher Mana^ng Director, John Deere, S.A., '50, 53 Adriance Ave., Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Peter J. Sutherland '55, 121 Briaibrook Dr., North Kingston, R.I. 02852 Postfach 949, 69 Heidelberg, Germany 12601 SOUTH CAROLINA Pafcujan—Rev. Frank J. Burton CSC '33, Mohawk Valley—Raymond M. Belden '49, Box 5, Notre Dame College, Dacca-2-, 1609 Mohawk SL, Uu'ca, N.Y. 13501 Julian D. Michel '43, 26 Broad SL, Charles­ ton, S.C. 29401 East Pakistan New York City—Alan R. Davidson '64, Up­ Paruuna—Lorenzo Romagosa '45, Box 8307, per Dogwood Lane, Rye, N.Y. 10580 TENNESSEE CfcaKanooga—Robert J. Shockey '61, 509 Panama, Panama Roc/iesjer—John G. Curran '56, 260 SL Peru—Enrique Lulli '45, Cuzco 440, Lima, Gabriel Dr., Rochester, N.Y. 14610 Cherry St., Chattanooga, Tenn. 37402 Schenectady—Robert A. Lupe '55, 875 Memphis—Joseph S. Signaigo '48, 1687 Peru, S.A. Westbohn Rd., Schenectady, N.Y. 12309 Btyn Mawr Circle, Germantown, Tenn. Puerto Rico—Gilberto M. Marxuach '61, Syracuse—^See Central 38038 Box 9848, Santurce, Puerto Rico 00908 Nashville—Richard T. Martin Jr. '54, Ely- Rome—Vincent G. McAloon '34, (secre­ Southern Tier—Frank F. O'Brien '34, 201 tary), Palazzo Brancaccio, Largo Bran- Federation Bldg., Hmira, N.Y. 14900 sian Garden, ApL G-6, Nashville, Tenn. Triple Cities—Fraiik M. Linehan '45, 2 Eliz­ 37211 caccio, 82, Rome, Italy abeth SL, MR97,Binghamton,N.Y. 13905 TEXAS San Salvador—ftoiando Duarte F. '47, 71 NORTH CAROLINA Da/to—Edward C. Fleming '63,11256 Webb Av. Norte 222, San Salvador, El Salvador, Donald J. Kelsey '48, 1115 Westridge Rd., Chapel SL, Dallas, Tex. 75219 Central America El Paso—Gus P. Momsen Jr. '49, 4427 Tokyo—Kev. Peter T. Moriwaki SJ. '65, Greensboro, N.C. 27410 Oxford, El Paso, Tex. 79903 Sophia University 7, Kiocho, Chiyodak, NORTH DAKOTA Houston—J. Moore McDonough '57, 1800 Tokyo, Japan William Daner '53, 1106 S. Highland Acres, Houston Natural Gas Bldg., Houston, Venezuela — Mervyn J. Gorman Jr. 39, Bismarck, N.D. 58501 Tex. 77002 Apartado 1651, Caracas, Venezuela, S.A. 36 GRADUATE SCHOOLS

Dr. D'Antonio (second from right) with members of the research team which went to Fabens, Tex. Study of a dying tourn

An ND alumnus in a small Texas sociology and anthropology depart­ if any, of the Mexican Americans town wrote a letter to the University ment, and means of financing the from Fabens who graduate from the last March expressing concern about study were soon sought. Leaders of local high school are qualified to the failing community in which he the R.F.K. Institute voted to give enter college—evidenced by the fact lives. The result of that letter was $15,000 to support the project. The that even though there was a full the first specific project of ND's new Fabens parish provided $5,000 for scholarship waiting at ND for a young Robert F. Kennedy Institute, an research. man from Fabens, the study group umbrella-like organization for the The study team, including both could not find a qualified student to coordination of student social action undergraduates and graduates from whom it could be awarded. projects. St. Mary's and ND, spent over two The group is hopeful that its report Nine students and two faculty months in Fabens, conducting inter­ might serve as some type of model for members spent their summer in Texas views and examining the community. cities which have similar problems. studying the dying town and, during The objective of the research was The report will be, according to the fall semester, will be working on a to compile a report which would D'Antonio, a fairly complete report of their findings, which is include information about the follow­ diagnostic survey of the conununity, expected to be released in the spring. ing topics: the town's history; including an evaluation of the The project began when Rev. demographic and geographic analyses; economic base and potential of Robert M. Getz, the pastor of Our the small-business situation; the Fabens. To the extent possible, the Lady of Guadalupe Parish in Fabens, school system; the world view of study group hopes to make a series of Tex., proposed to Jess Daffron, a 1963 young, unmarried adults living in the recommendations which the people of ND graduate, that the parish dip into community; the medical and public Fabens mi^t consider. its bank account and hire graduate welfare services available; crime, In writing to the people in Fabens, students to do research in the juvenile delinquency and leisure Dr. D'Antonio stated, "As we perceive conununity. Daffron contacted Dr. activities in Fabens; community the situation now.most OMmnunities William V. D'Antonio, chairman of decision making; and levels and like Fabens are simply allowed to die the ND sociology and anthropology distribution of income. their natural deaths, and the majority department, an^ described the plight D'Antonio, who was in Fabens of the working-class citizens end up of his community, a border town in during the summer along with Dr. drifting into one or another large southwest Texas with a population of Irwin Press of the sociology and city like El Paso. If Fabens is to be about 4,000. An unincorporated anthropology department, said one of kept alive, indeed if it is to achieve a town, Fabens is one of the many the major goals of the project was "to new vitality, a dynamic new relation­ communities across the U.S. which help the people of Fabens think more ship between social and econonuc are suffering economically and socially effectively about their future." forces must be developed. Hopefully, from the rapid decline of cotton as its According to D'Antonio, the town's one result of our stu^ will be to primary source of income. biggest export is people, relatively provide you the information necessary The proposal for research in the poorly trained and primarily of to know whether such a new vitality is town captured the interest of the Spanish-speaking backgrounds. Few, possible." CHEMISTRY has just accepted an article of his for Dr. CHARLES J. TULL M.A.'57, Prof. Patrick McCusker recently received publication: Entitled "Christ and Satan," it Ph.D.'62, associate professor and assistant a $5,000 award for support of research on comes from his dissertation. For Ae Aimy chairman of the Indiana U. at South Bend organometallic compounds from Gulf and the article we send, respectively, con­ history department, has published a book Research and Development Co. Dr. Gerald dolences and congratulations. entitled American History Since 1865. The Goe has a one-year staff appointment in Let all alumni of the En^ish department book is part of a new review series put chemistry beginning in September. He mourn the softball game, late last July, in out by Barnes and Noble which will received his Ph.D. in organic chemistry which the graduate student men challenged eventually cover all college-level subjects. from M.I.T. and was a postdoctoral re­ -the faculty and lost. The score: faculty 32— Dr. Tull has been on the lUSB faculty search associate at Iowa State U. students 14. But if the faculty gave die since 1966. He is currently writing the Those receiving the Ph.D. in chemistry at students a low grade as challengeis, they biography of Edward .N. Hurly, one of the the August commencement included awarded each a gold star as hosts. Tlie first ND lay trustees. Dr. Tull is also the CHARLES MACEACHERN, with DuPont weather was lovely, the refreshments were author of Father Coughlin and the New in Parlin, NJ.; JOSEPH STRUKL, Ameri­ refreshing, the arrangements were well Deal, published in 1965. can Oa, WhiUng, Ind.; and WILLIAM arranged and the fans (wives, prl friends, WILLY, who is starting postdoctoral re­ men and women students and more fac­ Bernard Norling search at Sunford U. KATHY MICHUDA, ulty) were loyal and loud. It was a great Department of History M.S. '66, completed the requirements for way to end the year. Notre Dame, Ind. 46SS6 the Ph.D. in biochemistry in July and became Mrs. John Kozak later in the Edward Vasta LAW SCHOOL month. Director of Graduate Studies THOMAS J. McCUSKER, a South Bend JIM DADURA '60 is a research tech­ Department of English native, ND grad and son of an ND nologist in commercial development at Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 chemistry professor, took top honors in Texaco research center. Beacon, N.Y. Dr. the June graduating class. He was one of Harry W. Gibson, a postdoctoral research P.S.: May I (speaking as his secretary for three cum laude graduates, and he won the associate at ND in 1965, recently joined the past two years) say thank you. Dr. Hoynes Award, the Dean Joseph O'Meara the staff of the organic and polymer Vasta, for a job well done as director of Award, the Lawyers Title Award and the chemistry branch of Xerox Corp., Webster, graduate studies. And to Dr. James P. Prentice-Hall Award. The first two prizes N.Y. ART KRANSFELDER '39 is Dougherty, who will assume Ac position of are for overall excellence in law school; director of process research and develop­ director of graduate studies in September: the others are for special work in real ment at Eli Lilly, Indianapolis. Best wishes in your new duties. property and in the law of taxation. ROBERT J. NEIRYNCK (Illinois, U. of Bro. Columba Curran CSC Mrs. Georgeanna Caldwell 111.) won the Farabaugh Prize for "high Department of Chemistry scholarship in law." That prize is given in Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 msroRY honor of the late Gallitzan A. Farabaugh Everyone associated with the ND history of South Bend. Neiiynck also graduated ENGLISH department for the last generation will be cum laude. The August commencement exercises made saddened to learn of the sudden death on The Law Week Award, for the greatest alunmi of over 40 graduate students in July 5 of one of ND's great men, Kev. academic improvement in the third year, English. A doctorate was conferred upon Thomas T. McAvoy, CSC. Fr. McAvoy went to RUSSELL J. HEIPLE of Penn­ WILLIAM JOSEPH PALMER and had been Univeisity archivist since 1929 sylvania. JAMES ROLLS of New York RICHARD R- REYNOLDS; the master's and was head of the history department won the International Academy of Trial degree was coirferred upon: MARGARET from 1939-1960. In these two decades, Lawyers plaque for "proficiency in advo­ FLORENCE BOAL, Sr. MARIE THE- in the face of many obstacles, he ef­ cacy," and DENNIS J. MACKIN of Ohio RESE BROUSSARD, Rev. GABRIEL G. fected enormous improvements in all the won the estate-planning prize. LOUIS BULLOCK, Sr. ELIZABETH DAUGH- department's programs, brou^t in neariy STAHL (New Jersey, Wheehng College), ERTY, Bro. DONALD P. DWYER, Sr. all the senior professors who are now ii4io is, among other things, the father of VICTORIA M. FORDE, Sr. MARY members of the department, and established three children, won the Dean William STELLA GAMPFER, EILEEN M. academic standards which have since been Konop Prize for "distinguished scholarship DONOHOE, ARTHUR J. EAVES, emulated by the rest of the liberal arts by a first-yearstudent " GEARY F. ELLET, Sr. KATHLEEN college. One of Fr. McAvoy's outstanding The A. Harold Weber Moot Court ANN FAGAN, Sr. M. KATHRYN qualities was a truly exceptional capacity Awards went to MR. ROLLS and to GRANT, STEPHEN D. GREGOIRE, Rev. for work. Five persons now perform the DAVID PRIOR of Rhode Island. The WILLIAM H. HENKEL, DOUGLAS A. administrative tasks which Fr. McAvoy did Weber Research Paper Awards were given HIGGINS, Sr. MAGDELAINE HILL, alone for 21 years. Yet somehow he found to REGIS TRENDA of Iowa and GREGORY HOLTZ, Sr. M. RITA time in those years to teach his courses in RICHARD HARBINGER of California. KALFAS, Rev. DONALD KEENAN, Sr. historiography and American Church Prof. GEORGE WILLIAMS KEETON, MARY PAULISSA KLAUSING, MARY history, to serve on the editorial staff of the who recently retired as head of the faculty ANN KNOLL, Mrs. IRENE L. LEAHY, Review of Politics and to write extensivdy. of laws at University College, U. of ROBERT LEE MAHON, Sr. JOHN It is both tragic and ironic that Fr. London, has been named professor of GREGORY MATT, Sr. M. RUTH McAvoy should have died only a month English law on the ND law faculty. Prof. McAULEY, Sr. CATHERINE MARIE after reaching retirement age, but sin­ Keeton is the author of several books on MONKS, Sr. KATHRYN MORAN, Bro. gularly appropriate that he was in hb En^ish legal histoiy and is an interna­ JOHN PLUMPE, Sr. MARY ANTONE ofiice, at bis desk (even though it was tionally respected legal scholar. He will RECK, Sr. RITA MARIE SCHONHOFF, Saturday afternoon) when the end came. lecture on En^ish law on the ND campus Bro. RICHARD J. SCHRADER, Mrs. Fr. McAvoy was the author of many and assist ND's resident professor in KATHRYN E. SERKES, Sr. JOSEPH scholariy articles and several books, of London in administering the year-abroad MARION SHAPPELLE, Mrs. ELOISE which perhaps the best known was his life law program at University College. WOOD SMITH, BARBARA STARRETT, of Cardinal O'Hara. He had just completed This is a summer of remodeling in the Sr. CLAIRE MARIE SULLIVAN, a general history of the Catholic Chiudi law school. The north half of the law ROBERT D. UNDERWOOD, Rev. BERT in the U.S. Even more important to auditorium has been partitioned off and W. VALDES, Mrs. MARGARET VAN scholars, however, were the extensive turned into two large rooms for law school DER GRACHT (nee Zwers), THOMAS C. collections of source materials he use. One of these will be a refurbished, WIDNER, HENRY W. WOOD, amassed in the course of 40 years, collec­ newly furnished student lounge; the other FREDERICK ZINKANN. tions which have made the ND arduves will be a study and seminar room. The ROBERT FINNEGAN Ph.D. '69, a indispensable for anyone imdertaking Notre Dame Lawyer has moved its offices reserve Army officer, has been on active serious research in American Cathcdic into «iiat was the student lounge, and the doty for the past six months and already Church history. stndent cotke bar is being spruced up for longs for his discharge in January, 1971. Those of us who were Fr. McAvoy's fall operatioiL Room 100, which has been He has thus far been shunted througb students or colleagues (in a few cases, used by the Lawyer for the past several fluee Southeastern states and a 12-week both) will always rememberhi s industry, years, has been partitioned into six new coiiise in Vietnamese, with Vietnam itself inspiration, personal example and friend­ Acuity offices and a small faculQr lounge. to come in December. Meanwhile, his mind ship. He has well earned his eternal The building will soon be ready for this it on scholarship. Philological Quarterly reward. year's net increase of three professors in

38 the faculty and a student enrollment that Research Magazine, Dr. Das is now completion during the sunnner mon At have may exceed 300. principal engineer at Raytheon's microwave been deferred until June, 1971^ dejectioB and power tube division, Waltham, Mass. and the feelinc of a laik of «"'~fi4iih In the Jime, 1969, Notre Dame Lawyer ND has boasted a chapter of Alpha ment have set in. Knowing this feding, I Sigma Mu, the metallurgical and materials would like to dfer a pos^ble sdution. Walter P. North, A Brief Histoiy of engineering honor society, since 1962 (Ac Wiflun a veiy few minutes ud iridi an Federal Investment Company Legisla­ Indiana Alpha Chapter). Or. Peretti has aba.'44, D. K. VENKATU note, "The Mutual Fund Industry: Ph.D.'65, RONALD G. VARDIMAN PHYSICS A Legal Survey," by Richard H. Ph.D.'61, HIROYUKIICHINOSE Ph J).'60, Having devoted the last column to news Farina, John P. Freeman and James ROBERT F. KRAUSE PhJ).'66, DONALD about the physics department, I had better Webster, aU of the Qass of 1970 E. SCHERPEREEL Ph.D.'64, CHARLES concentrate this time on the primaiy Student recent-decision comments on W. ALLEN (Honoraiy) Ph.D.'58, H. S. objective of this column, namdy, an class actions in securities regulation; NAYAR M.S.'62, DIPAK K. BAGCHI account of the past and pfesent activities unfair competition by charitable Ph.D.'67, SYMAL LAHIRI M.S.'64, and the present iriieieaboitts of some of corporations; parent-child immtmity NORRIS A. HOOTON Ph.D.'66, our old PhJ>. ahunnL So here we go. in New York; and entertainment- KAILASAM R. IYER Ph:D.'69, ROBERT THOMAS F. RUANE '65 (nuclear expense deductions under the federal M. RUSNAK Ph.D.'66, WILUAM D. idiysics), wife, Joan, and two childRii, income tax MANLY (Honoraiy) M.S.'49, FRANCIS Mary Ann and Kathleen, live at 1362 Rowe Book reviews by Daniel L. Skoler and T. McGUIRE (Honoraiy) PhD.'41, M. M. Rd., Schenectady, N.Y. 12309. After Harold G. Wren KUMAR M.S.'64, MAHESH C. MANGA- receiving his PiiJ>., Tom joined General Three pages of sour grapes from the LICK Ph.D.'68, LOUIS A. RAZZETH Eelectric Co.'s Kndb Atomic Power Lawyer's retiring editorial staff, on M.S.'67, K. VAITHINATHAN M.S.'67, Lab as a reactor physicist Apparently, Tom the law school's abolition of ranking and HIROSHI AKITA M.S.'68. Members really liked G.E. and G.E. liked him, for The Lawyer also published in July a RONALD W. JONES, JOSEPH P. Tom is still with them. He was pnnioted to sixth issue for this volume, devoted PERRY and HIROSHI AKITA are cur­ supervising physicist at KAPL in 1959 entirely to the law school's centennial rently doctoral candidates here. and, since 1961, he has been serving as observance. manager, experimental physics, at KAPL. Professor C. W. Allen EMIL "Mike" BANAS '55 (U^ pdymer Department of Metallurgical Engineering physics), wife, Margaret, and two chfldren, Membership in the ND Law Association and Materials Science Maiy iuad Barbara, live at 1726 Davis Ave, is available to all ND law grads as well Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Whiting, Ind. 46394. Mike graduated £rom as those who attended the undergraduate MUSIC St Procopius CoOege in 1943 and then school and are now attorneys. Member­ Rev. G. Carl Hager CSC, chairman of the entered the U.S. Navy's wartime officer ship in the association may be effected music department, has recently announced training program at ND, receiving Us by forwarding name and address to: the appointment of Robert F. O'Brien as ensign's conunission in 1943. Duiing the Miss Monica Jeffers chairman of the summer session. Mr. period 1943-46 (W-W. II) be was on active Executive Secretary, ND Law Association O'Brien is beginning his 17th year as duty with the U.S. Navy. He entered the Notre Dame, Ind. 46SS6 director of bands at the Univeraty. He inactive reserve in 1946 with the tank of has attended Southern Illinois U., the Navy Lt USNR. From 1946-49. Mike Tom Shaffer School of Music and Catholic U. of served as an instructor in mathematics and Law School America. He received his master's degree physics and also as dnuna coach at St Notte Dame, Ind. 46556 from the State U. of Iowa and did post­ Procopius College. Versatile, wasn't he? graduate work at the U. of Colorado. From 1949-SO Mike was with the dvil MEIALLURGICAL ENGINEERING O'Brien is honoraiy life president of the service, state of Indiana, adiile awaiting It has been several months since our last National Catholic Bandmasters Assn. acceptance to graduate school at ND. After column, during which time there has been and is quite active in various state and receiving his PhD. £rom ND in 1955, he a great flurry of local departmental activity. national music organizations. joined the American 00 Company (Stan­ The current major reorganization of the Rev. Patrick.Maloney CSC has recorded dard Oil), iriiere he is currently senior engineering college will produce a number an album for Educo Records. Selections project lAysicist in the research and of changes in the fall. Nicholas F. Fiore, include "Songs of a Wayfarer," by Gustav development department Mike also man­ iriio joined our department in Februaiy, Mahler, and "Liederkreis," by Robert aged to get in a little "moonH^ting" 1966, has been promoted to associate Schumann. Recordings are available during the years 1955 to 1960, serving as a professor. He will be taking the reins as through the ND Bookstore or can be lecturer in modem physics at Purdue U.'s our new department chairman. On behalf obtained directly from Educo Records, extension in Hammond. Mike has retained of the faculty and students here, as well as Ventura, Calif. a veiy active interest in educatim, having the many of you who know Prof. Ettore A. We would like to welcome the following served as president of St Procopius Peretti, who has been head and chairman to the ranks of our graduate school College's Alumni Assn. (195941) over the past 18 years, I wish to express alumni: FRANCIS AMUSSEN, Sr. CLARE and as a member of the board of trustees our gratitude for his long hours and hard BECKER. Sr. THOMAS KILL, Sr. of St Procopius College (1959-61). He is work in our behalf, congratulate him CAROLITA McMAHON, PATRICIA currently serving as an industrial con­ for having survived this most difficult of ROGUSKA and SHARON WESNER. sultant to St Procopigs' cbemistiy tasks and wish him the best of eveiy good JIM McGINTY '66 is presently working de{»rtment In recognition of his many thing as he enters a new era. Along with in the East Liverpool Public School achievements and contributions, Mike was taking good care of the many duties of a System, East Liverpool, Ohio. TOM named "Alumnus of the Year" in 1965 by department head. Dr. Peietti has managed KIRBER recently received a stipendiat by St Proctqaus College. to keep very active professionally in re­ the German government to pursue work at The editor says that's all for this time; search, publishing 52 papers during this the Carl Orff Institute in Vienna. Sr. so I guess I had better wrap up this 18-year period. DAVID RADSTATTER '68 had a tone column. Some time ago I had mentioned that we poem performed by the Fort Wayne Robert L. Astiioay had lost track of DILIP K. DAS Ph.D.'54. Symphony this past season. Department of Physics According to a recent issue of Industrial Now that the projects you planned for Notre Dame, Ind. 46SS6 39 Capt. and Mrs. THOMAS J. KIEFER, two dau^ters and a son, RONALD M. ON UECOMIMP '65, a son, Michael Thomas, April 9. '59, 2831 S. Park, Joiriin, Mo. 64801. ENGAGEMENTS Mr. and Mis. John WUliams (BARBARA Sr. M. JEROME CROWLEY CSC '25. Miss Josephine Ann Monde to DAVID KENNEDY WILLIAMS M.A. '66), a She resided at the Provincial House, Ogden, KILROV '61. daughter, Anne Marie, June 12. Utah. Miss Elizabeth Ann Long SMC to Air Mr. and Mrs. FRANK HONERKAMP ALBERT McGANN '25, Aug. 12. He is Force Lt. GARRETT ANDREW ISACCO JR. '67, a son, June 10. The grandfather survived by his widow, 2S00 Topsfield, South '66. is FRANK W. HONERKAMP "34. Bend, Ind. 46614. Miss Nancy Ann Sheeran SMC to Mr. and Mrs. T.E. McCASKEV '67, a JOHN F. WENDLAND '25, June 26. THOMAS J. CHOLIS JR. '67. son, Kevin Edward, October, 1968. John was an active Peoria Red Cross worker Miss Constance Lesson Cogswell SMC LL and Mrs. PATRICK A. PALOPOLI for 37 years. He is survived by his widow, '69 to JAMES MICHAEL MARTIN '67. '67, a son, Patrick Anthony III, May 16. 4925 Longview Place, Peoria Heists, III., Miss Diane Mary Hart SMC to THOMAS Mr. and Mis. BRIAN SM'iTTH '67, a and two sisters. KEVIN KNOWLES '68. son, Brian John, July 9. LEO J. SCANLON LL.B. "30, Aug. 3, Miss Elaine Rose Barcza to 2nd Lt. Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS F. MULLIGAN of a heart attack. He was the former JAMES JOSEPH ROWAN '68. '68, a son, Casey Bryant, July 16. Crawford County (Ohio) prosecutor. He is Miss SheUa Kaye Mark to MICHAEL SYMPATHY survived by three daughters, two brothers JOHN FERRERO '69. and a sister. EDMUND J. QUINN '11 on the death JAMES J. HUGHES M.D. '31, Aug. 14. of his wife, Norah, July. She was the MARRIAGES He is survived by his widow, 1000 Urlin mother of JOHN QUINN '41. Dr., Columbus, Ohio, and by three sons, Miss Jan E. Weeden to T.M. ELMER F. LAYDEN 75 on the death BLOOMING '62, June 21. including JAMES J. HUGHES JR. '59, of his wife, Edith, July 16. and a daughter. Miss Nancy Powers to Atty. THOMAS JAMES M. PEARSON '26 on the death P. GOODWIN '62, July 26. WILLIAM L. WILLIGAN '32, June 26. of his wife, Margaret, May 13. He is survived by his widow, 25 Francine Miss Sandra Isabel Markarian to JOHN V. McMANMON "28 and ROBERT JUDGE RILEY '62, June 18. Ave., Amityville, N.Y. 11701. ARTHUR McMANMON '31 on the death PAUL M. CALLAGHAN '33, June 28. Miss NOREEN MARGARET DEANE of their brother. Gen. Arthur F. M.A. '64, '68 to Dennis William Moran, He is survived by his widow, 445 W. Main McManmon. SL, BeUevue, Ohio 44811. July 12. FRANK W. HONERKAMP '34 on the Miss Rojean Margaret Dibbern to death of his son, Robert, July 26. Robert . LEO W. HODEL LL.B. '33, July 20. EDWARD A. MACIULA '64, June 7. was the brother of FRANK HONERKAMP He is survived by his son, JOHN L. HODEL Miss Susan Anne Kenney to ROBERT JR. '67. '69, 412 Custer Ave., Evanston, III. 60202. GILES DONOVAN M.D. '65, June 7. ANGUS McNEIL '34. He resided in Rev. ANTHONY LAUCK CSC '42 on Winchester, Mass. Miss Deborah Ann Harris to the death of his mother, Mary, Aug. 12. LAWRENCE H. DWYER '66, Aug. 16. JAMES M. DRONEY '48 on the death of ROBERT E. WARD Ph.BC. '34, July 6. Miss Eileen Muscarella to J. W. DAVIS He is survived by his widow, 1220 N. his wife, Patricia, May 8. Cutri^t, Chillicotbe, 111. 61523. JR. '67, Aug. 24. JAMES A. GILKER '48 on the death of Miss JULIANN M. DONOGHUE M.A. his son, August GLENN THEODORE DUBS '35, July 21. '67 to John T. O'Connor, July 12. PAUL A. GIBBONS '52 on the death of He is survived by his family, 4670 Frazer Miss Melanie Riecuch to LOUIS S. his father, Paul C. Gibbons, April 2. NW, Canton, Ohio 44709. GASPEREC '67, Aug. 9. THOMAS PROCTER '35, July 29. He CHARLES L. SIZER '67 on the death of resided in Elkhart Miss Jane Ann Calabria SMC '69 to his father, Charles J. Sizer, June 7. HARRY D. McPEAK JR. '67, Aug. 2. Rev. GILBERT BULFER OSB '36, April PETER H. WAYNE '68 on the death 6, 1968. He resided in Peru, III. Miss Elizabeth Ann Pankosky to PAUL of his father, P. H. Wayne, May 28. M. MORTON '67, Feb. 22. HOWARD O. McINTOSH '42, Jan. 28. Miss Joan Waters SMC '68 to WILLIAM DEATHS He is survived by his widow, 186 N. Hazen DUNFEY '68 and Miss Virginia Waters ARTHUR COLE '86. He resided on St, Paw Paw, Mich. 49079. SMC '68 (twin sister of Joan) to BRIAN Reading Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio. STEPHEN J. WEIGEL '44, May. He is McMAHON '68, in a double ceremony, LEONARD F. SMITH '06, May 14. He survived by his widow, 42 Cottage, June 14. is survived by his son, FRANCIS H. "38, Danielson, Conn. 06339. Miss Mary Catherine Rodighero SMC '69 9137 Garnish Dr., Downey, Calif. 90240. Rev. J. HENNESSY CSC '45, Aug. 1. to JAMES RICHARD HOKE '68. WILLIAM C. SCHMITT '10, July 13. He taught at King's College, Stonehill Miss Diane Elizabeth Daly to MICHAEL He resided on Salmon St, Portland, Ore. College and St Edward's U. He is survived THOMAS McGARRY '68, April. •JOHN P. MURPHY LL.B. '12, July 15. by his brother, John T. Hennessy. Miss Carta Jane Dahl to EDUARDO He resided in Cleveland, Ohio. GEORGE W. STRAKE LL.D. '49, Aug. 6. RUEDA '68, Aug. 2. WELLS T. ALBADE '13, July 11. He is He was a Houston, Tex., independent oil Miss Cathyann Therese Baldwin to survived by his family, 216 Tamaiada Dr., operator and a retired trustee of the STEPHEN DANIEL BERRY '69, July 12. Naperville, III. 60540. University. He also held an honorary Miss Mary Mount to DON GREGORY JOSEPH D. DREIBELBIS '13, June 3. doctorate from the University and four papal FORTIN '69, July 12. He is survived by his widow, 1622 E. decorations from Pope Pius XII. He is Miss Nancy Jeanne Shelton to RICHARD Donald St., South Bend, Ind. 46613. survived by his son, GEORGE STRAKE ALLEN LICINI '69, May 3. EUGENE A. MALONEY '13. Oct 13. JR. '58, and by his widow, 5050 Woodway, 1968. He is survived by his daughter, Mrs. Apt 8-R, Houston, Tex. 77027. BIRTHS C. Fantaskey, 637 Second Ave., EDMUND J. WILK 'SO, June 19. He is Mr. and Mrs. JOHN BOLGER '57, a Williamsport, Pa. 17701. survived by bis widow and two children, dau^ter, Beth Erin, June 4. VINCENT DePAUL RYAN '13, Dec. 9, 244 Warren St, Calumet City, III. 60409. Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM F. GAUL '57, 1967. He resided on Watkins Lake Rd., Sr. M. LORETTA WINGERINC OSF a son, Damien Joseph, July 10. Pontiac, Mich. M.S. '50. She resided at St Bonaventure Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS R. MARIANI RICHARD T. BRAUN '14, Aug. 3. He Convent, Toledo, Ohio. '57, a daughter, Ann Marie, Aug. 15. is survived by his widow, 3901 Fourth St, EDWARD HENRY WULF '52, June. He Mr. and Mrs. GERALD TRAFFICANDA Port Arthur, Tex., his son, RICHARD T. is survived by his widow, 120 W. Pokagon '57, a son, Timothy Whitley, June 26. JR. '54, and two daughters. St, South Bend, Ind. 46617. Mr. and Mrs. JAMES KEEGAN '59, Rev. EDMUND O'CONNOR '15, April THOMAS A. DORWIN '55, July 26. a son, Michael Donnelly, June 30. 25, 1965. He resided in LakevHle, Minn. of cancer. He was assistant advertising Mr. and Mrs. DOUGLAS ARMSTRONG JOSEPH HENRY MILLER '16. He manager for Eviniude Motors and a former '61,' a dau^ter, Aug. 15. resided on Portland Ave., Rochester, N.Y. national water ski champion. Mr. and Mrs. RICHARD BARRETT '61, PAUL JOSEPH HAGAN "20, 1968. He PATRICK JOSEPH WAGNER '55, Jan. a son, Gregory Richard, Aug. 1. is survived by his widow, Box 238, Glendive, 28, 1965. Mr. and Mrs. JOHN HUBER '62, a Mont 58330. DANIEL F. MATERNA '61, July 13. daughter, Wei-Ling Ruth, March 25. LEO J. MIXSON '23, July 31. He is He is survived by his widow, 7 Jefferson Mr. and Mrs. PATRICK F. MURPHREE survived by his widow, 1310 Ave. C, Dr., Flanders, NJ. 07836. '62, a dau^ter, Megan Donnelly, June 11. Beaumont, Tex. HUGO THOMAS RYAN '61, Aug. 7, Mr. and Mrs. JOHN PUGLIESE '62, THOMAS E. GORDON Ph.B.F.C. '24, 1968, in an auto accident in Brazil. He a son, Kevin Michael, May 29. Dec. 25, 1967. He is survived by his widow. resided in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

40 ALUMNI SPEAK

Alaainl gear ap far 'tt» by Leonard H. Skogtund, Preddent, Alumni Association With the coming of fall, I am sure the Student Life Council and the ment of alumni membera to this a degree of nostalgia comes over each significant strides made by this group group. The tSeedwaaa

Re-reaaloB by James D. Cooney, Executive Secretary, Alumni Association As Ara's legions grace the greensward wives'U see to that), but chances are championship teams of '29 and '30 this fall, other Notre Darners will it will get its share of attention when will line up as the Irish face Southern assemble to do their increasingly former '49 players mass before and Cal on Oct. 18. As theyimite for popular "thing." Fall reunions, co­ after the Navy game, Nov. 1. their 40th reunion, they'll relive incidental with football Sattirdays both General Chairman Leon J. Hart their two successive victories over home and away, have not replaced predicts a banner turnout as the Howard Jones' U.S.C. teams and h<^ the June affair, but they do offer an former national champions assemble the current Irish maintain the tradi­ excellent opportunity for old class­ tion. Frank "Noidy" Hoffmann is with wives, families and friends to mates and their distaff cohorts to reunion general chairman. He can be gather for an auld lang syne or two in relive deeds of yore and to hear once reached for details at 6602 Karison the stimulating atmosphere of ND again from the "Master." Undecided Ct, Hyattsville, Md. 20783. The '29 football. To date, no less than 13 '49ers should contact Leon at Abex and '30 squads will honor 73 living autumnal get-togethers are planned. Corporation, 900 West Maple Rd., members and 26 deceased members. (See schedule below) Troy, Mich. 49084. Their coach, of course, will not Football won't be the only topic of Not to be outdone, the living be present. But the memoiy's discussion at these mini-reunions (the members of ND's famous national indestructible.

Faff Ctass Hemmiomm Fall class reunions immediately after football games have been planned by ND alumni. At press time, the following gatherings were scheduled: Purdue (Sept. 27) Army (the night before the game, Friday, Class of 1928 Joe Dorah's Oct. 10, 6:30 p.m.) Lafayette Class of 1933 New York City The Vanderbilt Suite Biltmore Hotel Michigan State (Oct. 4) Southern Cal (Oct. 18) Class of 1931 (Classes of 1930 and Class of 1928 Monogram Room 1932 welcome) Monogram Room Athletic and Convocation Center Athletic and Convocation Center Class of 1929 Room 221 Engineering Bldg. Class of 1939 Room 102 Class of 1955 JShamrock Room O'Shaughnessy Hall Morris Inn Class of 1957 Room 105 Class of 1956 Room 102 O'Shaughnessy Hall O'Shaughnessy Hall Class of 1960 Shamrock Room Class of 1958 Mahogany Room Morris Inn Morris Inn Class of 1966 Mahogany Room Class of 1966 (Law) : Room 105 Morris Inn O'Shaughnessy Hall 41 ALU3iNi ASK But perhaps the problem lies even ND man. Stay in there and fight, CATHOLICITY deeper. On page two. Father John, for only because of such as you Hesburgh is quoted as saying, "For will an enlightened University of Michael Maas '66 in his letter said: 125 years the University of Notre Notre Dame reappear. "I heartily endorse the trends of the Dame and St. Mary's College have recent past — I embrace — a search been dedicated to a common purpose: Leo C. Heringer '24 for an authentic God free from the Christian education of youth." 1108 WestviewDr. prejudices of dogmatic religion." If The current fetish for using the word Normal, 111. 61761 he really means what he wrote, then "Christian" as a would-be synonym ND, a formerly great Catholic for the word "Catholic" may well be University, must now be UNCATH- the fountainhead for "the search for CICERO OLIC in its teachings and a disgrace an authentic God, etc." In that case, Cicero was bom forty years after the to her Founders. If, on the other Mr. Maas was shortchanged at ND. destruction of Carthage. (Your page hand, Mr. Maas was only "running six, July-August, 1969.) off at the mouth," a discerning edi­ May I suggest to John F. Marchal torial policy would have saved both '58 that he not retire from the fray Marshall Smelser him and ND unnecessary em­ or the fold. True ND men are never Professor of History barrassment. quitters; I'm sure that John is a true Notre Dame, Ind. 46556

COLUMN

The responses to these questions at humanity, their culture and their ND run the progression from lip ser­ needs. Instead, they have been asked vice to appropriate action, with a not- to continue their wait for a black surprising but still discouraging studies program and the reassessment concentration muddled in the rosy of priorities that will be necessitated by rhetoric of the former category. So what should be increased appropria­ far, the leaders with the power at ND tions for black recruiting efforts. have acknowledged the issues but have They're not interested in waiting much The stadent view: not come to grips with them as longer. fall 'IS9 quickly and as fully as should be I find it hard to believe that a expected in an intellectual community. university committed to openness by Bill Mitchell '71, a theology major Structural changes at ND, for all the could close a literary magazine as fine from Groton, Conn. hoopla that has been made about as the Notre Dame Juggler. The such innovations as the lay board of administration's failure even to consult Notre Dame in the fall of 1969 is a trustees and the Student Life Council, with the Student Life Council is difficult concept to write about. Its have not resulted in significant changes surprising in view of their concern present position between the tradi­ in University causes or effects. for proper channels and due process. tional American liberalism of the early Aside from a few very encouraging The nondecision by the Academic Hesburgh years and whatever it is developments, such as the new Council regarding ND and ROTC last the campus seems to be straining to­ program to study nonviolence as a life­ spring was enough to alienate both ward today requires powers of por­ style, the preliminary scene this year hawks and doves. Most significantly, trayal beyond those of this reporter. for anyone interested in change for I think, it said nothing to the real Without too much more presump­ the better at ND is pretty bleak. The issues of ND and ROTC. tion than it takes to write a column response to this situation, car window I think it can be said without in the first place, though, I can at­ stickers notwithstanding, probably is sensationalism that the situation at tempt to describe ND and to offer not to "love it or leave." ND today has made indecisive opinions on the implication of that I can't really love what Notre neutrality a morally futile path. For description. Dame is, but I can love what it can better or worse, to retain liaisons with For the most part, I thinic, people be. I have much respect for Father ROTC means to support the military. in power positions here have recog­ Hesburgh; I agree with him when he For better or worse, failure to nized the important questions facing says a university should be a "com­ respond to black America has legiti­ society in general and this University munity with a very real commitment mized the charge of institutional in particular. It is refreshing to hear to openness, to rationality, to civility." racism. Not to decide, as Harvey Cox them asked: "What are/should be I am impatient to see ND become a has written, is indeed to decide. be the essential aims of this Univer­ community with those commitments, Notre Dame tomorrow can be better sity? What is/should be the relation­ founded on values like justice and or worse than it is today in its attempt ship between the University and such charity. to become a Christian university. The forces in society as the military or But as I begin my junior year at question of who should have the '^ the peace movement? What is/should ND, I am discouraged by the many power to determine that fate is cer­ be the University's involvement in discrepancies I see between espounsed tainly one in need of study and debate. the struggle for human justice? What ideal and settled-for reality. I wonder But for now at least, the heart of does/should ND's Christian founda­ how ND black students must feel decision-making power obviously tion mean in regard to these and this September, a month that was to nests with the administration, and I other questions of University policies, mark the beginning of a much fuller hope they decide to decide ... for priorities and practices? recognition by this University of their the better.

42 so years of thunder by Tom Sullivan

History and the fates were kind up." Sorin and his band of French during the past eight decades was enough to bestow football on Amer­ and Irish followers were the archi­ actually christened on Nov. 23, 1887. ica. It is a native game, nurtured and tects of the spirit that first was mani­ A young fellow named Henry Kuhn modified through the years to the fested publicly when the University's captained the Gold and Blue in its point where, in its centennial year students began testing their athletic first intercollegiate football contest, a as an intercollegiate sport, it claims skills on the various fields of battle. 0-8 lesson at the hands of a visiting a lion's share of the national spot­ To alumni, ND football is an ex­ U. of Michigan team. Only four addi­ light during the months separating perience that was shared with friends tional games were played from 1887 August from January. who help sculpture the tradition. To through 1889, two of which were Of the past 100 colorful years at the countless people across the land similar lessons from Michigan. After least 80 have borne witness to the whose allegiance lies with the Lady of a two-year discontinuance, football annual regeneration of the phenome­ the Golden Dome, it is a symbol of was reinstated on a permanent basis non known as the Notre Dame spirit. the pride and strength of the under­ in 1892. That regeneration usually takes dog. To this writer, it is a childhood What has since occurred through the place on a late September afternoon dream that somehow became reality efforts of the young men from the in a football stadium somewhere in and one of life's treasures. Of the small school in Northern Indiana the Midwest. It is merely a manifes­ hallowed traditions, the heated rival­ has filled record books, stadiums and tation of a spirit that was actually ries, the electrifying moments and imaginations across the country. It enkindled by a fiery little man named the powerful personalities spawned has been the subject of numerous Sorin who built the University of by the game of football, none are sur­ books and articles, sources on which Notre Dame and who in 1879 stood passed by the golden legends of the this writer has relied heavily. looking at the ashes that had been Fighting Irish. We offer for your pleasure some the main college building and said, The record book will reveal that highlights of Notre Dame's gridiron "If it were all gone, I would not give the tradition and spirit perpetuated history.

43 1887 1906 The sport of was first introduced The forward pass was legalized and incorporated into to students on the campus of the University of Notre the Notre Dame offense for the first time. Harry Dame du Lac when a visiting team from the U. of "Red" Miller, the first of the great football clan that Michigan won an 8-0 contest. The South Benders had would come to the University, arrived on the scene. accepted an offer by a touring squad of Wolverines to ' indoctrinate an already-existing soccer team in the rules and performances of football. 1909 Utilizing a balanced running and passing attack to 1888 beat seven opponents, Notre Dame received its first Notre Dame tasted victory for the first time, winning national recognition. The season highlights were a 6-0 20-0 over the Harvard School of Chicago. defeat of Pittsburgh and an 11-3 win over Michigan. The team was proclaimed "Champions of the West" and "Red" Miller became the second Gold and Blue 1892 AU-American, as a Walter Camp third-team halfback. After a two-year discontinuance, the sport of football The Notre Dame Victory March, written by John was installed as a permanent part of the life at Notre and Rev. Michael Shea, brothers, was introduced. Dame. 1896 1910 Frank E. Hering became the first full-time athletic Knute K. Rockne, a Norwegian immigrant from director and coach. He also taught English at the Uni­ Chicago, enrolled at the University. Notre Dame re­ versity and is widely recognized as the founder of recorded its 100th football victory, 47-0, over Ohio Mother's Day. His record in three seasons was 12-6-1. Northern. Awards bearing his name are given to the outstanding individual performers at the conclusion of each spring practice. 1913 Jesse Harper took over coaching chores from Jack 1903 Marks, a strong advocate of the forward pass who had Louis "Red" Salmon, a versatile triple-threat fiillback, engineered two undefeated seasons. iGus Dorais and became Notre Dame's first football All-American. He Knute Rockne brought the use of the forward pass was selected by Walter Camp as a third-team back. into prominence by utilizing it to defeat the Army, The team was unbeaten, unscored upon and tied once 35-13, at West Point The Notre Dame shift became (8-0-1). widely known and used. 1905 Notre Dame recorded its largest margin of victory and 1916 scored its greatest number of points in a 142-0 win George Gipp, later to become one of the legendary over the American Medical College. backs of all time, enrolled at the University.

44 f9l8 Crowley, Stuhldreher and Layden. Knute Rockne took over as head coach from Jesse Harper. His first team won 3, lost 1 and tied 2. Outlined against a blue-gray October sky, the Four Horsemen rode again.

1919 In dramatic lore they are known as famine, Rockne's team presented him with his first undefeated, pestilence, destruction and death. These are only untied season, 9-0-0. aliases. Their real names are Stuhldreher, Miller, Crowley and Layden. They formed the crest of the 1920 South Bend cyclone before which another fight­ George Gipp climaxed a superb career with his selec­ ing Army team was swept over the precipice this tion as a Walter Camp first-team, All-American full­ afternoon as 55,000 spectators peered down upon back. He contracted a strep infection near the end of the bewildering panorama spread on the green the season and died before the end of the year. Dur­ plain below. ing his four years representing the University on the gridiron, he established numerous school records, some The "Seven Mules," the offensive line led by captain of which are still unsurpassed. His record for total and center Adove Wolsh, also received wide acclaim. offense produced was finally surmounted last fall by Notre Dame was recognized as national champions for Terry Hanratty. the first time and notched the school's 200th football win, 34-3, over Georgia Tech. 1924 The "Four Horsemen" were born, following a 13-0 defeat of the Army. ND sports publicist George 1925 Strickler came up with the name and Grantland Rice In the University's only bowl appearance the Gold and bestowed it journalistically on the backfield of Miller, Blue pinned a 27'10 Rose Bowl defeat on Stanford. // was in the imd-1920s that the name "Fighting Irish" was given to the athletic teams of Notre Dame. Orig­ inally the nickname had been a form of derision aimed at the various ethnic groups represented on the team, and at one point the University's administration had requested that it not be used. In time, however, the nickname came into full use by sportswriters throughout the country.

1928 Rockne's team compiled his worst overall record, 5-4-0, and scored a total of only 99 points. Carnegie Tech inflicted the first home defeat since 1905, 27-7. More than 120,000 people at Chicago's Soldiers' Field saw the Irish beat Navy 7-0.

1929 Rockne coached from a wheelchair and his team went on to a second national title and a 9-0-0 record. The team played every game on the road because of stadium construction on campus and thus garnered the nickname "The Ramblers." More than 112,000 people jammed the Coliseum to witness USC's demise, 13-12.

1930 In what turned out to be his final season, Rockne coached Notre Dame to still another national champion­ ship, 10-0-0. Notre Dame Stadium was dedicated as the home team whipped Navy 26-2.

1931 A plane crash on the Kansas plains on March 31 took Knute Rockne to his death. In 13 seasons his teams won 105, lost 12 and tied 5, making him the winningest coach in football history. A nation mourned at the death of a Norwegian immigrant who made his name building men on a small Midwestern college campus. Rockne's former superior, Jesse Harper, came out of retirement to assume the post of athletic director and his top assistants, Heartly "Hunk" Anderson and Jack Chevigny, took over as cocoaches. Notre Dame went 6-2-1 in its first season without Rockne at the helm and played before the first capacity crowd in Notre Dame Stadium (54,934) in a 16-14 loss to USC.

1933 The University experienced its first losing football season since the sport was adopted. The offensive out­ put of 33 points was the fewest produced by any Notre Dame team. Anderson, who had taken sole control of the team when Chevigny left, stepped down following the season with an overall record of 16-9-2.

1934 Elmer Layden, "the thin man" and one of the famed "Four Horsemen," took over as head coach. His first team won 6 and lost 3.

46 1935 The highlight of a 7-1-1 season was the 18-13 upset of Ohio State in what has been voted by sportswriteis as one of the all-time football thrillers. The Fighting Irish, led by halfbacks Andy Pilney and Bill Shakespear, scored all of their points in the final quarter and two TD's in the final minutes.

1938 Victory on the football field came for the 300th time in a 19-0 win over Minnesota. The Irish were national champion contenders going into the final game with use. The Trojans spoiled a perfect record but Notre Dame (8-1-0) was designated national champs despite the loss.

1940 Following a 7-2-0 season, Elmer Layden stepped down as head coach after compiling a 47-13-3 record in seven seasons.

1941 Frank Leahy, a 180-pound tackle for Knute Rockne's 1928 and 1929 teams and a highly successful Boston College mentor, took over as head coach. His first team won 8 and tied I.

1943 Leahy's team presented him with his first national championship and the school's fourth. The team went 9-1-0, defeated only by Great Lakes Naval Base in the final minute, 19-14. , Notre Dame's first T-formation quarterback, capped a brilliant career by becoming the school's first recipient of the , given to the best player of the year. Another of the Miller clan, Creighton, won Ail-American honors.

1944 Leahy was called to military service and Ed McKeever replaced him for a season, coaching the team to an 8-2-0 record. The team's only defeats came at the hands of the powerful service academies. Army, 59-0, and Navy, 32-13.

1945 Hugh Devore filled in as coach during Leahy's second year of leave and led the Irish to a 7-2-1 record and repeat losses to the service academies.

1946 The Master returned and his team won a second na­ tional title for him. The highlight of the season was the 0-0 confrontation with Mr. Inside and Mr. Outside (Blanchard and Davis) of Army. Tackle George Con­ ner received the Outland Trophy as the outstanding college lineman.

47 1947 Notre Dune won its second national championship in succession under Leahy, with a 9-0-0 record. Quarter­ back John Lujack became the University's second Heis­ man Tn^y recipient A young back named Terry Brennan tan the opening kickoff back 97 yards for a touchdown against Army in the final clash of the two football powers until 196S. 1949 Leahy> fourth national championship climaxed a string of four successive seasons without a loss. End Leon Hart w

1958 Teny Brennan left Notre Dame and the coaching pro­ fession fcrflowing a 6-4-0 season. His teams compiled a 32-18-0 record in five seasons. Professional coach Joe Kuharich was named to succeed Brennan. I960 Under Kuhaiich, Notre Dame matched its previous low ebb of: 2-8. 1961 On a controversial roughing call by game officials, Joe Perkowski was given a second chance with no time remaining and kicked a •42-yard field goal to beat fav

1962 Ftdlowing a 5-5 season, Kuharich resigned with an overall five-year record of 17-23. Hugh Devore was agidn tapped as interim coach and his 1963 team went 2-7. 1964 Notre Dame hired Ara Parseghian, who came to the Fighting Irish from old rival Northwestern. While at the Evanston campus, Parseghian coached his teams to four victories over Notre Dame. In his first season he trans­ formed the 2-7 team of the previous year into a national contender. The Irish were rated number one in the nation going into the final contest with USC, and the Trojans ended the comeback story of the year with a 20-17 upset in the final 93 seconds. Quarterback became Notre Dame's sixth Heisman Trophy recipient.

1966 Notre Dame won its ninth national championship with a 9-0-1 record. The highlight of the season, and pos­ sibly of the century, was an epic 10-10 tie with Mich­ igan State. Linebacker won the Maxwell Trophy.

1967 Notre Dame won its 500th victory, 36-3 over Georgia Tech.

SOME NOTRE DAME FOOTBALL RECORDS OF INTEREST To date, Notre Dame has won 508, lost 140 and tied 37, a winning percentage of .769, which is the highest during the first 100 years of college football. Only five teams have more wins than the Fighting Irish.

Knute Rockne, recently voted the top coach in the first . too years of college football, had a winning percentage of .881 to rank number one among college coaches. Frank Leahy's .864 winning percentage ranks number two.

Ara Parseghian ranks 10th among active coaches, with a winning percentage of .699.

Notie Dame has won the national championship nine times, more than any other school.

Notre Dame has produced six Heisman Trophy winners, more than any other school.

Notre Dame has produced more than 100 All-Americans, 57 of whom were consensus. Only three schools have had more consensus Ail-Americans.

Notre Dame has bad 19 undefeated seasons and 10 un­ defeated and untied seasons. Only two schools have had more undefeated and untied seasons than Notre Dame.

Notre Dame teams have won six offensive and two de­ fensive statistic records. •Mr. Franeis P. Clark Head. Microfilming & Photo. LaD. Memorial Library Notre Dame. Ind^45b&b m.

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