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Summer 1965 La Salle Magazine Summer 1965 La Salle University

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This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the University Publications at La Salle University Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in La Salle Magazine by an authorized administrator of La Salle University Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Summer 1965 La Salle A QUARTERLY LA SALLE COLLEGE MAGAZINE

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IN THIS ISSUE VYuXXui

Phillies Physician t

A visit with James M. Walker, M. D., "53, a big league physician and. most of all, a Phillies fan.

Around Campus

"Careers: The Critical Years," reveals the aims and activities of La Salle"s career planning and placement bureau, plus sundry other campus news items.

Alum-News

A brief chronicle of the often-significant events in the lives of La Salle alumni.

12 Plight Of The Humanities ? Brother F. Patrick, F.S.C.. director of honors programs at La Salle, questions many of the contentions in the F.ditorial Projects for Educa- tion supplement included in this issue.. 15 Plight Of The Humanities A cooperative report on the humanities today, as seen by representatises of 22 colleges and universities, who contend that "amidst great material well-being, our culture stands in danger of losing its very soul."

OO La Salle Vignettes

A glimpse at some interesting La Salle people. 35 Centenary Fund Report, 1960-64 A detailed report on the results of the four- year La Salle Centenary Fund campaign.

Photo Credits: front cover—H. A. Roberts; 1-3 and back cover Michael Maicher; 4 and 12 — Ralph Howard; 33— Frederick Meyer; 34— Walter Holl; 35 ( l.r. )— .lules Schick; all others by Charles Sibrc. La Salle A QUARTERLY LA SALLE COLLEGE MAGAZINE Vol. 9 Summer, 1965 Number 4

M. WALKER, M.D., "53, is a baseball Ralph W. Howard, '60. Editor JAMES Specifically, he follows the Phillies. He is also a med '61, Robert S. Lyons. Jr., Associate Editor doctor. Hence, it was only natural that Jim Walker very interested when the Phils offered the team physii post to him last winter James J. McDonald, '58, Alumni News Walker, who for three previous years was the t( physician for West Philadelphia Catholic High School

is Salle La Salle Magazine published quarterly by La College, Boys, earned his M.D. degree from Jefferson Medical ( Philadelphia, Penna. 19141, for the alumni, students, faculty and lege in 1957 and maintains a private practice in the W friendi of the college. Editorial and business offices located at the wood section of the city. News Bureau, La Salle College, Philadelphia, Penna. 19141 Sec- ond class postage paid at Philadelphia, Penna. Changes of address A doctor is not the busiest staff member of a should be sent at least 30 days prior to publication of the issue with which it is to take effect, to the Alumni Office, La Salle Col- lege, Philadelphia, Penna. 19141. Member of the American Alumni Council and American College Public Relations Association. PHOTOGRAPHED BY MICHAEL MAICHER

Je ball club (many of the team ailments are quickly ills of visiting players. jitched by the trainer— in this case the Phil's able Joe Among Walker"s (and Liscio"s) tasks for the 1965 sea- to)), but when real trouble strikes he is indispensable, son were injuries to just about every member of the start- busy afternoon or evening for Jim Walker might entail ing lineup, ranging from Jim (Perfect Game) Bunning, number of pre-game aches and pains of players, an outfielders John Briggs and John Callison, infielders Bobby rtment of fans" distress (ranging from too many hot Wine and Cookie Rojas, and front-line catcher Clay Dal- to an encounter with a vicious foul ball), and, on a rymple. day, game injuries to players. This season's loud These are some of the jobs Jim Walker encounters dur- sion between Phils" catcher Pat Corrales and Giants" ing the three or four hours he spends at Connie Mack

rstar Willie Mays gave Walker double trouble, be- Stadium at each home game. Most of all, however, he is

3 major league physicians are also responsible for the a Phillies fan. . , —continued rhlttieA —continuedcontin

APPOINTED ROUNDS by Phils' phyi clan Jim Walker might well inclui (left) meeting rookie Adolpiio Phil introduced by ubiquitous utilitymc Cookie Rojas; (below) conferring wi trainer Joe Liscio on the condition Jim (Perfect Gome) Bunning's pricele right arm, and (opposite) time-out f some 'medical' horseplay with All Sta John Callison and Richie Allen.

Around Campus

Careers: The Critical Years

Career Planning Director Reifsteci< (second from right) at career conference.

IF THE graduate's daily sustenance is one an organized placement program on cam- "good average" for liberal arts and busi aim of a higher education, career plan- puses across the nation. ness colleges, although engineering school? ning and job placement plays a vital role La Salle's career planning and place- sometimes welcome 600-700 company re in the educational process. ment bureau, headed by L. Thomas Reif- cruiters to their campuses annually.

There was a day when a different society steck, '51, reflects the new "from matricu- "There is a great need for college grad allowed for college graduates who were lation to the grave" approach of colleges uates now," Reifsteck stresses, "but thert either scholars, themselves preparing for and universities today. The bureau serves will be problems in the 1970's unless oui classroom careers, or simply well-healed not only new graduates, but day and economy can create new job opportunitie: conversationalists. evening students, and alumni, whatever for those with college training. That's wh; In this century, however, in many in- their class year. On a reciprocal basis, we changed the scope of the departmen stances higher education has become in- even alumni of other colleges are helped. to include career planning," he explains

creasingly utilitarian to meet the needs No fee is ever charged. "We spend a great deal of time helpinj of a highly-industrialized and business- Although La Salle was a city leader in students to plan their careers while stil oriented society. teacher placement as early as the 1930"s, undergraduates."

Placement service, which as a recog- it did not have a general job placement Since there are some 40,000 types o nized campus activity dates back to 1926, center until the post-war years—and then jobs listed in the 1964 government jol perhaps received its main impetus from only as a part-time effort on the part of index, this is a considerable task.

the Great Depression, when it became Dr. Joseph J. Sprissler, now vice president "The sheer number of employmen obvious that a college degree was not a for business affairs, Anthony M. Waltrich, possibilities is what really staggers a bo; guarantee of employment. Until then, most and John J. Kelly, both class of '39. when he enters college with no particula college students sought careers in medi- It was not until 1956, when Reifsteck career in mind," Reifsteck points-out cine, law or religious life. joined the college staff, that the college "The critical years are when he begins By the end of World War Two, how- launched a concerted, full-time job place- career; most companies won't start a mai ever, organized placement services gained ment service. over 28 years in a management trainin the tremendous momentum which char- La Salle's placement efforts have reaped position, so there is not much margin fo acterized the 'boom" employment years. startling results during their first decade; a false start."

Between 1 947 and 1960—and particularly this year, 1 17 company and corporate re- A key element in the career plannin 1956-57—placement and recruitment at- cruiting teams visited the campus to inter- program is a course offered to each senio tained the hallmark of activity. Increased view La Salle students, compared to just class—Personal Adjustment to Business demands by employers for college-trained one such visit in 1948 and only 19 as Unlike some schools, it is not a require

minds and the great influx of returning recently as 1955. course and no credit is offered. Also, sine

service veterans, underscored the need for Reifsteck considers the 1965 total a it is offered during the Friday "free peri I" a student must give his own time to offered by the Most Rev. John J. Krol, "We all share the concern about youth's tend. Attendance is not as high as Reif- D.D., Archbishop of Philadelphia. attitude towards authority," he continued,

'bck would like, but he is encouraged Archbishop Krol, expressing his grati- 'and there's good reason to be concerned

its ...... youth ; the placement results since inception tude for the Brother's work in the arch- (but) "we cannot expect ly seven years ago. diocese, said "I came not to contribute to be any more obedient than ourselves.

The course aims to help the student in to your conference, but to honor you. It It is only natural we would hope to develop aluating his own capabilities as well as would be very difficult indeed for me to youngsters who are dependable and reli- irticular job offers, and such specific express my appreciation for your work. able. But if we would, we must develop Lis as interviewing techniques and salary There is no possible way to express the these traits ourselves." Iipectations. value of your work for the archdiocese The Rev. George Hagmaier, C.S.P., [Types of jobs and starting salaries are and the Church." professor of religious education at Catho-

I out as varied as the companies seeking Bishop Wright warned the delegates that lic University, called adolescence "a period iployees. America "must not encourage a system of of second chance, a period of flux, change jThe average salary for the Class of '65 schools that will turn-out a society of and testing."

|is $6300, very close to the national trained barbarians. Other speakers at the conclave were ;rage of $6384. This year also saw the "American education," he continued, Brother E. Austin, F.S.C., chairman of jhest starting salary in memory—$8000 "must concern itself with the minds of La Salle's psychology department; Brother 'r a management consulting position, young people, not merely with skills. Com- John Egan, F.S.C.H., lona College, N.Y.; ifsteck claims they rise 3-4% each year. petence in civic affairs, taste in art, and Brother C. Luke, F.S.C., Col- Types of jobs have ranged from such maturity of ideas will win the battle of lege. N.Y., and Brother G. Anthony, dd" student positions as morgue attend- civilizations—not the world of gadgets." F.S.C., Calvert Hall College, Towson, Md. ts, "babysitting" the mail between Phila- "The fear should not be shunted aside," 102nd Commencement ^phia N. and Y., stacking ball bearings, he asserted, "that in a total national effort Individual freedom must always con- 'dertakers" assistants, selling rat poison to compete economically and militarily sider the freedom of one's neighbor, Lt. Id wigs, and erecting tents for society with a totalitarian state, the minds of our Gov. Raymond P. Shafer told some 850 lotions, to the more "conventional" young people could become nothing but graduating seniors at the College's 102nd sitions for graduates. repositories for technical know-how." commencement exercise. addition [n to the weekly course oflfer- The Very Rev. Msgr. John B. Mc- Samuel Gurin, Ph.D., dean of the Uni- a major facet of the placement Dowell, superintendent of Pittsburgh's versity of Pennsylvania's School of Medi- reau's activity revolves about an annual diocesan schools, told the delegates that, cine, and the Rev. Roland de Vaux, O.P., cement Conference held each Decem- "Youth is always modern, always a prob- biblical archeologist, received honorary •, which attracts a cross-section of em- lem—at least to those of us who are older. degrees conferred by Brother Daniel Ber- yers to give seniors the latest informa- Youth will always question, refuse to con- nian, F.S.C., president. Lt. Gov. Shafer n on job opportunities in their fields. form, always rebel: maybe that is the was the presiding officer. The bureau has won high praise from privilege of youth. There are variables be- Dr. Gurin, who heads the medical lost of large companies, corporations tween generations, but I don't think we school during its 200th anniversary year, i the federal government. In 1963, it should get too excited about them." received an honorary doctor of science insored and arranged a Federal Career "The greatest sin of those who deal with degree. Father de Vaux, who is director nference that was a "first" for a Phila- youth," he added, "is to fail to try to of the French School of Biblical arche- jphia college or university, and which understand them. A teacher could be ology in Jerusalem and for the past year 'leived the acclaim of federal officials supreme in his field, a master of his sub- was Charles Chauncey Stillman professor its effectiveness. ject, but if he fails to understand his stu- of Roman Catholic Studies at Harvard 3ut Reifsteck is quick to stress the fact dents he is a failure as a teacher." University's Divinity School, received a t the senior himself must first want to cecd. 'Placement," he states, "is mainly the Jent's responsibility and all we can do help him. We aim to provide service ellence for students, alumni, the col-

; and the companies." Salle Hosts CBEA Understanding" and "acceptance" of dern youth were dominant themes of four-day, 26th annual conference of Christian Brothers Educational Asso- :ion (CBEA) held at La Salle in July. (Ome 200 Christian Brothers from the :hing order's seven U.S. districts ai- ded the conclave, which was last held ^a Salle in 1957. The delegates received etings from the teaching order's Su- }ior General, the Most Honored Brother et-Joseph, F.S.C., delivered by Brother irles Henry, F.S.C., assistant superior eral for the U.S., and welcoming re- rks were extended by Brother D. John, C, provincial of the host Baltimore trict. lighlights of the conference were the note address delivered bv the Most

'. John J. Wright. S.T.D.', Bishop of sburgh, and Solemn Benediction C.B.E.A. principals (from left) Brother John, Bishop Wright and Brother Henry. —

Class of '65 Baccalaureate in McCarthy Stadium.

told a La Salle audience th doctor of letters degree. the fourth consecutive year has received Education, whic Father de Vaux delivered the sermon approval by the American Board of Coun- spring. But church-related colleges, financial support, and four La Salle alumni offered the seling Services. receive no church mu seek other endowment sources, he adde< Baccalaureate Mass, which for the first The center is the only local college or who is vice president and gei time in years was celebrated in the sta- university counseling service to receive Simpson, the Philadelphia dium. The Rev. George Hinchcliffe, "58, approval by A.B.C.S., which has sanc- eral manager of G in Works Division of the United Gas Ir was the celebrant; Rev. John J. Mulhol- tioned some 177 agencies the U.S., provement gave his remarks land, "61, deacon: Rev. Joseph Weller, Canada and Puerto Rico for 1965-66. In- Company, the principal address at the annu '54, sub-deacon, and the Rev. Roy Hardin, corporated by the American Personnel Founder's convocation in I- "60, master-of-ceremonies. and Guidance Association, the Board an- Day May. nually and the Rev. James T. Dolan, principal "There is an aspect to the word 'free- publishes a Directory of Approved Roman Catholic High School, receiv dom' that is sometimes overlooked,"" Lt. Counseling Agencies. honorary Doctor of Pedagogy degrees. Gov. Shafer told La Salle"s largest senior Church College Aid The Founder"s Day convocation and class. "Freedom of individual action is Churches must increase their support dinner mark the feast day of St. Jol good and valid and constructive when it of church-sponsored colleges if they are Baptiste de La Salle, founder of t takes into consideration—and only when to meet the financial challenge of state aid Brothers of the Christian Schools. Th it takes into consideration—respect for to public colleges, Charles G. Simpson, are the traditional occasions for the pr« the freedom of one's neighbor." chairman of the State Council on Higher entation of student awards for acaderr "What happens when freedom is mis- construed," he added, "when liberty be- comes license, is illustrated in the rise of crime in America. We sometimes hear well-meaning psychologists explain crim- inal conduct— I say explain, not excuse on the basis that the individual had a desire to give vent to an impulse for free- dom—an impulse that stemmed from a repressed desire. "Now this may be a valid psychological conclusion," he continued, "but it is hardly one that is acceptable to a society which must preserve law and order, the balance wheels of freedom. "Certainly, both as a lawyer and as a free citizen, I am deeply concerned with the protection of every individual's rights," he concluded. "But I am also very deeply concerned with the right of every law- abiding citizen to walk the streets of this and any other city without fear of having life or pursuit of happiness interfered with by thugs who may have psychological complexes."

Counseling Center Cited Brother M. Fidelian, F.S.C. (left) with faculty award winners (from The College's counseling center for Brother Patrick; Dr. Noughton; Messrs. Halpin, Oi Federico and Dronsl —

\cellcnce and $1000 faculty awards for ROTC Awards of six given annually by the West German distinguished teaching." Thirty-seven Three La Salle juniors are among the government under the auspices of the resistance ludent prizes were given at the convo- 600 college students chosen nationally to Fulbright program, will be "the National Socialist ation. receive the first two-year Reserve Officer writers opposing the 1945." The faculty awards, made possible by a Training Corps scholarships ever given by Party between 1930 and 3000 grant by the Lindback Foundation, the Army, given professors; ^eere to four Dr. E. The recipients are Thomas J. Conner, Record Graduate Awards lussell Naughton. professor of philos- Anthony J. Le Storti, and Paul E. Miehle. Some 75 members of the class of ,phy; Gabriel Di Federico. assistant pro- Le Storti and Miehle are enrolled in 1965 have received scholarships, fellow- iissor of philosophy; Charles A. J. Halpin. the school of arts and sciences, while Con- ships and assistantships for graduate ., industry, associate professor of and ner is a business administration student. studies at major U.S. universities, the rother F. Patrick, F.S.C., honors pro- Each has completed two years of ROTC college's counseling center announced ram director and assistant professor of training at the college. this summer. ;nglish. Awards of $1000 each went to The scholarship pays for tuition, texts The graduate awards, believed to be i»r. Naughton, Di Federico and Halpin; and fees, plus an allowance of $50 per the largest number in La Salle's history, rother Patrick, as a Christian Brother month for the duration of the awards. include a Foundation lay not receive a personal stipend. Col. Jack C. Maldonado. USA, professor winner, Francis J. Breslin; a Fulbright division An evening teaching award, of military science, nominated the recipi- recipient, Donald J. Rainey; several Na- ve faculty awards for 25 years or more ents on the basis of their academic and tional Defense Education Act awards ;rvice to the college, and a special award extracurricular records, ROTC perform- and three Danforth Foundation and Wil- > the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Charles B. McGin- ance, scores on an ROTC qualification son honorable mentions. y. were also given at the dinner. test, physical qualifications, and interviews The majority of the recipients, many

1 John M. Dronson. an evening division by Army officers and faculty members. of whom received multiple awards, won ';onomics professor, received the evening grants given by graduate schools to those ward from Brother F. Emery, F.S.C., Brother Daniel Named with outstanding academic records as un- /ening dean. Service awards were given dergraduates. Philadelphia Mayor James H. J. 1) full professors Dr. John A. Guischard, Many others in the class, the center Tate this summer named Brother Daniel |;nt of the college from 1945 to 1952. succeed Dr. Althea Hottle, of Bryn Mawr, "Ph.T."—Putting Him Through—degrees Ilsgr. McGinley, who is pastor of the as chairman of the Mayor's Commission at La Salle's 12th annual Ph.T. cere- hurch of the Holy Child, was given a on Higher Education, monies this spring. t;aque honoring his 50th anniversary as The President is also a member of Catherine M. Rowland, mother of six priest. Gov. William Scranton's Commission for children whose husband, Robert, teaches "In considering the total picture of a Master Plan for Higher Education and in La Salle's evening division and is private colleges in the years ahead," Simp- the Mayor's Committee on the Philadel- chairman of the education department at '|)n told the convocation of 400 students phia Community College. Chestnut Hill College, received the annual lid faculty, "it may be entirely consistent special Ph.T, "with distinction" at the Ir churches to reconsider their obliga- event, which recognizes the wife's as- jons to church-sponsored colleges and New Chaplain Named sistance in her husband's pursuit of a diversities, with a thought to increasing The Rev. Regis W. Ryan. O.P., this bachelor's degree. leir appropriations substantially. fall becomes the College Chaplain, suc- ceeding the Rev. Mark Heath, O.P., who I "The church-related college such as La had been chaplain since 1952. lille, which receives no church support. Father Heath will remain a lUst appreciably increase its endowment member of lorn other than church sources in order La Salle's theology department, with special emphasis devoted to increasing } progress in the future," he continued. the scope of the college's graduate pro- 1 He also called for smaller colleges to ad the way in personalized counseling for gram in religion. udents and in fostering the humanities. Father Ryan, who holds degrees from Providence "The smaller college," he said, "is in a College and the Pontifical In- I ivorable position to offer effective edu- stitute in Rome, previously served as chaplain at the itional and personal counseling. We hear Canterbury School in New ore and more these days about the in- Milford. Conn. He has also taught at Aquinas )ility of the large public high school, and College, Grand Rapids, Mich., e large university, to furnish proper and pursued advanced studies at Laval University, tidance to the individual pupil in the Quebec. aping of his educational program, as

;11 as the charting of his future." Fulbright Scholar "At a time when the humanities are Donald J. Rainey, a La Salle senior, jhting what appears to many to be a has received a scholarship under the Ful- sing battle in higher education," Simp- bright E.xchange program during the

n asserted, "church colleges can not 1 965-66 academic year. ily effectively serve their own purposes Rainey, a German language major at stressing this concept, but they can La Salle, will pursue studies in German 5o become citadels of the humanities languages and literature at the Univer- jFective champions of the humanistic sity of Gottingen,

ew of life!" His project for the grant, which is one Brother Daniel presents Ph.T. degrees.

I ill

MUSIC THEATRE '65 production of "Cai lot" (left), with principals (from left) C h ningham, Cronin, Jo Ann Forte, Bolsover, and (above) the late T. H. Wh author of "The Once and Future Kinc source novel for the hit musical, dur talk at La Salle.

White's Journal, Music Theatre's 'Camelot'

The final entry in the journal of the ian legend played to the largest autliences through Friday, 6 and 9:30 (two shov late T. H. White, author of The Once in the four-year history of La Salle's sum- Saturday, and 7 P.M. Sunday. No and Future Kinfi—source for the hit mer MUSIC THEATRE '65. formance is given Monday. musical "Camelot," includes the writer's The Music Theatre, under the direction Four alumni—Robert Bolsover, impressions of a visit to La Salle in of Dan Rodden, founder and managing John Carney, '58: Pat Cronin, '63, ; December 1963. director of the unique college-sponsored Dennis Cunningham, '59—have princi This summer, when the book {Amer- venture, is concluding its fourth success- roles in the two shows. Gerard Lea ica at Last: The American Journal of ful season on the campus stage, where '64, now a graduate student at Yale L T. H. White) was published, the musical "Brigadoon" continues through Septem- versity, designed the sets and costur based upon his adaptation of the Arthur- ber 4. Performances are at 8:30 Tuesday for each show.

A conscientious compendium of events significance to alumni, students, parents, Campus Calendar friends of La Sa

22. Unless otherwise stated, events are lield in of the Old Bergan Guild; to Aug. campus; Sept. 12, 1 P.M. the native Texan another College Union Building. Exhibits open Joseph Cain—A and Freshmen Mothers' Tea—The Guild \ 9 A.M. -9 P.M. Mon.-Thiirs.; 9-5 Fri., 12-4 Old Bergan Guild member, displays his comes the frosh mothers to their organ Sat. and Sun. casein works; Sept. 1-23. tion: Sept. 26. 1:30 P.M. ALUMNI Charles Arcier—Mr. Arcier, a painter and General Membership Meeting — seaman, exhibits 35 semi-abstract paintings; Guild and Associates hold separate meeti second an- Homecoming Weekend—The Sept, 12-Oct. 4. to plan the year's activities; Oct. 13, ^ nual Homecoming Weekend—featuring an Leslie Fliegel—Casein and polymer paint- P.M. Alumni Symposium, Stag Reunion. Signum ings by Mr. Fliegel, another Old Bergan Fashion Show & Card Party—The G Fidei Award Luncheon, alumni soccer artist: Oct. 1-22. holds its annual fashion and fortune match and a dinner dance— is planned for Alberico Monena—Wood engravings by Nov. 20, 1 P.M. for de- Oct. 1-2 (see Alum-News section the Italian artist, who had his first U.S. ex- tails). hibit this May; Nov. 1-19. Downtown Luncheon Club—Interesting Ruth Leaf— Miss Leaf graphics are also speakers are the rule when the downtown provided by the Old Bergan Guild: Nov. THEATRE executive-types gather for lunch and con- 1-23. Music Theatre '65 — If your heart's in versation at the Adelphia Hotel's restaurant Hakushi Society of Japan—The Hakushi Highlands (or even Havertown) there's at 12:30; Sept 15. Oct. 20, Nov. 17. (White Knight) Society painters seek to niftier bargain than Managing Director Iw liberate the artist's "feudal bonds"; Dec. Rodden's second Lerner and Loewe h uf ART 1-23. the season. "Brigadoon," through Sept " Marie Smith—An exhibit of oils by Miss the air conditioned Union theatre; perl Smith, a local artist: through Aug. 20. PARENTS ances 8:30 P.M. Tues. through Fri.; 6 Old Bergan Art Guiid—Twenty-four oils, Parents' Day—The Guild and Associates 9:30 P.M. (two shows) Sat., and 7 watercolors, caseins and graphics by artists introduce parents of new freshmen to the Sun.

8 ALUM-NEWS

26 !\NCIS J. Braceland, M.D.. psychiatrist-in- bury, Pa., community hospital. Theodore L. and guidance from Temple University. Henry !ief at the Institute of Living. Hartford, Lowe, associate professor of German at Holy T. Wilkens has been appointed director of mn-, received an honorary Doctor of Let- Cross College, has been awarded the Medal public relations at Shippensburg College. rs degree at Jefferson Medical College's of Merit First Class by Dr. Wilhelm Luebke, Marriage: George I. Haggerty to Stephanie 1st commencement exercise this June. He president of the Federal Republic of Ger- Houch Toth. so attended the 35th reunion of his Jefferson many. '34 '49 jliSFPH E. Crowley, civilian personnel direc- Vincent F. Cerchiara was appointed a mem- ber of the Greenburgh, recreation com- 'r for the Fourth Naval District and member N.Y. Ihe Evening division faculty, was cited by mission. Peter J. Kelly received an MBA from Temple University in finance. William e Civil Service Commission Lynch has been appointed Philadelphia zone r significant contributions to the Merit Sys- manager for the "Todd Division of the Bur- 11 and the furtherance of Personnel Man- cement in the, Federal Service. roughs Corporation. Joseph P. Mooney re- ceived his Ph.D. in economics from the John A. Brennan, Jr. }6 University of Pennsylvania. .LBERT J. Crawford, Jr., Esq. was recently '50 acted president of the La Salle College Lt. Col. Frank A. Bartkus, United States idowment Foundation. '38 Public Health Service medical officer, died in '56 an airplane accident on May 26. Rev. John John A. Brennan. Jr. was appointed comp- tARLES J. McGlave, a Du Pont Company G. Fala was ordained to the priesthood in troller of Trailer Train Company. Joseph N. ea supervisor, was elected district Governor May. Dennis O'Connor, director of pathol- Malone, employee services superintendent '; the Lions Clubs of Florida at the state ogy at St. Mary's Hospital in Ashland, Ky., at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, was recently nvention in Tampa. recently presented a program on "Automation I elected vice president of the Philadelphia in Clinical Laboratories" at a central Ohio J9 chapter of the National Association of Sug- Valley meeting of the American Chemical gestions Systems. Joseph P. O'Grady, assist- ;. Harold Metz has been appointed vice- Society. ant jesident, corporate personnel, for the Amer- professor of history at the college, re- '51 cently received his Ph.D. from the University iin BoschrArma Corporation in Garden of Pennsylvania. >ty, N.Y. John J. Stanton, M.D., was Ralph J. DeShan received an MBA from beted president of the La Salle College Temple University in industrial management. '57 iumni Medical Society. Francis J. Wuest, head of the psychology . _ Ronald L. Gendaszek was elected president '43 department at Lehigh University, was pro- of the Princeton (N.J.) Borough Teachers I moted to full WEN J. Breen recently retired as a Navy professor. '52 Association for 1956-66. John J. Serra- jptain and was appointed business manager TORE received an MBA in Marketing from the new Community College of Phila- j Gerald B. Saldino has merged his Darby, the University of Pennsylvania. He is em- 'Iphia. Pa. real estate firm with Joseph Hallas, Jr., ployed by RCA and attended the University Inc. Gregory C. Demitras received his Ph.D. under a David Sarnoff fellowship. in Chemistry from the University of Penn- sylvania. John DiSangro was honored as 'Teacher of the Year" at Woodrow Wilson High School in Levittown, Pa. Thomas J. Hallinan, assistant professor of business administration at the University of Portland, received a scholarship to Santa Clara Uni- versity. .OTHER E. AU.STIN '53 George V. Brown received his master's de- gree from Temple University in business 15 education. Michael F. Golden, M.D. is toTHER E. Austin, F.S.C. (Dondero), as- acting chief of psychiatry service in the V.A. I ;iale professor of psychology and recently hospital in Tuskegee, Ala. Eugene P. Hagan, T. C. Addison B. McCORMlCK pointed psychology department chairman, M.D. was elected secretary of the La Salle d his new book. No Borrowed Light, pub- College Alumni Medical Society. Dr. Robert '58 Jied this summer by Bruce Company. He L. Wadlinger will join the chemistry faculty Thomas C. Addison has been appointed ad- ]s earned master's and Ph.D. degrees from at Niagara University this fall. University of Pittsburgh ministrative supervisor of the Owen-Illinois j: and Catholic '54 liversity. forest products division's Orlando. Fla. fibre Walter E. Arrison has been named assistant can plant. Joseph D. Gallagher has been to the associate superintendent (or school appointed a hospital representative for Mc- facilities of the school district of Philadelphia. Neil Laboratories in the Baltirhore-Washing- Andrew J. Augustine received his M.S. in ton area. Bernard McCormick is now an education from the University of Pennsyl- associate editor of Greater Philadelphia Mag- vania. Hubert D. Yollin was named assist- azine. Thomas M. McLenigan received a ant district attorney of Montgomery County, master's degree in education administration Pa. Mtirriage: Robert J. Schaefer to the from Temple University. Fred Noller, a former Celeste Wagner. Birth: To George history teacher at John F. Kennedy High Willingboro. N.J., has been awarded EODORE L. Lowe Mason and wife Lois, their third child, School in second son, John Joseph. an academic fellowship grant by Illinois Insti- '55 tute of Technology at Chicago for 1965-66. The course leads to a master's degree in James I. Gillespie is chairman of this year's sociology. Robert E. Letulle received a '48 Signum Fidei Selection Committee. John H. master of social work degree from the Uni- MES T. Harris is director of education and Knox received his master of education degree versity of Pennsylvania. John P. Rossi re- lining for Corning Glass Works. He deliv- from the University of Delaware. James J. ceived his Ph.D. in history, also from the ;d the commencement address at Corning Morris was promoted to vice president at University of Pennsylvania. Marriages: El- )mmunity College, Corning, N.Y. in June. Broad Street Trust Company. John J. Patri- mer F. Hansen. Jr. to Eileen Held: Edward JOUSTUS F. Haydt died in June in the Sun- arca received a master's degree in counseling J. Healy to Helen Powell Surrick.

—continued 9 from the Catholic University of America Law from the University of Pennsylvania. H School. Eugene A. Dracanosky received his currently assistant township manager in Iri NLD. from Temple University and will intern tol Township, Pa. John J. Lehane has be at Germantown Hospital. Robert J. Ellis re- named secretary and a director of the Roii ceived his M.D. from Temple University and Club of Conshohocken - Plymouth - Whi will intern at the University of Minnesota marsh. Pa. David J. Lelli has been promol Hospital in Minneapolis. Paul E. Grexa re- to first lieutenant in the Air Force at Dy ceived an M.S. in physics from the University AFB, Tex. James McBrearty received of Rhode Island. Joseph Grosso received his M.A. in economics at the University of I M.D. from Jefferson Medical College. John B. nois and had his assistantship renewed Kelly has been promoted by Sealtest Foods continue his work for a doctorate. Alba to accounting supervisor for the firm's Balti- J. Paladini has been appointed advertis more district. Stanley T. Praiss received his manager of the North Penn Chat, a Philad Rev. Markowski J. P. McLaughlin D.D.S. from Temple University. He is now phia weekly newspaper. Michael M. R '59 on active duty as a captain at Brooke Army received an M.S. in physics at Lehigh U Hospital. Richard M. Schieken received his versity. Marriages: Lawrence N. Farni Bernhardt G. Blumenthal, Ph.D., studied M.D. from the University of Pennsylvania to Madeline C. De Luca; Joseph F. Larris this at the University of Tubingen summer and is interning at Children's Hospital in to Anna Bono: David J. Swankoski to B of on a grant from the Germanistic Society Philadelphia. Thomas J. Schneider received bara Szewczyk. Birth: To Kenneth Sh, America. Thomas A. Gallagher and his M.D. from Jeff'erson Medical College. and his wife, a son Kenneth III. Thomas J. Grimes received master's de- Eugene R. Valentine received his M.D. grees in education from Temple University. from Temple University. He will serve his Joseph E. Kelly has been promoted to sales internship at the Pensacola (Fla.) Educa- manager of the Philadelphia plant of Oscar tional Program Hospital. Alexander B. Mayer and Company. Louis J. Lendvay re- Chernyk and Frederick G. Uberti received ceived his M.S. in chemistry from the Uni- their D.O. degrees from the Philadelphia Col- versity of Pennsylvania. Thomas N. Man- lege of Osteopathy. Chernyk will intern at ning received an MBA in marketing from Riverview Hospital in Norristown, Pa.; Temple University. Rev. Edward M. Mar- Uberti, at Grandview Hospital, Dayton, O. kowski. O.P., was ordained a priest of the Navy Lt. (jg) Wilson Elliot is serving David A. Partridge in June by the Most Rev- aboard a South Vietnamese patrol boat in erend William J. McDonald. Auxiliary Vietnam. Marriages: Vincent P. Anderson Bishop of Washington, D.C. John P. Mc- to Veronica E. Makem; John J. Brabazon to the Laughlin, a state political reporter of Ann H. Beekman; Edward S. Gryczynski to received the 1965 Trenton (N.J.) Times, Arlene Loretta Cameron; Thomas J. Schnei- County Press Award of the (N.J.) Associa- der, M.D. to Loretta May Sherman. Birth: William R. Daley received an M.A. tion Freeholders "for fair an'd of Chosen To Martin J. O'Gara and wife Maryanne, business and applied economics from impartial coverage of the county government their second child, a daughter, Beth Anne. University of Pennsylvania. David A. Pai scene." Edward J. Spanier was awarded his ridge has been named director of pub Ph.D. in chemistry by the University of Penn- relations for the American College of L sylvania. Marriage: Gilbert J. Guim to Underwriters. Francis J. Storey has b« Maureen Rawley. Birth: To James F. Stehli appointed a special agent of the Fede and wife Norma, their first son, James G. Bureau of Investigation and is assigned the Charlotte, N.C. field division. Willl '60 J. Uhl won a fellowship in organosilic chemistry at Duquesne University. Marriat Thomas Burke will be an instructor in eco- Joseph T. Quinn to Ruth Ann Netzel. Bir University this fall. nomics at Georgetown John B. Kelly To Francis P. Brennan and wife Mart J. Roger Dunkle received his Ph.D. in a son, Francis. classical studies from the University of Penn- '65 sylvania. He is on the faculty at St. John's University, Jamaica, N.Y. Rev. Roy Hardin Kenneth M. Collins is training in All has been assigned to the Camden (N.J.) querque, N.M. for a Peace Corps assignm* diocese and is teaching in Cherry Hill. in Colombia, South America. Joseph Ri Thomas Hartberger is now an accountant '62 ERTSON received a scholarship from the 1^! Strick Trailer Corp. Christian B. Institute to study governmental administ for the Anthony P. Baratta received his LL.B. his master's tion at the Kulchycky, who has earned from the University of Pennsylvania. Jerome University of Pennsylvani at the University Wharton School. J. degree in German literature M. Curry received his M.A. in English from Michael Vallillo v is assistant professor of study dentistry of Pennsylvania, an Lehigh University. Richard Deigert was at the University of Maryla English at the Philadelphia Col- Lawrence R. is German and accidentally killed in Korea in June. Ronald Montgomery training lege of Textiles and Science. He is now a Peace Corps .service in Turkey, attend C. Giletti is attending a seven week insti- for in at Penn. Robert College in Istanbul. Ri< candidate a Ph.D. German tute in Spanish at lona College under an Marriages: his wife have son. Christian B., Jr. ARD R. EsPENSHip to Marjorie He and a NDEA grant. He was recently elected presi- Kreisman Cleveland, Thomas Swartz received his Ph.D. in eco- dent of the Sigma Phi Lambda alumni. Ohio: Thomas Gibson to Ka the University of Indiana. He leen M. McGill; J. nomics from Thomas A. Henry received an M.S. in biol- John Krumenacker the A. will be an assistant professor this year at ogy from the University of Pennsylvania. Marianne Goebel: Charles J. Moo> Reilly to Miriam Sprissler: . Joseph E. Anthony C. Murdocca received a summer Joseph J. McDoN/i received his master's degree in education to Claire E. Anderson: J. NDEA grant to study Spanish at Bucknell Michael Palmi St. Joseph's College. 'W. to Anna Marie Rotondi: from James Wag- University. Thomas C. Rosica will pursue James F. Savage) was promoted to assistant treasurer by Kathleen M. Wright; Francis J. ner his master's in English this fall at Yale Uni- Walsh the Broad Street Trust Company. John J. Geraldine Niedziejko. versity. John Richardson is studying geology Napoleon and Charles W. Pindziak re- and astronomy this summer at Franklin and ceived their Doctor of Osteopathy degrees Marshall under a National Science Founda- 1965-66 from Philadelphia College Osteopathy. ANNUAL FUND the of tion grant. Don F. Vandergrift received a will at Parkview Hospital, James J. Kenyon, chairman of Napoleon intern bachelor of divinity from Seabury-Western Philadelphia; Pindziak will intern at Cherry the Alumni Development Theological Seminary in Evanston, 111. Mar- Commit- Hill (N.J.) Hospital. Marriage: P. James riages: Ronald T. Boland to Mary Grace tee, announced that the Annual Waters to Eileen E. Beyer. Birth: To Lackey; Julian R. Meisner to Mary K. Fund 1965-66 will begin with the J. and wife Elaine, a ThoMas MoNCZEWSKi Slater in San Juan, Puerto Rico. son, Michael James. meeting of class chairmen, chapter '63 chairmen and representatives of various alumni groups. '61 Joseph T. Altopiedi received a master's de- The program will start with a James J. Connolly received an MBA from gree in social work from the University of Temple University in industrial management. Pennsylvania. Stephen W. Cook was pro- mailing to the general alumni in the Edward R. Corcoran received his M.D. moted to first lieutenant in the Army's finance later part of September. TTie per- from Jefferson Medical College and will in- corps. James M. Joyce received an M.S. sonal solicitation of alumni by class tern at Lankenau Hospital. Anthony W. in physics from the University of Pennsyl- agents will commence after Alumni DoNOFRio, Esq., was admitted to the Bar vania. Richard Lafferty received his mas- in Chester County, Pa. He received his LL.B. ter's degree in governmental administration Weekend activities.

10 I

ALUMNI WEEKEND

The second annual Alumni Homecoming Weekend will be held

October I and 2, it was announced by alumni president. Daniel E. Mc- Cjonigle. '57. This year's committees, under I' the

I general chairmanship of John P. ^Lavin, "62, plan to follow the suc-

(:essful pattern of I 964.

1; The 24th annual Signum Fidei lijMedal presentation and the second mnual Alumni Symposium will take olace Saturday. William B. Ball. Esq.. executive director and general j;ounsel, Pennsylvania Catholic Wel- rare Committee, will receive the

nedal at a 1 P.M. luncheon. "In- egrity. Censorship and the Arts"

vill be the topic at the morning ymposium. Principal speakers will pe Ernest Schier, Evening Bulletin Hrama critic, and F. Emmett Fitz- j)atrick. first assistant district attor- ley. A faculty panel will take part.

ames I. Gillespie, '55, chaired the ^ignum Fidei selection committee,

(vhile John Zaccaria, '54, is sym- losium chairman. The Annual Stag Reunion again

vill open the Weekend on Friday liight at 9 P.M. in the College Union. Jeer and pretzels, sports films and jeminiscing will be available at the Jisual $3 admission charge. The pop- ilar Monte Carlo casino, inaugu- iated three years ago, again will be featured. Anthony Clark, "63, is Ihairman of the stag committee. The Alumni Symposium will be iffered Saturday. The topic and ;uest speakers will be announced

'hortly. John Zaccaria. "54. is chair- Inan of this year's Symposium, yhich again will be sponsored by Alphaa Epsilon.

.1 RegistrationDo, for the Symposium

'vill be from 9:30 to 10 A.M., dur-

-J lig which time coffee and donuts

r[/ill be served. The Symposium will i'egin promptly at 10 A.M. and will ind at approximately 12:30. The S3 jegistration charge includes lun-

-|heon at 1 P.M. Concluding the Weekend will be f

^le Alumni Dinner-Dance in the ollege Union Ballroom on Satur-

[ay evening. Various groups, such

,i the College Union alumni and

'le alumni of Sigma Phi Lambda, he planning cocktail parties before

]ie dinner. Others will find cocktails mailable at 7 P.M. in the Snack ar. The dinner will start at 8 P.M. 1965 ANNIVERSARY REUNIONS totaled three this spring, including Class of '50 (top, nd followed by dancing. will be from left) Thomas Walker, Robert Lodes, Cletos McBride, Joseph Waugh and Robert '56, will chair- Dseph N. Malone, be Volenti shown with alumni director James McDonald; Class of '55 (center, from left) lan of the Dinner-Dance. Frank Noonon, Francis Donohoe, Thomas Golo, James Gillespie, David Smith, James Arrangements will be made to ac- McKenna and William Bergmonn; Class of '60 (bottom! Thomos Corrigan (second from Dmmodate out-of-town alumni. left) and the Rev. Roy Hardin (second from right).

I 1 Brother Felkian Patrick joined the La Salle staff as an assistant professor of English in I960. He was named Honors Pro- gram Director in 1963. He holds degrees from Catholic University and the University of Penn- sylvania.

12 —

3F THE HUMANITIES?

iBy Brother F. Patrick, F.S.C, Ph.D. 'Director, Honors Program

Many humanities scholars have contended that

science has been 'deified' at the expense

•of the arts. Brother Patrick, in this companion piece

to the Editorial Projects for Education supplement in jthis issue, questions the contentions as they apply to La Salle.

IN SENDING THIS Special report along to the readers of of man. To negate this culture is to negate the La Salle, the editors have a dual purpose in mind: fundamental nature of man. Hence, the liberal to alert the friends of the college to the national picture arts college should utilize all its talents and facil- with regard to the humanities, and—in this article—to ities in developing students who possess an aware- apply these generalities to La Salle. Several outstanding ness of the role of culture in this society, and members of the science and business areas have been asked that no dichotomy should exist between the to react to the special report; their thoughtful responses sciences and the humanities in a perfect society. have been worked into the fabric of the following paragraphs. There has been such a tide of well-written defenses of Three areas of reflection occur to mind upon reading the liberal arts in recent years, that such an undertaking the national special report, and will serve as the skeleton in this context would probably be redundant. It is probably of the article. Two are somewhat negative in appearance, more useful, then, to profit by the cautionary note which

but necessary. One is that the "plight" of the humanities is Roland Holroyd, Ph.D., professor of biology, has seen fit not to be construed as a conflict between humanities and to sound. Humanities persons take heed: the physical sciences or vocational training areas of the The humanities have not been the step-sisters of curriculum. The second is that La Salle—with its specifical- the sciences. They are blood relatives. Perhaps ly Catholic objectives—cannot offer the national report as they have been the vain older sisters, filled with if it were a perfect document. On a more positive plane, pride and the belief that they alone possessed the with the dual disclaimer out of the way, we shall survey charism of culture. The sciences were of the earth some of the programs which the college has instituted to earthy. Pride has gone before a fall. This falling

promote vitality in the area of the humanities. away has been a continuing process of over fifty

In denying that there is a conflict between the sciences years. and humanities, the science people are really affirming the About 1914 or thereabouts, college Greek was unity of human knowledge. As a corollary to this unity, removed as a fixed requirement for the cultural science educators stress that a liberal education is a unified A.B. degree. About twenty years later, the same formation of a human person, that—as a consequence^ fate befell . Meanwhile, the majors in pure the very real competition for funds and facilities does not science were declared to be worthy of this desir- in any way imply a conflict of the disciplines themselves. able degree, rather than the B.S.—still another Brother G. Nicholas, F.S.C, Ph.D., assistant professor blow. The scientific "Cinderellas" were becoming of biology, puts the matter this way: more attractive. Rather than discuss further the plight of the The humanities are looking backward, filled humanities vis-a-vis science, I should like to em- with the pride of accomplishment, whereas the phasize that here is precisely the type of problem sciences are gazing hopefully ahead. Youth looks a liberal arts college such as La Salle can influ- forward, impatient of the restrictions of the past. ence. The main task of the liberal arts college is Seemingly the sciences are chafing under the to demonstrate the unity of knowledge; to present burden of the humanities in the average college to its students the concept that the pursuit of core curriculum. It should not be so because they

wisdom is still basically a single enterprise. No are sisters, who complement one another . . . greater disservice could be done to either science A training in the sciences alone is mere fact- or humanities than to raise the level of one with- suffering, however glowing may be its patina. out concomitantly raising the level of all edu- A training in the humanities by themselves is a cation. worshipping at the shritie of past glories. To-

Brother Nicholas proceeds to make an application of this gether, they constitute true education . . .

general statement to hi^ particular discipline . . . From the dean of the business school comes an insight The biologist recognizes perhaps more clearly into the popular mind, one which can account for the than others that culture is the exclusive property widespread misunderstanding of the relationship between

—continued 13 PLIGHT »4, HUMANITIES ? .on,in„ed

Not 'step sisters/ but 'blood relatives'

the humanities and the physical sciences. Even though neither the science men nor the humanities people are science men themselves see the unity of knowledge so unanimously enthusiastic about some of the report's sample clearly — as has been shown — Brother David Cassian, projects. Some of those have a scholarly in-group aura to F.S.C., dean of Business Administration, points out that: them, which would be hard to justify, even in the longest- iVe are a people with a great obsession for range perspective, if competition for funds is involved. security. Security as the term is now generally There are even some contradictions built into the section accepted must come from without and he subject "A Million-dollar Project without a Million Dollars."

to physical measurement. This obsession is draw- After the refrain "more money" some problems are out- ing us as a nation to the material, the scientific. lined which no amount of money can cure: "As modest The present conflict between the humanities in their talents as in their public position, our historians and the practical must he, by its nature, one- too often have shown themselves timid and pedestrian in sided. As long as any kind of score can be kept, approach, dull and unimaginative in their writing." Amaz- the scientist has to win out over the humanist. ingly, the composers of the report strike a cause-effect There is hope for the humanities in this area. relationship: "These are vices that stem from public in- The concept of security cannot be critically ex- difference." Not, one must aver, the sort of reasoning that amined by the non-humanist. All he can do is ought to open federal coffers.

measure, increase, decrease or refine it. To dig Brother E. Mark, F.S.C., Ph.D., chairman of the physics out, and define the realities of security is a task department, devoted most of his commentary to similar for which the humanist has fitted himself. observations:

Conflict, then, in the sense of competition for the exist- There are several assertions made . . . which I ing amount of aid, truly exists; but between the two areas find difficult to accept without considerable reser- of knowledge themselves there can only be mutual accord. vation. For example, "To know the best that has

We can readily see, at the present time, that there is little been thought and said in former times can make debate left. Everyone who gets into print at all agrees us wiser than we otherwise might be, and in this that there should be much more money for the humanities. respect the humanities are not merely our, but Progress in this matter has been so rapid and so broadly the world's best hope." What is meant by "to based that supporting letters could hardly arrive in Wash- know the best in former times?" By and large, ington in time to be of help. The legislation will have very do we not judge the "best" in the light of con- likely passed without them. temporary experience and insight? Are there not The other possible area of conflict—the competition for times when we must discard the "best" and begin students' time— is somewhat tangential to the main pur- anew? pose, of the special report and therefore of this article. Brother also questions the implicit orientation to Western The struggle is still quite real, with superior people planted thought in the report. very firmly at various points on the spectrum. We shall Actually, one has to say that at several places in the be talking "to" this phase of the problem when we get special report, the "Commission on the Humanities"—blue round to the third main part of this article, the vitaliza- ribbon or not—might well have quit while they were ahead. tion of the humanities themselves. Surely, as Dr. Holroyd No sooner has the group made a cogent point, one pointed out, the humanities must earn their share of the designed to unlock treasure and spread it broadcast, students" priceless time. As will be seen, they may be than it goes on to undercut its entire line of reasoning, driven to such a renewal—where needed—by the happy like the workman who cuts, with an electric hedge clipper,

problem of using aid when it is suddenly offered. If it be the cord which is feeding it power. In addition to the true that any conscientious teacher must daily answer for examples cited above, a pervasive realism and artificial himself the question, "Why am I taking an hour of their detachment make it hard to see exactly what would be lime with this material?"— this will be doubly true when subsidized. True, for federal money, one minimizes the the teacher must justify the use of federal funds. factor of that commitment to a particular philosophy

This latter consideration leads into the second major which might cause a furor. There is a dilemma here, how-

phase of the commentary on the special report, since ever, since in an atmosphere of total detachment it is hard

14 continued on page 31 I THE PLIGHT

^ftk. HUMANITIES

SPECIAL REPORT COPYRIGHT 1965 BY EDITORIAL PROJECTS FOR EDUCATION, INC \

Amidst great material well-being,

our culture stands in danger

of losing its very soul. the greatest economic prosperity WITHever known by Man; With scientific accomplishments unparalleled in human history; With a technology whose machines and methods continually revolutionize our way of life: We are neglecting, and stand in serious danger of losing, our culture's very soul.

This is the considered judgment of men and women at colleges and universities throughout the United

States—men and women whose life's work it is to study our culture and its "soul." They are scholars and teachers of the humanities: history, languages, literature, the arts, philosophy, the history and com- parison of law and religion. Their concern is Man and men—today, tomorrow, throughout history. Their scholarship and wisdom are devoted to assess- ing where we humans are, in relation to where we have come from—and where we may be going, in light of where we are and have been. Today, examining Western Man and men, many of them are profoundly troubled by what they see: an evident disregard, or at best a deep devaluation, of the things that refine and dignify and give meaning and heart to our humanity.

H-ow IS IT NOW with us?" asks a group of distinguished historians. Their answer: "Without really intending it, we are on our way to becoming a dehumanized society." A group of specialists in Asian studies, reaching essentially the same conclusion, offers an explanation:

"It is a truism that we are a nation of activists, problem-solvers, inventors, would-be makers of bet-

ter mousetraps. . . . The humanities in the age of super-science and super-technology have an increas- ingly difficult struggle for existence." "Soberly," reports a committee of the American Historical Association, "we must say that in Ameri- can society, for many generations past, the prevailing concern has been for the conquest of nature, the pro- duction of material goods, and the development of a viable system of democratic government. Hence we have stressed the sciences, the application of science through engineering, and the application of engineer- ing or quantitative methods to the economic and political problems of a prospering republic." The stress, the historians note, has become even competition. As science thrives, the humanities must more intense in recent years. Nuclear fission, the languish—and vice versa. Communist threat, the upheavals in Africa and Asia, 2) There are only so many physical facilities, so and the invasion of space have caused our concern much money, and so much research and teaching

with "practical" things to be "enormously rein- equipment to go around. Science gets its at the ex- forced." pense of the humanities. The humanities' lot will be

Says a blue-ribbon "Commission on the Humani- improved only if the sciences' lot is cut back. ties," established as a result of the growing sense of To others, both in science and in the humanities,

unease about the non-scientific aspects of human life: such assertions sound like nonsense. Our society, "The result has often been that our social, moral, they say, can well afford to give generous support to

and aesthetic development lagged behind our material both science and the humanities. (Whether or not it

advance. . . . will, they admit, is another question.) "The state of the humanities today creates a crisis A committee advising the President of the United for national leadership." States on the needs of science said in 1960: ". . . We repudiate emphatically any notion that science research and scientific education are the only

kinds of learning that matter to America. . . . Obvi-

ously a high civilization must not limit its efforts to THE CRISIS, which extends into every home, science alone. Even in the interests of science itself, into every life, into every section of our society, is it is essential to give full value and support to the best observed in our colleges and universities. As other great branches of Man's artistic, literary, and both mirrors and creators of our civilization's atti- scholarly activity. The advancement of science must tudes, the colleges and universities not only reflect not be accomplished by the impoverishment of any- ." what is happening throughout society, but often thing else. . . indicate what is likely to come. The Commission on the Humanities has said:

Today, on many campuses, science and engineering "Science is far more than a tool for adding to our are in the ascendancy. As if in consequence, important security and comfort. It embraces in its broadest parts of the humanities appear to be on the wane. sense all efforts to achieve valid and coherent views

Scientists and engineers are likely to command the of reality; as such, it extends the boundaries of ex- best job offers, the best salaries. Scholars in the hu- perience and adds new dimensions to human char- manities are likely to receive lesser rewards. acter. If the interdependence of science and the hu- Scientists and engineers are likely to be given finan- manities were more generally understood, men would cial grants and contracts for their research—by govern- be more likely to become masters of their technology ment agencies, by foundations, by industry. Scholars and not its unthinking servants." in the humanities are likely to look in vain for such None of which is to deny the existence of differ- support. ences between science and the humanities, some of Scientists and engineers are likely to find many of which are due to a lack of communication but others the best-qualified students clamoring to join their of which come from deep-seated misgivings that the ranks. Those in the humanities, more often than not, scholars in one vineyard may have about the work must watch helplessly as the talent goes next door. and philosophies of scholars in the other. Differences

Scientists and engineers are likely to get new build- or no, however, there is little doubt that, if Americans ings, expensive equipment, well-stocked and up-to- should choose to give equal importance to both the-minute libraries. Scholars in the humanities, even science and the humanities, there are enough ma- allowing for their more modest requirements of phys- terial resources in the U.S. to endow both, amply. ical facilities, often wind up with second-best. Quite naturally, such conspicuous contrasts have created jealousies. And they have driven some persons in the humanities (and some in the sciences, as well) to these conclusions: THus FAR, however, Americans have not so 1) The sciences and the humanities are in mortal chosen. Our culture is the poorer for it.

the humanities' view:

Mankind is nothing without individual men.

"Composite man, cross-section man, organization man, status-seeking man are not here. It is still one of the merits of the humanities that they see man with all his virtues and iveak- nesses, including his first, middle, and last names." DON CAMERON ALLEN SHOULD an educated but practical WHYAmerican take the vitality of the humanities as his personal concern?

What possible reason is there for the business or professional man, say, to trouble himself with the present predicament of such esoteric fields as philosophy, exotic literatures, history, and art? In answer, some quote Hamlet:

What is a man I Ifhis chiefgood and market of his time Be but to sleep andfeed? a beast, no more.

Others, concerned with the effects of science and technology upon the race, may cite Lewis Mumford: ". . . It is now plain that only by restoring the human personality to the center of our scheme of thought can mechanization and automation be brought back into the services of life. Until this hap- pens in education, there is not a single advance in science, from the release of nuclear energy to the isolation of DNA in genetic inheritance, that may not, because of our literally absent-minded automa- tion in applying it, bring on disastrous consequences to the human race." Says Adlai Stevenson: "To survive this revolution [of science and tech- nology], education, not wealth and weapons, is our best hope—that largeness of vision and generosity of spirit which spring from contact with the best minds and treasures of our civilization."

Tm HE COMMISSION On the Humanities cites five reasons, among others, why America's need of the humanities is great: "1) All men require that a vision be held before them, an ideal toward which they may strive. Ameri- cans need such a vision today as never before in their history. It is both the dignity and the duty of hu- manists to offer their fellow-countrymen whatever understanding can be attained by faUible humanity of such enduring values as justice, freedom, virtue, beauty, and truth. Only thus do we join ourselves to the heritage of our nation and our human kind. "2) Democracy demands wisdom of the average man. Without the exercise of wisdom free institutions f

and personal liberty are inevitably imperiled. To scholars themselves (who are already convinced), is

. know the best that has been thought and said in anybody listening? Is anybody stirred enough to do

former times can make us wiser than we otherwise something about "saving" the humanities before it ,

might be, and in this respect the humanities are not is too late?

merely our, but the world's, best hope. "Assuming it considers the matter at all," says

"3) . . . [Many men] find it hard to fathom the Dean George C. Branam, "the population as a whole

motives of a country which will spend billions on its sees [the death of the liberal arts tradition] only as

outward defense and at the same time do little to the overdue departure of a pet dinosaur.

}' maintain the creative and imaginative abilities of its "It is not uncommon for educated men, after

I own people. The arts have an unparalleled capability expressing their overwhelming belief in liberal educa- for crossing the national barriers imposed by language tion, to advocate sacrificing the meager portion found and contrasting customs. The recently increased in most curricula to get in more subjects related to

American encouragement of the performing arts is the technical job training which is now the principal to be welcomed, and will be welcomed everywhere goal as a sign that Americans accept their cultural respon- "The respect they profess, however honestly they

sibilities, especially if it serves to prompt a corre- proclaim it, is in the final analysis superficial and sponding increase in support for the visual and the false: they must squeeze in one more math course

hberal arts. It is by way of the humanities that we for the engineer, one more course in comparative best come to understand cultures other than our own, anatomy for the pre-medical student, one more ac- and they best to understand ours. counting course for the business major. The business "4) World leadership of the kind which has come man does not have to know anything about a Bee- upon the United States cannot rest solely upon su- thoven symphony; the doctor doesn't have to com- perior force, vast wealth, or preponderant technology. prehend a line of Shakespeare; the engineer will

Only the elevation of its goals and the excellence of perform his job well enough without ever having

its conduct entitle one nation to ask others to follow heard of Machiavelli. The unspoken assumption is

its lead. These are things of the spirit. If we appear that the proper function of education is job training to discourage creativity, to demean the fanciful and and that alone."

the beautiful, to have no concern for man's ultimate Job training, of course, is one thing the humanities

destiny—if, in short, we ignore the humanities—then rarely provide, except for the handful of students [both our goals and our efforts to attain them will be who will go on to become teachers of the humanities Imeasured with suspicion. themselves. Rather, as a committee of schoolmen

"5) A novel and serious challenge to Americans has put it, "they are fields of study which hold values I

|is posed by the remarkable increase in their leisure for all human beings regardless of their abilities, time. The forty-hour week and the likelihood of a interests, or means of livehhood. These studies hold khorter one, the greater life-expectancy and the earlier such values for all men precisely because they are ages of retirement, have combined to make the bless- focused upon universal qualities rather than upon

ing of leisure a source of personal and community specific and measurable ends. . . . [They] help man to

concern. 'What shall I do with my spare time' all-too- find a purpose, endow him with the ability to criticize iquickly becomes the question 'Who am I? What shall intelligently and therefore to improve his own society,

|l make of my life?' When men and women find and establish for the individual his sense of identity jnothing within themselves but emptiness they turn with other men both in his own country and in the

jto trivial and narcotic amusements, and the society world at large."

jaf which they are a part becomes socially delinquent y ind potentially unstable. The humanities are the im- Tiemorial answer to man's questioning and to his jieed for self-expression; they are uniquely equipped " -s THIS reason enough for educated Americans fill the 'abyss of leisure.' I The arguments are persuasive. But, aside from the to give the humanities their urgently needed support? .

# The humanities: "Our Kves are

"Upon the humanities depend the

national ethic and morality. . the substance they are made of."

. . . the national use of our environment and our material accomplishments.'"

. . . the national aesthetic and beauty or lack of it . . . # ^'A millwu-dollai

project without

a inillion dollars'

CRISIS in the humanities involves people, THEfacilities, and money. The greatest of these, many believe, is money. With more funds, the other parts of the humanities' problem would not be impossible to solve. Without more, they may well be. More money would help attract more bright stu- dents into the humanities. Today the lack of funds is turning many of today's most talented young people into more lucrative fields. "Students are no different from other people in that they can quickly observe where the money is available, and draw the logical conclusion as to which activities their society con- siders important," the Commission on the Humanities More money would stimulate travel and henc ( observes. A dean puts it bluntly: "The bright student, strengthen research. "Even those of us who hav as well as a white rat, knows a reward when he sees access to good libraries on our own campuses mus one." travel far afield for many materials essential t' More money would strengthen college and uni- scholarship," say members of the Modern Languag versity faculties. In many areas, more faculty mem- Association. bers are needed urgently. The American Philosophical More money would finance the publication of long Association, for example, reports: "... Teaching overdue collections of literary works. Collections c demands will increase enormously in the years im- Whitman, Hawthorne, and Melville, for exampk mediately to come. The result is: (1) the quality of are "officially under way [but] face both scholarl humanistic teaching is now in serious danger of de- and financial problems." The same is true of transl teriorating; (2) qualified teachers are attracted to tions of foreign literature. Taking Russian authors i other endeavors; and (3) the progress of research and an example, the Modern Language Association note creative work within the humanistic disciplines falls "The major novels and other works of Turgene' []' far behind that of the sciences." Gogol, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov are readi More money would permit the establishment of available, but many of the translations are inferic new scholarships, fellowships, and loans to students. and most editions lack notes and adequate introdu( —

THUS PROFESSOR GAY WILSON ALLEN, OnC of the editors, describes the work on a complete edition of the writings of Walt Whitman. Because of a lack of sufficient funds, many important literary projects are stalled in the United States. One in- dication of the state of affairs: the works of only two American literary figures—Emily Dickinson and Sidney Lanier—are considered to have been collected in editions that need no major revisions.

torical Association says, "our historians too often have shown themselves timid and pedestrian in ap- proach, dull and unimaginative in their writing. Yet these are vices that stem from public indifference." More money would enable some scholars, now en- gaged in "applied" research in order to get funds, to undertake "pure" research, where they might be far more valuable to themselves and to society. An ex- ample, from the field of linguistics: Money has been available in substantial quantities for research related to foreign-language teaching, to the development of language-translation machines, or to military com- munications. "The results are predictable," says a

ns. . . . There are more than half a dozen transla- report of the Linguistics Society of America. "On

jons of Crime and PiiiiislinieiU. . . . but there is no the one hand, the linguist is tempted into subterfuge

"ingHsh edition of Dostoevsky's critical articles, and dressing up a problem of basic research to make it

Dne of his complete published letters. [Other] writers look like applied research. Or, on the other hand, he

" outstanding importance. . . . have been treated is tempted into applied research for which he is not ily in a desultory fashion." really ready, because the basic research which must

More money would enable historians to enter areas lie behind it has not yet been done." Dw covered only adequately. "Additional, more More money would greatly stimulate work in 'ibstantial, or more immediate help," historians say, archaeology. "The lessons of Man's past are humbling needed for studies of Asia, Russia, Central , ones," Professor William Foxwell Albright, one of

e Middle East, and North Africa; for work in intel- the world's leading Biblical archaeologists, has said.

:tual history; for studying the history of our West- "They are also useful ones. For if anything is clear,

n tradition "with its roots in ancient, classical, it is that we cannot dismiss any part of our human hristian, and medieval history"; and for "renewed story as irrelevant to the future of mankind." But, nphasis on the history of Western Europe and reports the Archaeological Institute of America, "the

merica." "As modest in their talents as in their knowledge of valuable ancient remains is often per-

iblic position," a committee of the American His- manently lost to us for the lack of as little as S5,000." I money: that is the great need. But where there were overt difficulties or where an oppor-

MOREwhere will it come from? tunity had opened for exceptional achievement," the

Science and technology, in America, report states. "The humanities fit both categories, owe much of their present financial for the potential achievements are enormous while strength —and, hence, the means behind their spec- the troubles stemming from inadequate support are tacular accomplishments — to the Federal govern- comparably great. The problems are of nationwide ment. Since World War II, billions of dollars have scope and interest. Upon the humanities depend the flowed from Washington to the nation's laboratories, national ethic and morality, the national aesthetic including those on many a college and university and beauty or the lack of it, the national use of our

campus. environment and our material accomplishments. . . . The humanities have received relatively few such "The stakes are so high and the issues of such dollars, most of them earmarked for foreign language magnitude that the humanities must have substantial projects and area studies. One Congressional report help both from the Federal government and from showed that virtually all Federal grants for academic other sources." facilities and equipment were spent for science; 87 The commission's recommendation: "the establish- percent of Federal funds for graduate fellowships ment of a National Humanities Foundation to went to science and engineering; by far the bulk of parallel the National Science Foundation, which is so Federal support of faculty members (more than $60 successfully carrying out the public responsibilities million) went to science; and most of the Federal entrusted to it." money for curriculum strengthening was spent on science. Of $1,126 billion in Federal funds for basic research in 1962, it was calculated that 66 percent went to the physical sciences, 29 percent to the life sciences, 3 percent to the psychological sciences, 2 s,UCH A PROPOSAL raises miportant questions percent to the social sciences, and 1 percent to "other" for Congress and for all Americans. fields. (The figures total 101 percent because fractions Is Federal aid, for example, truly necessary? Can- L are rounded out.) not private sources, along with the states and mu- The tunds—particularly those for research—were nicipalities which already support much of American appropriated on the basis of a clearcut quid pro quo: higher education, carry the burden? The advocates in return for its money, the government would get of Federal support point, in reply, to the present research results plainly contributing to the national state of the humanities. Apparently such sources of welfare, particularly health and defense. support, alone, have not been adequate. With a few exceptions, activities covered by the Will Federal aid lead inevitably to Federal control? humanities have not been considered by Congress to "There are those who think that the danger ol contribute sufficiently to "the national welfare" to \ quahfy for such Federal support.

ii Until they zvant to^ ^^ it wonH he clone. I.T IS on precisely this point—that the humanities are indeed essential to the national welfare —that persons and organizations active in the humanities BARNABY c. KEENEY (oppositc page), ufilversil) are basing a strong appeal for Federal support. now president and scholar in the humanities, chair^ « The appeal is centered in a report of the Commis- the Commission on the Humanities, which has sion on the Humanities, produced by a group of dis- recommended the estabhshment of a Federal!)' tinguished scholars and non-scholars under the chair- financed National Humanities Foundation. Will this lead to Federal interference? Says Presideni manship of Barnaby C. Keeney, the president of Keeney: "When the people of the U.S. want tn Brown University, and endorsed by organization control teaching and scholarship in the humani- after organization of humanities specialists. ties, they will do it regardless of whether there iS|

"Traditionally our government has entered areas Federal aid. Until they want to, it won't be done. XajI —

Federal control is greater in the humanities and the Whether or not Washington does assume a role i arts than in the sciences, presumably because politics financing the humanities, through a National Hu- will bow to objective facts but not to values and manities Foundation or otherwise, this much is cer- taste," acknowledges Frederick Burkhardt, president tain: the humanities, if they are to regain strength of the American Council of Learned Societies, one in this country, must have greater understanding, of the sponsors of the Commission on the Humanities backing, and support. More funds from private and an endorser of its recommendation. "The plain sources are a necessity, even if (perhaps especially if) fact is that there is always a danger of external con- Federal money becomes available. A diversity of trol or interference in education and research, on sources of funds can be the humanities' best insurance both the Federal and local levels, in both the public against control by any one. and private sectors. The establishment of institutions Happily, the humanities are one sector of higher and procedures that reduce or eliminate such inter- education in which private gifts—even modest gifts ference is one of the great achievements of the demo- can still achieve notable results. Few Americans are cratic system of government and way of life." wealthy enough to endow a cyclotron, but there are

Say the committeemen of the American Historical many who could, if they would, endow a research Association: "A government which gives no support fellowship or help build a library collection in the at all to humane values may be careless of its own humanities. destiny, but that government which gives too much support (and policy direction) may be more danger- ous still. Inescapably, we must somehow increase the prestige of the humanities and the flow of funds. At the same time, however grave this need, we must I.N BOTH public and private institutions, in boti safeguard the independence, the originality, and the small colleges and large universities, the need is ur freedom of expression of those individuals and those gent. Beyond the campuses, it affects every phase o groups and those institutions which are concerned the national life. with Uberal learning." This is the fateful question: Fearing a serious erosion of such independence, Do we Americans, amidst our material well-being some persons in higher education flatly oppose Fed- have the wisdom, the vision, and the determinatiot eral support, and refuse it when it is offered. to save our culture's very soul?

The report on this and the preceding 15 associated with the American Alumni pages is the product of a cooperative en- Council. (The editors, of course, speak for deavor in which scores of schools, colleges, themselves and not for their institutions.) and universities are taking part. It was Copyright © 1965 by Editorial Projects for prepared under the direction of the group Education, Inc. All rights reserved; no listed below, who form editorial projects part may be reproduced without express FOR EDUCATION, a noH-proflt organization permission of the editors. Printed in U.S.A.

DENTON BEAL CHARLES M. HELMKEN ROBERT L. PAYTON CHARLES E. WIDMAVER Carnegie Institute of Technology American Alumni Council Washington University Dartmouth College

DAVID A. BURR JOHN I. MATTILL ROBERT M. RHODES DOROTHY F. WILLIAMS The University of Oklahoma Massachusetts Institute of Technology The University of Pennsylvania Simtnons College DAN ENDSLEY KEN METZLER VERNE A. STADTMAN RONALD A. WOLK Stanford University The University of Oregon The University of California The Johns Hopkins Universil BEATRICE M. FIELD RUSSELL OLIN FREDERIC A. STOTT ELIZABETH BOND WOOD Tulane University The University of Colorado Phillips Academy, Andover Sweet Briar College

MARALYN O. GILLESPIE JOHN W. PATON FRANK J. TATE CHESLEY WORTHINGTON Swarthmore College Wesleyan University The Ohio State University Brown University *

CORBIN GWALTNEY JOHN A. GROWL Executive Editor Associate Editor PLIGHT'^* HUMANITIES ?

People with an obsession for security

to pin down that justifying vitality we talked of. How is humanities harbor a significantly higher percentage of a man to teach philosophy in a lively manner if he doesn't academic drones than do the physical sciences; but at any care which system is true? rate we are discussing the image.

Just how the huge uncommitted university is to solve So far as one can tell, across the nation, the humanities

this dilemma is unclear, certainly in the special report and are in varying degrees of trouble in the competition for probably in the academic community at large. However, student time and energy. People who can actually teach one partial solution to the commitment-detachment dilem- such branches are in crucially short supply; and all too ma is ours: the "small" independent college that has an often the vacant places are filled by persons with all the

axe to grind and is proud of it. In addition to the now- credentials and no knack. In a humanities branch, one familiar freedom of choice argument for aid to inde- must go to some pains to insure that the students will look pendent colleges, we are led to see the great need in our forward to the next class, to structure the hour in a way society for the kind of teaching that tries to adhere to that will match the intrinsic appeal of all that apparatus truth, and that cares about truth enough to stay in business in the science center. A core course that is dull, routine at a loss. This is not the same thing as that—often admir- (last year's notes unrevised), unreal (the morality of able—constant search for truth which will, by definition, duelling) and irrelevant does not deserve to infringe upon never know whether it has arrived or not. the famous "one more math course for the engineer, one True, we need the committed college; but as taxpayers, more accounting course for the business major" that are do we care to subsidize the other fellow's brand of com- trotted out in the report. A humanities teacher who reads mitment? This horn of the dilemma is not dealt with, and the textbook to his students (even if he has taken the

this is still another shortcoming in the structure of the trouble to type it out in the form of "notes") should be

report, since it several times implies a link between per- neither subsidized nor even tolerated.

ception of truth and right ways of acting. But it is still Every recent curricular development at La Salle shows

hard to pin it all down: a keen awareness of the vitalization problem. Several active It is both the dignity and the duty of humanists programs, all of which need "more money," are in full to offer their fellow-countrymen whatever under- cry. While they are not unique to La Salle, they all do standing can be attained by fallible humanity of have the stamp of meeting local problems, and are tinc- such enduring values as justice, freedom, virtue, tured by their immersion in the special compound of

I beauty, and truth . . . elements which are our college. Only the elevation of its goals and the excel- Very careful re-study of all core humanities require- lence of its conduct entitle one nation to ask ments has been going on for about six years now, in two

others to follow its lead . . . distinct waves, the first leading into the self-study recently

What, then, will we be ready to do at La Salle if we completed, the second tied-in with the decennial visitation are suddenly offered humanities money? Let us briefly of the Middle States accrediting group. National trends

look at the broad problem of the "image" of the human- clearly indicate that 1 20 credit hours will soon be the

ities on many campuses, and then survey La Salle's exist- acceptable norm for graduation (132 is the current figure ing programs. at La Salle). However, certain post-graduate curricula are Humanities people have to live with a whole set of facts exceedingly specific in the demands they make upon not dealt with in the special report of the Commission: undergraduate institutions; and these demands are grow-

the image of humanistic studies in the great practical ing. The third force in this evident three-way squeeze is, world, an image often richly merited by individual dull clearly, the humanities core group. While one may readily teachers. "Made work" on completely artificial research say, "Make the credit hour mean more and call them all

topics, spadework for the teacher's own thesis, and a two-credit courses," it is not really all that simple. Mean- misguided effort to "scientize" subjects which don't really while, the three-way squeeze causes all sorts of agonizing lend themselves to the scientific method properly so called, —but healthy—reappraisals, to which there appears to be are among the bases for this image. Moreover, old-fashioned no end. laziness has contributed to the problem. There are too To be more specific, let us list very concrete develop- many unread papers, easy-to-correct tests, and arbitrary ments which, at La Salle, will help make the humanities marks in humanities courses. No. one knows whether the yet more worthy of assistance.

—continued 31 PLIGHT »/& HUMANITIES ?con,i„„,d

The real need is not gimmickery

Sacred Theology, under the far-seeing leadership of its all the humanities departments, all of which are, as stated, present chairman, has pursued a two-pronged course of re-examining "one more time" the use they make of their self improvement. In the "first wave" of curricular re- slice of the curricular pie. vision, theology reduced its over-all requirement from 16 Honors Program courses, at all levels but especially to 14 hours, but attained much greater effectiveness in its in the later years, help the student to see the unity of separate courses by shifting from two-credit to three- knowledge, to which the contributors quoted earlier al- credit couree structures, of one semester's duration. This luded continually. The harmony of specialization and revision made possible a concomitant increase in the ratio liberal education can best emerge in such a setting. of full-time teachers to part-time teachers in the depart- For present purposes, suffice it to say that the honors ment. The gradual introduction of electives, looking to- program exists to challenge those who need challenging. ward the eventual establishment of a major serves still Its two basic ingredients are special sections of required further to vitalize the program. courses (using exclusively teachers from within the de- The other subject most closely tied to the college's partments), and independent study courses for upper divi- reason for existing at all, philosophy, has undergone sion students (using mainly visiting professors). As can similar changes in its course structure. Perhaps more be seen from the preceding instances, however, a rich significantly from the "image" point of view, the slow- growth of experimental formats and approaches—orig- dying notion that philosophy is strait-jacketed into one inating in the subject of departments—has come into being form of Thomism is being well combatted by the increas- along with the additional qualitative stress. ing degree of student-teacher dialogue in formal and in- What the honors program would like to see aided is formal circumstances. The rapid increase in the demand the students, so that they could give genuine full time to for philosophy majors in such lay careers as the teaching their four years of intensive formation. And on the over- of theology can be expected to stimulate interest, as will all picture, it is clear that virtually all improvements in the constantly increasing open-ness to other systems of the humanities courses are—or should be—costly. Better thought on the part of the teaching staff'. A pioneer stu- salaries, additional compensation, time for research and dent will, during the coming year, study Eastern thought for curriculum development, library enrichment, all these in Hawaii, returning for his senior year as a philosophy things are implied in this survey. major at La Salle. For some years now, the upper division Foundations of all kinds apparently have a strong aver- classes have been enlivened by the presence of returning sion to the support of on-going operations. They like a students from La Salle in Europe. These men have ex- terminal point; and they love novelty. But the more genuine perienced liberal education in the most complete sense need is not the gimmickry which such artificial standards of the term, and have been numerous enough to influence are producing on every hand. Our college needs human- campus life considerably. ities foundation money for salaries and scholarships. True, Modern language teachers, working within the existing we can always buy overhead projectors and jettison the departmental structure and stimulated by the growth of wartime buildings; but in the long run we should try to the honors program, have developed a comparative litera- meet basic needs. ture course during the past year and will team-teach it Finally, La Salle can claim to be in the very front for the first time during the coming year. Members of line in the currently vital issue of excellence in college the economics department are working 3 one-semester teaching. Meaningful awards for. distinguished teaching course of similar pattern, on the subject of the under- have been given for five years now; and the constant stress developed nations. An entirely independent seminar, inter- upon excellence in actual classroom procedure can be disciplinary in character, has been given a trial run by a no news to anyone with a mail box on our campus. member of the history department, and will become a We can claim, especially in this regard, to merit fed- regular course offering this year. eral foundation money; and we should not be reluctant Instances like the foregoing ones could be detailed for to do so.

32 La Sail Vignettes

John Ryan / state of the union

John A. Ryan, '51, is a quiet, rather intellectual person, not exactly the union leader archetype. But, as presi- dent of the Philadelphia Federation of

Teachers, he is the spokesman for some 5,000 Philadelphia public school teachers, who in a recent election au- thorized the Federation as their official agents—supplanting the Philadelphia Teachers Association. The Federation represents all city teachers and pro- fessional personnel in bargaining for wages, welfare and working condi- tions. Ryan, 38, who this fall will be- come head of the history department at Lincoln High School, taught in the city's elementary schools until earning his master's degree from Temple in

1957 (he is now a doctoral candidate), when he joined the faculty at Edison High—a post he held until the election this spring. At La Salle, he was presi- dent of the Historical Society and a member of the International Relations Club. His association with the Federa- tion began in 1954, when he was named to the executive board; he was elected president in 1963. In this sum- mer's negotiations with the Board of Education, the Federation sought a $1000 salary increase, new grievance procedures, smaller classes, and addi- tional texts and visual aids for teach- ing. Ryan supports busing students "from crowded to under-utilized schools," but disdains transferring teachers "unless it's voluntary." Un- derstandably, he favors increased taxes to improve public schools, and adds: "I think Catholic parents have to assume the responsibility of sup- porting public schools, whether we choose to use them or not." Ryan, his wife, and their five children (three of whom are enrolled in parochial schools), make their home in North- east Philadelphia.

-continued 33 La Sail vignettes —continued

Tom Walsh / 'city' on the boardwalk

In the good old days, a horse-drawn carriage brought guests of Atlantic City's Chalfonfe-Haddon Hall Hotel the several hundred yards from Chalfonte Cottage to the then-green timbers of the boardwalk. Thomas J. Walsh, '35, is sales manager of the mammoth ocean front hotel, which today is famous the world over as one of the last "family hotels." This casts no aspersions upon the virtue of other hotels; rather, it indicates Chalfonte's philosophy that a hotel should be able to provide all of the services guests require (it has its own power plant, runs its own food services for 1 800 guests). One of the largest hotels in the nation (1001 bedrooms, 35 meet- ing rooms), Chalfonte, according to

Walsh, is a "self-contained city in it- self—one of the unusual hotels in the country. It is often cited as an exam- ple for many phases of operation." Founded 73 years ago by Quakers, drinking and smoking were frowned upon at Chalfonte as recently as just before World War Two. Walsh, who entered the hotel business in Phila- delphia in 1936, joined Leeds and Lippincott (owners of Chalfonte) after Army service during the War. As an undergraduate, he was on economics major, the editor of The Collegian, and an assistant to the Registrar (then Brother Emelian James). Despite much travel to solicit convention business,

Walsh has been active in politics in South Jersey— he was elected a Free-

holder in 1954 and has been a leader

in the Democratic liberal movement. He, his wife, and their six children (three boys and as many girls), make their home in nearby Absecon, N.J.

34 -

La Salle Centenary Fund Report 1960-64

CAPITAL GIFT CAMPAIGNS

In the past quarter century La Salle College has con- the Fund Raising Program to help finance the College ducted three capital gifts campaigns. Library, to be constructed in the early 1950"s. A report of The first of these, the Diamond Jubilee Campaign was July 10, 1953, indicated cash received in the amount of begun in August, 1937, during the tenure of Brother E. $163,944.00. Of this amount over $100,000 had been Anselm as President of La Salle College. Ward, Wells, and contributed by Foundation members. Drinkman Company was hired as campaign manager, and In January 1960 the La Salle Centenary Fund was of- $157,230.89 was realized by November 6, 1940, when the ficially begun. Cash receipts on December 31, 1964, the campaign account was closed out. Unique aspects of this closing date of this most recent capital gifts effort were campaign were parish level solicitation, the involvement $717,120.85. of most, if not all, of the Christian Brothers in the solicita- The Board of Managers, Administration, faculty and tion effort, and the active assistance of His Eminence students of La Salle are sincerely grateful for the partici- Denis Cardinal Dougherty. Archbishop of Philadelphia, pation of so many in the Centenary Fund. who was honorary chairman and member of the Board of We begin our second century in higher education with Managers of La Salle College. the confidence of an increasing base of financial support The second capital gifts effort was sponsored by the from the alumni and friends. La Salle Endowment Foundation in 1949. The Endow- With your continuing help we can achieve our goals of— ment Foundation had been founded in 1946 to help the • continued commitment to scholastic excellence; Christian Brothers" Schools and under the direction of • a sustained program of academic development: Joseph J. Schmitz, Jr., "20, Chairman of the Endowment Board, assisted La Salle College in furnishing Leonard Hall • a curriculum suited to the needs of the time; Lounge in 1947. In 1948 the Endowment Foundation se- • a vital concern to serve the changing needs of cured the services of John Price Jones Company to plan the community and the nation.

"Private higher education in Pennsylvania and the nation faces a staggering financial burden. We must redouble the effort of the recently concluded Centenary s" Fund program if La Salle College is to meet the challenge of the 1970'

David L. Lawrence Chairman, La Salle Centenary Fund

—continued 35 Centenary Report -continued

CENTUR 1

TRUSTEES ($1000 and upwards)

Anonymous Eastman Kodak Company J. Harry La Brum, Esq. Nolen & Swinburne AAA Vending Company Faculty Wives La Salle College Guild Stanley C. Orlowski

Abbotts Dairies Foundation Rt. Rev. Msgr. A. F. X. Farrell La Salle College Masque Nicholas Pensiero, '40

M. L. Annenberg Foundation John J. Finley Rt. Rev. Msgr. Casimir F. Lawniczak Philadelphia Electric Company

The Annenberg Fund, Inc. First Pennsylvania Company Hon. David L. Lawrence Dr. Nicholas A. Policarpo, '38

Atomic Energy Commission Food Fair Foundation Leeds and Northrup Company Hon. Daniel L. Quinlan, Jr., '46

Patrick J. Barry, '51 Ford Motor Company Fund Mr. and Mrs. Fremont Levy & Stephen Joseph B. Quinn, Esq., LL.D. Estate of Helen D. Groome Beatty Formost Dairies, Inc. Oscar Francis Levy Radio Corporation of America

Bettilehem Steel Company Bernard A. Furey Matthew H. McCloskey, Jr. Regalbuto Estate

Byron Blum Most Rev. Francis J. Furey, D.D. Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. McFarland Glendon E. Robertson '26 Dr. Francis J. Braceland, General Outdoor Advertising Rt. Rev. Msgr. Charles McGinley George J. A. Roken, Jr. Broad Street Trust Company Hon. Gerald Gleason Dr. James C. McLaughlin '48 Ruben Rosen '44 M. A. Bruder Company Charles M. Grace Joseph J. McLaughlin Thomas J. Ryan

Ttie Budd Company Dr. John A. Guischard Rt. Rev. Msgr. Thomas F. McNally, Joseph Schmitz, Jr., Sc.D., '20

John F. Byrne, '35 Gulf Oil Corporation P.A., LL.D. Sears, Roebuck & Company Campbell Soup Fund Howard Hannold John McShain, Sc.D. Louis Silverstein '41 Dr. Nicholas J. Christ, 38 Dr. H. Blake Hayman, Mack Transportation Company Smith Kline & French Foundation

College Union Committees John F. Headly, Esq. John J. Manley Joseph J. Sprissler, D.C.S.

John F. Connelly, LL.D. Henkels & McCoy. Inc. Merck Company Foundation Louis Stein

Dr. Martin Crane, '20 John B. Henkels, Jr. Vincent Mianulli, '38 John H. Veen, '59 '22 Albert J. Crawford. Jr., Esq. '36 Hubert J. Horan, Jr. John J. Moran, Robert W. Walters, '47 '22 J. Russell Cullen, Sr., Household Finance Thomas J. Mullaney Wawa Dairy Farms

H. Daroff & Sons, Inc. John H. Keelan John A. Murphy Estate of Nat N. J. Wolfsohn

Dominican Fathers William F. Kelly, LL.D. National Science Foundation

Esso Education Foundation Hon. T. A. Kennally Albert J. Nesbitt DIRECTORS ($500. to $999.)

American Can Company Foundation Christian A. Fisher, Jr. La Salle College High School Joseph L. O'Brien '48 William J. Binkowski, Charles M. Foley Mothers' Club Pennsalt Chemicals Foundation

Lawrence G. Bowman, '35 Dr. Gregory F. Froio, '37 Rev. Howard P. Lawton Rev. Glendon E. Robertson '48 '40 Mary E. Broderick Thomas B. Harper, III, Esq., T. Francis Loughney, Robert J. Rowland, Sr. '48 James D. Rufe, '23 Rev. Thomas E. Burns, '50 Rev. John J. Haydt John L. McCloskey. Dr. Charles J. Schreader, '34 Carnegie Corporation James J. Henry Rt. Rev. Msgr. Peter J. McGarrity '20 Estate of Elizabeth Anne Shells Central Penn National Bank Rev, Joseph A. Henry, J. CD. Dr. Francis J. McGeary. Dr. John Stanton, Jr., '39 '48 J. Dr. SMrs. William F.X.Coffey, '44 Daniel G. Heyberger Dr. Paul W. Mcllvaine, The Travelers Insurance Company '27 Commonwealth Land Title Insurance Dr. Roland Holroyd, Joseph P. McLaughlin Frank J. Turbett, '56 Carmen J. landolo Dr. John McLoone, '48 Company C Union Paving Company '43 Rt. Rev. Msgr. James R. Cumminskey Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Incognito Theodore H. Mecke, Jr., Mrs. Anna Veen '20 Lester R. De Fonso, '54 CharlesV. Kelly, Jr. Vincent J. Moranz, Miss Betty Veen

Timothy Dunleavy John J. Kelly Joseph A. Moylan John E. Walsh, Jr. MEMBERS ($100. to $499.)

'54 '51 '56 Joseph L. Abbamondi, Dr. Anastasius C. Bandy, William J. Bogle, John Bresnan, '50 '57 '57 John J. Adair, Patrick J. Bannigan, Michael C. Boland, Jr., '53 James J. Brett, '50 James Accardi Pius Baumann Anthony P. Bonanni, '43 Richard M. Bridgeford, '49 '62 MillardE. Ames, Jr., John Beccaria Charles A. Bott, Inc. Lt. jg. Edward F. Bronson, '54

William R. E. Andrews Howard N. Becker Dr. Richard P. Boudreau George J. Brookes, Jr., '51 '41 Dr. John J. Angelo, Raymond S. Bedmarczyk Joseph J. Boyer, '51 Dr. Thomas P. Brown, '34 Alexander P. Antal, '21 Philip A. Belancio, '54 James M. Boyer, '60 Joseph A. Browne, '49 '57* '49 Dr. Austin J. App Lt, Col.&Mrs. William J. Bennett Constantine J. Boyle, Thomas P. Browne, '55 Edmund F. Armstrong, Harry Benz Thomas M. Boyle, '58 Lawrence J. Bur, Jr., '51 '51 Joseph F. Armstrong, Henry A. Berger, '42 Harry J. Bradley, Esq., '58 The Burke Family

Alexander L. Avallon, '54 Leon S. Blash, '37 Neil G. Breen Dr. G. Butler, '40

Joseph J. Baker, '54 Frank S. Blatcher, '56 Rev. Robert H. Breen Joseph M. Callahan, '60

Roger Balducelli, O.S.F.S. Dr. Ralph F. Boccella, '44 John J. Brennan, '52 Thomas P. Callan, Jr., '36

36 Every effort has been made to be accurate in the preparation of this report; if we have missed your name, or listed it incorrectly, we hope you'll understand and pass the correction on to us. LUB

'49 '47 '39 J. J. Caprano Mr. & Mrs. Charles Dougherty, John 0. Graham, Maurice A. Kelley, '53 '50 '36 William L Carley, Sr., '58 Joseph F. Dougherty, Esq., William F. Grauer, Dr. Maurice J. Kelley,

The Carpenter Steel Foundation James A. Downey, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Gray George J. Kelly

Thomas H. Carroll Robert C. Duffy, Esq. Nicholas F. Graziano, '63 James W. Kelly, Esq., "35 '60 '52 Joseph P. Cassidy, '57 Ralph J. Duncan, Joseph P. Green, John B. Kelly, Inc.

Charles A. Cavanaugh, '38 Durkin World Travels Charles W. Greenberg, '56 WilliamJ. Kelly, Esq., '57 '63 Dr. Edmund Chapdelaine, '31 Thomas J. Durkin, '56 Henry G. Gruber, '48 James J. Kenyon, '55 '54 Theodore J. Cheski, '57 Thaddeus E. QuVal Thomas F. Gruber, Francis DeSales Kerr, '49 '62 John H. Christie, '40 Joseph J. Eberle, Jr., '49 Vincent J. Gudijonis, Daniel M. Kerrane, '41 '52 John P. Clark, Jr. Dr. Edward C. Ehrlich, '48 Francis J. Guerin, C. William Kieser,

Nason B. Clark Charles H. Eisengrein Thomas I. Guerin, Jr. WilliamA. King, Jr., Esq., '50 '59 Parker G. Clark John K. Endo, '56 Gilbert J. Guim, '59 Robert G. Klaiber,

Classes 1890-1930 Dr. Michael M. Etzl, '38 Mr. & Mrs. Michael Gumrot Francis R. Klaster, '59

Dr. Louis H. Clerf Anthony Fabrizio Ralph M. Gutekunst, '17 Charles F. Knapp, Esq., '51

Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Cochrane, '48 Lawrence M. Farnese, '63 Gwynedd-Mercy Junior College Edward Kohlhepp '43 Bruce R. Coleman, '39 John J. Feehan, Jr., '59 Mr. & Mrs. Paul Hafey J. Harold Koob,

Major John Conboy, '50 Dr. Paul S. Felix, '34 Raymond F. Hagen, '61 Myer M. Kotzin '65 James J. Connelly, '61 Dr. Edwin T. Ferren William A. Hall Edmund J. Kozlowski,

James P. Connor, '50 Peter J. Finley, '53 Roy G. Hallman Sigmund A. Krzeminski '58 John M. Connor, '49 Mrs. Ruth M. Finley Charles A. J. Halpin, Jr., Esq., '44 Paul Kuzma, Jr.,

Leo E. Connor, '45 Finnaren & Haley, Inc. Joseph L. Hanley, '59 WilliamJ. Lang, '53

Vincent A. Marie E. Cooke, '55 Robert Fischer, '56 E. Francis Hanlon Dr. Nicholas E. LaRocca, '44

Dr. Donald A. Cornley, '47 William E. Flannery, '58 John T. Hannas, '55 La Salle Cleaners

Joseph P. Costine '40 James J. Flatley, '51 Harry E. Hansen, '63 La Salle College Glee Club

John M. Coulson, '53 John C. Fleck, Jr., '63 T. S. Hargesheimer, Jr. Edward J. Laska '55 Richard P. Coulson, '57 Edward Flood George J. Harkins, Jr., '56 Thomas F. Lavin, Sr., '10 Dr. Robert J. Courtney, '41 Francis A. Florio, '53 Norman P. Harvey, Esq., '34 John A. Lawler, '61 Bernard H. Coyle, '50 Dr. Joseph F. Flubacher, '35 Edward F. Harrigan Gerald Lawrence, Mrs. Catherine Coyle Joseph W. Foley, '55 Joseph A. Hatch, '52 James T. Leary, '48

James M. Coyle, '48 George S. Forde, Jr. H. S. Frank W. Hauser, Jr., '50 Joseph and Louise Leary '47 James V. Covello, '52 Foresight Robert E. Hayes, '52 Dr. Brendan J. Lee, '58 '54 Joseph E. Crowley, Sr., '34 Samuel B. Fortenbaugh, Jr., Esq. Edward J. Mealy, Jr., Louis J. LeHane, '21 J. Russell Cullen, Jr., '60 Joseph H. Foster, Esq., '50 Rev. Henry Heminghaus, O.S.F.S. Dr. James A. Lehman, WilliamR. Culp, '57 Four Chefs, Inc. Raymond G. Hepburn John Lehn '61 Charles S. Curran, '64 Frank J. Fox Hugh A. Hilferty, '65 Mr. & Mrs. William J. Leimkuhler,

Robert C, Curtis, '63 Dr. Ludwig M. Frank, '42 EdwardP. Hill, '47 William Leiheiser

Anthony J. Cutrona, '60 Franklin Sugar Refinery Francis J. Hoban, '51 (Mrs.) Margaret K. Lennon

Charles E. Dagit, R.A., A.I.A. Sidney Gaffin, '52 C. Clark Hodgson, Esq. Richard C. Leonard

Joseph M. D'Alonzo Joseph P. Gaffney, Esq., '00 Theresa M. Hoelzle Goddard Lieberson '56 Frank R. Lindh, '52 Thomas P. Darcy, Dr. James F. Gallbally Charles A. Hofmann

'57 John J.Lombard, Jr., '56 Henry A. Darragh, Donald J. Gallagher, '56 Joseph M. Holahan, Jr. Esq., '41 '60 Robert L. Dean, Joseph D. Gallagher, '58 Richard W. Holscher, '63 William R. Long, '63 '30 loseph A. De Angelis, John G. Gallatig, '62 M. M. Holtzman, Anthony Lucidi '47 '60 Michael Michael De Angelis, Thomas E. Gallagher Thomas J. Horan, Lukawsky '53 Henry L. De Baecke, '26 Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Gallagher Franklin S. Horn, '60 Thomas G. Lydon, '56 '60 John A. Lynch, '49 Robert T. Deck, Edwin J. Garcia, '51 Ralph W. Howard, '20 '53 John J. Dever, Ernest F. Gash, '57 Dr. William C.Howrie, Jr., '38 Robert T. Lynch, Esq., '56 '53 Charles '57 Henry G. De Vincent, John S. Gauker,'61 John D. Hunt, McAlpin, '50 '50 Martin J. Devine, Edward B. Gehring, '58 Albert C. Hurlbrink Cletus J. McBride, Dennis '47 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Devlin Dr. Joseph Gelehrter Industrial Trust Company J. McCarthy,

'53 '52 James J. McCarthy, '14 Francis X. Dennehy, Joseph E. Gembala, Jr., Esq., '41 Robert J. Insetta, '60 Dr. Richard G. DeSipio, William H. Gianelle, '58 Rev. John J. Ivers Thomas N. McCarthy '52 '50 Dr. Gerald A. Desmond, John F. Gibbons Dr. T. C. Jacob, WalterA. McCool, '50 '58 Dick's Delicacies Mrs. William B. Gibbons Mr. & Mrs. Frank Jankowski James McCrane, '56 '44 '56 Nicholas P. Dienna, Mr. &Mrs. Cliff M.Gillespie, '61 Dr. Andrew Floyd Jannett, John McCrane, Hon. '20 Thomas R. '65 Richardson Dilworth James I. Gillespie, '55 Col. G. Burling Jarrett, McDermott, '50 Senator Anthony J. DiSilvestro Globe Security Systems, Inc. Jefferies Processors, Inc. Charles M. McDonald, Mr, '61 Mrs. John F. & Mrs. Peter DiTullio Louis P. Goelz, III, '50 Coleman P. Joyce, McDonald '49 Claude W. Doak, '62 Thomas Gola, '55 Francis W. Judge, '50 Lawrence D. McDonald, WilliamJ. '49 Joseph H. Donahue Lt. Manuel Gomez, Jr., '56 FelixM. Kadel, '37 McDonnell, '49 Ugo Donini Clara D. Godman WalterJ. Kaiser, '47 Robert McDonough, '50 '58 Rev. Owen P. Donnelly Charles F. Gordon, '48 Walter Kanigowski, Francis J. McFadden, Francis X. Donohoe, '55 Theodore Grabowski, '61 Franz A. Kautz, '55H.S. Thomas McFarland '61 John P. Donovan George J. Gradel, '43 Michael J. Kavanaugh, Dr. John T. McGeehan, '41 '52 Michael J. Donovan, '48 Edward Grady, '49 John J. Keenan, Dr. Manus J. McGettigan, '44 '59 '53 Daniel D'Orazio, Most Rev. John J. Graham, D.D. RobertJ. Kelleher, '55 Paul J. McGinnis,

— contirroec 37 Centenary Report -continued

CENTURY CLUB -continued

Maurice B. McGoldrick, '17 Frank R. Murdock, '52 William Ries, '51 Michael L. Sullivan, '59 '57 '53 Daniel E. McGonigle, William E. Murphy, Joseph P. Roach, '59 Humbert F. Sweeney, '51 John McGowan Owen L. Murray, '65 Joseph F. Robb, '65 Williard Sweetser

Joseph E. IVIcGrath, '53 Gaudenzio A. Narcisi, Jr., '55 William T. Rogers, '47 Joseph P. Swietlik '50 '56 Leo F. Mclnerney John J. Nathans, Longin J. Rohach, Michael J. Theis '16 '36 Daniel P. McKenna, Jr., Vincent A. Needham, Oliver R. Roman Guido J. Tonzello '55 '58 James J. McKenna, Jr., Fred R. Noller, Robert A. Romano, '57 Richard W. Tragemann '55 '60 Joseph E. McKenna, Helen G. Noonan Vincent A. Romano, Joseph J. Traurig, '24 '23 '59 Bernard McLaughlin, John Noonan, Albert W. Rostien, '49 Dr. Charles B. Tribit, Jr., '48 Dr. James C. McLaughlin, '48 Frank A. Norton* Joseph Rothchild, '55 CharlesJ. Trois, '49

Robert F. McMackin, '49 Gerald P. Nugent, Jr., '49 Mrs. Kathryn Ruffu Benjamin Tumolo, '52

Bernard M. McManus, '55 Richard F. O'Brien, Jr., '54 Fred Ruthardt Anthony A. Tursi, '59

John Thomas McNutt, '52 Charles E. O'Connor, '52 John P. Ryan, '49 William H. Van Buskirk

Joseph T. Mack, '46 James P. O'Connor, '50 Joseph F. Ryan, '50 Raymond T. Vasoli, '54

Frank J. Madonna William J. O'Connor, '55 Dr. William J. Sabol, '58 Eugene J. Veneziale, '60

John F. Maguire, '22 Dr. Desmond S. O'Doherty, '42 Santarone & Rendine, Esqs. Donald P. Vernon, '49

Miss Margaret C. Maguire Richard K. O'Donnell, '52 Charles E. Satterfield, '63 Mr. & Mrs. Frederick G. Vogt '49 John Maicher, Robert J. O'Donnell, '62 Capt. William H.Scanlan, '50 Carl A. Von Hake, '52

Albert J. Makler, Esq., '40 Francis R. O'Hara, Esq., '54 William V. Scanlan, '24 Carl C. Von Nell, '53 '62 James F. Mallin, JamesJ. O'Neill, Jr., '49 Magnus J. Schaebler, '22 James J. Walsh, '58

Francis J. Mangan, '57 John J. Schaub, '48 T. '52 Thomas J. Padden, '54 Joseph Walsh, Esq., '53 '39 John L. Manning, Alexander H. Patterson Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Scheiter Anthony M. Waltrich, '55 '55 Joseph J. Manson, Julio Paz-y-Mino Thomas E. Schenk, Jr., Dr. Frank Wargocki

George J. Margraff, '22 Dr. '42 Victor P. Joseph J. Pello, '59 Henry J. Schneider, Warkulwiz

Martin P. Marion Dr. John S. Penny, '37 Augustin J. Schwartz, Jr. Samuel J. Watt, Jr., '59 '49 '50 Joseph G. Markmann, Joseph M. Penrose, '56 Harold W. Scott Joseph T. Waugh, '60 Michael J. Marshall, Benjamin Pensiero Scott & Grauer Frank J. Wetzler '38 Marstan Distributing Co., Inc. Dr. Joseph A. Pescatore, '23 Dr. Thomas M. Scotti, Dr. Harry J. White, '54 Frank W. Marte, '49 '60 B. John J. Pettit, Jr., '56 Joseph J. Sgro, John White Joseph W. Maxwell Pierce and Reese, inc. Louis A. Sgro Thomas B. White, Jr. John Meehan '58 John Whiteside & Son John J. Pilman George C. Shammo, A. Dr. '54 '46 '55 Lawrence J. Mellon, Jr., Fred L. Pirmann Dr. John H. Sheehan, Henry T. Wilkens, M. '63 '53 James Mermon, Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Sheehan, Williard, Inc. Harold Metz, '39 '60 Calvin L. Pontius Robert M. Shore, Charles J. Wills Edwin Michie, '62 Harry C. Portland, '58 Sigma Beta Kappa— Gamma Chapter Oliver G. Willits Mid Thirties '65 Combined Reunion Dr. Theodore A. Praiss, '30 Senator Martin Silvert James Wilson,

Walter J. Miller, '29 '47 Dr. & Mrs. Michael P. Primiano John C. Singer Joseph A. Wilson, Jr., John A. Mitchell, '29 '64 John P. Pryor, '58 , Merion Peter A. Wilson, '54 WalterT. Mitchell, Jr., '64 David G. Quinlan Bernard L. Skwirut, Clarence B. Wingert, Jr. Francis A. MIynarczyk, '62 '38 Thomas J. Quinlan, '48 John A. Slattery, Honorable Randolph E. Wise James C. Moffet, '50 William Francis '59 Magistrate Edward T. Quinn, '23 T. Smith W. Wisler, John F. '63 Mohan, Mrs. Mary E. Quinn Society of Holy Child Jesus Zigmund M. Wisniewski Dr. Mrs. William Frank Harold & J. Molinari Joseph F. Raab, Esq., '25 R. Solis Wolff Francis '24 '52 J. Monaghan, Jr. Bernard F. Rafferty, '48 Raymond J. Spahr, Joseph M. Wolfram, '50 Joseph L. Moran, DanielJ. Ragan, '53 Donald L. Sprague, '60 Melvin F. Woods '56 Joseph More, Esq., Michael C. Rainone, Esq., '38 David M. Spratt, '59 E. A. Wright Co. John G. Morrison, '49 '50 Rev. E. Wrigley Harry J. Reed, '38 John P. Stanton, John Joseph '53 Dr. P. Morrison, L. Thomas Reifsteck, '51 George L. Stark Charles B. Wurtz Paul M. Moser, '52 '55 Thomas J. Reilly, Esq., '19 Dr. Joseph E. Steelman, '50 Lawrence J. Yearly, '65 '64 Paul R. Moss, Dr. Emanuel M. Renzi, '49 Burton Stein, Esq., '51 Joseph N. Zaiuski, Dr. Thomas L. '52 Mrs. Zaiuski Moy, Dr. George J. Resnick, '31 Francis H. Sterling, '56 Regina '50 Peter P. Muessig, jr. Robert A. Resnick, '59 Daniel Stolfi Ralph H. Zecca, Henry F. Muller Edward M. Rickard, '64 Richard F. Strosser, '49

Richard J. Mullin, Jr., '61 '36 Joseph A. Rider, Cornelius F. Sullivan, '39 '52 John L. Mulvey, Dr. Jules A. Riehs, '37 Mr. Joseph J. Sullivan, '55

38 Every effort has been made to be accurate itj the preparation of this

report: if we have missed your name, or listed it incorrectly, we liope you'll understand and pass the correction on to us.

FRIENDS OF THE COLLEGE

Harry J. Ackenhausen Dr. & Mrs. John F. Connors, III Haasis Bakery Rev. Joseph W. McMahon Frederick Schmidt, 3rd. Dr. Edwin W. Adams Hon. John Morgan Davis Frederick J. Hagen Colonel Jack C. Maldonado Miss Louise A. Schulte Juan J. ; Amodei Victor Di Cristina J. A. Halligan, CM. Dr. Michael P. Mandarino Scott & Schmitt Anonymous Dr. Domenico A. Di Marco Frederick G. Hess Dr. Joseph C. Milhalich K. R. Shelter & Son, Inc. Wm. Armstrong & Sons, Inc. Edward Domineske, Esq. Hess Oil Company John T. Mooney Dr. Bernard J. Simmons

^ Mrs. Mary Jean Arrington Albert J. Dorn Wilbert J. Hiser John J. Moore Sisters of Holy Child Jesus Mr. & Mrs. Frank J. Bilovsky Edgecomb Steel Company Mr. & Mrs. Eugene lannotti Bruno A. Moski Sisters, Servants of the Blessed Trinity Mother Employee Fund Mrs. Isabel Jamison Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Most Immaculate Heart of Mary Missionary Cenacle Hon. Thomas C. Egan Capt. Gerald C. Kelly, D.D.S. Mrs. Lorraine Mullin Rev. William J. Stanton

Rev. John P. Boland Max Eirich Helen A. Kelly John J. Mulloy Students of Modern Language Frank J. Booth Francis A. Fife Mr. & Mrs. Carl L. Knauff Rev. Joseph T. Murphy Department John J. Booth Richard E. Fitzgerald Robert F. Lavelle Rev. Joseph Murray Mrs. Eileen Swalm

' John Boyle Dr. Patrick J. Friel Mildred T. Leimkuhler Alfred E. Smith O'Neill Dr. Paul K. Taylor

I A. Charles Buchegger Francis B. Galenski Max Leon Rev. John J. O'Rourke Mrs. R. V. VanHorn

Caisson Club Germantown Saving Bank Charles J. Linton Rev. John A. Otto Rev. James J. Vizzard j

I Rev. Thomas J. Calpin Harry J. Gibbons Henry J. Lopez Mrs. Maria Penkalskyj Wark & Company

Joseph M. Carrio Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Gimborne, Hon. Alfred L. Luongo Hector Persichetti R. W. Welpott Alain Cauv»e Sr. Rt. Rev. Msgr. Edward Lyons Dr. & Mrs. Mark G. Pfeiffer Miss Eileen Wood Mr. & Mrs. Charles Cheleden Mr. & Mrs. William A. Givey Miss Marie MacCorkle Frank Polizzi Rev. Richard J. Wright Helen P. Close Augustus S. Goetz Dr. John P. McCafferty Major Frank A. Reilly Claude B. Clunk Mrs. Elizabeth Gold Rev. Raymond J. McHale Edward Roberts Gerald F. Connell Sylvan H. Greene Miss Joan M. McKeever Robert J. Rowland, Sr. COLLEGE ALUMNI CONTRIBUTORS (Excluding Century Club Members)

1898 Colonel Henry J. Smart, USMC J, J. Keul Dennis J. Donovan Herbert F. Patrick

Walter I. Hinch Stanley A. Szawlewicz Norman Lucas Michael J. Dubyk Dr. W. J. Pounds Stanley J. Lucki William E. Edwards, Jr. Joseph D. Rihl 1901 1939 Joseph P. McGowan Frisby Euell Walter S. Rosowski Elias P. O'Keefe John A. Clement Robert McGranaghan George T. Evans Joseph A. Schmid III A. Jerry deAngelo 1902 Frank McNulty Francis J. Filliben William C. Seiberlich, Jr. Mr. A. J. Di lenno J. Mansfield John F. Moore Francis S. Gorski Joseph F. Smith Thomas Abraham Ginsburg Frank Rauch Clarence J. Harris Joseph F. Spellman 1913 Dr. Stanley J. Lisowski Carlo J. Salzano Dr. John Helwig, Jr. James T. Sullivan, Jr. Joseph A. Michels Jesse Stach j Francis J. Speiser John J. Kelley, Jr. Guy R. Tobias 1915 1940 { William C. Wixted Carl E. Kerr Edward J. Wall John H. Michels Charles T. Glenn, Jr. I William Lederer, Esq. 1949 1952 Claude F. & Mary P. Koch Patrick N. 1916 Leto Henry A. Backe I Carmen A. Alfieri Eugene J. Quindlen E. J William M. Donovan Robert Lodes Dr. Richard A. Bedford Samuel Louis Rhodeside Harry Arton Edward M. McCarthy Emanuel J. Benhayon 1918 Joseph W. Berenato, Jr. Daniel J. McConnell J 1941 Donald W. Bernard I Henry M. Grasmeder John L. Biehl J. Thomas McGlynn Thomas Breen Andrew D. Bertucci Raymond J. Bott ' 1919 Mr. & Mrs. Frank P. McHale Joseph A. Gidjunis Thomas J. Blessington C. W. Brownholtz Leonard F. Hoffmayer John Marczely j Dr. William E. Holt Jacob J. Bongart J. Burns John James Mullen, Jr. 1920 Joseph M. Walsh Richard C. Bourne Joseph P. Coogan William J. Murphy, Jr. r Thomas Kreher 1942 Alfred E. Brennan Raymond J. Corbett Albert K. Naseff Joseph C. Brennan 1923 Dr. Lawrence Goldbachen, Jr. James J. Cunningham, Jr. i James A. Nolan James V. Brooks |i Dr. Charles Landherr Dr. Bernard Helicher Anthony J. Durkin Edward T. O'Brien Thomas J. Carney, Jr. '. Andrew J. Ward Walter A. Heyse Joseph Eckert, Jr. Dr. William J. Oschell Francis X. Conaty Paul J. Nekoranik William J. Geiger 1924 Joseph L. Patti William E. Cox Joseph Swoyer, Jr. Paul E. Gillespie Joseph H. Blankemeyer Carl W. Pfefferle, Jr. John J. Cush Dr. & Mrs. Nathan H. Colton C. R. Haggerty Plick 1943 James J. Francis Daniele Joseph F. Hinchey Dr. J. Clifford Lenahan John J. Protevi Dr. Alexander A. Calomeni John A. DiMascio Vincent J. Kelly James E. Quigley 1925 Dr. Herbert Fletman Dr. Eugene V. Donohoe Robert D. Koecher Samuel L. Seran Joseph W. Heyer, Sr. Dr. Arthur Steinberg Leo J. Dooley Stanley J. Kopacz James Sheehan Paul D. Downey Family 1927 1944 Dr. Albert V. LaRocca William G. Snyder, Jr. Robert N. Drayton Henry P. Betz Julio J. Amadio Richard J. Lloyd Capt. Robert J. Sorensen David Frank, M.D. Harry T. McCann John J. Dugan Major John J. Luxemburger, Jr. Leon Stallings Saul Eskin Edward F. McGonigal Dr. John J. Rooney Frank J. Lyons, Jr. Dr. E. J. Stemmler Robert Fisher Daniel McSwiggan 1945 Charles J. McArdle Cornelius F. Sullivan, Jr. Anthony Fortunato Robert P. Morrissey James J. McDonnell Mark A. Manning, Jr. Thomas M. Walker Joseph M. Gavin 1928 Francis McEldowney Harry Wiebler 1946 Edward V. Graham Edward L. McQuaid Dr. Anthony E. Guglielmelli Walter E. Wosiewicz Rev. Sidney C. Burgoyne Francis V. Griffin Harry J. Mason, Jr. 1929 Dr. J. 1951 Robert Hasson Robert Carabasi Joseph P. Melvin George Pellettieri, Esq. Albert d'Alessandro E. Douglas Adams Joseph R. Horan Joseph P. Mooney Dr. Francis X. Farrell James J. Auchinleck John J. Irwin 1931 John J. Myers Leonard T. Zebrowski Salvator Bartucci E. F. Lagan Dr Milton Eisenberg Dr. Dr. Paul M. Petrillo Dr. Martin J. Bukowski William La Plante 1933 1947 Herbert T. Picus Dr. Lawrence F. Conlin, Jr. Joseph F. Larkin, III John C. Plunkett Or, Edward P. Joseph A. Colasante Pointer Hugh F. Convery Joseph F. McBride J. R. Dangel John j. Reilly 1934 Gustavo C. Cote James P. McHugh William F. Garrity William C. Schrandt, Jr. Milton L. Feldman John B. Cregan John H. McKay Joseph R. Morice G. J. Schorn Dr. Louis Kaplan Robert C. Crosson, Jr. John W. McMenamin Edward A. Nolan, Jr. Dr. Chester E. Smith Herbert Sussman, Esq. Richard S. Cullen Francis J. A. McNamara Dr. Charles N. Wang Salvatore J. Stea John T. Curran James G. McSherry 1935 William J. Wisniewski Edward G. Titterton, Jr. Philip E. Dolan John J. Malone Anthony J. Dwyer Frank C. Yoder 1948 Charles P. Dugan, Esq. John J. Mikus Charles J. Gensheimer Charles F. Zarroli James D. Barry William J. Earley James A. Muldowney P. L. Steffa 1950 William J. Begley Matthew A. Fanning John T. O'Donnell John P. Young A. V. Cabrelli Daniel J. Allan James W. Finegan Richard W. O'Brien 1936 Edward J. Carlin, Jr. John F. Augustefer Frederick G. Geary Guide Pacitti Frank Cappiello John L. Connolly Francis P. Bogle Joseph A. Granahan, Jr. John Quintan John H. Engel Joseph T. Curry James J. Bonner Frank J. Hart John F. Ricks Joseph J. Kolb Charles Dietzler James F. Brown Anthony F. Heck David W. Rumsev Philip A. Niessen Charles J. Dunne Donald R. Burke Charles H. Higgins Robert J. Ryan

1938 Francis T. Foti Harold J. Bythrow Thomas F. Hook John W. Schmidt

Dr. Oscar Corn Richard A. Garstka Gerald J. Cahill Walter Hynek John R. Shegda

Dr. Earl C. Costa Thomas J. Hickey Benedict A. Capra Stephen P. Imms, Sr. Dr. Timothy J. Sheehan

Rev. Walter J. Dalton, C.S.P. Thomas W. Howlin John J. Christie James A. Lee Stanton Joseph Shelton Daniel J. McCauley, Jr., Esq. Leo C. Inglesby Joseph M. Connell John P. Lee Carroll E. Shelton, Jr.

Cornelius J. Regan, M.D. John J. Jackiewicz Harry Connolly Edward W. Mikus David Shore

Charles A. Reilly Francis J. Kehoe John J. Dampf Gregory R. O'Brien William F. Simpson

—continued 39 Centenary Report -continued

Hugh T. Smith Walter HIadchuk John T. O'Brien 1st Lt. Mitchel V. Sukalski Albert J. Cantagallo Lester A. Spangenberg Edward B. Hoffman, Jr. Gabriel J. Pascuzzi Albert J. Taylor John J. Carrigan William F. Sullivan, Jr.. Esq. Francis Jardel H. Eugene Passmore, Jr. Robert M. Vass Joseph A. Carroll, Jr. Dr. Joseph H. Wood William F. Kelly Stephen Rega Dennis S. Welsh Joseph F. Caruso Don Nguey Lee Donald J. Risica Ernest L. Whalon Joseph F. Cassidy 1953 William H. Lentz Charles F. Rueger Edward A. Wykstra Clarence H. Chandler Gerald J. Corr Frederick G. Maguire Joseph T. Sanquilli Joseph P. Yambor, Jr. Ronald Chrzanowski John F. Costello George J. Margraff, Jr. J. A. Schmitz 1959 Class of 1960 John J. Creedon Frank J. Noonan Thomas Shanley John Arleth Richard Colton John M, Curran. Jr. H. William T. O'Donnell, Jr. John J. Simon Lt. William H. Bader Norman Coopersmith Dr. Vincent J. D'Andrea Thomas J. Corrigan, Esq. Charles Poolos John A. Smith William J. Bork, Jr. Francis J. Domzalski Harvey Portner Henry J. Sobieski Joseph G. Breen James F. Cosgrove Joseph T. Doyle, Esq. Joseph H. Rodriguez Thomas J. Sorensen. Esq. Richard R. Britt John J. Cowden Nicholas R. Gianoulis John M. Cunningham John J. Rowley Salvatore J. Sorrentino, Jr, Edward E. Caufield Edward J. Gibbons, Jr. David R. John A. Saponara, Jr. Michael L. Uzzo Raymond T. Clothier Dahms Edward M. Groody Joseph D'Aulerio, Jr. Dr. John J. Siliquini John R. Waite Mark A. Concannon Frank A. Harrison Andrew J. Decker Robert J. Smith Joseph B. Waltrich Francis T. Coyle J. Hering, Jr. Anthony B. Dierkes Fred A. Zaiss Henry W. Zakrzewski Joseph R. Cupini James J. Kunz Charles James P. Dooley 1956 1958 Theodore J. DeGroot Joseph A. Lappin, Jr. Donald D'Orazio David L. Andrews Zenon Dolnyckyj Dr. Walter Lomax, Jr. Edward J. Bader Francis J. Dougherty John A. Duffy, Jr. John Auchinleck Robert L, Belz John B. Lynch, Esq. Thomas M. Durkin John N. Burgoyne Russell S. Eggleton James D. McCall Norman Bernstein Alfred J. Falciani Alexander J. Butrym, III Charles A. Beugless John Flood Charles J. McGovern Peter W. Frey Mr. & Mrs. Dewey P. Clark Henry C. Bittner Francis Gleeson, Jr. Joseph A. Mancuso James Gallagher Thomas F. Connolly, Jr. Thomas J. Grimes Robert K. Marple, Jr. Robert E. Boyle Joseph J. Gallagher Francis P. Cosgrove Thomas M. Boyle John W. Hedges Joseph D. Martin Thomas A. Gannon Nicholas J. DeSanctis Edward T. Howe, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Louis P. Masucci Robert J. Bray, Jr. Edmond Gaucher Anthony DiPrimio Joseph E. Kelly Frank J. Louis J. Casale Mee Joseph J. Giusti Klein Joseph F. Farnan Charles C. Clunk Joseph A. Herbert W. Meyers Charles A. Glackin John P. Farrell Steve Kmetz Joseph F. Oesterle, C.P.A. Thomas M. Conroy Eugene J. Glading William J. Korytowski Frank R. Fighera Arthur J. Delaney, Jr. Anthony J. Polcino Frank Gladsky A. J. Franck Roland N. Kravitz Dr. George R. Reiss Robert J. DiLuchio Frederick Grace Robert D. Freisem Philip J. Kulp R. John W. DIugosz Newton Rogers Vincent J. Greely William Gershanick George P. Liarakos F. Thomas F. Dudley James Schoos Walter J. Griffin Ligenza PFC William M. Henhoeffer R. Allan Durrant, III John S. James F. Traum Gerald T. Hagerty Louis F. Kurzeknabe Paul M. Edwards Robert W. Lowery Irving Weiner Thomas P. Haggerty Arthur H. LeRoy Joseph J. Lynch, Jr. Valerian J. Wojtak B. J. Evangelisto William Haller E. McAlee Stephen J. McLoughlin Peter L. Feledick Lawrence Carmen J. Zaccaria William H. Hansen J. NuNulty J. Lynn James Francis J. Frysiek James 1954 Rev. Roy T. Hardin Lawrence L. Maguire John F. Gallagher, Jr. Michael E. McAleer Thomas E. Hartberger Walter E. Arrison Joseph N. Malone Patrick McFadden James B. Garvin, III Frank A. Hemphill I. Walton Bolger Lt. Paul Misura Francis X. McLaughlin John J. Gaworski Dr. Jerome H. Brodlsh Thomas J. Henry Dr. Charles J. Moloney R. Goral Michael Magnotta, Jr. John Joseph E. Hill Capt. William F. Burns Anthony M. Nardo Anthony Guerrieri James V. Mallon John J. Hunt Ronald Carfagno James C. O'Brien John Mariano John J. Haggerty, Jr. William J. Hunter Gerard T. Corkery James D. Ritzheimer Bro. Melchior Markowski, O.P. Joseph R. Harris Gerald R. Hutnick Dr. Arthur J. Di Nicolantonio Robert Louis Romaine Norbert F. Marzin Joseph Hilliar W. Jage Dr. Phihp Dorfner Raymond Lt. John L. Sechler John J. Mautz, Jr. Thomas K. Hines William J. Janus Gerald W. Faiss William Seltzer William A. Miller Robert Hogan William J. Kauffman Joseph J. Fayer Vincent J. Serfilippo Albert J. Miralles Frank J. Hohenleitner William Joseph A. Kelbaugh B. Fynes Isidor P. Strittmatter Thomas J. Nolan Dennis G. Katziner James P. Kelly, Jr. F. John Geary James A. Thomas, Jr. W. F. Nunnamaker, Jr. John B. Kelly Joseph V. Kelly Gerald P. Ginley John P. Thompson Frank J. Obara, Jr. Richard Kirchoffer Edward Kreuser Edward F. Heller James B. Weber Charles K. O'Malley Frank R. Kohler Aurelio P. Lodise Louis C. Kiehne Joseph W. Weiland Gerald P. O'Neill Charles G. Kramer Paul Logan Francis P. Loeber Daniel E. Ornaf 1957 James J. Kuhn. Jr. George M. Logan P. Charles McLaughlin Ronald J. Pawlowskj John F. Ambrogi, Jr. Robert A. Lample George J. Long, Jr. John F. McNally Joseph Pilla John E. Bengough Frederick Lochetto Randall J. Long Anthony M. Marino Remo Pitassi Gerald L. Bowen, Esq. Alfonso R. Lombardi Edward C. Lucas III George L. Mason, Fred F. Rizzo. Jr, James J. Broussard Michael J. Longo Thomas Lynaugh Joseph H. Ridgik Robert J. Rowland, Jr. Dr. Lawrence J. Bruther James J. Lydon John M. Lynn Peter F. Shields Raymond C. Seiberlich Francis J. Buck Robert Lydon Denis J. McCormick Jack Solomon Robert L. Sims Daniel T. Campbell, Jr. John P. Lynch Philip McGovern James & Mary Stanton Edward J. Spanier John F. Campbell Donald J. McAneny George B. McGowan Joseph J. Sweeney John M. Strobel Francis X. Cassidy Edward McCabe David J, McGrath Richard A. Walsh Capt. Edward Toole, Jr. John J. Dever, Jr. James J. McDonald Francis T. McGrath Dr. Joseph A. White Thomas F. Toomey, Jr. Frank P. Delich William J. McLaughlin Charles McGrory William J. Wingel Francis J. Trzuskowski Henry W. deLuca, Jr. John McLean John J. McHenry Earle J. Wood Stephent Uprichard William P. Dierkes Anthony J. McNulty Robert T. McHugh Donald E. Zdanowicz Benjamin S. Vassallo Paul J. Diesenbruch, Jr. John F. Magosin, Jr. Charles A. Mclntyre 1955 Bernard J. Vaughan Thomas A. Doherty Joseph E. Martin Michael F. McKeon, Jr. John A. Welsh Ronald A. Baselice Andrew J. Duff Joseph Meadowcroft Edmund F. McMullin William M. Wetzler William C. Bergmann Thomas Duffy J. T. Medalis Charles J. McNamee Jerome Zale:.ki John F. Blee James Farley Rene G. Meierhans Patrick J. McNamee William C. Zih inger John T. Butterhof Francis X. Finegan Joseph T. Meiris Frank A. Manfredi Vincent E. Cooke Richard A. Fuller John A. Mellon 19S0 Frederick T. Mannis, Jr. John W. Corbeil James A. Fynes Norbert C. Moser Robert B. Adair Frederick A. Marcell Conrad M. Cregan William A. Fynes Joseph A. Murphy Robert T. Alden John E. Margraff Richard T. Dalena John C. Gyza Enos C. Ney Robert C. Allwein Leonard E. Marrella

Michael J. Dempsey William J. Hall, III John C. Oberholzer Robert Angelozzi William R. Mason

Thomas J. Dempsey John J. Keating James W. Olp Robert C. Baker R. Gino Massimi

Anthony J. Dennison, Jr. Nicholas C. Kihm Eugene J. O'Neill John J. Bannon Thomas E. Mastrota

Harry F. Deutsch Richard A. King Edward J. Pascoe Algird R. Barskis Daniel J. Matteson Thomas E. Dougherty Stanley M. Knebel Richard Peregoy Richard Bayley Joseph M, Maurer Thomas J. Dougherty, Jr. Richard F. Langan Alfred T. Pepino James T. Birmingham Donald A. Mecklmg

Joseph Dunleavy John H. Lawlor Salvatore J. Piazza Francis L. Bodine John B. Messmer

Maxim Felk Frederick J. Leinhauser Louis N. Potenza Leonard J. Bonner Denzil J. Meyers

Dr. Edward J. Fetter Michael Lenahan John J. Powers Robert L. Bork Edward A. Miller

Louis E. Fidler, Jr. Sabato J. LoGuidice Angelo T. Randazzo William L. Boyle Francis A. Miller Michael G. Flach Francis M. McCormack Andrew Rauchwerk William D. Bradley Frederick C. Mischler

E. Fogarty John R. McDonnell Rodney J. Rivers John J. Brady John A. Mitchell V. A. Freitag Thomas A. McManus Leo D. Rudnytsky Charles D. Branch, Jr. Paul Mordan, Jr. James F. Garberino John C. Mackin, Jr. Michael M. Schlacter, Jr. John P. Brolly Charles A. Murray, Jr.

John J. Grasmeder Joseph E. Madeja Frank J. Schwartz Thomas Burke Francis X. Murray

George I. Haggerty Earl L. Melville Eugene J. Sharp Bernard J. Burns Francis C. Newman

H. Paul Haney Thomas J, Molloy William J. Sheehan, Jr. Edmund J. Butler Michael J. Norris Donald D. Heil Donald A. Murray George M. Spanfelner Frank Cabrelli Angelo J. Novello

40 Every effort has been made to be accurate in the preparation of this report; if we have missed your name, or listed it incorrectly, we hope you'll understand and pass the correction on to us.

Joseph S. O'Brien Donald A. Ciocca Joseph P. McFadden Francis X, Whalon, Jr. Theodore B. Ellerkamp Peter J. O'Hara, Jr. Robert J. Citrino John J. McHale Milton F. Whitehead Joseph T. Erb Edward J. O'Mara Joseph H. Cloran James J. McGill Joseph F, Wisniewski Carmen A. Fabizio Ercole Oristaglio William E. Collins Francis X. McLaughlin William D. Wolff Joseph Fassano Edward W. Paczkoski Edward R. Corcoran Gerald F. McLaughlin Thomas L. Woodin Earl Ferguson Anthony J. Parents Henry J. Costello Thomas J. McLaughlin James P. Wright Joaquim A. Figueiredo Warren L. Pastor William R. Cosgrove Andrew J. McLees James W. Wright John P. Finzel

Austin G. Paulnack Thomas J. Dalfo Joseph F. McMahon Robert J. Young John R. Fitzpatrick

Ronald E. Pedrick James F. Daley David McMaster Gerald J. Ziccardi George D. Friedrich Charles J. Peguese Thomas J. D'Annunzio James J. McPhillips Austin F. Zuerlein Anthony Fugaro David J. Perrine, Jr. Peter DeFilippis Jack D. McQuaig Thomas S. Gallagher 1962 Peter E. Perry, Jr. Edward A. Dehner Eugene J. McVey Walter J. Gallagher F. Donald Pickford Anthony C. Delgado James J. Madden William E. Adams John J. Garvey L. John Porambo Charles J. DelRossi Raymond D. Marasco Thomas J. Adelsberger Pfc. James J. Gately Desmond F. Preedy Anthony L. Deni Joseph Marchione Gerald F. Argetsinger Helmut Joseph Gauss Richard Prendergst Howard V. Dilkes Donald F. Markol Donald E. Ariosto Frank J. Geneva E. Reilly, Jr. Joseph Donald G. Dill Gerard F. Marple Louis J. Azzara Francis J. Gentile Walter J. Rider Vincent D. DiRenzo Vincent J. Mascoli Joseph S. Azzarano Thomas C. Gheen Charles Riley, Jr. Richard A. Dockwell Thomas C. Melley Bruno J. Bacallao Charles W. Giannetti Robert J. Rosemery Francis J. Dollarton, Jr. Anthony J. Mignon Samuel T. Bacica Joseph V. Graham David J. Russell Joseph J. Donegan Giulio R. A. Minchella Norman V. Baier John A. Gringeri Joseph A. Saioni Anthony W. D'Onofrio William J. Mistichelli John D. Ball, Jr. Francis M. Grochowski Augustus J. Sassa Richard G. D'Onofrio Joseph J. Momorella John Ballock Joseph A. Guinan Schiller George W. John J. Dougherty OIlie Bernard Monacelli Ronald R. Bambach Bernard P. Gwalthney Paul M. Schofield Thomas J. Dougherty Donald Monaghan Franklin T. Barrett Hilmar P. Hagen John R. Schwartz Gerald F. Orach Howard E. Morgan Stephen J. Beduch Carl Hajkuk Edward J. Shields John J. Drakeley Richard F. Moy Robert J. Bela Bruce J. Hall Cyril E. Simon Thomas A. Duffy Rev. John H. Mulholland Joseph J. Bellanca James J. Hamilton

Frank Sliwinski J. Louis Christopher Economos Robert Murphy H. Betz Frank J. Hannings John W. Smith, III James P. Edwards James W. Murray Frank J. Bilovsky Emil L. Harasym Joseph D. Stephens Joseph P. Egan William J. Neville Thomas C. Boetticher Ronald W. Harding Thomas J. Sullivan Wilson W. Elliott Thomas J. Nickle George W. Bohnenberger Albert E. Hebda John J. Timson Louis P. Farrell Charles J. O'Connor Frederick J. Bohrer, 111 Alvin M. Heisman Andrew Toth Benjamin G. Fisher Martin J. O'Gara Ronald T. Boland Theodore Hennings, Jr. Vincent J. Trolla Philip J. Fisher Joseph Oleszycki John A. Bolger Herbert R. Heys Anthony Turek Thomas J. Fitzgerald James T. O'Neill John F. Bonner Joseph F. Hickey James H. Wagner Richard R. Flint John Joseph O'Neill Charles J. Borcky John F. Hipp James W. Wagner James R. Fogacci Joseph P. O'Reilly Thomas A. Brady James P. Holmes Peter E. Walheim, Jr. John J. Franks Edward J. Padinski Francis J. Braun James A. Horty Charles A. Walker Hugh J. Fries Vincent J. Thomas F. Brennan Pannepacker Robert J. Houlihan William F. Walsh Francis T. Frosche John J. Piatkowski Walter R. Brown William P. Hyland Hans H. Walter James J. Gallagher Dominic A. Pileggi Michael K. Bucsek Rosario J. Ideo Joseph R. Walton F. E. John Gee Anthony T. Platanella Robert Byrne Richard E. Janiszewski James P. Waters Charles C. Cammarota Peter J. Gibbons John E. Powell Ronald R. Jeffery Edward J. Werner L. T. John F. Carabello Otto Gierstorfer Stanley Praiss Henry F. Josephick John P. Whitecar, Jr. Carmint, Edmond F. Gildea Lawrence J. Quinn Robert W. Jr. Venantio K. Kabachia Francis Wieber Cliff M. Gillespie, Jr. Joseph Peter Raffaele Francis J. Cartwright Peter J. Keenan George A. Williams Thomas R. Gillespie Thomas J. Carl R. Cassidy Rafter James J. Kelly John J.Williams Kenneth L. John J. Reilly John A. Chadwick Gnau James J. Kelly Joseph Winterburg Paul A. Stephen W. Cheney Gola Kenneth J. Roberts John F. Kenney Richard Wollaver John J. Golden Theodore M. Jr. Richard W. Chmielewski Rogers, John J. Kent Harry W. Woodcock John P. Theodore W. Grabowski John V. Rosetti Christel Robert R. Kern Robert T. Wright Raymond Raymond J. Christie W. Gramlich Alfonso Rosselli James E. Kerr Thomas Zuccato Anthony J. Clark Joseph X. Grosso John W. Rudy John P. Kerrane Joseph J. Zukowski Edward S. Frederick G. Clark Gryczynski Robert J. Rush Justin A. Kershaw, Jr. Joseph i. Hallman Michael G. Saloka James J. Clark Allan M. Ketterer 1961 Thomas J. Hartsough John T. Vincent P. Clancy Savage John C. Killmer, Jr, Maurice E. Francis J. Helverson Allen T. Schaefer Robert J. Clothier Abbott Thomas J. Kirsch John B. Hennegan Harry A. James L. Coleman Eugene J. Abel Scarpiello John L. Knab Paul V. Joseph L. Hepp Thomas M. Scanlon John P. Condron Adams Philip L. Knerr Joseph A. Richard L. A. Sawycky James A. Connolly, Jr. Ambrose Hepp Roman Joseph F. Koszarek James F. Hildenberger Bart Schlachter Hubert Connor Anthony J. Andrews Stephen Krywicki, Jr. L. Hinz Richard M. Schieken Patrick J. Conrey Ronald G. Armitage Norman Matthew R, Krzeskiewicz William G. Armstrong Gerald T. Hipp Thomas J. Schneider John P. Cooper J. Wayne Kullman F. James A. Horshock John R. Scott, Jr. Thomas A. Cottone Henry Babecki Nicholas F. Lacovara V. Walter P. Hund Charles E. Scully, Jr. John J. Crewalk Edward Bacholfer Earle C. Landes Anthony James T. Sedlock James C. Croke Robert J. Baker J. latarola Gottfried B. Lansberg Anthony George S. Jordon David A. Serchak Joseph G. Crosby Barba William S. Lavundi John Beckno John E. Katz John Vincent Shellock Anthony E. Curcio William J. Lawless Edward J. Henry Katzen Raymond J. Short Jerome M. Curray Bernier James 0. Lawson Paul F. Betz William J. Kauffman Joseph M. Shortall Joseph S. Cymbor Reinald G, Ledoux Charles J. Edward S. Czop Edward J. Biddle Anthony J. Kavetski Silk Eugene M. Lepine Adolph P. Birkenberger David L. Kazmierczak Louis G. Silli Joseph P. Daniszewski Nicholas J. Lisi James R. Blankenbiller William J, Keen Gerald J. Smith Robert J. Dawson Jack A. Lisiewski Edward G. Boland James John Kelly James F. Smith Francis DiCiurcio Francis J. Loftus Joseph G. Boland John B. Kelly Joseph D. Smith Joseph J. Deckert Thomas F. Lombardi Edward L. Borneman Thomas P. Kelly John A. Spellman Richard Deigert Donald C. Loose Peter William J. Kent Hugh A. Strehle Edward J. Devinney R. Bossow Lawrence M. Lubiski Matthew A. Bowe, Jr. John J. Kerns Robert P. Supina John P, Dickinson Edward F. Luty Charles A. Bowen John J. Kerwin Anthony R. A. Szczur John B. DiNunzio Edmund F. Lynch Bernard R. Boxill Edward M. Kiernan Anthony B. Taddeo Richard DiSammartino Thomas J. Lynch Bernard Boyle James J. Klinkowski Robert J. Tangi Harry J. Doehne Frank X. McCann James M. Brett James H. Knebel John V. Theveny Dommick D. Donato Michael F. McCarthy William E. Brindley Paul J. Kulowitch Gerard M. Tiedeken William W. Donovan Donald L. McCrossan Joseph J. Lang Paul E. Tillger William P. Doring, Jr. Joseph P. Bryner Robert McCullough Stanley J. Brzyski Harry Langley Patrick J. Timoney Leo J. Dormuth John T. McDevitt John L. Richard B. Leach Robert L. Trautwein Joseph B. Doto Burke Neal W. McDonnell Joseph J. Cain Joseph A. Lendvay George F. Trebbi Joseph M. Downey Robert J. McDowell Bernard J, Campbell, Jr. A. Levy Joseph A. Tyler Peter E. Doyle Joseph P. McGarry James J. Campion James E. Lion John F. Udinski Paul A. Dressel Dennis C. McGlynn John C. Caras Philip G. Loscoe Emil J. Unterkoefler John J. Dwyer Francis X. McGovern John N. Carides Joseph T. Lutz Eugene R. Valentine Norman S. Dyner Thomas J. McGrath Francis J. Carlin, Charles J. William J. Villano John J. Du Jr. Lydon Bois Philip C. McGuire George A. Carroll Edward J. Lynn Frank M. Viola Joseph F. Duden Francis B. McHugh James F. Cavanaugh Gerald A. Lyons Edward P. Vogelman Walter E. Dunn James G. Mclnerney

Nicholas G. Cavarocchi Robert S. Lyons, Jr. John T. Wagner James K. Durborow John J. Mclntyre

Richard W. Champlain James P. MacElderry Francis J. Weiss Thomas A. Dziadosz Thomas McKee

Francis A. Chesnalavage Jack MacLauchlan William V. Welch, III William J. Eichner Francis X. McKeffery

Joseph F. Ciccimaro Joseph S. McAuliffe Bernard T. Westermann Henry J. Eisennagel Edward P. McKeough Peter A. Ciliberto Martin J. McDonnell Aloysius E. Whalen William F. Eliason George F. McKnight

—continued 41 Centenary Report -continued

James F, McLaughlin Michael M Sorrentmo Francis C. Coyne John T. McCourt, Jr. John F. Smart. Jr. Frank E. McManus John V. Spadaccmi Dennis A. Cnbben William A. McDonald Donald C. Sminkey Ralph A. McNally George B. Stollsteimer Francis J. Cropper David J. McDonnell Charles W. Smith

Daniel J. McNeff Henry T. Stonelake Calvin C. Custer Thomas J. McFlynn Richard M. Snyder Douglas F. McRae Joseph Strohlem Ralph C. Dages. Jr. Joseph T. McGarvey Robert William Sosna, Jr.

Daniel J. Madden David W. Sullivan James C. Davidheise* John J. McGinnis John A, Spakauskas

Lawrence i. Maher Donald H. Sullivan James D. Deasy John E- McGovern Joseph M. Speakman Frank A. Maranto Thomas J. Sweeney James P. Devlin Mark H. McLaughlin Raymond Carl Specht Richard C. Martinsen Stephen C. Symnoski Joseph DePaula Leonard A, McMullen Donald J. Stabilito

Leo J. Marx Anthony T. Tomasco Richard J. Diamond Joseph P. McNaliy Richard A. Steiner William M. Masapollo Paul A. Toselli Milton 0. Dickerson. Jr. Brian McNulty John J. Stevenson, Jr.

Thomas J. Mastrangelo Richard J. Travaline Joseph G, Dinter John M, McNulty William D. Stickney Joseph D. Matyszczak Herbert G. Treffeisen, Jr. George D. DiPilato James E. Mahoney James J, Straine Anthony Meckleburg Frank J. Varga Christopher V. Di Sciullo William F. Mannion Harry Strub

James J. Meehan Charles J. Varker Thomas P. Dobroskey Leo J. Mansi Francis B. Stull Charles R. Merkel Philip A. Vecchione John T- Doman Martin J. Marano, Jr. Myron Suchanick Louis P. Meshon George P. Vercessi Alexander J. Oomeratzki John A, Mariscotti Carl J. Suchocki Alexander W. Messick Frederick Cart Vincent Leroy W. Donahue Stephen Markoe Daniel R. Sukis

Frederick J. Meyers Henry T. Voorhees Joseph E. Dorman John R. Mattes John W. Sullivan John Milburn Joseph C. Wagner Paul W. Oornisch Frank H. Matticola Phihp A. Sullivan John P. Milcetich Walter A. Wake, Jr. George A. Dudzek Leo P. Maynes William J. Sullivan

William J. Mitchell William J. Walchek Allan J. Duffy Angelo Mechikas David John SwankowskI William S. Mitchell Francis L. Walker John A. Dulik George Mack Louis Daniel Taddei Leonard W. Montgomery Edward L. Wanjek Martin P. Durkin Harry B. Meeker. Jr. Thomas J. Tarsney Richard T. Mooney Joseph F. Ward Kieve D. Ehrlich Norman Menchel Frank P. Testa Donald W. Moore George J. Wardle Frank C- Esposito Richard R. Merrell W. F. Thompson Edward T. Moore. Jr. Charles Warner Joseph M. Evancich John P. Meschler Dominic J. TomassettI Francis G, Moore James J. Weir Joseph B, Fahy John W. Michofsky Michael John Toth William F. Moore Joseph F. Welsh Robert J. Faraco John L. Mietz Milton J. Trimber

Edward J. Mount Alan L. Whitaker William E- Feaster. Jr. Robert J. Miller John Anthony Turek Anthony C. Murdocca James J. White James P. Festa John J. Milligan Mike Tushup

Dennis J. Murphy John J. White. Jr. Edward J. Fierko Raymond F. Minger Eugene D. Vannucci

George J, Murphy Glenn V. Wild Michael A. Figura Joseph J. Mingroni Robert J- Viglione James T. Murphy Arthur A. Winiarski Gerard T. Flynn Richard J. Moley Robert J. Vitalie John Murphy Taras M. Wochok Joseph L. Folz Frederick G. Mordan Matthew Wachowski, Jr.

John J. Murphy Reginald P. Wray Mark E- Fuchs Joseph P. Morgan Michael J. Walker

Jack J. Murray James D. Wuenschel Joseph L. Fudala James W. Moy John Anthony Walsh

John J. Murray George Yanco. Jr. Vincent Gabany, Jr. John J, Mulholland, Jr. Michael J. Walsh F. Bernard J. Naroleswski Chester A. Zach Charles V. Gain Robert Mullen Patrick Joseph Walsh

Otto T. Nebel, III Joseph S. Zajaczkowski Francis Galante Joseph F. Murray George J. Walters, Jr. Eugene Nines Roman Zylawy James J- Gallagher Joseph E- Myers Gregory J. Wenclawiak Joseph R. Novack John P. Gallagher Henry J. Negler Joseph F. Wetzel 1963 John A. Obara Anthony J. Gampico Hugh J. Nelis Francis W. White F, T. Dominic V. O'Brien Benjamin J, Anderson William A. Garrigle William Neusidl Wayne Whitman Thomas G. O'Brien Pasquale L. Anselmo John J. Gaynard Thomas M. Newell Leo A. Wiedmann

Bernard T. O'Connor Alfred J. Bannister John E, Geraghty Thomas R. Nicoletti Joseph Williams Nordin Daniel Charles D. Oettle Steven J. Barch Gerhard C. Gerhardi Gerald C. J. Wuenschel Hugh P, O'Neill, Jr. Frank J. Battaglia James A. Gilham James T. North, Jr. Joseph F. Zaiesak Valentine P. Ortolan! John B. Beal John K, Gohagan. Jr. John Nowaczyk Vincent E. Zampino A. O'Connor J. Zeoli Alfred E. Oziemkiewicz John J. Beck Herbert Goodman Bernard Samuel Francis A. Paino Howard G. Becker G. Gerard Gormley Joseph A. Oliver Robert E. Zera F. John J. O'Reilly Robert H. Zercher Joseph J. Paul Paul M. Bellanca Charles Grazioso P, Richard F. Paxson William R. Benzenhoefer Howard M. Gregor Robert O'Shaughnessy Gabriel J. Zinni Zippilli William A. Pearman Vincent P. Berry John W. Grelis James J. Pagliaro Leonard P. Bernard S. Gresh Frank Pantaleo Francis G. Peiffer Henry P. Betz 19E4 Harry B. Grider Charles A. Payne Raymond J. Pentzell Jerome J. Bilbee J. Griffin Joseph H. Perkinson James H. Abele Paul E. Petit Stanley J. Birch, Jr. David John J. Robert J. Pietrangelo Michael E. Accetta Bernard F. Pettit James J. Black Gustis William Pietrangelo Nicholas P, Acocella Bernard F, Pettit Lawrence S. Bogarty Thomas Louis Hagenbarth Thomas J. Hallinan Joseph E, Pingue William H. Adelsberger Charles P, Pfizenmaier Charles J. Bonner J. Hamil Robert T. Pinizzotto Bernardino A. Albence Francis W, Pfluger Leonard C. Bordzol Ronald Lt. John W. Harran Robert L. Policmo William Alfe Robert J. Picollo Joseph A. Boyle John C. Altrogge Lawrence A. Pijanowski Neil Bozzini Phihp J, Heckler Robert M. Potter William F. Heiland Ronald M. Pratowski Thomas J. Armstrong Vincent J. Pinto John P. Breickner, III Harry F. Hoffmeister John M. Pycik Robert C. Arnosky Vmcent C. Piselli Robert C. Bresnan Leroy S. In0orato Anthony S. Quinto Samuel T. Ascolese Salvatore J. Pronesti George A. Broil Joseph L- Izzo Philip A. Ranieri Wilham R. Askins Thomas F. Pyle Richard M, Brophy Francis A. Jablonsky Michael Mark Rea Robert J. Bacher Timothy Reardon Edward J Brown John J. Balestrieri James J- Jandrisitz James P. Reich John D- Reed Carl H. Brummer, Jr. M. Joyce Peter E. ReiMy Charles V. Banninnis William C. Regli Gerlad F. Bucsek James James A. Joseph F. Reisner Frederick Irvm Banks Robert F. Rizzi John F. Burns Kearney Bernard P. Barczak, Jr. John J. Keating Robert Riccio Phihp N. Robideau Gerard J. Burrows Joseph Ridgeway Robert J. Barr William A. Rogers Robert D. Byrnes Martin J. Kedra, Jr. John A. Kelly Vmcent Rivera Joseph C. Barrett Philip I. Romanick Donald E. Caputi Richard F. Barry, 3rd Leroy B. John J. Robrecht, III Thomas C- Rosica Peter C- Carozza Kemery, Jr. T. Thomas F. Rosso Norman B. Barth Raymond Rossi Joseph V. Catanoso George Kenney Francis J. Harold Thomas Kern Angelo T. Rotchford Beck Francis J. Salerno Eugene J. Cattaneo, Jr. Gerald T. Rothstein Francis J. Beck, Jr. Frank T. Salera Eugene C. Cerceo Gerald P. Kirsch William L. Beckett Joseph T. Koczur Edward J. Rotz James J. Scanio Vmcent M. Cerquitella John W, Kohl John Wesley Roup Norbert F, Belzer Thomas A. Scheib John J. Chapman Thomas M. Kontuly Alfred B. Ruff J. Bruce Bennett Leo J, Schilling. Jr. Robert H. Cheney P. Bennis Anthony J. Russo James John T. Schmitt Lawrence Chilson Frank J, Kosinski Benson William C. Kuebler Robert F. Sabol James A. Robert J. Schreiber John T. Christel Harvey Sachs Carl E, Berke Richard A. Schweitzer Joseph T- Ciasson George C. Kugler Richard L. Bernhardt William T. Kugler Anthony C. Saldutti James R. Schwartz Edward J, Clark Anthony S. Scavillo Richard N. Best Frank D. Seidel James Walter Clark Joseph C LaBnola Lannrng B. Schatz Franklin E. Beyer Andrew Senkewsky Stephen A. Clayback Richard W. Lafferty Bernard J. Bieg Gerard C. Lahr, Jr. John F. Schmelzer Joseph J. Semeister Herbert E. Cohen William P. Bissell John Joseph J. Schmidt Thomas Shanahan Herbert E. Cohen W. Lambert Harold J. Bliss Albert J. Schuler James F. Sherlock Harry A. Connelly, Jr. Martin J. Langan Richard L. Bokan Joseph F. Larrisey Richard J. Schufreider Robert L. Shiner. Jr. Michael J. Connelly Wilham E. Bornak John M. Lee Paul P. Schuda Robert L. Shipferling Patrick J, Connor Carl J. Bowden Norbert K. Siegel Johii F. Conway Theodore H. Leibrand Charles Adam Senior John R. Boyd Raymond F. Sieminski Bernard J. Conroy Leonard J. Leonetti Richard W. Serfass Joseph J, Bradshaw Thaddeus P. Siemmski Russell R. Consentino Walter N. Loburak John N. Serwo John P. Brady James J. Siravo Francis J. Cook Paul T. Logan Ronald J. Shatus Murray Brand Walter C. Slamp William E. Cooney. Jr. John J. Lyons, Jr. Louis John Sinatra Michael C. Brewer Albert J. Smith John M. Costa Bernard P. McAteer Edward M. Slavish Roger Brickley

Raymond F. Snyder Nelson Martin Coughlan James C. McBrearty Adam F. Slomiana George J, Bronkovic, Jr.

Thomas Sommers Joseph E. Coyle Samuel J. McCarthy Donald J. Slowicki Charles Brosenne

42 Every effort has heen made to he accurate in the preparation of this report; if we have mtsseJ your name, or tistctl it incorrectly, we hope you'll understand and pass the correction on to us.

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Stdnlf-y J Harry J Helm Dennis H Martin Thontat J Catttdy Caick Andrew J Kinslow Walter M Mathews Donald P Savaktnas Ronald L Schwartz Michael V. Mele Richard I. Clenry Joseph P William L. Hendry Domingo Martinez Ttiomai V Caiiidy Gallagher James J. Kirschke Richard 0. May, Jr. James E. Schieb Edmund A Schweitzer Karl I. Miller John I Cosfol Ralph John Henrich P Mflssi J Josoph t Catio W Gallant John w Kitchenhan Edward C. Meehan Andrew J. Schast James John Seydow Michael I Mondoro Mirhaol P Costello Fred E Jamei L. Cavanaush John C Callo Richard J. Knapih Mario V. Meie Ernest J. Schmidt R. J. Henry Mayer James Sergas Dennis M Murphy Robeit V Crohcn Kenneth J. CavanauKh Anthony J Gait James C. Knauff Elliot Menkowiti Harold G. Schmidt John J. Heron Joieph C Mealey Michael Sheehan James M. O'Dnscoll. Jr. Jiimos E, Dalton

John Higgins David J Richard R Cavanaut[h Thomat J Gaul Victor Knaus Richard F. Meroney James Schmitt A. Meddaugh Brian Sheridan Walter J. Okon Robert J, Dalton Joseph Ernest Thomas J Chancier Emmett J, Gavin James C Kogel Dennis L. Metrick Oswald A. Schumacher Robert E Higgms Medeiios Robert Shimmski Michael J. Palmien Attilio E De FollippiK Hill Richard Mejzak Uwrenco I. Chate Frantii P Ceyer John C. Konen Donald G. Miller William G. Scott Charles H. S James H. Simila David A. Paolini Anthony J. Do Ritis Melfi, Kontlanty % Cholon John P Gibbons francis Kostival Dennis S Misiewic/ Peter A Seibel David J Hiller Joseph Jr Joseph I Simon Robert A. Paul Thomas F. Devlin John Robert J Miller John A CInrh Bernard G. Giesiner Edward M Kos«rek James Anthony Monahan Arden Selvenan L Hoffman Benjamin G. Simone. Jr. Thomas I. Poltorak Edmond J Doran James A Mmchhotf lloyd K Ctarh James A Gigtio Albert C. Kot7 Anthony J. Monleiro Jerome P. Shea Alan F Holden Edward M, Sines Donald I. Rainey lohn P Dufhn

Anthony J. Gerald F Leo Nicholas Minnetti Colalongo Giordano Frank C Ko/empel Charles J. Mooney Kenneth J, Shaw Raymond Hood William T. Smalt William J Reese Donald P Dunn Coll, Theodore T William C Monaghan Willi.ini Jamo* i It. John Gluliano John R. Krail Edward A Mosca. Jr. Joseph J Sikora Home Edward James Smith Joseph R Heit.ino ^ Ouryi'p

). Coll Ronald P Huller John C Montgomery Albnl I JOReph Donato P Giusti. Jr. Michael C Kreuter James R. Muihern John C Singer John J, Smith Edward 1 Seifert hifii'lhart Charles L. Morns, Jr. William J CoMlni Paul Coetfer Charles F. LabrozzJ Louis J. Muracco John D Snyder Joseph A latarola Joseph E Smith William R Shnrpe JoM'ph P Fanclll Floyd Morns Anthony B. Contlno Stephen F. Gold William J. Lahr Joseph F. Murphy Joseph A. Spenser John V l7/o D Roger W Smith Richard T. Sherwin David M Fuerlo Rot>ert M. Frsncli C. Coraco Edward J. Golden, (r, Charles A. Lambiase FtetJ V. Narciso Martin W Stanczak Dommic R Janusky Morns William J, Smith William D Sokcl Robort E. Gnbrys Charles J Muhlberger Robert r. Paul R. Coien/a Richard P Goldstein Richard A, Lanciont Theodore A Nawalmski Mark Rodger Stein Leo A. Joerger Donald 0. Sommers William ] Spearing Gaffnoy John P. Murphy fr«ncl» P Coyle Robert J fionndia Carmen I. Laurenri Joseph G Neelon James Sterner Harmon Johnson Joseph J Spreng John J, Spence Ramon J. Garcia )amoi T CoylG Glenn P. Jones Robert J. Myers Jo^eph A, Goodhart Edward 0. Lavender John F, Net?el Robert J, Stock James H Michael Stephenson Thomas R. Stack Gronczewski Joseph Ernest Mmns C. Cramp Donald A Gntti Joseph A Lawler Robert P. Oberholzer Dommic Stolfi Stanley X. Kaminski S Naumowicz Eugene A Stohrer Joseph R. Staniewitch L. Harper Anthony J Nocelta John M. John R Crawford Hfrbert F Grotcsih Gerald J. Leahy Michael F. O'Connor Joseph Edward Sullivan Charles H Kane Charles 0. Struse Robert J. Stewart Hatheway Robert Paul F John W Crockett Rohcrl GudhnpLht George F Lehman Peter E. O'Connor George C Surosky Charles J Kane Nocentmo Edward T Strybuc Stanley H. Swtda Holse James T Noon WillLim M. Donnii W Cronin Robert S H-iRondorf Frederick D. Leschuck Gerald B, O'Donnell John S Tagye John T, Kasper Melvyn J Suplee Lawrence Sweeney Hink David P Cullon Rithard I Daniel Keefe lames L Norbury Russell A, Housoal Hallpenny Peter S Levesque Joseph V, OOonnell Joseph V. Tancredi, Jr. James F Sweeney Edward J Talbot Dnnl!. Francis John J. Kelley Robert Obenski Daniel J. Hurley. Jr. B Cummlngi N. Hammer. Jr Robert E lewis Bernard F Ols/anodski Raymond F. Tareila John L. Switai Joseph J Tolond Paul D Curran Jan F Ftanger F Fred B. Kempt John J Nowaczyk, Jr, T A. Traini Thomas P Hurley Robert lindberger Raymond A. Ostrowski Nicholas J Tavani. Jr. Joseph Swope Louis Thomai Curran Robert J. Donald Kenny Joseph P O'Connor T. Trautz John W. Huss Hannigan Richard J. Lisiewski John F Pac/kowski Albert D. Timko G- Joseph Szul Frederick H. Robert J, J. Richard O'Connor Richard P. Jackson Curry Robert T Hanson Joseph M. Loek Joseph T. Palombi Joseph R. Ttttermary Walter Kobe Robert H. Test, 111 Joseph N. Verdccchio William CaKlmir M. C/erpsh Philip E Frank D Korc7 James J O'Donnell, III George J Thompson Francis J. Walsh H Jackson Heaney Carl Lotto Vincent J Pancari Albert J. Tonzello Wllllnm John J O'Donnell James H Kearney R Daley Roy M Hevener Alvin J. Lussrdi David A. Patridge Anthony Tosi Richard R. Kowalczyk John Trent Donald E Ward Willi.im A Brian Paul Oamlani Owim P P John L. Kubiak David O'Kane William H Tropia Walter D Watson I Korh HiRRins Robert Luty Michael J. PasquarellO Thomas J. Trainer Frnni i\ C, Jovpph A. Dnrcy Gnrald P Mill Robert McAloon Robert L Kubiak Thomas J O'Mara, Jr Edward Trost Edward M Wharton Kri'hs lawrence D. Patterson John J Trombetta. Jr. JtJlin Robert P Davis Thomas T Laczi Richard G O'Neill Truitt Charles While I Klultlril.uKcf HinthrliHo Dennis T McAuliffe John J. Peditto John H. Trout Irme Joseph E C Steven f Brian J Dcory I Thomas Hindson Donald F George La Marra Malcolm H Osbourne John T, Turner, Jr, Walter E Yearling . Kr/eininshi futcAvoy Jan Louis Pekala Robert S. Tunilla W George H, Lawroncp J Do Varo, It Bernard C Hipp Harry J. f^cClernan Ihor Kenneth E. Lannan Robert T. O'Sullivan Theodore J, lurnock Robert J. Yurgal Kuglor Mark Pelensky Michael ft. Tyler Richard J, Mli:har«l f Oolnnoy Joseph Harry J Lavin Arthur Pagan, Jr. Twiss Robert Anderson Lnrmor G Hirsrhmann John H. McClure Ralph r Perkins Francis 0. Udicious W Clyde H. Charles A. Lelsso William r Dplanoy Robert A, Hitsh ivtcColgan Jerome R Lepping Max M. Pakyz, Jr. Albert J Visek Robert Ballard Joseph D. Peter A, Peroni Robert P. Vander Neut Stephen J, Lis Anthony A DdLaiirontls Edward I Hotfman, Jr. John J McCracken, Jr. ft William H. Lochten Waldemar Pataitis Joseph J Voelmie Arnold John Cantcra Lawrence Petrone Hams S. Vernick Stanley J. Lisowski Franns J, Del Palazzo Joseph J Hoffman Joseph P. McDeviIt William E Losch Edward P Palubmski Bruno L Walc/ak James M Carney J^mes E. Philipp Walter E. Viol James P. Lut; Thomas Del ucra Patrick J HoKan Joseph A. McDonald John P. Picollo Edward Lynch Aleiander F, Passe, Jr. Thomas P. Walsh William J, easier Peter L Viscusi Daniel John C. MrNelf Anthony T D'Frrico William I Holmes Joseph J Anthony James R Lynch Joseph I Papalmi Thomas F Ward f Coyle McDonald R. Piechowski Kenneth P. Vitale P.l^(|ll,^li r; Mrrdipso Edward J Doibyshire Pplet J, Hopkins Thomas J- John A. Piepszak Edmond F. MacDonald Robert V, Passero Alfred E Warren J. Thomas Oanzl McFadden A, Voegele George JOM'lili f/l William John T. Digilio M.ini'i^ ( Olctnch Peter A. Horty John J McGaharn John M. Piljer, Jr. John J McCann. Jr. Robert P Pauli William J Watts Leon J Vorndran Edw.ird li M.irdieskl, Jr, Raymond J Di I isslo Thomas M, Hovannk Thomas H James J. McCarry John G Pellegrini Robert Bruce Wayne Joseph Donahue McCee Angelo V. Pisano Robert K. Walker Richard R Edwards Lflwionte T. Marlnarl Philip ( Donahup lames J, Hunter Charles R. McGill Carlo S. Porreca Harry W. McCauley Lawrence Persick Charles L. Webster William T. Walker, 111 Terry Joseph F. Franzone A McGoo lovepli M Donnelly Gerald J Hurlbrink Archie F McGowan Joseph T, Qumn Joseph T, McConaghy Charles J Peterson Ronald P. Wenger James W, Wallace Francis Melcorl Raymond Dooloy Thomas A, Husak Archie F. John P. Radzai James L. McCorkle Robert G Petrella Louis R. West James B. Herring McGowan Joseph P. Walsh George Isajiw Robert F. Mooro Dennis M. DouRhorty Francis X laquinto James I. McGrath William M. Rapach John McCormick Philip C. Pfaff. Jr. Richard J. Whalen Thomas J. Walsh Jamei Joseph James F Ivan Pomilo Edward L Doughty Louis J. Incognito Michael J, McGuckin Francis H. Rasmus Joseph A McCormick Robert T. Pickford Thomas J, Whalen, Jr. Norman H Walton, Jr. John A Ju/aitis James J. Qulgley John E, Dtarh Eugene J Jjkommirh Michael W McGuire Francis X. Rauscher Michael T. McCracken Richard J. Pickup William J Whalen. Jr. John D, Warnoch Chester J Ray, Jr, William William D Kerrane L. Diiicoll Dominir Robeit Janusky James J. McKeaney Abraham Reich John A. McCreight John Charles Pionzio Martin Michael Whatley Thomas D- Weather Michael Reilly Calvin M. J Pisani David P Edward Krolikowski Dubtow Frank D Johns Cedric J McKeever Richard B. f?ein Owen P McFadden John White Joseph F, Westermann James Siegler Leroy J Robert J Lavm Dunn Robert F Johnson John F. McKeogh John I Rette John Edward McGinley Robert Pollacco Thomas B White Dennis I. Smyth Thomas W. Whalen Thomas t. MacDonald Jos.cph H Dunphy Ir.inK M Kaminski Norman Jr. Errol E. McGinnis, Jr. William E. Pomnitz George A. Williams Kenneth McKmney Joseph A. Rider. Anthony Spalola William J. WiLklem John McCloskey Ftedeiirk I ( n){0lhari1t Haiiy R Karcher James G. McMahon William A. Rizzi Edward Paul McGiuern Edward Pullman Charles J Wittwer Robert D. Stewart Arthur H linst lames Zachary S. Wochok Pratico Charles J Wolf. Ill John J, Seehousen H Kates Harry A Nirhol John H. Roberts John J McGrory Stephen Nick Taugnci Horlioi A Ivans. Jr. far I Kat/ John C Robinson Ronald D. Wolfe R Joseph G. Anderson Thomas L, McNichol Francis J McGuire Thomas W. ftalston Thomas Woloshm Rifharri M, Townsend Thomas I Falasca John C Hau\t John F. Robinson Harry J. Workman John J. Baker Steven J. Madonna James Mclntyre Harry G. Reamer John C, Wolfrom Stephen M Treitol Robert D Falhowslti Bartholomew J KocKan Matthew F. Romano Edward A. Wroblewski William J. Baldino Edmond J. Mahoney Robert E McLaren Donald N Redmond Gerard M Wood Fioientmo L. Viola Robert T F,irlev Richard Keevey J. Paul P. Romeo Harry Joseph Mali/ia D Wurster Francis McLaughlin Thomas C. Reid Victor C. Wright Richard G. Ballard Joseph Charles Wood, Jr Frank i. Fainnn lohn H. Kollchor Mark J. Malone Barry J. Rosen William G. Yates Clifford F, McMaster Richard W. Remer Henry A. Yaure Robert J. Bernosky James R. Yoa John S. Farrell Harry Lawrence Keller Royden M Maloumian Herman J. Rosica Richard F. Zaieski Walter J. Zogoriki James J, McNally Leo J. Rohan Edward J. Yundt William M Bradley STUDENTS MEN OF LA SALLE Fred A. Abbonlilo Richard D Breen John F. Convey Thomas G, Donnelly James J Gallagher Henry Joseph Adier frank Rene Btestin Schell James C. Conway Francis J. Dougherty John P. Gallagher, 3rd Or & Mrs. Robert L Mr & Mrs Richard A Flanagan Atbert P. Lang James P. Motley EarlS. Howard Allen Robert Adolph Brever John H Walter Smith P Coogan Charles J. Orumm, Jr. Joseph A. Galvan Breckenndge John J. Gallatig Thomas C Leone John J Murray lohn A Bachman Robett A Blinker Edmund F Swiacki Edward F Cooper Samuel A. Duca Robert A Gambmo Mr, & Mrs. Andrew Dick Mr. Joseph Garbenna Joseph P McAtee Joseph F O'Neill Robeit L Baker Charles G Bntt lohn H Cooper J Osborne Mr & Mrs Stefan Tabac/ynski Francis A Duffy, Jr. Thomas Frank Gannon Wtlliam J Ebbecke. Sr Mr. & Mrs. Waller R. Kaminski Daniel J Madden James Stephen Ban Thomas Btogan Leo ( Corbett Gerald M. Duncan Carmen Anthony Gaspero Charles M. Espenshade John E. Krause John A. Malone William P. Ralchford William J. Baiias ChAdes J. Bums Francis X Coyne John Edwin Dwyer John A Gaughan Ray I, Bairy Michael J Callahan John J Coyne Stanley M. Dziomba Edwin Gilbert Charles E Baukat Harold D Camlin Robert E. Cwik Edward R Edgar Raymond A. Gintowt Michael A, Baum John Cannon G William Curran James Elliott. Jr. James A Gladu John T Becker Charles Canuso Thomas G. Curran HIGH SCHOOL ALUMNI Henry V Engel. Jr. Vincent Glennon Louis D Bondift Withaml. Carney Thomas B Curran E R. Evans Ralph Goodwin lohn R. Benner. II Charles S. Carr T Jose R. Sobredo Joseph Cfosson Robert L. Everett Thomas E. Gore. Jr. Joseph F- Beuenouf Donald F. Furey Alfrod A K^ssimif Ihomas J Ouinlan Thomas M, Bermingham Thomas S Carroll Richard J Daily Robert Schaller James J. Ward John Joseph Ewmg John T Gorman John Burke Joseph J. Hanna Frank J, McCormick W Michael L. 0. Beinosky Iprmon L Carter F. Schlmk Ronald F, Zehnle Edward M D'Angelo Victor D. Federici Joseph T. Gramlich James A. D'Arcy Raymond G, Hepburn Robert McHenry Charles lohn Bliss Gerald J. Cassidy Oscar Michael T. Zubyk L Davis John Stephen Fenerly Daniel Grill Robert E. Fleming C- Clark Hodgson, Jr. Joseph J Mark Har/y J. Schoettle Robert I. Bonk Carmen Harry Celmo Charles Denms Dawson Robert F. Fennell Herbert Monroe Groce, Jr. David L. Forde Joseph M, Hficinak Gerard J. O'Rourhe John T. Bowen Patrick J Cetceo Michael A De Angelo. Jr Ronald P. Fmk Henry C Guynn. Jr. Russell C Bower. Ji. Gino V. Cern Thomas A Defant Robert H. Fischer Robert J. Hamilton Michael I, Bowdrcn Donald F Clark Matthew J. Oegres James L. Foreman John F. Handley Bii.m P Boyle lohn D Clouse Nicholas J. Del Sordo Robert Freedman Thomas C Haney C Boyle Albert G Cotlman. Jr. Thomas Oempsey William H. Fry W. Thomas Haney FRIENDS OF THE HIGH SCHOOL Iflmes F, Boyle John F. Coll Francts X. Oierkes Robert John Galcik Joseph E. Hanlon Anthony L. Bralciyk George P. Collins Joseph J. Donahue Charles J McNamara Harry J Rose Joseph F. Galen George M. Harbisort Mr. & Mrs. Duane F Barnes Mr S Mrs Robert J Bogle Mr S Mrs John B. Burns

43 this Every efjorl has been made lo he accurate in the preparation of incorrectly, hope -continued report: if liC have missed your name, or listed it we Centenary Report you'll understand and pass tlie correction on lo us. LA SALLE CENTENARY FUND Report of Receipts (Including Gifts of Kind) December 31, 1964 Number of BUSINESS Contributors MATCHING GIFTS Corporations $178,967.67 69 Matching Gifts 5,256.38 26 $184,224.05

Aetna Life Affiliated Companies INA Foundation COLLEGE ALUMNI 219,872.26 2,469 150,000.00 American Home Products Co. International Business Machines Special Gift

American Sugar Co. Lever Brothers Company FRIENDS 132,096.63 220 HIGH SCHOOL* Arttiur Andersen & Co. Merck Company Foundation Friends 2.220.00 5 National Lead Foundation, Inc. Atlas Ctiemical Industries, Inc. Men of La Salle 17,127.70 8S 3,834.45 36 Bristol-Myers Products Div. Pennsalt Chemical Foundation Alumni 23,182.15 Chicopee Mills Company Pennsylvania Power & Light Co. STUDENTS" 7,745.76 619 The Riegel Paper Corp. Foundation Clairol Incorporated $717,120.85 3,532 " No report available after June. 1961 Eighty Maiden Lane Foundation Smith Kline & French Foundation •• Includes only students as the writing of this report Ford Motor Company The Sperry & Hutchinson Company

Franklin Sugar Co. Stone Container Corporation DESIGNATION OF CONTRIBUTIONS CHAPEL % 21,381.25 J. Walter Thompson Co. General Electric Foundation COLLEGE GENERAL 382.821.55 The General Food Fund, Inc. The Travelers Insurance Company PROPERTY PURCHASE 150,000.00 (Physical Recreation BIdg.) Gulf Oil Corporation CLASSROOM BUILDING 7.464.92 COLLEGE UNION BUILDING 25.399.96 LIBRARY 4,220.61 RESIDENCE HALLS 1,677.25 SCIENCE CENTER 21,098.55 OTHER 29,066.90 GIFTS OF KIND 52,754.21 HIGH SCHOOL 21,235.65 $717,120.85

LA SALLE CENTENARY FUND ORGANIZATION

GENERAL CHAIRf^AN CORPORATIONS The Hon. David L. Lawrence CO-CHAIRMEN VICE CHAIRMAN Thomas Kennally Louis Stem H. Blake Hiiyman. M.D., '41. LL.D.. Hubert J Horan, Jr. COMfUIITTEE SMALL BUSINESS I;isl year received the first President's EXECUTIVE Brother Daniel Bernian CO-CHAIRMEN Medal, presented by Brother Daniel Schmitz, Jr. F.S.C, Joseph Bernian, F.S.C.. president or the college. Brother Eingan Francis Glendon E. Robertson Brother Daniel expressed his apprecia- F.S.C. LABOR CHAIRMAN Felix Francis Joseph McDonough tion (or Dr. Hayman's gift to the college, Brother F.S.C. the largest ever received from an aluni- LEGAL COMMITTEE ADVANCE GIFTS CO-CHAIRMEN mis. which "wiU enable lis to purchase CO-CHAIRMEN Joseph B. Quinn, Esq. grovind for a physical recreation building J. Russell Cullen, Sr. Albert J. Crawford, Jr., Esq. that will be dedicated to the memory of Robert W. Walters COLLEGE ALUMNI CHAIRMAN ." his parents . . SPECIAL GIFTS Francis R. OHara. Esq CO-CHAIRMEN MEDICAL DOCTORS James A. Noien, Jr. CO-CHAIRMEN The Hon. Randolph E. Wise H. Blake Hayman. M.D. Marcel 0. Sussman, M.D. Thomas F. McTear, M.D.

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l^hUticA PHYSICIAN