I I I ('l ' ·~ I !. :rolAL::tO Dltt :< ' - ~~~ ..: ... y ,, ._ <-'< "~ ., •. '.1-/"~''·· .... ~., "~'.. ·.· . ':\. ·~ ·'"'.;~ ...... ·, .. ,,

•• t J THE GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Offers The William Gaston Chair Designed for the men of Georgetown and their Descendants

$2495 $1295

In Ordering, Specify Finish Desired: BLACK AND GOLD • MAHOGANY AND GOLD • ANTIQUE MAPLE RED MAPLE • CHERRY • LIGHT PINE • DARK PINE Other (Unlisted finishes as specified by you at 10% increase in price) The WILLIAM GASTON CHAIR (Height 31", width 23%,", depth 20", seat 17 1h"x181,4,") Weight 20 lbs. Express collect. The WILLIAM GASTON jUNIOR Chair (Height 2Ph", width 17", depth 16", seat 12'h"x14%") Weight 11 lbs. Express collect.

DETACH AND MAIL TO ALUMNI HOUSE 3604 0 ST., N.W., WASHINGTON 7, D. c. Draw checks to Georgetown University Alumni Association Enclosed is my check in the amount of ...... for ...... William Gaston Chair(s) @ $24.95 each and for ...... William Gaston Junior Chair(s) @ $12.95 each. Finish ...... ·...... Name Shipping Address ...... !EXPRESSMAN WILL COLLECT SHIPPING CHARGES) EOR(lETOWD UDIUERSITq LUmDI mR~AZIQE

Member of the American Alumni Council e EDITORIAL BOARD JANUARY 1954 • VOLUME 6, NUMBER 5 OF ALUMNI MAGAZINE JOHN G. BRUN INI, '19 CONTENTS DONALD F. FLAVIN, '28 JOHN T. FLYNN, '02 Annual Giving ______2 MARTI:"'~ S. QUIGLEY, '39 DR. TIBOR KEREKE8-Faculty lmrnunity Statutes ------·------3 REv. GERARD F. YATES, S.J.-Faculty JAMES S. RUBY, '27, Executive Secretary Georgetown and Fribourg ------_ 5 and Editor Athletics ------7 • Dental Alumni Reunion 9 Who Knows? • CONTRIBUTORS ll TO THIS ISSUE Class otes ------__ 13 JAMES S. RUBY, '27, is Executive Secretary Schedule and Results_ 21 of the Georgetown University Alumni Association. John F. Parr, F.S. '39, Grad. '48, is a Pro­ Note on the Cover Picture fessor at the University of Fribourg. James S. Ruby, '27, is Executive Secretary Miss MARY KuHN, Alumni of the Georgetown University Alumni As­ sociation and Editor of the Al~tmni Maga­ House Receptionist, adds the new zine. total to the score board after the Mr. Charles M. Whelan, S.J., is a senior at morning mail on January 21st. the Georgetown Law School and Editor­ in-chief of the Georgetown Law Journal. Charlie Steele, '52, former Sports editor of the Hoya, is a student at Georgetown Law .School. REV. STEPHEN X. WINTERS, S.J., is Assistant Director of the Georgetown Forum. REV. GERARD F. YATES, .S.J., is Dean of the Graduate School. Copyright .1954 Georgetown University Alumni Magazine

Return Postage Gua?·anteed GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZI~~: Published ~ach two months by the Georgetown University Alumni Association Inc., Washington 7, D. C. • Sus~ammg l!-fembe?·shtp $25.00 per year, Regular Membership $5.00 per year of which $8 00 is for subscription to the Alumm Magazme. • Entered at the Post Office at Washington D C as Seco~d Class matter February !M, 19.1,8 under the act of Ma_rch 8, 1879. • Editorial and Executive offices: GE(>RGE­ TOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Alumm House, 860.1, 0 Street, N.W., Washington 7, D.C. ALUMNI ANNUAL GIVING THE FIRST SIX WEEKS

by James S. Ruby, '27, Executive Secretary

On December 16, 1953, the first co ntributions towards stressed . The present total represents, at 31/2 %, the interest the Alumni Association's first Annual Giving Fund were rield on an invested endowment of more than $974.,000.00. received as the postman dropped the first of the little gray Georgetown has never had an endowment of those propor­ envelopes with th e punch-card contribution cards at Alumni tions, and it adds immeasurablr to our pride and pleas­ House. As this issue of the Alumni Magazine goes to press ure to be able to provide her with a living substitute. we are delighted with the initial results of the careful plan­ Most of the contributions in this early stage of th e first ning which has gone into making the Fund possible. In less rear of our fund have come as a direct result of mail ap­ than six weeks, contributions totalling $30,104.46 have peals. However, in most centers of Georgetown population been received from 646 so ns of Georgetown. throughout the countr)', Alumni Fund Committees are Our enco uragement stems from several so urces. First, beginning their work which should at least triple the the size of the average gift, $4.6.78 is considerably higher present total within a few weeks. than the average for other College and University Alumni Each local chairman is furnished with a list of donors Funds last year. Second, out of one mail appeal, we have from his area so that those who contribute by mail will managed to obtain support from nearly" four percent of not be solicited in person. Contributions by mail are doub- Georgetown's former students. Perhaps th e most encourag­ 1)' valuable since they economize on th e time and energy ing note of all is the fact that there have been a large num­ of the Committee members. Contributions now also have ber of small gifts, ranging from one to ten dollars, from a double value, since the fin e start and the steady growth recent graduates whose generosity represents, we know, a of the Fund will serve as an inducement to others to get real sacrifice. Manr of these gifts were accompanied br on th e bandwagon. notes saying " I wish it co uld be more." That frequently The box-score below will be a regular feature of the repeated sentiment leads us to have high hopes for the Magazine throughout the present Fund year which closes permanence and expansion of the Annual Giving Fund in on June 30: The score-board featured on the cover of this th e future. issue is kept up to date, hour by hour, and has caused The value of the Fund to the University ca nnot be over- mu ch interest among faculty, students and visiting Alumni.

THE ANNUAL GIVING FUND AS WE GO TO PRESS As we go to press at 4:00 P.M. on Friday, January 22, 1954, this is the box score on the first year of our Alumni Annual Giving Fund: ALUMNI GIFTS TO THE FUND-$34,118.48 ALUMNI DO ORS- 684 Gifts are distributed as follows: Total Alwnni (Note that some alumni gave to more than one project) (or Alumnae) Contributors Percentage Donors Amount College of Arts and Sciences 5,897 256 4.34 College of Arts and Sciences 115 $ 3,429.50 Graduate School 767 26 3.38 Graduate School 11 143.00 Medical School 2,396 140 5.84 Medical School 116 4,715.00 Law School 5,709 160 2.82 Law School Ill 4,457.92 Dental School 1,578 51 3.23 Dental School 44 557.00 Foreign Service School 4,068 82 2.01 School of Foreign Service 60 1,143.00 Nursing School 101 3 3.00 School of Nursing 4 35.00 Institute of Languages Institute of Languages and Linguistics 2 55.00 McDonough Gymnasium 109 6,857.00 Total of University Alumni List- 21,007 Undesignated 150 12,826.06 Percentage Contributing to Annual Giving to Dat e-3.25o/o Totals 684 $34,118.48 Average gift to date $49.88 Size of gifts to date-$1.00 to $4,000.00

$34,118.48 is the equivalent of the return @ 3%o/o on an invested endowment of $974,812.74. Let's make it two million before the March Magazine appea rs. Let's go! 20,323 Georgetown men are still to be heard from!

2 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE IMMUNITY STATUTES: PRIVACY AND THE COMMON GOOD

Charles M. Whelan, S.J. Editor-in-Chief, Georgetown Law Jonrnal

Measures which will enable Congressional committees is co ncerned in its practical application, there are many to c ircumvent the s tumbling- of the privilege against questions which witnesses cannot b e c ompelled to an swer, self-incrimination are under serious considerati on in Con­ regardless of their guilt or innocence. gress. The Senate has a lready passed a bill which would The purpose of the privilege against self-incrimination, enable committees to compel answers to incriminating ques­ as authoritatively stated b y the Supreme Court, is to co m­ tions, by exchanging immunity for information. The com­ pel the federal government to seek proof of crime else­ mon people may w onder h ow it is possible for C ongress where than from the lips of the accused. The common law to take awa y something which the Constitution grants; history of the privilege shows that it developed a s a protest the answer lies in a Supreme Court decision t owards the against the inquisitorial methods of the ex officio oath and close of the last century, which h eld that a comprehensive of the Star Chamber in the notorious climax of its opera­ immunity statute is a co11 stitutional substitute for the privi­ tions. John Lilburn is the hero of the proponents of the lege against self-incriminati on. privilege, and it is interesting to note that his protest was Sound thought about immunity s tatutes is impossible aimed at compulsion to answer incriminating questions without a thorough knowledge of the meaning a nd purpose where there had been no prior f ormal accusation, not a t compulsion after such a ccusation. of the self-incriminati on clause in the Fifth Amendment. tter i s that if the privilege That clause, as it has been interpreted b y the Supreme The s imple truth of the ma against self-incrimination were wholly abolished, the fed­ Court, means that a witness in any federal proceeding may eral government could send people to jail for refusing to refuse to answer any questi on the a nswer t o w hich could tell whether they had committed crimes. Our whole system be used a gainst him in a f ederal criminal prosecution. of ~ riminal jurisprudence is designed t o achieve the op­ Whether the test of the availability of the privilege is that posite result. Today, the federal government cannot punish the truthful answer of the witn ess must b e self-incrimina· a man for a crime unless it can prove beyond a reasonable tory or that it is s ufficient for a possible answer to be self­ doubt that he actually committed the crime. Tomorrow. incriminatory, is a question earnestl y debated b y the law­ without the privilege, the government could ask anyone a1~ yers. It is settled, however, that the courts will not inquire incriminating question, and conceivably send him to jail what the truthful answer would have been ; it is e nough whether h e remains s ilent, lies or t ells the truth. All this that the co urts can see that one of the possible a nswers in spite of the fact that the man may be perfectly innocent, would incriminate the witness. As a r esult, as far as th e law Continued to Page 12

The Author and Members ~f Georgetown Moot Court Tea m discuss immunity statutes on the Georgetown TV Forum.

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was the College which saw the utility and advantage of higher studies and provided the first buildings and pro­ fessors of the University. In 1940, the strikingly beautiful modern buildings were completed and the University rapidly moved ahead in its mission as a Catholic and international institution. In recent times, the new university has again come into informal contact with the Jesuits to whom it owes so much. In Georgetown, Fribourg has found a warm friend across the seas and gradually the relations between the two universities have become closer and closer. A few years ago a joint student exchange program was estab­ li shed and though a lack of funds has prevented full participation in this activity, several students have profited from it and the project remains in force. The latest par­ ticipant was Philip Zuger who studied at Georgetown in the year 1950-51 under this agreement and who is now back in Switzerland. awaiting appointment in the Swiss diplomatic service. Dr. John F. Parr '39 Prominent in Fribourg-Georgetown relations has been When a former Georgetown student and instructor was the Briefs family. Godfrey Briefs was a s tudent at the recef\l;ly named to the faculty of the University of Fri­ University while he was a secretary in th e Pax Romana bourg, one more link was forged in the history of the headquarters in Fribourg and Professor Goetz Briefs lec­ relations between the two universities. The faculty and tured in Economics during the Fribourg Summer School authorities of the Swiss university had made the revo· of 1950. Also in 1950, the Very Rev. Hunter Guthrie, lutionary decision to introduce courses in American. his­ President of Georgetown, was named to the Committee tory and literature as a permanent feature of the umver­ of Honor which sponsored the Fribourg Summer School sity's instruction and it was altogether fitting and proper and which was responsible for bringing some 500 Ameri­ that they should turn to the oldest Catholic university cans to Fribourg to study during the summer months. in America for someone to provide that instruction. During the summer of 1951, Rev. Gerard Yates, S.}., Furthermore, there was a long Jesuit tradition in Fri­ Dean of the Georgetown Graduate School, gave a brilliant bourg which made it quite natural that they sho ul d _turn. to course in political science in Fribourg and did much to the Society in America at this moment: The yn1vers1ty increase the close associations between the two institu­ of Fribourg has its origins in two great Ideol~g1cal move­ tions. During the same period, Father Yates and mants. The first was the intellectual and doctrmal restora­ Fribourg's capable young Chancellor Hubert tion which followed the Council of Trent and which re· Aepli carried on ex­ tensive conversations suited in the foundation of a series of Jesuit colleges. regarding the possibility for future Not the least of these was the College of St. Michael in cooperation between Georgetown and Fribourg. Inciden­ Fribourg where St. Peter Canisius, S.}. was called in tally, Father Yates is probably the first Jesuit to say Mass 1580. There he opened classes in 1582 and for more th~n at the tomb of St. Peter Canisius since the departure of three centuries the College has served as the academic the Jesuits from Switzerland. center of French Catholic Switzerland. For seventeen years Continued on Page 7 the sainted disciple of Ignatius gave of _his _spirit and de· votion in Fribourg and there he is buned m a c~~pel of the College church. Although as a re~ult of the _ClVll .War of 1847 the Society of Jesus was obhge_d to _qmt Switzer­ ANGIE'S COPLEY PLAZA land, its spirit and tradition lives on m this monument Italian-American Restaurant to a saint of prayer and action. . . The second movement which dlfectly mfluenced the SERVING ITALIAN FOOD founding of the University was the libe~al mo~ement of "That's So-o-o Tasty" the XIXth century-the renewal of philosophiCal,. theo· We pledge our reputation for logical and historical studies which marked the pontificate serving the finest foods and of Leo XIII. Under the leadership of Georges Python Wines and supported by the people of Fr~bourg, coi~cid i~ g with Pizza Pizza the wishes of the sovereign pontiff, the Umvers1ty was Cocktails inaugurated on the fourth of November, 1889. AD 2-9313 • • • 1624 Que St., N. W. Without the College of St. Michael, it is impossible Washington 9, D. C. to imagine that there would have been a University. It

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1-----·-·--l L---- .. ·-... J 6. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE day he took over Georgetown1s basketball outlook has improved fantastically. The team is on the threshold of national prominence now. If they don't attain it next ATHLETICS season, there can be little doubt about it from there on. The key figure in all this has of course, been Coach Buddy Jeannette. His team this year, though undermanned through a lack of Juniors and Seniors has looked very By CHARLIE STEELE '52 good. Their losses to date can be traced to lack of height and experience. One thing is sure, they are never out­ coached or out-fought, and both of these qualities can • be traced to When Georgetown dropped football a few years ago, Jeannette. As long as Buddy is the coach, the alumni there was undoubtedly much concern among the alumni need not worry about Georgetown going small time in for the future of inter-collegiate athletics at the Hilltop. basketbalL If he is given the same backing next year that he It's interesting then, and reassuring, to chart the progress was given the past two, the alumni can start looking of these sports during the past few years. Take the bas­ for Georgetown's golden age in basketbalL ketball team as an example. When Buddy O'Grady, re­ signed a new coach had to be signed. Some of the names mentioned as likely candidates made it seem possible that BEN A. BUSCHER Georgetown was going to de-emphasize the hoop sport. Instead the new coach was Buddy Jeannette, an acknowl­ • edged top flight coach, and, as far as this column is con­ Eleclrico/ Controclor cerned, the best man possible for the job. This was most reassuring. Coach Jeannette stepped into a unique situa­ RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL AND tion. He had a team composed of twelve Senio~s, four INDUSTRIAL ELECTRICAL WORK Juniors, and NO sophomores. This meant that when the • 12 Seniors graduated, Jeannette would have only four 3906 Yuma St., N. W. 3207 Grace St., men returning to the varsity. Of these four, only one was N. W. over six foot one in height. That was the set-up Jeannette EM. 3-0060 wo. 6-0095 faced, and as a result, this year, with the 12 Seniors gone, the Hoyas are lacking depth and height, and the record of the team will of course be influenced by that lack. THOMAS A. NOLAN This is Buddy Jeannette's rear guard action year. He's trading os doing the best that can be done with what's on hand while waiting for reinforcements. The team has some AMERICAN TYPEWRITER CO. promising sophomores, especially Warren Buehler and Complete Business Machine Service Bill Cowley, two 6'3" forwards who are leading the 1431 E. Capital St. Ll. 3-0082 team in scoring. The freshman team, almost entirely hand picked by Jeannette, looks like a great club. 6'6" Joe Continued from Page 5 Missett from Philadelphia is a strong, fast, extremely well Among G. U. students at Fribourg, Dr. Harrison Smith co-ordinated giant who shoots from the pivot with either represents solid achievement. Having been awarded a hand. Matty White from Staten Island and La Salle Ph. D. at the Hilltop after doing his work in Political High School is 6'2", with a deadly set, and tremendous Science under Father Yates, he came to Fribourg and in drive. He too can really . Hank Morano, from 1951 was granted the degree of Docteur-es-lettres in St. Peter's Prep in Jersey City, is another 6'2" strong modern history. boy, with a great shot from anywhere. Dick Percudani, . A few wee~s ago, the present writer delivered the open­ from Power Memorial of New York City, is a ball handler mg lecture m the American civilization courses at the with real class, as well as a good shot. Dick goes an even l!niversity ?f Fribourg in the presence of the newly ar­ 6'. Ken Rhode from St. Francis, Brooklyn and Dale nved Amencan Ambassador, the Hon. Frances E. Willis. Smith from Allentown go about 6'4" to 6'5", can rebound It has taken great co urage and represents typically the with anybody, and can shoot. Drew Denmeade from West spirit of the Fribourg faculty that they should be among Catholic in Philadelphia and Dutch Wagner from St. the first of continental universities to recognize the im­ John's Prep, Brooklyn are the small men. They go about portance of American studies. It is with a high sense of 6', and both are good ball players. Ray Massa of Cin­ privilege and gratitude not only as an American but as a cinnati, Dick Farrell of Seton Hall Prep, Tucker Dunn Georgetown alumnus that this writer takes up the cause and Dan Devlin of Washington, and Frank Smith of of helping to bring a knowledge of America to Europe. Virginia round out the club. . Pr~yer!ully, it is hoped, that the high principles and So next year Coach Jeannette will have this year's 1llummat10n shed by the Jesuits at the Hilltop will inform sophs, plus this year's frosh. The height will be there. the lectures in American literature and history at Fribourg There will be one Senior on the team next year. He will and that this will mark the beginning of a new era of be Frank Major, who has seen very little action in the even closer relations between the two universities. George­ past. So Jeannette's great year is still two season's away. town students and professors will always be welcome m However, you can see how Buddy is building. From the the new office for American studies at Fribourg.

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Compliments I f Compliments of i of a The Easterday-Duckworth Mfg. Co. I Friend . I .::::::~ . _::::J GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Dental Alumni Reunion • • • Postgraduate Dental Clinic

Greater Washington houses many centers of activity in dental research and from these will be drawn exhibits demonstrating investigation in dentistry's basic problems in materials, instruments, investigation and testing meth­ ods, and new techniques. Members of these research staffs will be in attendance throughout the meeting to answer your questions and make available first-hand information. Such outstanding figures as Dr. Lester Burkett of Penn· sylvania, Dr. Louis Alexander Cohn of Columbia, Drs. Irving Hardy and Daniel Holland of Tufts, Dr. Lewis Fox of Connecticut, and Dr. Gaylord James of Ohio will be found on the Registered Clinic program. Table Clinics are to be held in two separate sessions so that attending dentists may cover as much of this program as possible. Three Panel Disc ussions will cover the hotly debated fi elds of Occlusion and of Focal Infection; and the Cancer Society will present an extremely interesting feature in Oral Cancer Detection. An entirely new listing of late Or. Louis Cubit '29 releases in films has been secured for Visual Education. One of the truly memorable social events of this meet· ing is planned for the traditional Stag Night featuring excellent entertainment and food. Other perennial fea· tures of interest will be found in the Opening Luncheon, An expanded social program will rz:ovide a ~an~er· for which a top personality is being secured, in the color­ than-ever welcome for returning alumm and their wives ful Dinner Dance, the fun filled Children's program, and at this year's Reunion just preceding the 22nd Post- the glamorous Fashion Show luncheon for the ladies. graduate Clinic in Washington. . Dr. Dubit joins with Dr. Lloyd in extending a most . D b"t Dent '29 General Chamnan of the D r. L OUIS U I , • , cordial invitation to all dental alumni to attend this mem­ Clinic, has emphasized his desire for a thorou~hly worth· orable reunion, and the 22nd Annual Postgraduate Clinic while attraction for Georgetown Dental Alumm. which it precedes. Reserve the dates, check with your class­ Dr. z. Bernard Lloyd, Dent. '38, gratified by last year's mates, and make your reservations as soon as you receive fine response of well over 200 graduates, has arranged your mailing. . p a program slartmg at 1 .M ., on Saturda)' , . March 13th, with a welcome from the Regent, Reverend Damel 0. C. McFadden, S.J., the Dean, Clemens V. Rault, Rear Ad· miral, D. C., U.S .. (ret.) and Dr. James S. _Ru by, ~x~cu· . TURNER CONTRACT FURNITURE COMPANY tJVe secretary Geo rgetown U mversi· "ty Alumm Assoc iation. There will 'follow a short talk of timely interest both to 923 G Street, N. W. the alumni and their wives. NAtional 8-9577 Table Clinics will be given by mem bers of the five year . d . b k reumon c1 asses allng ac to 1914· At· 4 P.M. a recep· Furnishing offices, Institutions, tion will be held in the Student Lounge, where evez:yone Restaurants & Clubs will enjoy an hour's relaxation. The new fea tu~ e will ~e * * at 7 p M when dmner Wi ll f oun d at t h e Sh ore h am Hotel · · . Property Management be highlighted by a welcome from the President of the University, the * Very Reverend Ed~ard B. Bunn, S.J., Offering decorator & layout service former Regent of the School of Dentistry. . On the morning following, Sunday, March 14, memonal Mass will be celebrated in the chapel at t?e School of Dentistry, followed by breakfast in the ca f~tena .. An important item of real interest. will be mtroduced HILLTOP CAFE Serving at this Postgraduate Clinic .. Since . tlns shall the first b~ Fine Foods-Steaks-Chops-Sea Food time any of the larger meetings will hav e s tan ed. a pro· Sandwiches-Fountain Service gram of the size anticipated involving re~,ea rch m . de:~ · Beer- Draft or Bottled tistry, the Committee is proud t~ announce ~ew Honzons 1226 36th Street, N.W. in Dental Research in the Washmgton Area.

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10 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE "WHO KNOWS?"

December 9, 1953 a lot of boys (non-scholarship, of course) who are willing, anxious and able to play football. I under­ Dr. James S. Ruby stand we have all the necessary equipment in good Alumni House working order. We are now all set for a playing field Georgetown University for free and with the fence and gate around it could even visualize paying any Dear Jim, additional small expense incurred, by a small admission fee. Also we are I was very interested in last week's write up in the fortunate to have our coach, Jack Hagerty, still at · Sunday Star about the enthusiastic support and good Georgetown. What more do we need,-simply a all around results from the new intramural football couple of varsity teams which can be made up of the program at Georgetown. The advantages of the "new cream of our present crop and a simple, unpre­ order" are certainly apparent. It is great to be able to tentious schedule for each Friday, Saturday or Sun­ put aside a hundred thousand dollars or more each day with some nearby institutions who are as in­ year for more of the uses for which a great univer­ terested as we are in football and learning, and as sity such as Georgetown was intended. It also strikes disinterested as we are in New Year's Day Games a bell to know that this program allows a greater par­ and undefeated seasons. ticipation in football for more students. Sorry·to say that this wasn't so when I was around the campus, Who knows, -a few years of good behavior like when we had only Varsity squad to shoulder the this in football, and we might establish a trend,­ honors. maybe even a few converts right in our own back­ yard!! Let's try it, and see. But at this point, a bit of nostalgia creeps into my Tom McMahon picture. I can't help but remember just a few years '38 & '42 ago when Georgetown was battling it out with Boston College for top football honors in the East. Spirit ran high those years both among students and alumni. I GEORGETOW UNIVERSITY must admit tho, this spirit did run "high," financial­ WASHINGTON, D.C. wise, too high. It was a shame that World War II pre­ January 12, 1954 maturely burst this small bubble of fame. Then I can Dr. Thomas F. McMahon, remember a few more years in retrospect, when 3000 Connecticut Ave., Georgetown had only fair football teams, but fair N.W. Washington, enough to wallop Shenandoah or Lafayette or Buck­ D. C. nell, and occasionally, Maryland. We, in College Dear Doctor McMahon, those years, enjoyed these games. I think the Alumni did too. But we both thought then, that something I was most gratified to read your letter to Jim must be wrong. It did seem silly to pay out so much Ruby anent the article that appeared in the magazine for such little return, to hire such a big stadium for a section of the Sunday Star. few thousand people. Most of us thought then that Georgetown should either "blow hot" or "blow cold." First of all, I was impressed by the lucidity and But none of us then, and not too many of us now simple elegance of the style which reflects great looked forward to a "cease breathing" status as far credit on you as a student in English Composition; as intercollegiate football was concerned at George­ secondly, and more important, by your grasp of the town. entire situation and the balanced judgment you manifested in appraising the problem. Enough reminiscing, now for some constructive criticism. Let's keep the student body and the College Relative to the ability of the University to "put Treasurer just as happy as they now are. But let's aside a hundred thousand dollars or more each year add a little glow to the faces of those forgotten for more of the uses for which a great university such Alumni. How to do all this? Well, let's take inven­ as Georgetown was intended", I wish this were the tory. What do we have on hand? First of all we have Continued to Page 19

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 11 Continued from Page 3 General has made it clear that he desires his office to have but because of suspicious or unusual circumstances in his a veto power over offers of immunity to wi tnesses before life has an understandable desire to s uppress the truth. Congressional committees. Since enforcement of sanctions Immunity statutes, however, are designed to avoid the is the duty of the Executive, it is reasonable for the De­ harm which would flow from an outright repeal of the self­ partment of Justice to look with disfavor upon measures incrimination clause of the Fifth Amendment. Under the which could frustrate its efforts to see that criminals pay typical immunity s tatute, when a witness invokes the privi­ for their misdeeds. Immunity statutes whi ch do not require lege, the governmental agency which is interrogating him the consent of the Attorney General make it possible for may compel him to answer, by giving him a legally en ­ Congress or a Congressional agency to extricate a criminal forceable promise that he will not be prosecuted by the fed­ just as the Department of Justice is closing in. On the other eral government on account of any "transaction, matter or hand, s tatutes w hi ~h do require the consent and approval thing" concerning which he testifies in answer to the ques­ of the Attorney General make it possible for him to render tion which has been asked. unavailable testimony whi ch Congress co uld oth erwise compel. The purpose of an immunity statute is to enable the gov­ ernment to obtain information, the acquisition of which it In addition to the serious problem of choosing the per-· considers more important for the common good than the son or group to whom the pown to grant immunity should punishment of the informer for his crimes. It is undoubt­ be entrusted, there is the inescapable difficulty of choice edly true that the wholesale exercise of the privilege in between any immunity statute and the privilege against recent years has seriously hampered Congress, through its self-incrimination. Although immunity statutes avoid some committees, in its efforts to obtain the information on of the dangers consequent up on abolition of the privilege, which to base intelligent legislation. The problem is par­ the fact remains that any immunity statute enables the ticularly acute in the area of subversive activity. With the government to do one of the things against which the privi­ possible exception of the Kefauver committee, the privilege lege was directed: to interrogate any person about possible against self-incrimination has been invoked more often in criminal activity on his part, without any prior formal the hearings of the Congressional committees which deal accusation of guilt, and under threat of imprisonment for with Communism than anyplace else. refusal to answer. Because promises of immunity entail bargaining with While it is true that under an immunity statute, the wit­ criminals, the Department of Justice has a serious interest ness cannot be punished for what he reveals, it is also true in the working of immunity statutes. The present Attorney that he can be compelled to reveal what might be of the highest importance to him, quite apart from any fear of prosecutiO'n, to suppress. The privilege against self-incrim­ ination is a valuable safeguard of the privacy of the indi­ vidual. In its practical workings, it permits the c itizen to keep many of his secrets without fear of going to jail for his silence. Where, however, revelation is essential for the common good, the privacy of the individual ceases to weigh heavily in the balance. The basic question which Congress, and consequentl y the people, must answer is whether the need for the information is so great as to justify whatever de­ struction of privacy must be wrought in order to obtain it. Once that question has been clearly resolved in the affirma­ tive, it will be time to consider the measures which will minimize the dangers inevitably attendant upon the power of compulsion.

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DENTAL EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES SANTA CLAUS VISITS HILLTOP On December 23, the Georgetown University Alumni Association 900- 17th Street, N.W. Washington 6, D. C. played host to the little children of the Georgetown faculty at a Christmas party in the band room at McDonough Gymnasium. Seventy­ three children, ranging in age from one to twelve were entertained with a professional marlonnelle show, after which Santa Claus (Rev. NAtional 8-5272 Richard C. Law, S.J.I distributed lolly-pops, balloons and ice cream In front of the Christmas tree. Here Santa is being quizzed by John A. Zimmermann, 21 months, son of Harry A. E. Zimmermann, Registrar of the School of Foreign Service. The pipe Is Harry's, not John's.

12 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Clplent of the highest honor conferred by the Departm ent of the Interior, its Dis· tinguished Award at a Convocation held in the Department of Interior auditorium in Washington on December 8, for his out· CLASS NOTES standing work in the U. S. Bureau of Rec· lamation. 1916 John F. Wieser, Law '16, former · ant Chief Attorney in the Rulings and 1901 Opinions Branch of th e Cleveland, Ohio, Wage Stabilization Board has joined tht> ACTION Franz H. Ridgway, Law '01, a Washing· ton attorney, died here on November 22. staff of the A . B. Smythe Company, a R. Kintner, USA, Lt. Col. William ln addition to his law practice he was for Cleveland real estate firm. M.A. '48, PhD '49, has been in Ko· twenty-four years the operator of the Ridg· Maurice Kohner, Law '16, prominent real rca since January 1953, first as an way Pharmacy in Washington. estate broker in Washington died on J anu­ nd er until infantry battalion comma ary 13. the armistice, and since then with 1902 1917 the Armistice Commission Hq. He Honorable Tisdale J. Touart, Grad '02, Alexander Anderson, College '17, died writes: "Got into a lot of action in· is a Judge in Mobile, Alabama. eluding the several battles for Pork in Boston, Mass., on November 17. Chop. Also have been in quite close 1904 James H. Cassidy, Law '17, after thirty· four years with the Legal Department of to the armistice negotiations, and Dr. John J. Griffin, Dent. '04, died in e Dupont Company, has retired as head it's been a useful experience for me Forest Hills, New York, on September 23. th the Corporation Law Division, and is to tangle with some of the lads di· Before coming to Georgetown, he was one of free to travel, loaf and fish. rectly after exposin g myself to them of the baseball "immortal " at Holy Cross vicariously for so long." College. last remark re· Colonel Kintner's Frank M. Foy, College '04, Grad '06, best crs to his Doctoral Dissertation on To serve your f Law '07, Secretary-Treasurer of the Miami and operating meth· the organization (Florida) Daily News, died in Cleveland, ods of the Communist Party which . . . serve MELVERN! Ohio, on October 22, according to word by the University of was published recently received at Alumni House. Oklahoma Press under the title The Front Is Everywhere and has had a 1908 wide sale. A special autographed William E. Rice, Law '08, died suddenly copy of the work was presented to in New York City on December 18. At Georgetown "from within whose Georgetown he had been Captain of the walls this work came." In recogni· Rowing Tea m. lion of it the Georgetown Alumni of Dr. William Edward Coyle, Med. '08, died Washington presented Colonel Kint· at his hom e in Brooklyn, New York on ner with a Citation of Merit in 1951. December 26. Last September, in collaboration with Colonel George C. Reinhardt, 1910 a second Colonel Kintner published Joseph E. Owens, College '10, an in­ in Land book, Atomic Weapons vestment broker in New York died there .: The Mili· Combat (Harrisburg, Pa on September 20. Company). tary Service Publishing John C. Brennan, Law '10, an official of York It was hailed in The New the Inter-State Commerce Commission, died Times as ''the first comprehensive in Washington on November 23. work on the tactics of atomic war· fare by professional soldiers." 1911 Dr. William J. Davis, Dent. '11, died in Washington on October 13. 1888 1914 At your nearest dealer Julius E. Cogswell, Law, '88, holds an Newton M. Perrins, Law '14, head of the unusual record as Register of Mesne Con· Eastman Kodak Company's Patent Depart· James M. Moroney, College '17, has been veyances for Charleston County, South ment for more than twenty years, died in made a Knight of the Order of St. Gregory Carolina, to which post he was elected to Rochester, New York, on October 18. the Great. His citation reads, "Because he fill the unexpired term of his deceased Alumni House has received a copy of the has quietly and with courage exercised his predecessor in 1893, and from 1894 to the resolutions of the Lackawanna County influence in journalism for impartial and present time has been re-elected by the (Pennsylvania) Bar Association on the objective reporting of religious news." Mr. people every four years. He is still in good death of Thomas P. Hevers, Law '14, who Moroney is Vice-President and Secretary active health and holding the esteem of his died at his home in Carbondale on July 5. of the Dallas Morning News. llow citizens. fe Charles J. Dean, Law '14, was forced by 1918 in 1950, 1891 health to retire from all activities Dr. Charles L. Smith, Dent. '18, has but he still keeps in close touch with Hugh M. Sterling, Law '91, retired Wash· been appointed to the District Board of Georgetown affairs through the Alumni term. Dr. ington attorney, died here on December 24. Dental Examiners for a five-year Magazine. He was associated with Herbert Smith is a Fellow of the American College P. Leeman, Law '15, in the practice of law 1895 of Dentists and a member of the American in Washington. Society of Oral Surgeons. Med. Commander Francis M. Furlong, 1915 '95, died in the Naval Hospital at Annapo· 1919 lis, Maryland on December 15. Richard J. Coffey, Law '15, was the re· James J. 9'Byrne, Law '19, died in Wash·

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 13 ington in late November. He was a retired Raphael M. O'Hara, Law '21, prominent December 31 after more than 35 years of commissioner of the Division of Concilia· Detroit, Michigan, tax attorney, died fol· service. H e is author of eo·author of Bureau lion and Mediation of the U. S. Department lowing a heart attack in Detroit on Decem­ publications dealing with tides and currents of Labor. ber 16. in important waterways of the United Governor Knight of California has named Alfred D. Reid, College '21, one of States. Dr. Walter Rapaport, Med. '19, Director Georgetown's very few architects, shattered of the State Department of Mental Hy­ traditions when he designed the Faldstool 1924 giene. for the new Auxiliary Bishop of Pittsburgh, William T. Hardaway, F.S. '24, manager George D. Horning, Jr., College '19, Law the Most Reverend Coleman Carol. The of the Veterans Administration Regional '22, was the s ubject of a f eature article portable, backless chair was made of alum· Office at Phoenix, Arizona, died in mid· in a Naval Reserve Magazine with the title inurn as befits Pittsburgh's first native November. His body was brought to Arling· "Reserve of Renown". He holds the rank bishop. ton Cemetery for burial. of Captain in the Naval Reserve. Joseph F. Howley, Law '24, formerly an 1922 attorney in Scranton. Pennsylvania, died on 1920 Thomas H. Gardiner, Law '22, long active November 12 in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. Dr. Leo Bartemeier, Past Presid ent of in the affairs of the Georgetown Club of He had been stationed in Saudi Arabia for the American Psychiatric Society, came Rhode Island, died suddenly during the the past ten years, in the Public Relations from Detroit on January 20, to lecture to Christmas holidays. Department of the Arabian·American Oil the faculty and student body of the School Dr. Joseph A. Lane, Med. '22, has been Company. His son Thomas is a student at of Medicine in Gaston Hall. elected President of the s taff of St. Mary's the University. T. Austin Gavin, Law '20, form er presi­ Hospital in Rochester, New York. The Hos· Edward J. Sauter, College '24, of Wauk· dent of the Oklahoma and Tulsa County pita! has a formal affiliation with the egan, Illinois, has been elected Vice·Presi­ Bar Association, has been named County Georgetown Medical School. dent of the Chicago Title and Trust Com· pany in addition to his duties as President of the Illinois Title Company. Dr. George H. Muscato, Med. '24, died at his home in Lockport, Illinois, on Octo­ ber 16. Edward J. Shaughnessy, Law '24, Dis· trict Director of the New York District of th e Immigration and Naturalization Serv· ice, was th e principal speaker at the 1953 Citizenship Day Ceremonies in Yonkers, New York, in September. George E. Beechwood, Law '24, law part· ner of J. Harry LaBrum, Law '25, has been elected chairman of the Insurance Section of the American Bar Association, at the or­ ganizations annual convention in Boston. He was also appointed to the College of Trial Lawyers. Mr. Beechwood has his practice in Philadelphia. Price L. March, Law '24, retired from the U. S. Internal Revenue Service on July 1. He had been with the Appellate Division of the Atlanta District at Jackson· ville, Florida. James J. Kilroy, College '24, died sud­ denly in Charlotte, North Carolina, on December 7. The Georgetown Delegation at the Inter-American All-Jesuit Alumni Congress at lima, Peru in October. Dr. Josef Solterer (second from right} headed the Delegation. Paul G. Felix, College '24, Field In· spector for the American Raditor and Judge in a t emporary measure to break a Leo W. White, lawyer and civic leader Standard Sanitary Corp., has been trans· deadlock between two county commission­ in Pittston, Pennsylvania, died suddenly on £erred from the norlh·cenlral district in ers over a political appointment. November 22. Pittsburgh to the east· Central district with Frank J. Claydon, College '20, is a mem· Dr. John W. Brittingham, College '22, headquarters in Baltimore. ber of the Common Council of the City of Grad. '23, in sending his contribution to Dr. Louis B. LaPlace, College '24, well Mt. Vernon, N.Y. the annual giving program writes the fol­ known Cardiologist in Philadelphia, died Clarence J. Bourg, Law '20, died in lowin g, "My life practically began at suddenly a t his home on December 27. His Washington in late December. Georgetown and only this past summer it wife had died only a few weeks before. was saved at the Georgetown Hospital. Charles L. Norris, Law '24, President of 1921. There will be more and larger gifts from Woodward & Norris, Washington Real Es· Dr. John R. Daly, College '21, is prac· me later." tate firm, has been elected President of the tieing medicine in San Diego, California. District Chapter of Residential Appraisers. John, Jr., is in his fourth year of the Jesuit 1923 Seminary at Florissant, Mo. His daughter J. Fendall Coughlan, Law '23, has re· 1925 Mary Anne is a student at San Diego Col­ signed as trial magistrate and judge of James R. Duncan, Law '25, has been re· lege for Women. the Police Court in Silver Spring, Mary­ elected to his post as Judge in Alexandria, Harold Dotterer, F.S. '21, Director of land, to devote full time to the general Virginia. Service Operations in the Department of practice of law. Andrew Nowak, Law '25, was elected Health, Education and Welfare, retired Dr. Embert A. LeLacheur, F.S. '23, Grad. Vice·President of the Pennsylvania School from Government service on January 1, '29, an oceanographer in the Coast and Directors Association and President of the after nearly forty years as a career man in Geodetic Survey of the Commerce Depart­ School District of the City of Erie, Penn· Government. ment, retired from Government service on sylvania.

14 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Joseph N. deRaismes, Jr., College '25, J. F rank McKenna, Sr., father of J. Lieberman will continue as a m ember of travels ex tensively for his firm the Union Frank McKenna, Jr., College '29, died sud­ t.he Executive Committee. Carbide and Carbon Corporation, where he denl y in Pittsburgh on December 1 6. Joseph P. Halpin, College '31, has been does liaison work between the c orporation made National Sales Manager for the newly and the Government and is intimately con· 1930 created A p.artm ent House and Builder Di­ nected with the procurement program as Arthur L. Simpson, College '30, has been vision of the Admiral Corporation. Joe has purchasin g agent. One of his recent trips pro moted to the rank of full colonel ac­ his headquarters in Chicago. oppor· took him to Texas where he had an cording to an announcement recently made Miles M. O'Brien, College '31, has re­ e Charles tunity for a r eunion with classmat by th e Maryland Military District head­ signed from the Hudson Motor Car Com­ A. Perlitz. quarters. In addition to his Reserve service, pany and is now an Account Executive Louis Fine, Law '25, Norfolk, Va. attor· he is c ommercial manager for the Towson with the Detroit Insurance Agency. Miles, ney, was the g uest speaker at the First and Boulevard areas of the Chesapeake and Jr., i s a Freshm an at the College. Forum meeting of the Adult Institute series Potomac Telephone Company in Baltimore. Dr. James J. O'Connell, Med. '31, of New he was Secretary of of the Jewish Community Center in Nor­ During World War II Brunswick, New J ersey, is bein g considered ~' Law s Committee under folk, on December 7 , on the s ubject, the Munitions Allocation for appointment to the S tate Parole Board the and Religion". the Lend-Lease program and holds by G overnor Driscoll. Legion of Merit and the Order of the British Empire. 1932 Georgetown was s addened on November Dr. John J. Bouvier, Med. 32, died in 7 b y the news of the s udden death of John Boston, Mass., on November 13. Formerly J. Manning, Law '30. Mr. Manning, a mem­ he had his practice in Whitinsville, Mass. ber of the New York law firm of Manning, Arthur E. Vogelwede, Law '32, divides Harnisch, Hollinger & Shea, died of a h eart his time between his law practice in De­ attack while on a train nearing the city catur, Indiana, and his post a s secretary­ of Elkhart, Ind., on his way home after a treasurer of the Security Cartage Co. at business trip to Denver. After earning con· Fort Wayne. He is the father of three siderable reputation as a m ember of the daughters and two sons. The e ldest daugh­ FBI in the e arly '30's during which h e ter has joined the S isters of St. Agnes at worked on tlie celebrated Lindbergh kid­ Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. napping case, h e resigned to join the s taff of the U. S. Attorney for the Southern Lathrop Smith, F.S. '32, is a County District of New York, the late Martin Con­ Commissioner of Montgomery County, boy, Law 98. He was assigned to the Crim­ Maryland. inal Division where he prosecuted the John E. Farrell, Law '32, has been pro­ Morro Castle disaster case and the first moted to the position of vice-president of test of the Lindbergh l aw. Prior to forming P. Ballantine & Sons in Newark, New Jer­ his own firm he served a s trial counsel for sey. John is a form er m ember of the Board the So cony Vacuum Oil Company. of Governors of the Alumni Association. Dr. James J. Brady, Dent. '30, of Provi­ Robert W. Patterson, Law '32, has been dence, R. I., r eports that his oldest daugh­ elected City Commissioner of the c ity of ter Margaret i s studying for the teaching Dayton, Ohio. land College of Ed­ Edward F. Cavanagh, '29 profession at Rhode Is Dr. John F. Baldwin, Med. '32, of West ucation. His two sons James and John are Englewood, New J ersey, has been certified at LaSalle Academy in High School, and 1927 as a Diplomate by the Am erican Board of his twins Pat and Frances are still in gram­ Psychiatry and Neurology. Francis Dalton, Law '27, who is with mar school. the Claims Division of the Veterans Ad· Dr. Francis J. Muller, Med. '30, is the 1933 ministration, since his separation from the fath er of Richard Muller a Freshman B.S. Henry A. Queen, College '33, Law '37, Air Force, i s now located in Philadelphia student at the College. reports that he had an early Fall sojourn and lives at 5717 Wister Street in the , Med. '34, at Providence Hospital where his stay was Germantown section. Dr. Paul Goodwin, College '30 resid ent physician at Anniston Alabama made pleasant by frequent visits from Drs. 1928 Ordnance Depot, has been appointed Wing Raymond A. Osbourn, College '33, Med. Hon. Ralph B. Kolu1 en, Law '28, was Surgeon of the Alabama Air National '40, James C. Cawood, Med. '36, and Arthur re-elected Judge of the Municipal Court Guards ll7th Tactical Reconnaissance F. Passarelli, College '33, Med. '38, whom of Cincinnati in the November election. Wing. He is the father of two sons and one he describes as "lun1inaries of the medical is the father of two Judge Kohnen has a son at the College. daughter. profession". Henry sons and two daughters, Elizabeth Agatha George Yamaoka, Law '28, is temporarily 1931 having been born in late May. in the Tokyo office of his law firm, Hunt John H. Hurley, Law '31, served as Dr. Thomas H. Quill, Med. '33, is prac­ & Betts of New York. Chairman of the 1953 Christmas Seal Sale ticing ophthalmology in Frederick, Md. He 1929 in Hartford, Conn. John is Connecticut is the father of twin sons for the class of Edward F. Cavanagh, Jr., College '29, representative of the Barrett Division, Al­ '59, a daughter 14, and another son 12. lied Chemical and Dye Corporation ih formerly Commissioner of Marine and A V· Dr. John C. Dunn, College '33, Mcd. iation in the City of New York, has been Hartford. '37, is s tationed aboard the hospital ship, appointed Fire Commissioner for the City The October IS issue of the Providence, Consolation, as c hief of the Orthopedic by the new Mayor, Hon. Robert F. Wagner. R. I. Bulletin carries a f eature s tory con­ Service. When w e last h eard from him, the Louis C. Micona, Law '29, died sudden· cerning the first woman member of the ship was at anchor in Inchon harbor, six ly in his law office in Newark, New J ersey, Warwick, R. I., City Council, Mrs. Claire Korea, and stays on station for about Drummey, s to Yokosuka, Japan on October 31. Drummey, wife of Charles H. weeks and then r eturn Law '31. with patients. Dr. Arthur W. Clancy, Med. '29, reports that he is s till "doing Eye, Ear, Nose and The Jesuit Alumni Association at Hous­ 1934 Throat work in his home town of New· ton, Texas, was until last month headed The Institute of Life Insurance recently buryport, Mass. by Charles E. Lieberman, College '31. Mr. carried nationally an advertisement with

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 15 the title "Big Families are Back in Style". The Magazine expresses the sympathy of Jameshedpur, India. He will maintain The ad featured a photograph of a "real of the Association to Charles F. McErlean, his office in Baltimore. American family", that of Julius Stryker, Law '36 upon the death of his mother on William J. Corvo, F.S. '39, is stationed in Jr., College '34. Pictured with Mr. and December 31. Rio de J aniero, Brazil, as Latin American Mrs. Stryker are six handsome children, Representative for United Aircraft Export fi ve boys and one girl. 1937 Corp. His previous post was as assistant John J. Powers, Jr., College '34, has been Capt. Miles DuVal, USN (Ret.), F.S. European representative in Paris. With him elected a senior vice-president by the di­ '37, has been elected a member of the are his wife and two sons, Nicholas and rectors of Charles Pfizer and Company. He Board of Directors of the Gorgas Memorial John Keane. joined the company in 1941 as head of the Institute of Tropical and Preventive Medi­ Rawlins Coffman, Law '39, is in general legal department, became assistant to the cine. This is the first time that a naval practice of law at Red Bluff, Calif., since presid ent in 1945, was elected secretary offi cer has been so honored. leaving the Federal Public Housing Au­ and a director in 1949, and member of the 1938 thority eight years ago. executive committee in 1951. Jerome C. McCarthy, Law '39, is the new Dr. J. K. Lucey, Mecl. '34, of Staten Hon. Lyndon Johnson, Law '38, Senator general manager of by products and metal­ Island, N. Y., has been elected to the from Texas, was the principal speaker at lurgical sales for the Island Creek Coal American Chapter Knights of Malta. the November dinner of the El ectra, Texas, Sales Co., of Huntington, W. Va. Chamber of Commerce. Charles F. Williams II, '75, first son and Robert P. Carmel, College '39, has been John G. Eidell, College '38, was selected third child of Charles M. Williams, Col­ appointed sales manager of the P ezzini as one of the 100 "newsmakers of tomor­ lege '34, was born in Cincinnati on J anu­ Electric Co. of Pittsfi eld, Mass. row" by the San Francisco Chamber of ary 10. Commerce. He is a partner in the San ]. Wade Dunaway, F.S. '39, Latin Ameri­ 1935 Francisco investment banking firm of Shu­ can Trade Commissioner, in the World Trade Department of the Los Angeles Major Robert G. Newman, Dent. '35, has man, Agnew & Co. Chamber of Commerce, has sent us a copy been assigned to the Dental Section of th e A recent caller at Alumni House was Lt. of his recently published "Survey of the U. S. Army Hospital at Fort McPherson, Comdr. Arthur D. Lachman, F.S. '38, who Ga. He entered the Army last July and at­ was in process of being released from the Expanding Markets of the West Coast of tended the Medical Field Service School at Navy. Mexico". Ft. Sam Houston, Texas before being as­ Dr. Bruno E. Amyot, Dent. '38, presented Frank A. Mazzacaro, F.S. '39, has been signed to his new post. a paper entitled "The Value of Dental In­ appointed a member of the Jersey City H. Murray O'Hanlon, F.S. '35, has sup­ tern eship" at the 25th Anniversary Celebra­ Sewage Authority. tion of the Columbia Presbyterian Medical plied us with his proper address: P.O. Box 1940 !>87, Ponce, Puerto Rico. Dr. Lewellyn H. King, Med. '35, has been William L. Shea, College '40, Law '49, assigned to the physical medicine rehabil­ with Mrs. Shea, has returned from a six itation staff of the McGuire Veterans Hos­ weeks' . business and pleasure trip to Can­ pital at Richmond, Virginia. nes, Paris, and Madrid. He has opened his Dr. Jose E. Munoz, Dent. '35, is on new law office in· Washington. active military service overseas with the Albert Litschgi, is a Major stationed with Army as a major, and serves as chief of the the U. S. Army Mission to Venezuela at Prosthetic Clinic at the 11th Field Hospital, Caracas. He reports that Vince Braun, Col­ Augsburg, Germany. lege '40, was in Caracas recently as a Dr. Frank P. Pignataro, Med. '35, was Major in the Air Attache's office of the Em­ recently elected President of the New Jersey bassy. It was the first time in fourteen years Neuro-Psychiatric Association. He has his that the two had met. office at 342 Broad St., Red Bank, New Nicholas J. Chase, Law '40, will be in Jerse y. Rome in March, where he has an appoint­ Colonel Raymond Maret, Med. '35, has ment for an audience with His Holiness, been transferred from Walter Reed Army Pope Pius XII. Medical Center in Washington to take over Dr. Matthew Pupilla, Dent. '40, is man­ the position of Chief of the Medical Service ufacturing the Chic Hydraulic Dental at Fort Hood -Station Hospital, Texas. Spray, exhibited at the New York Dental 1936 Convention and to be shown at the Wash­ ington Dental Convention. The spray is the John W. Wibel, F.S. '36, has been elected latest scientific concept of everyday care Vice-President of the Gray Manufacturing of the mouth for use at home. Dr. Pupilla Company in Hartford, Conn. He has been would be interested in comments of his fel­ Secretary of the company since 1948 and Dr. Le o H. Bartemeier '20 low alumni. He may be reached at #2 counsel since 1945. He is also Vice-Presi­ Kent Road, New Hyde Park, Long Island, dent of the Audograph Company of Ohio Center in New York City. Dr. Amyot was New York. and Secretary of the Audograph Company also general chairman of the annual con­ Edwin Ramey Donovan, Law '40, is Chief of New York, and the Gray Research and vention of the Catholic War Veterans of Legal Officer of the National Labor Rela­ Development Company, Inc., subsidiary Albany County in January. tions Board for the 4th region with head­ companies. E. James Hickey, College '38, has been quarters at 1500 Bankers Security Building, Dr. James F. O'Hara, Jr., College '36, 'elected Assistant Trust Officer of the Union Philadelphia. died in Canton, Ohio, on October 11 after Trust Company of Rochester, N.Y. an illness of two months. He was the son John M. Thompson, Jr., F.S. '40, is com­ of Dr. James F. O'Hara, Sr., Med. '06, who 1939 pleting five years in Munich, Germany with is still in active practice in Canton. Announcement has been made of the the Consulate General and one and a half David C. Keane, Jr., College '36, re­ formation of a new law partnership in Ft. years as Chief of the Consular Services ports two future Georgetown prospects, Da­ Wayne, Indiana, composed of Frederick R. Section, taking care of Americans abroad. vid III '69, and John Kevin, '72. Papa is in Tourkow, Law '39 and two associates. New York as a practicing attorney and also Rev. William M. J. Driscoll, S,J., Col­ 1941 . as Administrative Ass't. to the head of lege '39, has been appointed Director of James M. Fallon, Law '41, who until the Third Avenue Transit Corp. the Jesuit Mission Bureau for the mission recently was a trial attorney in the Tax

16 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Division of the Department of Justice, has '43, was ordained to th e priesthood at 1945 opened his offi ces for the general practice Kurseong, India, on November 21. Dr. John Guttmann, Med. '45, has been of law in th e Bowen Building in Washing­ Arthur J. Brew, Col lege '43, Law '51, an­ appointed to t.h e House Staff of the Moun­ ton. nounces the birth of his second son, Joseph tainsid e Hospital, Montclair, N.J. Dr. Charles M. Kollar, Med. '41, is c hief Linder Brew, '74 on September 20 in Wash­ Dr. James L. Callahan, Med. '45, and of the department of anesthesiology at the ington. Miss Angela Theresa Thompson of New Greenville General Hospital, Greenville, Joseph H. Fl ynn, College '43, is with the Rochell e, N. Y., were married on Novem­ s. c. U. S. Department of Commerce in the Na­ ber 7 in the Holy Family Church. George Cook Jordan, College '41, is com­ tional Bureau of Standards, currently work­ pleting e ight years as assistant general in g on chemical investi gations of the de­ 194·6 sales manager for the Gustin-Bacon Mfg. gradation of cellulo e. William T. Rach, F.S. '4·6, is publicity director of the Professional Golf Associa­ Co., manufacturers of glass fib er insulating Oswald F. Schuelle, College '43, is on tion of America, with headquarters at 134 materials in Kansas City. He is the father leave of absence from th e Coll ege of Wil­ N. LaSalle St., Chicago, Illinois. of two boys and two girls. liam and Mary in Virginia, to do research d. '46, has es­ Joseph L. Fitzmaurice, Law '41, is a trial in atomic physics at th e Max Planck In­ Dr. Henry R. Delaney, Me in Winchest­ examiner with the Civil Aeronautics Board. stitut e in Mainz, Germany. tablished p ermanent residence er, Mass. H e has been certifi ed by the He is the father of four children, James Russo, Med. '43, and his Dr. Robert D. American Board of Pathology, and holds '59, Mary 11, Ann 7, and Joseph '71. C. Olsavsky, are asso­ classmat e Dr. John the position of Chief of Laboratories, U. S. Dr. M. M. Kruszewski, Dent. '41, is a gy in ciated in the practice of radiolo Naval Hospital, Chelsea, Mass. Major with the Air Force, stationed at Bridgeport, Conn. Mitchell Air Force Base in New York. Dr. Louis Feinstein, Grad. '46, is a re­ Dr. John J. Rowe, M ed. '43, has been with the United States Steven J. Starr, Med. '41, is doing gen­ search biochemist appointed R esident Pathologist at the ltsville, eral and chest surgery in Worcester, Mass., Department of Agriculture at Be Community Hospital in Boulder, Colorado. hus­ where he is affiliated with St. Vincent's Mel. in the fi eld of animal and poultry bandry. Hospital, Worcester Hahnemann Hospital, and Fairlawn Hospital. He is a m ember of Leo Erck, Law '46, and Miss Florence the New England Gynecological Society, Stephenson of Pittsburgh, Pa. were married the Massachusells Medical Society and the in December. Worcester County Medical Society. Lt. Col. James M. Scoll, Grad. '46, is L. William Eagan, College '41, is the serving as Judge Advocate General with father of two children, Mary Kathleen two the 3rd Infantry Division in Korea. and a half, and Timothy '74. 194·7 1942 John Paul Frawley, College '47, Grad. '50, lecl urer in Biochemistry at the Grad­ V. Malfetano, College '42, Dr. Biagio uate School in Georgetown,' was married to announces that his sons Victor Med. '45, Miss Barbara Ann Croarkin, on Nov. 14, nt '71, and Richard '73, have a '69, Vince at the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacra­ sister Mary Ann Malfetano, born October ment in Washington. 10. Dr. Malfetano is a m ember of the med­ Dr. John M. Tracey, College '47, Med. Mother Cabrini Memorial Hos­ ical staff of '51, went on active duty with the Army on pital in New York City, and is on the July 1 a s a 1 st Lt., Medical Corps. He Pediatric Staff of the Fordham Hospital is c urrently assigned a s psychiatrist, U. S. in the Bronx. · Branch Disciplinary Barracks, N ew Cum­ Dr. J. Aaron Robinson, Mecl. '42, died berland General Depot, Pennsylvania. He in Washington on October 20. He had been is the fath er of three children, Anne Marie in practice in Trenton, N.J. 3, John Martin '73, and Robert Lee '75. Thomas H. Reilly, College '42, was a Dr. Patrick A. T. Tripe, Collef!e '45, speaker b efore the Chemical Specialtie Med. '47, has res um ed his s urgical residen­ Manufacturers Association in Washington John E. Farrell '32 cy at Los Angeles County Harbor General on December 7. He is s ales development Hospital in Torrance, California. His resi­ supervisor for the General Electric Com­ 1944- dency was interrupted by two years of pany's silicone products department. service with the Naval Medical Corps, the di­ Dr. Robert D. Cawley, Med. '42, is prac­ Joseph W. Thoman, F.S. '44, acting last year of which he was s tationed in ticing pediatrics in Washington. He is the rector of the United States Information Athens with the Joint U. S. Military Aid father of three daughters. Service in Sydney, Australia, writes, "I Croup to Greece. have run into several Georgetown alumni Edward Joseph Crummey, III, '74, son E. J. Powers, Law '47, special agent in here in Australia, among them Dave ChP­ of Edward Joseph Crummey, College '42, charge of the Miami office of the Federal adle, representative for U. S. Steel in Mel­ and grandson of Edward J. Crummey, Col­ Bureau of Investigation, has been a speaker bourne, James D. Crane who is a Vice lege '08, was born on March 10. in a series of television programs "Your Consul at the Melbourne Consulate, and John H. Pinto, College '42, formerly of FBI at Work" originating in Ft. Lauder­ Bell Harbor, Long Island, N.Y., has m?ved Colonel John L. Sullivan Air Attache at dale, Florida. the United Stales Embassy in Melbourne. into his new home at Hillside Place, River­ Dr. Daniel Bonadies. Dent. '47, a former Several months ago Pat Mulligan who is sid e, Conn. member of the Navy attached to the Ma­ Regional Security Offi cer operating out of Byron Robyn, College '42, is selling in­ rine Dental Corps, has been released from Manila, called on one of his periodical surance with offices at 56 East 59th Street, the service and has opened his office for trips to this area." New York City. the practice of dentistry at 721 Main St., 1943 Donald H. Dalton, Law '44, has been ap­ Hartford, Conn. pointed assistant professor at Southeastern Hon. Richard M. Simpson, Law '43, Dr. William B. Muldoon, Dent. '47, has University in Washington. He conducts a member of Congress from the 18th District been elected President of the New Bedford, 17-week night course in public relations. of Pennsylvania, is being groomed to run Mass. Dental Society. for Governor of th e State by som e of the Francis H. Cobb, F.S. '44, has been ap­ Republican l eaders. pointed acting manager of the District 1948 Rev. D esmond . Mauhews, S.J., College Chapter of the Red Cro s. Frank Connolly, F.S. '48, announces the

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 17 birth of Daniel Joseph Connolly '75, on the Evangelist in Rapid City, S. D. His December 22. address is Box 64, Rapid City. Francis Richard Walsh, Law '48, was Dr. Gilbert L. Odclo, Grad. '52, form erly among those selected by the "Committee assistant director of the Bureau of Infor­ for San Francisco's Future" as one of th e mation of the National Catholic Welfare "newsmakers of tomorrow." Mr. Walsh is Conference has been named associate pro­ a member of the faculty of the University fessor of history at Mt. St. Mary's College, of San Francisco Law School. He was for· Emmitsburg, Mel. merly on the staff at Georgetown Law Thomas L. Cassidy, College '50, has re­ School. turned to Watertown, Conn., after his dis· Ramon Y. W. Kan, College '48, sends charge as a 1st Lt. at the end of two and greetings from Hong Kon g, and best wishes one-half years' service, nine months of to all Alumni in 1954. He is the father of which were spent in Korea with the 3d two children, Royston '72 and Ramona, two Infantry Division. and a half. He is the assistant manager of Richard Strauss, F.S. '50, is acting pub­ American International Underwriters, Ltd. lic affairs adviser in the State Department's with headquarters in Hong Kon g. Bureau of German Affairs. Paul T. Smock, F.S. '48, Law '50, has Patrick G. Rue!, College '50, is with the opened his office for the general practice of Federal Bureau of Investigation in Fort law at 710 Mattison Ave., Asbury Park, Worth, Texas. New Jersey. Daniel A. Degnan, College '50, is law William J. Hickey, Law '48, has been secretary to Judge John J. Francis of the elected vice·president and general counsel Superior Court of New Jersey. Lawrence H. Slaughter, College '50, was of the American Short Line Railroad As· Thomas H. ·Reilly '42 sociation. released from his duties with the Air Force 1949 in mid-September. George E. Hamilton III, College '49, has has been appointed 1·egional representative John R. Lamb, College '50, is in Denver, been sworn in as assistant United States in the New England states and New York Colo., working with the Motor Express attorney under the Hon. Leo Rover, Law of the National Highway Users Conference. Rental Corp., operatin'g Union Pacific Rail· road Trucks. He is active in the new '10. Formerly he served as clerk to Chief John F. Hennessy, Jr., College '49, and trailer "flat car" program being introduced Judge Harold M. Stephens of the U. S. Miss Barbara McDonnell, were married at Court of Appeals for the District of Co· by the Union Pacific of Los Angeles. He is the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in New still single and may he reached at the Uni· lumbia. York on October 23. The best man was James P. Gleason, College '49, Law '51, versity Club. Stephen Smith, College '48 and among the has been appointed administrative assistant Dr. Carmine J. Mauro, Med. '50, who is ushers was the bride's brother Morgan to Senate Majority Leader Wm. F. Know· serving as a 1st Lt. with the Marine Corps, land (R-Ca!.): McDonnell, College '50. was married in mid-August to Miss Frances Mark Mci!vane, son of Robert Mcllvane, Dr. John F. Carnevali, College '49, Med. R. Catapano at St. Patrick's Cathedral in College '49, is a recent arrival. '53, has been informed that he is the re· New York. John E. Hanrahan, College '49, Law '53, cipient of a fellowship in general surgery Dean E. Duhe, F.S. '50, is a student at announces the birth of John Anthony, '75, at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minne­ the University of New Brunswick Law on November 6. Papa is engaged in the sota. His fellowship begins in October School, and may be addressed at Beaver· field of Patent, Trademark and Copyright 1954, and will extend over a period of three brook House, Saint John, N. B. Law with the firm of Roberts, Cushman years and possibly for a fourth. Bernard M. Kimmel, College '50, re­ and Grover in Boston, Massachusetts. cently passed the New Jersey bar examin­ T. Gerald Leonard, F.S. '49, is man­ ation according to a list announced by the J. Parker Connor. College '49, Law '53, ager of the Steamer Department for Grace is law clerk to Judge M. C. Barlow in the New Jersey Supreme Court. y Cia (Colombia) South America. Municipal Court for the District of Co­ Rodger Walsh, Law '50, announces his lumbia. Laurence Francis Rooney III, '74, son association with the law firm of Davis, Robert T. Trimpe, College, '49, Law '53, of Laurence F. Rooney, Jr., College '49, Thompson, Van Dyke, & Fairchild of Kan· is with the Realty Title Ins. Co. of Wash­ was born on Dec. 4 in Muskogee. Okla. sas City, Mo. Previously he had been an ington and is living at 4701 Chestnut Dr. Francis C. Mayle, College '49, Mecl. agent with the FBI. Street, Bethesda, Md. '53, is an intern at the U. S. Naval Hospital William J. Egan, Jr., College '50, was James A. Horkan, F.S. '49, was a recent at St. Albans, Long Island. named "Man of the Month" by Provident Notes, his insurance company house organ, caller at Alumni House. John A. Willison, F.S. '49, is traffi c Super­ Lt. John G. Finnegan, College '44, Dent. having sold over half a million dollars intend ent for the New York Telephone worth of life insurance last year. '49, announces the birth of his second Company with headquarters at Syracuse. daughter Mary Catherine on September 30 George Joseph Zeller, III '74, son of in Santa Ana, California. 1950 George Joseph Zeller, Jr., College '50, was Thomas M. Yelle, College '49, announces Michael P. Conway, College '50, an­ born in Philadelphia last July. his engagement to Miss Ann J. Welch of nounces the opening of his office for the Dudley W. Miller, F.S. '50, is the father Pittsburgh, a student nu'rse at Mercy Hos· general practice of law in the Th ayer of a daughter born recently at the Arabian pita] in Pittsburgh. Building, Norwich, Conn. American Oil Co. Hospital, Dhahran, Saudi Dr. Bernard H. Olbrys, Dent. '49, is Arabia. Papa is United States vice-consul Lt. Col. Ralph L. Brown, USAF, Grad. stationed as a 1st Lt. at the 279th General at Dhahran. '50, is Air Attache at the American Em­ Hospital, Osaka, Japan, after having served Dr. Arthur M. Benshoff, Jr., Med. '50, is bassy in Lima, Peru. thirteen months in Korea. in his second year of medical resid ency at John J. Regan, F.S. '49, and James Albert L. Sarashevitz, F.S. '50, has been University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Regan, College '50, have purchased and appointed a staff manager in the Pruden­ John Francis Kelly, III, College '50 and are operating the firm of Mullen, Inc., one tial Insurance Company's district office in Miss Sheila Maureen Klenk, Dunbarton of the oldest moving and storage firms in Elizabeth, N.J. College '54 announced their engagement in northern New Jersey. Rev. Richard A. Plante, F.S. '50, has Bloomfield, N. J. August 15. Jack is a Richard F. Mele, College '49, Law '51, been assigned to the Church of St. John senior at the Georgetown Medical School.

18 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Continued from Page 11 Miss Klenk allended Georgetown for two years, then transferred to Dunbarton, and fact. Unfortunately, we are still paying for the losses is the daughter of Dr. Joseph P. Klenk, incurred by football. So much of ordinary main­ Med. '25. Robert J . Grimmig, College '50, has tenance was neglected because of lack of funds in been sworn in as assistant United States those days that it has required in the last three years Attorney in the Brooklyn, New York, Fed­ double and triple the amount to make up for the eral Court. neglect. Likewise, we were able to increase to some 1951 schedule to meet the average level Capt. Francis J. Samaha, Dent. '51, sta· extent our salary tioned wjth the Air Force at Bergstrom Air by preventing that loss. This year, too, we are in­ Force Base, Austin, Texas, announces the augurating the Retirement and Pen ion program for bjrth of Gary Michael '74, on November 6, 1953. our faculty and administrative staff. The outlay for Colleen Ann Crosby, daughter of Dr. th e plan, from University revenues alone, will be James Crosby, Dent. '51, was born on last August 27. $175,000 annually. Charle B. Kenning, Law '51, announces I agree heartily that the solution you recommend his association with the law firm of Whit· beck and Holloran at 45 Exchanae Street in your "constructive criticism" is the one to adopt Rochester, . Y. He was former!; in prac: as a policy for competitive football in the future. In ti ce jn Washington. Dr. Raoul H. Renaud , Med. '51, and Miss fact, this has been our aim in the development of Patricia Wynne were married on November football among the students in the intramurals. 7 at St. Patrick's Church, Bridgeport, Conn. There cannot be any compromise with th e com, Mitchell K. Stanley, College '51, and hi mercialism that has grown up in college footb.all. It wife Mary Fanning Stanley F .. '51, an· nounce th e b irth of Valerie Joan on No­ must be a student game with all the students having vember 14. the opportunity to compete and with stud ent manage­ Jo eph R. Migliardi, College '51, has re· ment as well. When this s tate of affairs is fully ap­ turned to lLaly to resume hi study of medi· cine at th e Bologna Un iversi ty College of preciated, I think that the administration here at Medicine. He js living at Via Gandino 23, Georgetown will be glad to consider intercollegiate Bologna, or one may wrjte him at Casella Postale 558, Bologna. football. As you say very well, "Who knows,-a few James T. Lynch, College '51 is workina years of good behavior like this in football, and we jn the purchasing department ~f the Radi ~ might establish a trend,- maybe even a few converts Corporation of America at Harrison, N.J. Dan F. Henke, F.S. '43, Law '51, is right in our own backyard ! Let's try it and see." practicing law with offices jn the Inter­ been any attempt here to de­ national Building, San Antonio, Texas. There has never Dean G. Ca sell, F.S. '51, is a n Ensign in emphasize the game. Nor is there any opposition by the 'avy, presently studyin g for his Wings the Faculty to competitive football on a student level. at P ensacola, Florida. • J. Paul Rodriguez, College '51, was re· Athletics should exist in the American context of col­ leased from active duty with the Navy on legiate life for students' participation and satisfac­ October 5 and js working in th e Shipping tion. They, as individuals, not only develop a joy in Brokerage business jn New York City. Burkley F. McCarthy, Coll ege '51, re­ th e sheer activity of the sport, but also an "esprit de turned to the United States from Korea on corps" as a group in the collegiate community. For October 23. He has been released from acti ve duty and is now in business with his this reason, any serious interest manifested by a father in Evansville, Indiana. number of students in a particular sport will always John Reid, College '51, is in his second meet with faculty cooperation in assisting them to year at the Harvard Law School. Frank Palladino, Med. '51, i a Lieuten· pur ue that sport. ant with the Med ical Corps, aval Reserve, serving with the Marines at Camp Le· We have an Athletic Council which meets regu­ Jeune, N. C. larly to apprai e the entire athletic picture so that the Timothy J. Marcouiller, Col lege '51, re· policy for improving student participation will re­ ceived a Masters Degree in Busine s Ad­ ministration at Cornell University in 1953, main dynamic. and has entered military service at Fort Dix, N. J. With appreciation of your cooperation with us in Frank J. Diller, College '51, has formed this matter and wi shing you the choicest blessings in the Diller Agency at Southold , N. Y., af­ filiated with the Travelers Insurance Com­ the new year, I am pany of Hartford, Conn. Sincerely yours, Robert E. McGannon, Law '51, was re­ S.J. cently married in Kansas City, Missouri. Edward B. Bunn, He is associated with Jose ph A. Hoskins President Law '37, in the practice of law. '

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 19 John B. Brady, Jr., College '51, is a is now on a c ruise in the Mediterranean Robert H. Waldele, College '53 is in Of­ student at St. Mary's Seminary in Balli· with the British fl eet, but expects to be fi cer Candidate School, Quantico, Virginia. more, Mel . in his third year of theology. back in the Spring. He was married on September 19 to Miss Dr. Robert E. Meyers, Dent. '51, returned William D. Stewart, College '52, is a Janet D ebbs of Maplewood, . J. sophmore dental student at the U niver ity from service with the A ir Force last June John H. ies, Jr., College '53, was com­ of Buffalo. and has o pened his Dental offi ce at 924 missioned an Ensign in the N avy on Aug­ David P. O'Neill, College '52, and Miss 5th St. Clarkston, Washington. ust 1 4, and is serving aboard the Destroyer Cath erine A nne S ullivan w ere married on Arthur J. Fox, Jr., F.S. '51, has been made Escort, San F rancisco. October 31 at Saint Luke's Church, Lake­ commanding officer of AN the CG-83327, wood , Ohio. Rev. E. A. Kurth, Grad. '53, Chairman 83' Patrol Boat of the Coast Guard, and is Lieut. Maurice Francis Zetena , C ollege of the Dept. of Economics at Loras College assigned to harbor entrance Patrol at New '52, and Miss Barbara Louise Roncoli an­ at Dubuque, Iowa, has been selected a s York harbor. Befo re ent ering the OCS at nounced their engagement in early Au gust. arbitrator in eli pute cases involving the the Coast Guard Academy, he w orked for Pvt. Edward A. Yohe, F. S . ' 52, is sta­ Dubuque Packing Company and the Amal­ CBS-TV. He was married in July of 1952 to tioned at Camp Carson, Colo., in the Head­ gamated M eat Cutters and Butcher Work­ the form er Miss Joan Stutzmann. quarters, making administrative prepara­ men of orth America, A . F. of L. tions for the w inter war ga mes at Camp Charles C. Ailes, Jr., College '53, is work­ Hale, Colo., during the first three months ing with the American Finance Corpora­ of 1954. tion in Mt. Rainier, Md., in their Manage­ Ensign G eorge 0. Linabury, F. . '52, ment Training Program. qualified as a c ommunications o ffi cer in the 1avy in December. A Iter maneuvers in th e Richard R. Gall agher, Coll ege '53, and wa ters o ff Cuba and Jamaica, he has left Mi s E lizabeth Kuhn, were married on De­ for the Mediterranean for live m ore months cember 2 6 a t St. Michael's C hurch, Eliza­ of maneuvers. beth, New J ersey. Raymond M. Rodolf, CoUege '52, com­ Philip M. Haggerty, College '53, son of pl eted his c ollege work at the College of Loui C. Haggerty, College, '12, is sta· I he Pacifi c and is now a salesman for the tioned at Fort Dix, . J., with the 47th LeRoy Company, manufacturers of pneu­ Infantry Regl. matic equipment in Milwaukee, Wise. James H. Bail ey, Grad. '53, has been ap­ Dr. Joseph . Annichiarico, Dent. '52, pointed as an editor in the Catholic Text­ reported for duty with the Army at Fort book Division of Doubleday and Co., Inc. Sam Houston, Texas, as a lieutenant. First Lt. Daniel D. Harris, F. . '52, has Jose L. Cianchini and J . Sol er-Bechara, been a warded the Si lver Star for gallantry College '53, are a ttending medical school in action during the battle for Pork Chop at the U niversity of Madrid. Hill in Korea. Dr. David T. Joseph , Dent. '53, announces Michael John Hickey, '74, second son of the birth of a daughter in Camden, South William A. Hickey, Jr., College '52, was Carolina, wh ere Dr. Jose ph is o pening his born in June. offi ce. Col. P aul C. Schauer, Grad. '52, was Lt. Thomas V. Ball, College '53, is a t James H. Bailey ' 53 killed in an airplane c rash in South Caro­ Lowry Air Force Base, D enver, Colorado, lina, on January 10. At the time of his after graduating from Air Intelligence Francis A. Hart, Jr., F.S. '51, is working death he wa commanding officer of an in supervisory t~ainin g with the Peter aerial r econnaissance laboratory in Rome, School, and Photo Intelligence School. He Kiewit Sons' Co. on a construction of a New York. expects to complete his c ourse in Rad ar Int new Atom Plant. Clexton Rooney, College '52, is with the elligence in April and to be sent to a Strategic Air Command Base for perma· 1952 Dan River Mills in ew York City. He an­ nounces the birth of his second daughter, nent assignment. Dr. Francis M. Quinlivan, College '52, Margaret Mary last October. Dr. William B. O'Brien, Grad '53, is a announces the opening of his office for the John C. Hessenauer, Jr., F.S. '52, is with member of the faculty of the College of practice of dentistry at 259 Stillson Road, the Moore-McCormick L ines in Gothen­ Arts and Sciences at Georgetown, teach­ Fairfield , Conn. burg, Sweden. ing American Government and Modern Robert 0. Jones and Miss Rosemary AI· Foreign Government s. bus were married at St. Ann's Catholic 1953 Church in Washington on ovember 1 4. Walter Rafalko, Grad. Law "53,. has been Dr. Joseph F. McNally has 1)een made appointed A s i tant Professor of Political NEW YORK GLEE CLUB Co-Chairman of the 1954 Pawtuxet Valley Science at St. John Fisher College in Red Cross Campaign in Rhode Island. Rochester, N. Y. CONCERT Second Lt. Raymond Larroca, College John R. Crown IJ, F. S. '53, is s tationed '52, has been a ssigned to the First Cavalry at Fort Knox, Ky., as a n Infantry Lieuten­ The annual Glee Club Concert and Division, 7th Regim ent in Japan. Pre­ ant. Lt. Crown is the son of Lt. Colonel Dance in New York City will be held viously he was with the 5th Infantry Divi- John R. Crown, USAR, F. S. '29, who just ion at Indiantown Gap, Pa. completed a three-year term on th e Board at the Hotel Roosevelt on Friday eve­ Richard J. Neagle, Jr., College '52, is of Directors of the D. C. Al umni Club. ning, February 19. The concert will attending law school at the University of Richard L. Schoenberger, Jr., F. S. '53, Illinois where he is in his second year. A and Miss Jane Anne Patton, were married begin promptly at 8:30 and dancing ~au g ht e r Kathryn Lucile was born on No­ on Nove mber 17 at Blessed a crament will last from 10:00 until 1 :00. Tickets vember 17. Church, Springfi eld, Ill. William C. Johnson, College '52, has Charles A. Dailey, Jr., F. S. '53, uffered are priced at $2.50 per person and seen action as a Naval Officer in Korea serious head injuries in September when will be available at the door on the and since entering the Navy a year ago has he was thrown from an automobile as he made a complete c ircle of the g lobe. He tried to thwart th eft of the car. evening of the concert.

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VARSITY BASKETBALL SCHEDULE 1953-54 DATE OPPONENT LOCATION G.U. OPPONENT

Dec. 2 Baltimore Home 110 56 Dec. 5 St. Peter's Home 69 66 Dec. 7 Mt. St. Mary's Home 93 83 Dee. 12 St. Joseph's Home 75 71 Dec. 14 Xavier Home 54 74 Dec. 16 Loyola Home 92 79 Dec. 18 La Salle Away 49 58 Dec. 28 Detroit Away 66 72 Dec. 29 Wayne or D etroi~ Away 48 62 Jan. 7 George Washington Away 64 88 Jan. 9 Maryland Home 58 56 Away Jan. 12 NYU 75 67 Jan. 16 American U. Home 59 46 Jan. 23 St. Francis Away 52 77 Away Jan. 27 Duquesne 59 68 Jan. 28 Youngstown Away 74 78 Away Jan. 30 John Carroll 88 97 Feb. 2 Pittsburgh Home Feb. 6 Fordham Away Feb. 10 Navy Away Feb. 13 Virginia Home Feb. 16 Mt. St. Mary's Away Feb. 18 Maryland Away Feb. 20 Niagara Home Feb. 24 American U. Away Feb. 27 Templ e Home Mar. 2 George W asbington Home Mar. 4 Penn State Away Mar. 6 St. Francis Away FARMERS INSURANCE EXCHANGE

TRUCK INSURANCE EXCHANGE

FIRE INSURANCE EXCHANGE

MID-CENTURY INSURANCE COMPANY

FARMERS NEW WORLD LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

FARMERS AMERICAN AUTO CLUB

membe•·s

AUTOMOBILE-TRUCK-FIRE-GENERAL

LIABILITY-LIFE-ROBBERY-BURGLARY-GLASS

WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION

Home Office: 4680 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 54, Calif.

REGIONAL HOME OFFICES

Portland, Ore.; Merced, Calif.; Kansas City, Mo.;

Colorado Springs, Colo.; Austin, Tex.; Pocatello, Idaho;

Aurora, Ill.

DIRECTORS

JOHN C. TYLER THOMAS E. LEAVEY JAMES W. HUGHES Chairman of the Board President Georgetown '25 LLB Georgetown '23 LLB, LLD '50

MORGAN DOYLE E. A. HEAFEY Georgetown '25 LLM Georgetown '23 LLB

AL EYRAUD MARK HARRINGTON CLAIR PECK, JR.