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Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus

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STUDENT POWEF an inevitable issue takes its turn at NC NYC, 832 pages, $25. Sheridan P. McCabe, former Compendium Fiands Wallace '23, "Notre chairman of psychology Dame From Rockne to Par- dept at U. of Portland, UNIVERSITY btration, Kevin J. Brennan, seghian," an updated version named head of new Counsel­ CALENDAR Hartford, Conn.; John J. of the football history. David ing Center at ND. Raymond C. Gutschick, Dec. 16, Christmas vacation Bundschuh Sr., NYC; John McKay Co. Inc NYC, 303 T. Collins, NYC; Edward pages, $5.95. prof, of geology, presented begins. J. DeBartolo, Youngstown, a paper at International Until Dec 31, Walter R. Ohio; Paul D. Gilbert, South Symposium on the Devonian Bcardslcy Collection, East Bend; Edmond R. Haggar, CENTER FOR System in September in Gallery, O'Shaughncssy Hall. Dallas; Karl F. Johnson, CONTINUING Calgary, Canada. Until Dec 31, Portraits Indianapolis; Phillip J. EDUCATION Rev. Joseph B. Simons from the permanent collec­ Lucier, St. Louis; Charles F. Dec 11-12, Law and High­ CSC, former dean of stu­ tion. East Gallcr>', O'Shaugh­ Miles, Elkhart; Patrick L. way Beautification Sym­ dents, named to staff of the ncssy Hall. O'Malley, Chicago; Frank posium, sponsored by busi­ new Counseling Center. Jan. 3, Classes resume. E. Sullivan, South Bend; ness management dept. James W. Silver, prof, of Jan. 4-16, Advance regis­ Robert V. Welch, India­ Dec 14-15, Seminar on Life history, appointed to South tration for second semester. napolis; C. Craig Whitaker, Sciences and the Church. Bend Human Relations and Until Jan. 7, Drawings from North Kansas City, Mo. Dec 18, Standard Oil Sales Fair Employment Practices the Galcria Arte Mexicano, Conference. Commission. West Caller}-, O'Shaugh­ Jan. 5-6, Field Enterprises ncssy Hall. BOOKS Ralph E. Thorson, prof, of Educational Corp. Confer­ biology, presented a seminar Jan. 7-Fcb. 25, Six Cen­ Michael J. Crowe '58, asst. ence. for Centennial Year Celebra­ turies of Italian Art, East prof, in general program, Jan. 14-17, Food Research tion at the U. of Illinois in Galler}', O'Shaughncssy Hall. "A History of Vector Anal­ Center Conference. October. Jan. 7-Feb. 25, A History ysis, The Evolution of Jan. 21, Indiana Clinical of Sculpture from the per­ Thomas P. Bergin, dean of Vector Analysis." UND Conference (osteopaths). Center for Continuing Ed­ manent collection. East Gal­ Press, 320 pages, $12.95. Jan. 26, Conference of Cath­ lery, O'Shaughncssy Hall. ucation, named trustee of Gordon J. DiRenzo '56, olic Colleges and University the Foundation for Eco­ Jan. 13, "Lute Song," by "Personality, Power and Students, sponsored by ND National Players of Catholic nomic and Business Studies, Politics," a study of the Academic Commission. Indianapolis. University of America, political personality. UND Washington Hall. Press, 272 pages, $7.95. Peter P. Grande, assoc. prof, Jan. 13, Academic Council Robert H. Evans, asst. prof, FACULTY of education, appointed meeting, CCE. of government, "Coexist­ AND Director of Academic In­ Jan. 14-March 10, Selec­ ence: and its STAFF stitutional Studies. tions from the permanent Practice in Bologna, 1945- Leo M. Corbaci, asst vice collection chosen by Dr. 1965." UND Press, 225 pres. for academic affairs GRANTS Julius S. Held, art historian. pages, $7.95. and registrar, elected pres. Accountancy, $3,000 for West Galleri', O'Shaugh­ of the Ind. Assoc, of Col­ faculty development from ncssy Hall. Jack Gouiman '49, the first issue of The Gourman Let­ legiate Registrars and Ad­ Price Waterhousc Founda­ Jan. 16, Last class day. ter, a bi-monthly bulletin missions Officers for 1968- tion in NYC. $1,000 will be Jan. 17-24, Final examina­ supplementing "The Gour­ 69. given to Robert W. William­ tions. man Report" which rates John Kennedy, ch. of dept son, asst. prof., to assist his Jan. 18-20, Alumni Board American colleges and uni­ of marketing, appointed to doctoral studies at the U. of Meetings, CCE. versities. Contains new and National Board of Advisors Chicago Graduate School of Jan. 25, ND Credit Union changed ratings and cor­ of National Contract Man­ Business. annual meeting. North Din­ rections to the 1189-page agement Assoc. Aerospace Engineering, Dr. ing Hall. volume. The Continuing Robert E. Gordon, prof, of Thomas J. Mueller, $19,940 Jan. 26, Mid-Year Com­ Education Institute Inc, biology and assoc dean of from the AF Systems Com­ missioning of ROTC cadets, Phoenix, Ariz. the College of Science, or­ mand for study of "turbulent CCE. William T. Liu MA '52, ganized and moderated a base pressure in supersonic Jan. 29-30, Registration of prof, of sociology, "Family symposiiun on the biology of axisymmetric flow." new and continuing students. and Fertility," dealing with salamanders at Ohio State Biology, Dr. Robert P. Mc­ Jan. 31, Classes resume. the family system and the U. in October. intosh, $32,600 from NSF Feb. 2, Last day for class procreative behavior of the Joseph A. Tihen, assoc. prof, for ecological study. changes. family—past, present and of biology, delivered a paper Biology, Dr. George B. March 1-3, 7-9, "Enrico future UND Press, 400 on the fossil history of Craig, $89,105 from NIH IV," ^fD-St. Mar>''s Theatre, pages, $9.95. salamanders at the annual for research on the genetics Washington Hall. Nicholas Lobkowicz, former meeting of the Society for and reproduction of the assoc. prof, of philosophy, the Study of Amphibians Aedes mosquito. ADVISORY now prof, at U. of Munich, and Reptiles. Center For Study of Man, "Theory and Practice, His­ Morris Pollard, head of the Dr. George N. Shustcr, $5,- COUNCIL tory of a Concept from dept. of microbiology, pre­ 800 from Mrs. Lucy B. APPOINTMENTS Aristotle to Marx." UND sented a speech at the Lemann for Peace Organi­ Law School, Louis J. Finske, Press, 432 pages, $8.95. Southwestern Assoc, of Can­ zation. Jacksonville, Fla.; James F. Ralph M. Mclnemy, prof, cer Research meeting in Chemical Engineering. Dr. Thornburg, South Bend. of philosophy, "Jolly Roger- October. Julius T. Banchero, $5,400 College of Science, John G. son," a novel about a mid­ Milton Burton, director of from American Oil Founda­ Best, Elkhart; AVilliam dle-aged Midwestern uni­ the Radiation Laboratory, tion for engineering design Huisking, NYC. versity professor with a appointed to the Indiana fellowship. College of Engineering, Ber­ compulsive desire to an­ Academy of Science Com­ Chemistry, Dr. G. Frank nard K. Crawford, Lynd- nounce himself a failure and mittee on Science and D'Alelio, $15,000 from hurst, NJ; Arthur J. Decio, instead becomes an out­ Society and also AEC's NASA for research in poly­ Elkhart; John W. Scallan, rageous success. Doubleday, Advisory Committee on mer chemistry. Chicago. $4.95. Isotopes and Radiation De­ Chemistry, Dr. Milton Bur­ College of Arts and Letters, Daniel Moore II, "A Proud velopment. ton, $30,000 from the AEC US Rep. John Brademas, Tradition/Notre Dame," a K. P. Funabashi, assoc. fac­ for the study of effects of Washington, DC; Paul E. booklet of pictorial cover­ ulty fellow, presented a radiation on matter. Foley, NYC; John J. Mc- age of ND football. Moss- paper at the 8th Japan Con­ Chemistry, Dr. Jeremiah P. Hale, NYC; Donald T. berg & Co. Inc., Box 1, ference on Radioisotopes in Freeman, $23,614 from NIH McNeill, Chicago; Philip R. Notre Dame, 64 pages, $2.25 Tokyo in November. Co­ for the "chemistry of 1, 4- North, Fort Worth: Robert (incl. postage). authors of this paper are dihydrozypyrazoles." T. Rolfs, West Bend, Wis.; Paul A. Theb '48, co-ed., Milton Burton, director of ChemistiV, Dr. Ernest L. John A. Schneider, NYC; "Who's Who in American the Radiation Lab., and Dr. Eliel, $21,792 from NIH Jerome W. Van Gorkom, Politics," biographies of na­ Guenter Lang, postdoctoral for "synthesis and confor­ Chicago. tional and state political research assoc in the Radia­ mation in heterocyclic chem­ College of Business Admin- figures. R. R. Bowker Co. tion Lab. istry." Chembtry, Dr. Marino English, Dr. Thomas M. search on emitting ma­ SPORTS Martinez-Carrion, $28,925 Lorch, $9,500 from the terials." Dec 11, Basketball, ND vs from NIH for study of Rockefeller Foundation to Radiation Laboratiwy, Dr. S. Methodist "isozymes of heart glutamate evaluate the University's Milton Burton, $40,000 from Dec 14, Basketball, ND vs aspartate transaminase." freshman introduction to the AEC for research on effects St. Norbert Chemistry, Dr. Robert G. humanities seminar. of radiation on matter. Dec 15, Wrestling, ND vs Hayes, $27,000 for studies History, Dr. Samuel Shapiro, Radiation Lak, $60,000 Purdue at Lafayette of transition metal com­ $4,725 from the US Office from the USAE Commis­ Dec 19, Basketball, ND vs plexes. of Education as a supple­ sion for study of the effects Indiana at Ft. Wayne Chemistry, Rev. Joseph L. mental stipend award for an of radiation on matter. Dec 21, BaskediaU, ND vs Walter CSC, $12,138 from institute in advanced study Sociology, Drs. Julian Sa- Utah State at Logan NIH for study of "spectra in history. mora and William D'An- Dec 23, Basketball, ND vs of amino acids and protein Mechanical Engineering, tonio, $149,712 from Ford UCLA at LA metal complexes." $1,500 from the Rudy Fndtn. for population pro­ Dec 28, BasketbaU, ND vs Civil Engineering, $1,873 Mfg. Co., Dowagiac, Mich. gram in Mexico and Cen­ Villa Madonna Col. from NSF for graduate Metallurgical Engineering, tral America. Dec 30, Basketball, ND vs fellowships. Dr. Nicholas F. Fiore, $13,- Sociology, Social Sdence Kentucky at Louisville Civil Engineering, Dr. Keith 400 from the US Army Training Lab., Dr. William Jan. 3, Basketball, ND vs A. Yarborough, $21,625 Ballistics Research Labs for Liu, $23,150 from NIMH King's Col. of Pa. from the Dept. of Interior study of the "dislocation for graduate training in so­ Jan. 6, Basketball, ND vs for a program of residencies substructure of deformed cial research. AF Academy at Denver in engineering practice. materials." Sociology, Drs. John R. Jan. 8, Basketball, ND vs Civil Engineering, Dr. Mark Microbiology, Dr. Albert A. Maiolo and John P. Koval, Creighton at Omaha VV. Tcnncy, $810 from AID Nordin, $15,370 from NIH $2,000 from The S & H Jan. 10, Basketball, ND vs for sanitary engineering for research into "cellular Foundation for a series of Detroit training for a Brazilian aspects of the mechanisma in lectures. Jan. 13, Basketball, ND vs trainee. AB synthesis." Sociolm^, Dr. William T. DePaul at Chicago; Swim­ Electrical Engineering, Dr. Microbiology, Dr. Morris Liu, $181,994 from AID ming, Ohio U and Ball State James L. Massey, $25,000 Pollard, $16,000 from the for study of family and re­ at ND from NAS.\ for "convolu- Leukemia Society Inc. for productive behavior in the Jan. 17, Basketball, ND vs tional coding techniques for research fellowship in micro­ Philippines. Butler data production." biology. University, $60,000 from US Jan. 27, Basketball, ND vs College of Engineering, $5,- Microbiology, Dr. Morris Office of Education to con­ Illinois at Chicago Stadium; 000 from the American Pollard, $500 from Carroll duct a summer training in­ ND vs Western Ontario at Society for Engineering Ed­ County (Ind.) Cancer As­ stitute in Innsbruck, Aus­ London, Ontario ucation for a research fel­ soc, for research equipment Jan. 29, Swimming, ND vs lowship. tria, for teachers in over­ for Lobund Lab. seas schools for children of Wayne State at Detroit Engineering Science, Dr. Microbiology, Bro. Raphael American servicemen and Jan. 30, Basketball, ND vs Raymond M. Brach, $15,- Wilson CSC, $50,785 from civilian personnel. Michigan State at East Lan­ 245 from the Army Research the PHS for radiation pro­ sing Office for study of "optimum tection and recovery in Univeraty, $5,000 from design of linear elastic beams germfree animals, and $34,- Sears, Roebuck and Co. Feb. 3, Basketball, ND vs and dynamic loading." 115 from the NIH for germ- Foundation. Detroit at Detroit; Wres­ English, $500 from the Na­ free investigation of mam­ University, $1,001 under tling, ND vs John Carroll; tional Endowment for the malian thymus. Aetna Ufe & Casual^s Swimming, St. Bonaventure Humanities as an institu­ Physics, Dr. Edward A. matching and incentive at ND tional allowance for a Na­ Coomes, $24,000 from the grant program. Feb. 6, Basketball, ND vs tional Endowment fellow­ Office of Naval Research for University, $4,800 from DcPaul; Wrestlmg, ND vs ship. "fundamental materials re­ Eastman Kodak Company. Wabash at Crawfordsville

Change of Governance Launch of SUMMA Drive Presence of National Hgures Test of Parofbil

19S7 had sotnething for everyone and in Ustory. There was the posability of a second state medical certainly some of "the best of times." A review shows that school being located on Campus but hopes have dimmed on the University in its 125th year had much going on — that issue. Back on the plus side the Fighting Irish, though foremost was the change in University control to a board of suffering two early season defeats, came back to win six straight trustees which included laymen as well as Holy Cross Priests. games and wound up high in the top ten for the fourth Vice-President Hubert Humphrey led a stream of famous consecutive season. Notre Dame expanded its Sophomore- visitors to the Campus. Next there was the dedication of the Year-Abroad program to include Japan, announced plans new Post Office, the first meeting of the Alumni Senate, the for new dormitories, an addition to the power plant, a new first Festival of Contemporary Arts, the National Science faculty club and a new center to house the graduate school Foundation grant of nearly $5 million, the launching of the and continued work on the building to house a more power­ parafoil, the formation of a Student Union, jolly Class Re­ ful atom smasher. More than others in recent history, it was unions tinged with regret as Jim Armstrong '25 retired as a year national media focused on the Campus, with a feature Alumni Secretary and, finally, SUMMA, challenging ND's in Harper's, ND appearance on the collegiate quiz program, friends to raise $52 million in five years. There were other nationally televised entertainment and stories and advertise­ moments, too, and Dickens surely would have listed among ments in magazines and around the country "the worst of times" one of the biggest football ticket scrambles telling of SUMMA and the 125th anniversary, of Notre Dame.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER After listening last night (Oct 27) to ABOUT TRIBUTE TO WITHEY Alumni Ash what I had been expecting as a presen­ I was deeply saddened to read of the tation of some aspect of ND life, I death of Prof. James Withey. Although ABOtrr CONDUCT AT GAMES would propose to the liturgy experts on I was not a journalism major and never Got a little bit disturbed at the open­ Campus that in the Litany of the Saints had Mr. Withey in class, I, like many ing of the third quarter when the high- (Campus use only) the phrase: "From others, frequently sought his guidance school boys trotted on the field and the hucksters, O Lord, deliver us" be while living in Walsh Hall. formed a tunnel in company of silly inserted, probably between the phrases He was one of those extraordinarily girls. And wondered what the vocal "From the scourge of earthquakes" and gifted men and genuine teachers who voices of the assemblage were thinking "From plague, famine and war." taught his students not only how to when they repeated yelling in thunder­ VINCENT DECOURSEY '39 write and think straight, but how, under ing accord while Southern Prairie Village, Kan. the incredibly repressive rules and was attempting to call signals. Also a mores of pre-1960 ND, to grow up. sign that went up at the Iowa game ABOUT STADIUM SEATING Like all the best professors at ND, his reading "BULL SH*T" . . . hardly devotion to the University was matched University caliber. I would think that with the ever- by his criticism of it—demonstrating, increasing number of living Alumni and Also thought: when does a stop come I think, that to care is in part to be the constant improvements in trans­ to the goofy music being displayed critical and to see that natters are portation, that an expansion of the about the Campus with the long-haired always improving. stadium would be a good investment. goofs and silly girls making a noise that If this letter is longer than the no­ A 60,000-seat stadium was too large in can be heard all over the Campus? Es­ tice of his death you had in your last 1930 and 80,000 may be too large now pecially at Sorin Hall so close to Sacred issue, it is because I think Professor — but not in the future when costs Heart Church and services are being Withey deserves more attention than will be greater. Therefore, build it now celebrated. the space you were able to give him. for $6 million. I do not think the school We should foster SUMALA to foster KENNETH L. WOODWARD '57 should worry seriously about diluting the likes of this? City academic excellence. We are still build­ Yet there are some rewarding factors ing a lot more classrooms, and this is in reaching the Campus a little after just another expansion by the Univer­ ABOUT 'CHANGE' SEMINAR 10 o'clock and walking around and no­ sity to meet its current and future The Alumni who were submitted to a ticing the changes and the improve­ needs. seminar on change in the Church at ments — especially the boiler room the hands of a quintet of "new theolo­ where a million dollars is being spent RAYMOND RAEDY JR. '62 Washmgton, DC gians" suffered, we hope, nothing worse for the pickup of light and power and than utter confusion. The only other heat for the new facilities. Or occasion­ alternative would be utter apostasy and ally talking with a priest and learning I think the University must face up to the stadium seating situation at despair. The quintet succeeded in con­ a little more of some of the better things vincing them at least that change has to come. Or being rewarded with the an early date or stand to lose many of the benefits that have accrued to it over run away with ND. Hallowed and loved sight of a new hole in the ground which as the University is in their life con­ will bring forth another building. the years as a result of a pretty e£Scient system worked out by the Alumni Of­ ceptualization, this is as catastrophic as JOHN NORTON '23 fice and the Athletic Dept. It has to be an affirmation that change has run away Evanston, 111. the finest, long-range, continuous PR with the Church. A century or two of program that has ever come out of the patient exposition of truth resulting in ABOUT SHOW BUSINESS University. repentance could repair most of the The "Beat Generation" has found a new I am sure some people feel the whole damage the bad thinking these five home. Step aside, Berkeley — ND has athletic program should be de-empha­ emerging mystical prophets have spewed become a launching pad for kooks. sized, that we should get out of the at a segment of the captive laity. . . . First we witness the spectacle of an football rat race and get on with the They seem to misrepresent totally the oversexed priest. Father Kavanaugh, job of building the greater ND. The historical content of Christianity in the to use his appearance at an ND stu­ well-heeled Ivy League schools made light of their new relativism and coun­ dent body function to sell his book and the move some years ago, but I serious­ terfeit love thesis. They generalize all start his new religion featuring mar­ ly doubt that ND is, at this stage of its the hates of history in their slogans of ried priests. This left the mistaken, im­ development, in a position to take this love. . . . pression among most people that an step. We cannot continue the present The altar boys of today who so "for- ND priest was involved and that ND unbearable situation without alienating timately" do not get pencils marked, "I sanctioned his sacrilegious behavior. many people and it seems to me the am a Catholic, an honorable name," To cap it all was the much-publi­ only alternative is to provide the addi­ and are thus bereft of triumphalism are cized extravaganza, "John Davidson at tional seating capacity in the stadium not rushing to seminaries and novitiates Notre Dame." Everyone I know was at the earliest possible date. to give themselves to God and the horrified at this performance, except for Then, there is the matter of some Church as did the boys of the elder the brief appearance of the ND Glee $6,000,000 in costs. I am not an expert pre-new theology day did. With tri- Club. How could anything so shameful in fund raising or in the area of fi­ wnphalism out, even secular ND's ever originate at ND? Why should the nancing such projects. I woiUd assume, vocation output looks a bit thin and good name of ND be used as a promo­ however, that this would be classified as shabby. And when the totally spiritual . tional stunt to launch a few unknown, an income-producing project and that it religion that Buddhists had 1000 years untalented kooks into show business? Is would pay for itself over a period of before Christ is rated above the insti­ this the portrait of ND today? Heaven years out of the additional gross re­ tutional Church founded by Christ on forbid! ceipts. On the other hand, if the above men and for men, then nothing else of I can remember the motto "God, siun or any part of it has to be funded Christ remains. . . . Country, Notre Dame" during my days before the project gets started, I am ARTHUR L. CONRAD '35 at ND. Somehow or other, "God" and confident that any program for funds Chicago "Country" seem to have become dis­ would have the general support of ABOUT VIETNAM WAR associated from the motto. Alumni and friends. Does the University and its officialdom WILLIAM H. RICKE '39 I feel a firm decision should be know there's a war going on? Do they Maitland, Fla. reached, well in advance of the 1968 have any thoughts on the matter? Or Ed. Note: See pp. 5 and 8 for further season, so all will know in which direc­ are we most concerned with the grid­ comment on Fr. Kavanaugh and, for tion we plan to move. iron wars and the escalating box office? "outsiders" views of Davidson Show, BILL McCULLOUGH '27 VINCE MURPHY '37 see p. 64. South Bend Evanston, 111.

AlUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER In This Is9ue The ALUMNUS has been aiming toward giving the student body more coverage. With this issue, we've hit the target. Students rate the cover, the lead story and a special feature. Not by accident, this is the issue which will go to all seniors as their introduction to membership in the ND Alumni Association. The special feature, pp. 30-39, is an attempt to identify and explain the local "student power" issues. To tell the story, it was only natural to ask students. Senior Jay Schwartz is one of the most talented Campus writers and his columns in the student sparkle with wit and sarcasm. Washington, DC is his home town and his future plans call for enrolling in graduate work in American studies. His article tells the tale of the apathetic student. Tom McKenna writes what the activist students are thinking. (One of the surprising revelations of this feature is that ND's extremists would be only moderates or even conservatives on other campuses.) A senior from Madison, Ind., Tom hopes to go to graduate school if he gets a fellowship and will settle for high school teaching other­ wise. He is vice-president of the student body and is a prominent spokesman for the Action Student Party. Mike McCauIey '69 makes his second appearance in TBE ALUMNUS with his essay from the point of view of a moderate. The Student Government PR co­ ordinator, Mike is from Des Moines. Ken Beime '68 emerges as the spokesman for the antistudent power group or those who endorse the status quo. Ken is from Carle Place, NY and b now living in Chicago as he participates in the Collegiate Scholar program. To put the students' views in historical perspective — not to dilute what they have to say, but rather to help the readers understand them — Prof. Frank O'Malley of the English department was also asked to submit an article. Since his first association with the ND student body — as a freshman in 1928 — he has been a keen observer of the changing and changeless University. BEtRNE

McKENNA Some old editorial assistants may try, but they can't hide forever from a demanding editor — not even behind cases and cases of Coke. At least that's the case of P. Michael Bascle '66, former ALUMNUS staff member who contributed the personal portrait of the 1967 Sorin Award winner on page 14. Soon after it was revealed that Archbishop Paul J. Hallinan was to be the recipient, Bascle was summoned back to his typewriter as a guest reporter. It was a pleasant diversion from his duties in the marketing division of Coca-Cola Co. which, like the Archbishop, head­ quarters in Atlanta. Bascle found Hallinan "a hard man to write about. I found it very difficult to convey in words the uniqueness I found through personal contact. So, for good or for bad, I let his own words do most of the description. I tried to follow the single thread of his commitment. It is ever present; it made the man and his ideas all the HALUNAN more exciting." THE ALUMNUS offers this evidence of the personableness of both the subject and the writer: Bascle is going to visit the Archbishop again this month after he returns from Rome.

J. Richard Lamere '49, author of the article on Carl Yastrzemski on pages 16-17, is a prize-winning and has been on the editorial staff of the Boston Herald Traveler since graduation. Besides covering such stories as the Brink's robbery, the sinking of the liner Andrea Doria and the inmate riots at the old Charlestown prison, Lamere's assignments have taken him to Europe on several occasions. He has won several honors including the Sevellon Brown award, top AP honor for public and meritorious service. He has also been honored by UPI, the Newspaper Guild, AFL-CIO and other organizations. Twice he has been nominated for Pulitzer Prizes. He is commanding officer of LAMERE the largest Naval Reserve officers school in New England and makes his home in Canton, Mass. with his wife and YASTRZEMSKI four children.

W7 NOTRE DAME AlUMNUS, University of Noire Dome, The tvlotre Dame ALUMNUS is published bimonthly by the oil rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part University of Notre Dome. Second-class postage paid at without written permission is prohibited. Notre Dame, IN 46SS6.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER The Cemummmieatiom Chasm I am sure this deep thought has an Aristotelian root somewhere. It has managed to escape me, however, along with my $10 copy of the complete Works. So, sans philosojphical course material, here goes. It seems apropos that one must know the object of one's attention before it becomes the object of one's affection (or disaffection). A converse principle, "ig­ norance is the father of fear," might be even more germane. For the contention in this comer is that most of the folderol about today's collegiate generation, its activist tendencies, its purported defiance of the "estab­ lishment" and other forms of authority, its "cool" attitude toward traditional norms and codes ... is not really folderol at all, but fear . . . fear of fairly epi­ demic proportions. And the megaton of newsprint, pulp essays and TV specials seem to have blurred rather than Editorials crystallized the issue. In fact, our information about this generation, and therefore our comprehension of it, have been largely supplied by the copy-conscious media. There's the thought here that a more appropriate label for the so- called "generation gap" might be the "communication chasm." Any complete communication system consists of both broadcast and reception facilities. It's a two-way system. Multiple accounts of the Berkeley uproars, given a two- year perspective, have distilled cau­ sality down to "lack of communi­ cation." Call it ^ve and take, dialogue,

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER ting £«- Kavanaugfa's rejection of the priestbood. And as timugfaitliat weren't enough, the publisher 3 of Fathier Kavanaiigh's hestsdleiia^^ Modeni Priest Looks at HUrOut-^ datied Church, used the' N^ Dame efSsodcto promote thie jbodc in a half-page advertisemeht m tlw October 24 Nea;yoi*Tim«Jvfcli!| Some of the University's ciitiis were incensed that Kavaniaug^ was or discussion, it's just not what's happening today inter- even ih^ted to the Campiiiti b^ generation. And this may well be one of the profound Notarie Dame studoits witii th^ por-" tragedies of our time. For there is much to learn from mission of the University. Odiers were enraged Ixpauae this generation . . . and there is much to be taught. the Univerdty, as a great £ree Catholic institutiw^ac^ The onus may be mutual. But age, accomplishment, cording to the book publisher's ad, was bdng 'Hiscd'^ tiqi experience (and. "the establishment") place it more further Kavanaugh's boc^ .The Administrati(m,Vialiii

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19<7 DECEMBER THE GENERATION HERE and NOW Young men demand self-rule. MAKINGS OF A STICKY TIME "Be it moved that the Student Government Constitution be amended by deleting Article V, Section 4, which reads as follows: No organ of the stu­ dent government shall by its actions make any enactment contrary to official University regulations." rrH the passage of the above mo­ Murphy. O'Dea's running mate, Tom w tion this fall, the Student Senate McKenna, was elected to the post of moved wholeheartedly into the realm student body vice-president Although of student rights by making itself an curfews in effect had been abolished autonomous body. This step mi^t be and the car situation eased, the ASP interpreted as part of "student power," mustered a great deal of support from a term which has as many definitions the upperclassmen. as it has users. It is obviously con­ Thirteen ASP senators vote this fall nected, however, with the ability of and the number of sympathizers is students to take part in the decisions even larger than last year. After which affect their lives. amending the constitution, the Senate The ND student rights movement moved to abolish the rule of coats and can be traced to the Popular Front ties for dinner in the dining halls. A party of Lenny Joyce in the student resolution was passed calling for the body president race of 1966. Joyce ran administration to either abolish the on a platform of student action to rule or show the Senate good cause abolish curfews and night-check, and that it should not be abolished. If the to establish fewer restrictions on administration did not act, the Senate women's visiting hours and ownership said it would declare the rule null and of cars by students. Though a write- void. in candidate, he made a surprisingly Rev. James Riehle CSC, dean of good showing in his loss to Jim Fish. students, appeared at the next Senate November 1967 December That fall his party, its name changed meeting and told the members the to the Action Student Party, won Vol. 45 No. 6 University had been considering abol­ six seats in the senate and many party ishing the rule since the bediming of sympathizers were also elected. the semester and he had already The next spring the ASP had recommended such action to Rev. Denny O'Dea as its candidate for Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC, pres­ University student body president. O'Dea, run­ ident. When the Senate demonstrated ning on a platform consisting solely overwhelmingly that it favored leaving of student rights, made an even enforcement of dress standards for stronger showing but he was edged dinner in the hands of the halls, the out by middle-of-the-roader Chris rule was changed.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER W67 DECEMBER is a deeper meaning to "student to further cooperation between the power" than the attempt by students two institutions so long as they re­ to have a voice in the decisions affect­ main "autonomous." ing their lives. There are wider issues Following the SMC Board meeting here. Father McGrath indicated that he Robert Welch, Rev. James Kavan- would be on a year's leave of absence augh and Mark Hatfield have spoken from Catholic U. and that he ex- at ND through the initiative of the p)ected a new president to be named Academic Commission, a student- by the new lay-religious board to take organized group. More speeches ofiBce Jan. 1, 1969. from every part of the political and Closer relations between the two religious spectrum are planned. The schools began last year with the in­ "Free University" is an attempt to auguration of the co-exchange pro­ get away from the bureaucracy of gram, a move intended to make avail­ large-scale education; it too is student- able to both student bodies some of organized. the best courses each school had to Student initiative, student control— offer. At the same time the two drama the list is endless. And the horizons departments merged into what is now are growing wider. More and more the "Notre Dame-St. Mary's Theatre." students are becoming involved in Since then both institutions have public service activities: tutoring approved further studies which might deprived children, helping migrant reveal ways and means of closer co­ workers, spending vacations in urban operation. ghettos. Not so obvious examples, Sister Mary Grace together with perhaps, but equally important. most of the SMC faculty repeatedly has insisted that St Mary's for­ ever remain an autonomous institu­ While the Senate had been deliber­ Uncertainty across "the Dixie" tion. ating on student rights, the Hall All the action and, for that matter, "I favor collaboration in all ways," Presidents' Council under Tom Brislin the attention of Catholic higher edu­ Sister Grace said to the SMC student was moving toward the keystone of cation shifted across "the Dixie" in body following her dismissal, "but I student rights efforts this year. They early December when St. Mary's Col­ do not favor losing the autonomy and asked for hall autonomy by which lege announced several unexpected identity of St. Mary's College. Some the members of a residence hall make and unprecedented shifts in its gov­ suggest that in the future this wiU their o\vh rules on parietal hours, erning structure. come. I hope that it will not" drinking and other matters inde­ To be specific. Mother M. Olivette From the other side of "the Dixie," pendent of University regulation. CSC, superior general of the Sisters the Notre Dame campus, there was Each hall submitted a constitution and of the Holy Cross, in a letter to the no comment It is known, however, code, agreed upon by its members, faculty announced that Rev. John J. that the ND administration has ex­ and referendums were held to deter­ McGrath would become acting-presi­ pressed enthusiasm for greater col­ mine what parietal hours the students dent of the all-girl college January 1. laboration with other colleges. wanted. A hall board composed of The professor of comparative law at students was set up to deal •with. the Catholic University of America Meanwhile, Bacii Home... infractions. will replace Sister Mary Grace CSC, In a stormy session the Senate president of SMC since 1965. As this issue of the ALUMNUS went to moved to support fully the effort for The announcement came November press, Notre Dame o£5cials were pre­ hall autonomy, passing an "act to 24 and with it came traces of discord paring for the formal celebration of provide for the self-government of the within the St. Mary's family. It all the University's 125th anniversary. A residence halls of the University of seemed to stem from a possible "mer­ two-day program was planned for Notre Dame." SBP Chris Murphy ger between Notre Dame and St. December 8 and 9, highlighted by a also announced a general assembly of Mary's." symposium on "The University in a the student body in January to clarify Sister Grace felt that her dismissal Developing World Society," and an the position of the students on im­ was caused by her administration's academic convocation. portant issues and to demonstrate to failure to move more rapidly toward Archbishop Luigi Raimondi, the the administration the students' views greater union with Notre Dame. Apostolic Delegate to the United on what he called "the inequities of Mother Olivette in her announce­ States, was to be the principal cele­ student life at Notre Dame." ment gave no reason for the change of brant and preacher at Mass on Friday "As far as the University is con­ presidents. The letter only said Sister opening the observance. cerned," Rev. Charles McCarragher Mary Grace "has been invited to be­ Among the guests invited to par­ CSC, Notre Dame vice-president for gin a special study of the role of wom­ ticipate in the symposium were Dr. student affairs, replied, "the resolu­ en in emerging Catholic universities Nevitt Sanford, director of the In­ tions of the Student Senate and Hall of Latin America." stitute for the Study of Human Prob­ Presidents' Council are only recom­ A week following the announce­ lems at Stanford University; Rev. mendations." ment of the McGrath appointment, Paul J. Reinert, president of St Louis He went on to add that the Admin­ the College's new Board of Trustees University; and Dr. Lee A. DuBridge, istration considers such moves as met for the first time and issued a president of the California Institute "matters for dialogue." He empha- statement indicating that the merger of Technology. si7xd, however, that no student group of ND and SMC "was never con­ Complete coverage of the affair will can change University rules and reg­ sidered and is not in the immediate be reported in the Winter issue of ulations. nor long-term planning." The new INSIGHT: Notre Dame due for pub­ All this is political action. But there board did, however, indicate its plans lication in mid-January.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER \967 DECEMBER not done this yet but it is not too The Days after He Came far in the offing." A couple of loud echoes followed Rev. "Neither we nor the students had James Kavanaugh's talk at Notre any idea he was going to use the Dame, Oct, 15. The first round was University as such a platform," ob­ national news coverage of the talk in served Rev. Charles McCarragher, which Kavanaugh announced his in­ CSC, vice-president for student affairs. tention to resign from the priesthood Kavanaugh is now associated with and marry "definitely." Next the pub­ his brother as a marriage counselor lishers of Kavanaugh's controversial at the Human Resources Institute in book, A Modem Priest Looks at His Lajolla, Calif, Outdated Church, took out an ad in the Oct. 24 book review section reiterating his an­ Home for a New Concept nouncement. A "free university" class is a little un­ "I am resigning from the Catholic JAMES KAVANAUGH certain. It can be almost anywhere priesthood in personal protest against No embaTTassment intended. and have anyone discussing anything. the refusal of the hierarchy of the in­ There is no required attendance and stitutional Church to bring about no grades. There may or may not reform," Kavanaugh said in the ad perience. We believe this represents be a faculty member present. But it dated Oct. 16. "I announced my res­ the attitude of most Notre Dame may be the ideal of education—the ignation before an assembly of students men. There ^vill be other opinions, of interested search for knowledge. at Notre Dame University because course. That's what freedom of ideas Meeting after class hours as an this great University, a short distance is all about" extracurricular activity, the "free from my hometown, represents to me And there were others. Kavanaugh university" brings together people the greatest Catholic center of learn­ got three standing ovations from the who are interested in a subject not ing in the country. I can no longer crowd of students in the Engineering covered in the curriculum. The stu­ wear the collar nor accept the title Auditorium. And a letter from Rich­ dent president of the "free university" of 'Father,' when the institution I ard Rossie, a junior student senator, movement at Notre Dame, Dennis represent can cut off from communion in The Observer, the student news­ O'Dea, says it provides an opportunity the divorced and remarried, can re­ paper, expressed disappointment in to study a subject in depth. "Let's fuse to admit its error in the matter the University's ad. face it," says O'Dea, "when you're an of birth control, can ignore the plea "I cannot help but fed that the undergraduate, you don't get the of priests for marriage, can continue beauty and integrity of this Univer­ chance to really know anything. You to reduce the principles of Christ to sity, the Oxford of Catholic higher know a little about a lot of things, instruments of fear and guilt." education according to Ramparts — but you don't know anything well." Then the University, through Rev. has been tarnished ...," Rossie wrote. The "free university" tries to combat Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC, presi­ "Why is a great University required this by asking those interested in the dent, and Edmund Stephan, chairman to defend its academic freedom and program what they would like to study of the Board of Trustees, issued the to cater to an image that is false? ..." and telling those interested in the final volley. It was a retaliatory ad of Chuck Nau, chairman of the Stu­ same subject about each other. There the same size in The Times. Headed dent Union Academic Commission is generally a group leader but he can "In the Spirit of Notre Dame," this who arranged for the Kavanaugh be either a teacher or a student. ad stated its purpose was to clear up speech, explained that no reporters Virtually anyone who expresses an "some confusion" about the appear­ were invited to the speech and no interest can be a group leader, because ance of Father Kavanaugh. advance publicity given out. In fact, few people will offer to lead a seminar "Father Kavanaugh was invited by Kavanaugh specifically asked him to in a subject about which they are a student group for a firsthand discus­ keep the press away from him while uninformed. The "free university," sion of his controversial book," it he was on Campus. The story about with a minimum of superstructure, has stated. "The University was fully the speech was sold to a wire service no control over what happens when aware of this. Father Kavanaugh's by a student journalist a group forms. It either lasts or it views are, after all, commercially Recalling his first contact with Kav­ doesn't. available to anyone who \\i\\ buy his anaugh last June, Nau said he agreed About 125 students are participat­ book. It seemed fully consonant wth to come to the University only if it ing in the program in seven function­ the purposes of the University that would not embarrass Notre Dame in ing groups, with t%vo or three more the students have an opportunity to any way. Nau said this referred to the getting under way. The members confront the man himself. They did. possibility that Kavanaugh, who had decide what they will read, how often His reaction has by now become wide­ been listed merely as a "disobedient" they \vill meet and in what direction ly known." priest, might be suspended. He was the discussion will move. Subjects The advertisement included a re­ still in good standing up until the under discussion now include mass print of an editorial which appeared time of his speech at ND and Bishop media, psychedelics, mysticism. Chris­ in The Notre Dame Scholastic, the Alexander Zaleski of Lansing, Mich., tian marriage and the theory of polit­ student magazine, which called Kav­ had an official "no comment" con­ ical revolution. But there is room for anaugh's speech "as unsophisticated cerning the resignation the day after more. as a Huey Long harangue: repeatedly his speech. The "free imiversity" is an attempt emotional, continuously negative and In his talk Father Kavanaugh said to get away from the sometimes consbtentiy gross." The ad concluded he planned to leave the priesthood binding structure of mass education. by saying, "This editorial, we believe, "as a means of expressing my utter It is the result of student initiative. justifies some faith in the ability of rejection of the refusal of the bishops It does not appear to be a mass move­ thoughtful students to learn from ex- to put Vatican II into effect I have ment, though there are more ND and

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER St. Mary's students interested than its originators thought there would be. Numbers don't bother those involved. As O'Dea says, "There is a lot of un­ tapped energy for academic work beyond the curriculum. We just want to give it a home." Fillies vs. Horsemen In the mid-'50s it was Mt. Holyoke over ND on the radio. In '59 it was Barnard over ND in a telecast from FOURSOME FELLED BY FEAIUMES FATALES Washington Hall. Then, sure enough, South Bend Eddie was on their side, too. on their trip to New York Nov. 4, the latest College Bowl team en­ before the season started that was to the Irish that day in New York, there countered Bryn Mawr and it was the be the 'game of the decade' and we was plenty to teU in the locker room. Philadelphia iiUies over ND. In 48 thought it would be a psychological A couple of tel^rams helped spur the years, one of the ND team calculated, disaster for ND to appear then so we team on to nothing. The Califomia Notre Dame ought to be free of the asked to be rescheduled. As it was, cre>v beaten the week before wired Seven Sisters. our boys were running to the news­ this wish to ND: "Go Fighting Irish. BrjTi Mawr had overcome the Uni­ room to check on the Navy score every Bryn Mawr wears falsies. Watch out versity of California at Riverside (220- 20 minutes." for Shirley Lavine. Dominus Vo- 70) before topping ND 225-185. Carberry started aligning his forces biscum." And from the Faculty Club Then they went on to best the U. of last spring. Initially about 40 students came this admonishment for Car- Richmond (160-80) and Miami (310- were interested in being on the team berry: "Don't split no infinitives." 80) before they inevitably got theirs, and 30 showed up at the tryouts. After the loss, ND picked up the too. Sweetly, it was again Barnard After three bouts, he narrowed the telegram bit and sent cheers, cheers that drubbed the gals—205-175. contenders do\vn to 12 and gave them to Bryn Mawr—^"Hodie Miami Vin- But the team and the coach from a reading list for summer study. The catur—Nox Ara pugnum finiet" and ND kept their perspective—after all, final four plus an alternate were signed it the coach, the Retired ND it's only a game—and in the aftermath selected after a few more practices team and South Bend Eddie (see of defeat there were reflections on this fall. The team reflected Notre adjoining story). The wish (which "what might have been." For instance, Dame's ecumenism—^with a Jew and in loose translaticm means let Miami ND would have met UC of Riverside a Lutheran lining up beside three fall, then Ara will finish the job) if it hadn't been for Michigan State. Catholics. Team members were senior brought a thank-you note from Bryn "We were originally scheduled to ap­ Dennis Gallagher, junior William Ma%vr captain Ashley Doherty. She pear Oct. 28, the day of the Michigan Luking and sophomores Greg Adolf wrote, "Our encounter with Notre State game," explained Dr. J. J. Car- and Richard Libowitz. The alternate Dame ^vas certainly our most enjoy­ berry, professor of chemical engineer­ was Thomas Spinrad, a senior. able and we thank you all for making ing who coached the ND four. "But Though there was no victory for it so." No false note there. Packers in Miniskirts Threat to Notre Dame EDITOR'S NOTE: On the eve of the now-historic clashes, ND vs. massive IQs from end to end. Even Rockne would Navy and ND vs. Bryn Mawr, Philadelphia's Evening Bulletin ran a blanch. preview of the big one. Here, reprinted with permission, is what Sandy Grady wrote in his "Mon About Sports" column in the sports Deep, versatile, swift on the buzzer, that's Bryn section Nov. 3 : Ma\vr. There's Diane, nifty on reverses in Euroiiean "Anassa kata, kalo kale history. There's Ruth, a triple-threat in Latin, Greek "la! la! la! Nike!" —Bryn Mawr chant. and archeology. There's Ashley, crushing on ofF- tackle plays into politics and poetry. There's Robin, MRA PARSEGHIAN'S troubles have just begun. First elusive on runbjicks through Verdi, Van Gogh and he ran into Leroy Keyes at Purdue. Then it was Virgil. What can Notre Dame do but punt on first Orange Juice Simpson and Southern Cal. And now down and pray? it's Diane and Ruth and Ashley and Robin. Poor A telephone call found Parseghian, "Moose" Notre Dame. Krause and all tmavailable — prob­ Forget the Four Horsemen. These are Four Fillies. ably under sedation. The next best thing was to It's the Nightmare Bowl for South Bend — Bryn speak to South Bend Eddie, another VIP. He is the Mawr vs. Notre Dame. How can the Irish defend bookie who will take any bet, so long as it is against against a dream backfield drenched in Chanel No. 5? Notre Dame. Ara knew he had a tough schedule, but Bryn Mawr, "How many points are you offering on Bryn the Green Bay Packers in miniskirts? Too much. Ma%vr against Notre Dame?" And it's on the tube, for the world to see. The Who Did Bryn Mawr Ever Beat? 'T>on't kid around GE College Bowl, with $3,000 in the pot. (Never — we've got a tough one E^ainst Navy this week, mind Notre Dame's policy against bowls.) Power­ bud." I house Bryn Ma^vr, unbeaten, barely scored upon, with (Continued on Page 65) ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER Lowdown on SUMMA The chief subject of discussion at the meeting was football ticket distribu­ Never before has there been a imi- tion and other topics covered were versity fund-raising drive organized Club programs, continuing education, like SUMMA, Notre Dame's effort to student affairs, admissions, religion raise $52 million in five years. During and citizenship. the 17 months of plaiming for SUMMA, the foundation and public Robert Cahill, ticket manager, re­ relations staff set up the drive via the ported there was a good response marketing approach of businesses. In from Alumni questioned about recom­ structure, SUMMA resembles com­ mendations for solving the ticket munity United Fund drives—^launched problems. He said 31 suggested sta­ with fanfare and employing highly dium expansion, six suggested closed- organized teams of volunteers. circuit TV, five had no opinion, three responded negatively, two recom­ The concentration of effort is being mended an annual Soldiers' Field made in the cities where the majority JIM FRICK and FRANK KELLY game and one each recommended a of Notre Dame people (Alumni, Behind SUAAMA with fanfare revised distribution system, reduction parents, friends, corporations) live. and organizafion. of season ticket holders, elimination of "Through experience, we've learned St Mary's seating and a sliding ticket that people in 40 cities give us 80 more than 7000 volunteers involved in price scale. percent of our financial support," ex­ SUMMA. "One of the sigidficant He also reported the University has plained Frank Kelly, assistant to the things we've noticed," Kelly said, "is received a $10,000 gift which is to be vice-president for public relations and that more and more of the younger used to explore the possibility of sta­ development. Alumni are helping. This is important dium expansion. An architectural These 40 cities are those hosting because 50 percent of our Alumni have been graduated since 1950." firm is now studying the issue. Cahill SUMMA kickoff dinners which in­ With volunteers and through ef­ commented that, to his knowledge, clude a panel of speakers from Notre ND is one of a very few schools in the Dame. Five thousand people attended ficient planning, SUMMA commit­ teemen hope to keep down the cost country providing tickets to parents. dinners in 19 cities in October; more He also mentioned he hoped having are to come in January and May. In of fund-raising. "The cost of Chal­ lenge I was 2.419 percent and for ax home games next fall will help addition to the kickoff dinner and alleviate the problem. Herb Jones, panel discussion, most cities have press Challenge II it was only 1.614 per­ cent," according to James W. Frick, business manager of athletics, said conferences, luncheon meetings for vice-president for public relations and that, should the stadium be expanded, campaign volunteers and local adver­ development "We hope SUMMA an additional 20,000 seats should fill tising. Before the kickoff in each city. costs will be somewhere in that current needs. Alumni and ND friends receive range." SUMMA brochures describing the Board President Ambrose F. "Bud" goals of the drive in detail. Everyone knows money has to be Dudley proposed the Alumni Board spent to raise money but, according go on record as endorsing a temporary "This assures that no volunteer ever to Kelly, Notre Dame's expenses have reduction in allotments for visiting makes what is known in the trade as been unbelievably low. "Businesses teams and parents and the motion a 'cold call,'" Kelly explained. He spiend any\vhere from five percent to passed. added that in every one of the cities 28 percent," he commented. ND Clubs: A proposed model Club visited in October the crowd -was Constitution was approved and the either the largest Notre Dame gather­ As of Dec. 1 the SUMMA count ing in recent memory or the largest was $23,732,668 with "30 by 30" the 100th anniversary of the ND Alumni in history. chant in the background, meaning the Association was chosen as the theme conmiittee hopes to have $30 mHlion for the 1968 Universal Notre Dame By next June the campaign in all of raised by Dec. 30. Night (official date April 22). "The the primary cities will be over. Then Changing Chiurch" theme was chosen concentration wU turn to secondary for this year's Universal ND Com­ cities—those with fewer Alumni and The Board Met to Consider... friends—which give 15 percent of Richard A. Rosenthal '54 of South munion Day. Notre Dame's financial support. Fi­ Bend will head the Alumni Associa­ A program of visits to Club regions nally, a direct mail campaign will be tion as board president for 1968. was planned for Nov. 20-Dec. 6. aimed at people who do not live in Rosenthal was elected at the fall Directors met with Alumni Senators either primary or secondary cities. board of directors meeting Oct. 12-14. (Club presidents) to discuss Club Fund-raising plans for secondary cities are varied. There may be in­ formal dinners and guests from the University, but there will be no news conferences or local advertising cam­ paigns. SUMMA campaign leaders feel the hard-hitting short-lived campaigns in individual cities wll be better all the way around. "It's just unrealistic to expect a volunteer to give up six months or a year of his life to devote to raising money for Notre Dame," Kelley says. "There are just too many other demands on peoples' time." BUD DUDLEY and DICK ROSENTHAL Across the country there will be Behind the Alumni, honorary and new presidents.

10 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER problems and University programs. These meetings were an extension of ACADEME the new Alumni Senate which meet for the first time last May. Continuing Education: Dean Thomas P. Bergin of the Center for Continuing Education reported that, because of poor attendance at the two previous Alumni seminars at Re­ unions, there would be no seminar this year. However, the Center is working with the Alumni Office to program a fall seminar for husbands and wives on a non-football weekend. The "Change in the Church" seminar from the last Reunion will be taken "on the road" to Boston and New York in 1968. Student Affairs: Rev. James Riehle, dean of students, reported the student body was generally "quite well be­ FATHER HESBURGH BEFORE THE FACULTY haved" this year and that only about Th* time has com*. eight or ten students were expelled during the 1966-67 year. Arthur Pears, chief of security, rejxjrted there was an increase in the number of A CONBRESS FOR ACADEMICIANS "muggings" on Campus and that ow THAT NOTRE DAHE has com­ year. from all indications the source of the N pleted major restructiuing of its Members of the Faculty Senate are: trouble was off-Campus. He added govenmient it is free to move into College of Arts and Letters — Father that some of the security officers are self-renewal, innovation and experi­ Banas, Rev. Ernest J. Bartell CSC, now armed with pbtols as is the case mentation. Rev. Theodore M. Hes- Paul G. Barthelomew, Paul F. Bosco, in 85 percent of the colleges in the burgh CSC, Notre Dame president George A. Brinkley, Rev. David B. country. told a special group of faculty at a Burrell CSC, Rev. James T. Burt- closed meeting in late November. chaell CSC, A. Robert Caponigri, Admissions: Brother Raphael Wil­ Their session was an attempt at just Frederick J. Crosson, Peter P. Grande, son CSC, director of admissions, re­ such a venture. Seymour L. Gross, John J. Kennedy, ported there are 31 Negroes in this The occasion was the first meeting Thomas M. Lorch, Edward Manier, year's freshman class compared to 12 of the newly formed Faculty Senate. Paul E. McLane, Harry A. Nielsen, in 1966. He said the increase was Approved by the Board of Trustees Bernard Norling, Robert D. Nuner, primarily the result of a program of last May, the group of senators was Robert F. O'Brien, James E. Robin­ nationwide communication wth created to make recommendations to son, Stephen J. Rogers, John F. San­ promising Negro students conducted the University's Academic Council on tos, John A. Scannell, Stanley S. Sess- by the Committee on Minority En­ matters affecting the academic life ler, Marshall Smelser, Thomas R. rollment, a student group. of Notre Dame. Swartz, Robert H. Vasoli and John A. Brother Wilson said the total In all, 61 representatives have been Williams. number of Negro students on the ND elected from the four colleges, the campus was still much too low. He College of Business Administration — Law School, the Computing Center, Salvatore J. Bella, Paul F. Conway, estimated that between 60 and 70 the University Library and the Spe­ William F. Eagan and LeClair H. Negroes are enrolled altogether. He cial Professional Faculty based on one Eells. added the non-Catholic enrollment is senator for every ten faculty mem­ College of Engineering — William very small and the University would bers with each division receiving at like to see an increase in this area. Berry, James J. Carberry, Nicholas F. least one representative. Fiore, Francis M. Kobayashi, Ken­ The University had already received Professor Edward J. Murphy, the 400 applications for the 1968 fresh­ neth R. Lauer, John W. Lucey, Frank lone member from the Law School, Montana and Walter L. Shilts. man class and 80 preliminary ac­ %vas elected temporary chairman of ceptances had been sent out at the the Senate while Rev. Leonard N. College of Science — Harvey A. Ben­ time of the Board meeting. He also Banas CSC, an assistant professor in der, Roger K. Bretthauer, Sperry E. mentioned that 211 members of this the Modem Languages Department, Darden, William M. Fairley, Norman year's freshman class are sons of was selected the group's temporary B. Haaser, George F. Hennion, Gerald Alumni. secretary. L. Jones, Robert P. Mcintosh, John Religion and Citizenship: Rev. The inaugual meeting also brou^t W. Mihelich, Daniel J. Pasto, Barth Joseph Fey, new University Chaplain, forth the appointment of two com­ Pollak, R. Catesby Taliaferro, Joseph reported response to Sunday Masses mittees: the first, a seven-man group, A. Tihen, Erhard Winkler and Ber­ at Sacred Heart Church is excellent to begin work on writing the Sen­ nard S. Wostmann. and that nearly all are standing room ate's bylaws; and the second, known The Law School—Edivard J. Murphy. only." He has inaugurated a special as the Steering Committee, to work The libraries of Notre Dame — L. Mass the first Sunday of every month on procedures, agenda and the date Franklin Ixmg, George E. Sereiko, featuring a distinguished celebrant or of the next meeting. Vernon W. Vogd and Richard J. speaker. He said he felt at leaist 80 Each senator is elected for a three- Vorwerk. percent of the students practice their year term juid may be re-elected. One- Computing Center — Leon E. Win- faith regularly. third of the group are elected each slow.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19<7 DECEMBER n Meaney says he wants to find out cause shortly after I arrived in South Prompt TV Learning what the goals of the faculty are. Bend I had been given the impression A student sits in a soundproof booth. "Then we can see how the metfia can (how and why no longer matter) that A pair of headphones is beside him. help. There is a definite receptivity Msgr. Hughes regarded me as much In front of him is a screen. And avail­ among faculty members for increased too yoimg and inexperienced to be a able to him are all the tools of the use of the materials that are avail­ student of his. modem media: film, slides, audio­ able," he says. So it was with considerable trepida­ tape and videotape. He has at his Meaney envisions use of all the tion that I attended his first lecture command all the information for a media, but particularly television. Fa­ of the term. As he came into the course. He can proceed at his own cilities may be available for in­ room where the students were waiting, speed. He can take the exam when structional television for Notre Dame his awesome figure was hardly cal­ he feels he is ready. His teachers are courses. Also in the offing may be an culated to put a young man's fears free of the daily grind of lectures— educational television station broad­ at rest. He wore a cassock with a free for consultation, for discussion of casting programs to South Bend and short shoulder cape, and he walked difficult points. producing programs to be used by with a heavy limp, due, I learned This is a classroom scene of the other ETV stations. "This would be later, to a leg stiffened by a chronic future. But Notre Dame and other a tremendous public relations effort nerve ailment. His ruddy face was leading institutions are on the verge on the part of the University," ac­ crowned with an umiily tangle of of developing independent study op­ cording to Meaney. "It could be a white hair, and though he looked portunities for students, says John real window on Notre Dame for the older than his 61 years, his penetrating Meaney. As assistant to the vice- rest of the country." eyes seemed to defy any chronological president for academic affairs and The new station would probably category. He sat down and after cere­ director of educational media, Meaney share facilities with WNDU-TV, the moniously switching eyeglasses (he will help the University achieve that University-owned commercial staticm scorned bifocals) he began to speak. end. on Campus. One possibility for im­ When he did I forgot everything, plementing the plan would be the including my uneasiness, as I listened establishment of a nonprofit organ­ to the most magnificent lecture I have ization governing the operations of ever heard. The subject was the the ETV channel and possibly the nature of history and specifically of two existing educational FM radio Church history. He spoke in a high- outlets in South Bend. pitched voice, deliberately, calmly and Educational TV, like Ae other yet wth an intensity which was spell­ media, attempts to give wider access binding. The hour flashed by in a to ideas. ETV can do for the com­ moment and it held more wisdom and munity what the other media can do wit, more shrewd analysis, human for the student body: educate and, to compassion and timeless insight than quote Meaney, "improve the quality any I have ever expierienced before or of American life." since. Afterward, as the students filed An Inestimable Privilege out, he fixed those sharp eyes on me, Rt. Rev. Msgr. Philip Hughes LID '55, emeritus and I, brought suddenly back to my professor of history who died Oct. 6, was on threatened fortunes, was sure my first internationoll)' known authority on Catholic Church contact with Philip Hughes was also DR. MEANEY history. But he achieved a special fame among to be my last. Notre Dame's media man. the ranlcs of his students. One of them. Rev. Morvin R. O'Connell PhD '59, reflected on his "You are Fr. O'Connell, I believe," he said. Imported this fall from the U. of memories of Msgr. Hughes in this story in the Texas, Meaney brings credentials few Catholic Bulletin Oct. 20. "Yes, Father," I answered, with can match. A 1940 graduate of ND, Philip Hughes was laid to rest one heart pounding. he continued his studies at the U. of bleak, rainy day last week in the little "You were ordained last June?" Chicago and at Texas after wartime priests' cemetery at the edge of the It was more an assertion than a service in the Navy. He helped form campus of the University of Notre question and, as I muttered a barely the first educational TV station in the Dame. It had been his wish to be audible affimative, I wondered how country at the U. of Houston in 1953 buried there in the midst of other men long it would take me to pack my and became its manager. After a year who, like himself, had striven for a things. "Then by all means," he said, in France on a Fulbright fellowship lifetime to hear the word of God and "I must have your blessing." And and more work in ETV, he was to keep it. down he went, with great difficulty tapped by the US Office of Education As I stood among the mourners at because of the stiff leg, to his knees. as a consultant on educational tele­ the graveside, I recalled my first meet­ Somehow or other I managed to vision, then by the Ford Foundation ing wth Msgr. Hughes, a little more remember the words of the priestly for a similar post. In November he than 11 years ago. I had come to blessing. was at the White House for President Notre Dame, only months after my Perhaps I have indulged too much Johnson's signing of the Public Broad­ ordination, to study under the direc­ in what is so personal a memory as casting Act allocating $9 million for tion of this world-famous English to be of interest only to me. Certainly educational broadcasting. historian. And though from the first I Philip Hughes' death, considered as Meaney's work is not a completely appreciated theoretically the oppor­ a loss to the Church and to the world new project at ND. There is already an tunity, only the following years of of scholarship, outranks any pangs audio-tutorial laboratory for private close association would reveal what an which those who loved him may now study in Nieuwland Science Hall and inestimable privilege I had received. feel. Yet that gesture of courtesy and the modem languages department also Indeed, the prospect of that initial compassion offered to a frightened has tape facilities. meeting filled me wth foreboding, be­ youngster more than a decade ago

12 AlUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER imperfect men and women viho are m

PEOPLE

A familiar foe felled Dr. James A. at a November Valparmso (lad.) U. Reyniers '30. Ironically, it was cancer convocation commemtMating the post­ that both caused his death and ing of Luther's 95 theses. Father brought him a large measure of fame. Hesbiu^ said a milestone in Catholic MONSIGNOR HUGHES In 1957 Reyniers' germfree experi­ scholarship on Luther was published Of much wisdom and wif< ment which produced seven genera­ in 1917. It was this paper by F. X. tions of cancer-free mice was hailed Kiefl, a Catholic professor ol dieology remains as a bit of evidence of the as the biggest breakthrough in cancer at the U. of Wiirzbuig, which put kind of man Philip Hughes was. research in a decade. The founder of Luther back in a religious ccmtext and, Nothing human was alien to him ND's Lobund Institute revealed a saw him as an instrument chosen by and this was one reason he achieved high percentage of the same strain of God to purify the Church. Father such stature as a historian. To be mice developed cancer within months Hesburgh also told the Lutheran uni­ sure, he had immense intellectual gifts in a non-germfree atmosphere. An­ versity audience the Second Vatican which light up the more than two other notable achievement of the Council opposed some of the same million words he published during his Mishawaka native who pioneered the tendencies which Luther fought career. But he also possessed that development of the gennfree animal against in the Chmch of his d^. childlike character which Our Lord laboratory was investigation c^ tooth • • • defined as a condition for entry into decay sources. A man and wife have joined together the kingdom of heaven and which, at Dr. Reyniers, who died Nov. 4 in for better teaching. Enc Bauer, assis­ the same time, takes delight in dwell­ Tampa where he headed the Gemw tant professcM- of modem languages., ing among the sons of men. free Life Research Center, directed and lus wife Brisitt who teaches across There was no guile in him. His the renowned Lobund Institute for 28 the road at St. Mary's Collie, have intellectual chastity was absolute; his years until he resigned in 1959. He developed a new approach to teach­ integrity never compromised. He dis­ called Lobund the "dream of a young ing b^inning German. They aim to played not a scrap of bitterness, even college student." Among the honors make the language study more enjoy­ though his career was testimony to the he reaped were appointment to the able and intellectually benefidal to hazards which the intellectual has had first board of the National Science the student by putting him in contact to face in this era of the Church's Foundation, the Pasteur Award of the with the language as it is currendy history. Not till his last years—^not Illinois Society of Bateriologists and spoken. indeed till his association \vith Notre the first annual lay faculty award at With their text, reader, teacher's Dame—did his contribution to Cath­ ND. In May, in a hospital in Tampa^ manual, practice workbook and tapie olic life begin to be appreciated. ND awarded him an honorary doctor recordings, all published this year, they Before that, though his greatest books of science degree. emphasize the linguistics approach of had already been published, he recognizing sentence patterns rather received little but apathy from those than memorization of grammar rules. in high places who seemed to think A theme is introduced and, when the it odd that a priest should also be a student comprehends the material, he scholar. takes important speech patterns from A historian, after all, is a chron­ the context, practices them and icler of past disasters which have develofis than into new situaticRis. stemmed mostly from human frailty Their new course is the result of and folly. No one knew better than the Bauers' study of teaching methods Philip Hughes the blemishes which and linguistics during the last six years have disfigured the Bride of Christ and of classroom experience, includ­ down through the centuries. No one ing Mr. Bauer's work at the ND could lash out more forcefully than program in Innsbruck, Austria. he against those twin deformities of • • • avarice and ambition which have Liberalizing abortion laws would brought so much mischief into the likely mean the operation would some­ life of the Church. He recognized, in day be available cm demand simply as short, how frail is the vessel in which another birth control device, accord­ are kept the faith and the sacraments ing to Thomas L Shaffer '6IL, profes­ of faith, how mysteriously intertwined DR. REYNIERS sor of law. In an October t^ at an are the damaged human condition A dream come true. Oberlin Collie conference on pro­ and God's redemptive action. • • • posed changes in criminal abortion This insight, which for lesser men An accurate historical picture of statutes, Shaffer charged that physi­ has been an occasion of hatred or Martin Luther is coming from Cath­ cians "are unwilling to say candidly, despair, set Philip Hughes free to love olic writers after nearly 400 years of as the American Civil Liberties Union the Church, warts and all. By "the slander, according to Rev. Theodore has, that abortion reform is a matter Church" he seldom meant princes or M. Hesburgh CSC, University presi­ of birth control, that it is not a prelates. Rather he referred to the dent. Accepting an honorary degree medical matter at aU."

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER 13 nan was a deceptive one. He is a man small in statiure, soft in voice, gentie in action. Bouts with hepatitis have not left him unscathed. Innovator and leader he did not immediately appear to be. The conversation began, progressed and became an enlightenment. The accolades and labels were true. But the trite phrasing of labels did not convey the depth of the man. His words came easily and strongly, bear­ ing young and vigorous ideas on a solid tone of conunitment CommitRient. This would be the word, if only one word were allowed, to convey the spirit of Paul Hallinan. His own words fill out the portrait— and the words are unequivocal: "Noncommitment wU not do. What the restless protesters detest in our society, in our colleges, they also sneer at in the safe Catholic: organized to the hilt, but committed only to the superficial." Archbishop Hallinan has committed himself far beyond the superficial. Two months after his enthronement in Atlanta he announced the 23 schools in his 71-county diaconate would be integrated. Five years before Medicare required it, he integrated the Catholic hospitals. He dispatched nims and priests to Selma to represent the Church in the Negro's plea for justice. After announcing the desegrega­ tion of his schools, he expressed the hope that "this move of ours, and other moves, comes in time." That seems to be the same hope he feels when speaking out on Vietnam— that his action may come in time. He ARCHBISHOP PAUL J. HALLINAN suffers under the knowledge of the Awarded 1967 Sorin Award. death and destruction that is the daily routine in Vietnam. Under this mantle, he put his name to a petition calling for negotiations to end the IN A WORD, COMMITMENT war. Witness is the word. He once told a THERE is a lot to be read and to be doctorate in 1962. Both during and class of Notre Dame Seniors: "the 'heard about Archbishop Paul J. after the Second Vatican Council, word witness is almost a definition of Hallinan, recipient of the third annual Archbishop Hallinan served oa com­ the Catholic layman; we do not say Edward Frederick Sorin Award for dis­ missions for renewing the liturgy and great things, but we live them. We tinguished service to Notre Dame. The is the episcopal moderator of the must be and do, before we talk." award was presented at an Oct. 13 National Newman Apostolate. The Archbishop returns often to the Campus dinner by Ambrose F. Dud­ The Sorin Award, established in basic tenets outlined in Vatican II: ley, Alumni Association president. 1965, previously has gone to the Rev. the Church is the people of God and Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC, Univer­ A native of Cleveland, Archbishop the layman has an integral part in sity president, and Bernard J. Voll, Hallinan is a 1932 Alumnus and holds the structure of that Church. an MA in history (1953) from John South Bend industrialist and civic Carroll U. in Cleveland. Ordained in leader. It is named after the priest "Unless the Church is related to 1937, he was in parish work in Cleve­ who founded ND and guided its for­ men and women in the market place land for five years and spent three tunes for a half century until his it can have no meaning," he once years as an Army chaplain in the death in 1893. declared on Campus. "The world Southwest Pacific. The latest winner is known as an will not be saved in the pulpit nor He was consecrated bishop of innovator in education, a pronunent in the sanctuary. It will be saved on Charleston, SC, in 1958 and ap­ figure in Church matters and leader in Main Street, Wall Street, , pointed archbishop of Atlanta four civil rights. But the moment of my and in the suburbs and cities." years later. ND gave him an honorary first meeting with Archbishop Halli­ He believes there are lessons to be u ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER learned from the protesters and dis­ senters. "What I am pleading for," he told a national Newman Club conference earlier this year, "is that yve take their side—espouse it, defend it. Share wth them, not their hatred, but their agony when they find teamed up in American life righteousness and racial hate, affluence and starvation, national honor in war but little na­ tional honesty in peace. There is something radically sick with a na­ tion whose law makers, when faced ' with rats and ill-fed and ill-housed people, voted for the rats. "Young jjeople have grown im­ patient and have indeed become rebels in their distress. They are aware of their influence in the life of society and they want to assume a role in it sooner. We must not con­ THE ARCHBISHOP and UNIVERSITY FAMILY* demn this protest and rebellion, rather "... of whom all Notre Dame is proud." we must meet it with an honest heart and share it %vith a Christ-like mercy. of religion are not to comment upon No, you find that the rmiversity com­ The danger exists that we will send the social and economic problems of municates through the clatter of the out intellectuals without roots, social this day, what is the Church for?" computer." workers without hearts, and Catholics Christian commitment does not He attacks not only the anonymous \vho are only faintly Christian." wipe away the world's ugliness by mass of people, but the too organized doubling a United Fund contribution. instruction that may also exist in Neither doctrine nor whin). His dec­ It is a commitment which is built on today's university. As he counseled laration was attacked, challenged. compassion which reaches into the Newman Club leaders, "insistance on Some Catholics in Georgia asked him heart," he once explained. true academic freedom could be your to publicly state his was not a "decla­ Safeguard. An important guard most needed contribution. Urge the ration of moral teaching, but a per­ against this danger is a vibrant, active freedom to teach, to hold, to dissent, sonal whim." He could not. He told system of Catholic education. But the in season and out." them—^in the weekly diocesan news­ system itself is in danger. The very And freedom—Shaving its roots in paper—that his statement on the war attributes of a Catholic system of truth—should spring from the Church was neither a doctrine nor a whim. higher education—development of the if from anyone at all. He has been "Both Pope Paul and Pope John total individual—are being attacked known to describe the Church's role had made much stronger appeals for by automation and depersonalization. as "society's yeast, society's sentinel peace," he commented. "My duty "The student enrolls," explains the and society's ideal." here is as a leader of this diocese; I Archbishop, "and finds, not Mark He has earned the recognition and must stand up and lead." Hopkins ready for dialogue at the acclaim of many, but his own words His creed is commitment: "If men other end of the log, nor Newman's fiortray him best: "noncommitment * Among the Award's official party and guests were university where the professors • were Alumni President "Bud" Dudley, Miss Irene Dunne will not do." and Father Hcsburgh. 'the living voice, the breathing form.' —P. Michael Boscle '66

The Edward Sarin Award Presented by The University of Notre Dame Alumni Association to MOST REVEREND PAUL J. HALLINAN, DJ)., LL.D. Archbishop of Adanta—Class of 1932 To speak with the tongues of men and of angels—and to cupancy of the Metropolitan See of Atlanta. His has been an have charity—that is indeed service to Our Lady and to Notre eloquent and authoritative voice of peace with justice in a time Dame. From his student years as an undergraduate editor and of turbulence. The future of man and of the Church has not a lay student. Archbishop Hallinan has spoken and written disturbed the faith of Archbishop Hallinan or his influence. effectively and eloquently in the tongue of man. Time, ordina­ Rather, by the clarity of his thought and expression, he has tion, talent, episcopal and archiepiscopal honors have evoked given the Barque of Peter an essential stability against the ebb the inevitable tongue of angels. From his pioneer priesthood. and flow of tides less objective. Father Hallinan took the two tongues of his apostolate, and his inherent charity, into the vital channels of the secular campus, HE is indeed a deserving Knight of Our Lady, clothed in the and there created new stature for the Newman Clubs. The armor of light and armed with the sword of the spirit, who has personal growth of the eminent American churchman has brought to the problems of our times not only an admirable continued to be shared generously in the pursuits of this in­ tolerance, but an exemplary and constructive leadership. As creasingly significant academic arm of the Church. strong as the rock on which his Church stands; as charitable as Our Lady; as militant and venturesome as the Sarin who founded his Alma Mater, Archbishop Hallinan is a Notre Dame IT was a recognition of reason, requiring no inspiration of the man of whom all Notre Dame is proud. Holy Spirit, that placed Archbishop Hallinan on the Liturgical Commission of the Second Vatican Council. The same per­ James D. Cooney Ambrose F. Dudley ception had elevated him to the demanding and initial oc- Secretary President

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 15 CARL YASTRZEMSKI and FOLLOWERS* Beontown's miracleman. TED ... Who's He?

az . . . Yaz . . . Yaz . . . and the fore signing, in his sophomore year, Y beat goes on. Beantown, USA, has with die Red Sox for a handsome never been more exhilarated over the $100,000 bonus. performance of an athlete — home Following the World Series Carl run, clutch hitting Carl Yastrzemski. flew to Miami wth Boston sports- Weeks after the 28-year-oId Bridge- writer Al Hirshberg, who is co-author hampton, L.I., native led the Boston of a new book, Yaz, which %vill be Red Sox to the American League pen­ printed by Viking early in '68. In nant and do\vn to the wire in the numerous conversations with Hirsh­ World Series before losing in seven berg, the American League's MVP re­ games to the St Louis Cardinals, the lated his great love for Notre Dame. town is still agog with excitement. "It is one of the deepest regrets of Can the sports miracle of '67 con­ his life that he was unable to finish tinue? Can the Bosox, a sorry ninth- classes at Notre Dame and graduate," place club in '66 and champions the Hirshberg relates. "Notre Dame was following year, put together a •winning Carl's first choice and even while he combination next summer? was on campus as a freshman in 1957 Local partisans who watched he had over 14 bonus offers from Yastrzemski mature into one of the major-league teams. He finally signed game's greatest outfielders believe the after a sophomore semester in 1958 adrenalin-type tempo of Tom Yaw- and because of his baseball commit­ Classes key's lads will spUl over into another ments he had to complete his educa­ season — or more. tion off season at nearby Merrimack And the chief reason: The Red Sox College, finishing in 1966. have finally come up with an inspira­ "Nevertheless," Hirshberg contin­ tional leader — a team player with ued, "Carl has kept a close relation­ total devotion, imselfishness and hu­ ship with his friends at Notre Dame. mility. During the winter, he often takes his Notre Dame men in this region pop vacation with a priest whom he met their suit buttons wth pride when when he first arrived on the campus. Yaz is mentioned. They are as proud Rev. Glenn R. Boarman CSC now of the American League's Most Val­ director of development. University of uable Player and triple-crown winner * Fans include Vice-President Humphrey and as Yastrzemski is of the University of (below in a picture taken five years ago) his wife Carol, daughter Mary Ann (left) and Carl III. Notre Dame which he attended be- Photos courtesy of Boston Herald Trcaclcr.

16 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER most about Yaz — the triple crown? of medical bridge" between the US The great catches? Spectacular and Russia while he is over there. throws? Clutch hits? In addition to his research in neuro­ "His leadership," declared the mil­ physiology, he is making contacts with lionaire Red Sox boss. "His inspira­ Russian medical students and their tion for the younger players." professors, trying to establish more Sox clubhouse man Don Fitzpatrick exchanges between the two coimtries. commented: "I thought there could He is earnest in his feeling that all never be anyone greater than Ted areas of friendly cooperation between Williams. But Yaz was everything and the US and USSR should be explored. more. He did things that even some Although an exchange program for of the players didn't know about. medical students has been in existence They talk about super stars, but Yaz for 10 years, there has never been an wasn't a super star. He was a super- American student with sufficient com­ super human being." mand of the Russian language to Fitzpatrick credits Yaz as the one take part in the program—untU Jim who held everything together on the Muller, that is. ball club. He divulged that a telegram He and his Notre Dame roommate from Notre Dame students gave the had everything in their room labeled young slugger a lift during a critical with its Russian name and they used point in the World Series. Yaz the language for all their conversa­ clouted a pair of home runs the next tions. The hard work paid off— day, sparking the 5 to 0 Red Sox first in good grades and now in the victory that squared their series with grant from the State Dept., the Ford the Cardinals. Foundation and an association of 50 "He just wouldn't let the guys fall American universities. All expenses apart," he recalled. "I think that for travel, tuition, subsistence and during the course of the season just personal needs are paid by the grant about every guy on the club felt like and, as an added bonus, a visit to Portland. It was through one of his it was over at one point or another. Siberia is included. freshman roommates that he also was But he wouldn't let them quit." The trip to Russia is being coimted introduced to Carol Ann Casper of Fitzpatrick recalled also how Yaz for the requirement of an elective Pittsburgh — the present Mrs. Carl called home run shots in the dugout project at Johns Hopkins Medical Yastrzemski and now the mother of before going to bat. "That night in School where Muller is a third-year Carl Michael Yastrzemski III, 6, and Detroit when we were losing 5 to 4 in student. The son of Dr. Paul Muller two lovely young daughters. It was the ninth in that real big game he '37 and Mrs. Muller of Indianapolis, Father Boarman who officiated at the told me—'I'm going to hit one out of he hopies to write a book about his wedding. here off this guy right now.' He did. expteriences after he returns to the States in January. "Yaz," Hirshberg smiled, "hopes "Two nights later in Cleveland, that Carl Jr., will someday bat clean­ Sam McDowell was pitching and he up for Jake Kline's Notre Dame base­ said the same thing—'Fitzy, I'm going ...and a Traveling Padre ball team." to get one off this guy right now.' And Rev. Jerome J. Wilson CSC, ND Yastrzemski himself never got that he did." vice-president for business affairs, will opportunity, deciding instead to And, so, the beat goes on . .. "Yaz lead a "Friends of Notre Dame" launch his starry career. It was cul­ ... Yaz ... Yaz." group to Europe in 1968. The tour minated the past season when he —J. Richard Lamere '49 will leave NYC May 11 and return socked 44 home runs, led the league June 1. Trans-Atlantic air travel will in batting with a .326 average, batted Calling Dr. Diplomat... be via Swissair and Scandinavian Air­ in 121 runs and finally inked a new Though being named an exchange lines. contract for $100,000 with Red Sox student rarely attracts much attention The itinerary includes Portugal, o\vner Yawkey and General Manager anymore, the assignment of James E. Spain, Austria, Italy, Germany and Dick O'Connell. Muller '65 caused a stir all the way Denmark Highlights of the trip ^wll Yaz's contract for '68 is exceeded to Capitol Hill. be a visit to the Shrine of Our Lady in Boston only by the $125,000 Ted Muller is the first American medi­ of Fatima May 13; Toledo, the home Williams received in his heyday. cal student to be chosen for exchange of El Greco and a stronghold during Yaz, who is limiting his winter din­ studies in Russia. Before he left for the Spanish Revolution; a perfor­ ner appearances to six occasions, Moscow State U. in August, he ex­ mance of the famous Lippezaner discloses he hasn't set any loftier goals plained that he hopes to build "a sort Horses at the Spanish Riding Acad­ for himself next season. emy in Vienna; a Papal audience in "I think 44 homers is a lot for me Rome; steamship cruise through the to hit," he conceded. "I don't know JIM MULLER '65 Rhine Valley; and a three-day tour if I can better that. I just don't Moscow his beat. through Fairytale Land of Denmark, know because the things I did this made famous by Hans Christian An­ year with the bat continue to amaze derson. me. I finally found out how to relax All friends of Notre Dame are wel­ and enjoy the game, I guess. come on the trip but a limited num­ "I think if I could hit between .320 ber of reservations will be accepted. and .330 and bat in around 100 runs Full details and a brochure are avail­ next year, it would satisfy me. I'm not able from Edgerton's Travel Service sure about the homers," Inc., 226 S. Main St, South Bend, What impressed Tom Yawkey the Ind. 46601.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 17 Headed for Friendlier Sl(ies For the nation's top-ranked living air ace, it was just a "short hop" to his new post this fall as assistant director :> of public relations at Gnmiman Air­ craft Engineering Corp. "I've been doing this sort of thing for the Air Force for the past 27 years," com­ mented Col. Francis S. Gabreski '42. Widi 371^ kills to his credit from World AVar II and Korea, the 48-year- old Notre Dame man, who attended the University from 1938 to 1940, retired from the command at Suffolk County (LI, NY) AFB and headed for his new job at nearby Bethpage, LI. At retirement ceremonies, the TttC M9SO Reunion Committees have popped their corks to promote the veteran pilot was presented the Legion festivities next June 7, S and 9. In letters to classmates of the 50-Year Club and of Merit, the nation's highest non- years ending in eights and threes, the committees suggested writing to friends and combat award. urging them to attend the weekend events. Rosters listing current addresses were included with the letters which gently prodded the Alumni to get those messages Asked if he thought he had lived a moving . . . by rail, air or sea power. charmed life, Gabreski nodded and explained, "The longer you stay up destroying other aircraft in time of territory in July, 1944 and was a ALUMNI FUND REACHES battle, the luckier you've got to be." prisoner of war until May, 1945. ALL-TIME HIGH One of the reasons for his departing After his liberation he was assigned In early December, contributions to the (un) friendly blue skies is that it as a test pilot at Wright-Patterson Air the University's 25th Annual Alumni Force Base. Fund were running at a record rate. gets a little rough educating nine The latest figures indicated that Alumni had made 438 more gifts this year than were made at the same time during the 30-¥eir Nib 1966 record-setting year, Dennis F, ALBERT A. KUHLE *15 Troester, director of the Fund, has 117 SUNSET AVE. reminded Alumni that contributions LAGRANGE, ILL. G0325 through the Fund are applied to the Your secretary was agreeably surprised to receive SUMMA goal. Moreover, contributors a note from FRANK E. QUISH 'U who resides to the SUMMA program automatically at 630 Merrick Ave., Detroit, Mich. 48202. Frank become contributors to the Annual informs ine that he is retired from the Burroughs Alumni Fund for the calendar year for Corp. and was national advertising mgr. of the which the gift is made. The 1967 An­ Burroughs Clearing House for 30 years. Frank sa^-s he has been able to go back to the Campus nual Alumni Fund will close Dec, 31.. several times a year for a few days at the Morris Inn. He goes to football games when he can get tickets and reports that his order was accepted for the game at Atlanta and hopefully at Miami. eight holes, but wc had a most enjoyable gabfcst Although Frank was not a member of the Class over the luncheon table. of '15 his response to my pleas for ncvfs was no EDWARD McOSKER '17 doubt prompted by the ready availability of the 523 MELROSE AVE. yellow postcard which appeared on page 30 of ELGIN, ILLINOIS 60120 the ALUMNUS. Will members of the Class of 'IS please follow suit. Your secretary will appretaate GEORGE WAAGE any neiv's items. His address is at the top of the 3303 WRIGHTWOOD AVE. Class column. CHICAGO. ILL. 60647 A letter addressed to EDWARD G. GUSHURST lil8 was returned as undelivered. If Ed liasa't already BIRTHDAY GREETINGS: Nov. 4, JAMES P. sent in hb current address, I suggest he do SO LOGAN, 2951 Fillmcre Way, Denver, Colo. 80210; soon with a copy of the change to me. Nov. 8, J. PAUL FOGARTY, '17 5555 Sheridan — Albert Kuhle Rd., Chicago, 111. 60640; Nov. 14, RAY C. WHIP­ PLE, 373 Wcslcm Ave., JoUct, 111.; Nov. 16, GROVER F. MILLER '16 FR.ANK. X. RYDZEWSKI, 8355 Burley Ave.. 1208 SOUTH MAIN ST. Chicago, HI. 60617; Nov. 22, FRANCIS A. AN­ COLONEL GABRESKI RACINE. WIS. 53403 DREWS, 424 Alisouri St., Fairfield, Calif. 94533; Nov. 23, WILLIAM J. ANDRES, 410 Dorchester A charmed life. Rd., Rochester, N.Y. 14610; Dec. 1, CHARLES Word comes from CARLETON D. BEH that he W. BACH^L^N '17, 11 Sunset Lane, Pompano has heard from our classmate, DANIEL C Beach, Fla.; Dec. 15, FRANK M. KIRKLAND children on Air Force pay. He also CURTIS and tliat Dan as of Sept. 25 was in '17, 950 S.W. 21st, Portland, Ore.; Dec. 18, admits that "I've had a full career." the hospital at a Veterans Administration Center CARLETON D. BEH '17, 5323 Waterbury Rd., in Wood, Wis. where he has been ^nce June 10. Des Moines, Iowa; Dec. 21, EDWIN T. BREEN, Among the decorations he earned Carleton states that Dan has undergone three 1542 Sherwin Ave., Chicago, lU. 60626; Dec. 28, in World War II and the heart surgeries and that he now has batteries PAUL E. EDGREN, 701 Culbcrton Dr., Okbhoma with wires connected to his heart. It was ex­ are the Distinguished Service Medal, City, Okla. 73105; Dec. 31, RENE A. ROD­ pected tliat after two more weeks of convalescence RIGUEZ, 2266 Broadu-ay, Denver, Colo. 80205; Distinguished Flying Cross, Distin­ Dan would be transferred to a nursing home at Jo*. 1, EDWARD R. McDONNELL, 316 Wood­ guished Service Cross, the French 2027 North Wells St., lhfil»^ukee. Wis. Dan's land Dr., Council BlulTs, loMa; Jan., LEONARD address at the Veterans Administration Center is F. MAYER, 721 S. Beach St., Daytona Beach, Legion d'Honneur and Croix de Room 623-60 North, Wood, Wis. 53193. Un­ Fla. 32014; Jan. 23, JOHN A. LEMMER, 901 doubtedly Dan would enjoy hearing from his old Lake Shore Dr., Escanaba, Mich. 49829. Guerre, the Polish Cross of Valor, classmates and would welcome our prayers for his British Distinguished Flying Cross and health and happiness. WEDDI.NG ANNIVERSARIES: Dec. 2, ED­ WARD J. KENNY, 74 Cameron Ave., Home­ the Belgian Croix de Guerre. PAUL FOGARTY and your correspondent were stead, N.Y. and EDWARD R. McDONNELL, recent guests of JOE FLINN for golf at the 316 Woodland Dr., Council Bluffs, Iowa; Dec. 20, During WW II he was American Crystal Lake (111.) Country Club. Paul and Joe B. A. MUNECAS, 16, 776 Georsctown St., Rio liaison officer to the Polish Air Force didn't do badly at all, but yours truly, who hit Fiedras, Puerto Rico 00927; Dec. 24, PAUL E. and flew 20 combat missions %vith a golf ball tliat day for the first time tn »x or EDGREN, 701 Culbcrton Dr., OUahoma City, seven years, was much less than adequate in the Okla.; Jan. 2, NEIL J. WHALEN, 1023 Cadieux them. He was shot down over enemy game. A chilly rain cut short our play after Rd., Grossc Pointe Park, Mich.; Jan. 4, W.

18 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER BREEN MCDONALD, 55 W. 5th Ave., San Even if it has been 50 years since you "broke "MOOSE" KKAUSE. BILL SHEEHAN and Mateo, CaL 94402. bread with the guy" in the Main Biul^ng <&uns JIM MARTIN. CHARLES W. CALL, 1M7 BUtmorc Dr., Win­ room, send him a card. Make your plans now We of '22 win greatly BOB Chet at lotiire ter Haven, Fla. is recovering from a tough op­ to see him in person this, your year on campus Class Reniuoas. He was ahnjs present at our eration. No cancer but be may bave had a this June. Time will melt a%ray the 50 years 5-year mnuoos. He was a reil gentleman and touch of hepatitis on a trip to India, Thailand after you've talked with him 15 minutes — youll was extremely loyal to his funily and friends; and Laos. As of now he sees every reason to be both start talking about "remember when?" also, to ND and '22. Flease do lemember Chet on hand for the June jubilee. "MORRIE" E. M. Christmas Greetings. May the New Year have in your prayers. Onr sympathy is extended to STARRETT, 419 Quincy St., Port Townscnd, in store for you and yours loads of health, happi­ the bmily of the deceased and to Jen, IKxon, Wash, reports: "worst worry over — no opera­ ness and contentedncss. May you live to be a hun­ his law partner, chise friend and law aaociate tion imminent. Concentrating on June." ''ERNIE*' dred and a long time in heaven before the devil for many yean. J. BURKE, 1416 N. New York Ave., Orlando, knows you're there. To our Class president J. RALPH COKYN Fla. 32803, \^ited the hospital for surgery. Was and his wife of 2545—IStb St.. Mofine, SL we in need of repairs and he had it done during the THEODORE C. RADEMAKEK tender profotnMl sympathy in the tragic death "dancing" ofT-scason. Dr. RENE RODRIGUEZ, PERU FOUNDRY CO. of their son Hon. JOHN CORYN, of East Mo- 2266 Broadway, Denver, Colo., is hoping to re­ 1919 PERU, IND. 46900 line, a 3rd district appellate court judge, who turn to Campus in June. "TEXAS" WILLIAM lost his life Oct. 5 along %rith four businessmen A. GRADY U7, Box 596, Carrellton, Tex. writes JAMES H. RYAN in the crash of a l^t plane in Saskatchewan. that he'll bom in on us come June. Welcome 2470 EAST AVE., APT. 314 ROCHESTER, N.Y. 14610 Canada. The group planned to fish near the rug is out for all '16 and *I7ers. 1920 area where the plane crash occurred dming a MAXIMILIAN G. KAZUS, 101 Knox Ave., You will see a picture from the last issue of the heavy snowstoim. John gtaduatMl from ND in Buffalo, N.Y. 14216, admits that he has been 1918 Class of the very distingubbed Hon. Lt. '51 and the Law School in '53. "off bis oats" but is planning on returning with Gov. SHERWOOD DIXON, a Democrat. He Now we know why BILL DWYER of London. wife to Campus in June. Max writes that Rt. belongs to the 1920 Class. He is as youtliful and Ohio failed io show at our Reunion. He and Rev. Msgr. FRANCIS P. MONIGHAN bom distinguished in every way as the President, LBJ. Mrs. Dwycr were viriting their daughter Mary March 13, 1883, died Aug. 8. A Requiem Mass I asked him to write to a Republican classmate who is doing Peace Corps work in Dakar. Sene­ was celebrated at St. Joseph Church in Gregory, Hon. JOSEPH P. O'HARA in Washington. I gal, West Africa. The Dwyer group toured S.D. by Bishop W. T. McCarty. On Aug. 10 talked with Joe and find that with arthritis, often Europe and Ireland after the Dakar nsit. J. in Oil City, Pa., Rev. Robert Bower celebrated very painful, together with a staunch Repub­ FRANK "RANGY" MILES has been named Mass and interment was in Cal\*ary Cemetery. lican in a Democratic administration, he is not as Outstanding Fraternal Chairman of the State of NORBERT G. NONNING's son reports that his happy a man as he might be if he were on the hdiana for the Knights of Columbus. There are dad passed away in Vet*s hospital in Cincinnati. Democratic team. He has the ability and ideas ax chairmen for each local council. FRANK BAIRD WELSH M6, Box 807, Fall that a good Democrat would use. I think Sher­ CLARENCE PAT MANION was awarded the River, Mass. writes that June '67 he became the wood would agree. Wanderer Forum Award, a silver Revere bowl, great grandfather of twin girls. Now let's hear I called the bank president, PAUL J. LOOSEN. in appreciation of extraordinary service to God from Dixon, Seng and all you guys if you can He just returned from a 30-day automobile trip and country. Frtun Dayton, Ohio, word comes top Welsh in the great grandfather field. Say that to Expo '67 in Montreal along the East Coast that FRANK BLASIUS has retired from his re­ guy Dr. NEIL J. "WHITEY" WHALEN, 1023 returning through Tennessee. He should be ques­ tirement. About one and a half years after Cadieux Rd., Grosse Potnte Park, Mich, along tioned as to why he spent only one day hi Frank closed out his many years of service with with his \vifc has been cutting up this summer. Montreal. Was it because be comes from a HQ Air Force logbtics command, he aimounces Staying at Dromoland Castle, out of Limerick, cattle and wheat country in a town of 800 in his affiliation with the physical ed. dept. at U. of he had several days for golfing. "Had letter from Okarehe, Okla. and couldn't agree with the Dayton, where he finds a most pleasant and re­ JOHN LEMMER before we sailed to Europe French, or was it the congested area of the East warding environment. on the Queen Elizabeth stating that he was going or was it he left his bank in charge of his Notre The DAN YOUNGs of Drexel KH, F^. via'ted my way but wc never got the chance to see him. Dame son and feared control of bis purse strings? Banff, Lake Louise and Alaska this siunmer. In Had to go to Paris for a meeting I was interested His daughter is with Saks Fifth Ave. in Los mid4)ctobcr they are seeing Expo 67 in Blon- in and was there for one week, then to Cher­ Angeles. treal and motoring along the St. Lawrei>ce to bourg and back on the last trip of the Queen This report will come out just before Christmas Quebec City and Ste. Anne de Beaopce. The Mary. What a ball." and I will have a new Ibt of our Class and an RALPH CORYNs earlier motored west through exchange of Christmas greetings from the mem­ Canada and on to Portland, Ore., where they bers will add cheer to many. greatly enjoyed seeing Mrs. PAT HIRSCH BUHL and BILL SCHMITT '10. Rev. GEORGE DAN W. DUFFY FISCHER CSC was stationed at St. Fiitrick's 1030 NATL. CITY E. Gib BLDG. Cathedral. NYC. bom Aug. 6 to Sept. 4. CLEVELAND. OHIO 44114 1921 LOUIS V. BRUGGNER G. A. "KID" ASHE 1667 RIVERSIDE Dlt> AFT. A 175 LANDING RD. N. SOUTH BEND, IND. 4G616 REUNION '68 ROCHESTER, N.Y. 14S25 1923 When all these 'l8eis — former St. Joe, St. 1922 The Good Lord has ^ven our Claas a welcome Ed»'ard, Brownson, Corby and Sorin Hallers — We are highly pleased with the eolargemeDt of reprieve from the stream of deaths usually le- meet this June it sure will prove a ball, recalling the staff of our news reporten for tliis colunm. pcvtcd in these columns, there being none to the time they did not have the pot or window. It is strictly a voluntary deal. Every living Class report nnce the last issue of the ALUMNVS. Be sure and plan on being there to keep *em from member is a potential reporter. Join our repor­ ^tead SUMMAtters and the functiomi^ of talking about what you did while on campus. ters* staff. Just send in the news about yourself the Sports and Games Library seem to have It'll be one great big bull session better than any and your Classmates in any manner and it viSi be attracted a goodly number of *23eTs. MARTIN of the "lites out" sessions. processed for publication. BRENNAN and JOSEPH DONALDSON were BERT SENG and his wife drove down to Dixon, The early fall edition of the ALUMNUS carried on Campus Sept. 13 for the SUMAIA conference III. and had dinner with their old friends the a rather brief report in the obituary column of and judging from the announcxment in the most cx-Lt. Gov. SHERWOOD DIXON and his Mrs. the death of CHESTER "CHET" A. WYNNE recent SUMMA news release, that Buffalo, N.Y. Seng reports that the Dixons with their mono­ SR of Oak Park, lU. on July 17. We feel we is included in fl^ht three next Mxy and Louis­ gram track star son PAT '67 are off to the West should add a few more details, and in particular ville in flight one in October, both of them are Coast calling on FRANK KIRKLAND and hop­ quote VINCE HANRAHAN who said that Chet's even now hard at work in their respective home ing to get in some good salmon fishing. FRED visit to the Campus to attend our 45th Reunion cities. L. STEERS *n, 1910 W. 107th St., Chicago, lU. last June bordered on the heioic. Chct, of course, Following 16 yean of service to ihc American 60643 sent the Illinois Bar neivs brief about WIL­ fully realized that he was very seriomly afflicted Federation of Labor, HARRY W. FLANNERY LIAM E. BRADBURY '16, Robinson, II!. 62454 with cancer. Nevertheless, he insisted on making retired Sept. 29 as radio coordinator for the AFL- being honored in recognition of achieving 50 years' his final pilgrimage to the Campus to be with CIO dept. of public relations. He aba col- law practice. -Also cited was former attorney his classmates for a final visit. Two close Chi­ minates about 51 years of activity in the field of general JOHN E. CASSIDY '17, 1128 Jefferson cago friends: Hon. ROGER KILEY and OJAY journalism and the more recent communication BIdg., Peoria, III. Mr. Cassidy gave the re­ LARSEN '23 accompanied Chet on his round- arts of the ether waves having been a reporter sponse for the Senior Counsellor Class. trip journey, and tenderly administered his needs. for his home tctWn paper, Hag€Tstowm_ (Md.) MaU, From DANIEL E. HILGARTNER JR. '17, Can anyone think of a greater lesson in University before coming to ND. On Campus he distin- Forest Springs, Harbcrt, Mich., comes the fol­ and class loyalty than that given by Chet in the gmshed Imnsdf as a student, Schoiastic staff mem­ lowing; "You know when you originated an last days of his life? We gratefully thank Rog ber, editor of the Dome and founder of the Notre exchange of birthday greetings betwieen classmates and OJay for their grand assistance to our be­ Dame Dmfy at about the time of bis graduation. I thought for a while you had gone fluffy and loved classmate. In tlus effort be was a man ahead of bis dmes that it was a ridiculous idea among old goats like Chet was a fine football pbyer at ND. Later and his brainchild £d not last ioog thereafter. ourselves but I was astounded at the number of he coached football at Midland Col., Creighton Flan inoneercd in radio journalism at WOWD cards I received from old friends and classmates and Auburn and was head coach and athletic Fort Wayne, KMOX in St. Louis and then went after my date was mentioned and — naturally director at the U. of Kentucky from 1934 to 1938. to Berlin as war concspondent for CBS. Hairy pleased. Think it is a great idea, as well as wed­ But Chet decided that law would be his chief also has been a frequent contributor to ding anniversary greetings." Appreciate your note, business concern in life. He became a member Dan. Personally believe we should give them of the law firm of Burton, Isaacs, DIXON the flowers when one can smell them. So you (JEROME '22) and Wynne. He had served as guys keep sending out the greetings. legal counsel for his home village of Oak Park, JOSEPH T. RILEY. 715 Hackley BIdg,, Mus­ lU. and was a trial lawyer for the Chicago Tran­ kegon, Mich, sent a copy of an interesting and sit Authority. The funeral services were held in greatly appreciated letter to PETER J. RON- Oak PaA but burial was in Omaha, Neb. FaU- CHETTI, 1242 Cambridge Dr., Corpus Christi, beareis included Jerry Dixon, Judge Roger Kiley Tex. 78404. Riley, thank Peter for birthday and Ojay Larscn. Others attending the funeral greetings. included J. FRANK "RANGY" MILES. REUNION '68 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER w «!. Daniel Cuihane '23 AN EXPERIENCED HAND OPENS AGAIN WITH JACS FTER A LIFETIME of working for the most worthwliile endeavor and should ABoys' Clubs of America, J. Daniel Cui­ receive the support of every citizen who hane '23 and '26 retired in 1965. But has a genuine interest in the progressive he found it tough to keep the irons out development of our coiutry and its of the fire. He's back helping young citizens," Cuihane comments. men — and women, too, this time — Except in unusual cases, he does not as deputy director of Joint Action in have any direct contact with the Job Community Service Inc. (JACS). Corps graduates. However, he has be­ J.ACS is an organization aimed at come involved with individual Corps- getting jobs for Job Corps trainees. The men through contacts with corporation private, nonprofit corporation was or­ executives and has been able to place center where he learns a skill and re­ ganized by representatives of the Na­ several of them in excellent jobs. "Two ceives some basic education and then tional Conference of Catholic Charities, of our Corpsmen have already obtained returns to his home community. At National Catholic Community Service scholarships to universities through our this point, if some interested citizen and the National Council of Churches. efforts," he points out. does not help him get established in J.ACS works through established church Naturally, any new organization has the community and in the job, he may agencies and community groups to find a great many problems, but Cuihane become a tax consumer instead of a volunteers to aid Job Corps gradu­ feels that "considering the fact that tax payer for the rest of his life. ates returning to their homes or new the great majority of our Corpsmen "We hope thinking citizens through­ communities. are dropouts from school, we feel the out the country will volunteer to ren­ J.ACS volunteers set up job inter­ program has been most successful. der this personal service to these Job views, provide transportation or help "This does not mean that we have Corps graduates." the Corpsmen find living quarters or been successful with every Corpsman, Cuihane himself knows all about per­ social activities. In short, JACS in­ but when you consider that within the sonal service. He spent 42 years in sures that the nation's investment in the year there will have been 80,000 of Boys' Club work, assisted in the or­ Job Corps program is not wasted. these Corpsmen returning from training ganization of the USO during World Cuihane, who makes his home with centers, we believe our record has been War II, was a member of the White his wife Marguerite in Chevy Chase, most satisfactory. House Conference on Youth and the has been on his new job since March. "Probably our biggest problem is White House Conference for the Pre­ For some time he was the only person securing enough volunteers to work vention and Control of Juvenile De­ employed by J.ACS so he was involved with these Job Corps graduates to help linquency and has lectured frequently in setting up the entire program. Now them get oriented in their community, on youth topics. He has also served as that the organization is growing, his to see that they are employed and act vice-president and member of the duties have become more definite: de­ as a counselor to them until they are Alumni Board of Directors of ND and veloping a board of directors, establish­ securely established. We believe our is a charter member of the National ing contacts with national organizations program offers a wonderful opportunity Association of Social Workers. and securing their endorsement, assist­ for citizens to render a very construc­ A final word from Cuihane the Pro­ ing regional directors and getting na­ tive service to those who need it most. moter: "Anyone wanting additional in­ tional publicity. "What it boils down to basically is formation regarding our program can On one of his recent promotion trips, taking a boy who has been a school contact me at our National Office, he visited California, Nevada and Texas dropout, has been frustrated and hope­ Room 1009, Dupont Circle Building, to speak about J.^CS and secure volun­ less, and providing him with a second 1346 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washing­ teers. "It seems to me that this is a chance through a Job Corps training ton, DC 20036."

magazines and authored four books. Assignment sons who knew or knew about ''Rock" and his to Berlin, Pattern for Peace, The Church and publication date is tentatively set for spring, JAMES R. MEEHAN the Workingman and a book not yet published 1968. His theme is the inspirational effect which 301 S. LAFAYETTE BLVD. entitled Which Way, Germany? Flannery and his Rockne had on many thousands of youngsters in 1924 SOUTH BEND, IND. 46601 wife plan to move to to live out his own time and in the legend which faas their retirement- evolved. Paul has been a frequent Campus visitor WILLIA&f J. CROOK writes, "After 30 years MAURICE B. FRANK for years listed on the and he filled me in on more details during the as postmaster in my home town, I have retired Alumni office's **mail-retumcd-unclaimed" list, weekend of the Iowa game. Wallace's book, spending my summers at our lake home near has recently been added to my active list of Notre Dame, from Rockne to Parsegkiem was Detroit Lakes, Minn., and my winters in Rpe* classmates, as an executive of Stamp Dispensers, fiist published in the fall of 1966 and because of stone, Minn, (the Fun City of Podunk Valley) Inc., 30 N. LaSallc St., Chicago, lU. 60602. the great interest which developed in the '66 with two months in Arizona to break the winter's Authors PAUL CASTNER and FRANCIS WAL­ Number One team, his publishers asked hizn to bite. Last winter my wife and I spent a month LACE continue to develop the Rockne lore with bring the book up to date by including the 1966 with our youngest son in Levittown, L.I., and recent books or planned volumes. Paul has almost season. a month with our only daughter in Beltsville, Md." fimshed a long list of taped interviews with per­ Don't Hesitate — Be With Us In '68!

JOHN P. HURLEY including 10 days in Rome, a day in Venice five June 9, 1967 bad been in our mothball fleet of 2085 BROOKDALE RD. in Paris and four in London. It was a first dreams. Jim" 1923 TOLEDO, OHIO 43606 experience for all of us and continuing cdncatioa VIRGIL FAGAN and GEORGE CHAO were in its most effective form. having their own special 42nd reunion with their Received this letter from JAMES E. ARM­ "The unexpectedness of the trip endowed - it wives in Penang, Malaysia. Virg spent seven STRONG, our own former Alumni Secretary. with a spontaneity and a lack of organization weeks in the Orient and a two-week "resting up" We cherish the hope that wc will be reading which turned out to be one of its most appre­ period in Hawaii before coming home. He saw more of this talented fellow who is a genius in ciated features. Girl-watching on the \a. Vcneto, MIKE VELASCO in Manila and Mike looks putting thoughts into words. girl-watching in St. Marie's Square, giri-watching great. George has a son living in Brooklyn and ''The trip has added an enormous stature to on the Champs Elysces and girl*watching in a daughter who is a doctor living in Belfast, the role of the Armstrongs as debtors of the Class Camaby St. (our hotels were Icxsited dose to Ireland. As indicated before George is retired of '25. Our return plane landed two weeks ago all these post-doctoral areas) proved that the now and is busy transbting St. Thomas from today. I am just beginning to cuimc down. thoughtfutness of the Class had exceeded all English into Chinese. His wife Joan is a prin- "Dramatic and attractive as Africa sounded, previous achievements. Marion and PhO were dfal of a grade and high school %rith 3,500 common sense indicated an adjustment of the very impressed with the scenery and the history students. In a few years when Ac will retire program, which proved to be uncommonly con­ of our environment, they plan on a visit to the US and ND. (George structive. Instead of a few days in Ghana wth "The quiet sunset of retirement has been post­ ... why not make it for our 45th?) Phil and a few days in Europe ^^ith frustration. poned indefinitely by the fireworks of this three* A short note from LEN FRETT in St. Jo­ We adopted *Plan B' whereby Brother Phil (still vfeek rubbing of one magic lamp after another. seph's Hosp. in Aurora, HI. tells me fae faas been on vacation and most willing) met us in Rome '*You can see how inadequate thanks seem after under tfae weather since March. Thanks, Lcn, and stayed vnth us for the entire three weeks this totally highlighted summary of what .until and our prayers to you for a speedy recovery.

20 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER JAMES I. WARGIN MD writes from LA he If this dinner honoring JIM CROWLEY was am stin covering the same temtoij xa MJrh^an has been associated with the U. of So. Cal. being held in Nome, Alaska tonight, I'd be and Incfiana." medical school as clinical prof, of obstetrics and there.' I think this reflects the spirit when A copy of a letter from Jim Armstroi^ to gyn., in addition to private practice. Jim teaches Toots Shor came to Scranton on a broken leg. Mrs. T. J. Barry, 2 N. Dewitt, Morgan ICllt and acts as a senior attending ph>'sician on the Gene Tunney from New York and Vince Lon»- CaGf. advised me of the death of TOM BARRY. US service at LA Gen. Hos. and also consultant bardi in a special plane from Green Bay." A few days later word came of the death of at LA County Health Dcpt. in the Bureau of FRANK HOWLAND received the E. H. Meyen JAMES F. BffcNICHOLAS. Remember Hank Maternal & Child Health. Memorial Award which is presented annually to Wuizer^s Mass Fund! Our Hank has done a JOE BURKE wrote: "After long years in the the individual who has contributed the most to trcmeDdoos job as treasurer. Hb Mas cards and federal service I return to work in retirement as the life insurance industry. Congratulations, letters to the families of our classmates have claim examiner attorney for the comptroller of the Frank. I ran into BILL SEIDENSTICKER and been commcodable. Special thanks to PAUL city of NY." "Congrats" to GEORGE VER- his wife at "Half a Sixpence" in Columbus and ROMWEBER, JOHN TRAYNOR, GIL SCHAE- GARA who is the first ND man to be prcs. of for Frank Howland's information I found out it FER. CHUCK COLLINS, JOHN DROEGE and the Touchdou-n Club of NYC. BERT BER- was Bill and not you who paid for my Class so many others who are always on hand to help TELLI is on the present board of directors (this picture while I took Bishop JOHN KING MUS- in our Class efforts. If some of you did not get information was on the stationery). George SIO out to the Airport after that beautiful Class a copy of our owm Bishop Musno's talk kt me writes: "Saw DON MILLER, RIP MILLER. Mass sung by the CSC Brothers, led by our hear from yoo. ADAM WALSH and CHUCK COLLINS at a own JOHN KANE'S son. BILL SEIDENSTICKER advised me of the fine testimonial for JIM CROWLEY in Scranton JOHN W. COURTNEY'S note said: **We sold death of JOSEPH E. FTTZPATRICK on Aug. April 30. Don Miller was in great form and our home in Dearborn and now reside in Long 15. Joe was retired VP and senior trust ofiBcer was the best speaker on the program. Jim was Beach, Ind. The baby oE the family Nancy Jean of the Florida National Bank. He is survived kind enough to have me on the dais. I re­ graduated from St. Kfary's of the Woods in June. by bis wife Ruth, 903 Paradise Ave., Coral GaUes, counted what Don had said a few years ago She teaches at the Notre Dame parish school. Fla. A Mass wiB be said for Joe and yon fellows paying him a tribute by saying very sincerely. Long Beach, so the five arc off the payroll. I can add him on your prayer list.

J. N. GELSON T. AHEARN, GERVASE A. FROELICH, TOBE freshman at Notre Dame. Qetus visited Mexico GELSON & LO^VELL, INC. GISH, JOHN GLASKA, BILL O'KEEFE, JOE a few years ago and was entertained by CARLOS 1926 200 E. 42nd ST. MADDEN and CHAMP C, VAUGHAN. Further PALOMINO and RAFAEL GOMEZ in Mexico NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017 contributions, of course, are always welcome. City and FERNANDO TRAVINO in Monterey. DANIEL J. O'NEILL was among the 11 fellows The wisdom of establishing the Afass Fund has HERB BROWN (who, incidentally, started out in honored by the Illuminating Engr. Society at its already been brought home to us. Although only life in Aurora but in recent years has been living Montreal Conf. Sept. 14. He is credited with a few months have passed rince June we have at San Leandro) also iduted these men a few many new lighting designs, particularly in indus­ lost three classmates. BILL CARTER, JOHN years earlier so they know we are keeping track trial lighting indoors and out. Manager of in­ McBRIDE and JOHN "SKIPPER" SCANLON. of them. BERNIE ABROTT is the Federal dustrial lighting for the Holophane Co. Inc., NYC, Bill Carter had attended the Reunion with his Judge m Oakland. "SCRAPIRON" has moved to he is the author of numerous papers and articles wife. She said that the trip was almost a honey­ Modesto, Calif. Dave does not exactly say so in the trade press. IS PROBST writes, "Haven't moon because they had only been married a year. but he implies that "Scrapiron" has retired. seen a '26 since last year's Reunion. Been be­ She pointed out that Bill was responsible for her JOHN HOGAN is in West Covina; he lost his sieged by friend and enemy for tickets to Miami- becoming a Catholic two years ago. She said she wife recently and will appreciate your prayers. ND game. Are you coming?" told him over and over again how right this was Dave also advises that MIKE &fcDERMOTT for her. Bill himself had a colorful career. Most is in Long Beach along with JOE MADDEN, a of the years following graduation were spent in leading barrister. Dave saw DON SEHL in San CLARENCE J. RUDDY 111 W. DO^VNER PL. newspaper work in the vicinity of Newark, N,J. Mateo and at the time of writing the letter his AURORA, ILL. 60304 One of the outstanding features in his professional Club was planning the annual dinner for Coach 1927 life \%'as his coverage in '34-'35 of the Lindbergh Puseghian and three Notre Dame pbyers of the The day of the So. Cal. game was not a total baby kidnap-murder case. He covered the arrest East-West Shrine Game. Don is in semi- loss at least for a few of the lawyers of the and trial of Bruno Richard Hauptmann com­ retirement and is doing a good job in arranging Class. MIKE SWYGERT, BILL TRAVIS, JACK pletely. He scr\'cd with the Army Air Force the dinner which will be held in the San &&teo DAILEY and your secretary were invited to at­ during WW H and then resumed his publicity Elks Club on Christmas Day. Dave of course tend the annual dinner of the Notre Dame Laivyer business. was at the Reunion and says he put FR.\NK Alumni at the Hans Haus in South Bend fol­ who lives in Hazelton, Pa. CONWAY in the competent hands of LOU lowing the game as recognition of the fact that wrote mc about the death of John KIcBride who HOUGH and then came home to hear the good we all had served on the staff of the first volume. was a teacher at Hazelton HS. John died sud­ news that HORACE SPILLER Just brought in AfARC FIEHRER had also been invited but was denly shortly before the start of classes. He had another well in Texas. unable to attend. Following the dinner the four an excellent record as a teacher and advisor of JOE MADDEN has written that after he fin­ o{ us and our wives joined EUGENE KNO- his pupils. In 1366 the yearbfwk was dedicated ished Notre Dame, he took his law at USG and BLOCK, BOB IRMIGER and EMMETT BAR­ to him. AU of the lawyers will remember has been practicing in Long Beach nnce 1930. RON and their wives at South Bend Country "Skipper" Scanlon- He came from New Mexico He has three grown sons. Club. By the end of the evening the score of and went back there upon his graduation. He was Some time ago thfise of us who ordered Re­ the game had been completely forgotten. an active Iaw>-er during his entire career. union pictures received an tdentifica^n chart. A few ^vceks ago our Class prcs. DAN CUN­ DAVE HICKEY of Saratoga, Calif, has passed Credit for the idea which led to the preparation NINGHAM sent a letter to those members who on some interesting news from his area. He says of this chart probably should go to JOHN could not attend our Reunion asking for a con­ he has talked to Dr. CLETUS BANWORTH of GLASKA more than to anyone else. He wrote tribution to the Mass Fund. So far checks have Milbrac, Calif. CIctus* oldest boy is a West a letter of appreciation to DICK HALPIN, VAN been received from HUGH L. CAMPBELL JR, Pointer now teaching at the Academy. His CUNNINGHAM and others who completed the BILL CLARKE JR, AL DIEBOLD, FRANCIS second is at Cal. Poly, and the youngest is a job.

LOUIS F. BUCKLEY CECIL ALEX.ANDER has moved to Surfside, CaliL and to TOM KEEGAN '20, an attomer 6413 N. SHERIDAN RD., AFT. 1007 Fla.; NORB SEIDENSTICKER to Southern Pines, in Rockford, HI. for their letters of apprcdation 1928 CHICAGO, ILL. 60626 N.C.; WALTER LAYNE to Santa Monica, Cal.; for nxy efforts in writing this column. and Father JIM McSHANE has returned to his May I add for the Class of '28 our appredation DONALD A. TEAHAN died on May 27, 1964 mission in Honduras. ART DENCHFIELD u to JIM ARMSTRONG on his retirement for all following an acute coronary thrombosis. Don with the Kcycs Realty Co. in the Mianu area* he £d for our Cbus over the past 39 yean. We had been with "Whitney Aircraft Corp. in East Incidentally, Art has four boys, ages from 17 ta will miss you, Jim. Hartford, Conn, for 20 years in penonncl work. 26, who are single. A Chicago friend of mine advned that HENRY He is survived by his widow Claire who lives in BILL BROWN and your secretary spoke at the MASSMAN went to Rome tlus summer to see Hartford. Don attended our 20- and 25-ycar re­ National Catholic Social Action Conf. at the U. John Cardinal Cody recehre his red hat, He unions. A Mass was offered for liim at the request of San Francisco this summer. We are also mem­ also informed me that Henry's three sons are of the Class. Father LEO FRIERSON OSB, who bers of the Board of that organization. Inci­ members of the Ma^mnn Construction Co. in received his MA with us, is also deceased. dentally, BILL BROWN did an outstanding job Kansas City which operates nationally and which Tlianks to GENE O'BRIEN I am pleased to in an article on civil disobedience in the WtS' is listed in the top 500 contractors by the £)if»- advise you of the marriage of JACK DOYLE. consin Bar Bulletin for Aug., 1967. GEORGE ntenuE Ntws Record, This is the first marriage I have reported in years. KELLEY had an excellent article in the July JOHN ANTVS informed me that WILLARD How about additional ones or, better yet, a 13, 1%7 issue of America on liturgical changes. WAGNER had undergone some major internal report of a birth? Who has the youngest child? I note on the letterhead of correspondence from surgery, but had fully recovered. John's son and Please advise. the International Assn. of Insurance Council that BILL DWYER's son are at Loyola U. Law Congratubtions to CHARLES DUCEY, the JOE GRIFFIN is secretary-treasurer of that or­ SchocJ this year in Chicago. I was pleased to new deputy supreme knight of the K of C; to ganization. note a picture of BILL O'NEILL, preudent of JIM SHOCKNESSY on reappointment to his Thanks to DAVE HICKEY '27 of Saratoga, Leaseway Transportation Corp., in the July, 1967 fourth term as chairman of the Ohio Turnpike issue of Fortune m^arine. It was also a pleasure Commission; to Judge BOB GRANT, chief judge to see a picture of HOWIE FHALIN and aa of the US District Court for Northern Indiana, article ab

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER 21 I am most appreciative of the cooperation 1 have letxived from those who have completed and Tctumcd thur confidential questionnaire and from CORA STREET MAP SHOWS the classmates who are assisting in the financing Bernard Loshbotiffh of the survey. Our president BERNIE GARBER THE WAY OUT OF SLUMS is directing an effective publicity program to pro­ mote attendance with the aid of BILL DWYER o HOUSING leaders across the country, Among the enthusiastic fans of Cora who is obtaining excellent cooperation from others Cora Street is almost as well known Street is Senator Charles Percy (R-IIl) from whom you will receive correspondence dur­ T ing the next few months. ED QUINN is do* an address as 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. who arranged to show the movie to his ing his usual good job on local arrangements. Cora Street in the Homewood-Brush- colleagues. lEs "rave review" of the JIM COONEY and JOHN THURIN and their ton area of Pittsburgh is the "star" of film and the project in a Senate speech staff in the Alunuu Office are giving us excellent cooperation. a documentary movie about improving have brought Pittsburgh and Loshbough We have already heard from a ntunber of class­ the living conditions of the country's into the national limelight mates who will attend their first Reunion in middle income group. The film—and June, such as my old roommate JOE BRANNON "The idea is not an original one— from Phoenix, Ariz., HAROLD MILLER from the redevelopment of Cora Street—are everyone in housing has been trying to Pomona, Calif., BILLY WOOD from Santa Fe. the work of ACTION-Housing Inc., do this for more years than I can N.M., and BILL HIHILEY from Springfield, whose executive director is Bernard remember," Loshbough points out Mass. I have assurances from JACK CANIZARO Loshbough '29. and GENE O'BRIEN that TROY BONNER of However, the formula which AC­ Jackson, Klass. will be there for his first Reunion. ACTION-Housing remodeled the 22 TION-Housing developed as a step to Incidentally, Troy visited Gene this summer in two-story row houses on Cora Street to Minnesota. the solutioa of rebuilding America's I have also heard from a number of those who show the advantages of rebuilding rather slums, is a new idea worked out by than razing. They bought the houses have attended past reunions that tlicy will be Loshbough, the group's attorney and there, including ART DENCHFIELD of Coral for $4000 each and spent about $6000 officers of some of the large corporations Gables, Fla., KEN POWER, Commissioner of per unit in remoleding. Now the ren­ on the ACTION board. the Board of Elections in Rochester, N.Y. and ovated houses cost the tenants just a ART MILLER who reports that our 40-ycar Loshbough is convinced that "to solve Reunion is already becoming the main topic when few dollars a month more. he talks to MIKE HOGAN, BERNIE SCHUH, Financially ACTION-Housing "broke the problems of the inner cores of WAYNE BUSHMAN and FRANK McCARTHY even" on Cora Street by selling the American aties will involve a joint in Fort Wayne, Ind. CHRISTIE FLANAGAN, houses back to the landlords but Losh­ venture between government and the who has two sons with him in lus shipping service private sector, with private enterprise business in Port Arthur, Tex., will return for bough believes it could have been a the Reunion. Christie saw ELMER WYNNE money-maker. Now he's helping set up taking the leadership where appropriate, recently in Colorado. Elmer handles labor rcla^ the Allegheny Housing Rehabilitation and with both fully and sympathetically tions for Safeway Stores and is leaving Denver understanding the role of the other. to go to San Francisco where he will have charge Corporation (AHRCO) to undertake of the Pacific coast district. such projects on a large scale. "Otherwise, in my belief, nothing of I appreciated hearing from Esther and MIKE According to Loshbough, who has great significance is going to happen in HOGAN from Ireland and from Kay and JIM solving a problem that will take genera­ AIXAN from Honolulu where they were attend­ been on the ACTION-Housing staff ing the American Bar Assn. meeting. I talked smce 1957, "AHRCO" is repeatable tions, at best, to work out The solu­ to BILL ARMIN when he n-as in Chicago to anywhere. The basic idea is that a new tion must include not only the provision attend the funeral of BOB RUPPE '31. Bill had three or four million dollar corporation of housing but must simultaneously seen MAX GAUTHIER at Expo 67. LOU NORMAN has retired from General Motors aftcr can make 1000 new houses out of old develop and implement comprehensive 32 years of service. JOHN RICKORD saw ones every year, rent or sell them to programs in education, development of GEORGE CRONGEYER, JOE KANE and BER­ families at reasonable rates—^and still manpower, public health, recreation and NIE GARBER at a ND Club meeting in New race relations. Yoric recently. make a profit of §500 per unit. A How about adding a note on your Christmas limited dividend corporation such as "We must look at the total dty and cards .uiviung dassrtutes that you will sec them AHRCO can secure a mortgage for 90 make a frontal attack on its problems at the '28 Class Reunion on June 7, 8 and 9? per cent of the total costs and expect as a whole and coordinate or eliminate Also marie your 1968 calendar for these dates. to begin reaping dividends five years piecemeal approaches." LARRY STAUDER after organizing. He knows this will cost money and ENGINEERING BLDG. Cora Street's houses were redone great ingenuity and he believes "the 1S2S NOTRE DAME, IND. 46556 inside and out as "an honest demonstra­ job will (or should) include universities Yes, it is true, JOE DAUTREMONT and hU tion," Loshbough explains. "We paid such as Notre Dame, which must tool wife, Judy, were back for the Southern Cal game up to produce skilled manpower to and for the after-game Class get-together as were prevailing wages and bought every Generieve and BILL WILBUR. These CE class­ ounce of our materials on the open enter the field and take meaningful mates have been in contact frequently but it was market and we took no gifts for con­ leadership in urban affairs and de­ the first meeting for Judy and Gene. Other struction—^not one." velopment" viators were MICKEY McMAHON, our Class VP from New Orleans; Mildred and ALBERT ZOELLER of Hammond, and Ruth and Class VP JOE WHALEN of Des Moines. JOE LENI- HAN our Class pres. sent his regards and best wnshes — and his regrots. He wasn't able to break the ticket barrier and faces the same dilemma for the post-Michigan State gct-togcthcr. Others who attended include Rev. LOUIS THORNTON, CSC who had the pleasure of be­ ing host for two of his nephews and their wives; BOB VOGELWEDE ivas accompanied by his son Rev. Bob, Jr who shared their time between the '29crs and younger son Tom who is a senior at ND. Class Chaplain Rev. OTIS WINCHESTER had the pleasure of the company of a seminary class­ mate. Father Otey and Dorothy and CLETE SCHNEIDER and Class photographer FRANCIS MEYER and his wife, also Ahna and GAYLORD HAAS as it^ell as Dorothy and JIM DIGAN were back to share their fellowship with the new­ comers and the "regulars." Margaret and FRANK FLYNN were again here from New York. The Oliver Hotel has been demolished to make way for new multi-story Pick Motel. The Flynns inade Randall's Inn their headquarters. Dorothy PLUNKETT will have most of her family back for the Michigan State game. Mar­ garet and LARRY STAUDER and LARRY II '67 now at Purdue had the MAURICE STAU- DERs '41 of Danville, III. here for the weekend. Just a paragraph of explanation. The "mail-

22 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER ing list" enclosed with the get-together notice civil service in Dec. '65, Newark Air Stewm, I do. The fiaaadil iniMun ef naias five ckal- is that which ivas used last Year. When the Newark, Ohio. Earlier t^ year he volunteered diea and jiosiiiiag iU iritli a oaOege eJhcifiim Alumni Office offered to send this mailing to the his services in Vietnam as a construction accoun­ does aot leave modi leeway for a social Etc. My entire active list it invited confusion. The list tant and left the country Blay 25 for one year. two youagest aie senior and Jaaior senieUiwely is a compilation of those who have attended He is in Saigon and wtnlld welcome any letters. at Notre Osae. Bat I am dented «B ND and recent after game get-togethers. It was a gimmick His address is THOMAS J. JORDEN, OICC/RN an it stands for. Hope to see yon all max year." to stimulate aUendance. It helped, but the grape­ Code 331, AFO San Frandsco 96214." And tnm CHABI.IF. COLTON. Taaatoa, Mai*.: vine tells us that a number of '29ei3 who saw From JOE KRAKER, Akron, Ohio: "Wm ic- "On Jnae 3 daughter Charlotte Anne was isiriril the game had commitments which conflicted with tum for Southern Cal. and Mirhigan St. games. to CHARLES IflJMHY '63 at the I—amlatr the Class function. My No. 3 son, Jerry, is now a junior at ND. Cooceptioa dnndi in Tanntoa. To make it a Before we finish the Southern Cal story (we He will graduate on my 4Qth annivcrniy. We coaplete Notre Dame weddiag tk best man was won't mention the second half) wc'U return to have two older sons both priests in the Cleve­ Charlotte's brother John '70 and Kev. TOM the DAUTREMONTs. JOE has been doing engi­ land diocese — Rev. John is a prof, at Boxromeo SULUVAN CSC '48 married the eoople. Lt. neering for the past eight years for Strong, Seminary in Wickliffe, Ohio and Rev. Joseph is and Ua. Vhaptj are Ihnag ia Newpoet, KJ. Strong and Strong Architects. They specialize at St. Jude's in Elyria. We have t«n> manied My irife and I and the newiywedt expect to attend the Navy game — hope ta see soaK '29en in building schools and hospitals. Daughter JUDY daughters and 1 am grandfather seven times." thete." was graduated from St. Mary's in '60 and re­ From Father OTEY WINCHESTER: "I talked ceived her MS in '61 from Notre Dame. Kathleen with JOE FRIEL and Mrs. Jim Friel this morn­ KARL MARTERSTECK noir rcndes at 2739 is presently a senior at St. Mary's. Bill and Joan ing in N.Y. and N.J. I was shocked to learn of S.W. Rstton CL, Fkntland, Oit. 97201. He are in high school at Lima. Their residence is JIM FRIEL's death." From the Alumiu Office writes: "It any oC yen feOows are oat tUs my 2205 Odcma, Lima 45806. Joe's brother Rev. we have news of the death May 29 of WILLIAM 1 can asrare them a warm welcome at the Mar- JI.M DAUTREMONT CSC ordained in 1936 has H. BUilNS. His family may be addressed c/o teistecks'. I came out here a year ago to cstdb- taught at Notre Dame HS in Nilcs, III. but is Mayor William F. Bums, 3 Shelley Road, Ken­ lisb Great Lakes Dredge and Dod Go. on die now in Santiago, Chile. By the way, the Alumni dall Park, N.J. 08824. We wish to express the West Coast. We are known as the Fadfic Dir. Office has furnished me with one copy of the sympathy of the Class to his family and to assure We see Rer. NORTON CSC and Rer. CHARI.F.S revised mailing list for the Class. My former them that he will be remembered in our prayers. HARRIS often at V. of Portland. Yoong KARL list is about four years old and quite out-of-date. From JOHN GILTINON, Chicago: "This wiU '56 lives in Washugton, DC They have five Fully 20 percent of the '29cn have had address inform you of the July 27 death of GEORGE T. children jncfading oar first granddantfiter- bora or status changes in past four years. You will RATEGAN who Uved at 2410 E. 77th St., Chi­ in Hay. Oar dao^ter Teiry and bnuty of two receive an up-to-date list before the 1969 Reunion. cago with his sister Bemice. Please remember boys Eve in Fhibdelphia. Her hndiaad ART The yellow insert cards in the recent ALUMNUS me to Father Dorcmus." The Class joins with McMANUS attended ND bat finished at Holy have yielded this news: From TOM JORDEN's George's many friends in expressing our sympathy Cross in NROTC and is a Navy flyer now teach­ son, *'Since receiving my father's mail and read­ and the promise of our prayers. ing at Pennsyhrania. I saw CLETE SCHNEIDER in Cleveland recently." Karl iGdn't say this, bat ing your column, I thought I would %vrite and JACK FARR, Baldwin, N.Y. expresses the Clete (fid, "They have named a new mg far let you know of his whereabouts. After being in situation of many of lu: "No one regrets more my Karl — just another hazard of succca." the paint business for 36 years he went into inability to join my classmates on Oct. 14 than

BEVERE PLXJNKETT pressions of sympathy offered at the time of Prayers £rom the Class of 'SO are asked for ED O'SHAUGHNESSY HALL Jim's death, July 25. I am sure he will be re­ CONNOR who . 8; and for Mary im MCDONALD of LOS Angeles wrote as about the Motz, wife of JOHN HOTZ who died in JawH DICK DONOGHUE is Ii\^ng in San Diego and death of her husband JIM who £ed suddenly of aiy. ANDY ASIAN wrote that he had a c^ commutes each week to Litton Industries, Inc. a heart attack, April 17. His four children and from Larry Crooin in Dayton cariy this year advanced marine tech. div.. Culver City, Calif, for Mrs. McDonald ask that Jim's classmates remem­ when Andy was recuperating firom a heart attack. his work. Three boys in school keep his wife ber him in their prayers. He was getting on well and ewpccted to be oat Mary and him busy. He enjoys the ALUMNUS, CHET ASH^L4N wrote that things are gcnns at Notre Dame for a ball game in the bSL but would like to get some direct word from TOM well with him and the Little Chair Co. be TIM TOOMEY has sent me several items of K.\SSIS, FRANK LEDERMANN. CHOUSE operates down in Morristown, Tenn. For many news about Class memben. I wiU quote or para­ years he worked hard in building and getting LONG, CHUCK BOHRMAN. Dick is out to phrase some of his letters: "BILL WALSH was established the parish church that now thrives in get FRANK WALLACE'S new book after watch­ (mt in Vietnam early in the year for the Navy his home town. As aluays it was great news to ing him on the Today Show with Hugh Downs dept. to make a survey of trampoftation-siq»pBes - and Joe Garagiola. He wants to be remembered get a letter from Judge TOM McDOUGAL of Antigo, Wis. He is recuperating very nicciT problems there. JOHN V. MORAN's am KEVIN to FathcR THORNTON, DOREMUS, LANGE '67 was one of the senior managers at Notre and HOLDERTTH. from some serious surgery in February and he probably has not missed many turns on that Dune for the 1966 championship team. In mid- Mrs. Geraldine FLINN of wrote a spe- bench he has held so many years. We have August I attended a requiem B&us offered by dal note of thanks to the Class of '30 when she expected him to visit in South Bend because his Father JIM RIZER for aO the deceased 1930 was assured that the class members would re­ son (an ND graduate] works for a telension classmates. Enclosed is a copy of a good news­ member her husband JOHN in their prayers fol­ station here. In the last election Tom was chosen paper inece done by Father Rher entided 'Appeal lowing his death on Sept. U. HARLEY R. for another six-year term and without oppontion. to Atheists, Agnostics Examined.' TRUm died Aug. 4 of a heart attack. He was Dr. ED YORKE is on the staff of the state "Last week I attended the wedding of the owner-operator of the Truitt Drug Co. in Watseka, daughter of JOE FRIEL '29. The widow of III. He vfos past pres. of the Watseka School mental hospital in Camarillo, Cal. and has de> velopcd a new hypothesis on schizophrenia that Jim Friel (rf our Class was present and we bad' Board. He is survived by his wife Helen, a son a long chat about Jim's great loyalty for Notre Robert who graduated from Loyola U., a daughter will help general practitioners understand how to treat these people. Ed had an article pub­ Dame. LARRY CRONIN has been ill and after Marycllen now a senior at tfie U. of Illinois. lished on this very subject in the journal Distasts some surgery b recuperatii^ at has home in FR.ANK D. HAAHLTON of Dodgeville, Wis. of the Nervous System. H. LOUIS STETTLER Ehmra, N.Y. While m Washington he was has been serving as pres. of the State Bar Assn. was honored some time ago as Man of the Month visited by BILL WALSH, BOB COONEY, JOHN of Wisconsin an organization of 7700 lawyers. by the Monarch Life Ins. Co. of Chicago. This MORAN and myaelL DICK SULUVAN's beaid ED ARTHUR wrote me early this fall that he means he was the top producer in the nation has certainly been ^otUghted tins year. The and his wife were off for a nice European holi­ for the company for one month. He is also a "fringe" gets front page treatment in an article day. They had just bid good-bye to their three trainer in the Chicago office. FRANK SOWA by our friend JOHN LAUGHUN in Omr Smmdmf children who were off to college — Kathleen to is now pres. of the Consulting Chemists and Visitor's *Mr. Sullivan of Notre Dame.' Then Fordham for master's work in English, Nancy Chemical Engineers, Inc. an international or­ the magaiine INSIGHT focuses attentioa on the Okl Guard profs at Notre Dame. If a Van- to Lemoyne Col. for her senior year, and Chris ganization with 102 members and a combined D^ transforms character and beauty to soch to Boston Col. as a national merit scholarship staff of 4500 scientists and engineers. hdghts, I think VU discard the Gillette for a \\-inner for his freshman year. Because Ed was GUS BONDI was on hand for the big kick-off spen." to be in Innsbruck, he wanted the address of at Notre Dame for the SUMMA drive. He his old roommate LOU HASLEY. But I had to appears ready to suit up but said that he was There were many more lines in the Toomcy write him that Lou has been back here from partially retired from his work with Metropolitan letters but they concerned football tickets, adnus- Innsbruck for tw%> years, and has resumed his Ins. I suspect he wants some extra time for Bon and rejection of students and Urn's social­ work in the English dept. philosophical contemplation and perhaps is pre­ izing %nth the hierarchy. BILL SIGLER a recent J.ACK CASSIDY wrote a couple notes early paring the writing of his memoirs. At the last Alumnus came by the dean's ijSBct last wedi and this fall from his home in Ridgefield, Conn. He ND Club Presidents meeting on the Campus it reported that hb fither JACK is in good health is getting on well though he had suffered a was good to see WALT BERNARD from Celina, and still linng in Omaha. Concfanfing thn {necc, double loss in his family within one year. The Ohio and BILL MILLER from Jackson, Mitf. I want to say that I appredate the many notes JIM FRIEL family sent a note of appreciation They both appeared in great spirits and ready sent me in recent months aboat the doth of to the 1930 Class for the many prayers and ex­ to do a big job on the SUMMA project. Mrs. Plunkett. I am very gratefoL

JAMES T. DOYLE GER, JIM MULVANEY and JIM DOYLE. There is living in Fortsmoath, Va., and in « lecent IS67 RIDGE AVE., AFT. 306 is no record of any of us winning a golf prize. trip to AtbnU and Jadoonville saw TED TWO- ISIl EVAMSTON, ILL. 60201 CLARENCE PUTTER had a note from ED MEY, who lives in Jaclcsonville and is in the SHEERAN vacationing in Hawaii. Ed was hack advertising bonnesi. He had iGniier with thca After a pleasant summer and many of you at­ on Campus with TOM ASHE in September in and talked to FRED RAHAIM. Frank pbns oa tending football games I am sure there will be connection with SUMMA. KELLY POWERS attending the Gco^ Tech and Miami games, plenty of news for future ALUHNUS columns. '32 visited Clarence Futter during the June so 1 should have further news fatm him. He is Among classmates attending the Notre Dame Reunion weekend. Also heard from was BUD planning on a worid cruise fior next year aad Club of Chicago golf outing at Elmhurst Country GEIS, safety dir. for Flintkote Co., Los Angeles, then retirement in San Diego, Cahf. CARL A. Club last August were TOM COUGHLIN, JACK Calif. GAENSSLEN Bobe, Idaho retired May 12 tnm SCHMITT, JOHN MAHONEY, BERT METZ- FRANK BUTORAC, retired from the Navy. the Dept. o( the Inlnior with whidi he had

AlUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 23 been associated as an engineer for 31 ^"cars. His RENCE A. O'LEARY of San Frandsco was son ROBERT received his degree from Notre gmnted the Au-ard of Merit from the American Dame in June, 1965. PAUL BOTT formerly of Society for Testing & Materials for his contri­ White Plains, N.Y. is now living at 220 S. butions and role in ASTM area national meetings. Maple Ave., Oak Park, III. 60302. LOUIS Dr. O'Lcary received his award at the Boston GODOY sends greetings from Madrid, Spain meeting. ROY BAILIE's son BRAD '56 was where he spent several weeks tliis summer. ordained a priest June 11 in Hollywood, Caltf. During July tlirec classmates were called ta FRANK LEAHY has joined the WBBM-TV their eternal rt:wards. CLIFFORD L. FISHER, sports staff and has an analysis and commentary BOB RUPPE and VIN'CENT BUSCH. Just a on the 10 pm newscast. His articles are also week ago I received a letter from DON MAC- appearing in the Chicago Daily News. Word DOXALD, telling of the death of JACK L.-\UX ^vas received from tlie widow of R. M. MAR­ in September. Jack had been associated with SHALL, tliat he had passed away after a lonff General Motors in Flint ever since graduation. illness June 24, 1967. He had retired as engineer He is survived by his widow and four children. of bridge design for the State of Florida after 30 Please remember our deceased classmates in your years' service. MATT GARRIGAN writes from pravers. Detroit and plans on attending several games. KEN sees CHARLIE MILTNER who operates He saw AL\RTIN WIDER and JIM McQUAID, the Caberfac ski resort canoe Hvery scr\"ice when he JERRY GAUL, BOB MASSEY and CLARENCE is not practicing law. TOM MONAHAN will DURBIN during the year. HENRY KOPEK has probably have many '3Iers \-isiting his Areola recovered from a siege of illness. farm after the IlHnois-Notre Dame game and I hope the next few montlis will bring news I am looking fon%"ard to a newsy letter from of meetings of classmates on Campus at the fall him. I would appreciate news of any meetings football games. Every bit of news helps. My during the football weekends this fall. LA\V- best wishes to all for a happy holiday season*

FLORENCE J. McO^RTHY ville, Ind. 47933; MARTIN HECKARD from 6 RIVER RD. Beaver Dam, Ky. to 53 Park Plaza Dr., Canton, SCARSDALE, N.Y. 10583 III. 61520. HARRY MOSS has taken a big jump im from Albany, N.Y. to c/o U.S. Consulate, Rua There is one letter from JOE KENNY I would Padre Joao Manuel 20, Sao Paulo, S.P. Brazil like to print in its entirety in that it expresses (so help me, that's what it say's). Write, Harry, something I think we all owic JIM COLLINS: and tell us about it. And Rev. GEORGE BAXTER "Dear Flo: TED HALPIN and I enjoyed tlie CSC has left St. Pius Tenth Parish in Granger, 35th Reunion so much wc have agreed not to Ind. to return to Notre Dame. He is at the miss another so long as wc both shall live. Holy Cross House, Box S, Notre Dame, Ind. "You may be interested to know I am retiring 46556. as exec vp of Paragon Electric Co., Two Rivers, Wis. at year-end and am going into business as We are sad to report that Mrs. ROBERT N. a management consultant. .Areas of specializa­ LEPPERT, 1246 Sonoma Drive, Altadena, Cal. tion will be \'ariablc budget control, managerial notified the ALUMNUS office last summer of the accounting, forecasting, planning incentives, profit death of her husband Bob. A Mass for his in­ sliaring and others. This news may not seem to tention was celebrated at the Campus on Sept. 2. you to amount to much but is more than I ever Just heard that JOE PETRITZ has been gave Jim Collins. I hereby publicly apologize elected VP of the newly formed pr firm of to Jim and resolve to do better by you in the Beveridge, Penny & Bennett Inc. — a merger of future. Regards, Joe." Bcveridge Organization Inc., Chicago and Penny Also I had a letter from Dr. JOHN M. & Bennett Inc., Los Angeles. Offices will be in KEANEY JR who wote that HENRY B. AS- Chicago, Los Angeles and ?CYC. Also that Arch­ ALAN MD has just been named president-elect bishop PAUL H.ALLINAN of Atlanta was of tlic Kentucky State Alcdical Assn. and will awarded an honorary' doctorate of humane letters take office next September. It is the highest by Western Reser\'e U. on June 14. office in tlic state an MD can hold. Congratu­ A bit of pergonal ncu's: our No. 1 gal Sally is lations, Hank. Dr. John mentioned his talking getting married Dec 16. That leaves one to go. in connection with the Army's Materials Research at tlic Iowa game with iLARUS POPE ex *32. Our son Tim Avith American Airlines in Hartford, Agency and the AEC. E\idcntally the natives are restless as wc have Conn, has three youngsters. OSCAR ZOSS, in New York on business from notice of many moves: EUGENE HOWREY left That's all for now. Do please send news Atlanta, called many of his classmates. He is Fairfield, Iowa for Rt. 6, Box 47, Crawfords- along. waiting for the Georgia Tech game. Father FRANK G.ASTLAND CSC, is now director of John XXIII Institute, a catechetical centre for JOHN A. HO\T, JR. whether or not it took him 33 years to get his 400 boys and girls in the Bennington, Woodford GILLESPIE & O'CONNOR master's. & Pownal areas in Vermont. He is in residence 342 MADISON AVE. HANK PRENDERGAST from West Orange, at Sacred Heart Parish, 307 School St., Benning­ im ton, Vt. 05201. Comments of many — a fine NEW YORK, N.Y. I00I7 N.J., visited the campus in June with his wife We learned ^\ith deep regret that JACK J.AEGER and three of his five sons. His first visit in 30 spot for a wonderful guy. We wish him Well. died in late August after a long illness. At the years. One of Hank's boys is at the MaryknoU According to ED ECKERT our Class president, time of his death Jack and his family were re­ Seminary in Illinois. Wc look forward to seeing JIM COONEY our new Alumni Secretary- will siding in the suburban Riverdale area in New Hank at our upcoming Reunion. Rev. JAMES spend some time with our Class at Reunion. In York. To his ^v•ifc and family we extend our J. LE.AHY CSC has been transferred from Port­ accepting our invitation Jim wrote: "Succeeding sj-mpathy and prayers. land U. to Holy Cross House at ND. Dr. JOHN JIM ARMSTRONG is a consideration fraught "In Paradisum Dcducant Tc Angeli" PICK has relocated in Milwaukee and now resides with trepidation, challenge and honor." To him, At tliis writing, tlie OcL-Nov, issue of the at 2419 N. Whal Ave., Mihraufccc, Wis. 53211. cur good wishes. ALUMNUS has been in circulation for the better CHARLES CONLEY, while in Chicago recently Be on the lookout for ED ECKERT's Reunion part of three weeks. To date we have received for the funeral of his aunt, visited ^rith Judge Class letter. He is planning on contacting all only four correspondence cards from Class mem­ AL\URICE LEE. Fr. JIM DONNELLY flew up Class members several times between now and bers. These cards arc now carried as inserts in to Chicago to preside at tlic funeral Atass for June. Spare him some help and assistance. some editions of the ALUMNUS. We would wel­ Charley's aunt. While in Miami for the ND- CHUCK JASKWHICH has accepted the chore come news and views. Miami game, the Conlcys will be at the Carillon of representing our Class in the Mid-West and A quick glance at the calendar indicates that Hotel along witli LEO HODEL. JIM BOYLE, Dr. JAMES DONEHY will represent us on the our 35th Reunion is but six months a^vay. whom we've Iicard very little of in recent years, campus. Those on the West Coast should con­ CHARLEY CONLEY our Reunion chairman practices law in ^liami. tact CHUCK HAFRON at the U. of San Fran­ would welcome suggestions for the Reunion BERNIE (MIKE) DeLAY, president of the cisco, Cal. 94117, about transportation arrange­ Weekend. He can be reached at 100 East Turn- DeLay First National Bank, in Norfolk, Neb., ments. bull Ave., Haverto%%n, Pa. 19083. and recently elected Grand Knight of the Elks, JIM GARRIGAN of Upper ifontdair, N.J., saw several classmates while visiting in Chicago EDWARD F. MANSFIELD spent the simimer in Germany celebrating the recently. Both his boys are in the service, one in 523 W. HILLSDALE receipt of a master's degree in administration Vietnam and the other in Labrador. im SAN MATEO, CAL. M403 from Montclair State Col. and his daughter CHARLEY FARRIS, having concluded his Jean's BS in anthropology from Harvard. Jim work on the renowned St. Louis Urban Rencw:d pridefully talks about his daughter's accomplish­ Program, is now president of Urban Programming WILLUM F. RYAN ments at Harvard, but makes no reference Corp. of America with offices at 1921 S. Brent­ 1620 E. WASHINGTON AVE. wood Blvd., Brcntivood, Mo. 63144. He and SOUTH BEND, IND. 46617 ROLAND DAMES will be at our Reunion. Since the last issue communications Iiavc improved GEORGE ROHRS and his wife Jean were on considerably. Several '35cr5 responded to my en­ the campus for the freshman-parents convocia- treaties to provide ammunition, for wliicli I tion. His son Chris has just started his freshman thank them. year. During liis visit George saw ART LAVERY JIM KELLY wTote from Rocknllc Centre with who is in the electrical business in Van Nuys, the info tliat he is in the fund-raising and PR Calif.; Fr. LLOYD TESKE, rtrctor of Fisher HaU business. He and his wife Kay have two adopted and Doc BOB DONOVAN, of Concord, Mass. children, a boy, 16 and a girl, 13. Jim has yet REUNION '68 who was visiting the Radiation Lab on campus to attend a Reunion but, hopefully he will be

24 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER Dr. Henry B. Asman '32 was elected president-elect of the Kentucky Medi­ cal Association. A graduate of the ALUMNI University of Louisville School of Medi­ IN THE cine, Dr. Asman has served as vice- Congrats NEWS president and secretary of the state medical association and has held offices in niunerous other medical societies. Timothy P. Galvin '16 was honored Walter C Houghton "26 was hon­ as Hammond, Ind.'s Outstanding Citi­ ored this summer on the occasion of J. Marshall McAveney '33 recently zen and admitted to the city's Hall his 25th anniversary with Calvert Dis­ was promoted to immigration officer of Fame. A lay trustee of the Univer­ tillers Company. The advertising man­ with the US Consulate Office in Ger­ sity since 1946 and former president ager of Calvert's, he lives in Mamaro- many. In his new post he will be re­ of the Alumni Assn., he was cited for neck, N.Y. sponsible for immigration offices in his leadership in civic and Catholic most European countries. He has been community affairs. with the Dept. of Justice for 27 years and most recently handled investiga­ Timothy J. Murphy "24, who this fall Charles J. Ducey MA '28 was knight­ tions and deportation of racketeers. retired from his post as Connecticut ed by Pope Paul VI in the Order of state commissioner of public works, was St. Gregory the Great for his contri­ honored recently by state officials for bution to the Catholic Church. The Frank M. Sandera '34 has been elect­ ( "handling the job in outstanding fash­ deputy supreme knight of the Knights ed a corporate vice-president of Auto­ ion." Former Gov. Ribicoff cited of Colimibus first joined the K of C matic Retailers of America which di­ him in the Congressional Record and while a student at the University. He rects ARA food service systems. Prior Gov. John Dempsey praised his leader­ has served on the national level since to joining ARA in 1965, he was gen­ ship during a period which witnessed 1928 and since that time has held in­ eral manager for the Canteen Corp. great expansion in projects undertaken creasingly responsible positions with the His former position with ARA was that by the commission. Kof C. of Southern area general manager.

present at the 1970 affair. LUKE KELLY also GEORGE "MUGGSIE" McGRATH is a guid­ moter in Memphis and was picttuxd with several came through with a letter. Luisc is living in ance counselor at Ware HS and HARRY GAF- of the St. Louis Cardinal players at a "Memphis Albany, N.Y. and has been in the field of social NEY is dir. of athletics at Bryan-Stratton School weekend" in St. Louis for baseball fans. The work for tlic past 30 years. He believes in con­ in Boston. (Is Bryan-Stratton still a girls' school, clipping mentioned that Jerry has three children, tinuing education having received a degree (mas­ Harry? If so, you must be having fun!) two boys and a girl. Tom Owen hardly ever ter of social work) in '63 from Sj'racusc U. Luke TOM HILS is in Kissimmee, Fla. and plans misses a Reunion and we hope to see both him has been a faithful attendee at Reunions and to be at the Miami game. He is in the PR busi­ and Jerry at the next one. expects to keep the 1970 date also. ness. BILL BERNARD is an MD in Spring­ MATT S.AGARTZ informed us of the death Several took advantage of the yellow" card en­ field, 111. and mentioned that he was just elected of his brother JOHN in June. John started with closed with the last ALUMNUS to drop us brief VP of the Filing Fhj'sicians Assn. Bill gets back the Class of '35 but did not finish vnth us. Class notes: BILL CASA2Z.A has his o\\-n moving and to the Campus often and recently attended a condolences were extended to Mrs. Sagartz and storage business in Troy, N.Y. and definitely retreat there. TOM OWEN who has been a his son. John is the fourth member of the Class plans to make the nc-xt Reunion. BILL FAR- manufacturer's rep in Chattanooga for some of '35 who has passed away this year. RELL of Grand Rapids has a son who is cur­ years sent a newspaper clipping from a Memphis My sincere thanks once again to the '35ers who rently a junior at ND. Two long-lost *35ers paper containing a picture of our former cheer­ responded to our plea for help. Keep them from my home state joined together to write us: leader, JERRY FOLEY. Jerry is a sports pro­ coming, fellow's.

LARRY PALKOVIC land-Suco Color Co. Div. of Chemetron Corp. He Ridge. I certainly surpiised them by my viat. 301 MECHANIC ST. will contact manufacturers of solvent type print­ George is very busy with his practice aiid does 1936 ORANGE, N.J. 07050 ing inks in a technical capacity. He and his extensive surgery. wife have five children and live at 1226 Euna One Sunday last Ai^ust we made a trip to Once again Editor JOHN THURIN '59 is Vista Ct., Holland, Mich. North Wildwood, N.J. to see DALE PILLARS drawing a sharp notice to all secretaries for oxir Aho>-5 sad to report deaths of NICHOLAS and his family. We had a very congenial visit date line. To all intents and purposes sheer CONNOR JR and wife of JACK WITAKER. re-hashing old times. North Wildwood is noted laziness makes this problem an almost impossible All Class members are asked to remember both for its sea resort located in the southern tip of task. The problem is how to get started imme­ in their Mass and prayers. N.J. near Cape May. It has wide beach areas diately, which is the key to the whole solution, Received a nice letter from WILLIAM "BILL" and extensive facilities for \'acationcrs. Dale and and keep going. So here goes: PETER NEMETH SAFF.A who is now located in Tulsa, Okla., 350 his wife cater to \'acationci5 renting their twx> lost his bid for nomination as City Judge on East 32, Apt. 20. Bill wishes to be remembered ground floor apts. during the summer months. the Democrat ticket in the South Bend primary. by all the gang. I have often corresponded with Anyone wishing for a real sea resort vacation THOMAS ADAMSON JR has been named exec, Bill over the years since graduation and we often contact Dale in North Wildwood. editor of J)airy ® ^^^ Cream Field a national reminisce on our former college days as the best Nothing further to report. I only hope I re­ trade magazine. WILLIAM D.ARCY has been and happiest days of our life. Visited Dr. ceive more and interesting news imia all of you appointed technical field ser\'icc rep. for Hol- GEORGE MURPHY and his family in Glenn for further issues.

JOSEPH P. QUINN out his family to take care of the invaders from who hasn't a son named "KeWn." TOM CAR­ P.O. BOX 275, LAKE LENAPE the East. Bill is working hard to get the basket­ NEY had meetings on SUMALA and the Alumni 1937 ANDOVER, N.J. 07821 ball team as No. 1 after some poor years. He Board managing to make it there on Friday. reports JACK WALSH is available for corre­ We checked on Father NED JOYCE and the Your secretary finally made a So. Cal. game at spondence to the secretary. PAUL FOLEY, our last report stated he was returning firom Arizona. ND. ifadc a hurried trip with No. 1 son Kevin rep on the SUMM.A program as head of the Lunch at the Indiana Club (used to be off- for interview, etc. The two famous FOLEYS of committee on PR Events, ^vas in attendance at limits) where we met KARL KING who reported our Class were also there. BILL of House Ju­ the meetings in the Continuing Education Bldg. that the Alumni Ofi5ce was finally digging into diciary Comm., Washington, DC with sons Kevin and managed to find time to see .the game before our treasury so that Wc are now in the red. and Dick (broken wrist included). This group flying right back to the big city. PAUL has Minor bills keep coming in and they finally stayed with JERRY CL.AEYS who had to move decided that he is about the only member of '37 depleted the account or the next thing to it.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 25 Prof. LEE FLATLEY also makes the lU Qub telephone companies. porting he has JOE SCHILLING'S picture on and again thanked our Class for the party in Again I wish to acknowledge the '*OU Canon di^lay at the local Federal Office Bldg. (no June. The hanker from the West Coast, GOR­ Cocker" that arrived at Ncuwlon intact. This number given). SancuUus is sUU qiutc a golfer. DON MURPHY, just completed a visit at Lake fellow SIEGFRIED lives up to hu word. Of After winning at the Alumni tournament he also Lcnape. He is touring the East Coast for a course, he has also written all of us another note copped a couple of titles at this local dub, so \'acation this year. He is still single and keeps reminding us of our obligation to the University. he was no rioger in June. Wyoming in his heart, \\ith California second. Keep plugging, BOBBY. Letters are mighty MURPHY w-as glad that he finally made a Class few again. Don't forget the promises made at Put the secretary on the Christmas list and Reunion, along wth PARKER SULLIVAN who Reunion. Follow-up from JOE SANCULIUS send a note along. If you need any addresses, has gone back to work by now lining up more asking for address of MILT KATZ and also re- let me know.

BURNIE BAUER retired from officiating pro football, would Ukc own parish near the Milwaukee airport. A hip 1139 WESTERN AVE. to hear from ED WRAPP now teaching at operation a year ago has slowed him up only a SOUTH BEND, IND. 46625 Chicago U. and says say hello to £D CRONIN trifle. CHUCK SWEENEY and JOHN PLOUFF im and "OLD CANNON CROCKER, too." came out and w^e all had lunch together at Morris Back after a thrcc-ivcek trip in October with JACK DOYLE'S letter from 157 Gantobury Dr., Inn. my wife Helens to Europe ^vhere we stayed Ramsey, N.J. was more sombre, asking for NEL­ The Alumni office sent me two Items: JOE with families in France, Spain, Monaco and SON VOGEL's widow's address. JACK SCOTT MEinUNG was one of 160 business and govern­ Rome as part of a CFM exchange program. I sent a note that should knock off the years for all ment offidals who partidpatcd in an advanced found cards from Dr. DAN MONAGHAN, JACK of us, announcing the birth of John A. Scott Jr management prog, at Har\*ard from Sept. 11 to CLIFFORD, TOM SHEILS and JOE HE.\EBRY July 20 in Lafayette, Ind. where Jade runs a news­ Dec 8 and WILLIAM REDMAN DUGGAN, and letters from GREGG KEEGAN and J.\CK paper apparently with youthful vigor! Multo who lost his sight again several years after re­ DOYLE — wonderful homecoming. Guess I should congratulations. Jack! He also had a suggestion covering it, was transferred from his post on leave more often so I'll hear from more of you. for sol\ing the football ticket ntuation: "fire policy planning in the Dept. of State to the DAN MONOGHAN's wife also wrote saying Dan CAHILL and make tickets available only to non- position of American Consul General in Durban, is commanding ofHccr of an c^'actiation hospital Catholic Alumni." That was before Purdue and South Africa. in Korea until next summer. Before leaving Dan So. Cal however. met JACK LUNGREN's son JOHN '66 at Medi­ Much sadder was the late news of the death cal Field Service School, Ft. Sam Houston. Dan A phone call near midnight from JERRY of JOSEPH J. LUDWIG on Nov. 5. 1963 in said TOM TIERNEY *40 is now directing the KANE at Kforris Inn where he w-as attend­ San Francisco, Calif, where his widow now lives. nation's medicare program at DEW. JACK ing the SUMMA drive resulted in a long No other details were available. Otur condolences CLIFFORD, brother of JERRY CLIFFORD and reminiscing visit. Jerry who roomed with also go to DONALD SiflTH in Colorado Springs '38 doubles handbaU champ with BUNNY Mc- JOHNNY MOIR in Badin, TOM BOHEN in on the death of his mother last July. CORMICK, merely said he'd be at the 30th Sorin and all of us in Brownson is a VP with Movie notes: Dr. LARRY EBY from Grosse Reunion next June. Great! Bring the rest of Boeing in Seattle. He has a son in Georgetown He, Mich, to 102 S. Kennicott Ave., Arlington those Chicago lads. Jack. Law School and a daughter married. Jerry, who Hts., HI.; JACK ZERBST, ye olde fencer, from used to cut hair in Aforrissey sub, commented New York to Pasco de La Refroma 195, Mexico; TOM SHEILS also promised to show up next that he'd have a much easier time with me now, WILLIAM "T-BONE" MAHONEY, former Am­ June, particularly since he missed the 25th Re­ but probably would need a hunting license. bassador, from Phoenix, to 313 35th St., Virginia union because of surgery and wants "HOOK" Bumped into Father JOE RACE on the Campus Beach, Va. (what's the scoop, T-Bonc?); and KERWIN and GEORGE FITZPATRICK to be and was thrown for a loss as he is as solid as BOB DuBOIS from South Bend to No. Wheeler there too. He also wants TOM ATKINS to when he used to make those one-arm hand stands St., Douglas, Ga. (what's the scoop. Bob?) write him at his home at 17250 Paithcnia St., in the shower after football practice. Joe was Northridge, Calif. JOE HENEBRY, after 20 here for a priest conference on celibacy which The scoop about us going to Europe again was years in Paz^ Ridge, III. is now gen. mgr. of I thought was a little late to interest him until that my wife always wanted to meet Princess Butler Aviation, Friendship International Airport, I got Jack Scott's announcement. He has his Grace of Monaco which we did. We presented Baltimore, Md. and wants anyone fl>-ing that her some flowers, on behalf of the whole exchange way to look him up, or is it down? group and I used the occasion to find out who GREGG KEEGAN "married, no children, one had won the Worid Series which Grace knew. scbnauzer, over^veight and mellowing" in his owti Inddcntally, my wife wore a kelly green outfit, words is in his 26th year of trjing jury cases herself being Irish and married to a Fighting in St. Louis. When sleep comes bard, he says, Irishman and all that. The trip was also a little he tries counting all the names that fKXupied gift to each other on the 20th anniversary of Carroll Hall in '34. Wow! Better come to the our ha%ing started the very first CFM group Reunion to refresh your memory, Gregg. Gregg back in &farch, 1947. It was also a way of not says he has seen JACK LUNDGREN on trips having to see the Purdue :md So. Cal. dcbades. to California, also CHUCK SWEENEY before he REUNION '68 Besdes we just like wine and cheese!

JOSEPH E. H.ANNAN to my next request — I would like to hear from FuTgrounds Rd., Mt. Vemon, Ohio 43050. 1S04 GREENWOOD DR. every classmate who now has a son at ND. EUGENE F. MILBOURN, 4001 Greenridge 19S9 SOUTH BEND, DJD. 46614 Have nothing definite in mind at present. How­ Rd., No. 214, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15234; EDWIN "All's quiet" «Tote FRANK LAUCK recently ever, I'm certain we're all interested In this area. G. O'CONNOR, 10 Marlborough St., Boston, from Indianapolis, Ind., and that neatly sums up Virginia and RICHARD BURKHOLDER at Mass. 02116; ROBERT C. PERRY, 3547 Barge YOUR '39 column for the past two issues. Frank the California game. Dick and Ginoy make most Ct. W., Irving, Tex. 75060; JOSEPH F. RYAN, did inject a point I should have covered long of the home afialzs. Dick asked if the Chkfc RJ). No. 2, CowlesviUe, N.Y. 14037; Dr. SAL- ago. CHARLES "CHICK" RAUSCH's lovely Lauck who played defensive end was Flank's boy. VATORE P. SCARALATA, 5252 Northern Blvd., partner Idarge pens the Lauclcs periodically. This Frank '39 informed me he is a cousin's son — Glen Head, N.Y. 11545; ARTHUR LUKE humble person here and now pleads vAUi all the but hardnosed as Frank. MARIO G. TONELLI, STEVENS, 136U S.W. Knaus Rd., Lake Oswego, **Margcs** to heed the call . . . and I promise Skokle, 111. was recently elected state commander Ore. 97034; ROBERT G. STARR, 1139 S. Wood- not to divulge any confidences. . . . PULEEESEE, of the Illinois DAV. Congrats, "Motts," from lawn, Wichita, Kan. 67218; DANIEL C. SHEEDY, Gals. ... So much for the deep knee bends. all of '39. Plaudits also to JOHN THOMAS 1355 Homeland Dr., Rocky River, Ohio 44116; Dr. DANIEL A. TOBIN, 4801 Sheboj^an Ave., JOSEPH B. LEWIS is sales sen-ice mgr. with DOYLE, new director of marketing of the Madison, Wis. 53705; EDWARD M. TOBIN, B. F. Goodrich Co., Staten Island, N.Y. Joe Polyken di^^ion of the Kendall Co., Chicago and Boeing Co., Box 2428, Great Falls, Mont. 59401; and Caryl have two children, their daughter a to LOUIS A. RAOELET who directed the 13th JAMES L. WARNER, c/o Surf & Sand, R.R. junior at Miami U., Oxford, Ohio and a son in annua] National Institute on Police and Com­ No. 2, Malibu, Calif. 90265; RICHARD E. the grades. Joe also reports his brother JOHN munity Relations at Michigan State U. WELCH, 22455 Lake Rd., Cleveland, Ohio *41 lives in Washington, DC. (Not much o£ a "There'll be some changes made" as '39 moves 44116; WILLIAM P. WHITE, Gamcwood Farm, writer either, said Joe.) on . . . NICHOLAS C. AMRHEIN JR to P.O. R.R. No. 1, Box 46, Grayslake, HI. 60030; and A long-delayed note from JAMES J. RAAF Box 1163, Boca Raton, Fla. 33432; Rev. MI­ JOHN H. WILSON, US Dept. of State, Ameri­ from La Paz, Bolivia via Hicksville, N.Y. (you've CHAEL J. BENEDICT, Box 5506, Lake Charles, can Embassy, Guatemala City, Guatemala. got to be kidding!) via BURNIE BAUER '38 La. 70601; JOHN W. BALTES, Falignund Rd., via Alumni Office and somehow misplaced by Noiwalk, Ohio 44857; PATRICK J. BANNON, JOSEPH HARRINGTON phoned from the my "gal Friday." Jim, Angela and family, 3900 Cathedral Ave., Washington, DC 20016; Dr. local airport prior to boarding a flight to Chicago Angie 17, Barbara 14, Marie Elena II, Patricia GEORGE L. BASTIAN JR, 40 Ramsay St., and eventually back to Costa Rica. He had and Pamela 9, and Susan 8, were stateside last Rochester, N.Y. 14610; MAX H. BURNELL, just left son Kevin '71. Warns us to watch for April-May, traveling via Dodge "motor home." 1115 Beachview, Dallas, Tex. 75218; JOHN J. Hanlngton In the lineup of Miami U. (Fla.) Jim b now heading up Grace interests In Bolivia, CAREY, 413 £. 34th St., Indianapolis, Ind. 46226; a year hence. And to VINCENT DOLLARD, returning to LaPaz after stints in Peru, Bolivia, JOHN A. FERENCE JR, 5700 Bunker HIU Rd., Rochester, N.Y. "Man of the Year" congiatu- Chile and Ecuador. Jim can be reached c/o Pittsburgh, Pa. 15206; PETER J. FLUGE, Cen­ ladons. Vince is also Rochester chairman for Grace y Cia (Bolivia) S.A., Apartado 832, La tury Tower East, 2220 Avenue of the Stan, Los SUMMA. Your support for Notre Dame's "Great­ Faz, Bolivia. (St. IklazT's Col. endorses your kind Angeles, Calif. 90067; Rev. EDMUND NICH> est Challenge" Is urged by this %vriter. Its success of pec^c.) OLAS GOEDERT, St. Francis Xaner Chuidi, and the resultant new development program it will Game time in Mrami, Fla. saw the JULIAN Golla, P.O. Gobindpur, Dt. Dacca, East Fakbtan; insure will bring new distinction to the great TONSMEIREs, JAMES McGOLDRlCKs and FRANCIS JOSEPH HAYES, 80 Broad Meadow Univeisty dedicated to Our Lady. JOSEPH SULLIVANs (Apple Joe) according to Blvd., Apt. 5446 Woithington Temce, Colum­ Thb being the last issue for 1967, your secre­ JOHN K. TONSMEIRE '68. Thanks, John, for bus, Ohio 43214; CORNELIUS J. KVASNAK, tary mshes all members of '39 and their families taking up the cause. G. ROBERT CAMPBELL RFD No. 2, Middlebury, Vt. 05753; JAMES C a blessed and joyous Christmas, health, happiness MD, 111 Maplewood Dr., Beaver, Pa. introduced McARDLE, 1232 W. Sherwood Ter., Ft. Wayne, and all those blessings we hopefully pray for In son Robert J. Class of '70 which leads directly Ind. 46807; MICHAEL J. McGUIRE, Kt. No. 2. the year ahead.

26 AlUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER ROBERT G. SANFORD 233 W. CENTRAL AVE. 1S4I LOMBARD, ILL. G0148 For the very first time m the past two yean your secretary has sufficient news concerning the Men of '40 to submit a column representative of the true spirit of our Class. Please do not let this shock you into nlence, but rather inspire many of you quiet ones into immediate com­ munication with your secretary. WILLIAM M. BOLCHOZ wrote to teU us o! his change of address to 123 S. Broadway, Irving- ton, N.Y. 10533. After leaving the Campus he received his master's from Columbia U. and his doctorate from NYU. Bill is presently chairman of the dcpt. of English at Irvington HS. Thank goodness some of you use those yellow cards from the ALUMNUS for brief notes. PHIL CANALE utilized all the space when he wrote: "JOE RYAN of Denver, Colo, railed and chatted while CMDt. MclNTYlE *40 (Itft) passing thru Memphis with his family on his way to Tulsa where he will be with American Airlines. He has just retired from the USAF. Joe said that DOUG BANGERT is still with AVJMNI the Marines and stationed in Washington, DC." Phil has been District Attorney in Memphis, IN THE Tenn. since 1955. Congrats JIM DONOGHUE forwarded the information ^NEWS from the Investment Bealerf Digest that ROB­ ERT G. STENGER has been elected president of the Milwaukee Co., an old investment securi­ ties firm. A letter from Sterling, III. brought Commander John Mclntyre '40 i^ ¥ras elect­ the first communication from JOE GUCCIONE Nicholas J. Vilaiosa Jr. '43 since graduation. Joe has been running the Rock tired in June after serving more than ed nce-preddent and director of legal River Realty and Ins. Agency for the past 12 20 years on active duty in the Navy. and contract management for tibie De- years. He also furnishes the follo^ving informa­ He is now employed ynib ITT as man­ fense Conununications Div. of ITT in tion: "My wife Lois and I have laised two Nutley, N.J. A cum laude graduate of ager for Navy programs, US Space and girls and a boy. My oldest Mary Jo went to both the XJniver^ty and the Law Webster CoL, is married and I am the proud Defense Group, in the Washington of­ School, he has been with ITT since grandpa of two boys. Son TOM graduated from fice. Former Secretary of the Navy Paul 1951 and has held a number of man­ ND in June and is attending law school at U. H. Nitze presented the Navy Com­ of Colo. Daughter Theresa has just completed a agement positions. Earlier this year he lab training course. Had a recent short visit with mendation Medal to Commander Mc- was named director of 1^^ and con­ TONY POTENZIANI rccaUing the old days. Intyre at his retirement ceremony. tract management of ITTs Federal Talked about what has happened to JOE Dc- Laboratories. FRANCO my roommate, STAN ADAMONIS, JOE DclGAZIO, TO?^ CONSOLAZIO, MATT Bro. Xaverius CFX '41 yns recently GONRING and many others. Would certainly feted on the occasion of his 50th anni- Dr. Emmit M. Jennings '44 has been named president of the New Mexico like to hear some current news about tfacm." venary as an Xaverian Brother. Since; Medical Society after serving for three KEN COLLINS wrote from Fargo, N.D. to entering the brotherhood he has served years on the Society's CounciL He let us know that he is a contractor building high­ as both high school teacher and trea­ vnU visit all the component societies way's in North and South Dakota and Minnesota. surer for the order. He is currenUy He also writes: **Am married with eight children. within the state to keep the members treasurer of Good Counsel HS in LEO our oldest graduated from ND last June. informed and to correlate state activi­ Wheaton, Md. after playing as a linebacker for three years. KEN ties with those of the AMA. Dr. Jen­ JR is a senior this year at ND, Mike is a junior nings received his medical training at at St. John's U. CoUegeville, Minn, and two James J. O'Neal '42 has been elected sons and three daughters at home. With two sons St. Louis University. at ND I have been to the Campus often. Have executive vice-president of D'Arcy Ad­ vblted with some of the Men of '40 — mostly vertising in NYC. He was named to Rev. Herman R. Reith CSC MA '44 sitting in the Monogram section at football games. the board of directors in 1%5 and this summer was appointed a visiting JOHN KELLY, TAD HARVEY, CURT HES­ since that time he has also served as professes and resident tutor at Ma- TER, JACK HUSSEY are some of those I saw. management supervisor of international icerere U. in Uganda. The former Also hear from JACK E. IbfACK in San Jose, operations. He will continue as ]}resi- Calif, at least yearly." chairman of the ND philosophy dept dent of D'Arcy and Multi-National also recently^ celebrated the 25th anni­ Following are some items which w^ere for- Partners which handles such accounts warded from the Alumni Office. WILLIAM H. versary of his ordination. COLEMAN is a new member of the advisory as Lufthansa, the Bermuda Trade De­ board of St. ^ncent Charity Hosp., Cleveland. velopment Board and Grace Lines. Eugene D. Hul '47 has been named THOMAS M. TIERNEY, dir. of the Bureau of by the Otis Elevator Co. to the newly Health, Dcpt. of Health, Education & Welfare, created post of vice-president and assis­ Social Security Adminis., Baltimore, Md. was tant to the president in charge of cor­ awarded Honorary Fellowship in the American Col. of Hosp. Administrators on Aug. 20 at the porate planning and profit improve­ society's 33rd convocation ceremony at Orchestra ment. He previously served the com­ Hall in Chicago. The award is one of the Col­ pany as vice-president of the Middle lege's highest accolades. Army Rcser\'e Col. LEO Western Region and as vice-president A. SANTINI graduated from the Mobilization in chaise oS service operations. General Staff Officer Course at the Command and General Staff Col. In August at Ft. Leaven­ worth, Kan. John R. Kecgan 49 has been named JOHN McINTYRE retired June 30 after serv­ executive vice-president of George D. ing more than 20 years* active duly in the US Roper Sales Corp. of Kankakee, IlL Navy. The ex-commander is now employed with He formerly served as director of mar­ ITT as mgr. for Navy programs, US Space and keting for the 2q>pliance manufacturer. Defense Group in Washington, DC. RUSSELL A. KURTZ has rctimied to the US to be mgr. of international sales for the Elastomer Chemicals Dept. of the DuPont Co. in Wilmington, Del. He was formerly marketing mgr. for elastomers in Geneva, Switzerland. ANDREW J. GANNON of Claremont, N.H. has joined MiUcr Falls Co. as dir. of industrial relations. He was also named to the firm's executive management committee. He and his family will be moving to Greenfield, ^lass. Rev. ROBERT J. MAHONEY LLB '48 was ordained as a priest May 27 in the Cathedral of Immaculate Conception in Ft. Wayne. An in­ teresting article in Wonder Workert a publication of St. Anthony Hosp., Michigan City, Ind. con- NJ.VILlAROSA'^a DR.E.M-IENN1NGS'44 FATHER REITH '44 E. D. HUa '47 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER tained a sketch about Dr. ROBERT J. FROST, *40 men involved with SUifMA —PAUL HEL- Let us remember another man of *40 who has a member o£ the lay advisory board. Bob re­ MUTH, Dr. JOHN KELLEHER and JACK left us. JAMES W. PLUMMER of Zancsville, ceived his MD from Georgetown, has been active PINDAR. At the first football game the high­ Ohio died during the summer. I know all of in ciWc as UTII as professional organizations. He light of the weekend for us and the TOM FLADs you will remember Jim in your prayers. is presently scr\'ing as chairman of the NO was our first visit in 12 years wth SALVATORE News about BOB LAMBERT just made my Foundation, assembljinan of the Col. of American D. *ISH' ANDRIACCHI of Ishpeming, Mich. deadline. Bob was advertising mgr. of the NY Pathology, and president-elect and member of the Ish has a fine family, 10 children, five boys and Hertdd Tribune, but with the dose of the World-' board of directors of the Ind. Assoc of Pathol- fi\'e girls. He brought his son John who is a. Joumal'Tribune proceeded to make a change. ogists. The father of tno children Bob and his wfe leading high school player in the Upper Pcmnsula. He is now pres. of Story & Kelly-Smith, Inc., Amelia live at 3215 Cleveland Ave., Michigan City. After the game saw BERNIE MASTERSON and neH'spaper representatives. Our best reporter GERRY SAEGERT made the J. C. BRENNANs. Had the opportunity to Must admit that I am proud of this column this issue with: **As area chairman for the visit Father ARTHUR HOPE OSB at the priests' and want to thank every one of you who helped. SUMMA campaign I \^•as invited to attend a infirmary. He sends spedal greetings to JOE Now, let's hear from some of you reluctant cor­ Campus conference. The meeting was excellent MULQUEEN. Saw JIM ROGERS at the NY respondents and keep every issue of the ALUMNUS and gave me an opportunitj* to visit with other kickoff meeting." filled with '40 news.

JAMES F. SPELLMAN mutit Co., a div. of Ritter Pfaudler Corp. RALPH GOVERN Is third VP of the buyers' assoc. in SPELLMAN & MADDEN GERRA is chief tax counsel for Bethlehem Steel Rochester, NY. EDWIN W. KELEHER con­ 342 MADISON AVE. Corp. JERRY HICKEY {bless him) is board troller for Automatic Retailers of America was 1941 NEW YORK, N.Y. 10017 chairman of Thomas L. Hi(iey, Inc., South Bend elected a dir. of Financial Executives Institute, a contracting and engineering firm. Hey, Jerry, will national organization of financial execs, from all If you look back to the ALUMNUS of July, 1966 you start work on the 30lh? Never too soon, fields of business, industry and banking. AL\RTIN you wiU sec that the Class has a sccretar>'. If you old man! LOU MacKENZIE is the partner in INGWERSEN has been elected pres. and chief check the issues subsequent to that date you might charge of the General Motors auiUt by Haskins & operating officer of the Marybnd Shipbuilding arrive at a different conclusion! Be tliat as it Sells. Lou moved his domicile to the motor city and Dr>-dock Co. JOHNNY SOONG, who directs may I ^v-as told that my wages would be stopped just before the Reunion. FRED VOGELWEOE, Mobil Oil's operations in Hong Kong recently if I didn't get hopping; so here is a potpourri of BILL STURM and LARRY WALSH are also with conceived a plan to construct low-cost housing for Class information, not necessarily in the chrono­ H & S. BOBBY SAGGAU represents Northland Chinese refugees on the site of the company's old logical order in which it was received. Ski way up in Mequon, Wis. He enjoyed the storage terminal. The apartment complex will JOHN COPPINGER is senior computer sdentist 25th very much, as did many. But he doesn't like house 60,000 to 80,000 people. WILLL\M C. with Computer Sciences Corp. at Alaishall Space to say farewell and I feel exactly the same way. McGOWAN is asst. VP for the real estate loan Flight Center, Hunts\*ille, Ala. Says he is trying Bob. I guess maybe it is because we wonder if dept. in Wells Fargo Bank's head office in San to organize an ND Club since there arc eight other wc will meet again. It is statistically accurate Francisco. MAXWELL HILL JR. is exec. VP Alumni locally. John likes the card for keeping in to say that the attendance cur\'e falls off after the of chemicals and plastics operations of the Union touch with the Class. BOB POHL made the 25th Reunion. Your old Secretary will be there, Carbide Corp. use game at which time he \*isited his son in God willing. BOB KOCH is exec. VP of Cali­ Farley Hall. Bob attended his first reunion last fornia Ph>'sicians' Service for Blue Shield. A wcl* That is all for now, shipmates; but I will have year (our 25th) and is still cnjoyins the mem­ come note last November from FRANCIS D. much more for the next ALUMNUS. Please use ories; he wll be at the 30th. Lives in Whitticr MEYER '29 informs me that ex '41 man LEO the yellow insert cards and send me a few notes. and sells printing at Pacific Press. BILL DALY GARRITY is a partner in the brokerage firm of Your fellow '4lers will be most pleased to learn is with Seattle office of Allstate; lives in Edmunds. Rodman & Renshaw, Chicago. of your whereabouts. I promise that the data you send will be inserted in the ALUMNUS issue fol­ No NT) men out his way. JOE MANIX didn't Bro. XAVERIUS (PAUL J. KLINKHAMMER) lowing the date of your letter if it is received make the Reunion because he's in the Alarshall treas. of Good Counsel HS in Washington, DC by deadline date. Islands for 18 months. since 1962 was honored on his 50th anniversary as JOHN W. LARSON is publicity mgr. of Per- a Xaverian Brother in May, ANDREW Mc- Say a prayer for the success of SUM^L\.

AVTLLIAM M. HICKEY as an Air Force Chaplain area rep. He and 100 FRANK LEAHY'S first ND team are touting him P.O. BOX 8640A other reser\'e chaplains throughout the country for membership in the Hall of Fame. CHARLIE 1943 CHICAGO, ILL. 60680 prowde a \*aricty of sendees to active duty and CALLAHAN discussed the situation in the Aug. 6 retired military personnel in their areas. Chaplain edition of Our Sunday Visitor, The seniors on JAMES J. 0'NE.\L has been elected exec. VP Connelly will serve without pay and pronde asas- that team are having their 25th Reunion this year. of D'Arcy Advertising Co. He has been a mem­ tancc to families of men killed or wounded in We hear from GILBERT A. ZIMMERM.AN, ber of their board of dir. since '65 when he was Southeast Asia. He is priest at St^ Therese's who now lives in Sacramento: **I live at 2660 named pres. of D'Arc>' and Multi-Xational Part­ Catholic Church in Portsmouth, Va. Huntington Rd., married and the father of four ners, their intcmaUonal operations where he will daughters and four sons — all ages and all stages. continue as management supervisor for Lufthansa WILLIAM J. MINGES has been appointed mgr. Have been at Aerojet Gen. for 17 years and hold German Airlines, Knox Gelatine, US Travel Ser- petroleum processing, chemical and additives for the title of asst. mgr. solid propellant. Am active \ice, Bermuda Trade Development Board and Union Carbide's Process Chemicals Div. He fives in the Alumni chapter of Sacramento and a Grace Line. in Cliappaqua, N.Y. with his wife and three past pres.; play golf; Uke linng out of the snow children. BERNIE CRIMMINS and PAUL and the Calif, smog in the city of Sacramento. Major WILLIAM P. CONNELLY is sen-ing LILLIS and other seniors who were on Coach Enjoy your column and the ALUMNUS."

JACK WIGGINS JIM GODFREY is now majority whip in the nation's dead xv-arriors in the lead editonal by 5125 BRIGGS AVE. Missouri House and brother MIKE GODFREY tellins Vito's life story. FRANCIS J. iLAG- 1S4S LA CRESCEN-TA, CALIF. 91014 is a circuit court judge. DON DEGNAN has NELIA has heen named Michigan/Indiana/AVes- his own PR firm in N^C, FRANK KUNKEL is tern Ohio sales engr. for Nuodex div. of Tenncco GEORGE COPPIN writes that he has returned prof, at St. John's. BILL TRACY is Revlon's Chemicals Inc. of Chestcrtown, Md. Dr. RICH­ to the Pacific North^vest from San Francisco. dir. of security. ARD D. MtJRRAY received the Youngstown George has returned to line fljing for Pan Am On May 25 LESTER KROLNICK, the exec (Ohio) Junior C of C Frank Pumcll A\rard for to Hawaii, Alaska, London and Paris. George's editor of the Manhasset Press paid his annual community serrice on Oct. 13. ARTHUR J. family: seven boys, three girk — two children in tribute to Pvt. VTTO CAPELLO and to all our QUIGLEY SR, assoc. prof, of elcc. engr. at college at St. Afcirtin's, Olympia, Wash. Coppin ND, received the Catholic Layman of the Year plans to attend the 25th Reunion and looks for Award by a local K of C. EDWARD V. HAS- other aero engrs. to return. TOM CONLEY has RAH,AN was featured in an article in Chicago's just returned from two years in Mexico City; he American as one of four men who have done was controller of Ford's engine plant and is now more than anyone else in the last four decades to assigned to the general office in Birmingham, break Chicago's distasteful world-\«-ide reputation Mich. He has four boj-s — grade school through as a city of crime. HANS O. HELLAND of high schooL Look for Tom at the 24th! JOE Wisconsin Dells was elected this spring as treasurer TRACY is pres. of the ND Law Assn. He met of the State Bar of Wisconsin. NICHOLAS J. OLLIE HUNTER at tlie recent Law Advisory VILLAROSA JR has been elected a VP of ITT Council meeting on Campus. Joe writes that REUNION '68 defense communications div.

JOSEPH A. NEUFELD surrection: JOHN J. BISHOP, Davenport, Iowa; and JIM MEAGHER, Louisville; Dr. PHIL P.O. BOX 853 JOSEPH C. McMANUS. Mt. Pleasant, S. C; CLARKE and VINCE DUNCAN, Denver; BOB GREEN BAY, WIS. 54305 1S44 WILLIAM J. McNAMARA, Parma Heights, GALVIN and GERRY STANTON, Chicago; BOB Ohio; Dr. JOHN E. McSWEENEY, Cincinnati, METZLER, Kansas City; CHUCK P.ATTERSON, What a changel The constant complaining, Ohio; EAMON D. MacDEVITT, Santa Rosa, Framingham, Mass.; and SAM WING, Dallas. griping or whatever you want to call it in the CaUf.; and Dr. FELIX A. McPARLAND, Minne­ Tom mentioned that some original '44ers, Angelo past several columns by your secretary about the apolis. for one, have been identified with classes other poor cooperation from fellow '44ers in submitting Sympathy is extended to GEORGE WENDT than '44 due to the mix-up created by World news items w*as not in \'ain. The pleas were upon the death of his father, to SAM WING War n. He recommends that these men re­ heeded. The response was excellent. A very upon the death of his mother and to BILL classify themselves as '44ers. sincere thank you! O'CONNOR upon the deaths of both Jus DICK DOERMER of Ft. Wayne has been First, a serious error must be corrected. It is parents. elected to the board of dir. of Ballastran Corp. of long standing, since the 'G4 Reunion. The TOM ROLFS reported on his visit to Campus He is pres. and dir. of Indiana Bank & Trust, memorial card listed six individuals as deceased for the opening announcement of SU&IMA and is a dir. of Bowser Inc. Chicago, Columbus Mal­ but in reality they are very much alive. May the on those '44eiti who were there: ANGELO BER- leable, Columbus, Ohio and Pierce Governor Coe following men enjoy all the benefits of their rc- TELU. CUfton. N.J.; BERNARD BOWLING Inc. iu Upland. Rev. HERMAN R. REITH

28 AlUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER CSC has been appointed as a visiting prof, and company. Fandl is very mndi there where be owns and resident tutor at Makercre U. in Kampala, LARRY YEATES another New Yoricer and manages the In£an Cave Lodge at Ldte Smupee* Uganda. He will be teaching philosophy in the FRANK VIGNOLA nortbshore Chicago furmture His annual nutors are the "BLACK" JOHN dept. of comparative religions and will be spon­ baron both tried through their encooragiiig UURFHYs. Sorry, FarreO, for the goof. sored by Bishop VINCENT McCAULEY of Ft. epistles to rescue this secretary from the bottom­ HENRY ADAM, snpt. of employee relations of Portalj also an Alumnus. less pit. Neither had any quotable news bat doPont lives once agsuo in Orange, Tex. He had Col. JOHN S. HOWLANp has been selected did want to help fill the mail box. Many thanks. been there £rom '49 to '55 but was transferred as one of 160 business executives and government A welcome letter was received from FRANK to fafhenburg, W.Va. Now he has returned to officials to participate in the 52nd session of the CARVER, Trumansbuig, N.Y. who during the lus former area. He and hts wife Catherxoe have Advanced Management Prog, at Harvard. Dr. past 24 years has had various poutions — dairy five children, three boys and two girb. Hank JOSEPH B. FARRELL has been appointed to fanner, highway and builtUng construction worker, hopes to look up TOM BRENNAN itrho fives in the Federal Water Pollution Control Admin. salesman for Electrolux and for Worid Book and nearby Houston and is planning on joumeyii^ to JACK WOELFLE, Pottstown, Pa. is logistics teacher of sixth grade and of the mentally re­ ND for the 25th Reunion. FHIL CLARKE mgr. for Burroughs Corp. BILL 0*CONNOR tarded. A few years ago he received his meter's Denver MD penned a note enroote to the is sales engineer for an asphalt company in Har* and presently is teaching junior high special classes SUMMA kickoff. He mentioned that PAUL risburg. Pa. His oldest son Tom is a junior in and also is working on his doctorate at Syracuse MARIETTA and his family vacationed with the chcm. eng. at ND while his younger son Bill U. He and his wife Mary have six sons and four Clarkes at Cstes Vaxk YMCA camp and also is a freshman at King Col. daughters. his fonner Cavanaugh ^ted them in Denver. Phil sees Msgr. GEORGE The entire Green Bay contingent of ND '44ers Hall neighbor lives in nearby Ithaca where he is EVANS frequently and reports that he continues (all four) tiumed out for the annual goU outing. on the athletic staff at Cornell wlule NICK as chancellor under the new Denver arcfatushc^. Neither of the two pros — WALLY CHRISTMAN AMATO is a member of the history dept, at An intercsdng letter was received from JOE and JOE FIEWEGER — nor the two duffeis — St. Bonaventure. Frank (whose address is Box DONALDSON '23 of Louisville who apparently KEN FORBES and yours truly — came away 21) wonders about the whereabouts of JOHN w^ adopted by '44er5 attending the SUMMA with any awards. Two Flewegcr sons are at NX) MORRISON, PAUL CARR, JOE LANIGAN meeting. He sent a ne%vspaper article about now — Tom a junior and Joe Jr. a freshman. and GENE PECIULXJS. Mayor BERNARD BOWLING who appeared at BILL TALBOT recently bought a country club Another NY state man is JACK MURRAY who a city council special meeting attired in sport (Ardsley) clubhouse in Westchester. Evidently hails from Cortland where he is pres. of Cortland clothes nrach to the consternation of his fellow there is just too much to the place and he gladly Line Co. world's largest manufacturer of sport councilmen who just previously bxid reprimanded will part with an extra squash court, a bowling fishing lines. One of his customers is Stratton & one of their group for appearing in axiular attire. alley or an olympic-size pool. JACK KfcCABE Terstcgge, wholesale hardware and sporting goods, Fortunatdy for Bemie an exception was allowed handled legal aspects of the purchase while whose pres. is JIM MEAGHER. Apologies are and a ^0 fine was suspended. ANDY BARBIERE who lives a few blocks away in order to FARRELL QUINLAN. In an earlier May the joys and blessings of the holy season made recommendations on insurance coverage. column it was stated that ^nce CLEM CON- of Christmas be showered abundantly iqion you Bill saw DAVE CURTIN, veep of Xerox Corp., STANTINE moved from New Hampshire JOE and your HamlHes. Merry Christmas and Happy who was in NYC to accept a dtation for his GALL was the only *44er left in that state. New Year!

Bob Shaw ^47 IHE PRINCIPLE IS KNOWING HOW TO HANDLE A WOMAN INALLY, after almost 100 years, one Dame every year since I've been teach­ fa]I with their five daughters — ages F of Oklahoma's Catholic schools has ing — two of them this year. Now I'll 23, 20, 18, 15 and 14. Papa admits a lay MAN for a principal. He's Bob just be talking about Notre Dame to "this sounds a little unusual until I add Shaw '47 and he's enjoying his unique younger boys, which may have as good that they are all adopted. We've never position as head of the 200 elementary an influence." had a child younger than nine." pupils in Tulsa's Madalene School. The only thing Shaw doesn't like Extracuiricularly, Shaw has done a Oklahoma has had Catholic schools about his job is that there is so much lot of volunteer coaching with the since the 1880s, though not in large talk about closing down the Catholic Tulsa Park Dept. and his parish school, quantities, and Tulsa has had Catholic schools — for financial reasons. "Any Madalene. He has coached boys' base­ schools since about 1910. A few years idea where we can raise $100,000 or ball, basketball and track and girls' ago, the first lay principals were hired so?" he asks. Softball, basketball and track. when not enough nuns were available. It seems three Catholic grade schools "In the last five years I have spent But until September, when Shaw joined in the area closed this year. Tulsa is more time coaching girls than boys, the Madalene staff, all the principals mainly Protestant with about 15 per­ mainly because there were numerous had been women. "This is in contrast cent Catholic and three percent Jewish parents willing to help the boys and to the Tulsa public schools which vir­ and what Catholics are there don't so few to help the girls. To make a tually always hire men," he points out. support their schools — either finan­ long story short, five years ago I started Principal Shaw has high praise for cially or by enrolling their children. coaching the Madalene Girls' Basket­ his staff of five laywomen, two physi­ There is just one Catholic high school ball Team — 7th- and 8th-graders — cal education teachers (one of each (other than the prep school where and for the last five years we have won sex) and four Benedictine nuns. "I Shaw taught and one for girls — both the Oklahoma State Catholic Cham­ see no possible reason why sisters can­ rather expensive) in the city of nearly pionship. Thb has not hurt my chances not function to the best of their capac­ 400,000. of getting this principalship. Now I ity under a layman," he believes. "As Mr. and Mrs. Shaw have contributed am coaching still, but will not be able a matter of fact, I have been told that their share of pupils. They celebrated to give as much time to it as in the it is much preferred by many of the their 18th wedding anniversary this past." sisters not to have to live 24 hours a Madalene Chiurch is under the pas­ day and seven days a week in the same toral care of Rev. James MacNamee, house with their principal." whom Shaw calls "one of the most For the last eight years Shaw was progressive and influential priests in an instructor of English and social the coimtry." Shaw was the first com­ studies at Cascia Hall Prep School, municant at the first Mass celebrated considered one of the best boys' schools at Madalene when it was established in his part of the country. He finds the in 1947. Father "Mac" was the cele­ biggest difference between teaching and brant and Shaw has been in the parish being a principal is time. "I used to ever since. go home about 3:15," he says. "Now In 1957 he and his wife Evelyn and sometimes 1 am still here at 6 o'clock." their family moved right across the Then, too, it was quite a change street from the entrance of the church from high school boys to five- and and they have been very active in six-year-olds, but, he says, "I think I'm parish functions. Now in 1967, the going to like working with this age move is paying off in a bonus. "I have group better. I hope I can still in­ the advantage of knowing personally fluence worthy young men to attend three-fourths of the families whose Notre Dame. I've had one or more of children are in our school," the new my prep school graduates at Notre principal points out. v^ ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 29 ^ —-^^ « . . -1*

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?• STUDENT POWER has been defined as "the move­ ment to gain for students their full rights as citizens and their rights to democratically control their non- academic lives and to participate to the fullest in the administrative and educational decision-making of the university. To this issue four students and a pro­ fessor address their views on its present and future at Notre Dame.

HERE IS unrest in academia. Students have mini-view of what was to come; This time the queen plunged into-the rabbit hole of education and was Father Hesburgh and the head was that of Student they are disgusted with their destination. It is Body President (SBP) John Guerin. Although Berkeley Universityvillej USA—a quasi-Wonderland. --^The would later concern herself with academic freedom while Queen presides over her court, shouting "Off Notre Daine was up at arms about "lights,out" and with their heads" at every unruly student leader. curfew restrictions, the basic premise was there i .''. TIt all startedmore than two years ago. The court Power. Because that's what it's all about, just who has was the University of California at Berkeley. The Queen the power to tell whom what to do. was Clark Kerr. And the student who almost lost his - Guerin kept his head. Notre Dame received ex­ head was Mario Savio. Har\'ard too rebelled and stu­ tensions on both lights and curfews." Then She sat back dents around the nation were chanting "We have and enjoyed a rather peaceful two years. But the power." _ rumblings began again. SBP Minch Lewis had s\valIowed Everyone \vas upset but what upset them most was the "let us, • administrators and knowledgeable student the fact that students did have power. Savio kept his leaders, reason together" philosophy for his entire reign., _ _ . _ _^ Student unrest has turned into student power, says the activist, and Tom McKenna - it's here to stay. head because students had power and Berkeley changed He reasoned, yet when the tiirie came for delivery of because students used that power. It is a struggle and, concrete action, Minch found his sandbox empty.. JWhat whether or not it ismodulated with love, it remains a did he do? He.acted. He threatened a mass violation struggle. of curfew. He threatened signed statements by fellow­ Notre Dame is a long way from Berkeley both ship winners painting a somewhat dreary picture of' geographically and, philosophically, and in many other Du.Lac. I He threatened student power buttressed, by ways. But in the \vinter of 1964, She gave a student actionl What happened? It worked. "Curfews,

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 31 lights, apartments and cars were promised—^a charitable versity r^ulations. It decided the coaf and tie rule was. response. ' a self-defeating, meaningless anachronism. The adrnm- Y • Mr. Lewis was assisted in this little political burst ^istratipn agreed. The Senate decided thfe students by an organization called the Popular Front They should have complete control oyer their personal lives wanted to bring student rights and resjwnsibilities into witUn the University. It passed legislation to that effect Campus politics. For the first time, the possibilities of and the students have begun to act on that l^islation. student incorporation, student hiring or firing of the They Would now like an active part in the reahn where ' Dean • of Students, student judicial board,, and the the three elements (students, faculty, administration)_ of students' role in University'policies were discussed. It . the University meet—^the realm of academics. \ was new. It was exciting. It was here to stay, Thie student at Notre Dame is a product of an educa­ i The fall of 1966 wtnessed Paul Higgins' establish­ tional evolution. He has been eciuipped with a critical ment: of the Action Student Party (ASP); It ran 12 mind and now desires to apply this criticism to his men for the Student Senate. Six were elected. For present community.i He views his life, his existing most of that year, the party ^vais restricted to introducing educational construct, and is dissatisfied. He questions suie-to-be-defeated bills in the Senate and small discus­ the fact that he cannot exert any control over his awn sions, in the Senate conference rocHn. In the spring, "environment He. questions the fact that he is required along with student body elections, the ASP decided to _to take outdated and irrelevant courses. He questions nin its ideas. We wanted to see just how many people the fact that the current system is not fulfilling his j^eed with us. The party grew. The issues^were 1 needs. He questions, searching out possible solutions, declared. Dennis O'Dea was named the ASP candidate. beginning action on these solutions. He unites with other He ran and the ASP ran exceedingly hard, but lost. students; he forms an organization, a political party, The preadential candidate was defeated, but the pro­ an Action Student Party. grams were incorporated in every student politico's He is. not a wild-eyed radical. He's a concerned platform. There was "^ lot-of "we agree with you in student, one who is tired of seeing what tomorrow's principle, but . . ." We were mowng, and the best was going to bring. He wants to discuss openly all Uni­ yet to come. ' versity policy.' He-wants to know why the students In 1967 the ASP had 13 voting members in the aren't governing their lives. He wants to know why Senate along with many more "principle" people who academic reforms^ar e so long in committee. He wants now agree on action. The.Senate has decided that it recognition as a member of a threefold commimity. now has power. It • deleted a constitutional article He wants respect as a vital entity in the great Catholic which prohibited it from passing anything against Uni­ University. He thinks that maybe tomorrow is NOW.

HERE. IS NO possibility that the stru^le for eulogized without consideration of the. relevant question "student power" is an accident. Power is not an —how is this to be done? impotent shibboleth, but the, indication of a Niraibers^ imply dilution,* if not prostitution of the real and uncontrollable desire. Two points quality, of rational inquiry. \ demand expression before the remnants of Holding the Ivy League as an ideal has the effect academic order topple "in a shudder of anti- ,of reversing the direction of Notre Dame, toward Trational ecstasy: that power and student life are the dissemination of facts instead of ideas, statistics mutually exclusive, student power a contradiction in instead of concepts,'quantity instead of quality. It terms; and that responsibility for the disruption of uni­ has its curricular coimterpart in the creation and rise versity life is general, though not universal, and is a to ascendancy of depjirtments and sections within de­ moral responsibility. It would be profitable to look to' partments that recognize only the man controlled by the dissolution of the three main elements of the uni­ passion and whim at the cost of the humanistic studies'^ versity, and the causes of that .dissolution for the source that recognized an independence of .man through his of the present preoccupation with student control. Creator. Gradually, to; salve federal and social feelings.

r The traditionalist deplores the forfeiture of university authority arid labels student power "the culminatibn of amoral disaster." Ken Beirne* va. , Prior to any discussion of a takeover^ by the under- I Notre Dame is oithronirig determinism and game theory graduates of a school, there must be the forfeiture by above responsibility and ethics. the administration and faculty of thar roles in governing "Hie faculty has been adjusted to its new role as and^.'leading academic life. The administration must disseminator of fact umrelated to reality through its, first take for its ideal of excellence some socially accepted newer members in the empirical social sciences. On the symbol having litfle or no relevance to the demands of other hand, we find the. faculty chorusing the same. education, such as the East Coast.; Statistics come to claims without foimdation as the students, for their •;replacei content as the>.desired aim of the university; use of fact has no relerance to' arguments of ethics "and number of books, number of buildings, number of fellow­ order. The call for rights preempts the discussion of ships, nuihber of students, teacher-student ratios, all are reality and'necesdty. A curious dichotomy has arisen.

32 •• , ALUMNUS NOVEMBER I9«7 DECEMBER

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V •.''.!, ••• ; t/ • ' •' • . ••.'.•'••: On one hand, the students are taught, on the other, what kind of leadership, a rational authority. oiticaU]^ ac­ they are taught provides no basis for either their or the cepted. S(Hiueone must point out the |>attaiis, of'the faculty's thoughts about a student's role at "Notre Dame.- , real; so.long aJs he does nplt deceive, thejteach»,a{^« ' We find instead the use of older concepts without ' course, ordie administrator; ot ja tiniversity is to be ac> , foundation as intimidating weapons. In the 'arguments cepted as ah authority, to \jc hei^ed if not obeyed., Tb?. of those claiming and espousing student rights and student must follow tlie' pdnter of his teacher^ not doch power, you will find some condescension to reason in ilely but impatiently, until the day when they^init their use of terms such as "community" and "university," company,, through separation of intertstSr or through .die but no attempt to link, the actual essences to their own occasipiial leap of IirOliance. the fine) teacher ^i^tty assertions. ^ ; Justs to see. The authority ,of the university should not The whole movement takes the form of a radicid .be unquesticned, but miist Jbe acknowledged^-bpth' fay. the' egalitarianism, mainly because the administration and students/and by the administcationr .' '• ' _ faculty have admitted to no inore a grasp of the Power is the n^ation of reason:, ,It nuasuies itii' demands of education than the students. We have even progress by addition and multiplication;'^ iti path' is had the spectacle of a former University administrator marked by subtraction and nitiiladon. \Power is deare . announcing the dawii of a new age with the coming unbridled by reason, a cuiming chaos. Armed with dw of Berkeley. The imitatio Berkeley replaces whatever it , hedonistic calculus, a man seeks power; his personalpNun was that preceded it and its herald is i>ow in Guidance. multiplies itself in'the satiatioa of others, and his power: On this basis, the students' demands for power are,, - enters existence. Mme accurately, pbvrer repkues re­ if not rational, at least understandable, at least at first ality. Find a man who speaks of power and there you ^ glance. But the form of-^the demand is not that oc­ will.'find the focal mirnxr of the carefidly disordered . casioned by the nature of the situation. Normally, it deares of his associates and followersi, their eyes and-i would be expected that the students,-after noting the appetites turned not to the world but to him.' Fmd.the \ deficiency, would call for-a reassessment of the present man tom'^by .desires where his reason holds no sway, y changes; call upon faculty members with a background Watch a sal^man,cajole, pressure and bribe him, i^ in theory and the natures of education (not to be con­ , pealing to the greatiest number of fears and daires pos­ fused with technique); and then proceed to work with sible to find the one that will force not a discision, but the administration aiid faculty toward a time when the an action that will replace a dedsioa, and then.you.will role of authority in reason could be accepted on campus. know the natiure of power/ The platrtic salesman, cbn- This is not possible under present circumstances for two forming„not toj«dity but to the twists of. his subjects' reasons. \ N ' ; tortured souls, is the widdeir of {X>wer. Ask what place The administration will accept neither authority nor this has at a university, and then watch the student torn the responsibility that goes with it.' Not willing to extend between the desire to be oh a judicial board over his, the efTort to distinguish between paternalism and fellows and the desire to.^have no requirements at all authority, the administration is allowing-the latter to in his own life, with the opportunity to justify dthor-: be slaughtered in the guise of the former. The basis of with the necessity for commimityor the in^dolable rights^ authority is the willingness to work to see and live with of the student Salesmanship is ^replacing truth in the an objective reality, an absolute. The administration is university; where then will it go to find expression? not willing. ^ Reason and power are natural enemies, as are a The student body will not accept authority in any fortress and a'horde of savages. Who will.gain if "stu­ case, since its acceptance demands the same type of dent power" becomes a reality? The student whose edu-"' relation to a reality that one person can know better cational atmosphere will be the plaything of his rpom- than another as' that demanded of the administration. niates and drinking buddies, 'and those'with, whom he. In either case, leaidership is demanded of the man who wouldn't even associate? The teachers who know what - holds or heeds (not xmcritically) authority. can be shown, if only the students in ppwer will con­ There is then a vacuum, created from the unwilling­ descend to allow their charges to look? A short analysis ness of anyone to lead. In answer to this, a number of of the platforms of candidates in student elections will interest groups have grown to struggle for control. The reveal in what direction all eyes are. turned. two major ones are the bureaucracy (formerly an ad­ ^ This is^the present aiid futuire of NotreDame. vThe ministration), and student leaders (formerly students;). demand .for^ "student power" is npt<|Unique to Notre The demands for "student power" are the technique Dame. The presuppositions c^^ the'^claiins are the same used to overcome the' inertia of a semi-controlling everywhere. If notUng else, the fact that the movement ; bureaucracy identified in the. popular ima^ation with is widespread should.give grave doubts as to its correct-. rules. In this way the whole structure.of the university ness. The outcome outlined' is not inevitable; it is, how­ is made to participate,in the incoherency of its present ever, improbable that anything else'will be the outcome. organizers, instead of being understood in its .possible t No, there is no possibility that the general clamor ~ relation to a rational design. This design and its relation for "student power" coming frcan. administration, fac- . to power is the next problem. ulty and students alike is'an accident,'' The pretext of ' The nature of student life comes first into question. student maturity is very thin; one does not claim matu­ Its primary foundation is the awareness of an objective rity, but lives it It is not frar anyone else to give or-take , reality (absolutes), and the necessity-to use-reason to away. Only the fragile atmosphere of the university^, its understand it. To train the rational faculty in any num­ delicatei mr^cture of reality and thoughl^ is th«e to> be ber of its various and complementary disciplines is the granted oi: destroyed. Its destruction willrbe^the culmi­ task of the imiversity. Training the mind supposes some nation of a moralidisastier. Its name—'"student pcwcr.'v

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER ^ 33: \ - N THE FALL elsewhere come leaves and colors and people., We come as^American middle-class white Cath-^ sounds and then football. In the fall at Notre Dame olio males oi average intelligence and the majority shall comes football and football in all its glory. The leave the same. Our political and social views, tend to campus is turned into a riot of yellows and reds be conservative since we are the children of a stable in­ -and hooraySj and soon there is no campus but only dustrial sodety which in its self-sadsfacdon promotes an open air opera house, the stadium and glory, stasis. We are obedient, if familiar, with the authority-; I gloryj always glory. And the stands swing to and fro of black^'robes. In sum, we come to Notre Dame smug like sheets in a wind and here, here on' a plot of green and secure in our social status, our material prosperity the whole of Notre Dame plays with "the pigskin and' ^ and perhaps even our claim to eternity. oohs and aahs the flighty ball into the right hands. The Just as the sun sets and the sun also rises, we pass cheers rise and grow louder and finally as the ball thrmi^ four winters-of Notre Dame the same as we crosses that last sliver of lime and into ^ the end zone, were during that first deceptively bright football season. you and me and him and everyone are merged into cme, Let us examine more closely the way Notre Dame re­ a metaphysical imity of sweat, tears and good times. inforces our stock credentials.

., .and then there are rnany who, handed their beliefs and values, • Jay Schwartz slumber away in the world of absolutes.

And then you retreat back to the gloominess of Sorin A high-school senior approaches college with a set and "fall asleep and feel dead, but soon to be sdive is - of beliefs and values,, that are generally a result of his another long week and you know that you'belong out familiar socialization. As he moves, at least physically, there and you want to be there. Your joy and love are avray £rom his parents, he should move intellectually ephemeral but they shall return and they shall return and spiritually from the values they have given him; the sotm. " ^ move'ment t^es the form of questioning, revising, and After fall comes the snow and with the snow the finally, personally appropriating these values., He may darkness. The lights in the South Caf are a dull haze not feel any differently, but at least he will have felt and your milk is no longer really white. And you study these things more direcdy, more as being for himself. hard, and read the Sun-Times amid the gloom.and you What I wish to suggest is that-the encounter and con­ study late into the night On Friday everyonp bundles flict of ideas andjof beliefs are not an integral part of life off to Frankie's or St. Mary's and then maybe to the at Notre Dame; rather values are not test^ because Laurel Club for a beer and more sweat. You come back they are not discussed and we graduate with our original in the cold, a bit drunk and you fall in your ho-hum and unexptored beliefs.-^ corridor and soon you fall asleep. The whiteness of the . The primary fact of the imiversity and this one in snow makes everything darker and you walk slower than particular is community; everybody lives together. The before. TTie march with everyone goes on. And you secondary facts are St. Mary's, the weather. South Bend, bask in the empty warmth oLyour radiator and wait for and vacations. These are the basic topics of intercourse spring that has to come. and the residence halls serve as a market place for these Spring comes and leaves the ground "so^;y. It's a classic and cozy topics of conversation. Football, heavy spring and the light breezy fall air won't come not Vietnamj" looms large as the subject of concern for a few inore weeks and then you probably won't here; we talk more,about the weather and St Mary's know how to leave the library." If you do leave, it will than we do about the nation's ghiettos; more about be on the run — probably to St. Mary's and the girls, vacation than religious experience. By doing this we . the nondescript, blank, aloof, pretty girls of the fall. strengthen our original inherited values - because and ' And they will be in the windows and then walk you only because they grow with us in time. Yet they grow home with souvenirs, together. -Tomorrow will bring not in contoat but rather blindly, safely out of view and " die blue lakes and a terribly clear brightness. The birds out of reach. Reinforcement is the name of the game and thdr bustle ivill awake the trees and signal the and Notre Dame from eight thirties to late in the library exams and finally summer, summer and the dullness of happens to be theplace. heat, on a dry day. It is my belief that life at Notre Dame revolves about At Notre Dame the year is only nine months long. these central objects and ignores what one could, per­ ' It starts with gaiety and ends with relief and aXl along haps a little pretentiously, call the great questions of the way everyone goes together, always together. This • personal existoice. We piyot about our common condi­ is only natural since this is how they b^an — together. tion with our stock responses, and emerge afte r fom- This is life at Notre Dame or at least as one man years as football fans with the intellectual maturity of sees it It is not meant to be a total view but it is in a high-school student Creativity and indivddual con- many respects a true one. One person and perhaps many tributibn^us become special phenomena at a place that others think it is and their qualification is that they should promu^te their necessity. live it , ' / ^. ^ I am' not omtending that all the people here do not ^ It. appears quite clear that Notre Dame serves to try to come to know themselves. I am not su^esting rdnforce inherited and generally unexamined values. for obemmnent that all of Notre Dame cheri^es only _We come together to Notre Dame as the same type of footbalL I am not saying that there is not intellectual

34 ' •• ' ' — ~ ' ' ALUAitNUS NOVEMBER Wt7 DECEMBER revolt or serious ccmsideration of serious problems. How­ - fathers aad^aldiad.mea. Tacf mImded thrir bdie& ever, I am saying, and saying very seriously, that the life and values, ^dtly instructed not to questkni, and then- I have depicted is unfortunately the life of too many pushed quicklyjinto die.life of mechanized suburlna. , •• students. I am saying that too frequently students leave I hope that thisessay has pinpointed a serious l>rob- ^ Notre Dame on a sunny day in June and ventiure forth lem and that with^tfais.kndwlolge another fact will : in iht real world without ever seriousl)Kconsidering how .emerge:'that this problem, with such serious dimen-^ they stand in that world. These are the people jvho sions, has no mnple and foFthright.answer. I dobdieve cbine back in the fall to cheer the team, and these are that the solutiob'is in the air at NotrelDam^.butl alsp, the people who shall approach life with inherited and believe thit it is coming too slowly~^d obviously'too imexamined qpinions on anything from birth control to late for too many. For as long as stuilmts are-not di­ Black Power. These are Notre Dame's lost many. rected toward individuality'iand toward creative activity,' We ask what is the role of the American Catholic in V as Irag as they lead a mechanical-.existencfi they will' the contemporary intellectual scene, but we ask before remain spectators to that game that we somehow, call . we have considered that the Catholic at a Catholic life. They wiU be; as rigidly held within thdr narrow university is normally so strictured by parochialism, an £rames of rderence as when^they cam& oppressive sense of tradition, a devastating awareness of I do not believe it is necessary for every graduatt; of; the ordinary, that innovation is impossible for him. He Notre Dame to be a Socrates, floa^g back and forth in - must lead a subterranean'^existehce', concerned not with melancholy metaphysical water. However, it'is man­ the real problems of lifebiit rather wth yards per carry. datory that eadi.be an Odysseus, a mail coiisdous of They are notencoiuraged to test the territory off the himself and^f those around him, a contributor, alive, ^ beaten track but rather to follow the absolutes of grand- intense, open. ^ , j^

HE HEAVY mist of a cold, dark, Indiana evening reality in the winter-r-is that^we-at Notre Dame lack lingers over Notre Dame's norths quad as a lone the sustaining energy to keep our student igovemment- - student trudges toward Farley Hall. At the front living, vital and meaningful. The,missing element of door, one of his""advance men" meets him and vAadi I speak is "student power." And because of this takes him to a crowded forced-triple on the lack, the. entire Notre Dame community suffers—Utip' first floor where a couple dozen students have administration, the-faculty, the alumni and espedally Tgathered. the students. Notre Dame suffers, because with "student ^ He begins. His voice is mechanical now after two power," it could be so much better. weeks, of constant campaigning. He has said these The fundamental prindples of "student power" same words over and over again, and he has now include three important concepts: 1) the right and reached the point where he could give the speech in responsibility of the student to govern himself.^ in the his sleep.' acadenuc community, 2)' a recognition by the> admin­ "I'm running for student body president because I istration and faculty of the students' rights and^e- , think Notre Dame can be a better place. I'm running sponsibilities of self-govemmen^ and 3) an acceptance^ - because I think we, through student government, can do by all three dements.of the xmiversity-^administration,'- something about the conditions we find ourselves in. faculty, and students—to recognize each other's place . We~_can gjun more student rights. We can participate in the at^emic community and- to work together to

/ —— — • —

• ' * • •' Student Power at Notre Dame - . REVOLUTION or EVOLUTIOm Mike MipCauley ^ actively in the academic community. We can begin to exercise joint control over matters, which concern the build a better hall life. We can. make decisions for entire community inWest. ~ . -. ourselves." If we clearly understand the fundamentals of "stu­ And then the candidate goes on to enumerate dent poWer" and the implications they have on our specific programs and ideas regarding student govern­ university, then we can begm to see why student power - ment. But the ideas and programs and words bounce is lacking here at Notre Dame and what we can do to off the walls of that.forced, cramped triple in Farley establish a base for "student p)Ower" in the future.'' j ~^ Hall because those' two dozen students don't really The failure of student govemmeht to incorporate the %- believe it is possible. They will vote for this candidate. first prindple of "student power"—^that of sdf-govern- He.is a sharp guy.and an impressive talker. But they ment—^is perhaps the key to why "student power" docs ' resdly don't believe what he says. not exist at Notre.Dame. The f^ure falls to a large And that is the beginning. It all begins with idealism d^ee on the shoulders of student government and not , in March, flickers in the mute months of ^summer the university administration, becaiise we students have^ vacation, fades in the footbaU-frantic days of autumn, f^ed on three levds: ,^ A and finally gasps and dies as the winter engulfs the 1) We have failed to support our. student govern­ Notre Dame campus.' " ment—and redprocally,^ our student govemmoit has _ - The reason that - student government annually failed to be senative to the real interests of the student' resembles a gigantic balloon^—^blown up with idealism body. 2)'We-have failed,to build meaningful and sdf- in the spring only to be jwpped by the sharp point of goveming hall communitira^ On the contrary, we have

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19(S7 DECEMBER ^ •• ^. •'•:'.'•'•/ "T ^^ • . 35, channeled our main interests and .what power we do intelligent arid have a.greater interest and capacity to have into areas which should riot take precedence over learn, and diat we win more graduate fellowslups.. But hall life. The hall community is the most important they iiave fjuled to realize that we students want to structural unit of student government and student life, assert ourselves in the academic community—^that we do and it has not received the attention and interest from ' have something valuable to offer-in the vray of advice • either the individual student or the student government from'the student point'of view. We want them to know, 3) We as students have failed to live up to our coni- our iritereste,iour opinions on student life, liying con­ mitment concerning the judiciary system v in the hall ditions, arid academic policy. We simply want our and on the Campus. This opportunity for peer govern­ rightful share Jn the policy formation of the University. ment and discipline was started by the students and ^Numerically, we should/have that representation gained recognition from the administration through the (we are over 6,000 strong), intelligently, our demand OflSce of the Dean of Students. But we students have is a just one. And responsibly, we have shown and will failed to sustain that judicial system. Most halls do not continue to show that we can riot only govern ourselves, even have hall judiciaries. The students' simply have but also make suggestions to help Notre Dame become not taken the initiative. It is not a matter of not being a truly modern university in the fullest sense of the word. willing to enforce rules which we students did not make. The third fundamental of "student power"—^that It is a case of student apathy vnthin the hall and student of boopraration amorig^'the administration, faculty, and government. student body—^will be realized at Jfotre Dame only if Do we have the right to complain about the archaic the| first two primary principles become reality. We and neomonastical rules imposed upon us by the ad^ students niiist first realize that with a "right" comes an ministration if we have displayed a complete lack of undeniable responsibility. We have a lot to prove yet. resjtonsibility in this important area of student power— If we cannot govern ourselves within the hall com­ the power to maintain order in our i own hall com­ munity, we have displayed to all that we do not have munities? ^ the responsibility to accept further" rights; But the The second main reason for the lack of real student important thing is that we students DO have the re? power at Notre Dame is that the administration is sponsibilityi, .We only have to redirect our student unwilling to relinquish its strangehold over the Uni­ government and individual interest to the obvious focal versity community. The administration has failed to be point of student life—^the hall community. truly academic—that is, it has failed to realize the full, Hojjefully,- the administration of the University will potential of the modem university. And it has failed realize the students', capacity to govern themselves and . to realize the potential role of an a\Araure, interested and to. participate in th^ policy formation structure of the articulate student body. It seems as though the Uni- University. And, ^ hopefully, the student body wll be versify administration has failed to notice that students recognized as an important and constructive force at have changed over the last two decades—^that they can Notre Dame;. no longer accept dictatorial control by an administration "Student power" is coming to Notre Dame.' It is which is largely insensitive to student demands. inevitable,,and no one can stop it Indeed, no one A recent article on "student power" in Newsweek should want to stop it, because it is-good. It can only ' put it this way: "Increasingly sophisticated by travel, help Notre Dame in the long run. It can come through sderted by the universal word of the media, and weaned responsible dialogue and cooperation among the ad­ on the security of an affluent society, students are not . ministration, faculty, and students. Or it can come afraid to assert their beliefs. They have realized that through revolution and demonstration, as it did at the student body —, increasingly diverse, urban, and Berkeley. worldly—^is changing more rapidly than the school." If we realize the true potential of "student power," The administration at Notre Darbe must realize the there is no question as to how it will come to Notre change that has occurred within th^ student body in Dame—through-a mutual cooperation and'respect for the last decade. The administration has realized that the positions and viewpoints of the administrator, the our collie board scores are higher, that we are more teacher and the student

lOTKE DAME TODAY enjoys a new life and a new is known that this sorrow involves, an undeniably crucial hope engendered by a new generation of stu- question: Ist^the person of the 60s stiU adequate to his 'dents and teachers.. Still,- every generation own vocation, to his own Work? brings with it new ways and new .^approaches, In the 20th century there has been developed a the past flowdng into the. present and the fu­ measure of power surpassing all expectations and antici­ ture and, strangely, the future flowing back irito pations,, a measure of power that will grow, it seems, Nth e present And today.we do know that stu- constantly and immeasurably. This power is widely ob- '. derits and teachers, like all citizens Mn the antipersbnal jectivatcd: in scientific perceptions and institutions, ,' power-world of the 60s, are always in; danger of being which now in turn bring forth new problems; in political • submitted to the process of massification we observe structures, iwhich are in constant movement; in technical everywhere about us in the history, society and. politics works which'push forward out of their own dynamism; - of our time. last but not leasts in the spiritual and intellectual at­ The optimism of a few cannot gainsay the fact there titudes of. man. "~ .' • is to ,be encountered everywhere a deep; sorrow now- ' Ck)llege students and,their teachers want to know ^{adays. This sorrow is first of all concerned with political- what they can. do.- We find ourselves staring — vastly asocial conditions and possibilities. But beyond these it startled •^— at the savage features^ of the nuclear mon-

2i ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1M7 DECEMBER ,;A;:

strosity and a^ our spectacular missions into outer space themselves of paral^ns and to save thonsdves nam Ae r; and lately into' the darkest depths of the oceans. Vfe rampant 20th-century\powqr wiucb th^:fm[in;'fnd/' are tormentet^ and tortured in iriind and spirit by war­ ' out of the Chindf; in and out of the Uhi«^s^i?^c^'"'';:' .^ fare and specially by the vijper's tangle of Vietnam. / I cannot. speakViwith'the authority ,or l^^iage,of /suffering from a sense of "powerlessness." 'I do not a sociologist andiropd<>gist^ educatimi^ psyclxdog^ V , 'think Notre Dame' students crave power. Without be­ . typolc^ist or journalist-analyst Yet I do have adme/wg^ '% '^; ing militant or enrj^ed or violent, they want to relieve gestions affecting our. ^dents in their jdig^t and ^. ; f.-t Professor of English, beloved by geriertttums- ^^'^• y ofND men, speaks of) students:anid ourseltie}^^ i.' ' Frank O'Malley in the bowetiworld oj.thi sixties. \;. '\ .: N -

.1-, ic i.'i We recognize the immense importance of the solution reeled mostly to ouisdves as teachen and OMmellaits of political, social and economic disorders and injustices. who cannot fail to share the experiences of oiir ftiidents. v . ' But the emphasis varies in this decade from year to year. First: .wemust renew in some measure what used to Involvement here in the civil rights movement is be cidled the contemplative attitude. Enmunud Mourner ' ^ clearly much less than it was three or four years ago. has"mentioned the real danger of liecoining'^ut up m ^ , Instead the energies of some of our ablest current stu­ ounelyes. But for most of/us tfie true descriptipo, is / '^ dents are engaged in the peace movement to end the tl^t of Valery: 'TVejare shut up outade'cursdves." • ^^ Vietnam war and to reject the draft Simultaneously From that ^kind. of imprisonment inothing' Init\' . \', . . - y-'. ••^>'''-,i>:'' their lessons and get along with the business of ^x>wing Actually, I believe many of our studoits who are / ' up,and readying themselves for careers; But I would, known'as activists comprdiend this—- and, asia raidt,\^- ,' say that our students are chiefly concerned, regardless their action on behalf of. their fellpyy students, and me \- of other commitments, with the improvement of, with Uiiiverrity community has the form of Aeir renectj^^ -^ ^ \ the quality and integrity of pur educational system, with is more constructive and effective.-.To bum down the ', the promotion and sustenance of the arts and sciences. Dome is not their objective —7, only to make the &c^ These compose, for oiir students .and teachers, the true the history, the symbolism of its odstence more meaning- \ preoccupation. - \ ful, more radiant'than eveirsbefore. / ^y ^ As I see it, our problem rests not on matter of Second: We must open^ ourselves again to the el©-, > ^ method but in our whole attitude towards life and in mentary fact of the .nature of things and peiyms. Even S the examination and re-examination of this attitude. a cursory.examination will show us how schematic w-' Now the pressing questions come: Is rule always un- isysteinatic we make them, how far 'we deal with thedi •~ .; assailably right? Does the p>erson dealt with always only on the basis of .conventions, how much we handle •_'., feel there is a personal, relation established, especially them.under external aspects .of efiBciericy; convenienoe ' - ,one of respect? Is the action really concerned with or the saving^of time. We must approach the esseice of ^ c. this relation and is it realized as it should be, according being ^aiii. We must commit;, as Josef KepCT womd y to its nature? Is there a true appeal to the animate, the urge, the genuinely philosopMcal act Our stud^ts hore' creative faculty, the freedom in the student? today, with aU' intensity and interiority beyond that v^ . We must understand these are not questions .of pri- • of past generations are right now asking/the real jdiilo- V -- vate morale merely but of the success or failure of in­ sophical questions: What is work? —r and what'is,in^ tellectual and ^cultural life and of the education that tellectual work? — as soon as they areseen in the firaxne __' would nurture this life. We must realize that everything '' of the interreUtions of life.. What is learning?/Whi?* \ depends, for, ourselves and for owe students, upon the is wisdom.? What is thinking? What are ^oritX\ aad' activation of a true and deep respect for truth, right, discipline? What are authpri^ and \pbedien(^? What is; personal dignity, and the "creative center" of our fellow- friendship? What is lowE? What is nam? .IS^rthimiva^ men. If this is not done, then some kind of force will scale of values? 'Which are thelmore importan^^which conquer.and some kind of slavery will ensue. V the less'important" values? Which are not important a^^ Students throughout the country, are described as , all? What are the final amis of life? Wfiat aie die meazi^.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19«r DECEMBER ' , ,

- V , to achieve them? / - . _ ""; ~; i (\ ^ ; - eduaitoi^-^^teacheis vand students and as men of ar^ high virtue of reverence, should he, m intellectual drcles, -^ science,and learning altogether against hubris., against emphasized first (nothing agaiast excellence is'implied unmeasured "arrogance—^and we may discolvar that "all here but the term has become a .kind of academic and"^ pedajitry and"/caste'spirit and tin-god service" are de^ semantic blank). Reverence signifies regard for the" sub­ feated and dissdved. ^ \ -, stance of thingSj of persons, history and nature. The - ~Of one fact I am convinced: die mode of imder- virtue of reverence will bring about the growth of . 'gradiiate education must always be submitted to^the wonder, love and awe, lesiding to a_genuinely creative stiidenfs owndevelopment, to his own call and need to thought and art, a creative science and culture and ^ l>e himself and to dominate or master decently his ex- - indeed a creative citizenry altogether.. The attitude of, , periences ^ther. than to be dcmiinated or mastered or' reverence will keep us from committing acte of agres­ overwhelmed by*^them. Each student's existence has to sion against all retries and knowledge — and willhelp be adoidwledged andhe; caimot be deprived of his owii us, out of our respectful recognition of our students to si^le, bis own. way with ideas .and realities. The truth ^ avoid the dangers of instrumentalization and deperson­ is that no two students grow towards perfection" in eix- alization. ^ — . , ' ' actly the same.way.^Failure to grasp this fact can result While we know, we~cannot indidge a' foolish faith only in standardization, if not actually in a "massacre of in the good nature of those students comii^ imder us-^ -die 1niM)ceht».*'t <- "" . , (for they will be capable like ourselvw of a variety pf Our students today will not long endure academic sins and weaknesses),-we must avoid the perils of what structures set.up out of dght and out of range of theii- r would like to call academic Jansenism whidi, having living~^presences and pnissures, structures which-in the too low a view of human nature, chronically under- concrete situation may be fpiind irrelevant on-untoward. •estimating.human quality, int^rity and decency, crushes At the moment some students have es^Iisiied a out or obstructs the possibilities of great life and growth "free jimverrity" .on die Campus. Its sponM*rs sayNits in our students, deals deathblows • to or igiiOTes their necesdty "qirings from the demands of the students for greater intdlectual fulfillment" and frcxn "the feeling "TOTi the part of jdie students that impicntant things they want to know escape them in the normal curriculum." 'To burn down the Dome is not their objective It must te noted, however tiiat through the generations V.. only to make the fact, the history, the student.discussion societies like The Wrimglers and lit- symbolism of its histdry^more meaningful,^ erary-jmrnials like the.older Scrip and newer Juggler have always tried to enlarge and enliven the normal " more radiant than ever before." :^ curriodar.'experience. Clearly our students will not ^continue to be. omsumers or credit victims, thus saving facility- members fictMnsettlin g down- in die 7 status of -: often- excellent saisibilities and powers of iniagination;' , function^rin or ^business managers. ? - For, on "the whole, our students are far, far from being Many, of ^tbe statements made here are familiar 'worms; and we have much more to do than" to observe enoiiq^ to my.colleagues and,students as they are to.the them turn up their bellies in a just agony. . _ faculties and students of other schoolsvl have visited. . Fourth and last: In the'Catholic University of Notre . Since I could not develc^ or concretize my points and Dame we are brought to the thought that in our concern " notes herCj^I reconmiendjonly further meditation upcnr , with the works of the mind, we miust'meditate seriously these thoughts, for theydo result from a profound con­ about the-final relationship of our existence o^ ""rela­ cern for the sanctity of the^person.and personal life,' tion to God through Christ Our Lord. Today in the from an~~acute realization that (persondityy is sacred. 1 university the"* religious, liturgical, and sometimes pente- It is evident to me that the Notre-Dame student is ~' costal than formalistic, aesthetic and pietistic concern tnily^a person... He ^annot-be cat^rized. He cannot -~oL the student may seem to be more theolc^cal.' But be pat ^irawling on a pin. Jt is not power he wants in the inids"t~~of his understandable crises of-faith and butajecogdhiMi, in^the impersonal power-world of the ~ .\doubt, the student senses that man is "iiot a being suffi- _ 60s, c^tbe< fact that-he wants tO-be—^and will be—a 1 cient unto himself who can acknowledge'this relation-. perscm, free, open and creative.' ; - - ~^p or reject it, precisely as'he thinks and decides. And Fiiiallyy I ^ve written these wmds in the ALUMNUS •- thie way in which he imderstands^this relationship, how' . with pride in .the Notte Dame/students of the,past, •^ seriously he takes it—all this determines, the nature of with confidence and joy in, those-of the-preseiitand -his life, his work. Jus vocation. This is so. No phi- with faith in thosef^of the future. "And with love for ,^lpsopher, no historian, no politician, "no poet-^-and no ^. ail. TpAXir.'" . •' .':.^-, , N ...^ ••• •, ••. ^•.

38 , ' ••/• -• i- ' .• V 1 .v^ AlUMNUS,NOV»lBE« IW DECEMBEH '

./- Editor's Note on STUDENT POWER Except for Professor Frank O'Malley's overview, the story of "student power" on this campus was told only by Notre Dame students. O'Malley, whose asso­ ciation with the student body goes back to 1928, provided the historical perspective for this latest student movement. This was, then, the stu­ dents' own show, an unrestricted op­ portunity for them to speak their piece — to tell Alumni how they view their own role in the University community. But speaking as both alumnus and editor, I hope the issue will not end here. I know among Alumni and even within the student body itself there are many who view the issue diifer- endy. I hope these jjeople, as well as those who endorse these views, will contribute their own thinking on a subject which affects the essence of the University. This magazine welcomes all points of view as it has with other topics: Change in Today's Church, Academic Freedom and The Lost Image. Hope­ fully, the response will be such that in a future issue we can give adequate space to "How the University and I Alumni Look at Its Students." FRANK M. LINER^N Caf where we reminisced of the dbys wc worked ALUMNUS Editor JOHN THURIN '59 entertained P.O. BOX 5000 in the dining halls. John is an attorney and mth coffee and doughnuts Saturday am. I was a 1943 BINGHAMPTON, N.Y. 13902 assistant secretary of the Afasonite Corp., Chicago. little disappointed in some of the unnecessary Had a nice chat %%-ith Dean TOM BERGIN responses at the Pep Rally and also a sign at Class agent JOE HAGGAR is chairman of the in Continuing Ed. Center. Father CHARLES the game. Just an "Old Grad," I guess. Crossroads Committee in Dallas to inform the CAREY CSC dropped in and doesn't look any Tsdked to Chiss president BILL KLEM on the public on the proposed $115 million bond program. different than he did when he was in Walsh. phone. JIM RETTER, former Class president, O. J. KEYS has opened the Bob Key's Travel Prof. WES BENDER is still the same and was has been promoted to mgr. customer service for Agency at 132 N. Rodeo Dr., Beverly Hills, Calif. reminiscing about putting a cement floor in his chonicak and plastics. Union Carbide, with head­ We express the s>-mpathy of the Class and offer basement. A great crew — SADOW5KI, DON­ quarters in NYC. Dr. F. GILBERT McMAHON our prayers for D.AVE CONDON'S mother, Mrs. NELLY, WALTHERS, GARRY and a few iias been tuuned executive director of medical re­ Lcona Condon. othen. search of the Merck Sharp & Dohme Research I had the opportunity to see a few of otir The Campus still gives you that "special feel­ Labs, in West Point. classmates at the lou-a game. *'M.WOR JOE" ing." Offered prayers for our Classmates at Sorin How about putting us on your Christmas card BR.ADY, still of Jolict, sat right behind mc. Saw Hall Chapel and the Grotto. Looks as if Tom list and send us some news with your greetings. FRANK "BUD" MALONE but not to speak to. Bergin's old room in Sorin is going to be a Merry Christmas and Happy and Prosperous Ran into JOHN LA VERY in the basement of the lounge — I think it was that in '44 and '45. New Year.

PETER P. RICHISKI BROWN, I now discover that both RUDY LOPEZ a small private practice in research. 6 ROBIN PLACE and ED FISHER have been dethroned as FRANK FOSS is now hack at ND as a staff 1946 OLD GREENWICH, CONN. 06870 ''Father of the Cbss of '46.'* Bob's family con­ member of the Center for Continuing Education. sists of 12 children. Oldest son Mike (bom at I am very pleased to report that a number of He, his wife Yvonne and their six children had ND) is a medic in the Army; Patrick (also bom fellow classmates have responded to my plea for been living in Southern California. An invitation at ND} is a freshman at the U. of Wisconsn. peu-5. This is most encouraging especially when to visit him is extended to all members of the The other 10 arc at home. Bob is program dir. you are trying to \mte a column for such a Class who happen to return to the Campus. The for ballistic missiles prog, for AC Electronics Div. small class. Keep those notes and cards coming Foss family now make their home at 1935 Trent of General Alotors in Afilwaukce. He lives at in. Way, South Bend 46614. JOE ZIMMERMAN 13450 Brook Ave., Elm Grove, Wis. 53122 and Bro, CAJETAN HOLLAND CSC celebrated his took time out to write that he is employed with would like to hear from some old buddies. Phone 25th anniversarj' of his religious vows in June his father as distributor for American Oil Co. number is 414-782-4453. ivith his brother Rev. Jerome Holland OSA cele­ in Lake Charles, La. Joe is married and has four brating the Mass for the occasion. Brother Cajetan ROBERT £. IbL\CK AID also dropped me a children, a boy 15 and three daughters 19, 17 and is currently at ND HS, W. Haven, Conn. T. J. line. He is prof, of medicine, Wayne State U. 11. Kindly stop in to say hello to Joe if you VARG.A, VP of Emmco Ins. Co. the last two School of Medicine and is a director at Hutzcl happen to be in the vicinity of Lake Charles. years has been promoted to asst. VP for the Hosp.» Detroit. His wife Patty and their five A final note: your secretary is a candidate for Indianapolis region of Associate Discount Corp., children live at 3020 Westview Ct., Bloomfield the Board of Tax Review, Greenwich, Conn. a subsidiary of Associates Investment Co. Hills, Minn. Afost of Bob's time is devoted to Hope to hear from you other classmates so that Through the receipt of a kind note from BOB medical school affairs, hospital administration and we can look forward to more enjoyable columns.

JACK MILES (translation; NT)—7, Southern Cal—25). John is JAMES W. KELLY, first secretary of the US 3218 BENTLEY LANE with the PR dept. of Cook County, 111. embassy in Rome, is hoping for a Washington as­ 1947 SOUTH BEND, IND. 46613 signment sometime in 1968 so he can sec ND MAILBOX again before it expands out of sight. RAY FOOTBALL PRIZE UP FOR GRABS Father WALTER BOZEK uses one of the yellow FRANKLIN has moved from Atkinson, N.H. Now that it is established the Fighting Irish will cards from the ALUSINUS to report, "I am now where he has been principal of a school as I not go undefeated again this year (this is being teaching full time at Immaculate HS in Danbury, recall, to Turners Falls, Mass. What brings you written Oct. 22, thus tlie strange tense), scores Conn, and am in residence at St. Alary's rectory "daow-n" to lifass., Ray? of entries in our football sweepstakes on the m Ridgefield." SAM ADELO, "Mr. Oil Slick" Still in the educational field, RAY STRUBLE Reunion questionnaires arc out the window. By himself, sends mc an article about him published is teaching math at North Carolina S. in Raleigh, the time this appears in print, we'll know (1) in a recent issue of Petroleo Interamericano, which N.C., and BOB REINDERS is on the faculty the season tally and (2) tlic winner of the grand he says is the Spanish "sister" of ^e OH and at Tulane in "N'awlins." Other address changes prize. One thing we don't know yet is what the Gas Journal. The piece relates how Sam's mastery of note: BOB CANNON from Des Moines to prize is, but it'll be something at least moderately of Spanish, Arabic and several other European Binghamton, N.Y.; WILMONT KERR from worthwhile. tongues has buffed added luster to his brilliant Denver to Houston; Rev. JOHN WILLIAM WEEKEND SEEN professional career. GREENE from Washington, D.C. to AfcAIIen, Early football dates at the stadium brought some Tex. BOB VEENEMAN from Louisville to Miami; men of '47 back for a look at the action. While GLEANTNGS and JOHN PAINTER from Rocky Afount, N.C. awaiting the outcome of the American League While in Chicago in early fall, I had a pleasant to Philly. pennant race JOHN McH-\LE trekked in for a phone chat with JACK NOONAN supervisor of BEGINNING AND ENT> look-see at the ND-California game. John, as­ the FBI's fugitive section there. He has a son in Within a seven-day period we obser\'c two sistant to the commisaoner of baseball, was ac­ minor seminary. Jack managed to make it to events ... a beginning in the miracle of man's companied by S.AL FIORELLO and was hob­ South Bend for the California clash and then salvadon which we call Christmas and the end of nobbing in the stadium >TLrd with Lydia and home again right afterward. Chaplain Maj. another year. May the spirit of Noel give you FR-ANK GILHOOLEY. And JOHN MOELLER WILFRID A. MENARD CSC is stationed at the perspective to put '67's mistakes and sorrows phoned to say hello before witnessing the remake Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Klaryland after tours behind you and the grace to take advantage of of the Trojan Horse gambit on the Irish sward in Germany and Korea. every opportunity 1968 affords you and yours.

GEORGE J. KEEN.\N and his wife are expecting their 10th child in reports that he is getting along fine in his law' 177 ROLLING HILLS RD. January. We agree with you Bob that things practice. While in Madison, Ind. he saw JOHN 1948 CLIFTON, N.J. 07013 haven't been slow. No use being an actor when READY O'CONNOR and says that John is Something really happened since the last issue of you can be a producer. We look forward to getting along fine since a serious automobile ac­ the Ai-tJMSUS and since then I haven't nusscd a seeing you at the Reunion if you can find time cident a couple of years ago. LooUng forward mail call. The yellow cards have really been to get away. Dr. D.AVE MOSIER is now prof, to seeing you too, Larry, at the Reunion. Going coming in and it looks like it is really the word of pediatrics at the U. of California Ir%^ne Col. to try for class pres. again? I think wie're ready from the gu>-s tlicmselves and the kids aren't of Medicine. His main area of responsibility is for a new one. . . . filling out the cards. I just hope I can get all heading the div. of metabolism and endocrinology JOHN P. FITZPATRICK writes from Arling­ the info into this column and keep within the and has been carrying out research in the area ton Heights, III. that he wants to help make limits prescribed. Besides the cards wc had those of central ner\'ou5 sj-stem control of physical the Reunion a successful one and volunteers to who exercised their options and wrote to Notre growth. Dave's wife Afarjorie is enrolled in the be a local committeeman. That's the spirit. Dame \vhere this information was collected and UCLA School of Afedicine. What does a local delegate do? He probably gets fon\*arded to mc to be included in the column. LARRY TURNER writes "sign mc up for the a few guys together and they plan to car pool it Dr. M. W. WILCOX writes to us from Reunion next June." Larry is still in Indianapolis or even have one wife drive them to South Bend Dallas and admittedly "for the first time ever" where he is law editor of Indiana Decisions a and another wife pick them up. That's team tells us that after getting his BS at ND he re­ weekly reporting service for lawyers in the Hoosier woric and gets the wife into the mood of the ceived a doctorate from ND in 1961 and was state. Larry gets to see JOE QUILL regularly and Reunion, too. (That is not limited to classmates associate prof, at the U. of Arizona in '61-'62. nvith two wives but classmates each with a wife.) Presently he is prof, of solid mechanics and John is with the Byron Jackson Div. of Borg- mech. cngr. at Southern Methodist U. and also Wamer Corp. and has his office in the Chicago dir. of the Solid Afechanics Center at SMU In­ 3Loop although he travels through the Midwest. stitute of Technology. TOM CONLEY writes to RUDY KEMPTER volunteers to help reunionize us from Pearl City, Haw-aii that he has been in the Washington, DC area and will be contacting Army Intelligence since the Korean War and is some of the classmates in that area just as soon in his 10th year with G-2, US Army at Fort as we feed him the names. He recommends Shafter in Honolulu. JOHN CRONIN in Charlotte, N.C. and BOB BOB TAYLOR is still in Skancateles, N.Y. and PERCIVAL in the PitUburgh area for the same is now in the eng. dept. at S>Tacu5e U. Bob REUNION '68 job. Is that agreeable to you, John and Bob? 40 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER Rudy recently joined the office of the Secretary tives have varied wine interests. After an in­ was published in July. VINCE DOYLE, of Defense as senior valve engr. BRAD BENNETT teresting visit to the vineyards and wineries along sports dir. aiHl gea. sales mgr. lor WSJV-TV m out in Pomona, Calif, wants to have classmates with the breweries Bert and Frank both have a Elkhart has joined the faculty at WawMee IVcp of '48 and maybe others with amilar Reunion better understanding of the fundamentals for School in Syracuse, Ind. He heads the scboaT* dates at ND to organize an Air Charter Flight their wholesale and retail beverage buaness. Frank speech dept. and win coach l»—1»*^»| ^ and he'll he glad to handle the details. Brad is is for wholesale, Bert sells retaul. Wdl, I must say that this has bcesi an >»• in the business dept. at West Covina HS as a PETE BAKER has moved from Bristol, Conn- terestiiig cohunn. It is more bet than fietioa teacher. He also coaches the cross-country team. to Huron, Ohio. ED McBRIDE has relocated and it depends oa the infotmatioB lent in. I Brad received his MS in Ed. this year at U. of from Cleveland to Coral Gables, Fla. and JIM hope we can get continued intenst for Ae Southern California. Brad and his wife along SACKINGER has moved from Horseheads, N.Y. Reunion because the IStb was sort of ad. W« vdth four children are residing at 1574 Valencia to Palo Alto, California. "CORNY" STYERS seem to have some exdtement and intenst goin^ PI., Pomona for those wanting to make plans received his PhD from the U. of Iowa last June. so talk it up, make some plans irith othen in your to fly to, during and from the 20th Reunion. Congratulations. Dr. GEORGE A. CYPHER has area who may have a Reuiuon year also and pba At the SUMMA luncheon in Neu-ark last wieek joined Natvar Corp. in Woodbridge, N.J. as VP to attend. VU be looking to hear from yoa all 1 saw HANK DiGIROLAMO, MOOSE COONEY, and technical dir. and has also been elected to and some of you wiU be hearing from m^ espe­ ART STATUTO, LEO COSTELLO, FRANK the Board of Directors. BOB BACH was recently cially the volunteen, ilekgates, oiganiien, etc TRIPUCKA, , GENE appointed national accounts sales mgr. for the We still lack someone from the South Bend area ANGUILLl and many others. Those in our Qass A. B. Dick Co. in Chicago. GEORGE M. TULLY to prearrange things and meet with the CTIWIT'W all indicate that they are looking forward to the of Pelham, N.Y. has been elected sec. of the people who run these affairs. H-E-L-P ! Reumon particularly to elect a new Class secre­ Tully-Starrett Corp. a new textile corporation. RtumioM Stpstnaus: Bob LcToumeaii, Chock tary. and ANGELO BER­ PAUL THEIS, PR du-. for the Republican Cuculln, Tom Herbert, Brad Bennett, Rody TELLI just returned from Germany where they Congressional Committee has co-cditcd with a Kempter, John Fitzpatrkk, Larry Turner, Dave attended the beer festival in Munich for their member of the Democratic party, a nonpartisan tlosier. Bob Taylor, Gene Dean, Bunky Ref^m, fine performance in achieving sales quotas in the directory of complete biographical data on lead­ Leo Costello, Hank DiGirdamo, Art Statoto, Lowenbrau sales contest. From Germany they ing political figures from the presidential to the Moose Cooney, Bill Fitzharris, Hany Zeibtra, went over to Verona, Italy where Bertelli's rela­ precinct level. "Who's Who in American Politics" George Muhnmey and Jim Ledwith.

LEO L. WESLEY Rev. WILLIAM NEIDHART CSC and Rev. Colleen who jmncd Maureen 6. Shannon 5, Mi- 155 DRimVOOD LANE JAMES RIEHLE and a not so quiet game of diael 3 and Sheila 2. The Maias left Toledo ifii ROCHESTER. N.Y. 14617 bridge. (They let the padres win.) Father Bill in '63 for Midland, Mich, where Lee is adver­ has very recently been reassigned from duties as tising mgr. of the engineering prodocts dir. of I don't want any of you nonwriting members of asst. publisher of Ave Maria Press to his new Dow Coming Corp. He sees VINCE BOYLE the Class to relax when I say this, but I find charge as asst. pastor at Sacred Heart Parish at various club funcrions. Vincc is with BGd- myself in the wonderful position of having over and Village chaplain. Father Jim has also been hnd's AUen Dow Assoc, Axclutects. Lee at­ a dozen ycHow reply cards from which to de­ asked to broaden his sphere of knowledge and tended last fall's Army anid MSU games and is velop this column! Not to mention a couple influence as he has been named dean of students looking forward to our b^ 20tfa in '69. letters and various news tidbits from the Alumni at Notre Dame. I can't help but recall the wtirds Office. "It falleth like the gentle rain . . ." but Remember our star sonthpaw with the hot pro of the Mass — *'it is truly light and just, fitting I wouldn't mind a flood- A backlog for two basdnll contract in his hip po^t, DICK and proper." consecutive issues? Incredible! SMULLIN? Got a message from "Lefty" him- Brt). JOHN H. NOLAN FSC used the card as GEORGE NICHOLS JR sent me a card with sdf marked 56 Saratoga Ave., Bn^ngton, Vt. he wrote from Bishop Bradley HS in Manchester, news good and bad. He asks first that we pray Says IKck, "played basdiall for seven years whidi N.H. to inform us that he worked a year at for the soul of his dad who was killed in a car fooled up my mail but plenty. Itfoving, moving! Brooklyn Catholic Charities doing social wt>rk accident on May 11. His dad was not an Alum­ Now Rosemary and I and our five yuungstcii make Burlii^ton home rince I am the meifical and in Nov., 1950 joined the Brothers of Chris­ nus, but as so many of us know by our o%ra rep for South, KHae and French Labs of Phita^ tian Schools. He since tuis obtained MAs in his­ experience, our dads love Notre Dame as much delphia, FU. I hear from JIM 'MIDGET RACER' tory and religion followed by hours of duty in as we. Please pray for George Nichols Sr. George updated my files by teUing me that he MURPHY every few months. Best rcganb to Brooklyn, Narragansett, R.I. and now Bishop everyone. See you in '69." Bradley. He*d like to hear from his friends. and his wife Ann have a fine healthy family of BOB LEANDER came through in solid Badin three boys and three girls aged 9 through 14. CHARLES WATERS checked in on a leply Hall fashion to tell me that he and his \rife George works for the dept. of Public Wdtare card marked RR 1, Ewen, Mich. He cscplahied Ricky arc still in the Chicago area (Glcncoe, HI.). in Florence, S.C. where he is project dir. for a that after a few years as a physical instnactor for Used to be a small town — Bob and Ricky have two-county work experience and traimng program. the Chic^o Park Dist. he moved to the upper added five girls and three boys ranging from Almost in the same mail delivery came a card peninsula of Michigan to teach phys. ed. and 16 to 2. This represents only one aspect of his from JOHN KENNEDY of Occanside, N.Y. You coach wrestling and track. He and I^ wife success. Bob spent 11 years in the advertising catch your breath for a moment when you Arlyss and their three boys and two girls enjoy business and then switched to another family realize you have mail from the FBI, but that's their life "on 160 acres of woods in the Ottawa operation. Mystic Tape, in 1960. Two years later our John. He is a resident FBI agent at Kennedy National Forest." His cross*country teams most the Borden Co. bought them out and that's how Airport, NYC and welcomes a call or visit by be murder. you do it, Charlie. Says he "took up tennis any '49crs passing through. Hasn't been back to Out of space again. But you can help me meet with BOB BATES a few years back — been fine Campus since graduation and definitely plans on my assignment next trip by exchanging news vui for weight but not worth a hoot for the hair." making the '69 Reunion so he can rave a bit Christmas cards. Check up on one or two or PETE KERNAN wrote me a letter incorporating about his fine family of six girls and three lads. three Class members and then brief me-on any news as well as some straight thinking on future Want to hear some beautiful names? These news bits you come upon. Just a qiuck note to material for this column (not distant future come to you courtesy of LEE MARA and bis me will mean much. May you all know a warm cither!) Pete mentioned visiting Campus recently wife Sue, formerly Sue Moran. On Feb. 15 Lee and cheerful and holy Christmas season atxl may with hb wife Ann, having a quiet dinner with was presented with twin giris Kathleen and '68 have the answers to your biggest problems.

JOHN W. THORNTON He has twin boys, Rit and Mike aged 15 and Aktorrc, now Uve in Toledo but nu^ntsun thur 4400 MONSERRATE ST. Barbara 13. In their spare time the Clearys play home in Mexico City. JIM KRONER reports from 1930 CORAL GABLES, FLA. 33146 a little golf and some duplicate bridge. JACK LaCrosse that he and his wife Maodne and WILLI.AMS reports from Laurl Gardens, Htts- family of seven children, three boys and four A happy and holy Christma$-tlme and a success­ burgh that he moved from Wheeling, W.Va. to girb, arc now in their new home. He is in the ful New Year to each and every one of you in Pittsburgh at graduation, has six children, has hanhvare business as an architectnxal hardware every way. been in the insurance business since 1953. He consultant. He sees JOE BECKER, Father TOM It was a pleasure to see some of our classmates has heard from JACK WHEELER in New York NINNEMAN, HANK FUNK, JERRY HEBER- represented on Campus at the kickofF of the and would like to hear from GUS BREZEL, LEIN and DON WELCH. SUMMA Program on Sept. 10-11: JOHN CE- BENNY MUNSEL and others. He is planning, He reports that GILES HACKNER moved to LUSTA, PAUL HUDAK, WALTER McGUlRE as I hope all of us are, to attend our 20th Re­ Green Bay and is with the Gateway Transpor* JR, DON RATCHFORD, JIM SEBOLD JR, union in two and a half yean. BOB SAVASKE Ution there. JIM CREAMER'S urife reports from JIM SLATTERY, GENE SMITH and PAUL reports that he and his wife Janet and children Norwalk, ObM. Jim is the sales staff opeiatioos MACK SCHAEFER. Kandace 18, Robert 16, Mary 15, Margaret 12 manager for New Departure*Hyatt Div. of Gen­ Mrs. (Louise) DICK EYKHOLT reports that and Patrick 5, reside in Merrill, Wis. where he eral Motors in Sandusky. He and his wife she and Dick have been in Ft. Wayne since is VP of the Citizens American Bank of Merrill. Shirley (O'Brien) have two boys and two girls. 1959, where he has been the organist and choir BERNIE MULHOLLAND reports from Burling­ ED HUDAK is worting in Bethlehem, Fa. for director at St. Charles Church and also conducts ton, N.J. of his recent trip (with wife Peggy Bethlehem Steel and b asst. coach at Leiugh U. music classes in the school. Of their five boys and children Maureen and Bemte) to the Campus. He married Kathleen McDonndl and they have and four girls they have one set of twins. All DICK SOISSON reports Ann Mary as No. 7, four children Edward Jr. 6, Shane 5, Biary Beth 3 are doing well. Another nice card from HOW­ giving him three girls and four boys. He is the and Kevin, bom June 13. Honorary Alumnus ARD WURTH, Jackson, Mich, who is a con­ athletic director and football coach at Hackett of our Class TOM SEXTON of Toledo, a para­ sulting engineer at Commonwealth Associates Inc. HS, Kalamazoo. Dick has been elected pres. of plegic from polio, has three boys and twin girls^ He has two children, Elizabeth 11 and Jimmy 6. the Michigan State Athletic Directors Assn. for is a sales broker in printing and insurance known His work carries him to Hartford, Conn, often 1968. Congratulations. ND's regular left guard as Tommy Sexton Services. RAY SULLIVAN and he would like to hear from classmates in that TOM McKINLEY is one of Dick's former reports from Cedar Rapids. After spcni£ng three area. players. JACK BECKHAM reports from Toledo years in Atlanta he is now in production with DON CLEARY, Ft. Wa^-ne reports that he that his father WILLIAM L. BECKHAM '15 Collins Radio in Cedar Rajuds, working on a was transferred by Magnavox from Urbana, 111. died Aug. 4. May he be in all of our prayers. master's degree at the U. of Iowa and has five to Ft. Wayne as production engineer last June. Jack and his wife, the former Josefina Gimpero of hb ax duUrcn in scfaooL

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 41 sponsible for providing multiple out­ lets for industrial and community-re­ lated development. ALUMN/ /N THE NEWS Congrats / Col. Malham M. Wakin '52 was named full professor and head of the depart­ ment of philosophy and fine arts at Leo Blaber Jr. '50, vice-president and versity, he received his law degree from the US.^F Academy. His academic general counsel of First Federal Savings Fordham U. promotion from assistant dean for and Loan Association in Chicago, has graduate programs carried with it mili­ been named corporate secretary of the Joseph M. Dukerl '51 was appointed tary promotion to full colonel. firm, the largest savings and loan in state chairman of the Maryland Re­ Illinois. In addition to his bank train­ publican Party. Formerly vice-chairman Ronald E Zier '52 has been appoint­ ing, he holds a law degree from De of the state GOP, he has served the ed director of public relations for War­ Paul Universit>- and is a member of party in vEirious positions of leadership ner-Lambert Phannaceutical Co. He the Illinois Bar. on both the state and national levels. joined Warner-Lambert from Howard In addition to his political activities he Chase Associates, a New York counsel­ John G. Kelly '50 was promoted to is also an independent public relations ing iinn, where he had served as a assistant vice-president of Mutual of consultant and an author of two books. vice-president. He lives in Glen Rock, New York and was named an admin­ N.J. with his wife and four children. istrative officer, .^n attorney, he joined James F. Garvin '52 recently was the public relations department of unanimously chosen director of the Royd V. Blair 53 has been named vice- MONY after ser\'ing 14 years in the Industrial Development Service of Al­ president for sales of Plas-Steel Prod­ legal department. In his new position buquerque, N.M. He formerly served ucts, Inc., manufacturers of fiberglas he will administer and coordinate a as general manager and secretary for products. He was formerly general staff of public relations specialists. A the Fort Worth Chamber Developmtl^ manager of Alside, Inc., B.A.S.C.O. magna cum laude graduate of the Uni­ Corp. In his new post he vdll be re^ Div. in Akron, Ohio.

LEO BLABER '50 J. G. KELLY '50 J. M. DUKERT '51 J. F. GARVIN *52 COLONEL WAKIN 52 R. E. ZIER '52 F. V. BLAIR '53

4 A r ^ JAMES JENNINGS behind a thick set of whiskers at the Reunion) DENNY O'NEILL has lived at 8 Covcwood 1U rk 1 BORG-WARNER CORP. writes from No. 12 5 St., N.E., Washington, DC Dr., Rouayton, Conn, for two years. His wife, I Sal I 200 S. MICHIGAN AVE. 20002 that after leaving ND Law School in '55 the former Pat Skclly (Barat *59) mentioned they M.^VM. cHia\GO, ILL. 60604 he has been admitted to the Bar in Indiana and spent tliree very interesting years at No. 10 Down­ The Class extends its s^Tnpathy to the father of Illinois. Dick has since been a commerce attorney ing St. in Greenwich Village. Denny is eastern JACK CORYN of Rock Island who was killed and works for the GAO. He is still active in div. mg. for Newspaper Enterprise Assoc, E. 43 in a plane crash in Canada last month. Please fencing, both physically and in the organizations, St., NY. Their three children arc Sarah Angele remember Jack in your prayers. Thanks to several as well as being a pres. of the local St. Vincent (3), Dennis John II (2), and Margaret Dorothy midwestcm classmates ^vho fon\*ardcd this in­ DePaul Society and a member of many other (1). Their next hcir/heircss is expected at any formation to us. organizations. In Jan. '64 Dick married Avril moment. The O'Neills have recently seen Marie- Quiggin and converted her from a British subject. BOB RAYMOND %\TOtc from Jacksonville, Fla. Cbirc and PRESTON MURPHY who live at 88 Their first child Timothy Scott was bom March where he and his wife Donna have lived for Deer Path Lane, Weston, Mass. In that location 1 of this year. seven years. They '.\iU move soon and we will they should run over to Pope John XXIII Semi­ publish the new address as soon as wc hear from nary and visit our old friend FRED BRICE, now Bob. Tim family includes three bo>-s, Paul (7), TED FERDINAND writes from 104 Round in his third year. Robert (5) and James (3). Bob is in wholesale Wood Rd., Newton, Mass. 02164 and be has more appliance distribution business in Florida and degrees than my tlicrmomcter. Ted received his TOM BOL.AND split a pizza with us during a Georgia handling such brands as Motorola, Amana master^s from Purdue and PhD from Michigan. recent visit. His boy Mike (6) is turning into and Hamilton. Note to JOCKO MULDOON: He has taught sociology at Northeastern U. for such a good catcher, Mary Jo and Tom have Bob is giving up the boat to concentrate on golf six years and is now an assoc prof. His first adopted Bobby (1) to pitch to Mike. The Bo- vnth Jack at the Reunion in 1971. book. Typologies of Delinquency^ was published lands visited Muff and JIM BEXBOW in last year and another The American Nation is October, going with them to the Illinois game. JOE MOSCHELLA and his wife, the former under way for the same publisher. Random House. DAVE O'LEARY and I had lunch with tvvo Tina Marotta, live at 20 Grandview Terr, at Seven years ago Ted married Jane Fisher, and lovely young bdies, Dave's older daughters Ann Staten Island, N.Y. 10308. Their four children they now have two bo>-s, Teddy (5) and Lorrin (13) and Nora (12) on their way to the Iowa are Vincent (12), Drew (10), Mary Beth (7) (9 months). and JoAnn (2). Joe is Dean of Discipline and game. Dave is a stock and commodity broker coaches the golf and bo^vling teams at New Dorp Also heard from VINCE ST£. &IARIE, now for R. G. Dickinson and Co. in Carroll, Iowa. HS. At the SUMMA Kickoff Dinner in NYC an agent for State Farm Ins., ^vho resides at 1407 Dave married Thcrcse Heaslip in 1953 and they Joe \-isited with KEN THOREN, DENNY N, Lynndale Dr. in Applcton, Wise 549II. \^nce also have twin boys. Matt and Mark (10), Jean O'NEILL, CORKY DESMOND, BOB ED- and his wife Joanne have five children, Mike (13), (9), Mary (5), Scan (2) and Patrick (1). Write MONDSON, HANK McCORMACK and DICK Drcux (11), Lisa (6). Terry Ja (4) and Tim (2). to Dave at Box No. 3, Carroll, Iowa. KOSMICKI. Joe would really like to hear from •\^nce was in Chicago for one year when he set JACK BARNETT also stopped for lunch and Ills health cd. classmates so please drop him a line. up the pbys. cd. system at St. Philomcna and he noted that after some family illnesses things arc DICK DOLAN reported from his home at 808 coached at St. Iklary's in Menasha for four back to normal. We see Jack in Washington more W. Tcchny Rd. in Arlington Heights, III. Dick years. Vince missed the last Reunion because he often than here or South Bend. Mary Lou and is now dir. of automotive events for the Pure jammed a knee playing ball with his boys but I arc grateful for all the prayers for Patrick's Oil Co. Dick worked in the same dept. at Pure heMI be there in 1971. surgery, which was successfully completed last with JOHN GROSSPIETSCH. Handling the auto DICK BIRMINGHAM is another lad who went month. We also thank our local friends who gave races kept Dick pretty busy until four years ago astray (law school). His Navy duty lasted from blood and those who tried but were prevented by a cold or some other irritation. We really when he slowed down enough to marry Bctty- *51 to *54 and he was graduated from the U. of appreciate everything that was done. They now have t^vo daughters, Kathleen and Buffalo Law School in 1957. He was a legal llai^aret. ass't in the app. div., 4th Dcpt., NY Sup. Ct. Let me start my campaign for nonreclection at JIM LAUGHLIN who is with the FBI resides to 1960 when he became associated with Riillips, this time. The reports in the last Reunion issue with his wife Joanne and family at 9728 E. 50th Lytle, Hitchcock, Blaine and Huber where he indicate that every other Class reelects a different St., Kansas City, Mo. The Laughlins have four became a partner two years ago. In 1961 Dick slate of officers at Reunion time. Although there children, Kathleen (II), Suzanne (10), James (8) married Sue M. Cannon of Buffalo and they have is a tremendous enio>Tnent in rejuvenating these and Donald (2). Jim would like to hear from three children, BaH}ara (5), Maureen (4) and old friendships, this honor could be shared and his classmates. Greg (3). Dick and hb family live at 599 Ashland we will suggest this for 1971. But keep the news DICK SHIPiLAN (you recall he \vas hiding Ave. in Buffalo. coming *till then.

42 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER ^VILLIAlkf B. KING JOHN CRONIN MD has been in practice as the broadcastins of the Baltimore Cdts' games 613 E. DONMOYER AVE. an internist for four years in Long Beach, Calif. this f^. 1953 SOUTH BEND, IND. 46614 Married and the father of four who range from LAWRENCE S. FESHEK has been transferred 1 to 7. He saw FRED SCHLICHTING MD at from group leader of packaging and analytical OK, sports, if you can't send the Class secre­ the Calif.-ND game in '65. Fred is practicing sections to groop leader in charge of all house­ tary money for Xmas, how about a card to let in San Jose, Calif. "Doc" Cronin wants to hold products for the SImonIz Co. at the Wood­ us know what's going on. hear from JOE O'CONNOR and ED WATERS. stock, HI. research center. FRANK P. DOYLE "TEX" CHISHOLM was thoughtful enough Speaking of hearing from people JOE BOWLING has been appcnnted VP of employee relations for to snap a photo of the concelcbrated Mass at our writes from Louisville that he wants to know Western Union, NYC He and I^ «^e Joan and recent Reunion. He sent pictures to Father why RAY TRTTZ and DOLLO VERRO didn't then: three chiblrcn Uve at U2 Lake Dr. W., "BILL" TOOHEY CSC in Washington, DC with make it to the Reunion. Joe and NORB GANOB- Wayne, N.J. NORBERT JOSEPH GANOBSIK the result that special Mass cards and a picture SIK have decided on a complete Investigation as rcceivai his &CBA from Western Reserve U. in of the Mass were fonvarded to the families of to what you "swingers" arc doing. Cleveland in June. our deceased classmates. Nice teamwork, fellas. DICK VIOLA obtained a PhD from NYU JIM HARRIGAN received his PhD in business where he Is now asst. dean at the grad school GEORGE HERBERT GROSS receded his MA from U. of Chicago this summer. He has been of business administration. He is responsible for In phys. ed. from Western Reserve U. in Cleve­ leaching finance and accounting at the U. of public relations and development activiues, alumni land in June. M. HAYES KENNEDY has been appointed director of industrial engineering for New Hampshire for a year after eight years of affairs and the school's executive conferences, sem­ R. J. Reynolds Foods Inc. of NYC. FRANK teaching at ND. His wife "CLIP" is an ND inars and lecture series. As an asst. prof, Dick grad, too. She received an MAT degree in '64. JAMERSON was a speaker at an August con­ has been teaching in the fields of behavior sciences ference on cSrect energy conversion at the Argonne JACK ROSS is now an ofHcer with Foote Min­ and management. He is living with his wife and Natl. I.aborator7. He Is a supervisory research eral Co. of Exton, Pa. He will take up duties five children in Wcstbury, L.L physicist at the GM Research Lab m Warren, as secretary when he moves there in November LOUIS H. MEECE has been named VP of Mich. CONRAD L. ARNOLD is now product \vith his ^\^le and nine children ages 3 to 12. sales for American Commercial Barge Line Co, manager of fluid drives for Amexican Standard An international flavor has hit the Class. In Jcffersonville, Ind. He is a dir. of the Natl. Industrial Products Dept. in Detrtut. PAUL J. SHLICHTA after leaving the Jet Pro­ Coal Policy Conference and a member of the pulsion Lab as a senior scientist to join ad­ Mississippi Valley Assn., Ohio Valley Improve­ Maj. WHXUM F. DELANEY has been vanced research laboratories of Douglas Aircraft ment Assn. and other trade-related organizations. awarded the USAF Educational Achievement spent four months in Europe. He delivered He and his family live In Louisville. JAMES F. Award at Torrejon AB, Spain. He was selected papers at scientific meetings in AIoscow and MUTSCHELLER CLU, asst. general agent of the for the award for his accomplishments in the off- Cambridge. Science had to share the limelight Maryland general agency of Natl. Life Ins. Co. of duty education program. He is a supply staff with love as Paul met Miss Ema Kbibor of Vermont, lias been elected second VP of the officer In SAC. Dr. FRANCIS McCAFFREY is Hamburg, Germany. Together they returned to Baltimore Life Underwriters Assn. He recently a guest scientist in physics at the dept. of the San Diego and ^vere married in December. They moderated a life ins. telethon, an hour-long pro­ Army's materials and mechanics research center are now living at 2124 E. First St., Long Beach, gram over WBAL-TV sponsored by the Union in Wateitown, Mass. and Is also head of the dept- Calif. 90803. Trust Co. of Md. He will be the analyst on of phydcs at Boston CoL

W. F. "BUD" STUHLDREHER port, Iowa, now stationed in Lausanne, Switzer­ for multi-story buHdings. Personally, Audrey and 11006 JEAN RD. S.E. land, has been appointed asst. VP of United Shoe I have four children now ages 11, 9, 6 and 2. 193S HUNTSVILLE. ALA. 35803 Afachineiy* Corp.'s International Div. in Lausanne. This past year we designed and fa^t a new two-story colonial home and this spring have Well, gang, at the time of writing this, we've EUGENE P. SULLIVAN has been named ND's newest asst. basketball coach even though he been very busy with the yard vfoA. I am looldi« lost two. I'm still looking forward to seeing the fon^-ard to our next Reunion as Has one mill be Georgia Tech game, though. And speaking of never played while he Avas a student. He did help coach JOHNNY JORDAN as a grad asst. a must for me — not having made one yet." that the other day my phone rang at work with Many thanks. Bob. a call from T. J. THORNTON from BUming- FLOYD V. BLAIR has been named VP for sales ham, Ala- Hadn't heard from T.J. in many of Flas-Stcel Products Inc., a manufacturer of Wow! And now for a reaHy long one from years. So we're planning to get together at the woven fiberglass recreational products and a mde JACK DILENSCHNEIDER: "Class of '53 Alumni who are in Columbus, Ohio Include ROGER game. You will perhaps remember that T.J.'s range of fiberglass industrial products. J. GERARD ZOELLNER who is with Trane Inc., JOE FINAN uncle is Rev. LOUIS THORNTON CSC, pres­ BOEHLING JR has been appointed VP of Car- with Columbus Coated Fabrics and BOB KOSY- ently placement dir. at ND. gill, Wilson & Acrec Inc. of Atlanta, Charlotte and Richmond. ROBERT J. CHRISTOPHER DAR, who is managing partner in the law firm Have several letters to report and many yellow has been promoted to industrial relations rep in of Brownfield, Kosydar, Folk and Yearling. While cards so here w-e go, as the Great One would the plant industrial relations section of Koppers practicing law last year I had occasion to work say! Finally heard from PAT RILEY: "After Industrial Relations Dept. and wiU be respon^Ie with DAVE EARDLEY who has a law practice receiving the July-August ALUMNUS and having for providing industrial relations services to the in Chardon, Ohio and fellow Sub-Sorin resident spent a pleasant visit vrith Jane and DICK management of Koppers' various divisions and LEO CAHALAN who is a member of a law LORENZ at Lake Tahoe this last weekend, I pbnts. firm In Detroit." (Always glad to hear about thought I might get some information on the fellow Sub-Sorinltes!) Reunion in hopes I would be able to attend. I Received a nice letter from BOB NIQUETTE, was wondering if it might be possible for you 1134 FlectwTood Dr., Manitowoc, Wis. 54220: "Rody (SMC '54) and I had an eighth child Csixth boy) on Christmas Day, 1966 and a meek' to tell me whom I ^v'rite to and what dates will "After reading our Class news for so many times later I was appointed federal bankruptcy referee, be involved, etc. A lot of w*ater has run under and seeing your plea for news I finally am getting for the Southern DIst. of OhioJ (With eight kids. the bridge since our trip to the ND-So. Cal. around to reporting In. Haven't kept in touch with many classmates as I'm isolated here in Jack, yon ought to know something about that game many years ago while I \\*as in Law School subject!) At a conference this past year I ran and I hope that this finds you and yoiu: family Wisconsin without proximity to many. We do not even have an ND Club and sorely miss the into the highly regarded Toledo U. prof, of law well and in good health. JOHN STOEPLER and on a trip to Washington, "My wife Bert and I have two children, Mike chance to get together with any ND members. Perhaps you could put a plea In somewhere that DC two months ago spent a few hours with 3 and Katie 8. I have settled dovfti to a some­ FRANK JACKMAN who is UPI ovenught ecfitor what? quiet life in Placer\'ille, which is a foot­ would get a few of us together, anyway. "For the past ID years or so my brother TOM there. Last month I was a member of a team hill town in California approximately 60 miles giving a Cursillo and was pleasantly surprised to from Lake Tahoe on US 50. In the event you '47 and I have been very busy putting together Consumers Steel Co. which we formed In a meet GEORGE BLUBAUGH who came doKrti are traveling out West by yourself or with your from Mi. Vernon, Oluo, to speak at the doauig partnership. We now have over 55 employees family, we certainly Would like to visit with you ceremonies. so stop by. I still make all of the ND-So. Cal. and ship fabricated steel parts over a tri-statc games but unfortunately I don't see too many area as well as doing structural steel fabricating "One question for the Class: h the Haldan D< people I know anymore." Thanks, Pat. His Tompkins, who has arranged so many hymns in - address: 465 Main St., PlacervIIIe. Cal. 95667. the Peoples Mass Book, the same HAL TOMP­ And here's some news about several of our KINS who used to alternate with JOHN HEL-. Class: ALGIE OLDHAM, principal of Colfax MAN on the piano at Dragoons?" Gee, what a School in South Bend, has the added responsi­ swell letter! Jack's address: 2555 Berwyn, Colum­ bility of being principal of the E. M. Morris bus, Ohio 43221. School for crippled children. JOHN R. O'LAUGH- Although I have many yellow cards to go it LIN has been appointed gen. mgr. of the main­ looks like I'm out of the space allocated to the tenance sales dept. at Combustion Engineering Class so will have to close. Keep rooting! Keep Inc. RICHARD K. PERRY, a native of Daven­ REUNION '68 writing!

MILTON J. BEAUDINE Christmas is just around the comer and If you Among those who took time to sign the register 21 SIGNAL HILL BLVD. haven't communicated with your ole secretary were: DICK ASH, JERRY DIXON, DICK 1934 £. ST. LOUIS, ILL. 62203 In the past 10 years or so, drop me a line while "CHOKE-UP' CASTELLINI, TOM TUCKER, you're sending out your Christmas cards. BOB "SUAVE" WRIGHT, BOB BLOOM, TV is really getting bad. Last night a St. Our class reunion party was held as usual GEORGE BOEHM, FRED MANN, JUD Louis station showed the great " — after our first home game of the season. It's an MORAN, JACK DILLON, PETE BUCHETT, All American" and they cut out **Win One For annual affair, so plan on it next year. There JOHN DARAGO, J. D. iL«>IGAN, CHUCK the Gipper" — for a beer commercial. No kidding. w'ere 65 or more of your classmates In attendance WETIZEL, BOB PODEN, BOB B.ARNBAUCH, It was as unbelievable as a quarterback throwing partaking of the booze and good times. Hats off TONY MANDOLINI, JIM BUCKENMYER, 63 passes in one game — and losing. and deepest appreciation to DICK PILGER, WALT WAGNER, JOE JOYCE, DAN MUNSON, Thanks much for all the yellow cards and GENE HENRY and their wives for all their PHIL DOELL, BOB MIHLBAUGH, JOE letters since the last issue. Be patient 'cause I efforts. Without their untiring efforts our parties BERTRAND, TIM O'HARA, ED MRAZ, PAT won't be able to use all the material in this issue. would not exist. O'MALLEY, DICK ANTON, BILL MORLEY,

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER JOHN POIRIER, JOE McGINN, RICH HOH- before the game. TOM MOORE's attendance Martin, In June after two girls. The Cbrks AlAN, RAV SALVINO, JACK ROSSHIRT, JIM mariced his first trip back to ND ance graduation. reside at 339 Humphrey St.. New Haven. Conn. STUBLER, JOHN LIBERT, TOM MOORE. BILL MORLEY was in high spirits bubbling Our sympathy is extended to Joe whose father WALT DUSCHKA, HERM KRIEGSHAUSER, over about his No. 1 son Bill, Jr. bom last Nov. passed away suddenly last March. Our sympathy JOE NASH OP, DAVE FOY, JIM BERN- 18. and WALT WAGNER was feding blue about is also extended to WALT WAGNER on the HART. ED MILOTA, GENE HOWLEY, JOHN being sued by the city of Louisville and maybe death of his mother and to JIM HEARONS on REIDY, BOB PATTERSON, JOHN BIER- the state of Kentucky. Everyone looked great. the death of bis mother. Your prayers. I'm sure, BUESE, MIKE CELESTE, TOM MURPHY, The bartenders got a real workout and we all will be sincerely appreciated. GEORGE HUBBARD, BILL MEYER, BOB resolved Ut be back in '68, Gfxl willing. How Many people have thanked me for taking the ROSSITER, JOHN KELSCH, PAUL KRAUSE. about you making the effort too, next year, first time to work up these — excuse the word — DICK EHR, J. N. McHUGH, JOHN LYON. home game, be there. articles. No thanks are necessary, just being a JOHN SCHLOEGEL, JACK PITTAS, JAKE It seems like only yesterday I reported that member of our Class and having a reason to NOONAN and good ole MILT BEAUDINE. BILL some poor unfortunate girl was wed to GEORGE make it back to the parties is thanks enough. REYNOLDS, a regular attendcr v.-ns home re­ O'CONNELL and now they have three little This time I can't even complain about the lack covering from an illness that had him hospitalized O'Connells. Little Patrick O'Connel was bora of mail. It would be nice to hear from some for a while. on St. Patrick's Day. George has left Bell Labs of you guys who laven't written at all or been BOB PODEN and I conquered DICK CAS- and joined Raythcrm in Andone, M^s. He*s a in touch these past 13 years. Meny Christmas product engineer building Hawk tnitjpli-^ Phyllis TELLINI and BOB WRIGHT on the I8th hole and a Happy New Year to all. as they both choked on short putts on the Friday and JOE CLARK had thdr first son, Joseph

PAUL FULLMER wile Beach, N.C. writes: "I've been up here MBA trom California lifter four years in the Air 1922 LARKDALE DR. away from my home in Afiami for several months Force. He notv is mgr. of financial planning for 1933 GLENVIEW, ILL. 60025 recovering from my second heart attack and wrote Hycon &ffg. Co. Frank married the former Marcia Young and they have four children (1 BLT-LETIN! Would you believe that the a book while recouping! It's all about fraud thru won't mention that she is a MSU grad). They world's Uvo great bachelors — JOHN WEITHERS the mails. Name of book is Satisfaction Guara*- live at 2509 W. 179th St.. Torrance, Calif. TOM and JERRY PRASSAS — tumbled to young love­ teed or Your Money Back — Phooey! JOE DORWIN has been named asst. ad mgr. for lies since the last column. Jerry led off by marry­ NASSIF now is an architect in Raleigh and is Evinrude Motors with headquarters in Milwaukee. ing the former Abigail Halpln on Aug. 14 in doing real well. He has four Idds." Hope you're Since NEAL HALLORAN got me a rate reduc­ the Church of San Francisco de Borja in Madrid! feeling better, Fred, and sell those books. tion, I have to mention that he has been made John followed suit with the former Mary Van TOM VIVIANO's wife Ruth checked in »^th an account agt. for Allstate. MIKE KELLY and Etten on Sept. 18 in Immaculate Conception the news that they have four children. They're his Organization '55 group will meet Jan. 16 at Church in Chicago, but honc>'mooned in Spain, living in Tampa, 6026 Wilshire Dr. where he is I«ittner's Steak House in Chicago. DICK CLARK, naturally. (One wag suggested that a devcr travel pres. of Vi^^no Stereo Center. BOB DEBREY's 940 Saylor, Elmhurst, III. is a CPA with Northern agent got to our young heroes and sold them a %rife Claudctte sent word that they had a little Illinois Gas Co. The Clarks have two adopted group pbn!) Jerry and bride arc living at 1433 boy on Aug. 20 to make it three children. Bob boys and hope to welcome another soon. N. State Pku-ay in Chicago; John and frau at has his own industrial design firm in Minneapolis. 1355 N. Sandburg Tcr., Chicago. Their home address is 6928 Washburn S. HARVE Did you see RAY "THE SHARK" KENNEDY PAUL HAUHNAR has written again asking MUELLER, 6040 Winding Way, Sylvania, Ohio, in his lucky polka dot shirt in Time? He wrote that a classmate or a group that ^-ou might belong and his wife Audrey now have four. He's dis­ the cover story on Las Vegas gambling. DAVE to sponsor the Hauhnars for a visit in the US trict sales mgr. for Strohs Brewery. PAT KEW- DISCHER is teaching at the UCLA med school. to tell Americans about the plight of his people LEY, ^21 Sparks Ave., San Diego is another DAN SHANNON, who now has six children, in the Mizo Hills of India. Paul sa>-s that they who reported in after 12 years. He spent 10 has been made VP of the Chicago Park Dist. by have enough money for the trip, but need official years in the Navy, joined American .^riincs, but Mayor Daley. HARRY NIEMANN, 117 S. Wood­ sanction. If you can help with this or send now is a co-pilot for Pacific Southwest, **Aineri- land Ave., Middlesex. N.J. is a zone under^vriting donations for his people contact him at Ave ca's swingingcst airline." Pat's nuurried to the specialist for Allstate. (Next thing you know }tlaria Cottage, Madanryting, Happy Valley, former Jody Coles and they have four childicn. State Farm will demand equal time.) LOU Shillong-7, Assam, Indb. of school age. ZEFRAN tells me that JOHN PALMISANO wtis You guys and gals have made good use of the JIM "SWEDE" ilETRESS now xs teaching married this summer in Erie and that RICH yellow cards. Keep them coming. BOB BROWN, anthropology at Clarion State Col. in Pennsyl­ McCORMICK was in the wedding party. Sr. 2535 Country Club Ave., Omaha, writes that he vania. He's finishing the research for his PhD KfARY FLORIAN GRIX now is teaching at is a trust officer of the Omaha Natl. Bank. He from Indiana. While on the tmivernty front* Nazareth Col. (Mich.). received his LL6 from Crcighton in '58. Bob MIKE WARD has been named mgr. of spedal DICK PERRY has been appointed an asst. VF has two little girls 8 and 5. He'd like to hear projects for Loyola in Chicago. While on Campus of United Shoe Kfachinery Corp. and now is sta­ from MARTY KINEHAN and "MO" REIDY. for the introduction of SUMMA I ran into many tioned in the firm's international div. in Lausanne, BOB HUNECK, 103 N. "F" St., Marion, Ind. '55 notables who will be heading local campsugns. Swtzerland. JOHN HAMILTON received his reports that he has three clnldrcn. Bob's a sales TOM MAY, 4237 85th Ave. S.E.. Mercer Island, MBA at Harvard m June. JIM KORTE is rep for IBM. He saw LOU CENTLIVRE, 10 Wash, is a contract administrator for Boeing. employed as a sales rep. for the Purolator Products Gateway, Yonkers, N.Y. in New York recently Others who Were on tap in South Bend arc WALT Inc. He and his wife of seven years Kathleen and MAX ROESLER in Ft. Wayne. KAVANAUGH of New Jersey, who is in the have three children and are expecting their fourth PAUL AflLLER, 720 King Ave.. City Island, building field; BOB GERVAIS of Los Angeles, Christmas Day. They live at 2233 Estelle Dr. Bronx NYC 10464 completed his training our space expert; BOB HUTCHINSON, stocks SE, E. Grand Rapids, Mich. 49506. TOM for the Botirds of Internal Medicine three years and bonds and , insurance, HICKEY has been promoted to systems engi­ ago. '*! bugged out to Uppsala, Sweden to gain both of Washington; JIM BARRY, VIP from neering mgr. at the Aurora, 111. branch office of furthw training in biochemistry, but as you know, Milwaukee; JOHN I^IAHONEY, Hanover Bank, IBM. BOB NAVARRE has been named presi­ no icd-blooded American IiWng in Sweden would New York; TOM WELLY, personnel and place­ dent of Simpson Manufacturing Co. in Litch­ take time out to write to a Class secretary. 1 ment, Toledo; JOHN ROGERS, la%vyer, Dallas; field, Mich. brought back a Swedish wife who has since given DAVE METZ, Kodak p.r., Rochester; BOB We're way over now. Gang, so I won't explain me a son and daughter plus two sailboats. I am ZEIS, Denver Post^ Denver; and JOHN CASEY, why you all didn't get tickets for the MSU game. now awaiting a draft call and will probably enlist." banking, Rochester. News from the cocktail party in the next issue. FRED MAROON, 12 E. Seagull St., Wrights- FRANK CRIBBS reports that he picked up his Merry Christinas and a Happy New Year!

EUGENE O'CONNOR RECKER has joined the Old Reliable Ins. Agencr and gave us a call while at the airport in Buffalo. COSGROVE & O'CONNOR in Elkhart. PAUL A. RENSTROM has been He advised that SAM GLORISO is with NASA 1S36 656 ELLICOTT SQ. BLDG. promoted to mgr. of Wells Fai^o Bank's new in Houston, JIM RYTHER is an attorney in BUFFALO, N.Y. 14203 office in Del Monte, Calif. Chicago and GEORGE DURKIN is an attorney Chins up, our football team is sure to improve Dr. ALBIN A. SZEWCZYK attended a sem­ in Cleveland. CONNIE TRIMBER is in resi­ and is certainly going to have a successful season inar on numerical methods for viscous flows at dency for his advanced medical training as an regardless of the unfortunate losses to date. the National Physics Lab. in Teddington, England. ophthahnologist. JIM SASSO finally reported and Cmdr. KENT J. CARROLL, aide and flag sec ALBERT H. BIERMANN has been promoted to is in San Jose, Calif, at GE's atomic power dept. on the staff of a rear admiral, has been given the ^finneapolis region mgr. for American Hospital FRAN DWAN is studying orthopedic suigery added duty of commander of sub div. 81, For^ Supply. Maj. ROGER J. PRICE began a year at Hines V.A. Hospital in Chicago. His wife mal ceremonies took place Aug. 7 on board the of study this summer in the Army Comptroller- recently presented him with a giri, their fifth USS Croaker berthed in Groton, Conn. Rev. ship School at Syracuse U. Students who qualify child. DAN GRIFFIN is in Mt. Clemens, Mich, BRAD BAILIE was ordained June 7 in Anderson, will receive MBA degrees and will be assigned to as a special education teacher and active in Ind. and Rev. JOSEPH D. STOCK SJ was comptrollership positions throughout the Aimy. youth work. JOE MARTELLARO is now at No. ordained June 10 in Seattle, Wash. FRANCIS BOB DUNEGAN, an asst. chief engr. for Walter Illinois U.as a full prof, of econ. BOB BURKE H. BOOS JR has been appointed patent counsel Motor Truck Co., Vooriieesville, N.Y., was mai^ received his MBA from Babson Institute and is a for the major TV depc of GE's Consumer Elec­ ried on Sept. 9 to Cynthia Krystofik. Gongiatn- member of a unique group called "Sodety for tronics Div. His duties include being acting lations. Bob. the Rreservadon and Encouragement of Barber­ patent counsel for Personal TV Dcpt., Ports­ JOHN PHELAN is a high school gutdaoce shop Quartet Singing in America," TONY BAL- mouth, Va. counsellor in St. Louis, Mo. ED WHITE reports SIUTGH and wife visited Bob and his family DICK SCHILLER was «cc. dir. of the 1967 that he saw Father JIM O'BRIEN and BOB this summer in New England. DAVE Mc- Miss Illinois pageant. Army Maj. DONALD F. McKENTY on the Campus in June and that NAMARA's wife reported that he is sales mgr. IklAEDER completed a hospital administration JOHN GUEGUEN is teaching soda] studies at for a medical supply co. in Jackson, Miss, and course in June at the Medical Field Service San Francisco St. Col. in Calif. DICK FRAE- that his twin, Dan is with the U. of Miss. Hasp, Schools at Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. RICHARD S. THER is a flight captain with American Airiincs and School of Medicine. Dave, inddentally.

44 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER holds forth on the tennis courts with a pretty fine game. r From our Secret Agent in NYC: JIM CLARK has three children and practicing law in Newark, N.J. and living in Short Hills, N.J. AL PARIL- LOt writer and advertiung executive with Gaynor 'ALUMNI IN THE NEWS & Dukas in NYC, lives with wife Carol and I Congrats three girls in Summit, N.J. TOM CAPLET was seen rushing in and out of Daily Netvs Building on E. 42nd St. in NYC. MIKE CARR is a top William T. Dwyer "49 has been ap­ stock analyst on Wall St. JOE DiLALLO is an pointed personnel manager of the Pratt MD living in New Jersey as well as practicing there. & Whitney Aircraft Florida Research S. EDMUND (SIL) RESCINITI, one of NYC's and Development Center. He wrill direct most eligible bachdors and Brooklyn's finest crim­ all activities of the personnel depart­ inal Iau7er5, has chauffeur-driven Cadillac taking ment at the aero-space plant located 25 him to court from his plush 15 Park Ave. miles northwest of West Palm Beach. bachelor quarteis. Spotted in NYC men's shop was SAL PROFACI looking in superb shape. The plant currendy employs more than SPIKE DALY is all over the place dropping in 4,500 persons. Dwyer has been acdve on classmates in NYC. TOM McNEILL reports in personnel work since joining Piatt & that he and his wife Ingrid had a nice visit with LEO LINBECK and his wife Connie when the Whitney Aircraft in 1962 as security Ltnbccks were traveling through Kenilworth, III. coordinator. Tom is finishing his fifth year of law practice in Chicago. FRANK McCARTHY called Tom re­ Joseph T. O'Neill '53 was selected cently with news of his wife Pat and their three Outstanding Young Man of the City children and his new job in general counscFs office of St. Paul and was one of 10 such for a bus association in Washington, D.C. honorees for the State of Minnesota. W. T. DWYEK 'l» J. T. O'NEIU 'S —GENE O'CONNOR, Secretary An attorney, he is also a member of the state legislature and founder of MORE '56 NEWS • the county legal assistance program. Maj. FRANK H. WHITTON USMC dropped a Daniel Shannon 53 has been named line to LaGrange Park with news of his recent to a five-year term on the Chicago return from Vietnam and current assignment at Park District Board and to the Board HQ, USMC G-4 Div. Frank, his wife Jo and four (Jiildren, Denise 9, Christy 8, and twins presidency by Major Richard Daley. Michael and Kathleen 1 reside at 3116 N. A Chicago accountant, he also serves Aurora Dr., Woodbridgc, Va. In this, Frank's as secretary of the Illinois Racing Com­ first of many such epistles, he also reported on mission and is chairman of the Garfield Maj. JOHN D. DAVE FRISKE USMC who Ridge Trust and Savings Bank. completed a tour of duty at Alarine Corps Air Facility in Ytuna, Ariz, in July. Dave was LeRoy F. Bazany '54 was appointed assigned as a helicopter pilot with the 1st Afarine treasurer of the American Photocopy Aircraft Wing in Vietnam. Equipment Co. of Evanston, III., one Maj. MIKE MULROONEY USMC is prcscnUy of the nation's largest manufacturers serving with the fiscal div., HQ, USMC in Wash­ of copying equipment whose operations ington, DC; this follows a tour of duty in Viet­ cover 70 foreign countries. Joining the nam. Mike has long remained a bachelor, but company in 1958 as accounting man­ was scheduled to take the altar trip on Sept. 30; DAN SHANNON '53 L F. BAZAINY '54 hope to hear from the participants in that wed­ ager, he was appointed controller in ding party! BILL LAFOND is the only ND 1965. classmate Frank has visited outside of the mili­ tary. Bill and his wife Pat live close by Frank's Richard E Gerbracht '54 has been in-laws in Chicago. Frank is looking forward to named general manager of the Cleve­ the 15th Reunion and regrets having missed the land office of the Marschalk Co. He last two bashes. is the youngest man ever to be named Would you believe that a press release addressed to the post with the advertising firm. to "Beloveds, people, and various humanois," Prior to his appointment he served as would end with the announcement^ "By the w-ay, assistant manager and also holds the passed my comprehensive exams at Northwestern position of vice-president. and \vih soon be an MA in broadcast communi­ cations or something like that" and be signed Robert W. Navarre '55 was named JIM O'BRIEN? Anyway Father Jim has been president of the Simpson Manufactur­ assigned to Notre Dame HS, RR 1, Gurler Rd., ing Co. of Litchfield, Mich., makers of DcKalb, 111. 60115. Among other things, be's precision parts for the automotive in­ diocesan dir. of radio and TV, chaplain and dustry. Formerly sales manager of the instructor of religion at ND HS (girls), and chaplain at the Provincial Mothcrhouse of the Marber Corp., he joined Simpson as School Sisters of Notre Dame. With sufficient assistant sales manager in 1964. He advance notice, Jim inWtes all to join in a swim was elected to the board of directors at the school (anyway, he s:ud all could *'comc in 1965 and the following year was R. E. GERBRACHT '54 «. V. NAVARRE '55 soak their heads"). named special assistant to the president. We're over our limit, but will need and enjoy your comments for the next ALUMNUS; why not Charles L Grace '57 is one of four write today? new marketing vice-presidents of Cum­ —JOHN MANION mins Engine Co., Columbus, Ind. He 726 Forest Rd. will direct operations of Cummins' LaGrange Park, HI. divisional offices and field sales and service representatives. Before his pro­ GEORGE W. GROBLE 111 ^VEST WASHINGTON ST. motion, he was Midwestern division mi CHICAGO, ILL. 60602 manager and had his office in Chicago. Cummins is the world's leading inde­ Many thanks to all members of the Class along pendent producer of diesel power. with the interested wves who sent in the infor­ mation cards. It certainly makes the job of Gerard Gray '63 was recently named writing a column much easier. Please keep the Outstanding Young Educator by the info coming in to the writer. Bel Air, Md. Jaycees. The social DAVE HAND reports that he has returned to studies department chairman at John the private practice of medicine in Manchester, N.H. after completing his tour of naval duty as Carroll HS, he was cited as one "who a flight surgeon. Dave is married to the former truly typifies the best traditions of Carole O'Connell and between them have four teaching." C L GRACE '57 GERARD GRAY '43 youngsters. More doctors are reporting in and JIAl WALSH checked in to advise he is finish­ ing up his residency in radiology at Bryn Afa^vr Hosp. and in January, 1968 will join the staff at the U. of Cobcado Med Center in Denver. V. J ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER Jim reports there are three little Walshs including and wife Marita also in Evansiolle added No. I looks up JACK ROBINSON who is fiving in Susanne bom June 20, 1967. son this year. BOB LAZ's wnfe reports fliat ber Bangkok with his wife and managing an oil TOM ECKMAN has returned to Chicago to husband is the financial dtr. for the Chicago company's interests there. HANK LUPKE be- enter the pri\-ate practice in obstetrics and gyne­ Police Dept. and they have one son MichaeL ndes practicing law is a famous oiganizer of cology at Passavant Hosp. along with teaching at Barbara Rose reports in that JIM ROSE is fishing expeditions and for all of us who are the NU Med School. Tom will be involved in asst. prod. mgr. of Champion Sparfc Hi^ in interested I am sure we can convince Hank to cancer research along the way. Tom reports he Toledo and as a result of four years erf marriage set up some attractive canoeing and fishing trips and his wife Mary Alice are the proud parents there are three little Ros^uds. Ladies, I thank in the %vilds of Missouri. of three. To avoid complete domination by the you. The NESS organization has been exposed by mcd men BRUCE FEDOR has been heard from DICK DUNLAY reported in and advises he xs confidential sources and we now know that VP expressing regrets in missing the Reunion and is with Hallmark Cards as an account manager and BILL RIGALI has paid agents planted through­ looking forward to seeing some of the Class at sales trainer in Columbia, S-C. Dick plans to out the northeast to flood this column with neu-s the football games. Bruce is a partner in the make the ND-Gcorgia Tech game. He also advises of suspicious value from their area. Bill's agents law firm of Fedor & Fcdor in Cleveland, where that JOHN HARVEY is in Geneva, N.Y. and a are: MIKE SALTER in Augusta. Maine, a VP he abo puts his finger in politics besides raising partner in an architectural firm there. There are with an engineering and contractor firm; DON three children with the help of his %vife Evel>*n. three little Harveys. JOE RIEGER is in Frank­ WASIK, attorney in Manchester, Conn.; BILL TOM SCHRIBER contributed a nice letter filled fort, Ky. with Scars and has four children. Word DAVIS, Allstate Ins. ace in Farmington, Conn.; with much news and thank you, Tom. Tom's from CHARLIE CONNOR is that be is with JIM "FLASH" ROWLAND in Allcntown, Pa.; only excuse for missing the Reunion is that he Sinclair Refining and has settled in Fort Lauder^ PETE "PISTOL" NOZNESKY out of Mohnton, took a bride unto himself in June, tiie former Ann dale with wife and four Uttle ones. I wooder if Pa.; BILL GAVIN MD, in Boston; CPA JOE Snecd. Tom reports a 50-day hone>'moon in Fort Lauderdale is the same as when we spent POLICASTRO in Pittsburgh; GENE YURGEA- Europe and he is happily married. Those professor those Easter vacations down there? Please let us LITIS with Xerox out of Rochester, N.Y. Be­ salaries at U. of Michigan must be alright. Tom know, Charlie. ware of these Northeast Scoop Scouts and any is teaching computer-oriented math in a PhD PAUL JOHNSON is still going at it after his promises of monetary reward by them in order program. Also on the faculty at Ann Arbor are master's at U. of Penn; he returned to ND for to obtain information from you should be scruti­ BERT HORXBACK (English) and DON CAL- his PhD and is presently on the English bculty. nized. These men do not hxvc an unlimited ex­ AHAX (electrical eng). Don't be too critical of my grammar in this pense account from thu column as they may BRAD McKAIG is in Washington where he is column, Paul, The Johnsons have two children. claim. I urge the VP's in the other areas to practicing psychiatry- and BOB GRIFFIN and his Maj. DICK POLLENZ has graduated from the organize to defeat this dangerous group. Help! wife Judy arc in E\"ansviHe, Ind. where Bob is Army Command and General Staff Col. and is Our sympathy and prayers go to JOHN D.^RCY leading the Indian Archery Corp. TOM DIETER now spending a year in Thailand. I hope Dick on the recent passing of his father.

ARTHim L. ROULE, JR. U. of Chicago Law School following graduation Mich. KEN CAR\nGNANI is vilbge engineer 102 "I" ST. from ND. He is married, has one son and at Lombard, lU. and JOE SCOTKOVSKY is in 1938 LAPORTE, IND. 46350 resides at 1211 Anne Dr., Kinston, N.C. MICHAEL charge of a construction project at O'Hare Field W. HERB is now engaged in the general practice in CMcago. Father BOB DEVINE is teaching We have more than the customary amount of of law with offices at 19701 Sciibcr Lake Rd.. at Salesianum HS in Wilmington, Del. JIM news for this edition for which we are grateful. Lynnwood, Wash. 98036. DUNNIGAN is in charge of affairs at Buffalo In order to remain within our space limit we JOE ELLAM, 4106 Hillsdale Rd., Hartisburg, Raceway and JIM "SPECKS" ROGERS is prac­ will attempt to set forth our news with a minimum Pa. I7U2 wrote with news of interest to our ticing dentistry in West Hartford, Conn. BOB of comment. Class regarding the formation of a new Alumni MCCARTHY is teaching and coaching in Brigh­ ROGER J. KILEY JR fonrards the follou-ing Senate. According to Joe, no less than 10 mem­ ton, Mass. JOE and BERNIE PELLEGRINO summary of his activities: Following graduation bers of our Class were on hand for the first meet­ are practicing laW in New Haven. HANK De- Roger served as pilot in the Marine Corps for ing last May. They were PAT KITTREDGE, CALUWE and JIM ENGLEHARDT are living four and a half years, after which he taught in Philadelphia; DICK MURPHY, Boston; JOHN in the Dearborn, Mich. area. Our thanks to the Chicago public school sj-stcm for a period of DUNN, Decatur, 111.; AL ECK, Springfield, lU.; Joe Ellam for the foregoing. one year. He then entered Loyola U. Law^ School CHARLES KITZ, Dearhom, Mich.; JOE PEI^ Dr. DAN KAVANAUGH, Rt. 1, Box 474, and graduated in '66. He is now with the firm LEGRINO, New Haven, Conn.; TOM EISEN- Galeburg, Mich. 49053 graduated from the U. of of Mayer, Friedlich, Spiess, Tiemey, Brorni & HAUER, Dayton, Ohio; JOHN FITZPATRICK, Detroit Dental School in '63, served four years Platt of Chicago. Roger also reports that TOM Grand Rapids, Mich.; LOU BOSCO, Detroit; with the Navy on the West Coast, in the Far HAAS is in the construction business in San and JOE ELLAM. The foregoing represented East and at Great Lakes. He was married in Francisco and was recently married. Also Capt. their various area Alumni Clubs. Also joining the Nov. '65, now has one daughter and has been GARY COOPER USMC is now stationed at the group for the Old-Timers' Game were Father in private practice since September of this year. Pentagon following Vietnam duty. PAUL BOUR- DON McNEILL, JIM BRADY, JACK MURRAY JOHN R. MARTZELL was recently appointed JAILY is an executive A*ith an advertising firm in and MIKE CANTWELL. Also in attendance were q>eoal counsel to the governor of Louisiana. He Chicago, is married and has five children. Roger DAVE SHANAHAN and JOHN CROWE from win advise the governor on civil rights matters. further reporU that JACK CRILLY is in the the Foundation Office. DAVID H. KELSEY was recently made a panncr State Attomey*s office in Chicago. Joe also reports that DICK LYNCH and MEL in the Albuquerque law firm now named According to a clipping from the Kinston, LARSON were coaches of the Pennsylvania - Big Hernandez, Atkinson and Kelsey. Dave's partner, N. C. Free Press, KIRK WAGENSELLER Jr 33 all-star high school football team in its annual B. C. Hernandez, is the US ambassador to was recently promoted to Asst. VP of the contest with a similar Texas all-star team in Ruaguay. Wacho\ia Bank & Trust Co. Kirk attended the August. Mel Larson is now coaching at Pontiac, PAUL W. PIKELL is now Uving at 1532 Wedge-

William V. Bault «#r. '39 CARE-ING FOR A FAMISHED FOUR MILLION

ILLIAM V. BAULT JR. '59 graduated bamboo pole balanced on their shoul­ quent Jeep tripis through clouds of dust W only eight years ago, but he already ders. over hot, dry and rutted dirt roads to has more than four million dependents. It is also Bault's responsibility to the villages where the meals are served. They all live in famine-racked Bi­ make sure the food is cooked properly Assisting him are five American har, India and all of them are served and correct rations are distributed. The CARE administrators and 17 Indian daily meak at 23,325 CARE centers average daily ration is four ounces of field officers, who spend most of their throughout the state. Bault is coor­ wheat and either one ounce of milk time traveling through the state to dinator of the CARE Famine Relief or two ounces of blended com meal, check inventories and inspect the feed­ Program, the largest of its kind ever soybean flour and milk powder. ing centers. undertaken by a private agency. Bault, a native of Philadelphia, During June, in anticipation of the He took charge of the program last joined CARE as an overseas represen­ monsoon, 70 million pounds of food December when it included 600,000 tative in 1964 after four years in the were moved quickly to the CARE cen­ children under 14 and pregnant and Air Force. His first assignment for the ters from the ports of Calcutta, Bom­ nursing women. nonprofit aid agency was in Ceylon bay and Madras. About one fifth of His job is to make sure the CARE until February, 1966 when he was sent the 23,325 centers, which would be food, 40 million pounds a month, is to India. Before he took charge of inaccessible after the rains began, were moved quickly and efficiently from the the famine relief program in Bihar, given a three-month supply of food. ports of India to the CARE centers in Bault was administrator of regular Even though monsoon rains have Bihar by rail, truck, bullock cart and school feeding and self-help programs begun this year (they have failed the headload. In some remote areas of in the state of Gujarat. past two years), the acute shortage of Bihar, men walk as far as 25 miles Bault lives in comfortable quarters food in Bihar will continue at least over the hills to their villages with two above the CARE office in Patna, the until the crop is harvested in the fall. 25-pound bags tied to either end of a capital city of Bihar, but he makes fre­ Although most of his time is spent

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER wood Dr., Fairbom, Ohio 45324 after resigning JOHN G. HEDUCK w from the Air Force where he was a captain. He of Abon U.'s Institute :far C5rie KJtrti—. Bt is now employed by the USAF in a civilian «nll coatune detdopment of ICE pra|na* 4c- capacity as a flight test engineer at Wright-Pat­ s%ned to encourage WHiiimiMe aiUt PHtkipuim terson AFB. BOX CAMERON is sales rep. and in one aBaurs. ItONALD. W. RORK Rccncd asst. branch mgr. for the South Bend area for his MBA in miiigifnt at Faiileigk OiciiaMai Continental Business Interion Inc. of EUchart. U. in Joae. Dr. (Capt.) DENNIS J. GAIt Mother FLORENTINE OLVM celebrated the 25th WACKI has coapleted the orientatioa coatMtar anniversary of her profession of vows this year REUNION '68 USAF meifical officers at Sheppnd AFl. Tcs.. and said the most outstanding event in the years The doctor who iccentljr went oa aclne dirty was she has been in the religious life was '*Pope John asBgaed to the USAF Impitsl at OSiitt AVB. and Vatican H." Dr. (Capt.) PATRICK M. SKI was married to Miss Barbara Frances Chiapck Neb., for dutr as a aemok^st. Dr. HEMKV FLANAGAN and Dr. (Capt.) THOMAS A. GAR- in South Bend Aug. 12. ROBERT W. MISSEL FRASK is ia research ia soEd plvna at .the SIDE have completed the orientation course for has been appointed sales tnuning mgr. of Ford Amy Materials and Mwhsnin Scseucli Cater officers of the USAF medical service at Shep- Motor Credit Co. TIMOTHY J. MURTAUGH in Watertowa^ Mam* pard AFB, T«. 111 has been admitted to partnership in the law The balance of news still ia >ar baads.iltia Capt. JOHN M. LEDDEN has been graduated firm of Murtaugh, Nelson & Sweet in Chicago. have to be held over until the neat issae at «e from the Air U.'s Squadron Oflicer School at Max­ ANTHONY SPERANZA has received a bachelor have now consumed our allotted well AFB, Ala. THOMAS FRANCIS BURZYN- of laws degree from Seton Hall U. School of Law. for the contiibntions.

JOSEPH P. MULLIGAN accurate list next time. im FARREIX has been aaaaed poitibGs a^ 2680 LEHMAN RD.. APT. 42 TOM CAHILL is now VP and director of ministratar of Teachers Insmaace and Aaaaiir 1939 CINCINNATI, OHIO 45204 marketing of newly formed Leslie Foods, Inc., a Assoc, and the College Kedieiaeat Eqinties Fund, The class officers take this opportunity to wish div. of Leslie Salt Co. in San Francisco. TERRY nonprofit ocganizataous that provide m natioanade each of you and your families the choicest blessings KEATING has been named personnel director for system of portable pennoas for college) and etbcr of this Christmas season. While sending notes to The Container Corp. of America, with offices in educational and sdentific institutions. friends this holiday, why not jot a few lines to Chicago. BRIAN QUINN earned his MBA at Hr. and Mrs. TOM MIRANDA bccasK panats this scribe so that he will have material to carry Miami U. in Oxford, Ohio. Rev. JOHN E. of a daughter Sept. 24 in South BeaJ. BOB KBX him into the new year? (My suggestion for an BUCHALO CSC was retreat master for this year's has been promoted to the newly created positka of excellent Christmas present for yourself is the 49th annual BIG RETREAT at NO. One thousand North Central regional siaiieting mgt. for Oe trip back to the campus for our Class reunion in men from half the states in North America at­ grocery div. of Beatrice Foods Co. BOB HAS- June, 1%9.) tended. SENGER appeared on CBS' 'Oook Up and lite" The reunion after the S. Cal game was a LOU MANZO was named the fint recipient TV show on Sept. 24 to iSscoss the iistnrc of tremendous success and we especially thank JOHN of the Harry A. Batten Fellowship awanled at the Church-qionsared college and He it THURIN and his sec*y, Jean Forray, for handling Harvard Graduate School of Btuiness Adnun. He also one of the 100 "experts" who attended the the arrangements. John and I got together and enrolled in the two-year program in Sept. BILL conf. in Washlitgton to cBscuss the futme of tried to remember who was there and came up WHALEY has been named plant mgr of Western Catholic education, Nov. 5-10. As you ai^ with the following names: PAUL ANDERSON, Publishing's Cambridge, Md. plant. TIM SHARON know. Bob has a recent book tm tlus siiiject. BOB ARCHEY, JOE BATTLE, JACK BEARD, has been assigned overseas duty with the Catholic GEORGE CLEMENTS Eves again! After giad- BO BROEMMEL, TOM CAHILL, TO.M CAR­ Relief Services program in Ecuador. SCOTT uation, George went into the Amy and served ROLL, KNUTE C.WANAUGH, JIM COLOSI- BRADSHAW, a reg. Army officer since gradua­ at Ft. Benjamin Harrison in Indianapolis. WhSe MO, FR. JIM CO.N'XELLY CSC, BOB DAILEY, tion, shipped to Vietnam in late August. He there he started wt>ritii« nqhts for Tkt iMiUammptSt NICK DEMPSEY, ART Dl SABATI.VO, JOHN had been an ROTC instructor at Kansas Slate Star as a reporter aitd also met and married a DOWNES, BARRETT GLEIXXER, BILL CoL in Pittsburg, Kansas. Upon completion of South Bend giri, Joyce Ripp, who was wusldag GR.AHAM, STEVE H.ARVATH, BOB HAS- his assignment at Pitts, he was tzansfaTed from as a nurse in a Nap-town hasp. They now Inve SEXGER, JOHN HAYVVARD, PAUL HESSION, the Infantry to the Signal Corps. Scott has fcmr four boys, from the age of five on down. Gcosse JIM HILLIARD, PHIL HODOXOS, TOM hoys (7-5-3-1) and has full intention of going the spent five years with the Star and moved to Bias- JOSEPH, TERRY LAMB, JOHN MADDEN, full distance with the Army. hamton, N.Y. where he worked with the aftctaooa JOHN MALOXEY, TIPPY MAXN, TOM JIM MERZ, my roommate freshman year in paper, part of the huge Gannett chun. He McBREEN, BILL XfcCULLOUGH, BILL Mc- B-P, earned his PhD at Harvard in June. JOE switched to the independently owned <^ipoBitioa~ CUSKER, GEORGE McTERNAN, JACK Mc- McARDLE is the recipient of a master of fine arts paper and b now the exec e^tor of a 30,000* GRATH, JOE MULLIGAN, DENNY NEAD, degree in drama. JOE O'CONNOR joined the drculatkm morning tabhnd. DAVE AMIDON, KEN NOTH, DICK PHELAN, CHUCK faculty of Wittenberg U. in Springfield, Oluo, Lt., USN, lec'd his MS in AE on July 6 bcm QUEENAN, JIM REUL.\ND, BUDDY REYN­ where he Is an ass't prof, of history. Joe has been Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CaEf. and OLDS, GEORGE ROSS, ART SHANNON, an interviewer for the John F. Kennedy Library then left for another tour in patrol bomlieis with JULIUS SPARACHINO, FRED STEPANICH, since 1965 and is writing his doctoral dissertation VP-23 at Brunswick, Maine. Dr. JOHN O'BKIEN, JOH.N THURIN AND JORGE ZABLAH- on "Russian-American Relations, 1939-1941." Lt. after leaving ND, rec'd hs BID fnan Stanford, TOUCHE. My apologies for the omission of the Cmdr. TOM BARTHOLOMEW has just com­ fiiushed his intern and first yr. readency at Saa 30 or 40 names of other classmates who attended. pleted an eight-month totir with the 7th Fleet in Fraixjsco General Hosp. and left Aug., 1966 (with We made a few notes for next year*s reunion Vietnam u*atcrs. Tom is an a\'iation officer at­ wife Peggy and children, Attida uid Kobert) (after the Sept. 28th Purdue game, so mark your tached to Cmdr. Fhilbar, Ninth Staff, home based for Kaduna, N^eria, Africa. The O'Briens arc 1968 calendar) and we promise to have a more in San Diego. assodated with the PbbGc Health .Dept. on loan to the Peace Corps and will be there imtil Jtrae- '68. After July 1 of next year, J cretSt mgr. for Evan-Ficoae, Inc. (a major ladies^ sportswear manufacturer) . throughout the famine-racked state. and married Aileen Lipschutz cm June 20, 1964. "I like to get out to see the people They have a son, Eddie (2) and daughter Dcfciiie in the villages," he says. "It gets me (1). Fat's brother DICK '60 is on Ae bcnhy at the U. of Dayton, and his brother AL '64 n with closer to them and their problems. Allied Chemicals Plastic Div. ED McGEE's nmnber "When I see the swelled stomachs, t%vo son, Kevin EdwartI, was bom Sept.-?. Ed was spindly legs and painful sores of mal­ recently reass^ed to the Chicago office of Stan­ nourished babies, it's impossible not to dard OH where he is supervising a group of computer pcogranuaeis. Ed reports that MIKE respond emotionally. But 1 have a job TRESSEL and badly are nwving to NYC lor to do. I can't let it bother me all the two yean while Mike is on special awigmneat time." for Sinclur, and that TONY MACIOCE is soc-- Bill said he has seen noticeable cessfuUy leuiveiing in Detroit iram a very seriow case of bleeding lilceis. improvement in the health of children After TERRY DALY returned from Vietnam, after only a month of daily CARE where he worked as a dnBan advisor, he en­ meals. They are more lively; they can rolled in the Duke U. graduate school vdiefe he laugh and play. can now be found woildng toward a degree ia history. BILL BOHNSACK was DnntocQ s pvicst In his Patna office Bill juggled num­ May 23. 1964 after a year at Benet Latin School bers and schedules about 12 hours a and four yean of theoksy at Mt. St. Ifasy** day. This kind of administrative job Seminary, Emmitsburg, MtL Father Bin has beea can become quite abstract. But for assigned to St. Anthony Puish in Trenton, N.J.,: where he is teaclung higli school xtE^taa, as SRO Bill it has not. His visits to the vil­ as part-time parish work. lages have given him a deep apprecia­ The sympathy of the Oas is extended to TOM tion of the thin margin that separates BRUOER and his farotfaen JIM "65 aad MIKE life and death. ex-'62 on the death of their lather, Thoaaat A. Btuder, Sr. Rev. Ferdinand Brown CSC offered a Mast on Campos on No*. 4lh bsr Mr. 1

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1?<7 DECEMBER THOMAS J. O'CONNELL Lisa have popped op in Waldwidt, N.J, where Hark the angds aang . . . and MIKE McKEE 3350 EVERETT RD. they aire united with Union Carinde. Pete's drops out of the sky. Mike, how can I forget ISil LAKE FOREST. ILL. 60015 Poop: "Nancy and JACK SCHROEDER with aid the tenor of ROTC? Mike's thesis vvould take from Detroit's J. P. Stevens & Co. art building a three issues to cover, so here, mth apologies to Dashing thru the snow, etc. which according to kindergarten, two each and one due. JOE Mike, are some excerpts: '' '60-'62 ^rfoome Chi*s ESP doU, I'm supposed to be doing vfhtn REANEY is managing in Manhassctt, slaving for Ranger, leader and patient. Broke my back sum­ you receive this. Football scene. How about No. a NYC account firm." mer of '62 after diopper lurched during ex­ 10? Loola like a long season. AISU, Ga. Tech. Chestnuts roasting on an open fire ... on the ercises involving lowering troops from hovering and Fla. <»uld be difficult. Of course it's all over helicopters. But, back again jumiring in the fall. as you read this and you know the results. But beach probably, at least at CHUCK NACKLEVs in Miami. After U. of Miami La«r *63 he mar­ Met Jeanne, a WAC Lt. in '62 and married in the big one was still AfSU and %v-asn*t it great '63. However, she was then at Ft. Knox and I to beat them. But what the heck it's not ried Barbara Da.vis (Raleigh, N.C.) in '66 and is just lulling himself in that sunshine. He says at Ft. Campbell. (Sec. Note: That's the mili­ whether you win or lose but how much you tary!) Another accident and quite some hos­ enjoyed tiie day. That's the opinion of a few JOHN PARKS is in Chicago and VA like John to come out of hiding. BILL COMEFORD is pital time and in '63 a medical retirement. Fin­ seen at Gate 14, like TOM MOYNAHAN, RICK ished MA at Columbia sodology dept. and was SALMON, D. JERRY McGLYNN, TOM MAR­ not though. He pops up finally with, "USMC after graduating, then a year is traunee with pursuing PhD but now have three-year Nat'l TIN and JOE DAY. All agree half the fun is Defense Ed. Act Fellowship and am back at ND. leaving the driving to that friendly bus driver! Texaco, Inc. and am currently electronic and computer buyer for the Aigonne Natl Lab. Mar­ Soc dept. is really an up and coining group now It's the walking when we finally return home and seems to reflect the overall resurgence jn ND that's rough. ried former Judie Mauer '64 and have Cfcmdia 3." I'll be home for Xmas, you can count on me ... academics. We're looking forward to becoming The First Noel . . . One of the interesting at least, if any one of the old doctors at Mayo young 5iU}urfoanites and viewing better football things about doing this column is the consistency lends a band. Dr. PAT SHEEDY in raiUology than before '60. TeU JULIAN! that Prof. of some people. Over the last year we've had and Dr. TOM STARKEY in OB. Thanb to D'Antonio wants to see him about an old term tAvo, three and four reports from some individuals- Dr. BILL SCHECKLER for that note and also paper." In one case wc had such a running dialog pre­ on Dr. GREG WALSH in neurology at NIH in ceding the first child that I could've been god- It's Xmas in Killamcy wth all of the folks at DC. Bill is "chief resident, intenial medicine &ther. In contrast, there arc a few people whom home , . . including JOHN LYNN whose missus U. of Wisconsin Hosp. Will take care of Uncle I just know will never ivTitc and whoops, out of Nancy writes that they and Mary Elizabeth 3 and Sam in July '68 in the US PubUc Health Service. the woodwork come "brothers" like: Ohayo, John Jr 2 are at home in Center Valley, Pa. Wife Rollie (SMC '62) enjoys opera nnging and PAUL RAFFERTY teaching Army Jr. High in where he is a research eng. for a mining dept. Ed 3 and Megan Mkrie 1 enjoy being- them­ Schweinfurt, Germany after numerous years do­ of the Homer Research Labs at Bethlehem Steel. selves." ing same for J^ Force High in honoraHc Tokyo. Joy to the world . . . well, at least to STEVE What a life- Ah Yes, reminds mc of the old More Meds . . . DICK BILODEAU, intern B.ARRY (Sean), GERRY LALLY (Terry) and days back in '63. (Old?) In his own inimitable and resident at Albany Med Center June '66. JOE COOPER (Meredith Jean) with their new style, "... been on the Rhine to Cologne, Now with Biary and Laura 4 in Cambridge, Md. additions. Cheers. Wurzburg, Munich-Oktobcrfest beer is fantastic — with allergy practice and consulting work at East- On the 1st day of Xmas my true love gave and Nuremberg. I've found a fantastic apartment cm Shore State Hosp. DDS DAN SCANLAN and to me . . . for DAN KtETTER, LARRY and as soon as I can move off post I'm sure I'll other ND pre-dents recently received thOT di­ KYTE, TOM BRINKWORTH and EMMET enjoy Germany." (Sec Note, Ach So!) DON plomas. Congrats. Jeannie and he claim that MCCARTHY and their new wives we ^ve best DIMBERIO the old five and dlmcr retailing at the their two linebackers, Dan and Tun, were wishes for many Cbristmases to come. And so Kre^e National Warehouse in Fort Wayne. MBA, recently seen being offued candy by one Duffy D. dear friends as the snow drifts rise and the salt OSU '61; I do '63; Dad to Amy and Anne. I'm dreaming of a white Xmas %nth every Xmas trucks sally forth we bid a fond farewell until He also found time to teach at Indiana, Purdue card I get . , . and the first one is from DDS next time from the heart of Chicago's second and St. Frauds and sends regards to the Giucago TOM ADAMSON who has gone to Carmichaci, worst blizzard. Happy roasting and toasting. Gang. Calif, after two years* Air Force in Sacramento, Joyeux Noel, FeUz Navidad. Marilyn and PETE HICKEY wth Lynn and along with Vickie and Ryan Lee 1. —Old Lang's Sign

WILLIAM HENNEGHAN ing. They have two children. Fat and Erin. MEULEMAN. Den is national account rep with 30556 SCRIVO DR. DON RICE has been serving as an Anny captain Koppers and lives in King of Prussia, Pa. Bob ISfil WARREN, AHCH. 48092 by teaching economics and systems analyns at the is a stock analyst for the Bank of Detroit and Naval postgraduate school in Monterey, Calif., but received bis MBA on a fellowship at MSU. I just got back from seeing USC beat the Fight­ Don and his wife Sue (SMC '61) and the two Gerry and LARRY RICHARDS stopped by the ing Irish. I hope the rest of the season will be sons are now Ii\^ng in Arlington, Va. where Don Vandcrwalles* after a visit to Disneyland. Larry better than that game. BILL CRONIN and is dir., cost research and analy^ in the office and Gerry have two children, Chris and Mark. Mai:^e spent the weekend with us and drove of the asst. secretary of defense tot sjTstems Larry is also with Douglas Aircraft. Jerry McKay down to South Bend to see the gome together. analysis. recdved his MBA from Indiana U. in '63. Jerry "ITie Cronins now have a baby girl Kathleen and BILL BENDEN is still single and is now in is with the Ford Motor Car Co. as a supervisor Bill is working back in N.Y. with Underwood the Air Force as a s^iologist. Bill had the in the controller's office. Jerry married Alice Olivittie. My wife and I saw Maggie and ^HKE experience last year of being a race doctor at Gressel in Dowagiac, Mich, in Aug. 1964 and CRONIN over at the Cronin car bar in the the Sebring 12-bour race. That must have been has two children, Patricia and Ann A£arie. They parking lot and Mike tells me they bought a something. JOHN &IULROONEY graduated are now living in Owosso, Mich. home on the south side of Chicago and we were from Minnesota's School of Medicine in '65 and Bro. PASCHAL PESCE CSC wrote and told me talldng over some of the pleasantries of owning js now a captain in the Army in Boston. STEVE he is on the faculty at Cardinal Mooney in N.Y. a home. PAUL La FRAMBOISE wrote and SALLER is a junior financial analyst for MalUn- Brother is teaching' English and religion. Last told me he wus married in September to Nicole fr^t Chem. Co, in St. Louis, Mo. Steve is summer he received his MA in guidance and psy­ Durand of Quebec They will make their home married and has two children, a daughter 5 and chology from Vaianova. CHARLES "NICK" in Montreal where Paul is working for Inter­ a son 3. JOHN PALEN fiiushed lus PhD in KOENIG rccuved an MD degree from St. Louis national Sun.'e>-s Ltd., a marketing consulting sociology at U. of Wisconsin and then began as U. Med. School in 1965. After interning at St. firm. RAY CURTIN was married in France to an asst. prof, at the U. of Milwaukee. Army Luke's Hosp. in Sa^oaw, Mich, he entered mili­ Marie France Brochard. Ray Is working for GE Reserve active duty orders are sending the Palens tary service and is presently in Vietnam. Ed as a consulting coordinating engineer for the to Washington, DC next year where John will Greene married Asia Marie Garibay De Quintero last year and a half. be on the faculty of the Industrial College of of Guadalajara, Mexico last summer. Ed is cur­ TONY CHESSICK is doing nuclear consulting the Armed Forces. John and Karen and the rently employed as export mgr. with the Heath worlc in Washington and has his master's in two looking forward to taking over the Capital. Co., St. Joe, Mich. Ed mentioned that while on phy^cs from Catholic U. Tony is married to MIKE McMAHON %vas married in Oct. '66 assignment in the Caribbean he spent a lot of the former P. Darcy Urban. DAVE KILROY to a Pittsburgh girl. He is presentiy working on time with classmates MIGUEL FERNANDEZ and is tile federal govt, account rep. for Xerox in his PhD at the U. of Httshurgh full-time after ROBERTO RAMIREZ. Ed would like to hear the Carolinas. He sa^'S he is doing well, still teaching in a high school for a while. JEROME from TOM "GUMS" GIEL and Dr. JIM Mc- single and looking. His brother Jay is at the VANDERWALLE wrote and told me he is an GOWAN. Cape in Florida doing real estate worlc for Humble engineer-scientist specialist with Douglas Aircraft That's it for now, gang, but I would like to Oil but they don't sec each other, very often. Co. at the Space Systems Center in Huntington esqilain that this article is limited to ^e and Dave mentioned that FRED JENKINS is sta­ Beach, Calif. Jerome and bis wife Gretchen and some of the info might be a tittie old when it tioned as a lieutenant there in Charleston. PAT their three sons. Bob 4, Jim 3, Steven 2 live in goes to press but I won't forget any news that BURKE and his wfe Denise are living in Lan­ Costa Mesa, Calif. On a trip to tiie East they I have received from you. "Keep those cards and caster, Mass. where Pat is teaching and work­ met Peg and DEN KASUN and Judy and BOB letters coming int"

H. JAMES KRAUSER Two members of our Class were very much in As pronused last issue I will attempt to high­ 1760 EAST \VEST HIGHAVAY SILVER SPRING. MD. 20910 evidence serving as integral parts of the ND light a particular group or organizations active 1IS2 Foundation. JOHN CROWE and JOHN HUT- dnring our days on Campus. Through the cour­ Yonis truly was fortunate to attend the recent TON both are to be commended for the out­ tesy of STEVE WEIDNER and BILL SCANLON national SUMMA conference held at ND Sept. standing job they are doing coordinating Alumni comes news of most of the Blue Qrde members 10-11. One had to be impressed by the organiza­ activities throughout the country. John Hntton of the Class of '62. Steve is a Ia%vyer working tional stnictuie of your Alumni' organization and has recentiy moved to the West Coast where be in the Pentagon while serving in the Navy. Bill, the Jon^eness of purpose which u'as the keynote has opened up ND offices in both Los Angeles of -two extremely informative days. I know it abo an attorney, works for the General War may.jKmnd trite but I would Hke to urge all and San Francisco. The only other member of Glahns office in DC. CHRIS BUCKLEY is now members of this Class to pledge funds according our Class attending the session was JIM GREVER practicing law also in DC with the firm of to your individual means for this very worthwhile who is cruzrentiy H-orking for IBM crat of Gin- Covington and Burling after his graduation from campaign. cinnati» Harvard.

48 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER TOM EIFF and wife TaBy live in Boston in La. PAT HUGHES has begun m pei^rie and icporti that lOKE, whoa he anr Hm aam- while "Eiffer** attends his second year of Harvard residency at Chelsea Naval Has]!., Bostoa ud ata while ICke waa aitca£a( a tnat atd MiMa Business School. JOE DELLA MARIA is now in expects to be there for two or three inoee yean, aemnar la ChicagD, ii m the tratt d^t. af iha the Navy JAG and stationed at Newport after JIM HIGGINS is sharing a San Franciiro apsst* Victona Bank & Tnat Co. ia Victaria, Tel.; spending the past two years clerlcing for Judge ment with FRANK O'CONNELL. Jim ii ni the PETE, aow named, haa joiacd JDf SIUOUO Kiley in Chicago. JIM FLYNN with law degree Navy trying court-martials and headied for Vitt- iaOmfieU, OL ia the fina

FRANK P. DICELLO and wife Dean became the proud parents of a course at the U. of >nrginia he irill lepoft for 218 PALMER HILL RD. daughter Deborah Lynn on May 11. John Is at active duty in the Judge Advocate Coipt at Ft. OLD GREENWICH. CONN. 06870 Yale completing PhD work. He writes that he Hood, Tex. m\ often sees BOB KLEIN who mairied OGm Dr. ROBERT P. SIEFSIS, lAo hat bees Jeannie, Anne and EUGENE BLISH have ar­ Paiva on July 1 and is also at Yale. a teaching feUosr at Banard, «as appointed ant.- rived ia Bangitok, Thailand to begin their new pnf. of Englisb at Lake Forest CoL -Army Vn.., duty assignment with the Air Force. They can be Captain NICK WALZ returned from 13 months RONALD W. VETI'EL completed ^ht-we^ reached at the Maison Royale, 10 Fhaholyothin, in Vietnam in Sept. '66 and is stationed at Ynma» of advanced in£mtiT tiaiiiing at Ft. Otd, CaGL Soi No. 3, Bangkok, ThaUand. KEVIN O'NEILL Ariz. He was married in Chicago on Feb. 4» in September. USAF Cvt. STEIHEN D. HEN-. and his wife Mary Elizabeth are the parents of a 1967 to Sara Johnson (SMC '65). Capt. MI­ NING has been decorated inth two nuEtey boy, Kevin Michael, bom June 10. They are CHAEL SEXTON has extended for an additional medals at Udon Koyal Thai AFB, Thaihad. He. residing in Chicago where Kevin is regional xngr. six months in Vietnam. He is stationed at Phan received the Distinguished Flying Cnm and the of computer sales for Leasco Data Processing Rang and is fiying F-lOOs. KEVIN HART has ^r Uedal for actins in Southeast Asa. RON­ Corp. RICHARD SOBONYA married Evangeline entered the Peace Corps and recently began trainr ALD MICHAEL BUDZINSKI is engaged to Mia*~ Eybsen of Cleveland on May 27. Best man at the ing in the Truk Islands of the South Fad6c. Jaeqndyn Ann Holewinski of Sooth Bead.' wedding was RICHARD FEPLINSKI. The Anny Pvt. BARTLEY M. O'HARA com{^ted FHIUP F. RILEY m mairied Ang. 19 to 1GB Sobonyas are now in Cleveland where Dick is a field communications crewman course at Ft. Sheila Ann Fitzgerald in Oak V*A, HL m it completing his internship in pathology at Uni­ Huachuca, Ariz. JAMES P. MERCURIO now doing graduate wok at ND. versity Hosp. Capt. AL DESKO is currently serv­ a captain and Army legal officer in A^etnam was ROBERT JAME$ FKALEIGH earned an IB ing as a f^v. G>3 operations officer in Vietnam. defense counsel for a successful defendant in one adence at Kenaelaer lUytcdaie Al and his wife Marie have a son aged 2. of the highly publicized court-martials involving Institute. Carnegie . Institute o( Tirlrtnlngy JIM AIcNAMEE and wife Mary Jane now the alleged murder of prisoners of war. Jim's avoided ROBERT LEO HAYES a FhD. *e*. have thrae children and are living in North Olm­ client, Lt. John L. Ritrick, was tried in An Khe, EDWARD C. KRAUSE CSC bffeKd' Ini fat sted, Otuo where Jim is a sales rep. for IBM. South Vietnam for the murder of prisoners on the Mas in tins country in the diapd of CHUCK PAYNE recently completed a two-year Bon Song Plains in April. Enlisted men serving Senunaiy at ND Jtdy 15. He vn tour of duty with the Air Force in Japan and under Patrick were found guilty of the crime. Rome Dec 17 and coigqileted - hii has been reassigned to Travis AFB in Galifontia. PATRICK J. FOLEY has been comnusnoned s stn£es at Gregorian U. in Rboe arhere he BOB MARTIN is presently a staff accountant captain in the Army at Sheppard AFB, Tex. He coved hit Bcenliate in saaed theology. THOUAS wnth Abbott Labs in North Chicago, HI. He and was formerly an enlisted USAF legal spedalist at RAY VECCHIONE received luf >fD boa the Yvife Carrie recently welcomed their tlutd child. Sheppard. Upon completion of a short orientation Ohio State U. CoL of Uefidne in Jnne and ii Colleen Patricia. DAVE GRAHAM received his interning at Lot Aagdes County. Unit I Vimf, VSSi from Baylor U. in '66 and spent the past in Loa Angdes. Aho graduated in tte: immii: year as an Intern at Ben Taub General Hosp. ia das> was THOMAS P. CUFFEL who Is 'a>. Houston. On March 31 he married Janet Susaa temiiv at Akron City Hasp.- in Akma, OUK Butel and is currently serving in the Army. ROBERT M. SAJNOVSKY lecesvcd or ItfA BOB BUCKLEY has completed his Navy obli­ degree at Ohio State IT. FREDERIC KAKL. gation and is currently in Chicago where he is SOOTT got his deatisliy dtgtec at Western Ke.: attending the U. of Chicago and worlung toward serve U. and the steal of medicinr Aeie aoaided an MBA. ARNOLD TESTA is serving as a RICHARD E. A. SOBONYA an UD. Aiaqr lieutenant in the Air Force and is stationed at Lienteoant EDWARD W- TUCKER coi«ietal Phu Cat AFB in Vietnam. JOHN DABROWSKI REUNION *68 the-adJBtaat geaoal oCccr bmiB COOBW at Ft..

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER \n7 DECEMBER Benjamin Harrison, Ind. in June. Ohio State U. Phi Delta Epsilon med. fraternity and held an NIH tmtry OCS. Ft, Bcnning, Ga. SHAUN BUR-NS awarded MD degrees to THOMAS P. CLIFFEL grant for research in anatomy. Capt. JAMES has returned from Nigeria and is attending UCLA and THOMAS R. VECCHIONE. Rutgcra award­ R. BEST was graduated from the Air U. Squad­ in pursuit of his master's degree in Afro-American ed A. THOMAS BER.\NEK JR an MBA. ron Officer School at Maxwell AFB, Ala. He Studies. Dr. JOSEPH P. CHOLLAR, who is now in­ received special recognition during the ceremonies THOMAS JOSEPH MURPHY received a PhD terning at Xladigan General Hosp., Fort Lewis« as a member of the group that was a%vaTded the in chemistry in August at Iowa State. Dr. (Capt.) Tacoma, Wash., was graduated from The Jeffcr-^ Academic Excellence Trophy. Army Pvt. MYRON GEORGE J. CHOBY completed a medical service son Medical Col. of Philadelphia in June. ROB­ J. BUSBY JR completed an eight-week ad- officer basic course in September at Brooke Army ERT M. D.-\LE JR was graduated from the • ministration course in August at Ft. Leonard Med. Center, Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. After nine Georgetown U. Med. School in Washington, DC 'Wood, &(o. Capt. JAMES O. EIDE is now aide- years of teaching at Regis HS in Cedar Rapids, and plans to sen'e bis internship at the IT. of de-camp to Maj. Gen. Frank G. White, com­ Rev. MARTIN LAUGHLIN has been transferred to Colorado Med. Center, Denver. ROBERT T. manding general of the US Axmy Munitions the American Martyrs Retreat House as asst. dir. DIGIULIO was commissioned an Army lieutenant Command. Capt. DONALD J. RYAN JR re­ Lt. JOHN J. IMPERIAL completed an ordnance after graduating from the Infantry OCS at Ft. ceived the ^vcr bars of his new rank in recent officer course Sept. 11 at the Army Ordnance Bcnning, Ga. in July. JOHN P. MACKIE has ceremonies at the Army's First Recruiting Dist. School, Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md. ROBERT been appointed professional sales rep. for Pfizer HQ. in Fort George G. Meade, Md. J. KONOPA has been admitted to practice law Labs, div. of Chas. Pfizer & Co. Inc. NORBERT DON GILLESPIE is now Dr. Gillespie and is in Indiana and is an associate in the South Bend HERMAN R.ASCHER JR earned the juris doctor in California on his internship. ROBERT M. law firm of Crumpackcr, May, hcvy &. Scarer. degree at Western Rcscr\'e U. in June. GILBO CSC was ordained a priest Sept. 15 in THOMAS ALBERT RODGERS received the Santiago, Chile. He is to be assigned to one of MD degree from the U. of Colorado in June. He the parishes or other institutions of the congre­ will be taking an internship in Seattle at the U. gation in Chile. JOHN G. HOGAN became dir. 1963 LAW of Washington Hosp. WALLACE P. BERKO- of info, services at Piedmont Aviation Inc. in JOSEPH R. SULLIVAN WnZ is serving a surgical internship at U. of September. JAMES M. HESS was commissioned 1526 E. CEDAR ST. Chicago hospitals and clinics. He is the pres. of an Army lieutenant after graduating from In- SOUTH BEND, DID. 46617

WARREN C. STEPHENS affairs office in Holly^vood, Calif, doing liaison criminal trials through appellate worli and is en­ 1100 CLOVE RD., NO. 5-0 work for the Navy with the TV and motion joying Washington so much that he moved hb 1SS4 STATEN ISLAND, NY 10301 picture industry. He and his wife Linda arc liv­ rcddence to suburban Bethesda, Md. He would ing in Burbank where she is teaching school. welcome visitors therein at 4970 Battery Lane, JOHN SIEGER graduated last June from George­ Pete also writes that RON GILLES is on shore Apt. 609. The avalanche ended with a lengthy town Law School, passed the Illinois bar exam duty in San Diego and will be married this mn- letter from Capt. MIKE STEPANEK, presently and is now working for the US Dept. of Labor ter. Other interesting notes in Pete's letter arc: serving as Chief of the Military Justice Branch in Chicago. He and his wife Mar>' arc expecting JOE AlAYER is a boat commander in the Me­ at Fort Huachuca, Ariz. He and Judy antici­ their second child in February. D.WE LAHAN- kong Delta, JOE STINEMAN is on a destroyer pate returning to the Chicago area in about a ZIO is a supervising accountant with PE.\T and TOM WUKOVITS is fl^ng Navy jets. year. The really big nc»« in his letter leads MARWICK after completing his CPA require­ First Lt. PETE KUMP is a platoon leader with right into the next division — ments in Nov. *66. Dave is married to the former the 3rd Marines operating in the northern prov­ Dorothy Rubin; they have one child Kathi Lynn The "Changing" Scene: To Judy and MIKE inces of Vietnam. First Lt. JOHN NAGE, his and are liWng in Pittsburgh. DON FOSCATO STEPANEK, a boy, Patrici Michael, on March wife Carolyn and son John Jr. are at Fort Bel- completed his naval tour of duty, married Linda 30. To Helene and BERNIE KATZ, a boy, voWy Va. John received his MSCE from ND and Tishman of Long Beach, Calif, and is employed Allan Seth, Dec. '66. Maria and MIKE RYAN, served a tour as engineering officer in South Korea. by Price-Waterhouse in Virginia. a girl, Mary Janet, in August. To Jackie and Summer graduates of the U. of Texas Law MIKE SULLIVAN, a girl, Maura Kathleen, in MIKE LONG is an attorney for the Bankruptcy School are GEORGE CALLAHAN. CHRIS CAR- August. To Ctaudette and GERALD VAIRO, Div. of the US District Court in Hartford, Conn. MOUCHE (Texas Capital Corp., Austin) BEN a boy, Stephen Dominic, in September. Con­ Mike graduated from the U. of Conn. Law School MUNSON, TOM SCHNITZIUS (Ford) SKIP­ gratulations, parents and good luck, offspring I in June, passed the bar in August and was mar­ PER VAUGHN (Texas U., MBA). Chris and ried to Ann O'Connell in September. Even after his wife Quita had a daughter Mary Claire last The "ten-fourteen scene" \fas a grand time due all this he had the energy to register as a full- spring. to the fine efforts of TOM KERN and CHUCK time MBA student at the U. of Conn, in October. Jl&f MASON and his wife welcomed a second SWEENEY who combined their talents and time Ens. JIM WEBSTER is at the Naval School of boy. Jim is employed by Consumers Power Co* to put on a s^vell party. Compared to last year's Aeronautical Science at the U. of W^tem Florida. in Jackson, Midi, developing computer applica­ be-in it was a bit tame due only to the fact that Upon graduation he will receive an MS plus his tions. Jim had a recent article published in a the Ford Motor Co. thought it needed the draft­ flight wings. Jim ^v-as ranked first in lus class technical journal on computer analyns of gas ing talents of HURLEY SMITH more than we at mid-term. regulator capacity. WAYNE ALLEN is coaching needed his plucking talents. There w^is a good football and teaching at Salcaanum HS in Wil­ turnout for part or all of the festivities. To wit: ANDY O'DWYER will receive his MD from the ZAVODNYIKs, the KERNs, the SWEENEYs, Northwestern next June. He was married to ^fag- mington, Del. His wife presented him with a new daughter hist spring. BRUCE O'NEILL the SULLIVANs, the RYANs, the VAlROs, the gie Leach in June *66 and they now have a son, JIGANTIs, the MESSINAs, the CASHs, the Kevin. Their address is 626 W. Waveland, Chi­ graduated in June from Marquette Law and will serve as a law clerk at Wisconsin Supreme Court CONNEELYs, CAROL KILLIAN, GENE KRA­ cago. JOHN FLECKENSTEIN received his MBA MER, RUSS BLEY, BILL FLAHERTY, CHAR­ from the U. of Chicago and is with Industrial in Madison. He and his wife Barbara have two sons. Lt(jg) J. D. KOLATA is aboazd the sub­ LIE O'MALLEY, JIM SUTHERLAND, BOB Nucleonics Corp. in Columbus, Ohio. He is mar­ FROST and JACK RAilMEL. Of course the ried to the former Frances Murphy and they had marine Sea Leopard. He writes that fellow sub officer TOM BARD is on the Runner. TOM Trojans spoiled a beautiful Homecoming day their first child a daughter in September. Other (sunburns were in evidence] but KERN and new parents are Carolync and PETE MUR­ Iktin^INAZZI received his MSCE from Pixxdue and is now pursuing his PhD. SWEENEY and the folks at Holly's provided RAY who welcomed a son Eric also in September. soothing liquids and hearty food respectively and First Lt. GREG BRADFORD is a flight naviga­ the evening ended all too quickly. tor aboard B-52's out of Wright Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio. He and his wife have a year> 1964 LAW A flu bug prevented the GALLICKs from get­ cUd daughter Karen. ting there and wouldn't you know Peter was THOMAS F. C»NNEELY unheard from again. The word making the MORIARTY, ROSE, lAURIE GOTP is in his fourth year at the FACCENDA & HULTQinST rounds was that BALFE WAGNER and JIM TJ. of Illinois Med. School. He was married this ONE NORTH LASALLE ST. MERCURIO are both at JAG HQ in Washington September to Mary Kay Duffy (SMC '66). Also SUITE 701 and that Jim was married to Nancy (?) on 10-14. mazTied last summer were JIM GLE.ASON and CHICAGO, ILL. 60602 We missed seeing him but his excuse will be Mary Petricca (SMC *66). Jim is working for accepted. Planning for the Third Annual Sem­ Champion Mills in Rochester, N.Y. MIKE You have all heard the old saying about things inar has begun and by next issue we ought to COYLE is in his fourth year at the College of commg in bunches. Well, your faithfol tcribe be able to give you the date. Physidans and Surgeons, Columbia U., NYC. believes it this tone around the typewriter ribbon. There is more news but I will hoard it for the FRITZ HOLZGREFE is gen. mgr. of the poultry First came a veritable avalanche of mail, then next column on the slim chance that my sources products div. of Ralston Purina Dc Venezuela. came news of many births and last came the '*sccne win dry up and everyone will have a severe Fritz married Jean Secnolf (Marymount Col. '64) on ten-fourteen.*' relapse of nonwritingitis. But it won't really in January and they are living in Maracay, Vene­ The avalanche began with a card from Mr. happen, will it classmates? How about a word zuela. Justice FINDLAY who reports that he is still or two from JIM CARROLL, MIKE MILLER PETE UTRENTA served three tours in Viet­ with the Dist. of Columbia Corp. Counsel's Office and JOE MYLOTTE? nam as a communications officer in the Navy. and presently engaged in the tax dept. He is Here's wishing each of you a Holy and Happy Recently he was transferred to the Navy public getting a wealth of exposure in everything from Christmas and a Bountiful New Year.

JAMES P. HARNISCH Apt. B in his third year at Ohio St. Med School and Sandy. Daughter Lisa was bom in April. Pat 863 E. GRANVILLE RD. in his spare time has served as a tennis pro and is working for the city of Euclid, Ohio while 1913 COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224 instructor for several country clubs. KEN GEOLY attending Western Reserve Law School. TOM was presented last July with a daughter Michael HOGAN and MIKE MURPHY are both serving Please note the above address change. The mail Ann by his wife Bemie. Ken b in his last year as prefects in the undergrad dorms during their and information arc pouring in at a steady rate— at Downstate Med School, N.Y. LEE MC­ final year at Georgetown Law School. Pi\T so much so that due to a word limitation rule CARTHY is also a proud father of a daughter MURPHY and Lynn arc living in Huntsville, not all the current news u^Il appear in this issue. Bridget Mary bom last April to his wife Bobbie Ala. where the Army is utiliring his metallurgy Interesting items are still needed, though, so keep (SMC '66). Since January Lee has been a staff talents. JOHN ZULBERTI received his MBA those yellow cards coming. reporter with WTOP radio and TV in Wash­ from Syracuse U. in marketing and is now with JIM GOETZ was married Nov. 25 to Kathleen ington, DC. DuPont in the Electro-Chem. Div. at Wilmington, M. Connors of Cleveland Heights, Ohio. Jim is More proud parents include PAT ROCGO and DeL JIM BROCKE has become an account exec.

50 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER in the Gary, Ind. office of Walston and Co., Inc., ington U. Med School in St. Louis. Jim has lawyer opened an evening practice in S. BoBda one of the nation's largest securities firms. Jim also found time to indulge in research wack in qilitting the nights." Mike is abo buying real is also treasurer ol the Crown Point Jaycees and renal physiology. GARY THEBAULT is serving estate for rental puipmei! Does he get the a member of the Stockbrokers Assoc, of Chicago. as sales mgr. for the Edward Hines Lumber Co. "tycaon.of-the-)car" award ior this year? Mite JIM TEDFORD u-as married to Claudia Louise in John Day, Ore. After receiving a master's in daims to have qioken with KAY LUM back ia Brake of Burbank, Calif., last June. Jim is in political sdence from U. of Catifonua, Bcfkelcy, September. Bay> >be proud father of a second his third year at UCLA Med School. MAT LARRY STEFANI yielded to the Army and is daughter, bom last July, has lost 5S lbs. Wookl COSGROVE has been appointed dir. of tech now serving as a lieutenant with a transportation we lecogniie him? LARRY SHINNICK, a new services for Datanamics Corp. of America and company in Qui Nohn, A^etnam. He was mairied gToom, now is living at 2530 "Q" St. N.W. No. ROBERT DilORIO was promoted to assoc engr. last April to Susan Posson of San Francisco. 25, Washington, DC. He married a beantifiil by IBM in Endicott, N.Y. Lt. JOHN BRADY TIM KRISTL was married to Carol Creamer SMC gal Carolyn Fleming '65. Mike daherty is flying for TAG at George AFB, Calif, and Lt. (SMC '66) and is in his last year at ND Law was best man. Larry, now starting his second JIM ZENZINGER is stationed at Sheppard AFB, School, tt. DICK DUFOUR is at Ft. CampbeU, year as an asst. US attorney, has received his Tex. while training as a transportation officer. Ky. with the 101st Airmobile Div. Lt. KENN master's in law. He was law tiak for Dist. Jodie NEIL KIcDONALD was graduated with honors ODMARK has returned from a tour of duty in Joseph C McCimghy in '85-'86. from OCS at Fort Benning where he was com­ Korea. PHIL BALDWIN is working as a research Capt. ROBERT P. KENNEDY just recentir missioned second lieutenant in the Army Adju­ staff chemist with Goodyear Tire and Rubber sailed on the USS to Emtipe on tant Gen. Corps. He is now stationed at Keesler Co.'s research div. in Akron, Ohio. BILL METZ his way to became liaison between the town and AFB, BUoxi, Afiss. studying communications elec­ was married to Anne Flannigan (SMC '65) in camp for a three-year tenure. How about send­ tronics. Alike was married to Jean VoUwciIcr on the chapel at Yale U. where Bill is working to­ ing them a card this Christmas telling them all the day he u'as commissioned in June at the Air ward his PhD in nuclear physics. about life in the States: address OF lOSSOB, 3id Base Chapel, Lackland AFB, San Antonio, Tex. Lt. (jg) EVALYN AflLLOTF is one of the Admin. Co., 3td Inf. Div., AFO N.Y. 09036. JOHN RIFFLE is back in Redwood City, Calif, few girl graduates from ND*s grad school who Ever wonder what became of FRANK WALZ? after being released from the Army. He spent a is not a nun. Since her giaduatioa under the He and wife Coolde took a 5,000.inile, five weeks year cra^vHng around the Vietnam jungle where AIAT program she has been serving as an air motor trip to show off daughter Kathy bom he earned a silver star for gallantry in action. Lt. intelligence officer with the US I^cific Fleet. Lt. May 22 seeing as many relatives as humaidy pos­ KEVIN REGAN received the Bronze Star in BILL SIDDENS received his MS in aerospace sible. Frank is workii^ for the firm of O'Coa- Vietnam. JERRY PREMO was married to engr. at ND in August and worked for Pratt and nor. Green, Thomas, Waters & Kelly in down­ Martha Johanck in Rochester, N.Y. in October. Whitney ^rcraft before the Army decided it was town Minneapolis: Apt. 302, 953 40th Ave. NJi, Jerry is working for HEW in Washington, DC. time for a visit to Ft. Knox. Also with Rratt Columbia Hts., Minn. JOHN and BILL McDONALD are both in their and Whitney and having received the same MS That gay blade, MIKE BISHKO recently joined last year at Columbia Law School. Bill plans to at ND is JACK BOWDEN. Jack, wfe Judy the married roster. Jan and I attended the huge enter Na\-y OCS after graduation. JOHN and daughter Katherine are living in £. Hart­ wedifins held in Qu-town in late summer. Miks HUARTE is the father of a son John Matthew ford, Conn. Another ND master's degree winner has inherited sisters-ift-law by the half dosea as of last June and BILL FERRENCE was pre­ is DICK BELL who is working for McDonnell and all Italian beauties. Mike and Carol axe sented with a son William G. lU last December in St. Louis and sharing an apartment there with living in N.Y. where Mike works for Aitbar by his wife Cheryl Lynn. Bill works in revenue MIKE HEINZ. RAY BLAKE was married in Young & Co. and is attending NYU. DENNIS accounting for United Airlines ia the Chicago June to Lynette Sorow of Chicago. Ray has been STEROSKY and Doris are proud parents once exec, offices. employed by Commonwealth Edison Co. in the again! Greg Martin was bom Ang. 14. Otar Some of the graduate degrees earned include: engr. dept. since graduation. RANDY BROWN address for Denny is 33555 Crestbell Dr., Wanen, FRED ALTHEN, MBA, Rutgers; JOHN BEL- has completed his tour with the Navy and is now Mich. 48092. LANY, MFA in sculpture, Carnegie Institute of at the U. of Minnesota Law SchooL Due to the Christmas season approadung I su Technology; JAMES EIFERT. MS, Ohio St. U.; adding some recent address changes herrin: JOHN PAUL MONTUORI, MS in mcch. engr., Rens­ H. MARTIN, 52 Linden Dr., Santa Clara, CaSf., selaer Polytechnic Institute; PETER EDMUND 1965 LAW 95050; HENRY BOITEL, 7501 Ridge Bhrd., DeBRUIN, MSCE, Polytechnic Institute of JOHN A. HAUTER Brooklyo. N.Y.; JON KRUPNICK, 130 N.E. Brooklyn; JIM FLINT, CHARLES TERRENCE 1050 INDIANA AVE. 57th St., Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 33308. I canoot SMITH, JI.\I MIRRO, MICHAEL D. MURPHY, GLENWOOD, ILL. 60^5 urge strongly enough for you to send some newi BOB KURAS, DICK BERRY and IGNACIO A wonderfully ncu-s-filled letter from the fhhtxtf% of yourself and family — even if only a sentence D. FLORES, MBA degrees at Harvard. brinss us up to date on their happenings. As or two within your Christmas card. Bear in mind RAY McLAiN and wUc Suzie are the proud some of you may know MIKE FLAHERTY went that this column is only as good as yoa make st! parents of a daughter Meeghan Anne as of last into practice with bis brother Tom following Enough philosophy for today—a last hope that yoa July. JIM EPSTEIN is in his third year at Wash­ graduation. *'Last February Mike and atlother have a happy and hotf holiday season.

RICHARD ANGELOTTI BOB RIVIELLO is currently stationed with service as a research and s^ems analyst 1 8640 SOUTH 86TH AVE., APT. 203 the 101st Airborne Div. in Vietnam. He uras puter progranuning. GARRETT ISACCO who 196S JUSTICE. ILL. 60458 recently promoted to first lieutenant and has is stationed at Eufanla Air Force Station in been awarded the Infantryman's Combat MedaL After receiving information cards for the past Alabama is enjoying the txt that Notre Dame He will return to the states in March '68. Lt- couple months it seems to me that this country is playing ball games tlown South. MIKE BERNATH who is a maintenance ofBcer would have no defense if it were not for the JIM KEARNS is romhining school and the with a transportation company in Mannheim, members of our Class. The clear majority of service. He went to U. of Illinois Graduate Germany is the proud father of a new son. Lt. the cards I received — and **thank you" there School and vras commisaoned a second lien* and Mrs. JpHN HANNIGAN JR had a popu­ was a ton of them — were from '66-ers presently tenant in the Army on Ang. II. He reports for lation explosion on July 4, a son John IH. Lt. in the employ of the government. This conse­ duty on Dec. 1 at Ft. BeWmr, Va. TOH BER­ JOHN BLUM became a father on Aug. 16. He quently will be my "Uncle Sam" article. GEN is currently at Sheppard AFB in Texat. is presently stationed at Ft. McArthur, Calif. Lt. BOB CAVANAUGH recently graduated JACK HANNIGAN and BILL ST. PAUL fin­ from the officer orientation course at Ft. Sam ished pilot school in August. Bill will be flying Houston. He is now asst. adjutant of the US in Vietnam and Jack will be flying a B-52 out of Army dispensary at the Pentagon. Lt. HANK Griffias AFB, N.Y. JOHN PAVLIC is the SCHLAGHTER is a food man also serving as battalion adjutant for the 15th Ordnance Bn. in a food administration officer at Ft. Lee. JOHN Frankfurt. CAVAN who recently became a senior officer in Lt. WILEY J. PICKETT JR. was commisnoncd OTS was married in Short Hills, N.J. to the recently from transportation OCS where he was lovely Miss Joanne Winn on Oct. 7. The newly- also a distinguished military graduate. He is weds honeymooned in F^get, Bermuda. It was presently stationed at Alexandria, Va. where he a terrible disappointment for me to have to miss is in HQ military traffic management and terminal the wedding of my ex-roommate and one of my dearest friends but circumstances prevented my being there. ^fa^riagcs are in the news for many of our SOCIETY EDITORS are finally getting Class' soldiers. ANDY McCULLIN is a lieu­ used to writing "both the bride and tenant in Thailand now where he is serving as a construction platoon leader. He was recently groom" are graduates of the Univer- engaged to SMCer Ellen Simonini. CHRIS­ sity of Notre Dame. An event that TOPHER AfEAD is stationed %vith Marine air once was unheard of has become a control squadron 7 at Camp Pendleton, Calif, and is e>cbaUing a January Wedding date. frequent occurrence on Campus — at GEORGE ADAMS is in Saigon and was recently least during the summer marryin' promoted to first lieutenant. He is planning a June wedding. Ens. GARY HEDIGER was mar­ months. One of these happy oll-in- ried April 15 at ND and is now stationed aboard the-family happenings was Aug. 16 the USS Washburn home-based at San Diego. CH.\RLES PEARL JR who was married last when Miss Patricia Anne McGuire AAA October U'as recently commissioned an ensign and '67 (the daughter of Dr. and AArs. is now stationed at Long Beach, Calif. Lt. Francis T. McGuire '35) became the PHILIP WrrHUM W3S married on Aug. 5 three days after his graduation from transporta­ bride of Robert Eugene Kasten '65. tion OCS at Ft. Eustis, Va. He ivas stationed University President Rev. Theodore IA. at Ft. Bclvoir, Va. until November and then left for a two-year &tay in Alaska, Hesburgh CSC presided.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER NELSON reported seong Jim and Steve SealL JOHN J. HUGHES Tcnn was past Grand Knight of Notre Dame 99 W. 37th ST. K of C. GEORGE PALMER was recently as- Maury vinted Washington with his funily dtnins BAYDNNE, NJ. 070QZ ttgned to a basic training brigade at Ft. Dix, N.J. the summer. Windy McKENNA, aaother of asy 1987 and then to on-the-job training at Ft. Campbell, female reporters, notes that she and AL are With the ritnation dicing the college graduate Ky. He expects to return home to Jacksonville residing at 1699 B Bumstock, Colmnbiis, Ohio bdng what it is today we find that most of our where he will be worlung for Thomson and Mc- 43206. Al passed the NY Bar and finished fourth classmates either took advantage of their defer­ Kinnoa as a stockbroker. lA. JOHN RUM- in Oluo. He likes doUng for Judge Kinneaiy ments to attend grad schotJ or have gone directiy INECZ was au'arded the Army-Navy and Air and also likes Columbus. They will be Mtajag into the service, with quite a number of them Force gold watch for graduating nimiber one in for some time and would like to see and hear getting married since graduation in June. an infcvmation officer class at Ft. Benjamin from classmates. FRANK REISER's new addres On June 10 MIKE STOKES and Frances Sulli­ Harrison. This was a 1000-hour course conducted is Apt. 10. 3816 P^, Kansas City. Mo. 64111. van were married in St. Louis where they arc now imder the auspices of the defense information BOB MiniFHY %ras in Detnrit in connection living. ACke will be studying law at St. Louis U. sdiool. [Captain Pickett Lumpkin of the Office with his Justice Dept. u-ork. He ^lent an eve­ There was a flock of Alumni at the wedding in- of Defense Information made the award.] ning with Terri and BOB KRAUSE and Bfaiy chiding BILL HANIGAN. JOHN COYLE, BILL TIM STREB one of our lengthiest correspon­ and TOM READY. Tom bought a home in RAGEN, and BILL McNULTY. Hanigan and dents completed OCS at Ft. Eustis, Va. with a Monroe. Mich. Bob was at the Cafifonua game Coyle are attending Stritch Med School while commission in the transportation corps. While and talked with RON VETTEL. They were Ragen and McNulty will both be studying law at Ft. Eustis he ran into BILL SELLERBERG, miable to locate anyone else. PAUL POLKING in Chicago. JOE OLSON nras also married on BILL WENTWORTH, JOHN FLATLEY, PAT will be carier to locate after next June. He has June 10 in St. Louis. He and his mfe the former RYAN. BOB HARRIGAN and WILEY PICKETT. announced his engagement to Mix Joan Ycager Mary Louise Landwehr will be Uving temporarily Bill Wentworth who is sporting a '67 Corvette a registered nurse. They Kvill marry in Carlisle near the campus of Duke U. where Joe vnll be is going to harbor craft and deck operations Fa. Ob, the thousands of weeping maidens! Mtudyiag law. school. John is an instructor at Eustis in the Cookie and I visited Etta and SCOTTY MAX­ There were also a number of marriages in South motor transport branch. Fat is currently at Ft. WELL at Quantico just before they headed for Bend during the summer. JIM QUENAN and Bragg. N.C. Newport and Navy JAG. They and tilie two Joan Marie Nagy were married there on Aug. 26. Ens. PAUL FIEBERG shipped out of San boys are fine. I received a letter irom JIM Jim is studjnng medicine at Ikfarquette while Joan, Francisco in August bound for his second tour ANTHONY postmarked An Khe, South Vietnam. having completed her graduate wtirk, will be of Japan, Hong Kong and then off for the coast Jim is mth the first Air Cav. Div. and is han­ teaching math there. On the same day LESLIE of Vietnam. Paul is currently aboard the USS dling various criminal and civil matters. Addrcsi: STEHMER vras married in Our Lady Chapel on Coral Sea and is due back in the states in Cpt. J. R. Anthony, JAGG. 05331105, 15th Admin. Campus. He and his wife the former Gayla Marie Fthruaxy. After all the above information. Tim Co. (SJA). 1st Cav. {Air), APO San Francisco, "Maxxotto will be living in Miami where he mil be finally told me a little about himself. He is CaUf. 96490. studying business. TO&f RIECK and Penelope presently a training officer in California where Scotty Maxwell has been writing to FETE Anne Doherty were married on June 10 in Chi­ he has purchased a new Corvette. He states the IPFOLrrrO. Pete has extended tus time in cago. VERN RODEN, DICK LUDWIG, and car has made the service a little more bearable Vietnam (his VMI education is coming to the BOB BROWNE attended the wedding. Tom was but he's still anxious to retiun to civilian life. fore) and is now with the 1st Inf. Div. up north. working for Ernst & Ernst during the summer The hardest, and most difficult task of this job Address: 1st Admin. Co. (SJA) 1st Inf. Div., as an "in-charge" accountant. As of September is to tell you of the death of one of our class­ APO San Francisco. Calif. 96345. I reported re> he began attesting Loyola's business program full mates and it is with great regret that I must cently that TOM HARVEY had converted his time and they are planning to remain in Evanston. do such in this article. Kfarine Lt. WILLIAM Army time into a nice legal job with NASA- JIM McINERNEY and Monica Deubel were mai^ A. WILK was killed in action July 29 near Quang Well, Tom got bored with the good life. He ricd on Aug. 19 in South Orange. N.J. They are Nam, Vietnam while on a patrol mission. He has undergone ranger and airborne trumng and reading here while Jim is studying law at Fordham. had been sent to Vietnam in May after recci«ng has volunteered for combat duty in Vietnam- There does seem to be a large number of us at top honors in training at Ft. Sill. Okla. He is JOE DELLA MARIA wiU be ass^ed to DC law school. MIKE O'CONNELL is at the U. of survived by his wife of 14 months Elaine and after completing Navy JAG. RAY STARMANN, Connecticut; TERRY MAHONEY is at Illinois; an infant son William A. Jr. To them I express formeriy of Army intelligence command in Bald- JOE McCOY and JOHN LIUM are over at St. our Class' sincere condolences. Our memories of more, is on his way to Vietnam. John's, while RICK TROY is with me at Seton Bill vnH always be most pleasant and I hope that It seems lUce half the Class is on the way to HaD. RICH DINALLO, PAUL KELLY, MIKE BUI Jr. with grow up to be the same kind of war. I had a letter from DENNY "COOL" DEE CONVOY are at Geoigetou-n. wonderful man his father w-as. complaining about the lack of equal time for the There are of course many who are completing There are many others from whom I have girls who want news of Um. He reports that dieir requirements in the service. ANDY REAR- received cards but about Avhom space does not allow "coolness pervaded his every act" as he smoothly DON is down at Pensacola with AL KRAMER me to write this month. Thanks for your great travelled &om Fort Knox to Fort Gordon, Ga« and GEORGE FRAWLEY. They are all in response. Please keep it coming and look for where he underwent training as a tsvH affairs flight school and doing quite well. Andy is en­ your names in the Jan.-Feb. issue. officer. His group is going to Vietnam where be gaged to Kfichele Berard and they are planning • I hope you all have a wonderful holiday season. will be assigned to some remote ^^llage to cement to be married on Dec 27 in Washington, Mo. I also hope 1967 was a year that held great things democratic institutions. Denny notes that the price CHARLES REICHT is now a second lieutenant for eadi of you and a year that vnH always bring on his head will be high. At Fort Gordon he got attached to Barksdale AFB, La. Cbariie was mar­ %vonderful memories to your minds. I also hope a lot of experience in court-martials. Give Denny ried on June 10 to Rosalind Ann Homing and that 1968 will be a most enjo>-abIe year for you the cool word by writing to him c/o U.S.M.A.CV0 thcmgh he attended supi^y school during October all and that it will see the fulfillment of all your APO San Frandsco, Calif. 96222. in Denver, they seem intent on making their resi­ hopes and dreams. Denny ran into TOM PETERSON who en­ dence in Louinana for the present. Lt. TOM tered on active duty with the military police at CX)USINO is now stationed in California at 1966 LAW Fort Gordon. Tom is one of the ludy ones who Mather AFB and is working with the 320th Bomb is going overseas, but not to Ana. Hell be sta­ Wing of SAC as administrative officer. He men­ FRANK GREGORY tioned in Germany. Denny also saw a |Hctnre tioned that he ran into DON CO.AKLEY at 7403 KEYSTONE LANE of "SMILING ED" KOHLBRENNER and.his FORESTVILLE, MD. 20028 &&thcr; he is attending their undergraduate nan- bride. MAURICE O'BRIEN was snatched from gator training prog, and is attached to 3535th I am always happy to begin by noting the new the office of the Attorney General of Iowa by his Navigator Training Wing. arrivals. Cookie was eaiiy for the second time draft board. In lightning speed he adva^iced There, of course, have been many graduate and Lauren Sue was bom on Sept, 21. We now from private to captain and was diqatched to honors received by the members of the Class. have a boy and a giri. She ^veighed 6 lbs. 8 oz. JAG school at the U. of Va. He'U probably be BARRY KEATING received an NSF grant and mother and baby are doing fine. We intro­ joining the other Irish at Fort Bliss, Tex. in the amounting to 96,000. He is now studpng at duced her to the sodal life of the laW graduate near future. Lehigh U. and expects to get his MA ntxx Sep­ at a Christening party on Oct. 8. All the local PioL JACK "CHIEF" BRODERICK sends his tember. JOSEPH PAUL ANDERSON has been ND lawyers were present. John Paul was bom best to the Class and reports the wonderful news awarded the 1967 Ernst & Ernst Fellowship to June 24 to Bonnie and STEVE SEALL. Their that there will be six home games in 'GS. JAY Harvard's Graduate School of Buaness and is en­ new address is 2020 Dorwood Dr.. South Bend. DOUGHERTY'S firm in Miami is Dixon, De- rolled in the two-year program leading to an TOM McNALLY phoned in the nudst of a qmck Jamette, Bradford, Williams. &&£ay ft KmbrtU. MBA degree. BILL DONOHUE has been awarded trip to DC to tell us that he had completed his and he looks forward to hosting anyone at the a fellowship for graduate study in urban plan­ ax months* reserve obligation and is practicing in game Thank^ving weekend. NORM MANDEL ning at the U. of Illinois. PETER TIERNEY and Cincinnati. He and Joan expect their first duld spent some time at the Army intelligence center DAN DONOVEN have been accepted as Peace soon. Thar address is 2477 Westwood N. Blvd., in Baltimore and then headed bac^ for Texas. Corps Volunteers. Peter wiU be in St. Luda, CindnnatL Tom also reported that SAM BER- Summer is just about over at this writing and ao woiking on upgrading teaching methods and cur^ NARDI and Barb were "crowing*' over the birth are vacations. BOB MURPHY spent the summer ricula, while Dan mil be teaching in grammar of Sam HI. who also' weighed in at the very in Misasnppi and Maureen spent it on Cape Cod. school in the Philippines. popular 6 Dn., 8 oz. According to Sam the baby Next year they are determined to avoid another Although I had received very little correspond­ "is a real cool character." impasse and sdect a neutral spot. PAUL POLK­ ence during the summer it picked up quite a bit Barb BERNARDI has. I hope, started a trend ING went home and stopped at ND. He avoided vnth the beginning of the football season and I by sending along infoimaUon. If you husbands the robbery at Cliff's Tavern but noted that, hope that it will continue. If you get the oppor­ are too busy to write, put your wife to work. during school, the gunmen could have found him tunity i\'rite a note or perhaps a Christmas card The traditional Christmas card is a fertile source in attendance any Saturday night at 10 pjn. and let me know of any new developments. And of news. Barb wrote that she and SAM have The PAUL NIEMEYERS vinted school iriiile have a good holiday season. moved bom. I^mmond and are living at 1211 seeing Paul's folks. They also q>cnt tome time E. Chicago, Valparaiso, Ind. 46383. Sam is with Susan's parents in Cory, EL. Terri and 1967 lAW enjoying practice at Jennings. Spangler, Jennings BOB KRAUSE went to the land of the Sky Bloe MICHAEL SMITH and ALFONSO MA- & Dougherty in Gary. She also says that their Waters while Cookie and I took a fittle time to GNOTTA are both involved in training for foreign feelings were "hurt" when the Army turned Sam tour Washington and the surrounding area. We u&gnmcnts in the Peace Corps. Mike recently down because of high-blood pressure. weren't exotic but we were rested. comidetcd the Peace Corps course in San Fran­ Sue and JIM VIRGIL have a son named Eric. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to cisco and expects to be assigned to Momnvia, Jim is working in Elkhart with his dad. MAURY everyone from the four Gregorys. LUieria.

52 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19<7 DECEMBER '^I'tmamr'sJ^m LAW SCHOOL at Bddtdh^j'Iie 1^ ^1 hirtary (leputraB^

idutia;d)m-'m>IJBOBail)CT

copirK:;in;Pueito^ltioai;^:^ the -> summer..: m.^aii't l^alpragram erj'in:CalifoniML»-=X7~>?v>SI^ .' FOOT manbea €i ibeSaa!30^ Bar are fiUiE^ Fao^ty guni^-^Tiinri Jcdin A; Bucdmnldi^lM^iw teacbes torts^ smd JadoMS I^'l^n^ buig,. John^L.':. Carey :inii:;EawJwi|J^ PROF. ED MURPHY, MRS. OLIVAREZ and JUDGE NAGAYAMA Gray:'52 .'58L;who-wn:"t«acK;;a:!fl^^^i||| Frosh profile bespeaks the unusuaL year tax-dannmg couise in tbie seoBiiitf^^l semester. Mr. Tharnbuig tangJK^atiSfi^a^ the Law School m;tl«494(]^:^^p^ ProfesstMr. Kelleri>eigili«d»1iB^^ All About the Here and Now ordinated'' the -Law' SdaiooPi'iiamn^^^^^^ THE LAW SCHOOL enrolled 120 first- Mrs. O'Meara) spent October in ment-in -the;Sc«th;BendirL(^|iiila^^;i^ ' year students in August; total en­ Lima, Peru, on a consultation missicm oSBces- the past two yesus; md^/pK^i^:^^^ rollment for the year stood at 258. to the law school at the Catholic Uni­ seminais-in law-^md poyerty;,''has^t^«i^y^ Fifty-nine law students are Notre versity there. additional duties;- he.:will :tia^lM^ieMMi^ courses. in: profe^k»ai;:resi»iisadi^i^ Dame men; the other 199 represent Professor Conrad Kellenberg was administrative law aiid; feimSy. 3]kiws^^S%%^^^ 86 other colleges and universities. The honored by a resolution in September student body comes from 36 states, will supovise-the'Law Schoar^:ii^n^:^^l of the directors of the Legal Aid ment'program;'he-is: aIso:c64draiar-SS^I Canada and Japan. Their ages range Society of St. Joseph County. TTie to the L^al Aid and Defender Asio> ~ , i- from 20 to 44; 75 of them are mar­ society expressed its "deep and sincere dation. ried, and 16 are veterans. Towering appreciation" for his services as a athletes in die first-year class—^some director of the society and for his Professor Noonan spent die summer of them former collegiate stars and "competent attention to the affairs of researching in Rcxne on his study of some from professional clubs — the society" and his "dedicated leader­ the procedure used in matrimonial threaten revolution in the Law ship." Professor Kellenberg has been cases in the Church courts. He ^poke School's intramural touch football project director of the Office of on; the subject of caitracq>tioa in competition. Economic Opportunity (O.E.O.) — the history df Catholic moral theology in four states, Canada and Puerto Backgrounds in the new class range funded l^al services program in Rico last ^rir^, to groups pdicy and oAcr will be devoted to "Improving the aspects of law-school administratiaii. Administration of Criminal Law." A special committee committed at this writing include lay prdinunary jdans for Ac toHr^ Professor Henry S. Ruth, Jr., of the Schod's centenoiai cddhntioii in die University of Pennsylvania; Eliot H. firing

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER \9S7 DECEMBER This year's Law Association oflBcers Second-place honors went to Rich­ and directors are: ard L. Manning, Niles, Mich., a 1963 Immediate Past President: Mr. Philip J. graduate of Notre Dame. Two other Faccenda, Notre Dame finalists were John F. Pusey, Bellefon- President: Mr. Joseph A. Tracy, New York taine, Ohio, also a '65 ND grad, and City Andrew F. Tranovich, Reading, Pa., President-elect: Mr. George B. Morris, Jr., from LaSalle College. Detroit Three federal judges were on hand Vice President: Mr. Martin P. Torborg, to hear arguments in the finak of the Fort Wayne 18th annual competition: John W. Executive Secretary: Mrs. Jan AIlsop, Peck, US Court of Appeals for the Notre Dame Sixth Circuit; Frederick J. R. Heebe, Region I: Hugh F. Fitzgerald, New York US District Court for the Eastern City; Hon. J. Gilbert Prendergast, Balti­ District of Louisiana; and James A. more; John M. Crimmins, Pittsburgh; E. Walsh, US District Court for the Dis­ Milton Farley III, Richmond; Dana C. JOHN SANDNER Devoe, Bangor; Ronald P. Mealey, Wayne, trict of Arizona. Winner in Court Hnals. N.J.; James C. Higgins, Beckley, W. Va.; Right from tiie Experts Graham W. McGowan, Washington, DC; must play "in seeking new approaches William A. Whiteside Jr., Philadelphia; Two nationally prominent lawyers, and in devising new solutions for im­ George F. Meister, Miami; F. James Kane the police ctHnmission- Jr., Buffalo proved law enforcement appropriate er and a former GOP vice-presiden­ to the times." Leary made specific Region II: Alphonse A. Sommer, Cleve­ tial candidate are among this year's reference to the utilization which his land; Hugh J. McGuire, Detroit; Louis guests to appear before Gray's Inn, own department has made of the Hollenback III, Louisville; Edward J. file Notre Dame Law School's speak­ Gray, South Bend; Lawrence A. Kane Jr., Vera Institute of Justice in its efforts ers' forum and discussion club. to meet the needs of today's society. Cinciimati; William H. Schroder, Atlanta; In September New York attorney John I. Bradshaw Jr., Indianapolis The final speaker of the fall semes­ Roy M. Cohn, who first gained fame ter was Louis Nizer, eminent trial Region III: George W. Vander Vennet, at the age of 25 for his role in the Davenport; James W. Wrape, Memphis; lawyer and author, who discussed successful prosecution of the Rosen­ "The Art of die Jury Trial." Before a William E. Brown, Milwaukee; William berg espionage case, recounted the B. Dreux, New Orleans; James L. Ferstel, third capacity crowd of Gray's Inn Chicago; Paul J. Meyer, Springfield; various events and crises which have members and guests, Nizer noted that Joseph P. Summers, St Paul; Norris highlighted his turbulent carreer. the "most important single quality for Bishton, Chicago Dwelling particularly on his service as a successful trial lawyer is thorough chief counsel during 1953-54 for the Region IV: Hon. Victor H. Fall, Helena; preparation, hard work and industry." Senate Investigating Committee chair- William P. Mahoney, Phoenix; David M. The second semester's program will maned by the late Senator Joseph R. Thornton, Tulsa; Joseph C. Spalding, include appearances by Charles Evers McCarthy, Cohn defended die record Denver; Frank M. Manzo, Santa Ana; of the Mississippi NAACP and Hon­ of McCarthy and his committee and Gerald J. McGinley, Ogallala, Neb.; Hon. orable William E. Miller, the 1964 John F. Kilkenny, Portland; George E. maintained that the McCarthy in­ Republican nominee for vice-presi­ Fletcher, Houston; Richard P. Byrne, Los vestigations were of great benefit to dent. —Peter King Angeles; Lawrence Weigand, Wichita; the country. Daniel J. Sullivan, St. Louis. Turning to the topic of today's law students, Cohn lamented the fact that In the October Issue Decision in IMoot Court so few young lawyers display imagina­ "Katz vs. United States," a case tion or initiative and he maintained NOTRE DAME LAWYER concerning the use of electronic that top-grade trial lawyers are a van­ Robert G. Nottnan, "A Decen­ eavesdropping to obtain evidence in ishing breed. nial Study of the Uninsured a gambling prosecution, provided the In October Howard R. Leary, Motorist Endorsement." framework for this year's Moot Court {lolice commissioner of New York won by John F. Sandner from Chi­ City, spoke to members of Gray's Inn George J. Alexander and cago, a graduate of Southern Illinois. about the greater role which fiolice Thomas S. Szasz, "Mental Illness as an Excuse for Civil Wrongs." Student notes on mental and dental X-rays, out-of-state pub­ lishers under long-arm statutes and the finality of civil judgments, with respect to judicial self-correction under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Student-written case comments on removability to federal courts in contract actions, judicial deter­ minations of voluntariness of con­ fessions, withdrawable savings ac­ counts under the Securities Ex­ change Act and choice-of-law ques­ tions in federal tax lien actions. LEARY, NIZER and COHN Book review (Leach, Property Cast for Gray's Inn lecture series. Law IndictedJ.

54 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER Up Scholarship Aid all kinds for the current academic year law schdaiships) increased to 251 stand at 135, in a student body <^ last year, bam 220 in 1965-fi6 and Two hundred fifty thousand dollars 258. is the current year's goal for the Notre 183 in 1964-65. Dame Law Scholarship fund. The Funds for all scholarships are raised new goal is more than double the and spent on a year-to-year basis. Ciish CIIIK Mlp amount raised for law scholarships They are solicited mainly throu^ Judge John R. CcHyn '51 '53L, a last year. the efforts of the Law School's own member

Miss April Louise Manford and EDWIN U. Ifr. and Mn. PATRICK F. limPHKEE VZ. ENGAGEMENTS NEFF JR. '64, Brooklyn Heights, NY. Sept. 16. a dangfater, TiBmy Anae, Aug. 23. liriss ^Iai7 Kathlccs Ryan and GORDON J. Miss Kathleen M. Connon and JIM GOETZ Mr. and Ibi. THOMAS E. DALUM '63, a DiRENZO 'SS. '65, Clc%'eland Heights, Nov. 25. danghter. Amy Marie, Oct. 2S. Mihmikce, Wo. Miss Barbara Jean K!ce and LAWRENCE F. Miss PATRICIA ANNE McGlHRE '67 and Mr. and Mcs. JOHN DABROWSKI 'O. a BIEBUYCK '58. ROBERT EUGENE KASTEN '65, Notre Dame, daughter, Deborah Lynn, May 11. Miss Judith Lynne Arcli and LAWRENCE Aug. 19. Mr. and Mis. DONALD N. dLLESPIE '63. KENDALL COX '62. Miss MARY CLARE ALBY '67 and ROBERT a son, Donald Joseph, Ang. I6._ Miss Patricia Ann Rcilz and STAN FECORA THOMAS MARKEL '65, South Bend, Aug. 5. Mr. and Mis. KEVIN O'NEILL '63, a soi^ '62. Miss Christine Ann Baldwin and ROBERT Kevin ^^irhafl^ June 10. Miss Carole Barsltis SMC 'M and FREDERIC EUGENE McDONOUGH 31IA'65, Notre Dame, Mr. and Mis. ROBERT A. DRAJEM '6^ a son, W. WEBER '62. Aug. 19. Mark Robert, March 17. Miss Jacquclyn Ann Holcwinslu and RONALD Miss Mary Louise Hellmuth and THOMAS P. Mr. and Mis. BERNARD KATZ '6^ a aon, MICHAEL BUDZINSKI '63. LOFTIS '66, Springfield, Ohio, Aug. 19. Allan Seth, Dec '66. Miss Carrol Young and CONRAD &IASLOW- Miss Sheila Clare Brennan and WILLIAM Mr. and Mis. ROBERT E. MIER JR. '64. a SKI '63. HENRY McGANN '66, Notre Dame, July 15. son, Biian Matthew, Sept. 16. Miss April Lomsc Manford and EDWIN NEFF Miss Judith Anne Robakowsk! and FREDERICK Mr. and Mis. MICHAEL RYAN '64, a da<^ JR. '64. RUSSELL NELSON '66, South Bend, July 22. ter, Maiy Janet, August. - Miss Doralil Saucr and ANTHONY J. PUG- Kliss Dcbra Dec Andrews and DENNIS KEITH Mr. and Mis. JOSEPH SANDZA '64, a dai^ LIESE '65. HUBBARD '67, South Bend, Sept. 2. ter, Diane Louise, Aug. 27. Miss Patricia Marie O'Donnell and J. RAY­ Miss Sluron Louise Montgomery and DAVlU Mr. and Mis. MICHAEL STCPANEK "U. a MOND FLYNN '66. ALLEN HUZAREWICZ '67, Notre Dame, son, Patrick Michad, March 30. Miss Mary C. Jamieson and LAWRENCE ED­ Aug. 12. Mr. and Mis. RICHARD T. STKITTEK tt. a . WARD HOUDEK '66. Aliss ELIZABETH ANN JARVIS '67 and daughter, Katherine Rose, Sept. 3, 1966. Miss Mai^aret Ann Knapp and JAMES EARL Thomas Wayne Renaldi, Elkhart, Aug. 19. Mr. and Mis. MICHAEL SULLIVAN '6«. a CASE '67. Miss Chcrilynn Joyce Blank and GARY PETER daughter, Maura Kathleen, August. ' Miss Anne £. Gillls and RICHARD £. Mc- KUCKEL '67, Niles, Mich., Sept. 2. Bir. and Mis. GERALD VAIRO '64, a «a. CLOSKEY '67. Miss Carol Sue Botvser and Lt. DONALD A. Stephen Dominic, September. LIEPOLD '67, South Bend, June 24. Mr. and Mis. RICHARD ARRINGION '63, a Miss Carol Snadecki and ROBERT AMBROSE- daughter, Courtney, July. MARRIAGES MCDONNELL JR. '67, south Bend, Aug. 12. Mr. and Mis. BILL FERRENCE '63, a sia, Mrs. Edward L. Rigley and BERNARD J. Kliss Tamara Ann Howard and STEPHEN J. William G. HI, December. VOLL '17, Notre Dame, Aug. 19. McNALLY '67, Cascade, loiva, Sept. 2. Mr. and Mis. KEN GEOLY '65. a dai^ter. Miss Josephine Leonard and LEO DANIEL Miss Karen Anne Remmo and LLOYD MAUR­ l£chad Ann, July. KELLEY '21, Syracuse, N.Y., July 27. ICE PERNELA '67, South Bend, Sept. 16. Mr. and Mis. JOHN BUARTE '65, a ion, Miss Gail Halpin and JEROME R. PRASSAS Miss CHARLOTTE HELEN TIRMAN '67 and John Matthew. June. •55, Madrid, Spain, Aug. 14. Philip Arthur Roper, South Bend, July 29. Mr. and Mn. LEE McCARTBY '65, a dan^tcr. Miss Mary Van Etton and JOHN WEITHERS Bridget Maiy, ApriL '55, Chicago, Sept. 18. Mr. and Mis. RAY McLAIN '65, a ^nghter, Miss Elva Dughi and JAMES L. BYRNE '57, BIRTHS Meeghan Anne, July. San Francisco, May 27, Mr. and Mis. JOHN A. SCOTT '38, a son, Mr. and Mis. PAT ROCCO '65, a duster, Miss Mary Kathcrine Gray and THOMAS JO- John A. Jr., July 20. Lisa, April. SEPH KANE '57, Springfield, Dl., Sept. 16. Mr. and Mrs. LEE MARA '49, twin daughters, Mr. and Mn. FRANK GREGORY '66, a dan^ Miss Mary Louise Endres and THOMAS C. Kathleen and CoUcen, Feb. 15. ter, Lauren Sue, Sept. 21. McMURTRY '57, Lancaster, Calif., Sept. 16. Mr. and Mis. GENE SCHAFFER '49, a daugh­ Mr. and Mis. STEmEN SEALL '66, a too, . Miss Barbara Frances Chrapck and THOMAS ter, Mary Kathleen, Sept. 14, Stamford, Conn. John Paul, Jcae 24. FRANCIS BURZYNSKI '58, South Bend. Aug. 12. Air. and Mrs. ED HUDAK '50, a son, Kevin, Mis Sandra Ann Andreas and WILLIAM GER­ June 13. ARD McMURTRIE '60, Washington, D.C., Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM SEIDLER '52, a ADOPTIONS July 8. daughter, Jennifer Jane, Aug. 24. lb. and itta. DEAN F. DAVIS '36, a aeo. Miss Patricia Ann Reie and STANLEY £. Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT J. DEBREY '5S, a son. Douglas Dean, November. PECORA JR. '61, South Bend, Nov. 11. Marc Micliael, August 20. Miss Marie Mclinda Rose and BERNARD CON­ Mr. and Mrs. JEROME SWEENEY '56, a son, NORS O'NEILL JR. '61, Charlotte, N.C., Francis Gray, Oct. 7, Salem, Mass. SYMPATHY Aug. 12. Mr. and Mrs. DENNIS F. TROESTER '57, a LOUIS KEIFEK '16 on the death of is wil^ Miss Jacqueline Ann Holewinski and RONALD daughter, Maureen, Oct. 27, South Bend, bd. Sept. 27. MICHAEL BUDZINSKI '63, South Bend, Mr. and Mrs. JAMES WALSH '57, a daughter, J. RALPH CORYN '22 on the deadi of In Nov. 11. Susannc, June 20. son, JOHN JR. '51. Oct. 5. Miss Linda Suzanne Smith and PAUL MI­ Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS MIRANDA '59, a DANIEL F. CASHOti '30 on tke deadb of Ui CHAEL LEHNER '63, Dublin, Ga., Aug. 5. daughter, Sept. 24. brother, JACK CANNON'30, Nor. 12. Miss Charlotte Anne Cohon and CHARLES Mr. and Mrs. W. JAMES EASTERLY '60, a MARGARET C MAURICE '32 Ae •63, Oak Park, 111., Aug. 19. a daughter, Sarah Judith, June 13. death of Us dangihter, Onistiae, OiS. 29. Miss Evangeline Eybsen and RICHARD SO- Mr. and Mrs. CARL M. WALSH •SI, a son, JACK F. WHITAKER 'Se on the death of hii BONYA '63, Cleveland, May 27. Kevin Michael, Aug. 31. wife, Sept. 19. Miss Susan Elizabeth Mahoney and DIFAK K. Mr. and Mis. ROBERT W. dHAK '62, a ton, RICHARD E. FUXM> '37 oa the dca& a( Us ' BAGCHI '64, NUes, Mich., Sept. 2. Robert Alan. mother, Aug. 29.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19<7 DECEMBER 55 Rev. ALBIN L. HOSINSKI CSC '39 on the WILLIAM L. BECKHAM '15, Toledo, Aug. 4. JOHN P. SAGARTZ '35, Chicago, June 6. death of his mother, July 30. Survivors include his son, JOHN J. BECKHAM Sumvors include a son, JOHN W. '62, and his ROBERT J. KOCH '41 on the death of his son, '50, 2909 Kenwood Blvd., Toledo. widow, Ann, 5937 N. Medina Ave., Chicago 60646. Nov. 11. ANTHONY C. FASENMYER '18, Phurie Vil­ NICHOLAS J. CONNOR JR. '36, Indianapolis, RICHARD G. HECKMAN '42 on the death of lage, Kan. in August. his mother, July 22. Rt. Rev. Msgr. FRANCIS P. MONIGHAN '18, Rev. GEORGE T. MEAGHER CSC '36, Port­ PHILLIP J. LUCIER '42 on the death of his Aug. 5. Survivors include a sister, EtUth, Startite land, Ore,, Aug. 22. Father Meagher had been a mother, Oct. 27. Inn &(otel, Yankton, S.Dak. 57078. teacher at the U. of Portland since 1964. GEORGE R. WENDT '44 on the death of his NORBERT G. MONNING '18, Canabene. Fla. RALPH E. HRUSKA '37, N. Miami Beach, father in June. JOHN L. REUSS '18, Oct. 6, Ft. Wayne. He Fla., Oct. 11. S.AMUEL A. WIXG JR. '44 on the death of is survived by his widow, 909 Orlando Dr., Ft. MILTON J. EISERT '39, Groton, Conn., May his mother in August. Waj-ne. 26. He b survived by his widow, 56 Eastwood D.AVID R. CONDON '45 on tlic death of his WILLIAM S. FOGARTY '23 died in 1966. He Rd., Groton. mother, Aug. 18. is survived by his widow, Alary, Comville, Ariz. Dr. PHILIP RICHARD SHERIDAN '39, Port JOHN L. BE.\U (BEAURIVAGE) '47 on the 86325. Henry, NY, Jan. 6, 1966. death of his wife, Sept. 29. WILLIAM D. BAILEY SR. '24, Xanana, CaKT., JAlklES G. PHILLIPOFF '44, South Bend, Oct. GEORGE S. NICHOLS JR. '49 on the death July 16. 13. He was the owner of the F^ty Shoppcs. Sur­ of his father in May. MARK E. NOLAN '24L, Duluth, Minn., Aug. vivors include two sons and his widow, Dorothy, CELESTINO R. SIERRA JR. '49 on the death 18. He was struck by a car as fae crossed a street. 1523 E. Hoover Ave. 46615. of his mother, Oct. 15. A district judge since 1936, he was named chief THOMAS M. KERRIGAN '48, Michigan City, JOHN J. BECKH.AM '50 on the death of his judge four years ago. He served four terms in the Oct. 28. He was a former FBI agent who once father, WILLIAM L. BECKHAM '15. Alinncsota House until his appointment to the posed as a convict at Sing Sing to try to discover LOUIS KEIFER JR. '50 on the death of his bench. He is survived by his mdow, Ann, 423 who blinded hbor Victor Riesel. After mother, Sept. 27. Court House, 55802, three daughters and a son. leaving the FBI in 1958, he became a restaurateur. HAROLD F, SCHRECK JR. '51 on the death JOSEPH E. FITZPATRICK '25, Coral GaMes, Survivors include lus widow, Rosetta, Portage, of his father, August, 1S66. Fla., Aug. 15. Mr. Fitzpatrick was retired vice- Ind., three sons and two daughters. JAMES S. ASI^LAKIS '52 on the death of pres. and senior trust officer of the Florida Na­ JOHN A. McGRATH '48, Ashton, Md., Oct. his father. May 4. tional Bank & Trust Co. of Miami. Survivors 10. Mr. McGrath was executive vice-pres. of Fuels HAROLD J. W. SWEET '53 on the death of include his widow, Ruth, 903 Faradiso Ave., Research Council Inc., and was a partner in the his wife, Sept. 25. Coral Gables 33146. law firm of Gosnell, Durkin & McGrath. Past JAMES A. REY.N'IERS JR. '54 and LEON, on ARMANDO J. PORTA '25, South Bend, Oct. president of the ND Club of Washington, he was the death ol their fatlier, Nov. 3. 12. After 35 years with the Studebaker Corp., he their "Man of the Year" in 1964. He is survived PAUL FULLMER '55 on the death of his was \ice-prcs. of Associates Investment Co. at the by his widow, Jane, 18820 New Hampshire Ave., lather, Aug. 7. time of his death. ND *'Man of the Year" in ^hlon 20702, and three sons. FRED S. GALIONE '55 on the death of his 1960 he was a member of ND's Prcadent's Council IAN L. LANDRY '49, New Orleans. father in October. and many civic and church organizations. Surviv­ JOHN J. HYLAND '50L, Endicott. NY, Oct. 8. HAROLD W. MEYER JR. '56 on the death ors include his son, daughter and widow, Mikhred, Survivors include his widow, 612 W. Main St., of his father in Fcbruarj'. 1626 Inwood Rd. £., South Bend 46614. Endicott, 13760, four daughters and one son. JOHN T. D.ARCY '57 on the death of his EDMUND F. BURKE '26, Sparta, N.J., Nov. JOHN RALPH CORYN '51, '53, Rock Island, lather, June 28. 11. Survivors include the widow, Muy, 9 BL, Oct. 6. An Illinois Appellate Court judge, he THOMAS A. BRUDER '59 on the death of Indian Terrace, a son and daughter. was killed along with four others in an airplane his lather, Sept. 19. EDMUND J. BANKS '27, East Aurora, NY, crash about 50 miles north of North Battlcford, PETER JANDRISEVITS JR. '59 on the death July 8. Survivors include bis widow, 371 S. Fuk Saskatchewan during a heavy snowstorm. Survivors of his father, Nov. 1. Place, East Aurora 14052. include his father J. RALPH '22, 2545 13th St., JAMES H. MOR.AN '60 on the death of his Sr. M. JOSEPHINE BASKERVILLE OSB '27. Moline, lU. father, Feb. 15. JOHN P. MONTBRUN '27. Sarasota, Fla., Sr. M. VIRGINIA MARSH RSM '59, Bay City, MICH.AEL A. BRUDER '61 on the death of Oct. 23. Mich., Oct. 14, 1966. his father, Sept. 19. JOHN R. "SKIPPER" SCANLON '27, Gaflup, EDWIN J. HERMANNS '63, Stroudsburg, Pa., NEAL W. G.ALIONE '61 on the death of his NM, Oct. 10. An attorney for about 40 years, March 30. He was killed by an avalanche while father in October. he was partner in the firm of Scanlon and Son. hiking in Yosemite National Park with anotlier JAMES A. O'DAY '61 on the death of his Survivors include a daughter and a son John Jr., graduate student from Stanford U. father, June 24. 316 Mesa S.E., Albuquerque, with whom he JAMES E. PAVLICEK JR. '65, Nov. 3, Viet­ JACK H. WHITAKER '61 on the death of his w^ living. nam. An Army helicopter pilot, he died from mother, Sept. 19. Rev. LEO FRIERSON OSB '28, Richmond, Va. injuries received in the crash of his helicopter. He THOMAS H. FOX '62 on the death of his JOHN D. "SNUBBER" MURPHY '28, Chi- is siuvivcd by his parents, a brother and two father in May. cago, Oct. 24. ustcrs. JOHN W. WOLF JR. '62 on the death of his Rev. ROBERT BRENNAN OSB '29, Belmont^ Lt. WILLIAM A. WILK '66, Vietnam, July iatlier, Sept. 2. NC. 29. Lt. Wilk was killed in action near Quang J.\MES J. BRUDER '63 on the death of his WILLIAM H. BURNS '29, Bryn Mawr, Ru, Nam, Vietnam, while on a patrol mission. He is lather, Sept. 19. May 20. survived by his widow, 1011 S. Belgrade Rd., Silver D.WID F. CZULEWICZ '63, on the death of GEORGE T. RATEGAN '29, Oucago, July 27. Springs, Md. 20902. his father, March 27, 1966. Survivors include his sister, Bemice Ratcgan, 2410 MICH.AEL F. LYNCH '63 on the death of his E. 77th St., Chicago. father, Oct. 28. JOHN J. "JACK" CANNON '30, Columbus, FACULTY ond STAF DEATHS RUSSELL JANDRISEVITS '64 on the death Ohio, Nov. 12. An AII-American guard under Rev. THOMAS P. IRVING CSC '04, Nov. 5, of his father, Nov. 1. Knute Rockne, he was elected to the National ND. He was the second ranking officer of the FRANK L. FOX '67 on the death of his Football Hall of Fame in 1965. Known for dis­ Holy Cross Fathers from 1928 father in &fay. regarding his coach's urging to wear headgear, he to 1938 and served as ND's vice- THOXL\S W. STRiVCHAN JR. '67 on the was once dubbed "the hatless horseman." He was pres. from 1922 to 1925. Father death of his father. a coach at Auburn and of the old Columbus Bulb Irving spent virtually his entire pro team and was Columbus' recreation director priestly life at Notre Dame— in 1940-42 before going into the florist business. 1909-1912 as a faculty member, DEATHS Survivors include three sisters and two brothers. 1919-20 as director of studies, MICHAEL J. CONNOR '02, Aug. 20. Sr. MARY PLACIDA CASTROP OSB '30. 1922-1925 as vice-pres. and from EDWARD W. COSTELLO '10. Michigan City, T. LAWRENCE CRONIN '30, Bloomfield, NJ, 1943 until his death as a teacher Ind., Sept. 2. Sumvors include his widow, Alabd, Nov. 8. Survivors include two daughters. and counselor. He was superior 513 Lafayette St., Michigan City. JOHN S. FLINN '30, SeatUe, Wash., Sept. 11. of Holy Cross Seminary on the Campus from FRED L. STEERS *II, Chicago, Nov. 7. A For the past 19 years he was ou'ner of the Flinn 1912-19 and was Moreau Seminary rector during la-wycr who (ought Chicago union wars in the *40s, Chemical Laboratory. He was an Army Captsun 1921-22 and from 1925 to 1931. Survivors include he went dou*n in Fighting Irish lore as one of the in World War IL He is survived by his %vife, a brother and three sisters. men wlio convinced a discouraged Knutc Rockne Geraldine, 308 E. Republican St., Scatde. Rt. Rev. M^. PHILIP HUGHES, South Bend. to stay in school as an undergraduate. He also led HARLEY R. TRUITT '30, WatscAa, III., Aug. Oct. 6. An internationally known authority on the group which urged the appointment of Rockne 4. The owner and operator of Truitt Drug Co., Catholic Church history and a retired history prof, ais coach at ND. One of earliest non-Catholics who he is survived by his widow, RJL 1, Watsda at ND, he was known by his students as an in­ were Io>*aI and active Alumni, he was former prcs. 60970. structor whose teaching was tempered with wit of the ND Club of Chicago and \\:as on the JOHN F. LAUX '31, Hint, Mich.. Aug. 25. and understanding. Hb field of specialization in Alumni Board of Directors from 1933-37. A mem­ An employee of Buick Motor Division for 26 years, history was the Reformation and Counter-Reforma­ ber of the track team as an ND student, he main- he is survived by his widow, Waneta, 620 W. tion in England. Msgr. Hughes w*as the author tained a lifetime interest in amateur athletics and Parkway, Flint, 48505, three sons and two of several church history volumes, the most recent %ras wce-pres. of the AAU from 1923-25. He was daughters. in 1965. also a member of the American 01>-mpic Commit- JOHN H. CAHILL '33, Opa-Locks, Fla., S^ tee and was also an Asst. US Dist. Attorney. He tcmbcr. Survivors include his widow, Patrida, FRANK W. KELLY '24, South Bend, Sept. 22. is survived by his widow, Mayc, 1910 W. 107th 17141 N.W. 42nd Ave. 33054. A professor at ND for 39 years, he is survived by two asters. St., Chicago 60643, a daughter and a son. WILLIAM M. GARRETT '33, Houston, July JAMES ARTHUR REYNIERS '30, founder and WILLIAM J. PARISH '12, Momencc, DL, in 20. Survivors include his widow, 2245 Maronealy first director of Lobund Institute at ND, died of No\'embcr. Sur\-ivors include his widow, Ava, Houston 77025. cancer Nov. 3 in Tampa, Fla. Prof. Reyniers 211 N. Hill St., Alomence, a son and daughter. JOHN G. JAEGER '33, 2*rYC, Aug. 26. Sar- developed the germfree animal. He also initiated ROBERT D. SCHINDLER '13, Toledo, Feb. 9. vivors include his widow, 6200 Riverdale Ave.j studies in the fields of radiation ackncss, anti­ He b survived by his widow, Helen, 2673 Gunckel Bronx, NY 10471. biotics, nutrition and protein metabolism. Survivors Blvd., Toledo 43606. JOSEPH F. NOVAK '34, Chicago, June 14. include his widow, three sons and two daughters.

56 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER INAUGURAL DINNER IN PHILADELPHIA Black tie and capacity crowd. SUMMA SPREADS TO CLUB CITIES OTRE DAME Alumni Clubs across Dr. Thomas P. Carney, honorary pres­ N the country are hosting SUMMA ident of the Alimmi Association; Dr. campaign kickofF dinners and pro­ George Shuster, assistant to the Uni­ grams. With ten cities tucked safely versity preddent; Dr. Thomas Stewart, into the banquet belt in October, two associate vice-president for academic teams of University and Alumni affairs; and Frank G. Kelly, assistant officials are set to take off again in to the vice-president for public rela­ January. tions. Clubs in California, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois, Survey Analyzes Clubs Colorado and Washington, DC have This is Ihe second of a three-port series dealing with the Notre Dome Alumni Survey token lost arranged meeting places for the spring. In this piece the ALUMNUS reports re­ January flights of two teams of Uni­ action to the present Alumni Oub structure and versity and Alumni officials. activities. Cities to be covered include Seattle Six out of ten readers of this page and Toledo, Jan. 15; San Francisco haven't been to a Notre I^me and Akron-Canton, Jan. 16; Los Club meeting in the last year. And Angeles and Youngstown, Jan. 17; nine out of ten Club officers are Columbus, Jan. 18; Pittsburgh and wondering where they are. (The Peoria, Jan. 22; Cincinnati and tenth guy is the clean-up chairman Denver, Jan. 23; Fort Wayne, Jan. 24; who'd just as soon they stay home.) and Milwaukee and Washington, DC, The 1%7 Alumni Study results Jan. 25. show 60 percent of the Alumni The two panels of SUMMA speak­ haven't attended a Club meeting in ers are headed by Rev. Theodore M. the last year though 28 percent have. Hesburgh CSC, University president, Of those who retiumed the question­ and Rev. Edmund P. Joyce CSC, naire, three percent had no Club in executive vice-president. On Father their area and 10 percent did not Hesburgh's panel are James W. Frick, answer the question. vice-president for public relations and The survey asked Alumni to in­ development; Dr. Oliver C. Car- dicate the program areas v^ch michael Jr., national SUMMA chair­ should be implemented or improved man; Dr. Frederick D. Rossini, vice- by the Clubs and 19 percent diecked president for research and sponsored community service and continuing ed­ Clubs programs; and Christopher Miurphy, ucation. "Social activities" was student body president. checked by 17 percent, "family func­ Another student will accompany tions" interested 13 percent, "religious Father Joyce's panel which includes activities" was indicated by 10 percent

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER and "athletic" \vas tlie choice of only six percent. Three nuns commented on the ap- pai-ent "discrimination" against their membership in Clubs. One wrote, "I don't tliink nuns are 'eligible'; I wish they were." Another said, "The Alumni should also have a Club for summer graduates—^it would be fine to know something about your Class after gi-aduation!" Comments on programs the Clubs should add or improve included these: "Getting sons of Alumni in the Uni­ versity even if they don't have a 99 percent average from high school"; and "Concern for problems of private higher education in general and of ND in particular." An Ohio man wrote, "We have the unfortunate situation of a Club that does not represent the Alumni." And a Virginian said he thought no pro­ grams should be added because "there are too many meetings now—mostly DR. O. C. CARMICHAEL JR., REV. THEODORE M. HESBURGH CSC and non-significant." HOWARD V. PHALIN A New Yorker felt none of the sug­ In Chicago's Conrad Hilton SUMMA leaders meet the press. gested programs for Clubs were ap­ plicable and stated he felt "an ND Club ought to promote and support home town University programs and projects over the entire spectrum." This same man cheered the question­ naire data gatherers with his com­ ments regarding his job. He wrote he was self-employed in insurance and investments and the name of the institution which employed him was "Poverty & Perspiration," the nature of which was "Principally, ulcers." An Ohio lawj-er MTOte that ND Clubs should help obtain private or government financial aid to equalize ta.xation of private schools and to enable them to function competitively. He noted Clubs "sometimes seem smug about being involved in com­ munity' and governmental efforts." A Pennsylvanian said he attends REV. EDMUND JOYCE CSC O. C. CARMICHAEL JR., MRS. THOMAS the Club meetings two or three times Louisviliians heard the McCLOSKEY, THOMAS McCLOSKEY a year and asks, "How about speakers vice-president. National chairman meets Philadelphia other than coaches?" He added, "All chairman. activities are social, a fatal failing in my opinion." He feels ND Clubs should have "a broader, more mature reason for being than dances or social activit)'." A graduate living in Oregon thought the Clubs should work on "turning ND back into the tj'pe of institution it used to be." So much for Alumni reaction to the present structure and activities of the Clubs. In the third and conclud­ ing part of the Alumni Sur\'ey (Jan.- Feb. ALUMNUS, the magazine will report Alumni attitude toward the re­ organization of the governance of PAUL RAFFERTY, REV. THEODORE M. HESBURGH CSC, W. UNCASTER SMITH, Notre Dame and to the University's EDMOND HAGGAR, PHILIP R. NORTH future growth and development. Dallas-Fort Worth committeemen chat with President.

58 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER AKRON = the winning colt. The Club chartered a jet and REYNOLDS '54 and CHUCK FALKENBERG made all the arrangements for a trip to Miami for '52 were recently appointed to the Club's Scholar­ New officers clioscn for tlic coming year arc JIM Notre Dame's last game of the year. ART MUR­ ship Fund Board of Dir. CEXSKY '56, prcs.; BOB STACK '41, Vicc-Prcs.; PHY '60 and JACK LAMERE '53 were the men Chairman MARIO TONELU '39 wHl hold the ED. BUTLER JR *60. trcas.; and JIM KEEGAN in charge. Rockne Dinner on Dec. 4 at the Sherman House. *59, sec During the coining year wc will con­ A Club Directory has been printed and distrib­ Another outstanding program is being planned and centrate on a more definite program, interviewing uted. Tliis project was originated and directed by will feature a well-known sports personality as prospective students, scholarship program, pos­ JOHN McCULLOUGH '63. GEORGE CRONIN guest speaker. Make plans to attend. sible joint activities with the Canton and Cleve­ '60 is one of the finalists in the race for a scat —PATRICK J. MONTROY '53. Secretary land Clubs, support of a charitable organization on the Boston City Council. Congrats arc in order and establishment of honorary memberships. Inter­ to PAUL HELLMUTH '40 for being elected to ^^^^ CINCINNATI ^^^^ est in ND around Akron by nonalumn! is very the Board of Trustees of the University. high and wc Iiopc to parlay this into a stronger At the annual Golf Outing GEORGE LAUGHLIN —RICHARD MURPHY '58. President organization. was' awarded the low net trophy by Chairman DREW B.\RTON '60. BOB WRIGHT '54 was A free '*Spring Lawn Party" was held at TOM BUFFALO Chairman of the annual Freshman Sendoff Picnic MEURER's '66 in Silver Lake on June 10. It was Club members and their wives attended a folk held Sept. 5 at Mt. Airy Forest. Highlight of the well attended by a "Hard Core" and wc hope it Mass Oct. 4 at the Newman Club Chapel of the event was the traditional Alumni-Student Softball was the start of a good year. TIic annual Fresh­ State Teachers College. The celebrant was Father Game at which the Alumns upheld their honor man Welcome Dinner was at lacomini's Restau­ JOHN WEIMER. A tour of the building and re­ by a 20-16 score. rant Sept. II. Wc have 13 freshmen from the area freshments followed. The Club also sponsored an The first fall membership meeting took place on campus, including top football candidates excursion to the ND-Pitt game Nov. 11. Plans Oct. 24 at the Cincinnati Club. The highlight of Bob Ncidert and Scott llcmpel. Rev. Joseph are under way for a Christmas Dance Dec 29 at the affair occurred when RALPH B. KOHNEN Barry CSC spoke and the "1966 Football High­ the Cordon Bleu. JR and JACK GILLIGAN '43, candidates for lights" was shown. A Monday Quarterback —JIM SEYMOUR '35, Secretary City Council, discussed local politics. Luncheon at Tangier Restaurant was started on Plans have been made for the 1967 Communion Sept. 25 and will continue throughout the season. ^^^^ BURLINGTON ' Breakfast which will be Dec. 10 at Our Lady of Our annual Dinner-Dance has been su*itched Cindnnati Col. MIKE MORRISSEY '61 has been from mid-January to St. Patrick's Day week­ On Oct. 8 the Club held its annual boat trip on the Mississippi River. Because of the cold weather chosen chairman of the event. JOHN COTTING- end in 1968. This is for the benefit of our schol­ HAM and BOB McCAFFERTY, co-chairmen of arship fund. We hope this change will attract a number of the old faithful were missing, how­ ever, those who attended enjoyed the boat trip, the Christmas Scholarship Dance, will be In the a larger number of Alumni and friends. Lookout House Dec. 2S, Two bands will provide —JIM KEEGAN *59, Secretary the conversation and the delicious meal in Oquaw- ka. Hosts for the afternoon were Marianna and continuous music and the recipient of the annual Dome Award will be announced. AURORA, ILL. = Club Pres. VERN BRINCK '48. Also along were Dorothy and JACK DAILEY '27, H.-\ROLD —LARRY KYTE '60. Secretary The annual Club golf outtng was held July 27 RILEY '27, Mary Kay and GENE RILEY '52 and at the Aurora Country Club. A large turnout en­ Father ARTHUR PERRY *52. Meeting the group CLEVELAND joyed the fabulous entertainment put on by MC for supper at Oquawka were Mary and ROLAND ROBERT E. DOWD '41 general dty chairman ZIGMONT CZAROBSKI. Guest speakers includ­ MARTEL '43. wishes to thank the Alumni, parents and their ed Coaches TOM PAGNA and JERRY WAMP- —REV. ARTHUR PERRY '52, Secretary families who attended the SUMMA dinner Oct. FLER who put on their usual fine program. The 16 at the Cleveland-Sheraton Hotel. JOHN P. Gil Bryan trophy was won by guest VINCE COYNE '54, JOHN P. McFADDEN '59, THOM­ KONEN and as custom was awtirded by Czarob- CANTON, OHIO AS M. RAIA '55, RICHARD H. XHLLER '54, ski and GEORGE CONNOR. Tlte Club held its third annual Shillelagh Swat THOMAS A. CORRIGAN '57 and PATRICK J. —DICK REEDY '44 Golf Stag at the Elms Country Club. There were CANNON '55 who formed the committee in 63 people present and our guests included Coaches charge of the dinner are to be espcciaUy com­ BOSTON TOM PAGNA and JERRY W-A.MPFLER who mended for the fine job they did in generating Many fall and winter activities arc scheduled both swing a mean golf stick. JOHN ASIAN and the large turnout of over 400 guests. The Cleve­ by the Club under its new officers DICK MUR­ JOHN SAXER were co-chairmen for the event. land Alumni have currently raised 407 thousand PHY '58, prcs.; ART MURPHY '60, vicc-pres.; Club Pres. CHUCK KOEHLER handled the pro­ dollars. FRANK McCORMACK '63, sec; and TOM gram with finesse. JIM WEBER, our former Co-Chairmen Thomas A. Corrigan '57 and WELCH '57, trcas. prcs., is taking up golf and won the booby prize. Patrick J. Cannon '55 headed up the schol­ John Sa\er and EMIL OLF were trophy winners. The third annual Golf Outing at the Hatherly arship raffle which was held on Oct. 25. A sub­ The rest of the program consisted of a buffet din­ Country Club in Scituatc was well attended. LOU stantial sum of money was raised for the Notre ner and a showing of the "1966 Football High­ DiGIOVANNI '49, chairman and second-place Dame Scholarship Fund and Prcs. RICHARD lights." winner, presented the winner's trophy to Ray VAN AUKEN '57 wishes to thank the co-chair­ Fitzgerald, an outstanding Boston sportswriter. —EDWARD MACHUGA. Secretary men for their excellent work on this affair. Thirty new freshmen and their dads were The husband and vntc retreat held during the hosted at a ScndofT Dinner in early September at CHICAGO weekend of the Michigan State-Nbtre Dame foot­ the Officers Club in Boston under the capable The opening of the school year was heralded by ball game was a singular treat this year being that chairmanship of NEIL FOWLER '47. Father JO­ the Club's annual reception for the incoming the members and their wives who enjoyed the SEPH O'NEIL '46, assoc. dir. of admissions, Freshmen and their parents. Chairman TOM weekend were also able to see the football game furnished the young men with sound and sage HAYES '55 reported over 250 attended this event following the retreat. GEORGE KERVER '22 advice. which was held at the Lake Shore Athletic Club. again was In charge of this year's retreat. The SUMMA Banquet was held on Oct. 11 at JIM GIBBONS '53, representing the University, Ch^rtnan RILEY MILLER '59 announces that the Hotel Somerset and proved to be \"ery success­ was the principal speaker and as usual did an the Christmas Dance will be Dec 9 and will be ful with Father HESBURGH as the principal outstanding job. a semi-formal followed by a champagne break­ speaker. BOB MARR *58 did a splendid job as Membership Chairman FRED HOLZL '58 in­ fast. ROBERT J. LALLY '50 and JAMES F. chairman. forms us that currently paid memberships in the RODGER5 '49 have announced that the Rockne On Nov. 3 the Club enjoyed its third annual Club have risen to 1134. This represents a nine Award Banquet is to be held early in January evening at Suffolk Downs. Chairman BILL PE- percent increase over 1966. Club Prcs, TONY at the Sheraton-Cleveland Hotel. TRUSIAK *58 awarded a Notre Dame blanket to GIROLAMI '43, PAUL FULLMER '55, BILL —JOHN P. COYNE '5t. Secretary

EV. THODORE M. HESBURGH CSC, ROBERT TOM HUBBARD, DR. ROBERT WARNER, ROBERT McGOLDRICK, REV. DOWD, DICK VAN AUKEN EDMUND P. JOYCE CSC, FRANK W. LANE, DONALD FOSKETT, '.leveland committeemen check the schedule JAMES FLAHERTY JR. with the president. An enthusiastic Hartford committee poses.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER 59 FAIRHELO COUNTY. CONNECTICUT New officers for the coming year are ^VILLIAM E. HARRINGTON *48, pres.; DAMIAN VAC- CARELLA '57, \-ice-pres.; LORING WEBBER '47. sec; and WILLIAM E. REIDY '53. treas. Oa Aug. 27 a large group of new students, their parents and Alumni attended the Freshman Sendoff at the Red Coach Grill in Darien, An inspiring and informative address was given by JIM GIBBONS from the dept. of public rela­ tions. DAMIAN VACCARELLA handled the ar­ rangements. A record-breaking crowd attended the Second Annual Sports Night on Oct. 6 also at the Red Co*ch. FRANK G. KELLY, assistant to the VP of public relations and development, spoke on the progress and activities at ND and brought us up to date on the SUMMA program. PAUL SEILER '66 offensive tackle on the undefeated '66 team and first draft choice of the N.Y. Jets told us bow the 1966 team became National Champions. He discussed the All-Star Game, his experience with the Jets and fielded questions from the floor. We saw "The 1966 Notre Dame Football High­ lights" film followed by the raffle of an all- expense weekend to the ND - AISU game which was W'on by Ronald Cicero of Bridgeport. BILL REIDY '53 and SARSFIELD FORD '55 headed the committee. BILL HARRINGTON handled MC chores. —LORING WEBBER '47, Secretary

^^^^ INDIANAPOUS • The annual Golf Outing was a tremendous suc­ cess. Chairman TOM O'BRIEN '53 hosted 192 Alumni and guests for dinner following an after­ noon of golf enjoyed by 164 golfers. JERRY REV. THEODORE M. HESBURGH CSC, HOTEL ATTENDANT, MURPHY *57 won the 5100 raffle and proceeded to contribute half his winnings to the ND Scholar­ LT. GOV. RAYMOND BRODERICK and MRS. BRODERICK ship Fund. Coach was the fea­ OfBcial welcome to Philadelphia by ND alumnus tured dinner speaker. The SUMMA Dinner was Oct. 17 at Stoufl"er's Inn with guests Father HESBURGH, Dr. Rossini ^^^^= COLOMBIA = DALLAS-FORT WORTH ^^^ and Dr. Carmichael as well as VP JIM FRICK. We arc sorry to report the recent untimely It is a pleasure for our Club to inform you that A large crowd was on hand for the summer pi^ death of former Club pres. ('49-'50) NICK CON­ our President Ramon de la Torre '57 was ap­ nic which took place on July 22. PAUL UNDER- NER '36 as well as TED MARBAUGH '25. May pointed as personnel v.p. for Baxaria, the largest KOFLER, with help from TERRY MURPHY their souls rest in peace. cntcrpnse in the countr\'. We are planning a Club and JIM DENIG, provided a wide variety of enter­ On Nov. 11 at the Indianapolis Athletic Club dinner to celebrate Ramon's appointment. Our tainment for young and old alike. The long-awaited the annual Scholarship Ball was held. This dinner Club u-as one year old Oct. 27 and we cele­ Fall Smoker which featured **The 1966 Notre dance was highlighted by the drawing of the brated our anniversary' simultaneously with Dame Football Highlights" was well attended by ' grand prize which this year was an atl-expense-paid Ramon's congratulatory dinner. Club members and friends. Other attractions in­ trip to Kfiami for two over the weekend of the —ERNESTO GUHL, Secretary cluded talks by RUSS BELLAMY, pres. of the ND-Miami game. JOHN R. WELCH '47 was ND-Texas Club, JOHN RODGERS, who brought chairman of (he dinner dance, while younger • •• COLUMBUS. OHIO ^^^ us up to date on plans for the SUMMA drive, and brother JIM WELCH '50 chairmanned the raffle. In July Pres. FR.ANK BETTEXDORF '59 called JOHN RONAN, who briefed us on his trip to the PRES. BILL MCGOWAN '57, along with Tom a special meeting of Club officers, directors and Alumni Senate meeting in &Iay. CORKY CLARK Moynahan, has promoted a weekly Friday-noon advisory alumni. Tlie purpose of this meeting was and LEE FLEMING co-chainnanned this event. luncheon at the Riley Towers for ND Alumni and to discuss actinties and proposed changes in the Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC and other ad­ their friends. The average attendance has been Club agenda for '67-*68. The site was the Christo­ ministrative officers were in Dallas for the formal 46 men the first three weeks. pher Inn and all who attended agreed on one opening of the SUMMA campaign at an inaugural John O'Connor, Jr., pres- of the campus In­ point — some changes are in order. Area -Mumni dinner on Oct. 19. A noon luncheon for SUMMA dianapolis Club of ND has appealed for Alumni should already be aware of at least one of these committeemen preceded the dinner. support of their annual Christmas Ball to be at changes — a stricter policy on, and an advantage —LAURENCE BEDFORD '57, Secretary the Indiana Roof on Dec. 27. to active membership upon pa>'nicnt of dues. CHARLES WAGNER '54 chairman of the an­ Aug. 21 was the date of the Club's orientation ^^^^ DECATUR, ILL. ^^^^ nual Communion Breakfast advises that the Mass for incoming Freshmen and their parents. Pres. Forty-two busy members crowded an annual meeting will be at the Blessed Sacrament Chapel at­ Ken Castrop of the student club organized and into tlicir schedule and elected JOHN DUNN '58, tached to Sts. peter and Paul Cathedral followed conducted the student panel. Club officers were pres.; PAT NOLAN '63, >icc-pres.; ED KOVAL by breakfast at Stouffer's Inn. The new co­ on hand to welcome the guests. JOHN DORIAN '50, treas.; and Rev. ROBERT S. STEWART '45, adjutor Archbishop Biskup has been invited to '58 addressed the gathering, telling them of the pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church, chap- speak. meaning of ND in his life. John's talk was superb lain. The five directors elected arc ED KOVAL —LEO McNAM.ARA *50, Secretary and could not but inspire the freshmen to great '50, JERRY McNAMARA '61, BILL DOWNING loyalty for ND. '57, RICH MCDONALD '55, and Jim Moran. The annual Alumni-Student Picnic was Sept. 9 ^^^^ JERSEY SHORE ^^^^ Our annual alumni trip bussed 39 staltvarts to at Living Waters picnic grounds. The Alumni It is a sad duty to report the death of Rev. the California game. JOE DONOVAN '56 liters defeated the students in the annual Super Bowl to Paul Kane, Club chaplain and the recipient of the ally takes care of all details. remain undefeated. J.\MES GRACE '65 a newr 1967 Man-of-the-Year award. Father Kane had resident attended and was welcomed to the Club. —STEVE GRALIKER, '42, Secretary served the Club faithfully since its inception. This BOB BORDIGNON '65 of Itasca, III., was passing devoted priest died suddenly in Indiana while on through and attended the picnic. ^^^ EASTERN INDIANA ^^^ one of his annual trips to visit his many friends A dinner for workers on the SUMMA drive Muncie, and Eastern Indiana Alums, plus a con­ in the diocese of Peoria, 111., and to attend a and certain newsmen was held Oct. 12. Chairman tingent of present students, are excited this fall nimibcr of the Notre Dame games. The Club's of the drive is JOHN IGOE '28. DICK LAUBER about their first basketball product to head for grief at this loss is beyond expression. '62 is cliairman of this year's membership com* "Green Power Pastures" since JIM CARNES *40. Two events began the fall program of the mittee. The subject of the excitement is 6' 6" Jim Club — the Freshman Sendoff and the second On Oct. 18 the Club sponsored a dinner for the Hinga (one of JOHNNIE DEE's "Select Seven" annual Club cocktail party. The officers and trus­ principals of all Franklin County high schools for frosh recruits), son of Ball State U. basketball tees combined to sponsor the first function while the purpose of informing them of the availability coach of the same name. Incidentally, Jim Sr. DICK CORDASCO '50 and DICK TIERNEY '54 and requirements of the Joyce scholarship, which tells me the successful "Lafayette Line" this year chairmanned the party for the second year. provides a ND education for some four to eight was to remind all of their "Papal Pulverizers," of The annual Communion Breakfast will be held area students per vcar. Scioto Countrv Club was which there are plenty, that since the Notre in Asbury Park on Dec. 10. with the Mass at the site and JOHN GUEXIN *62, MIKE DRIS- Dame "Home Office" did not think enough of Holy Spirit Church. Plans arc already under way COLL '61, STEVE VAN HEYDE '65 and DAN them to invite them under the Dome, this would for the UND Night in the spring with BOB IGOE '65 welcomed the guests on behalf of the be a good chance to show them! Can*t vouch for GIUNCO '57 and CHARLIE HESS '57 co- Club. JOHN IGOE '28 was MC. this. chairmen. The dinner mil be held at the Shadow- —DAN IGOE '65, Secretary —JOHN C. HYNES '39-'40, Secretary brook in Shrewsbury. '

60 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1W7 DECEMBER A Club innovation begun by Pres. ED VOLL = MEMPHIS, TENN. RETT '52. GEORGE HERO '52, aad JOHN '48 is the meeting ot oSScers and trustees at THORNTON '50. Special asutsatf are CHAR­ dinner planning sessions four times a year with New oflficers chosen to lead the Chib dming the LIE CALLAHAN >3B and Joe Roblne. the purpose of promoting more Club functions. coming year are JOE SIGNAIGO '48, pres.; Our bnsf bn ataaom was opened whh the aamal One new plan calk for a bus trip to the NYU-ND DAVE SAXON '58, vice-pres.; TOM WHITUAN fathcr^oa ni^t on Sept. 7 at the Hbtd Unacr* basketball game in the Garden in the winter. '59, treas.; GEORGE DOUGLAS JR '57, sec; and Chainnaa CHARLIE MAHER '35 planned tUi —CHARLIE KELLER '54, Secretary directors: JERRY FOLEY '35, FRENCHY DO- fiae cvenisg at which over 60 Onb matbcn, ito- HOGNE '27 and DAN CANALE '42. Mr. Siguigo dents aad thdr fathers attended. As a fbuJe to ^^^ KANSAS CITY, MO. ^^^ was a member of the Nadonal Chamirion ibotfaall the prograai the filiu "Notie Dame" aad "The teams of '43, '46 and '47. 1966 Notre Daae Football HigUights" were shtnra. AND KANSAS On Aug. 25 the Club had a party for abont GO At our Oct. 5 meeting we were pleased to hare The Freshman Sendoff was held at the Flaza m at the Olde West Dinner Theater. Joe Signaigo, as oar spedal gnest DICK KUWE oi the Notre restaurant on Sept. 19. The rookies were treated Club pres., was there with his wife Thelma. Dame Foimdatiaa Office. to dinner and tips on what to expect were passed Among others were Mary Ellen and LOU SAMP­ on by , retired captain of the '66 Na­ SON, Grace and WALTER BURKE, Fiub and —L. NICK MUELHAOIT, Secieuty tional Champion Fighting Irish and currently line- NORMAN BROWN, Gina and JIM TYRRELL, backer for the AFL champion Kansas City Chiefs, Martha and DAN CANALE, Kay and TOM ^^^^ NEW jaSEY^^^^ and DENNIS HOGERTY, Peace Corps volunteer WHITMAN, Mimi and DAVE SAXON, Mary and This was our finest hour. Never before have the destined for duty in the Virgin Islanfls. JOHN CHARLIE SCHAFFLER and MICKEY MORAN Almnni been so privileged to meet and bear the WHITAKER '61 was chairman and was ably as­ with Pat Taylor. leaden of omr beloved Univenity. This was at the sisted by BERNARD CRAIG '61. It was announced A TV viewing party for the Mich. St. game Oct. kickoCC of SUMMA, the most ambitioas picgiam at the dinner that CHUCK O'NEILL '37 had 28 was held. A junket to Atlanta for the Georgia in any omvexsity's history. Over 400 Ahmmi and relinquished his duties as president of the Club Tech game Nov. 18 and the Pro game between their wives were privileged to hear ND Resident due to his transfer to Washington, DC. BILL Atlanta Falcons and Los Angeles Rams was Rev. TTheodore M. Hesburgh CSC deliver, in ha UNGASHICK '43, vice-pres. succeeded Chuck and planned Nov. 19. A chartered plane supplied inimitable style, another of those rsfiting aad presided at the dinner. transportation for the Club. dynamic talks that stir up so mnch pride ia the SUMMA was inaugurated locally Oct. 10 by —GEORGE DOUGLAS, JR., Secretary heart of every fme Notre Dame man. Rev. EDMUND P. JOYCE, executive v-p, and Dr. Governor Hughes of New Jeisey led off the fes­ GEORGE N. SHUSTER, asst. to the president. tivities congratulating Fr. Hesburgh and the New ROBERT J. METZLER '44, former Club pres­ ^^^ GREATER MIAMI ^^^ Jersey Ahmmu This was the second time the Gov­ ident, is general chairman of the project here. The formal opening of SUMMA for South ernor has graced oar official fimctions aad he It is anu'dpated that Kansas City Alumni, par­ Florida was Oct. 12 at the Bath Club on Miami demonstrated once again why he's so well respected ents, and friends will respond to the challenge Beach. A reception honoring special guests Rev. as a man and civil servant. of the five-year program with their customary Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC; Dr. Oliver C Car- Dr. O. C. Carmichael and Dr. Frederick Roamd charity and determination. michael Jr; James W. Frick; and Dr. Frederick D. gave us background iiUbimation on the objectives —THOMAS M. FLEMING '59, Secretary Rossini preceded the dinner. We are quite prond of SUMMA as cEd yoong Christopher Morphy m, to have had such a distinguished team present the Student Boiiy president. Don Criqui did a i LA CROSSE, WISCJ this greatest challenge to over 200 Alumni, wives mastoful job as M.C. Jim Frick gave a talk and friends who attended. Our South Florida which proved why our programs have been la Mr. and Mrs. HENRY FUNK hosted the an­ Chairman FRANK MACKLE JR, and Nora and masterfully handled by this administrative genxns. nual steak fry at their Mississippi River cabin on PAUL SCHAEFER '50 were rwponsible for the The thanks of every Ahunnus nmst go to Bcraie Sept. 22. AUGGIE GRAMS was chairman of the success of the evening. Assisting Chainnan &awfoxd who has been a tower of strength and event and supervisor of a special fund-raising event Mackle are PAUL SCHAEFER '50. JACK BAR- held during the evening. Plans were made for the detfieation to the soccesa of SUMMA. Onr hats Communion Dinner on Nov. 16 under the aegis of JERRY HEBERLEIN. Mass was said by Rev. TOM NINNEMAN. Election of officers for 1968 to succeed pres. PHIL UTZ, vice-pres. TOM JAEB and scc-treas. BILL ROTH will be held at the annual Com­ munion Breakfast on Feb. 4. —BILL ROTH '60, Secretary : MAINE = The Club held its annual meeting on Sept. 6 at Mario's Restaurant in Lewiston. This was in lieu of our annual picnic which we were unable to have due to the fact that the good Fathers closed down Camp Sebaik at East Sebago, Maine. Those in attendance were VINCE ALLEN '67, WIL­ LIAM BARTLETT '60, JOHN BELIVEAU *59, JESS DELOIS '42, JOE DOYLE '42, RAY GEIGER '32, RAY LEMAIRE '50, JOHN U. RILEY '17, John Riley his grandson who is also Notre Dame, PAUL SCULLY '41 and TONY SILVA '56. Incoming students were honored and attending were John Bennett, Gene Geirger and Zack Brown, accompanied by their fathers. Also at­ ROBERT J. WELSH JR., WILLIAM L TRAVIS, REV. EDMUND JOYCE CSC, tending our first meeting was our new associate chaplain Father GEORGE WEBER '61 now resid­ ROBERT L. HAUTER, PATRICK MALONEY ing at St. Joseph's Church in Lewiston. Elected Calumet Region SUMAAA leaders welcome panel chairman. officers are JESS F. DELOIS '42, pres.; JOSEPH D. DOYLE '42, vice-pres.; JOHN B. BELIVEAU '59, treas.; and RAY GEIGER '32, perennial sec This was a very excellent meeting and for the first banquet in the State of Maine considered quite a success. We showed pictures of the 1963 football games and had an inspirational talk by outgoing pres. TONY SILVA, to the freshmen. On the day of the Michigan State game the following Alumni and wives met at Ray Geiger's house to watch the game and toast the team's effort: J. PAUL SCULLY JR '41, DOM ZURLO JR '58, JOE DOYLE '42, BILL BARTLETT '60, TONY SILVA '56 and the fathcre of the students Maurice Laurendeau and Ed Scarborough. —RAY GEIGER. '32. Secretary ^^^^^ MANIU ^^^^^ On March 11, Club members, \vives and friends got together for the movie of "The 1966 Football Highlights." Aside from this showing the film was shared with other friends of Notre Dame: Ateneo U., De La Salle Col., Clark Air Base, US Navy Subic, American School and La Salle in Bacolod. On March 21 the Club offered a Requiem Mass for the late DON ALFONSO ZOBEL DE AYALA DR. FREDERICK D. ROSSINI, REV. THEODORE M. HESBURGH CSC, '24. On Sept. 2 the Club offered a Reqm'em Mass for the late DON ALFONSO PONCE ENRILE. THOAAAS WHITE, PHILIP LUCIER, JOE DWYER —LARRY GOTUACO, '54, President In St. Louis time for a talk.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER «I are off to Bcrnic for his leadership. death of his ydie: on Aug. 21, 1967; and Dr. of the 11 freshmen attending Notre Dame from To mention just a few of the many New Jersey RICHARD E. FLOOD '37 on the death of his Rhode Island this year. Pres. TOM McHALE Alumni who attended with their beautiful and mother on Aug. 29, 1967. greeted Bob Hurley, John Mahoney, John Regan, adoring wives: ANGE BERTELLI, FRANK TRI- —BILL MITSCH '33, Secretary-Treasurer Ernie Santoro, John Tobin, and Tim Trcmblay PUCKA, JOE BYRNE III, DEON SUTTON (a at the wcll-attcndcd party. Worthy of note is Notre Dame Foundation rep who worked so hard OREGON the fact that Ernie Santoro and John Regan both and long), BOB JOYCE, JIM SEBOLD, Hon. The second annual picnic at Champocg State spumed academic scholarships to respected col­ TOM WALKER, BILL CROSBY, GENE AN- Park with a turnout of 30 families was a sue- leges in this area to attend Notre Dame. The GIULLI, NICK VILLAROSA, cx-Yankcc GIL cess. Dclores and RAY MARTIN, with the new club officers for the coming year were intro­ McDOUGAL, HARRY DURKIN, BILL assistance of JIM MORAN, TOM TOMJACK, duced as follows: Pres. TOM McHALE »59; vicc- KIRSCHXER, ART ARMENTO, JEFF FLAG- JACK ROGERS and their wives capably organ­ prcs. PETE SUTHERLAND '55; trcas. GEORGE STAD, ART STATUTO, JIM McGOLDRICK, ized the races and other sports actit^tics. Some HESS '56; and sec. BOB McHALE '58. It was JACK PINDAR, \VALT CONNELL, Dr. ART of the Club members complained that the 100- announced that plans have commenced for a TUTEL.A, JOE LEPORE, HARRY O'MEALU. yard dash, shortened to 30 yards, should be Christmas dance. JOE ABBOTT, PHIL SHERIDAN, JOE and further reduced to a dash from the picnic tables —THOMAS J. McHALE '59, President JIM KELLY, JOHNNY F. KELLY, BILL SCUL­ to the refreshments. Members, wives and friends LY, OrrO SCHERER, HANK BORDA, TOM gathered at the Terrace Room of the U. of Port­ FARLEY, GEORGE WENZ, PETE LUSARDI, ROCHESTER, N-Y. = land to watch the Michigan State game. On Aug. 19 the Club picnic was held at Ellison BILL CROSBY (our executive vicc-presO, BILLY —J. MICHAEL WHITE, Secretary KELLY, (DAN GR.ACE, HOWARD GILLESPIE, Park. Many thanks to Jan and TOM CUSKER my counterparts in Central Jcrse>- and New York, for all their efforts towards the success oC the respectively), ED VON HOEHNE, GEORGE PAKISTAN affair which featured the usual attempts at athletic KEENAN, JIM GIBBONS from Campus and a HUGH T. MURPHY '59 has arrived back in prowess called touch football. The "fivc-y-ard-and- host of others. Dacca w*ith his bride the former Joanne Tilley. collapsc" runs and the offensive blocking were es­ Many names were omitted, and there are nu­ Hugh is associated with the US AID program pecially comical. Highlight of the entertainment was merous ones who have been so active that we for Pakistan. Tlic ncwlyivcds are living at CWN JIM DOYLE's recitation of "Selected Poems by must apologize. But the evening was so memor­ (E), 9 Gulshan, Dacca—5. M. A. ZAMAN, who Gcnkhis Khan" and FRANK CONSLER's simul­ able and SUMMA such an inspiring event that received his PhD at Notre Dame in January, has taneous translation. Pm surprised I remembered so many. also returned to Dacca and mil be teaching in Each year JACK NYE DUFFEY organizes the To every Alumnus who wasn't there, let mc the botany dept. of the U. of Dacca. Freshman Orientation designed to familiarize the lay as your president that wc need your support— —Rev. F. J. BURTON CSC, Secretory new ND frosh to life under the Golden Dome. socially, financially, etc So please share with us On Sept. 7 this get-together was held at the the wonderful moments that only ^ve as Notre PEORIA, lU. Ccnacle Retreat House for over 25 freshmen add their parents. Ellie and GENE YURGEALITIS. Dame men can experience. Oh, yes! Let's all The new officers for 1967-68 arc BOB MANNING Pat and JOHN ANDREWS, JOHN GALVIN and start with our Communion Breakfast in December '60, pres.; BILL STOTZER '56, vice-pres.; Club Pres. ROY HANNA assisted Jack at this —^we want ever>*one there. WALLY CASHMAN '54, sec.; and JOHN HOF- very popular and wortlnvhilc event. One final word. The wives of otir Alumni gave F£R '51, treas. The election was held at our such grace and dignity to this affair that we trust June 13 meeting at the "Pabst 33" room. LOU The ND Women's Organization which has con­ they will continue to be a part of every future ZUMBALEN '49, our '66-'67 president, gave us tributed so much to the Club's success over the function. So to Jane Scbold, Pat Joyce, Mrs. J. a report on the Alumni Seminar which he at­ years will begin its yearly program on Nov. 4 Byrne and Joe's mother, Mrs. A. Arment, and tended at ND. JOHN PUSEY '65, a grad, stu­ %vith a luncheon. Ellen Yurgealitis, pres.; Ginny Mrs. J- Flagstad, Joanne 0''Mcalia, Jane Pindar, dent, also spoke on the aspects of current campus Bergin, vice-pres.; Mary Ann Dempscy, sec; Emma Emmy Lou Kelly and Joan Sheridan and all the life at ND. Members then saw "The 1966 Notre Yohon, treas.; Pat Andrews, program chairman rest—many thanks. (Oops, I forgot to mention Dame Football Highlights." and Daisy Klce, publicity chairman, arc this year's officers and wc certainly extend our best my own w-ife, Eleanor) The annual Back-to-Scbool Dinner was held wishes to them. —ANGE AMATO '42, President Sept. 12 at PETE VONACHEN*S '49 "Vonachcn*s Junction." CHUCK PERRIN '54 presented the A Thanksgiving weekend and tickets to the ND- Lt. James A. Cassidy Award for academic achieve­ Miami game were the attractions offered in the ^OHIO VALLEY^ ment to Frank J. Galvin, Pekin, III. Gal\in, a Club's Scholarship Fund Raffie held under Chair­ ND Alumni, parents and guests held an in­ senior majoring in architecture, received the sixth man PHIL VAN DER KARR. Reports on the formal dinner meeting at Figcretti's Elm Grove annual award for the highest over-all average of lucky winners next issue. Restaurant, Wheeling, W. Va., on Sept. 13 as a all Peoria area students at the University. Guest Congratulations to JIM PORCARI on his recent SeadofI for local students attending ND. The fol­ speaker at the dinner w*as Cook County asst. acceptance of a position with the Afetropolitan lowing were in attendance; Mr. and Mrs. BILL Sute's Attorney William J. Martin, chief prose­ Rochester Foundation Inc. BUCH '59, Mr. and Mrs. HARRY HUGH '59, cutor at the Richard Speck trial held here in —BOB DEWEY '54, Secretary Mr. and Mrs. JIM HARANZO '52, Mr. and Mrs. Peoria. Klartin spoke of the growing problems BILL HOGAN '51, Mr. and Mrs. RAY KEYS, '49, connected with crime tn the metropoUtan-oricntcd = ROME = Mr. and Mrs. BILL MITSCH '33, Mr. and Mrs. society of today. Our ND Hospitality Center at Largo Brancaccio John Maier (parents of Ronald Maier '69), Mr. and Dr. & Mrs. Edward ^Vard now have four sons 82 is open every day from noon to nine. Welcome Mrs. Leo J. Bonenberger (parents of L. P. BO- attending ND; Edward *68; David '68; Eric '69 and telephone us at 730.002. Rome comers should NEXBERGER '64), Mr .and Mrs. Bill Flynn, Mr. 2md Douglas '71. The 1966 graduation class of remember that Papal audiences by PAUL VI and Mrs. Paul Ottc, Mr. Albert Hcnnen (father Peoria's new Catholic boys' high school, Bergen, LLD *60 are Wednesdays at U a.m. A Papal of Terry Hennen '71), Mr. Jack Altmeyer (father is well represented in the ND freshman class this public blessing is given Sundays at noon. of Tom Altmeyer '69), Mr. Terry Hennen '71, Mr. year with six young men attending. Ronald Maier '69, Mr. Bill Mitsch Jr. '69, Mr. —WALTER D. CASHMAN 'M, Secretary Welcome to new Roman NDer Bro. FRANCIS Bob Mitsch '70. After the dinner Club pres. BILL CONRAD DELVAUX CSC '67 MA, (acuity of BUCH outlined future plans including a golf ^^^ RHODE ISLAND AND ^^^ Notre Dame International School. Regrets on tournament and a TV smoker for the ND-Mich. departure of Dr. VINCE lONATA '60 who won State game. S.E. MASSACHUSETTS medical degree U. of Rome and JOE SIMONS On behalf of the Club I wish to extend our A dinner dance was held the evening of Sept. 9 '44-'47. sympathy to Dr. W. E. ACKERMAN '33 on the at the Pawtucket Country Club introdudng »x Deluxe guests; JIM ARMSTRONG '25, with

MR. and MRS. ARTHUR BEC VAR and MR. and MR. and MRS. CHARLES PATTERSON and MRS. KENNETH A. BARKER JR. MR. and MRS. LEO LINBECK SR. Louisville ladies are interested too. Display in Houston attracts attention.

REV. THEODORE M. HESBURGH and GOV. JOHN VOLPE TRIPLE CITIES Massachusetts Governor honors ND President with membership in NEW YORK Order of Paul Revere Patriots. Activities for the year began in September with tbe annual student sendoff party and smoker bigb* lighting films of last year's successful football wife Marion and son Bro. PHILIP CSC '55. CAHILL '63, EDWARD nSCHER '37 faculty. season under the tUrtction of TOM BENEDICT This was a historic honor for us, affording a relatives of STEVE HERMES '67, JOHN CLE­ '49 and DICK HANIFAN '49. Two recent Roman opportunity to fete Jim in gratitude for MENS '43 and wife, Capt. MEZZAPELLE '59 and graduates BOB HAINES '66 and JIM HAINES his exemplary 41 years of Alumni leadership family, THOMAS GRADY '41 and family, Sr '67 spoke, as did KEN WHITING '70. loyalty. Following on Jim's heels was Father PAULINE GRADY '61, GEORGE SCHWARZ In the fall tbe Club particulates in a Catholic HESBURGH. Then Father JOHN REEDY, editor '25 and wife, Capt USN PAUL BOLAND '45 College Alumni Night joining with other uni­ Avt Maria with Father JOSEPH QUINN of and family, parents of DANIEL BACHINI '64, versities in this annual affair. GEORGE HAINES Family Rosary organization. And ND's friendly- PAUL FORTINO '38 and wife, G. MIHOUCH '42 is pres. of the local chaqiter of the Catholic enemy Duffy Daugherty of you-know-where! '43, DAN O'NEIL '25, THOMAS GORDON '63, CoUege Alunmi. JOE GALLOWAY '51 beads Pious pilgrims: Dr. GORDON DI RENZO '56 TOM KENEDY '42 and mfe, TIM MORIARTY the Notre Dame committee for tbe affur. with copy of his new book (in Italian) on person­ '64 and wife brother TERRY '67, parents of TOM This year the Club raised funds through a, ality and political power in Italy. JOHN GRIF- RINK '67, JIM DONOGHUE '40. raffle for the Notre Dame vs. Michigan State FI.V '39, trustee St. Mary's, BILL MAUS '53 and Four lawyers, same firm, father-sons: JOHN football tickets. The prize included expenses and wife, VICTOR KIMMEL '44, TOM MALEI '69, O'DONNELL '24 with wife, parents of JOHN two nights in a fabulous downtown South Bend EUGENE MUR '69, RICHARD ZIENTEL '69, and JAMES '31 and HUGH '37. Parents of Dr boteL MICHAEL Z^VETTLER '62, MIKE SARTON RAYMO.ND ROSEDALE '54, Msgr. ALLAN -MXPHEN F. DRAGOS '61, Secretary '66, Sr AUGUSTA RSM '67, WILFRED DAVYER NILLES '42, JOE CROTTY '37 and wife, Capt "22 and JOHN '71, DAVID KABAT '68, VIRGIL PAVIA '56, JIM BRENNAN V-7 '45 UTAH MICH.\EL MCKEON '68, SMC daughters of and wife, JOHN LEONARD '53 and wife, aunt A Freshman Sendoff was the occasion for onr JOHN WITTLIFF '32, son PHIL '70, SMC of ANTHONY HASKE '61, parents of RICHARD meeting held Aug. 12 at the home of BILL ALLEN daughter of ROBERT NEWTON '34 and sister LANNIN '63, Col. BILL LEAVEY '47. '57, Pres. It was a picnic affair with hot dogs of W.\RREN ALBRIGHT '59, EDWARD O'CON­ DICK SMALL '51, pres. of Alumni Holidays, and beer plus all the usual trimmings on the NOR '54, Fr. JOSEPH HAYDEN '44, ROBERT Inc. sent us two alumni groups U. of Wisconsin menu. AH the girls worked hard to make the VEE.\E.\f.AN '47, RANDY SUTLIFF '67, ROB­ and Indiana U. Joseph Black Indiana alumni event a success. New students present at the ERT QUINN '65 with wife SMC '67, DOUG pres. visited ND Center with his party as did meeting with their parents were BRIAN BUSH MARVIN '69, JOHN MARTIN '62, RICHARD SAM OGLE of Wisconsin Alumni. Sam attended '71 BOB CROWDER '71 and KEN FAKLER LA PORTE '66, DAVE CAMERON '68, sister of ND in Rock's time. By individual visitors over •71. Also present were JOHN LYONS '69 and CARL FLECKER '64, sister of TERRY PLUNK- 30 other colleges arc represented in our guest FRANK AMUSSEN, grad student. ETT '59, niece of ROBERT CHENAL '34, book while over 190 school peimants, all im- Alumni and honorary alumni present with their KEVIN IGOE '67 son of JOHN '28 brother solicited, grace our ND den. latGes were BILL ALLEN '57, Dr. JOHN DAN '65, family of ROSE and FRANCESCO —VLNCE McALOON '34, Secretary SCHIRACK '50, BILL POGUE '61, FRANK DEL VALLE '62, Brothers CLARENCE POD- CALLAHAN '62, Lt. Cmdr. CHUCK BENNETT GORSKI and NORBERT ALLERTON CSC, SAN JOSE '• '55, TED BARES '59, JOHN MORAN '47, DON PATRICK SHAW '67, PAUL McCONVILLE RONEY '58, BOB GRISLEY '50 and BILL '67, JAMES CIMINO '65 and wife, CLETE Officers elected for 1967-68 are TED SOBIERAL- ALLEN SR. A good time was had by all. Plans WILLI.AMS and BRUNO RUZZO '67, TOM SKI '54, pres.; TORMEY WARD '60, vice-pres.; for an upcoming trip to Logan in December for DONOVAN '66, LEONARD CALL '20 and wife, MAURY DE WALD '62, treas.; BOB SAXE '63, tbe ND-Utah State basketball game were dis­ WALTER ZUBER '49, Dr. JAMES STEIN- sec; and Rev. ART SCHOENFELDT CSC, cussed. chaplain. The Club's new Board of Directors TR.AGER '58 and family. Rev. AMBROSE —BOX POGUE '61, Sec-Treas. GERMAN OFM '59, VINCENT BUCCI '44, Rev. includes DICK KELCH '54, DAVE HICKEY '27, DAVIS BURKE CSC '60, JOE LA NASA '64, BERT MILLEN '57, Dr. V. T. MURPHY '45. ^^ WASHINGTON, D.C. ^^ SMC sister of BILL SCHMULL '65, BOB '69, WALTER GILL '56, and BOB FIGEL '49. Top three places in the summer Golf Tourna­ The Club officers FRANK McCARTHY, JACK dad WILLI.AM '36, wife of D. COMMISSA '45, LOWE, RAY RAEDY and JOE LIBBY held sister of S-i^L '36 VINCENT '41 NICK COM­ ment went to MAURY DE WALD, TOM WEB­ BER '62 and JIM COYLE '51, respectively. BOB forth at a luncheon for the incoming freshmen MISSA '45, daughter of GEORGE O'BRIEN '34, and their parents at Bonat's Cafe on Sept. 6. Sr ROSELINA TINNES '65, Sr ANNE ISABEL FIGEL served as chairman of the very successful annual family barbecue highlighted this year with Bill Beyer, pres. of the ND Washington student '68, JOSEPH COSTELLO '52 sister of TOM club, answered many of the questions about what DE ANGELIS '64, RONALD VINCI '66, widow a talk on SUMMA by JOHN HUTTON '62, West Coast rep of the ND Foundation. The 1967 to expect at school. of BILL COYNE '27 '29 and debating coach, The dub bad scheduled a Night at the Races SXfC daughters of JAMES SULLIVAN '30 football season was closed with the Club's East- West Shrine Game Testimonial Dinner, planned on Oct. 4 but the track had a strike which brothers BILL '62 JOHN '65, ROBERT MILLER eventually forced the cancellation of the fall '42 and family, Sr .AGNESE PRENDERGAST and promoted this year by BILL SHINE '49. —BOB SAXE '63, Secretary Season. However, arrangements are being made M.\ '46 MA '55 and faculty. to go to another track later in the year. ELLIOT BINZEN '66, PATRICK MURPHY Father JOSEPH REHGE, our Qub chaplain, '37, sister of Rev. DANIEL BOIAND CSC, ••• SPOKANE, WASH. was transferred to New Orleans over the summer FRANK MELEWICZ '68, parents of TOM Club members and friends gathered at the home to become dir. of the house of studies there. AfcCLORY '70, PAUL PEZZA '66, LEE FL^TLEY of Pres. Dr. DEE J. McGONIGLE '52 to view Father GEORGE BERNARD, superior of Holy ex-faculty and wife, brother of BILL BRENNAN the MSU game on color TV. Between halves Cross Col., was elected as our ne^v chaplain. '68, FRANCIS McGAHREN '34 and wife, KEVIN Dec's wife Kay scr\-ed hearty refreshments and at —RAYMOND RAEDY '62, Treasurer

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER «3 Vietnamese conflict, since massive VISITORS North Vietnamese infiltration did not start in the South until after his death. No "Mop Heads"... Another charming audience Inter­ He mentioned Kennedy's legislative view made the show on the air, but record would have been better if he, Though the University got just as other couples who were interviewed like Johnson, had a solid Democratic many plugs in other net\vork shows during the four taping sessions must majority in the Congress. In recalling this fall, John Davidson was at Notre have been disappointed. Then, too, the assassination, he took issue with Dame for two weeks in October. He thousands of dollars in film and man author William Manchester who said brought with him some 75 other show hours were cast aside when time there \vas friction between the Ken­ business people rounded up by Bob prevented showing scenes of Home­ nedy and Johnson staffs on the plane Banner Associates and they had a coming activities and interviews with returning to Washington. "They were budget of $275,000 for the hour-long students on current events. The Glee in one part of the plane, and we were "special." Club was cut down to one number in a totally separate section. We had Broadcast the night before the ND- but so were pop singers "Spanky and litde contact with each other," Michigan State game (which was also Our Gang" and comic George Carlin O'Donnell said. nationally televised by ABC), the didn't get all his stufF on the air nor • • • John Davidson show netted some im­ did folk singer Judy Collins (and pressive reviews. Variety pointed out, Two major national conferences—one some stuff she was!)—^and that's show on secularity and theology and the "For all its localisms and pure appeal business. to the massed collegians in Notre other on birth control—^were part of Dame's geodesic dome, the John Da­ Notre Dame was pronunently, the busy fall schedule of the Center vidson hour was attractive enough to though indirectly, featured in another for Continuing Education. Both meet­ make you glad you dialed it. Not a TV special, a rebroadcast of last year's ings were closed to the public and whopper with a big 'special' banner "The Long Childhood of Timmy." limited to invited guests including hanging over it but just earthy music It told the story of Timmy Loughlin, some prominent national figures. brother of Jerry Loughlin '69 of NYC, One lecture, that by Rev. Edward and his family's decision to send Schillebeecloc OP, a professor at the Timmy away to a school for retarded Catholic U. of Nijmegen in The children. Netherlands, was open to the public Another documentary, "One Night as part of the "Secularity and Con­ Stands," aired in November, showed temporary Theology" conference. popular singer Johimy Rivers during Father Schillebeeckx, who served as his performance at Notre Dame fol- the theological expert for the Dutch lomng the Southern California game. bishops at the Second Vatican It included Campus scenes and also Council, discussed relations betvveen showed Notre Dame students in the a secular and a Christian expectation audience. of the future and man's role in bring­ Other comments on the John ing it about. Among others who Davidson show are included in the participated- in this symposium was "Alumni Ask" section on p^e 2. Dr. Harvey Cox of the Harvard Divinity School. ... but Lots of Pros There was also a public lecture as Alread/ this school year Notre Dome students and faculty hove hosted one of the most im- part of the conference on "The JOHN DAVIDSON pressive lists of Campus visitors the University Changing Woman: The Impact of "Clean, man, clean . . ," has ever seen—and more are yet to come. Most Family Planning." This was delivered of the speakers were contracted by the Academic by Dr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Byrd, and comedy not dipped in pot nor Commission of Student Government. Following high-blo^vn on a trip. Clean, man, are capsule reports of the talb, though each authors of The Freedom of Sexual clean . . . speaker would be worthy of on entire story if Love. Their topic was "Anatomy of "It \vas pleasing to see clean-cut space were available. Editor, ALUMNUS Good Marriage." college kids enjoying clean entertain­ Appearing on Campus, Oct. 2, Mark Among the other participants in ment instead of demonstrating on the Hatfield, Republican Senator from this conference, organized by the ND streets with mop-headed agitators. Oregon and prominent dove, declared Institute for the Study of Population Television needs more of 'John David­ the Vietnam war "Unwinnable" and and Social Change, were William son at . . . .' to blow down the critics accused the Johnson Administration of Masters, director of the Laboratory of of the war in Vietnam who hog the hiding the facts of failures in South­ Reproductive Biology, and his research headlines and bring the TV camera­ east Asia. According to Hatfield, it associate, Virginia Johnson; Jacqueline men running." is up to the Republican Party in 1968 Grennan, president of Webster Col­ The New York Times said the show to hold out a meaningful alternative lege; and Betty Rollin, senior editor of turned out to be a "better-than-aver- to American presence in Vietoam. He Look magazine. age pep rally" and mentioned—as did would like to see the conflict "de- • • • other reviews across the country—that Americanized," bombing of the North Julian Bond, the first Negro legislator one of the high points was Davidson's stopped and the South Vietnamese in the Georgia government since the interview wth football player George left to fight their own battie. Reconstruction, in his talk at the Uni­ Kunz. Kunz admitted on the show • • • versity Oct. 10 traced the history of it was his first date with the blonde Kenneth O'Donnell, John Kennedy's Negro political power in America. He from St Mary's who sat on the floor closest political adviser, recalled his said the Negro, especially in the next to him. Asked if he planned to years with Kennedy in a speech at South, could get no representation •date her again, he grinned and Notre Dame Oct. 3. He said there from the regular Democratic Party replied, "Not if her boyfriend sees could be no way to tell what Ken­ and cited the rise of the Mississippi this show." nedy would have done in the present Freedom Democratic Party and tlie

<4 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER BOND JOHNSON HATFIELD O'DONNEU UBBY From civil rights to the Vietnam war. Lowndes County, Ala. Democratic from Indiana, warned Oct. 23 that while C(»demning the civil-i%hts and party in electing officials. bombing pauses over North Vietnam peace movements as Commuiust-in- • • • are not enough to bring peace and spired. He said the Society has re­ Dr. Willard Libby, Nobel prize-wiiming that a broader plan is needed. He laxed its attempt to impeach Chief chemist, in his talk Oct. 17 on Campus strongly criticized Secretary of State Justice Earl Warren. urged the US Government to not make Dean Rusk and Secretary of Defense • • • the mistake of branding the space Robert McNamara for mishandling Gen. Harold K. Johnson, Army Chief program nonessential. Appearing as the conflict, though he did not call of Staff, defended the administration the first speaker in the "Challenges in for their resignations. policy in Vietnam Nov. 17. He Science" lecture series, he said the • • • denied the conflict was a dvil war, practical applications possible from Robert Welch, head of the John sayinig there are more than half a space research will never be realized if Birch Society, spoke on the Society's million North Vietnamese troops in the program is allowed to wither be­ efforts to combat communism Oct. 24 the South. He declared the US is cause of expense. at Stepan Center. He pointed with winning the war, both militarily anid • • • pride to the different ethnic and politicly, but would not estimate how Vance Hartlce, Democratic Senator religious backgrounds of the members. long the war would last. Packers in Miniskirts Tlireat to Notre Dame (Continued from Page 9) "No Bryn Mawr. In the College Bowl. You know, "I think," said South Bend Eddie before the the quiz game. Brains, not brawn. What's the line?" phone crashed down on the hodc, "that we are in It was so quiet you could hear the click of pool trouble." balls being racked. Then South Bend Eddie com­ Exacdy the feelings of Dr. Robert Patten, who menced laughing. is the Ara Parseghian of the Mainline (distaff divi­ "You mean chicks? Agamst the Irish? Listen, sion). A young English professor. Dr. Patten has we'll play 'em in hopscotch, Mah Jong or spin-the- whipped his Bryn Mawr dub together since Septem­ bottle. Who did Bryn Mawr ever beat?" ber. He started with 149 candidates, then drove his "The U. of California at Riverside last week. Four Fillies— Ashley Doherty, Robin Johnson, Ruth Score was 230-70. Bryn Mawr wasn't breathing Gais and Diane Ostheim — through 2,000 practice hard." questions. Before waxing Cal on TV, his assassins "Yeah?" said South Bend Eddie, suddenly in­ ripped Haverford three times in scrimmages. terested. "Aw, let 'em get a reputation first. Have "And these aren't pros but pure amateurs," said they ever had an Elmer Layden, a Bill Shakespeare, Dr. Patten darkly. "Some schools—I will not men­ a Bertelli or Lujack or Homung or—" tion names — keep their players in special dorms, "Sure. They had Katherine Hepburn, Cornelia with daily training sessions, no outside dasswork. Otis Skinner, Marianne Moore, Dr. Emily Bach who And they have specialists in sdence, music, et cetera. won the Nobel Prize. . . ." Ours play every poation." "Ridiculous. You mean they're gonna say in the The Bym Mawr coach saw weaknesses last week dressing room, 'C'mon gang, win this one for Cor­ in naming the Aristotelian categories, an equation nelia Otis,' " scoffed South Bend Eddie. "What they about the rotation of the earth and the works of got, 750 chicks against our 7200 manly, erudite, Bertrand Russell. It gave Cal their 30 points. profound scholars? Have they been No. One? Have "We'll be up for this one," said Dr. Patten. they got the Golden Dome tradition?" "Notre Dame had a spy invade our campus. A boy Emotional as always. South Bend Eddie broke infiltrated the dorms here, took notes on our training into a hoarse, offkey version of "Cheer, cheer for old methods, scouted our perscnmel. I'm serious. We.' Notre Dame . . . wake up the echoes that cheer her considered retaliating by sending a g^l with a bad name. . . ." What, he snarled, did Bryn Mawr have cold to Notre Dame, but I am against germ vrarfare." that compared? If Bryn Mawr wins this one, they have a diot at "Well, they have this chant that goes 'Anassa the all-time 5-0 record and a $19^00 paydf. Dr. kata, kalo kale, ia! ia! ia! nike!' " Patten cautions, however, that his dub may be slowed Haverford a 3-Time Loser in Scrimmases. "What kind down by exam week. of dumb cheer is that?" "We respect Notre Dame," said the coadi, "but "Well, it means 'Goddess descend, we invoke you remember—we're Number One." O beautiful one, hail, hail, hail, victory.'" Ia! Ia! Ia!

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER ts fans of all allegiances will be delighted versity, the brochure-like publication with this picturebook of the "who, tiien studies the anatomy of football BOOKS what, where and when" of football at under the Golden Dome. Covered are the University of Notre Dame. such things as practice, the games, the WHO'S WHO IN AMERICAN POLITICS, edited The photographs, mostly taken by rallies, the off-the-field lives of the ball by Paul A. Theis '48 and Edmund L. Henshaw ALUMNUS photographer Richard players, the victories, tlie losses. . . . Jr., R. R. Bowlcer Co., $25. Stevens '51, are superb duo-tone re­ It's so thorough that, if there is a Who says tlie Democrats and the GOP productions and are 116 great shots criticism of the title, it reads like a can't cooperate? The first edition of selected from more than 1,500 in­ textbook and leaves very littie for a good idea shows it's certainly pos­ dividual negatives. granted. sible—at least when publicity' for both Beginning with Father Hesburgh's Certainly, though, the photography is involved. quotation on football "... a proud and printing alone make the piece As public relations director for die Notre Dame tradition of doing every­ wordiwhile. For more information Republican Congi-essional Committee, thing with style, spirit and e-xcellence," write to: Mossberg & Company, Inc., Paul A. Theis '48 joined forces with and a brief introduction about the Uni­ P.O. Box 1, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. Edmund L. Henshaw Jr., research director for the Democratic Congi-es- sional Committee, in the 832- SPORTS page volume. "The duties ^vere split evenly and bipartisanly," Theis re­ ports. 'M"^^'.^ "In addition to setting up the ad­ visor^' committee for die book—which was chaired jointly by John M. Bailey of the Democratic National Commit­ tee and Ray C. Bliss of the Republican 'ir O'^ ^ National Committee—we also laid out tlie criteria for inclusion in the direc­ tor)' and helped make tlie final deter­ minations as to who did or did not go into the book," he explained. And like a politician, he sixth- sensibly added, "I'm sure, however, we overlooked a number of polidcal leaders who should have been in V -^ « (hopefully, none from Notre Dame) and perhaps even included some who should have been left out. But we i^ s t hope to straighten out these problems } *; f by the next edition." Questionnaires were sent to 20,000 politicians—^Henry Cabot Lodge got his in Vietnam—and some 12,500 of THE NATION'S PRESEASON CHAMPS the replies were selected. All the Pressures made victory more sweet. leaders in the two major parties— from die President to the precinct— made it, along with the top names in the minorit)' parties. The ne-xt edi­ No. 501 and Still Counting tion, to be published early in 1969, COR MORE of the season than they Irish ^vill go down in history as one will take care of tliose who "arrive" ' would care to admit, the Fighting of the finest." during the 1968 elections. Irish were forced to play "catch-up The near-capacity crowd in the ball." It was more notably a factor in North Dining Hall that evening let A PROUD TRADITION/NOTRE DAME, by Donrel the Purdue, Southern California and the squad know there was no doubt Moore 11, Mossberg & Company, Inc., Soulh Miami games. But it also was the pre­ Bend, S2.35. in their minds. The 29 all-time ND vailing characteristic of the overall records that were broken in '67 also This 64-page, 8J4xll paperbound season. were ample evidence. And if this gem is a journey through "an institu­ "After four games," Coach Ara Par- weren't enough to convince critics, tion within an institution." Pisfskin seghian revealed at the November 30 Parseghian produced a poll that football banquet, "the team found ranked Notre Dame number one. themselves wth two \nns and two While tiie Associated Press placed losses . . . and this developed into a ND fifth and the UPI saw the Irish real problem. in the fourth slot, a computer in Chi­ "With the likelihood of a national cago, its endless of sheets of data un­ championship quite remote and there raveled by Parseghian, left no doubt being no incentive for post-season ND was number one. bowl games, this team was faced with Milestone. This year's 8-2 squad will a real morale problem. Only the also be remembered for bringing to sheer tenacity and the desire to pro­ Notre Dame its 500 gridiron victory, duce a true Notre Dame record spir­ that against Georgia Tech. Moreover, ited this team on to six straight vic­ Notre Dame's placement in the "top tories . . . and for this reason the '67 ten" this year was the fourth con-

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER seen live year it has placed that high. I nor the doctors can understand how Not since the early fifties have ND he played the second half of the Tech teams been able to compile that many game with an injury which required consecutive rankings. surgery days later." "Excluding the 1964 and 1966 And then to Hardy, Ara quipped, teams, one must go back to the 1954 "We'll remember you most for that team," Ara reminded those at the 13-yard kick against Miami. Kevin banquet, "to find a Notre Dame team was a master at kicking, believe me." with a better record . . . and that is On a serious note, Ara praised the a long way back." defensive 6-5, 220 veteran who was Sponsored by the ND Club of St. the bulwark of the Irish "front four" Joseph Valley, the testimonial also for three years. brought forth next season's team lead­ Other departing seniors include ers. Offensive tackle , a Dave Haley, Dan Harshman, Dave junior from Arcadia, Calif, and sopho­ Martin, Mike McGill, Tom O'Leary, more linebacker Bob Olson, from John Pergine, , Tom Superior, Wis. were elected co-cap­ Schoen, Jim Smithberger and Dick tains of die 1968 Fighting Irish. The Swatland. latter will be the first junior to cap­ Awards and a Preview. Before the eve­ GEORGE KUNZ and BOB OLSON tain a Notre Dame football team in ning came to a close three members fifty seasons, or since Leonard "Pete" Leaders in '68. of the team were honored by the stu­ Bahan headed the 1919 squad. dent body and the National ND "We're quite pleased with the new Izo, 322, against Pittsburgh in 1958); Monogram Club. To Jim Smithberger arrangement of co-captains," re­ most rushing and passing plays, 75 went the first annual "President's marked Parseghian. "It's more in (Huarte, 44 against Stanford in 1964); Award" presented by Student Body keeping with the two-platoon system." and most total offense yards, 420 President Chris Murphy. The honor Kunz, 6-5, 240, started the season (, 354 against So. Cal. is for academic achievement and wth at tight end and in the first two games m 1955). the plaque was presented a "book­ caught seven passes for 101 yards. In­ This year's place-kicker Joe Azzaro case of the classics." juries on the defensive and offensive wrote himself into the record books Freshman coach Jolm Murphy, on teams required adjustments in both three times with his season's total of behalf of all monogramers, announced lineups and the resulting shake-up 61 points, Tnoif points scored by kick- the winners of this year's "most valu­ found Kunz playing offensive tackle ing (Ken Ivan, 48 points in 1965); able player" awards. The honors, voted for the remainder of the season. his eight field goals this year (Ivan, iipon by members of the team, went to Olson, 6-0, 225, was one of the hardest seven in 1965); and jor most field Terry Hanratty on offense and Tom hitting and one of the most frequent goals made in a career, 13. Schoen from the defensive unit. tacklers of the defensive unit. He led Others whose performances have With 1967 now history for Notre the squad in tackles with 98. set a new pace in Notre Dame foot­ Dame football, what's up next for the Record breakers. The Irish continue ball are , Jim Seymour, Fighting Irish? to rewrite gridiron history at the Uni­ Jeff Zimmerman, Tom O'Leary and "You know one of the sports\vriters versity with their 29 new marks in die John Pergine. brought that up to me after the Miami record book. Moreover, in the four Departing Seniors. Captain Bob Bleier game," Ara chuckled. "We find our­ years Parseghian has been head coach, and Kevin Hardy head a list of 13 selves starting up right where we left 80 records have been broken and seniors who were regulars on this year's off . . . right in the thick of it." eight have been tied. team and who will be graduating. A mere glance at next fall's sched­ Terry Hanratty led the parade of Bleier, a regular halfback for the Irish ule will tell you all you need to know: record breakers mostly because of his for diree years, wound-up his playing Sept. 21—Oklahoma performance against Purdue. That days in the Georgia Tech game when Sept. 28—Purdue Oct. 5—Iowa at Iowa City day he set individual single game he was injured with torn leg ligaments Oct. 12—^Northwestern marks for most passes attempted, 63 which forced him out of acdon Oct. 19—Illinois (, old record, 37 against against Miami. Oct. 26—^Mich. State at E. Lansing Stanford in 1964); most passes com­ "A great runner, pass catcher and Nov. 2—Navy at Philadelphia pleted, 29 (Huarte and Coley O'Brien, Nov. 9—Pittsburgh masterful team leader," Parseghian Nov. 16—Georgia Tech 21); most yards passing, 366 (George spoke of Bleier. "To this day neither Nov. 30—So. Cal at Los Angeles

JEFF ZIAAMERMAN, KEVIN HARDY and TOM SCHOEN Bright young Irish to take up senior gap.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 19(57 DECEMBER £7 COACH JOHNNY DEE Great basketball is a game called "unselfishness." 730-DAY WONDERS HAT running the break has to do by the end of the season was averaging phy joining Amzen and Whitmore as Wwith the virtues of motherhood, almost 20 points per game in addition the three full-time returning regulars only Johrmy Dee really knows. And to leading the team in rebounds. — also fondly called by Dee as the only Notre Dame's head basketball "When people look back to 1966," "first of the blue chippers" — Notre coach can explain it. But somehow or Dee explains, "they'll have to say that Dame's attomey-coach is looking for other it fits into his philosophy for de­ guys like Amzen and Whitmore were a 17-9 year. veloping a contender at Notre Dame the ones who really turned the tide. Coach Dee, an active lawyer who for the national basketball champion­ These were the fellows, along with last year was admitted to practice in ship. And the feeling around Notre others, who were really willing to the US Supreme Court, feels "so long Dame is that he may be just a year or come here and start something great as we keep that right column in a two away from doing just that. in basketball at Notre Dame." single figure, it'll be a good year." The grand plan began for J. F. Dee Now, in the early stages of the 1967- Pausing for a second he goes on: Jr. at X minus 730 days, March 2, 68 season, with junior Dwight Mur­ "But, I'll really be disappointed if 1966 to be exact. It was Saturday af­ ternoon and the Fighting Irish had just lost its season's finale to Creigh- ton, closing the books with a 5-21 record. From that day on, when John Dee's hand-picked talent began to take the floor, the push was on to reverse the 1965-66 season and in two years to boost Notre Dame into the top ten collegiate basketball teams in the nation. The first half of reconstruction days on the old court of the fieldhouse might even be considered impressive. The Irish pulled themselves over the .500 mark by winning 14 and losing 12. Bob Amzen (6-5 forward from Ft Thomas, Ky.) totaled 597 points and so set a Notre Dame mark for most points scored by a sophomore. Next behind him in scoring was an­ SiNNOTT, CARR, PLEICK and JONES other sophomore. Bob Whitmore, who Latest to cast lots.

68 ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1967 DECEMBER we don't get a berth in a national 1967.^8 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE tournament. That's what the kids are Dec 2— ST. JOSEPH'S COLLEGE (Ind.) really working for." To make the NCAA tournament or Dec. 5 — Wisconsin at Madison the National Invitational Tourna­ Dec 9— LEWIS COLLEGE (2:30 p-m.) ment, the Irish must pull do\vn a Dec 11 —SOUTHERN METHODIST Midwest "at large" bid. This means fighting it out mth other indepen­ Dec 14—ST. NORBERT dents such as Dayton, Xavier, Loyola, Dec. 19 — Inciiana at Ft. Wayne Detroit, Marquette and De Paul. The Dec. 21 — Utah State at Logan two or three teams with the best rec­ Dec. 23 — UCLA at Los Angeles ords are usually invited. Dee is looking to several other vet­ Dec. 28 — VILLA MADONNA COLLEGE erans as well as this year's sophomores Dec 30 — Kcntuclcy at Louisville to give the team a \vinning combina­ Jan. 3—KING'S COLLEGE (Pa.) tion. Junior guard Jim Derrig and senior forward Jim McKirchy are Jan. 6 — Air Force Academy at Dem'cr likely candidates for the two remain­ Jan. 8 — Creighlon at Omaha ing starting positions. Their strongest Jan. 10—DETROIT competition will come from sopho­ Jan. 13 — DePaul at Chicago mores Mike O'Connell, a guard, and John Gallagher, a fonvard. Gallagher Jan. 17 — BUTLER topped the frosh in scoring last year Jan. 27 — Illinois at Chicago Stadium with a 22.3 average while O'Connell Jan. 30 — Michigan State at East Lansing is probably the top ball handler on the squad. Feb. 3 — Detroit at Detroit This year's prospects are not the Feb. 6 — DEPAUL only things Johnny Dee is willing to Feb. 10 — Duke at Chicago Stadium talk about. He'll even look a little Feb. 13 — ST. JOHN'S in the future and talk about "the new facility," referring to Notre Dame's Feb. 17 — Bradley at Chicago Stadium $8 million Athletic and Convocation Feb. 22 — N.Y.U. at Madison Square Garden Center. There in early December, Feb. 27—VALPARAISO 1968, the massive structure will offi­ cially be opened. Johnny Dee and his Mar. 2 — CREIGHTON (2.30 p.m.)— HOMECOMING cagers will be the main attraction as they entertain the UCLA Bruins and Mr. Lew Alcindor. With equal pride, the Coach also points to this year's freshman team. And this is where the Irish coach, now beginning his fourth season at the "We think that in this class we have University, reveals his secret of one of the finest groups of high school success. ball players ever assembled." "It's amazing how all of these kids Among these future Notre Dame come from the same kind of home, BOB WHITMORE stars are Austin Carr (6-3 from Wash­ the same kind of background. I've DWIGHT MURPHY ington, D.C.) who last year was voted often thought to myself what a great the "outstanding high school basket­ thing it would be if I could put all BOB ARNZEN ball player" in the nation by Scholas­ 19 or 20 of these kids' mothers up on First of the blue chippers. tic magazine. a stage." Other five-year men, all of whom He then e.xplains, "For some reason gained either national or state-wide or other, I've always felt that basket­ recognition, include Collis Jones (6-8 ball players reflected their mothers from Washington, D.C), Jackie Mee- more than their fathers. To be a great han (6-0 from Philadelphia), Tom basketball player, you've got to be Sinnott (6-4 from Elizabeth, N.J.), unselfish. If a guy is not unselfish, he's John Pleick (6-9 from Los Angeles) not going to amount to much of a and Jim Hinga (6-4 from Muncie, player. All the ingredients for making Ind.). a good home, a good mother, are the These recruits lived up to their same in a great ballplayer. And you prep-school billings when in presea­ better believe I've got the greatest son play they whipped the varsity in bunch of mothers you've ever met" seven out of eight regular ball games. This, then is how running the break, Carr provided just about all the gas blue chippers, turning the tide and all the freshmen needed as he aver­ the virtues associated -with mother­ aged 34 points per game. hood fit together in a rather fascinat­ "I just can't believe this is happen­ ing pattern for winning basketball ing to me," Dee thinks to himself. games. "Something's going to happen to me With 365 days to go and all the between now and next year. I'm going necessary ingredients in hand, Johnny to get an ulcer or something." Dee is marching for home.

ALUMNUS NOVEMBER 1947 DECEMBER Mr. Francis P. Clark Head. Microfilming & Photo,. Lab. .-Mamorial Library -Jjai. 46556

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS

OFFICERS THOMAS P. CARNEY '37 HONORARY PRESIDENT AMBROSE F. DUDLEY JR. '43 PRESIDENT JOSEPH H. CAREY '32 VICE-PRESIDENT THOMAS W. CARROLL '51 VICE-PRESIDENT CHARLES J. PATTERSON '47 VICE-PRESIDENT ,.y JAMES D. COONEY '59 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY

DIRECTORS TO 1968 JOSEPH H. CAREY '32 NOMINATIONS RELIGION AND CITIZENSHIP 19965 BRIARCLIFF DETROIT, MICH. 48221 THOMAS V/. CARROLL '51 NOMINATIONS PLACEMENT 214 W. 20th HUTCHINSON, KAN. 67501 AMBROSE F. DUDLEY JR. '43 EXECUTIVE SHERATON-PEABODY HOTEL 149 UNION AVE. MEMPHIS, TENN. 38103 CHARLES J. PATTERSON '47 ACADEMIC AFFAIRS CONTINUING EDUCATION 73 MT. WAYTE AVE. MAGAZINE STAFF FRAMINGHAM, MASS. 01702 JAMES D. COONEY "59 DIRECTORS TO 1969 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY WILLIAM D. KAVANAUGH "27 JOHN P. THURIN '59 BUDGET EDITOR 3445 ORDV/AY ST., N.W. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20016 JUNE SHASSERE WILLIAM F. KERWIN JR. '40 RICHARD RILEY '68 ADMISSIONS EDITORIAL ASSISTANTS 1108 EMILIEST. GREEN BAY, WIS. 54301 M. BRUCE HARLAN '49 CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER RICHARD A. ROSENTHAL '54 PUBLIC RELATIONS AND RICHARD STEVENS '51 DEVELOPMENT PETER McGRATH '70 STUDENT AFFAIRS RICHARD HUNT '69 P.O. BOX 200 DON DEMPSEY '71 SOUTH BEND, IND. 46624 PHOTOGRAPHERS LEO V. TURGEON '42 ATHLETIC SUITE 107 CRENSHAW MEDICAL CENTER 3731 STOCKERST. LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90008

DIREaORS TO 1970 EDWARD G. CANTWELL '24 700 BINNS BLVD. COLUMBUS, OHIO 43204 . EDWARD B. FITZPATRICK '54 5 THE MAPLES ROSLYN ESTATES, N.Y. 11576 JOHN J. REIDY '27 11850EDGEWATERDR. LAKEWOOD, OHIO 44107 LEONARD H. SKOGLUND '38 MMmm 426 DOVER AVE. LAGRANGE PARK, ILL. 60525 ai