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FEATURES 6 On the Rocks? 8 A Matter of Money 12 Soldier of Science DEPARTMENTS VOL. 49, NO. 6 DECEMBER, 1971 3 ND News 5 Student View

James D. Cooncy '59 16 Class Notes ExECUTi\x DIRECTOR ALUMNI ASSOCIATION EDITOR 43 Club News Timothy J. Hughes *61 AIANAGING EDITOR 49 Graduate Sctiools Georsc A. Scheuer *28 CHIEF COPY EDITOR 50 Alumni Ask James Fanto '73 EDITORIAL ASSISTANT 51 Alumni Speak M. Brace Harbn '49 CHIEF PHOTOGRAPHER ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Donald F. O'Brien '42 Notre Dame Magazine HONORARY RIESIDEN'T Robert A. Erkins '45 There's at least one merger around announcement came as we were in PRESIDENT here that will be carried off on the middle of our press . This is John T. Classman '56 schedule—that of ALUMNUS and IN­ the first time I've ever had to shout VICE-PRESIDENT, ADMINISTKATU-E AFFAIRS SIGHT. The two will become one in "Stop the presses." It was a disap­ Frank L, McGinn '52 February and come to you under the pointing task. VICE-PRESIDENT, ALUMNI AFFAIRS Robert L. McGoIdrick '56 masthead—^NOTRE DAME MAGAZINE. VICE-PRESIDENT, STUDENT AFFAIRS Jim Cooney gives the details on page Leonard H. Tose *37 51. We hope you will be pleased with VICE-PRESIDENT, ACADEMIC AFFAIRS the new product. James D. Cooncy *59 As to the other merger—^well, the -^/A E?tECUTi\x DIRECTOR Michael E. Jordan '68 DIRECTORASSISTANT DIRECTOS TOR 1972 Robert A. Erkins '45, P.O. Box 546, Buhl, Idaho 83316 John T. Massman '56, 3917 Broadway, Kansas City, Mo. 64111 A BOOK FOR ALL SEASONS Frank L. McGinn '52, 900 BIdg., Pompano Beach, Fla. 33052 Robert L. McGoIdrick '56. 15 Drury Lane, What does Ara Parseghian do after the game? If the new West Hartford, Conn. 06117 Leonard H. Tose '37, 64 W. 4th St., Bridge­ NOTRE DAME COOKBOOK is any indication, he spends part port, Pa. 19405 of his time in the kitchen putting together his favorite recipe DIRECTORS TO 1973 of stuffed grape leaves. It is just one of the many recipes in Daniel D. Canalc '42, 1325 Commerce Title the cookbook by the culinary experts in Notre Dame's family. BIdg., Memphis, Tenn. 38103 Rev. Jerome J. Wilson CSC, vice president for business affairs, Dr. John C. Lungren '38, 4180 Chestnut Ave., Long Beach, Calif. 90807 provides you with his no-nonsense recipe for 15-minute James C. MacDevitt '35. 43 Hampshire Rd., Great Neck, N.Y. 11023 spaghetti. And another highly placed ND gourmet. Rev. James Joseph T. O'Neill '53, 60 W. 4th St., St. T. Burtchaell CSC, provost, reveals a recipe for oyster stew Paul. Minn. 55102 John R. PancIIi '49, 17549 Kirkshire, Bir­ that will warm the hearts of alumni, faculty and students alike. mingham, Mich. 48009 The NOTRE DAME COOKBOOK is conveniently divided DIRECTORS TO 1974 into sections that include recipes for rally parties, before-the- Joseph G. Bertrand '54, 8114 S. Luella Ave., Chicago, 111. 60617 game brunches and lunches, postgame cocktail parties and Paul J. Doyle '36, 5061 Cedar Creek Dr., buffet dinners. But don't let this fool you. NOTRE DAME Houston, Tex. 77027 Peter F. Fkherty '51. 5033 Castleman St., COOKBOOK recipes will serve you the year around, no mat­ Pituburgh, Pa. 15232 ter what the season. William K. McGo»-an Jr. '57, 108 Pcnnsyl- ^•ania Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. 46204 All profits from sales of the NOTRE DAME COOKBOOK Charles F. Osbom '38, 73I5-51st N.E., Seattle, Wash. 98115 will be used by the Notre Dame Library Association to buy 1971 Notre Dame ALUMNUS, University- of Notre Dame, all rights reserved. Reproduc­ materials for the Rare Book Room. The cookbook can be tion ill whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. ordered for $4.45, including postage and handling, Notre The Notre Dame ALUMNUS is published monthly, except January, Afarch, May. Dame Library Assoc, P.O. Box 45, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. August and November, by the University of Notre Dame. Second-class postage paid at Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. accredited college or university and the E>epartment of Economics, Dennis served as a full-time faculty member M. Byrne, Horace R. Carby-Samuels THCUH AWVI for at least five years. According to and Stanley H. Masters; the Depart­ Dr. Joseph M. Duffy, a professor of Danforth Foundation president Mer- ment of History, Lawrence Bradley, English at ND since 1954, has been rimon Cuninggim, the nominee is Rev. Jay Dolan and Brother Bernard named one of the ten 1971 winners of judged on his capability as . . . "an F. Donohoe CSC; the Department of the Danforth Foundation's E. Harris articulate, passionate teacher who Modem and Classical Languages, Harbison Award for Gifted Teaching. views education as a spiritual affair William J. Hunt, Thomas W. Renaldi Duffy, who will receive a $10,000 ... a universal teacher who cares and Marie-Claire Royer, and the De­ grant with the award, is the second about values, society as a whole and partment of Management, Yu-Chi Notre Dame faculty member in three human beings." Chang, George E. Manners Jr., and years to be so honored. Rev. John S. Matt M. Starcevich. Dunne CSC, a theologian, won the The Department of Communication award in 1969. Arts adds James P. Carroll and Don Duffy attended Columbia Univer­ McNeill; the Department of Finance, sity, Harvard, the University of Chi­ New Facilb Edward J. Farragher and Howard P. cago, where he received his doctorate Notre Dame added 85 new faculty and staff members this fall. Rev. Lanser; the Department of Architec­ in 1954, and did post-doctoral studies James T. Burtchaell CSC, provost, ture, Rein Pirn and Enrico Plati; the at the University of Leeds in England. has announced. In addition, 28 will Memorial Library, Robert D. Nich­ Students who have had Duffy's course, return from leave during the aca­ ols and David Sparks; Military Sci­ Literature and the Imagination, con­ demic year while 113 have announced ence, Lieut. Col. Frank K. Kulik Jr., sider it one of the two or three best plans to leave and 35 will go on leave. and Capt. John R. Tufano; the De­ courses they have taken at ND. Their partment of Psychology, Donald Wal­ New in the Department of Mathe­ opinion of Duffy's teaching ability is ter and Rev. Jerome Rene Wilett, and matics are Theodore J. Barth Jr., exhibited by this evaluation published the Freshman Year of Studies, Daryl Francis X. Connelly, Richard H. Es- in the student-edited Scholastic maga­ Glick and Rev. Thomas E. Seidel cobales Jr., Joseph A. Gallian, Wil­ CSC. zine: "Duffy is a brilliant lecturer who liam L. Goodhue, William C. Hale, demands only the interest of his stu­ Thomas A. Mclntyre, V. Frederick Also new are William E. Biles, dents. . . . This is the study of litera­ Rickey, Malladi Sitaramayya and Da­ aerospace and mechanical engineering; ture at its finest, critical hardnosed vid H. Tracy; in the Law School Richard Emge, Center for Continuing best." ( Program) are John Dela- Education; David J. Fielding, civil The Harbison awards were named fons, Helen Galas, Burton K. Haimes, engineering; Lois Godersky, micro­ in honor of the late E. Harris Harbi­ Patricia Harmer, Leonard H. Leigh, biology; Carl J. Magee, electrical en­ son, professor of history at Princeton Ronald H. Maudsley and Keith Uff. gineering; Kenneth W. Milani, ac­ University and a former trustee of the Femand N. Dutile is joining the cam­ countancy; Philip T. Sciortino, gradu­ Danforth Foundation. Winners of the pus Law School. ate studies in education; Kenneth F. award are chosen annually by panels Thibodeau, general program; Sister The Department of Philosophy adds of educators who make their selections M. Robertia Urban OP, music, and Sheilah Brennan, Brian Cooney, Ken­ from nominations submitted by col­ Amo O. Zozki, physical education. neth Goodpaster, Earl Ludman and leagues, students, past award winners, Peter McCormick; the Department of and college and university presidents. Biology, Reinhart Brust, Robert P. The nominee must be teaching in an Fiorindo, John F. O'Malley, Quentin E. Ross, William Surver Jr., and ULUKEkrk Thomas A. Troeger; the Department The editor of the student-published of Theology, Rev. Robert C. Anto- Notre Dame Lawyer, William J. nelli CSC, Roberta C. Chesnut. Rev. Maledon of Detroit, Mich., has been Donald McNeill CSC, Rev. Leonel selected by U.S. Supreme Court Jus­ Mitchell, Rev. Ronald T. Schmidt tice William J. Brennan to serve as a and John H. Yoder. clerk on his staff during the 1972-73 New in the Department of Sociol­ term. ogy and Anthropology are Edward L. As a clerk Maledon will be involved Fink, Kook Ching Huber, Lincoln in research and preliminary prepara­ C. Johnson, James J. Noell, Tom T. tion of opinions on issues presented Sasaki and Kathleen M. Weigert; the to the high court for decisions. Ap­ Department of Government and In­ pointment to the judicial staff is lim­ ternational Studies, Peri E. Arnold, ited to two law graduates for each Wesley W. Daley, Peter R. Moody justice. Jr., and Christopher Osakwe; the De­ Maledon, a third-year student in partment of English, Maben D. Her­ Notre Dame's Law School, received ring, John J. McDonald, William J. an undergraduate degree in econom­ Dr. Joseph M. Duffy Reeves and Daniel J. Sullivan Jr.; ics from Loyola University, Chicago. Lee states that the field of religious Lee, who received his doctorate education has not matured because it from Columbia Teachers College in New Hlstora Heed has been used as a "messenger boy" 1958, has been at ND since 1962. He Dr. Philip J. Gleason has been named for theology. He feels that theologians served five years as chairman of the chairman of the ND history depart­ have used religious education simply Department of Education and has ment by Rev. James T. Burtchaell as a "methodological railway" to ship written or edited seven other books on CSC, provost. He succeeds Dr. Vin­ theology from teacher to student. He various aspects of Christian education. cent P. DeSantis, who will continue believes that just as religious counsel­ to serve as a professor in the de­ ing became a worthwhile psychological partment. discipline after disjoining itself from The editor of a current book, theology, so also will religious educa­ "Catholicism in America," Gleason is the author of several articles on the tion become a more effective branch AmoiBt Diniciip history of the Church, including of education if it disenfranchises itself Dr. John F. FitzGerald, professor of "Mass and Maypole Revisited: Amer­ from theological affiliations. philosophy at ND, has been appointed ican Catholics and the Middle Ages." Lee's theoretical ideas influence his acting director of the University's A native of Wilm.ington, , direction of the graduate program in Center for the Study of Man in Con­ Gleason received an undergraduate religious education at ND, in which temporary Society by Rev. Theodore degree in education at the University he aims at developing a specialist in M. Hesburgh CSC. The Center for of Dayton and graduate degrees at modifying students' behavior along the Study of Man in Contemporary ND. Before joining the faculty in religious lines by emphasizing the Society is a University institute which 1959 he served as a management as­ structure of the learning situation. Lee coordinates interdisciplinary research sistant for the Air Research and De­ uses a "studio-classroom" equipped in the humanities and social sciences. velopment Command, Baltimore, Md. with three videotape camera-recorder- FitzGerald, who has taught at playback machines to analyze teaching Notre Dame since 1937, succeeds Rev. behaviors in religion classes. About Ernest J. Bartell CSC, who resigned one-third of Lee's curriculum is in Sept. 1 to assume the presidency of pastoral theology, compared with what Stonehill College, North Easton, Belieien end Tbeeleosi he said was an average of 80 to 90 Mass. FitzGerald received his under­ Religious education is not a branch of per cent theological content in other graduate degree from College theology but a form of social science programs. Nontheological courses in­ in 1933 and his doctorate from the which needs "demythologizing," a clude such subjects as the teaching University of Louvain in Belgium in University of Notre Dame professor process and the development of reli­ 1937. He recently served as acting of education argues in his newly gious attitudes. He predicts that by chairman of the Department of Phi­ published book. The book, entitled 1980 most religious education pro­ losophy and was the former head of "The Shape of Religious Instruction," grams will have switched from the the Association of Chairmen of Doc­ is being published by Pflaum/Stand- theological approach to the social toral Programs in Philosophy in ard, Dayton, Ohio, and has met with science approach. American Catholic Universities. a mixed reception from professionals in the field of religious education. Dr. James M. Lee, former chairman of ND's graduate department of edu­ cation, makes a distinction between teaching religion and teaching the­ ology. "Teaching religion means build­ ing the entire class around changing the student's understanding, attitudes and way of life along religious lines. Teaching theology, on the other hand, is simply to teach the basic theologi­ cal facts and concepts which under­ lie an individual's faith in a particular religious denomination," he said in an interview. Since, according to Lee, learning religion is not basically different from learning something like citizenship, he wants religious education "demythol- ogized," removed from the supersti­ HISTORIC MEETING —Robert A. Erkins, president of the Notre Dame Alumni Associa­ tious or overly supernatural trapping tion Board of Directors, and Karen Galvin, president of the St. Mary's College Alumnae and put into a framework of learned Board, share the symbolic gavel before the first session of the two boards on the Notre intellectual, attitudinal-lifestyle be­ Dame campus in October. The two associations are working out arrangements for closer havior. cooperation as the result of the unification of St. Mary's and Notre Dame. ception of alumni as authoritarian ND go unnoticed. The majority of Liikiii at AlmiK figures has arisen and has been pro­ alumni have gone along with the mulgated each year in the campus planned merger of SMC and ND. by Jim Fanto '73 student media. Above all, students fail to realize that A student's view of alumni who many of their friends who have gradu­ It seems most appropriate for me to come on campus does nothing to ated are alumni as well as a good take advantage of this column to cite dispel the alumni stereotype. When I number of faculty and administrators. one student view which many of you speak of alumni on campus, I allude These alumni the students know per­ take issue with—that of a student's to the football season that brings many sonally. conception of alumni. Granted, I can­ of them to the home games. Actually, A lack of communication exists be­ not speak knowledgeably for all stu­ a student only sees the alumni—^he tween students and alunmi that per­ dents, yet I can relate to you the com­ rarely meets or speaks with them. He petuates the one-sided, and at times, mon caricature of alumni which I watches them wander about campus harmful conception of alumni. Since have heard described by • students. reminiscing around old haunts, and our four years at ND are times of Whether a misconception, opinion, or he may open his door to the knock of wonder, reflection, and occasions for truth—depending on how one regards an alumnus who wants to tour his "old founding lasting friendships, many it—this stereotype regularly emerges room." students feel an attachment to the in student conversation. The student conception of alumni school and a desire to aid the Uni­ The "typical" alumnus is a grey- is a gross caricature for the most part. versity after their graduation. Many haired man who attended ND when Staunch Catholic or conservative alumni fulfill this desire. Their actions attendance at morning Mass was man­ alumni exist, rabid football-enthusiast should be explained to the students datory for all students. This hypotheti­ alumni exist—but this "alumni con­ by more meetings on and off the cal alumnus is conservative and natu­ ception" obscures the total picture of campus, between students and alumni. rally, opposed to any changes within graduates. Individual alumni who help After all, we should let our common the University. He frequently remi­ struggling students through school, and continuing experience at ND, nisces about his undergraduate days who search for minority students, and rather than our age differences, be the at du Lac, poking fun at the man­ who perform countless other tasks for basis of our relationships. nerisms of contemporary students. True, he donates money to the Uni­ versity, but not to support the intel­ lectual and social changes at ND. He wants only a good seat for all home football games. TRY IT, YOU'LL LIKE IT! This student conception of alumni arises from the few contacts an aver­ age student has with alumni. Almost Eight days in Ireland. It's the latest European excursion pack­ all students meet alumni before they age offered by the Notre Dame Alumni Association In co­ enter ND. An alumnus acquaintance operation with Alumni Holidays, Inc. The escapade will take of a student, perhaps a family friend or a high school counselor, often was place April 22-30, 1972, with Marion and Jim Armstrong your the one who first interested him in hosts. ND. All prospective freshmen are en­ couraged to come to a local ND alumni club meeting specifically ori­ Discover the world of balladeers, tail tales, rich food, ented at presenting ND to the new ancient pubs and storybook scenery. There are castles, manor students. It is sad, but true, that these pre- houses and quaint villages to see and photograph. You will see freshman year meetings constitute sparkling lakes, brooding forests, and green velvet country­ perhaps the only personal contact side. You will sample Irish coffee, Guiness stout, fruitcake, students will have with alumni for Irish hams, bacon and soda bread. his entire four years at ND. Further­ more, the student meets only a few alumni club members who present a limited vision of campus life. They As Jim says: "For many alumni, they will walk over the allude mostly to the fall football graves of the various kings of Ireland who were their fore­ schedule and their own experiences at bears. For the rest, the philosophy which shaped the Fighting ND, avoiding contemporary student life and academic programs. Irish from the melting pot spirit of Notre Dame will find you Because of this, the student does just as welcome and at home." Package price: $329 per person not come away from the meetings with plus 10 per cent taxes, services. From New York. For more a complete knowledge of what alumni information write: Alumni Association, University of Notre do for the University. Thus, rumor adds to the student's conception of Dame, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. alumni. In the past, alumni have sup­ ported many administrative decisions, such as parietals, that are unpopular among students. Consequently, a con­ N THE BOCKS? (continued from cover)

unified. Some of us with little more would or could afford whatever lease dents and some of their faculty are up to do in off hours had even fiddled arrangements the sisters might require. in arms over what many consider to with the dilemma posed by "While her A third nagging concern which be the College's breach of coedu­ loyal sons go marching " surfaced early was the question of cational promise. Class boycotts have The inevitable question of course, SMC security . . . the effect merger been suggested. "Demands" include a is "what went wrong?" And, offi­ would have on the College's 125-year look at the College's books, public cials on both sides are playing it close heritage ... and importantly the role release of the minutes of Trustees' to the vest. So much so, in fact, that and influence members of the Col­ meetings, reopening of the negotia­ time may not even tell what, or who, lege would have in the emerging Uni­ tions, etc. It remains to be seen how threw the monkey wrench into the versity. Did unification really mean strong current resolve will be. Student works. But, that's not unusual. I'm institutional conjunction ... or did revolts have a habit of flickering out still trying to find out what made Ara it signify total absorption of SMC when time and/or the weather inter­ walk out of the Morris Inn in 1963. by ND? vene. The official word is that "financial These are doubtless anguished if not One wonders though if SMC stu­ and administrative problems" inter­ downright embarrassing days for ad­ dents aren't being just a bit unfair to vened, which covers a multitude of ministrators and Trustees on both the college. While it is doubtless that sins. I don't want to throw stones or sides of the Dixie. Proponents of the deepening relations with Notre Dame speculate unduly here, but it is known "I told you so" school will point out appealed to many applicants in recent that there were several major concerns that as a first order of business the years (applications as of Dec. 2 for throughout the stages of negotation. schools should have determined the the 1972 school year were up 23% Primary among them was whether or financial possibilities, before signing for males and 50% for females), not SMC could extricate itself suf­ agreements and sending the troops neither the College nor the University ficiently from the total community of onward and upward. And, history promised current students a fully co­ Holy Cross Sisters and their apos­ may support that thesis. But, one educational program prior to their tolic enterprises including hospitals, imagines, it must have been felt by enrollment. Possible exceptions are schools, etc., in order to negotiate those involved that two institutions the handful of freshmen who may relatively independently. The total whose physical separation amounts to have applied and been accepted after group shares some common purchas­ four lanes of asphalt, but which other­ the unification announcement last ing, personnel and financial arrange­ wise boast a common founder (whose spring. But, the fact that the an­ ments. Diminution of one would affect founding budget was $437.00), in­ nouncement was made at all (though the whole. While ND is owned by a tertwined histories, common religious couched in terms indicating financial Board of Trustees, predominantly lay, heritage, and thousands of graduates arrangements were pending and would and thereby an autonomous entity, who have forged their own unifica­ govern ultimate decision) caused the SMC is ovraed by the Sisters of the tions, . . . that somehow neither students to presume coeducation was Holy Cross, each of whom is a "stock­ ideologies nor finances nor identity just around the comer. The current holder" in the College. These different questions could stand in the way of impasse in the student mind, there­ negotiating postures were bound to the union. But, obviously something fore, represents just another instance create highly complex problems. has. Perhaps many things. We hope wherein the establishment says one Additionally, the Motherhouse of to shed sufficient light on the matter thing and does another. the CSC Sisters is located at Saint in the next issue of our magazine. ND students seem to be sitting this Mary's. Outright sale of the College's For the moment, the facts have not one out, since they're getting what facilities therefore, was unlikely, since all been revealed. they had campaigned for anyway. part of them are used for non-Col­ One can't help but feel a haunting While they empathize with their lege purposes. Lease arrangements sadness that at a time in history when feminine counterparts, most are con­ would have to be flexible enough to private institutions of higher educa­ tent to sit back and as usual tolerate accommodate a growing and diverse tion are going out of business with the rhetorical bombast of the student University, while sensitive to the alarming frequency . . . when there is press which predicts SMC's future as needs and interest of a group of aging unprecedented division within every a "second-rate finishing schools for and retired nuns, as well as the unit of society, the family, the state, morons." housing and education of those taking the Church, and yes, the University Obviously emotions are high, and their places. . . . Notre Dame and Saint Mary's disappointment general. The whole A predominant question, of course, aren't seeking the solution together thing was a valiant effort carried out was whether or not ND, experiencing . . . they're part of the problem. in the best of faith, but perhaps with its share of the financial pressures The disappointment is more than the agenda a bit askew. The episode facing all private higher education. personal. At this writing SMC stu­ is not without some benefit. Unifica- tion at some yet unnamed date may tuition, library services and use of still be possible. Previous barriers to athletic facilities. The two schools StlMNIt communication and other relation­ also have agreed that Saint Mary's The University of Notre Dame and ships between the two schools have women who major in the Colleges of Saint Mary's College have decided, lifted on a number of levels. The stu­ Business Administration or Engineer­ after a series of high-level meetings, dent bodies, their organizations and ing may receive Notre Dame degrees that it is not possible to accomplish activities, are virtually integrated now. since Saint Mary's does not offer complete unification at this time. For Academic cooperation is at the highest courses in these fields. the present, we are unable to solve level ever and should continue. Notre The advances in collaboration financial and administrative problems. Dame will be a coeducational insti­ made since the intent to unify was Progress has been made toward unifi­ tution next fall. And the Alumni/ announced last May will be examined cation since the intent of the two Alumnae Associations, their Clubs individually to see if they can be institutions was announced last May, and programs have already entered a beneficial even under the revised much of it due to the substantial work new era of cooperation and inter­ separate-institution framework. "The of the four inter-institutional com­ action. advisability of merging certain aca­ mittees. It is planned that many of The courtship-marriage rhetoric has demic departments and major pro­ these newly formed bridges between been much overdone but, as the old grams will be studied further by the the two institutions, academic and saying goes, perhaps it's better to have faculty and administrative personnel otherwise, will be preserved and loved and lost, than never to have involved," the joint statement noted. strengthened. Students from each in­ loved at all. On the administrative side, the major stitution will continue to have access unifications occurred in public infor­ to the other institution in many ways. mation, the registrar's office, and ad­ While Notre Dame and Saint I MtriEP missions; each will have to be studied Mary's remain two distinct institu­ The proposed merger between the to determine if a unified operation is tions, the students of each will be free University and Saint Mary's College to be retained. to pursue their education together on was suspended indefinitely Nov. 30 Officials of both schools declined either campus, with continued co­ In a joint statement. Mother M. to elaborate on the "financial and ad­ operation in social, cultural and Olivette Whalen, CSC, chairman of ministrative problems" which collaps­ spiritual areas as well. The advisability Saint Mary's Trustees, and Edmund ed unification negotiations, except to of merging certain academic depart­ A. Stephan, head of ND's Board, an­ say that discussions had terminated ments and major programs will be nounced that it was not possible for amicably. "The two institutions still studied further by the faculty and ad­ the two schools "to accomplish com­ recognize unification as a goal to be ministrative personnel involved. plete unification at this time" because desired and hopefully to be achieved Notre Dame announces that it will of an inability to solve "financial and in the future," the joint statement initiate internal coeducation with the administrative problems." said. direct admission of women as fresh­ At the same time coeducation at Saint Mary's announced that a men and upper-division transfers in NDwas assured with the announce­ special meeting of its trustees would the fall of 1972. Notre Dame is like­ ment that women would be admitted take up the question of its future as wise amenable to the granting of its directly to the undergraduate program a Catholic women's college, concen­ degrees to qualified Saint Mary's stu­ of the University for the first time in trating on its liberal-arts orientation, dents, a matter for further discussion history next fall. Father Hesburgh expanded to include health-related with Saint Mary's officials. said an estimated 250 women, roughly fields "and other innovative programs Saint Mary's announces that it will divided between freshmen and upper- significant to contemporary society." study its goals and objectives for the division transfer students, would be While disappointment was wide­ future, concentrating on its liberal- accepted for the 1972-73 school year. spread following the announcement, arts orientation, expanded to include Thus, about 1,000 women would be it was most evident among Saint health-related fields and other innova­ full-fledged Notre Dame students by Mary's students, who geared up tive programs significant to contem­ the 1976-77 school year. campaigns to challenge the decision porary society. New directions will be The student exchange program within hours after it was announced. determined at a special meeting of the with Saint Mary's, which is six years "There are no heroes or villains," Saint Mary's Trustees. old this year and involves hundreds Father Hesburgh told a group of stu­ The two institutions still recognize of students who take courses on each dents. "We all tried very hard to get unification as a jgoal to be desired and campus, will be retained, although for everything together. But it didn't hopefully to be achieved in the future. the first time there will be a financial work. We're confident, though, it will —^EDMUND A. STEPHAN AND MOTHER reckoning between the two schools for all work out in time." M. OLIVETTE WHALEN, CSC.

MMiP ^fii^'i:^ a If Notre Dame strives to recruit more minority students. by Jim Fanto '73 and Jim Palenchar '72 "In no small way, the University is Aid Program (RAP), and for Chi­ m responsible to a context much larger canos, MECHA, a national organiza­ than the boundaries of Notre Dame, tion of Mexican-American students. ^m Indiana." Since 1968, Notre Dame Their views on recruitment reflect the has been actively seeking the enroll­ cold necessity of the University's obli­ mmm ment of minority ethnic groups at the gations. Armando Alonzo, head of University. This enrollment has stead­ Notre Dame's MECHA, sees the edu­ ily increased to the point where almost cation of Chicano students as a neces­ four per cent of the 6,300 under­ sity for the economic survival of the graduates are either black, Chicano Chicano communities throughout or American Indian. America. The barrios or Chicano B*;*-?; Numbers are, however, for the most neighborhoods are on the fringe of yt. part abstractions of our desires (or self-development. For a people, who, S&* fears). Numbers are deceiving. Al­ in economic terms, are .second only to •"g!! though a degree of success can be in­ the American Indians in poverty, the terpreted through these numbers, ad­ need for educated and trained people missions counselors and student rep­ is the simple reason for recruitment. resentatives sense room for improve­ According to Carl Ellison, head of ment. RAP, an ethnically diverse community The University and. in particular, is needed, yet black recruitment is the Office of Admissions, is guided by aimed primarily toward the education two obligations in the area of minority of a class of blacks that may never recruitment. In regard to the minority fit into the white world. Education is students themselves, the University is a call for solidarity among all blacks. impelled by a social obligation — a response to the times and the society "I don't like the word, recruitment, in which it functions. These students because it connotes some sort of are finally getting the educational op­ athletic huckstering or talking one into portunities that everj'one deserves. In going to Notre Dame. I go out on the no small way, the University is re­ road and share my experiences here sponsible to a context much larger with the students." One cannot say than the boundaries of Notre Dame, that the search for minority students, Ind. by the Admissions Office or by the stu­ The second obligation follows from dent groups, has been lax. The Ad­ the first. The society within the bound­ missions Office itself has established aries must also reflect the relevance of a number of contacts with testing the community to its times and agencies which learn of academically society. This obligation encompasses qualified blacks, Chicanos, or Indians the University's relation to all its stu­ through their extensive research activi­ dents. As expressed in the Admissions ties. Also, both the Admissions Office Office Report on Minority Enrollment, and MECHA send out letters to high dated September, 1970, the University school counselors asking for the names is attempting to enrich "the diversity of promising minority students. Con­ of the student body." According to tacts with these men, as well as junior Daniel Saracino, assistant director of college counselors and administrators, admissions, the University is obliged are invaluable, enabling the University to educate each and every student in to have firsthand, personal informa­ a "total way," providing them with an tion on prospective students. environment that demonstrates the Yet often, information on minority multifarious nature of the world. The high school students comes not from effect on the student body is apparent; the established channels or testing all social and ethnic backgrounds have facilities, but from members of the a chance to experience all the others. University community. Minority stu­ Students themselves are deeply in­ dents attending the University fre­ volved in fulfilling the obligations of quently suggest names of prospective the community. Notre Dame has two students whom they know personally very active student recruitment orga­ from their own home communities. nizations: For blacks, the Recruitment Individual faculty members, such as Dr. Julian Samora of the Sociology past, however, a Chicano student has student, proper perspective might in­ department, or faculty groups inter­ worked as a student assistant in the clude the placing of more particular ested in particular minorities seek out offices and on recruitment trips. The importance on his classroom perform­ applicants. Administrators, other than MECHA members, who themselves ance than on standardized tests. Admissions Office personnel, also come from the barrios, realize that The prospective minority student suggest students that the University they must speak to a very poor, under- must have the basic academic qualifi­ should be interested in. educated community. They realize, cations to show that he can perform Alumni, through local ND club too, the significance of Notre Dame to well at Notre Dame, for no official schools committees or through indi­ the Chicanos, who are 90 per cent remedial or "catch-up" program exists vidual efforts, have also been instru­ Catholic and look with reverence on at Notre Dame. TTiere is an English mental in channeling information on a school which offers a high-quality course reserved for international stu­ minority students to the University, education and, in their thought, a dents in their freshman year, but its according to Saracino. "Our gradu­ Christian community. Armando and application to American minority stu­ ates have been of great service in this his group are able to speak to the dents is negligible. More importantly, area," he states. "And in many in­ students and their families in their the Admissions Office looks at the stu­ stances, they have provided financial own language and perhaps give to dent's "motivational potential"—his assistance to these students." them a view of Notre Dame that competitive desire which would make A case in point is the ND Club of could never be communicated by an up for any deficiencies in formal edu­ Mississippi in Jackson. Recently a English-speaking recruiter. cation. "These students have a lot club member designed a ND Alumni According to Carl Ellison, the mem­ going against them in high school," Association decal. It is now being bers of RAP can communicate the says Saracino, "so they must have produced and sold through the Missis­ situation for blacks far better than strong attitudes and characters," Judg­ sippi Club and other ND clubs. Pro­ any white recruiter. "A white man's ing from the admissions memo on this ceeds will go to a scholarship fund experiences may be interesting, but year's freshman class, Notre Dame for students from low-income families they tell the black very little in terms has succeeded in attracting the kinds who want to attend Notre Dame. of the minority student's life at Notre of students who can realize their The foremost form of seeking mi­ Dame." Ellison tells them honestly academic potential. The academic and nority students is by "bringing Notre that the school is changing yet by the extracurricular records, except for the Dame to them" through visits to inner- same token he describes the Univer­ SAT, for minority freshmen are better city, barrio, or reservation schools by sity's problem in relating to its black than the entire freshman class. RAP, MECHA, and the Admissions students. RAP, he says, does not speak Statistics for the 77 minority stu­ Office. These trips, funded by the Uni­ of Notre Dame's academic excellence, dents entering as freshmen show that versity, give high school students a for most black students have only a 14 per cent graduated either first or chance to speak with either a Chicano vague notion of higher education. second in their high school classes. or black student and Saracino. The "You can't go to the comer," says And 53 per cent ranked in the top 10 bulk of the traveling is done by an Carl, "and start running down Des­ per cent of their classes. A little admissions counselor, because of cartes or Plato to a brother and more than 48 per cent of all entering limited time of students, trips are expect him to respond." freshmen graduated in the top 10 usually restricted to a 100-mile radius per cent. of the campus. "For the blacks, Ciiicanos, Indians, And yet the University's admission "I don't like the word, 'recruit­ and Anglos things are looked at in the standards for minority students or in ment,' " says Saracino, "because it same way essentially, but . . . every­ particular, their trumpeting of these connotes some sort of athletic huck­ thing is looked at, everything is put standards and the high-quality stu­ stering or talking one into going to in its proper perspective." Once the dents they bring, seem to be addressed Notre Dame. I go out on the road applications are submitted, however, only to those that worry about the and share my experiences here with the decision of accepting students lies prestige of Notre Dame. The Univer­ the kids." Besides the special effort to in the hands of admissions personnel. sity states that the minority students learn of academically qualified minor­ It is here that the fear of Notre who do enroll here possess high aca­ ity students and the waiver of ap­ Dame's alumni can become manifest demic and motivational qualities, and plication fees for needy individuals, —that the University is selecting stu­ they are correct. But, as Carl Ellison there is ultimately no difference in the dents, who may not be up to past points out, the Admissions Office is Admissions Office "recruitment" for standards, only because of their ethnic primarily concerned with students who minority students than for white stu­ background. Some alumni may see the have adjusted to white educational and dents. The prospective students are recruitment as being prejudicial social standards, who demonstrate ac­ invited to visit the campus, they are against white applicants. ademic excellence and high "motiva­ made aware of application procedures, The admissions policy with regard tion." Ellison fears that the University details of financial aid, and programs to minority applicants is similar to its is enrolling what he terms the "black which might be most suitable to their recruitment policy. While there is a bourgeois," avoiding the "brothers on ethnic background (e.g., Urban flexible attitude towards blacks, Chi­ the street" who have not and will not Studies). canos, and Indians, the criterion for adjust to the motivational standards of For Armando Alonzo, the MECHA final judgment is the same one used a white society. group offers prospective Chicano stu­ for all students. "For the blacks, Chi­ dents an understanding of the Chicano canos, Indians, and Anglos things are ". . . when the funds run out there community and its language. At looked at in the same way essentially," is nothing more we can do." Despite present there is no Spanish-speaking states Saracino. "But. . . everything is the debates over recruitment and se­ counselor in the Admissions Office or looked at, everything is put in its lection methods, Notre Dame's mi­ in the Freshman Year Office. In the proper perspective." For the minority nority recruitment is, in the end.

10 conceived in terms of numbers—the The people who have, in the past, sup­ munity at the University and among amount of financial aid. The monetary ported the traditional concept of the the ones who leave it, as well as to­ figures of financial aid make the philo­ Notre Dame student body are to be wards a full and human education sophical considerations significant only looked towards for a response. Alumni expressed by Rev. Theodore Hesburgh, on paper. Financial aid is the basic and friends of the University have the CSC, President of the University: and limiting element of recruitment. potential to invest in the cultural "Our education should nurture in For the 1971-72 academic year, future of the University; the response them this hunger for equality, this MECHA got 100 Chicanos to apply, to the SUMMA campaign demonstrat­ respect for the human dignity of every 67 of those were accepted, 19 of these ed this. Thus, we of Notre Dame con­ human being, whatever his or her were offered financial aid, and just tinue working towards a total com­ race or color." these 19 are now freshmen. The Uni­ versity sees its recruitment as a "re­ moval of the greatest wall which sep­ arates minority students from Notre Dame," and that wall is money. Most of the minority applicants are poor, and, in Alonzo's words, "What is the use of being accepted when you can't even provide one-third of University expenses?" Financial aid for minority students is broken into three categories, the last of which is not available to white students. Much financial aid comes directly from the government in the form of EOG grants. National De­ fense Loans, and Work-Study Pro­ grams, Scholarship money from the University, ROTC, state or private associations accounts for the second large percentage. Last, special Uni­ versity grants funded by the Cotton Bowl games and private contributions are used specifically for black, Chi- cano, or Indian students. All but a few minority students receive one of these types of aid, or a "package" of all three. "Notre Dame's commitment is a commitment of funds," says Saracino, "and when the funds run out there is nothing more we can do." If the Uni­ versity is ultimately concerned with minority recruitment and its social and educational obligations are reduced to the availability of funds, then its mi­ nority recruitment program is on shaky ground. The special University grants are the concrete evidence of its commitments, but the source of these grants is unstable. Presently, the Cot­ ton Bowl money is the predominant source of the University minority grants, but this source is a fixed amount—it will run out. Is, then, the availability of funds for minority stu­ dents dependent upon football ratings and postseason bowls? Since the quota for enrollment is based solely on fund availability, an endowed fund would be more stable. Without adequate funds RAP and MECHA cannot do what is necessary to bring students that widen the cul­ tural scope of Notre Dame. Without adequate funds these students can never become part of Notre Dame. imm\^mmf^rmm(i\mrmmmri\^mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm^^^^

12 Neoprene, the first useful synthetic ment. One reporter for Columbia rubber, has come a long way since magazine suggested that the newsmen Rev. Julius Arthur Nieuwland CSC were expecting to find a "great man," wore a raincoat made of his brain­ SOLDIER surrounded by the trappings and as­ child that in his words "smelled like sistants common to such. But instead, heck." "They met a very plain, a very quiet, Since the product was developed by and a little bit tired middle-aged man," Fr. Nieuwland and E. I. DuPont Co. he said. "To see him walking about scientists 40 years ago this month, OF the campus one would scarcely take more than seven billion pounds has him for a distinguished scientist. His been manufactured. That's enough for cassock is stained with chemicals. He a rubber band around the entire orbit smokes a short, black pipe and, if he of the earth about the sun. SCIENCE happened to have been working most As durable as natural rubber, neo­ of the night in his laboratory, a stub­ By Jean Horiszny ble of beard will adorn his cheek." prene is also resilient, good-weather­ It's been 40 years since Rev. ing, flame resistant and resistant to Julius A. Nieuwland CSC pi­ If the journalists were surprised at ozone, oil, air and many chemicals, the unpretentious life Father Nieuw­ according to DuPont. It is used as an oneered the development of syn­ land lived, some scientists were ap­ architectural glaze, a jacketing for thetic rubber. But there was palled. An eastern researcher cables, an expansion joint for bridges, nothing artificial about Nieuw­ charged that "gross "neglect of the safety cushions, lab stoppers and, of land the man. God-given genius of Rev. Julius course, tires. Some newspapers cred­ formed a rubbery substance too plas­ Nieuwland, C.S.C, has wasted a ma­ ited neoprene with helping the U.S. tic for practical use. jor portion of his talents." He cited weather Japan's capture of Asian Chemists at the DuPont Company inadequate laboratory facilities and rubber plantations during World heard of Nieuwland's success with the the lack of trained assistants to sup­ War II. oil in 1925, and joined him in his port his claim. This first of many synthetic rubbers search for the mysterious gas—^finally However, Father Nieuwland be­ was developed through the interaction identified as monovinyl acetylene. The lieved that it wasn't the equipment, between a curious, absent-minded sci­ same group actually developed "syn­ but what you did with it, that count­ entist carefully investigating the re­ thetic rubber" from Nieuwland's basic ed. And as for assistants — many actions of acetylene, and industrial discovery by reacting the gas with have since entered original research chemists quick to see the practical common hydrochloric acid. fields of their own in chemistry, bi­ possibilities of his research. As a When Father Nieuwland and the ology and the germfree life program graduate student at Catholic Univer­ DuPont chemists announced the new that eventually became Lobund Lab­ sity of America, Nieuwland noticed product at the ACS meeting in Akron,' oratory at Notre Dame. Perhaps his the strange odor of an elusive gas the mild chemist who wanted neither most famous assistant never took up when acetylene was passed through fame nor fortune suddenly received research, but Father Nieuwland main­ a solution of copper and salts. Ex­ both. Fortune was easily disposed of tained that Knute Rockne could have perimenting with different salts over — Notre Dame received all royalties been a fine chemist if he had not gone the next 14 years at Notre Dame, he from the discovery. Fame was more into other work. finally isolated an oil which appeared tricky. While the general public came to in addition to the gas. When treated Scores of journalists descended on admire the priest-scientist for his ex­ with vulcanizing agents this oil the campus following the armounce- periments ending in neoprene, his col-

13 leagues conferred the highest medals dren of friends, sketching the action of the scientific community on him for as he unraveled the plot. He loved a lifetime's work in both chemistry circuses, and was always accompanied and botany. The Nichols Medal of by several children when he jour­ the American Chemical Society hon­ neyed to see the elephants and high- ored him as a "soldier of science" for wire acts. braving considerable danger to dis­ He played the guitar well, spoke cover basic scientific truths. Many eight languages, studied subjects from products of acetylene reactions are Egyptology to "The Lives of the Wghly unstable and explode without Saints," and devoured detective sto­ warning, while others are extremely ries in great numbers. He could re­ toxic. Father Nieuwland once spent member the details of every scientific several days in the hospital after in­ experiment he ever performed, but advertently discovering the poisonous often forgot what time his train was gas later developed into "Lewisite" leaving. He knew both the Latin and intended for use in World War I. common names of the trees and plants He received two other important mer "botanizing" trips along the In­ all along the dunes, but had to be re­ medals for his chemical research, and diana dunes and the New Jersey minded to change his stained cassock finally won the Mendel Medal from swamps, and kept a sharp eye out and fraying sweater for an important Villanova College in 1936 in recogni­ for plants during his travels. One meeting. His contribution to syn­ tion of his contributions to botany. ex-graduate -student tells of driving thetic rubber ushered in a new age Actually, Father Nieuwland began the famous scientist to a chemistry of chemical technology, but he per­ his teaching career at Notre Dame in meeting at over 70 an hour, sistently refused to use the telephone, 1904 as a professor of botany, and only to be forced to stop so Father describing it as "an invention of the founded the respected journal The Nieuwland could examine some plants devil." American Midland Naturalist, before along the road. At Notre Dame, the priest-chem­ moving to the chemistry department. Father Nieuwland died suddenly in ist's name lives in the Nieuwland He collected thousands of plant speci­ 1936, while visiting his old labora­ Science Hall, the Nieuwland Lecture mens for the Nieuwland Herbarium, tories at the Catholic University of Series in Chemistry and the Nieuw­ now a major collection in the depart­ America. The hundreds of speeches land Herbarium in biology. Funds ment of biology, and was instrumen­ and articles that marked his death from the patents on neoprene helped tal in bringing the country's leading described him not only as an out­ the chemistry department develop one botanist, Edward Lee Greene, to No­ standing botanist and chemist, but as of the best chemical libraries in the tre Dame. For the first few years at an endearing human being and a country. Many scholars in that de­ Notre Dame, Nieuwland supported 'conscientious priest. partment credit the groundwork laid his "hobby" of chemistry by prepar­ A native of Hansbeke, Belgium, by Father Nieuwland with establish­ ing and selling botanical slides. Father Nieuwland spent most of his ing Notre Dame's chemistry depart­ When chemistry became his "work," Saturdays hearing confessions in ment as the only doctoral program at botany took over as his recreation, Flemish at the Belgian churches in a Catholic university to win a recent A campus magazine received an un­ South Bend and Mishawaka. The "strong," or highest, rating in the expected treatise on botany when chairman of his chemistry department American Council on Education's they asked him to write an article remembered him as a man who loved ranking of the nation's graduate pro­ about his hobbies. He relished sum­ to tell "illustrated" stories to the chil­ grams.

14 tion, either big or small, is a much chosen by members of the ND needed source of revenue. Alumni Board at its meeting on Cam­ pus in late October. by Robert A. Erkins, President, The Friday afternoon meetings were ND Alumni Board combined meetings with the St. Mary's The new president, a member of Alumnae Board. We discussed the the Alumni Board since 1970, will The Alumni Board of Notre Dame effects of unification on the alumni begin his one-year term Jan. 1. He convened for its two-day fall meeting associations. Your ND Board ap­ succeeds Robert A. Erkins '47. Oct. 21, with both executive com­ pointed Joe O'Neil of St. Paul as Dr. Lungren is chief of staff at mittee and nominating committee Chairman, Joe Bertrand of Chicago, Memorial Hospital, Long Beach. With sessions. The nominating committee Paul Doyle of Houston, and Bill Mc- specialties in cardiology and internal selected an excellent slate of candi­ Gowan Jr. of Indianapolis to a joint medicine, he is a consulting physician dates to be presented for the election committee to work with the St. Mary's to U.S. President Richard M. Nixon. this fall. Not only is the caliber of Alumnae Board members on the pos­ The doctor and his wife, Lorain, each candidate extremely high, but sibilities and problems of unification. have seven children. Two are Notre those nominated have been so selected Friday evening, the St. Mary's College Dame graduates — John Jr. '66 and that they will give the full Alumni Alumnae Board hosted the Notre Dan '68. A daughter, Christine, is a Board an excellent class year and pro­ Dame Alumni Board, with their re­ 1970 graduate of St. Mary's College. fessional balance, as well as fine rep­ spective husbands and wives at a A native of Sioux City, la.. Dr. resentation of the various colleges at dinner at St. Mary's. Lungren has lived in since the University. Please cast your ballots At the Saturday morning session, his graduation from the University of by December 30. the Alumni Board discussed the idea Pennsylvania School of Medicine in The board heard a discussion on of combining Insight: Notre Dame 1942. After completing his intern­ admissions by John Goldrick, director and the Notre Dame ALUMNUS into ship at the Los Angeles County Gen­ of admissions, and his staff. Board one magazine. This we hope to ac­ eral Hospital, he served in Europe members discussed with the admis­ complish with the first issue appearing during World War U as a battalion sions personnel the problems and in February 1972. (see p. 51) surgeon in the U.S. infantry. After policies of selecting students to attend The next Alumni Board meeting the war he returned to California to ND and SMC. The admissions offices will be January 27-29, 1972. At this begin a private medical practice. Sev­ of both schools are unified. time we will discuss matters that you eral years later this practice was in­ Also the board reviewed with Frank feel are important to the University terrupted when he returned to school G. Kelly, ND Development Director, and to the alumni. Please write me as a postgraduate fellow of the Na­ and his staff, the Pilot City Program your views on any matters that you tional Heart Institute at the U. of launched in a revitalized alumni fund want us to discuss. Southern California School of Medi­ campaign. While the University is cine. honoring its pledge not to engage in Dr. Lungren is a diplomate of the any special capital funds solicitations American Board of Internal Medicine, in the near future, the University does NEW Aliiii PrtsHnt a fellow of both the American Col­ rely upon gifts from friends and Dr. John C. Lungren '38, a physician lege of Physicians and the American alumni to underwrite at least 11 % of from San Diego, Calif., has been College of Cardiology and since 1955 the operating budget requirements for elected 60th president of the Notre has taught on the staff of the UCLA each year. It is necessary that the ND Dame Alumni Association. He was School of Medicine. Annual Fund generate around $6.5 million per year, with at least $3 million of that amount in alumni sup­ ORDER YOUR OFFICIAL NOTRE DAME ALUMNI DECAL port. The Pilot City Program is being conducted to find the best methods of gaining financial support from those NAME alumni who have not recently con­ tributed to ND. This test is being run ADDRESS in Boston, Detroit, Chicago, Dallas, Memphis, Peoria, , Los CITY STATE TT Angeles, and St. Louis. It is being very well received, and the returns are Enclosed is $ for decal(s). good. One letter, that was sent to me Enclose $1.00 for each decal and mall to: in October, summed up the need very well. It said in part, "After working NOTRE DAME CLUB OF MISSISSIPPI while studying as an undergraduate and as a professional student, after 733 North State Street receiving multiple education loans, Jackson, Mississippi 39201 after spending three years in the Far East and seeing poverty on a first­ As noted in the January-February issue of the Notre Dame hand basis, I agree that supporting ALUMNUS, this is the official alumni decal as approved by the our colleges and universities is a alumni board. It is available exclusively from either the Missis­ worthwhile imdertaking." Notre sippi Club or your local organization. Buy several and help an Dame is no different than any other underprivileged Mississippian obtain a quality education at privately supported school. The finan­ Notre Dame. cial need is great and your contribu­

15 CliKllmis For the last 10 years, the Notre Dame Class class agents have been more or less secret (or silent) agents. That's be­ cause the University has been carrying on its great fund programs—Chal­ lenge I, Challenge II and SUMMA. Now the decade of capital gift campaigns is drawing to a conclusion. And the emphasis is shifting back to the Notre Dame Annual Fund. Part of those alumni who have helped make the Fund a success in the past have been the class agents. We thought you'd like to know what they look like—as you remember them. So we got out.the old yearbooks and copied graduation pictures. For those of you who graduated during WWII, we're sorry but no Dome was published then. Do you remember your class agent? Check your class column.

Dr., Apt. 207, Pompano Beach, Fla. 33062; '17. Pleased to report that Danny states he 50-YEAR CLUB Nov. 22, FRANCIS A. ANDREWS '18L, is feeling OK. Sounded to me in good 424 Missouri St., Fairfield, Calif. 94533; spirits. (Editor's Note: BERNARD VOLL Why not send a birthday greeting card on: Nov. 23, WILLIAM J. ANDRES '18, 410 '17 reported that Dan has resigned as '17 Nov. 3 to JOHN F. BOYLE '15, Box 67, Dorchester Rd., Rochester, N.Y. 14610; secretary due to health.) Coalgate, Okla. 74538; Nov. 4, CLARENCE Dec. 1, CHARLES W. BACHMAN '17L, CARLETON D. BEH '17 is aU set, in J. DERRIK '14, 2021 Kenilworth Ave., Los 11 Sunset Lane, Pompano Beach, Fla. 33062; same box for this season's football games. Angeles, Calif. 90039; JAMES P. LOGAN Dec. 2, THOMAS H. O'CONNOR '16, 428 Starting off with Northwestern game. Heard '18, 2951 S. Fillmore Way, Denver, Colo. Magee Ave., Rochester, N.Y. 14613; Dec. from 50-Year Club freshman, ALFRED R. 80210; Nov. 8, PAUL J. FOGARTY '17, 7, ROBERT E HUBER '19, 405 W. SL, ABRUMS '21, Hon. NORMAN C. BARRY 400 Seasage Dr., Delray Beach, Fla. 33444; Dowagiac, Mich. 49047; Dec. 9, Dr. L. '21L, Class Secretary RAYMOND J. Nov. 9, THEODORE C. RADEMAKER '19, VINCENT GORRILLA '21, 3262 Falkland (Schub) SCHUBMEHL '21. All appreciated 154 W. 6th St., Peru, lnd..46970; Nov. 10, Circle, Huntington Beach, Calif. 92649; pictures taken at reunion. Now that "guy" CHARLES E. LENTZ '19, 1021 NUes Ave., Dec. 10, JAMES L. SWEENY '18, 1254 LEO J. VOGEL '17 sent a letter that he'd South Bend, Ind. 46617; Nov. 11, PETER , Denver, Colo. 80206, and Dec. understand when I say "Thanks." Vogel 12, Col. JOSEPH J. HEALY '15, 2845 Santa reported that he talked with JAMES L. J. MCDONOUGH '21, in N. Pompano Paula Ct, Sacramento, Calif. 95821. SWEENY '18 and that Jim was not feeling Beach Blvd., Pompano Beach, Fla. 33062; Great to hear from STEPHEN H. HERR any too good. Trust he is much better now. Nov. 12, GEORGE B. REINHARDT '19, '14: "My wife and I have been spending Leo said if we had more fellows like Jim 301 W. 51 St., Kansas City, Mo.; Nov. our winters in Fla. Hope to go there this on this good earth we would not need a 13, WILLIAM E. KENNEDY, 1700 S. winter for three or four months. If all goes heaven. Recall my visit West a couple years Ashland Ave., Park Ridge, 111. 60068; Nov. well hope to see you all in "72." Gotta thank ago. I stopped at Denver and phoned Jim, 14, RAY C. WHIPPLE LLB. '18, 373 Class Secretary ALBERT A. KUHLE '15 whom I had not talked to or seen for years. Western Ave., JoUet, III. 60435; Nov. 16, for his kind note and acknowledge here I was commanded to stay right where I was JOSEPH F. FLYNN '17, 401 N. Riverside what a fine column he has in the ALUMNUS. and he'd pick me up for a drive around Up "pops" GROVER F. MILLER, aass Secretary '16, with a nice note about how he is enjoying the North Woods. Phoned Class Secretary DANIEL E. HILGARTNER \6 town. I had to promise to wait and have the form of a postcard from J. STOCK- I regret to report the recent death of the coffee with him in the morning and he DALE KOBB '14, whose address is 69 father of CLAUDE W. TOUREK '35 who would lead me out of town and get me Heidelberg, Nouenheimer Land Strasse 52, is president and owner of Hi Quality Mfg. headed in right direction for home. That's Germany. The card had a picture of the Co., Screw Machine Products, and resides the kinda guy Jim is. Wallfahrtskirche in St. Margen (Schwarz- at 624 N. Edgewood Ave., LaGrange Park, Hope Mrs. "Ted" Feyder has infor­ wald). He said St. Margen is one of the III. 60525. mation she requested about the names of most scenic spots in all Germany. Warm WALES E. FINNEGAN "10 retired the fellows on picture taken of her late regards to you J.S.K. Thanks for being of the Veterans Administration in husband, THEODORE N. FEYDER '14L. remembered. Next time you might tell us Martinsburgb, W. Va., died Aug. S at the LEO S. ZGODZINSKI "14 could not help, what keeps you over there so long. Washington Sanitarium and Hospital after but HENRY J. FRAWLEY '14L came a long illness. He lived at 10616 Mantz Kd., across with a most interesting letter and Silver Spring, Md. He is survived by his named the guys in the picture. Back row— widow, Katherine, and a sister, Mrs. TIMOTHY E. SOWNEY '14L, BILL J. Katherine Waterhouse of Saranac Lake, CUSACK '141^ and ARTHUR W. RYAN N.Y. I am indebted to JAMES F. O'BRIEN '14, (deceased). Front row—Ted Feyder '13 for this information. Jim added, "Have and himself (Henry Frawley). The "huddle" been well, thankful and quite happy with football leak for this year, Henry, is that Arizona, 790 more Mid-Western winters." ND is No. 1 in '72. Again Frawley, thanks The death of JOHN W. SCHINDLER for your interesting letter. That's all the SR. '09L was reported in my column in the chitchat this time. Closing wish is that you September issue. This additional infor­ all live to 100 and enjoy the best of health. mation has recently come to hand. "John W. Schindler Sr., 86, of 810 Lincoln Way, Geogre B. Waage '18 E., Mishawaka, Ind. 46544, a well-known 3305 Wrightwood Ave. Albert A. attorney, died in St Joseph's Hospital Chicago, lU. 60647 following an illness of one week. A 1909 Kuhle graduate of the ND Law School, Schindler had conducted a law practice here since Following the June reunion GEORGE B. that time. He was former president of the St. '11 THE COLONEL 15%' WAAGE '18 told me that I was missed on Joseph County Bar Assn. and a member of that occasion. I had made plans with two the Indiana State and American Bar Assns. alumni for transportation but in the final He was a member of the Father Nieuw- stages both petered out. I hope to have land General Assembly, Fourth Degree better luck next June. Just had a thank-you Knights of Columbus and Council 1878 note from an old friend who recently Knights of Columbus." He is survived by celebrated his 82nd birthday. Anyone his widow; one son, JOHN W. JR. '43 of attaining that age should consider it an Mishawaka; three daughters; 12 grand­ accomplishment instead of a misfortune. children and six great-grandchildren. Congratulations are indeed due to STEPHEN H. HERR '10 who is still active as chairman of the board of the Citizens Albert A. Kuhle Bank of Chatsworth, 111., where he resides. 117 Sunset Ave. He and Mrs. Herr both enjoy good health LaGrange, HI. 60525 and spend their winter months in Braden- ton, Fla. May the Good Lord keep you in '16 NO NEWS 193%' His care, grant you good health, a long '12 RICHARD J. and happy future. A cheerful note was recently received Can't seem to get news from my Qass of MONROE 9.5%* from RAY HOYER '24, a good friend and '16—so here are some notes from my former associate who was on the teaching picture album of 1912-13-14-16. staff at ND from 1924 to 1940. Ray resides The football team goes East and beats at St Anne Retirement Home, 1900 Van- Yale. They arrive home by train, of course, '13 FRED 20.6%* dalia. Fort Wayne, Ind. 46805. Ray reported and the whole school meets them and that he had recently had his second cataract parades through South Bend, taking over a operation. You have my best wishes Ray. few streetcars for the trip out to ND. See a writeup on Ray in the April-May The old post office, about 20 feet square, issue. and the budding opposite it about the same JOHN D. MOYNAHAN JR., formerly size, where the watchman slept, both stood of LaGrange, 111. has been named vice- at the end of the Hill Street car line. president of Metropolitan Life Insurance Faithful nuns washed our clothes and Co.'s New York Metropolitan group office. cooked our meals and baked those famous He earned his B.A. degree cum laude at ND buns. The buns we didn't eat were used ND. He began his career with Metropolitan in 1957 in Chicago as a service supervisor and later held the same position in Detroit. He was transferred to New York as senior account representative and became account executive in 1970. Moynahan and his wife have three daughters and a son and reside '14 BELL 19.4%* at 25 Little Brook Rd., Darien, Conn. Would that space would permit recounting here some of the folklore of the "Roaring ^ C. Patrick 20's" in Lakeland, Fla. sent to me by WILLIAM V. HALLMAN who resides at 1113 S. Success Ave., Lakeland, Fla. 33803. He and Mrs. Hallman have one daughter in pitched battles of hall against hall after and three grandchildren, two girls and a breakfast boy. Needless to say, he is very proud of The football team all played a full game. them. , the , never wore BiU says WILLIAM and a headgear and never was tackled down. CAREY '29 dropped by. William has pur­ Thei» were KNUTE ROCKNE, HEINE chased a home at 40O4 Wellington Dr., BERGER. EICHENLAUB, DEAK JONES, RED, Lafcewood, Fla. 33802. Tommy still CROWLEY, AL FEENEY, JOE PLISKA, WlUiam J. lives in Santa Barbara, Calif. Both are fine HARVAT. FITZGERALD, FINNEGAN, Redden men and are nephews of the late W. F. GUSHBARST and 20 others. Carey, president of Madison Square Garden. The Natatorium back of the Main Build­ He also reports seeing CHARLES W. ing was about gone. The Minims were the "preps" from four years of age till college. 31.2%* BACHMAN LL.B. '17 who is retired and '15 OVER THERE lives at 11 Sunset Lane, Pompano Beach, Brother Floren was the boss and a sister Fla. 33062. did most of the teaching. Their St Edward's It is always a pleasant surprise to hear from My daughter, Mrs. J. D. Flynn of La- Hall was next to the Main Building. an old friend, especially when that friend is Grange, 111., and her family made a trip East College fellows ate in two sections on the so far away. I just had such a surprise in this summer sightseeing and visiting friends and relatives. Among the folks visited was the TOM HESSERT '48 famfly at 603 Chews Landing Rd., Haddonfield, NJ. 17 ground floor of the Main Building, eight to column can be done only if you furnish a table. At the head of the table were '20 WE'RE RECOGNIZED 14%* such information. Thank you! juniors and seniors and were served first Walsh Hall was new and one of the finest We now are recognized by the Alumni Ray Schubmehl in the whole country as the fathers had Association as members of the 50-year 1622 McKinley visited the East and the West for ideas. Club and are invited to stay at the Morris South Bend, Ind. 46617 The old Novitiate across the lake burned Inn during all class reunions. one night about 6 p.m. so all of us ran over The following attended in June: and saved pictures and statues to become LEONARD CALL with his wife; PAUL '22 TRAFTON DIES 24.2%* heroes. CONAGHAN; HUMPHREY LESLIE with I can produce pictures of all these As we try to make the deadline for the memories and hundreds more since I was next issue of the ALUMNUS, today's Sports the school photographer in those good Columns carry the sad news of another old days. classmate, GEORGE TRAFTON, who died Classmates, send me some news. at age 74 in a Los Angeles area convalescent hospital on Sunday Sept 5. Trafton was a Grover F. Miller great football player. His career got nicely 1208 S. Main SL under way during World War I, when Racine, Wis. 53403 George played the center position for Camp Grant at Rockford, 111. At that time, it was murmured around the campus that he '17 JOHN E. would like to matriculate at ND, and so CASSIDY JR. 31.2%* JohnT. he did in the fall of 1919, when most of Balfe the military, who had been discharged from service with eyes on ND arrived on campus. his wife; HARRY NESTER, and JIM At ND he played in conjunction with the '18 ABOUT FOOTBALL 26.8%* TRUANT who brought his wife and me. famous "Slip" Madigan of later fame at We all promised to return next year and to Saint Mary's College in the San Francisco Let's start this report with acknowledging urge others to join us. SHERWOOD Bay area. Usually Slip would start the a very interesting letter from JOSEPH T. DIXON while registered at the Morris game, but Trafton would be called into RILEY '18. If you know Riley you know Inn did not come and we missed him. service to relieve Madigan. George played it's all about football. That guy takes in all WALTER MILLER always came to annual only the year 1919 pt ND. In 1920, he the games he can get tickets for. Muskegon signed up with the Decatur Staleys who Monogram Club meetings before but was later became the Chicago Bears. Trafton among the missing. played until age 32, and he, indeed, was JOHN BALFE, our president and leader, one of the AU-Time Great centers for the disappointed us by his absence. The atten­ Chicago Bears, e.xcelling on defense. Subse­ dance of the '21 Class was not as large as quently, he spent 13 years as assistant ours but among them and coach for the Green Bay Packers, the NORM BARRY were at the Morris Inn Rams, and the Los Angeles Rams, with us. also served as head coach for the Winnipeg ; '?*». =»v~ Bombers in the Canadian league. He was James H. Ryan later elected a member of the National 24270 East Ave., Apt. 314 Football League Hall of Fame. In the Rochester, N.Y. 14610 recent past, George was in the real-estate business in West Los Angeles area. We extend our loving sympathy to his wifs, Jacqueline, a son George E. Jr., and a John A. '21 HALE AND daughter Bliss Ellen. Kindly remember ^ Lemmcr HARDY 35.4^ George in your prayers. HEARTLEY (Hunk) ANDERSON of 917 is not far from ND. He sends copies of JOE MAAG reports that he is hale and North Flager Drive, West Palm Beach, Fla. his letters to PETER J. RONCHETTI '18 hardy again and feels bad only because he 33401, who played football with George and FRANK X. (Big Frank) RYDZEWSKI was not able to make the 50th reunion. both at ND and the Bears, kindly assisted '18, A nice note came with a calendar Remember the story about the ghost of us in telling the Trafton story. Many thanks from ARTHUR J. (Young Dutch) BERG­ Washington Hall? CHARLEY DAVIS for the sympathy message concerning the MAN '17. Chicago radio station WBBM claims to have the inside dope on the death of JOE BRANDY '21 from our class­ gives Dutch credit for putting over a deal mystery. Perhaps we can prevail upon mates who thought highly of Joe. for the Washington baseball team. "Chuck" to tell us about this affair when Best of wishes are extended to Mr. and WILLIAM A. GRADY '17 is always "on we meet again in 1973. Dr. JOSEPH HEIN- Mrs. David Woodhead, who were married the ball" with a card and it's mighty nice MAN phones me that he would have made in Christ the King Church, South Bend, of Bill. Got a note from JOHN A. LEM- the '71 reunion except for a slight illness. Ind. on June 26. Parents of the bride are MER '18: "Had hoped to make the USC By the way Joe has a grandniece who is Mr. and Mrs. Clarence (Pat) Manion of game, but lost out on tickets." The card applying for admission to ND-SMC for the South Bend. from NEIL J. (Whitey) WHALEN '18 fall of '72. Our grateful thanks are directed to A. comes from the Gold Coast of Maine. JOE TILLMAN reports that he has 44 F. (Tony) GONZALEZ '25 who writes us Whitey and Rosemary sure enjoy their trips. grandchildren. He claims this is a record. from 6781 Ayala Ave., Makati, Rizal^ Great to know they are enjoying good Would like to hear if there are any others Philippines: "Thank you for your hand­ health. Regret to report that Mrs. MAX written note acknowledging the information KAZUS is still in the hospital and, accord­ I sent you on the death of my late brother, ing to Max, not doing too well. Only wish R. J. DUKE '22. He was not associated in I had more to report about cards coming business with me but it so happened that in. Why don't you drop a hello card and one of his business interests was the fran­ let us all know that you are still around? chise from Armour Dial of Chicago for LAMBERT Q. SENG '18 and I often the manufacture and distribution of Dial phone each other. We talk about fellows soap. That part of the business was turned like JOHN J. VOELKERS '18 that we over by Armour to my son, J. A. '58. Mrs. don't hear from. Seng is one swell guy and Gonzalez and I plan to be on the campus I like him. After I get through the ordeal for both the North Carolina and the USC I'm now in, Bert and I will perhaps drop in games...Durihg-.tH'e interv'ening week,..we on you. We often talk about driving down shall"berstqppirig-.at'Moms Inri-ra ,. to see Ex. Lt. Gov. SHERWOOD DIXON .ydii'happen to be on the'campus between • '20L. Have not seen WILLIAM E. BRAD­ Oct. 1'6'arid Oct 23, I shall be very happy BURY '16 since he got out of Vets hospital. Raymond J. to greet you. I just went to ND in the fall REV. CHARLES J. WILLIAMS '18 missed Schubmchl 4 of 1920 as a "prep" and have a hazy out seeing Bill. Let's have a card from you. recollection of having said hello to you on Sincere best wishes to you all. who can.b"ea't;or.'even approach this the campus a number of times." George B. Waage number. HARRY andEUa McLELLAN Many thanks to FOM LEE '23 of 3305 Wrightwood Ave. who missed'the" reunion because they were Minneapolis for his kindness in sending Chicago, lU. 60647 moving into their new home are now all details of the Woodhead-Manion wedding, settled and ready to receive visitors. Their also, to LEONARD M. CALL '21 for his address is 10446 Meade Dr., Sun City, nice remarks about EDWARD JOSEPH Ariz. 85351. If any of you have information '19 LOLIS J. FINSKE 11.7%* that might be of interest to others of our class, please let me know about it This 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. GOTTRY, deceased, and for the fine ROCKNE once put it: Anytime those blue expressed are entirely his own. Listen to spiritual bouquet he so arranged. Leonard's jerseys take the field we forget the little this: (slightly edited) "Perfidious and address is 231 Paterson Ave., Hasbrouck things. So we start with four utterly revolting is the metamorphosis of Heights, N.J. 07604. this season . . . but there will always be Ed Cantwell from the sweet boy graduate Don't fail to attend our Golden Anni­ only the one who happens to be wearing of 1924 to the dirty old man who by his versary Reunion. This month the South that blue jersey on the field. We can all dastardly nominations for (defunct) class Bend group will convene to prepare the way. learn from Papa Mariano Donato. officers pits the blopd brothers EARLE The Readers Write. ... I heard from six and JIM HURLEY; and MAYL and G. A. (Kid) Ashe people that my picture was in Insight before SWIFT who are cousins by affinity, against 175 Landing Road, N. I knew it was there. It was in a cemetery each other in a death struggle for the elusive Rochester, N.Y. 14625 fame and fortune with which such official status is crowned (and don't tell me that Ed didn't know that Helen Mayl is my '23 PAPA WRITES 11.4%* kissin' cousin). I hereby irrevocably re­ nounce Ed Cantwell and all his pomp and They Remember Papa. . . . Class secretaries evil machinations, and to paraphrase that are always complaining that nobody writes. non-loquacious Republican who occupied Well, somebody wrote from Mandaluyong, the White House when Ed was still a bed- Rizal, in the Philippines. Following are wetter in Walsh Hall: / will not accept the excerpts: nomination, I will not run against my "Although Notre Dame has been so cousin by affinity, and if elected I will not faithful in keeping in touch with Papa all serve. I hope to see all the living classmates in the luxury of Morris Inn in June '74, these years, 1 don't believe Papa has had Joseph F. time to send word about himself and his except Ed Cantwell who should be banished activities. I was reminded to write you Donaldson to the torture chambers of Badin. Cordially because a few days ago one of Papa's ND . . . Jim." N.B. Notwithstanding the above contemporaries JACOBO ZOBEL, one of which is no place for a senior alumnus to lengthy quote, the ALUMNUS is getting an the most prominent businessmen in this hang around, but 1 always include it in the abundance of campaign literature from this country, died at the age of 69. 50-cent Grand Tour for distinguished candidate. In his letter to TIM HUGHES "Papa is MARIANO DONATO, a 1923 visitors. Those old fellows who built the '61, ALUMNUS Editor, published in another Electrical Engineering graduate. He is so place, from Sorin to the humblest brother, portion of the magazine (must reading for sentimental about anything ND does that lie so quietly beneath the little wooden "24 classmates) Jim expresses himself and last month he showed me his well-preserved crosses . . . but still speak so eloquently . . . what he stands for. He deals with, in this 1923 Commencement souvenir program. Faith and good works. writer's opinion, the prejudice against the He keeps talking about his ND days and JOHN NIEMIEC, one of our oldest older generation just as naturally and has sent me all his copies of Insight, fellows, doesn't write but he sends news­ deeply rooted in our modern generation, ALUMNUS and other ND publications. I papers every so often from , Palm as we, in our older generation, dealt with feel I know so much about ND because of Beach and other health spas in Ponce De race prejudice, but in a sort of reverse- Papa . . . ND has given Papa a lot. 1 am Leon land. FRANK. DORIOT weighs in english (to use an old pool-room expres­ glad for that because he has given lis a lot." cheerfully from St. Pete to Cape Cod and is sion). We pray for the day when age and planning to join the Boston Club tour for experience will develop the tolerance of Us includes his wife. Carmen Rivero, younger generations for the opinion and nine children, 20 grandchildren. The the Miami game this fall, with wife Helen and daughter Frances. HY HUNT, with human honesty of those who have lived children, spread geographically and all with before them. Compromise is a sign of college degrees, are: Filomena (San Jose, "wife and brown dog" has been "antagoniz­ ing fish instead of tax-payers" in Canada maturity when we try to blend idealism Calif.), Milagros, Salvador, Salud, Angclita, with practicality. Socorro, Raoul (New York), Mary (New since he retired from the IRS. He hopes to York) and Brother Rafael FSC, a Ful- be back for Southern Cal. If he makes it On a recent (when written) visit to bright Scholar and now president of a we hope to include him in the planning Dallas, Tex., our reluctant candidate tried school of 3200 young boys. session for '73 along with the class brass, Brother Rafael wrote the letter. He did RED SHEA. ED KREIMER, JOENYIKOS not mention Papa's other activities but they and South Benders JOHN ROHRBACH, must be considerable because you don't put LEO REIDER, ART DIEDRICH. Ed nine kids through college on trading stamps. Kreimer has his updated class roster There is obviously no generation gap be­ about ready for distribution to all of us tween Papa and Brother Rafael who con­ by the Alumni office. cluded: "He would be tickled pink if you CHARLIE CONLEY and DOC NIGRO, would mention him in your column. He working to get a KNUTE ROCKNE stamp, is 71 years old. On his trip last year to the have enlisted SAM DEVINE, congressman States Papa had plans to visit Indiana. But from Columbus, O. NORDY HOFFMAN Mama and my sisters had other plans and and our many other people with political he was outvoted (our version of women's muscle, please get in touch with Charlie lib). You can't win." who is secretary of '33. And this from Paul So here's Papa. And a word to Mama: Tarsus who wrote to the Hebrews: 12-5, We are planning our 50th Reunion in 1973. 7-11, 11-13: "What son is there whom his We want to see Papa in Indiana and Mama father does not discipline? At the time it is administered all discipline seems a cause too. So for that year women's lib gets lost. to contact PAT BUELL but missed him. Right, Mama? And many thanks to Brother for grief and not for joy, but later it brings forth the fruit of peace and justice." He says Pat doesn't read the ALUMNUS Rafael for the type of letter all class notes, so this secretary is sending him an secretaries hope to receive. Perhaps other Francis Wallace advance copy with a red circle around this children might be inspired to write about classnote. Pat, do you remember when the other Papas who are too busy or too 4615 Guernsey St. Bellaire, O. Hurt twins (female) made their invasion modest. For his classmates who want to into society about 1925 remember Papa with a note, the address is: from Dallas, and you suggested that I meet 2526 Arrellano, Manila, P. I. . . . All of this '24 WHERE'S HAROLD? 20.0';^* them and keep them from feeling lonesome? recalls a chance meeting at the Morris Inn I couldn't beat my way through the crowd, a few years back with ANDRES MALA- Pat. Hd Cantwell "leaked" to me that Jim TESTA '23 of Lima, Peru, where there HAROLD WELCH, Fort Dodge, la., was last seen personaliyby-your.secretary in Swift was run out of Texas. Did you hear obviously was no women's lib because any rumors to this effect? Mama was with him. So come back in '73, NYC when Harold was liiiiiding;tfie,BeIl Andres : . . and all you nice people. Telephone business for the World's Faih. • Our amiable and retiring Gene Mayl also circa 1930. Now I have news-via a letter •"• ^deeli'ne.d the nomination in a gentlemanly Let's Hear It for the Editors. . . . The from ED CANTWELL that he is recom­ sfattmient Apparently neither of these people who put out the University publi­ mending a trial run in 1972 for our big lawyer-pplitjcmns are acquainted with cations do an exceptional job. I doubt if Golden Reunion in '74. It is a little like Oregon election ballot laws. No popular any magazines are more completely read. suggesting a trial marriage but without the candidate for high office can withhold his The class secretaries, each in his own style, moral stigma. ^Vhat about it 'mates; will you name from the ballot in Oregon. Maybe write about things and people they know join Harold in '72? It is a little late to our Judge, TOM' DONOVAN is acquainted and care about. Occasional opinions reflect advise his many friends that he planned to with that law. If you lost your first ballot the thinking of their age groups. They all be at the State game Oct. 2. Did and need another, ED CANTWELL will add up to a panorama of ND through the he make it? He inquired particularly about supply it. You might even be able to vote years, and, for those interested, opportunity LEVI GENIESSE. That makes two asking twice without detection in the Chicago for dialogue and communication. And this about you, Levi, Harold and LEO tabulation, but dc it soon. The judge is we need. ND has always been family. HARINGER. Let them hear from you. It is about time I exposed a letter from JAMES P. SWIFT, an apparent unwilling candidate for Class President. The opinions 19 being pressed to close the tallying and nounce the passing of an old friend from Bob continues to live in Barrington his declare the winner. The "machine" is Toledo and Indianapolis, and a classmate, home for some 15 years. He expects to already talking about a recount. When this THOMAS F. HARTNETT, 4224 Rustic continue to make that his headquarters secretary inquires, all he gets is "Tricky Ave., Paducah, Ky. We received word that except for trips to wa:Tner climates if he Dickie Talk" from a Democrat. He reports Tom died in April of this year. can in the wintertime. He adds that he thus: . . . The vote at this time is extremely In a letter dated Sept. 8 from the Alumni sees ED RYAN frequently. Ed lives in close . . . returns from Worthington, Minn., Office we were told that CHARLES E. Chicago. Bob also has frequent communi­ and Chatsworth, 111. may well decide the CASE, 1575 Perry St., Denver, Colo., died election. . . . Many perplexing questions May 26. have been raised, and I in my usual way In the name of the Class I extend heart­ have fairly resolved them . . . for instance felt sympathy to both wives, and HANK a "wise guy" inquired if I was counting WURZER will take care of the Class Mass absentee ballots ... 1 told him if he would for Tom and Charles. send me the laws from each of the 50 states, the Philippines (PIO MONTE­ John P. Huriey NEGRO); Peru (LOUIS RIVERA); and 2085 Brookdale Rd. the Argentine (GENE VIAL), 1 would give Toledo, Ohio 43606 the matter further consideration ... I may add that his ballot was placed in the "D&O" (defective & objective box) . . . '26 PROMISES, another voter wanted to know which of the Hurley boys had the dark wavy hair. . . . PRO^nSES 24.6%* I gave him an ambiguous answer because I cannot show favoritism . . . what do you There were firm promises at the reunion suggest I do with a write-in ballot for Prof. that there would be a steady flow of news Dan Waters? The judge continues with a from the far comers of the states, as yet cation with TOMMY GREEN in Houston devious deceit to disqualify all '24 cum even the first trickle has not appeared. and BILL O'KEEFE in Moberly, Mo. All laude graduates on the grounds they should Maybe I can persuade TOM FARRELL to of these classmates are planning on attending have come up with this idea 47 years ago. use a pen instead of a golf club and I know Reunion '72. He concludes with the advice that he has Dr. JERRY HAYES is a busy obstetrician AL DOYLE also wrote me. He and Mrs. appointed JOHN P. McGOORTY (Bronson but if the zero population proponents Doyle are scheduled to fly to Europe in Hall seatmate) as amicus curia (to non- succeed he will have more time soon. We September. Al has not retired and says he lawyers, friend of the court). He gives us missed several of the standbys at the does not intend to retire except for frequent two reasons. (1) Unable to find anyone else reunion. HAL KRAUSER, ART BILWILL vacations during the year to travel and visit to undertake the responsibility, and (2) and JOE RIGALI usually come even if it his children in the East and West. He says unable to find anyone else who would admit was for a short stay. CLEM CROWE, ART he is going to remain active in the practice to the social amenities with the Judge. SUDER, HARROLD KLEEN, WALTER of law "as long as I can find my way to the Thank you. Judge TOM DONOVAN. •TROHAN and a group of the Mechanicals courtroom." would like to hear from TONY CAVALLE. Voting time has been extended rather than a call for a new election in a com­ Had a pleasant surprise, a call from Clarence J. Ruddy promise solution to the claims of "foul" by IZZY PROBST. He was up from Key III W. Downer Place Biscayne to get his son Bernard started as Aurora, 111. 60504 some of the candidates and withdrawal by a freshman at ND this year. Sounded as others. Maybe we'll have a Christmas full of vigor as ever. present for half the reluctant candidates. Haven't seen RUDY GOEPFRICH since If not, we'll probably have to wait till his trip to Alaska. I'm counting on him '28 IN April 1. as a source of news. He gets around and MARCH 19.9%' never lets me down. James P. Durcan JERRY REIDY writes from Chicago: Make your plans now to attend the 2nd 5400 SW Scholls Ferry Rd. "The old bunch of '26 enjoyed their air- Annual Class of '28 Luncheon on March Portland, Ore. 97225 conditioned isolation out in the boondocks. 2, 1972 at the Yardarm in Pompano Beach, It was too bad that some of the buildings Fla. The HATCH-DAILY-QUINLAN team which one looks back upon with nostalgia promises a repeat of the successful affair '25 MEMORIAL GROWS 18.6%* were locked and bolted, such as the old held last year. Since BILL DAILY is based gym, Washington Hall and the log chapel. in Florida the year-round, write him at 818 If it wasn't for Judge JOHN F. KILKENNY One would look for them to be open on S. East 4th St., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33301 these past few years your secretary would such a weekend. It is always a looked- advising you will attend. JOHN ROBIN­ have little material to work with when the forward-to pleasure to attend the reunions SON, BOB HAMILTON and ART deadline looms up. John is retiring Nov. 1. and many thanks to Rudy Gocpfrich HOLTON have already indicated they He will continue working as a judge in and FRANK DEITLE for the enjoyable expect to be there. senior status and he is entitled to maintain hours they arranged for us. Is it true that The generous hospitality of Frdn and JOE his chambers and his staff. Mrs. Kilkenny your new slogan is 'Onward and Forward DORAN in the friendly atmosphere of theii plans to attend the Purdue game with PAUL to the Morris Inn in '76'?" beautiful home and the history-making and Mrs. ROMWEBER. Purdue game combined to give a party of In a letter sent a few weeks before the Frank Deitle rain-dampened classmates and their wives a above, John felt the Class would be inter­ 1763 Kessler Blvd. most delightful evening on Sept. 25 at ested in learning that the JAMES W. South Bend, Ind. 46616 Lafayette. Among those there were LOU WRAPE Memorial Fund with the ND Law BUCKLEY, FRANK CREADON, JOE DORAN, BILL DWYER, TOM HART, '27 NO AVALANCHE 16.9%* MIKE HOGAN, TOM LAVELLE, FRANK MCCARTHY, LEO MCINTYRE, FRANCIS My recent request for information regarding MEYER, ART MILLER, BILL MURPHY, retirements from the professional and com­ GEORGE SCHEUER, SWEDE SCHROE- mercial careers did not bring exactly an DER. BERNIE SCHUH, and RUSS avalanche of responses. As a matter of fact, SMITH. FRANCIS MEYER did his usual 1 have received two replies, one from a good job in taking pictures which I hope classmate who has retired and one from a to get to you later and Frank Creadon led classmate who has not. us in song. Incidentally the party coincided BOB STEPHAN reUred on May 21 from with the 37th wedding anniversary of the the U. S. Gypsum Co. His experience Creadons. covered 37 years, the last 18 of which he HOWIE PHALIN and his wife, Pete, served as an officer. After his retirement have returned from Rochester, Minn., where the company offered him a contract as a each underwent surgery. JOE LANGTON Henry C. consultant and in that capacity he has been is now home after having had surgery on working several days a week, which, Bob his leg in Chicago. TOM BOV was hospital­ Wurzcr points out, is a pleasant way to retire into ized for several weeks after returning from a semi-retirement posture. ITiis provides Pakistan where he picked up a bug. ED School now amounts to over $700. The suf^cient work to keep him alert and BOURKE was hospitalized with a coronary. money will be used to purchase books for sufficient leisure for hobbies and grand­ I am pleased to report that these classmates the law library. Thanks again John, and will children. He has five daughters and 14 are making progress in recovery. some of you '25ers drop me a line about grandchildren, eight of them boys, so he 1 gave reports on the deaths of yourselves or other classmates? and his wife always have plenty of family CHARLEY RILEY, CLIFF TROMBLEY, It is with deep regret that I have to an­ activity. Furthermore he has plenty of and RALPH NOLAN in my August News- traveling also as the children and grand­ children are scattered from California to Kansas to Indianapolis and Chicagoland.

20 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. letter. JOE SULLIVAN, LL.B. '29, died years with Bendix Corp.). JOSEPH S. SULLIVAN, monogram man, in Chicago on Aug. 24. Joe was an attorney Those who recently reported as retired second baseman and captain of the base­ at the time of his death with the Amalga­ from their regular employment, but who ball team, died Aug. 24. He is survived mated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen have taken another job on a part-time or by his widow, Kay, 9250 S. Damen Ave., of North America. He died suddenly and full-time basis include: Father GEORGE Chicago, III.; two sons. Dr. Patrick and was at work the prior day. He is survived BENGLIA CSC, is now auxiliary civilian William; two dau^ters, Mary Kay Joyce by his widow, Kay, and four children. chaplain at Fort Huachuca, Sierra Vista, and Connie; and a brother, William J. We BILL MURPHY represented the Class at Ariz.; PHIL BERTHIAUME is self- extend the condolences of the Class. the funeral. employed on a part-time basis as con­ Congratulations to BILL KRIEG on his Father JIM McSHANE, SJ., returned to sultant on insurance and investments; ART recent appointment by the governor his old address, Apartado Postal 10, CANTY, after 36 years with Prudential of Indiana to the Board of Trustees of Progreso Yoro, Honduras, in September Insurance Co., is now an attorney with Purdue U. At recent class reunions you and after surgery this summer in Denver. He Stephens, Jones, LaFeres and Smith in I have often heard the question: "What now visits only four villages, instead of 60, Pasadena, Calif.; FRANCIS DAVID is now have you heard from or about Bill Krieg?" for regular parish work and six parishes of with U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, New Usually, at least in my case, I recall the State of Yoro to supply movies, radio Orieans District: WAYNE EWING works rather superficial replies to the question tapes, etc. Father Jim bought and begged part-time in auto sales, Weston, Ohio; MAX and have had little to contribute myself. We many radio and TV programs during the GAUTHIER, formerly with Internal just haven't been reading the right news­ summer in the U.S. Revenue Service, is now a self-employed papers. In a recent letter Bill writes, Recent get-togethers of '28 men include tax consultant; JIM HAYWARD, retired ... "I hope and plan to attend the next SWEDE SCHROEDER stopping to see after 28 years with Archer, Danvers '29 class reunion. ... I am including some JOE DeBOTT for a first get-together in 20 Midland Co., is now self-employed as biographical information on myself and years: Fr. McShane visiting JOE BRAN- a technical consultant for segments of feed family . . ." Bill is senior partner of the NON and Maria; your class secretary and and food manufacturing companies and law firm Krieg, DeVault. Alexander and Pauline having a good session with VINCE writes extensively in these fields; ART Capehart, 2860 One Indiana Square, CARNEY and Mary and CARROLL HOLTON, who retired as commander in Indianapolis, he is director of numerous PINKLEY in Chicago, and my visit with the U.S. Navy in 1957 and who worked companies including Hook's Drugs, Sarget BILL KIRWAN and Lillian in Iowa City, until 1966 as a high school teacher in Falls Paint, Mutual Hospital Insurance Inc. where my son is a graduate student. Inci­ Church, Va., is now engaged in home (Blue Cross), Boy Scouts ... President of dentally, I am curious over the fact that projects in Georgetown area of Washington. the Board of Trustees. Winona Memorial Carroll Pinkley doesn't have one gray hair. DC; BERNARD LOEFFLER. 33 years with Hospital of Indianapolis, President C. C. Is it related to his drug business, his living Indiana Bell, is now field representative for Fairbanks Hospital of Indianapolis, and in a small town, or to his being a bachelor Engineers Registration Board; and former commodore of the Indianapolis — I wonder? GEORGE SARGUS, for many years owner Sailing Club, Inc. Congratulations to FRANK CREADON and operator of retail shoe and clothing Bill and his wife, Virginia, have two sons, on being honored as 1971 Man-of-the-Year stores in Wheeling, W. Va.. now assists his Peter, M.E. Purdue and Frederick. A.B. at a testimonial sponsored by the Chamber daughter and son who each have retail Wabash, J.D.U. Michigan Law School. Bill of Commerce and Lions Club of Riverside, stores. took his law at Harvard. He contributed III., where Frank is village trustee; and to Thanks for the excellent cooperation I almost five years to military service in BILL BROWN on an interesting article in have had from classmates on news. For the early forties, attaining the rank of the June-July issue of Parish Today on example, Leo Mclntyre kept me advised lieutenant colonel. He has enjoyed extensive parish councils. by phone almost daily on Howie Phalin travel and has expended himself in the Our recent travelers include JERRY while he was hospitalized in Rochester, continuing legal education program of the GAYNOR (a freighter to Europe and South Minn. Indiana Bar Association. He has lectured Africa), Dr. PAT SULLIVAN (an extended on federal tax law at Indiana U., Mar­ stay in Switzerland), JOHN CARLIN Louis F. Buckley quette and New York U. (Europe), BERNIE GARBER (Ireland and 6415 N. Sheridan Rd. We are grateful to Bill for his contribu­ London, where his son, Clint, has a 2-year Chicago, 111. 60626 tion to the column. Your classmates and Navy assignment), STEVE SHERRY your secretary are dependent on you, (Japan and Hong Kong), and BOB especially if you are one whose name RIGNEY (Germany to visit his son who '29 GEORGE SCHMIDT seldom appears, for the news we need. is an air pilot there). The column is the sum of its parts. Please Since retirement is the most important DIES 20.8%* send at least a little today, more later. news these days, the following are the most Thank you. recent to be added to this group: GORDON One year ago the highlight of the Class of BENNETT (42 years with the Buffalo '29 after football game get-together was the Larry Stauder Courier-Express); BERNARD CONNELLY surprise birthday cake and party for Dr. Engineering Bldg. (43 years with the Central Trust Co.. JIM TOBIN. The donor of the cake was Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Rochester. N.Y.); JOE BRAUNSDORF classmate and close friend, GEORGE (35 years with Indiana & Michigan Electric SCHMIDT, and his wife, Jessie, who ac­ Co.); LOUIS ECKSTEIN (16 years with companied Jim and his Margaret from '30 COMMISERATION 18.8%* Scott Tobacco Co., Bowling Green, Ky.); Elgin, HI. On Aug. 18 George died in his JERRY GAYNOR (10 years as owner of sleep of a massive coronary attack. His A cheery card from JACK CASSIDY miners Collection Service); CHARLES sudden death has left a deep sadness, a void informed us that he was cruising the river KAISER (33 years as owner of Lakewood that will continue. George was one of Shannon in Ireland this summer with those young men who absorbed what ND CY KELLEHER '35 and his wife. Jack had to offer to those who lived and said he ran into TOM KEEGAN sauntering studied here with him. No doubt he down a street near St. Stephen's Green brought much with him, but he cooperated in Dublin. Tom and his family had been in with Our Lady and her friends here to London where he attended an American develop an even stronger sense of values Bar Association meeting. If Jack Cassidy and the foundations of an exemplary had gotten out deeper in the bogs, he way of life. To quote from his wife's brief might have encountered our Class president, letter, "The inspiration of Notre Dame TIM TOOMEY, who was doing a research was deep within George and was a large study there this summer in the interests part of his life." Their address in Elgin of the Toomey Foundation. is 620 Summit St. 60120. The Schmidts JOHN J. ODONNELL has joined the and Tobins had plans to come to ND board of trustees of Golden Gate College, together again in October. At times like San Francisco. O'Donnell is manager this God gives us. his classmates, a chance of manpower planning and development for Waiiam K. to share "in the inspiration . . , that was the Beehtel Corporation. After ND he Dwyer deep within George." We offer George did graduate study at Fordham and our promise of renewed efforts to carry on Columbia. With his wife, Catherine, he Coal and Coke Co.); BOB MADDIN (42 together. lives in San Rafael, California. They have years with Northern Pacific Railroad Co.); Rev. GEORGE HOLDERITH CSC 18 three married children. BILL MAHIN (7 years with Kaiser died Sept. 2. Although not in good health The Class of 1930 will want to remember Engineers); BOB RIGNEY (40 years with he was still up and about until shortly in prayers the parents of LOUIS CHAP- Chicago Show Printing Co.); Dr. S. before his death. Father George was, LEAU who died this summer within the DAVID SOLOMON (40 years of private as I recall, a hall rector in our senior year. period of one month. practice as a physician in Johnstown and You know him best, perhaps, as golf This office needs some news items fast. Gettysburg, Pa.); and BURT TOEPP (20 coach. His straw hat was invariably the type with a flat brim, like that of Father DOM O'MALLEY. Father LOUIS THORNTON CSC. a good friend of Father George, was one of his honorary pallbearers. 21 Maybe Toomey's column in the September courses. I am looking forward to a visit president of A.T. Houlihan Inc., in charge issue will have enough libelous charges with Luis when he makes his holiday of their Pound Ridge office in Scotts against classmates to stir up some conflict. visit to Chicago. Sympathy of the class Corners. This is a leading real estate firm Also, there is a substantial number of is extended to DICK BREEN in the specializing in estate properties and land our class who have gone into early loss of his brother. Judge EDWIN T. development. Fran and I figured out I had retirement in some sunny clime. They could BREEN '17. FRANK HOLLAND just 19 jobs since '32 — so this makes 20. That's easily take pen or typewriter in hand, phoned offering seals for the Northwestern about all for now. and send us their reflections on the We are landing in Paris in another half easy life. hour and then non-stop to New York. A group of some 1930 class members and Reunion is getting closer so let's all make wives gathered in the Athletic and Con­ plans to be there. vocation Center after the Southern California game. There was a note of Florence J. McCarthy disappointment throughout the place after 6 River Road Ihs defeat, but it was soon dispelled by the Scarsdale, N.Y. 10583 friendly conversation of old campus friends. Among those sighted were: WALT BER­ NARD, JACK CASSIDY, JOE DRINANE, '33 ISLAND FEATURED 15.7%* BILL DUNLEVY, MILTON FOX, TOM LANTRY, CHUCK. LENNON, FRED A recent article in The Raniblin Rover was LENSING, DEVERE PLUNKETT, JOE about Beaver Island, Mich., "The American RUPPE, JACK SIGLER, SAM SIL- Arranmore," which was the summer home VESTRO, TIM TOOMEY and JOHN of our late classmate, WILLIAM F. WIT- VOSS. TENBURG. Just before his untimely death, Sam Silvestro is moving soon to Fort Bill sent me voluminous printed matter on Lauderdale where he can enjoy the warm this picturesque resort area. At our 35th weather sports and catch ND now and then game and promises to report on class­ reunion, 1 promised to visit him, but my in the Miami Orange Bowl. mates seen on campus. Please let me hear plans were cut short by the sad news of his JOHN HEALY wrote in September prior from you by letter or telegram as your death in '69. The article above described to his departure for Australia. He will miss news makes this column interesting. the Gaelic-speaking Irish who settled the the football games this fall in South Bend, island after the forced departure of the but he may find good competitive sports James T. Doyle Mormons. The priest for these Catholic down in Australia. 1567 Ridge Avenue people was a Rev. Peter Gallagher, born in The University Club before the Southern Evanston, 111. 60201 Ireland and eventually buried in my parish California game was the scene of several cemetery, St. Denis. This was such a co­ alumni gabfests. Tom Lantry and wife had incidence that I sent a copy of the story as their guests Mr. and Mrs. FRANK to Mrs. Wittenburg and to JOE DAVEY, SPIEGEL '48. Jack Cassidy was present '32 NO NOTES 17.1%* the renowned Michigan historian and with CY KELLEHER '35 and his wife. "Hm Toomey moved through the throng The news this month will have to be about dispensing gems of Irish wisdom. Also on me as I have no notes from any of you. hand were my son JOHN PLUNKETT '65 Labor Day weekend we took off for and my nephew PAT PLUNKETT '53 of Cape Cod to stay at MURRAY BOOTH'S Detroit. at Brewster. When I say we, I mean we! Class members will want to extend We reserved three cottages: No. 1 to prayerful sympathy to Jack Sigler whose house my wife, Evelyn, daughter, Maryann wife, Helen, died in recent months in and girl friend; Cottage No. 2 for our Omaha. son, Tim, his wife, Lori, our three Joe Drinane was accompanied to the grandchildren, one dog and one cat; and, game by his daughter who has been doing in Cottage No. 3 for daughter Sally, graduate courses in communication arts son-in-law, Brian Putney, and dog, Mollie. at ND in the summer sessions. I'm sure the Cape—and Murray—will Joe Ruppe now lives back in his old never be the same. Lucicn S. home town, Hancock, Mich, after residing The Alumni Office notified us that Kcnipf many years in San Francisco. MARION J. PILLIARD died March 9, JOHN VOSS reported favorably on his 1971. His widow lives in Michigan former operator of the gigantic History- brother, Don, who is at a veterans' hospital City, Ind. mobile. in Wisconsin. Don attended the 40th re­ 1 am writing this as Ev and I are airborne The always amiable Joe Davey responded union at ND in June 1970. on our return from 14 days in Greece. Wc immediately to tell me that the Michigan WALTER LANGFORD has resumed spent five days in Athens, five days on a Department of State had put the History- teaching in the ND modem language classical tour of the ancient ruins, and mobile in mothballs due to budget short­ department, after two years' absence during four days on a cruise ship of the Greek comings. If it is revived the first visit will which he directed ND student programs in Islands. We got talking to a gal aboard be to Rogers City in deference to KARL South America and in Mexico City. only to find out she was Mary McNally, VOGELHEIM. Joe said Sophie and he ROBERT HOLMES has come out of a SMC '38. attended the summer picnic of the Lansing very short retirement and has accepted a Walking through one of the castles where ND Club where they had a nice visit with position with the local Valley Cable Tele­ St. Paul preached and where the Virgin C. J. HESS who is now deputy director of vision Corporation. Mary died, I happened to remark to Ev, Civil Service for Michigan. The remainder "I wonder how Notre Dame made out last of the '33 Michigan brethren are scattered Devere T. Plunkett over that large and beautiful State. Joe's O'Shaughnessy Hall immediate superior is FRANK SlERAWSKl Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 '45, the president of the club. Continuing with his personal history, Joe said he is now the curator of the Michigan '31 HOPES FOR Historical Museum, Lansing, Mich. He LETTERS 18.6C invites traveling classmates to view the contents of the museum but neglected to News is a bit on the sparse side this time, give the visiting hours. Of his children, the but 1 am hopeful of letters resulting "baby," James Patrick, was graduated from from meeting classmates at football games U. of Detroit Law School in May and will this season. CLARENCE FUTTER take the state bar soon. His daughter, Mary phoned while in town with his wife Ellyn, is a special ed teacher. The oldest attending the Gift Show at McCormick son, John, is an attorney with the Oakland Place. KELLY POWERS '32 was a recent County prosecutor's office in Pontiac. Last, guest at his home. Kelly is now retired but not least, the Daveys have four grand­ and living in Ft Lauderdale, Fla. FRANK children. For the football season, he plans LEAHY, according to a newscast in late to attend both the Michigan State and the July, is off the critical list at a West Francis J. Southern Cal games. The eminent historian Coast hospital. LUIS GODOY and his O'Mallcy invites all members of the '33 class to join wife are in Spain attending Salamanca U. him for a pitcher of beer and cake at Mrs. where they are taking special teaching Saturday." A complete stranger spoke out. "They won." FRAN OELERICH wiU break up when he reads this but at my old age (and yours) 1 have just accepted a new position as vice 22 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. Nick's after the games. He still hopes to the number-one position in the national III. 60126, has been named resident find a S7.50 felt hat from Max Adler's that ratings. If ND cannot make it, Lou, I'll go psychiatrist at Cleveland Clinic Hospital, was lost under the beer barrel in '30. along with you! Cleveland, Ohio. NICK LUKATS, of late-Iate movie fame, This column is being written early CHARLES H. CARROLL, president of now resides in Barberton, O. Whenever TV because my daughter, Mary Helen, will Carpet Laying Service, 1550 E. Birchwood, revives an oldie, such as a Burns and marry Bruce Edward Mapes, on Sept. 25, Des Plaines, 111., has been elected to the Allen drama, I watch for our classmate. 1971 at St. Denis Chapel. My loving wife board of governors for the ND Club of Before his Hollywood career, you'll re­ and proofreader insists that my writings be Chicago. member Nick as an all-time Irish football out of sight before the guests arrive. To NORBERT J. SCHENKEL received the great in '30, '32 and '33. A tennis-incurred repeat in old wheeze, Irene and I will lose "Man-of-the-Year" Award from the Fort ankle fracture caused him to nuss the '31 a daughter but gain a bathroom. Wayne ND Club. Hope you all read about season but he more than made up by his it in the August edition. Happy to receive a play against Army in '33. I hope he attends Charles A. Conley note from WALTER KENNEDY wishing our 40lh reunion in '73. 100 East Turnbull Ave. me a speedy recovery after my gall bladder Nick reminded me of another splendid Havertown, Pa. 19083 operation. It was finally removed on Aug. 5. player in '30, '33 and '34, DAN HANLEY. More changes of address for our class­ A few years ago I met him after a Navy mates: EMMET J. HOLLAND, 1950 Park game in Baltimore. In his playing days '34 RHODE ISLAND 4 15.7%* Ave., Paducah, Ky. 42001; EDWARD A. someone handed him the sobriquet of KERNS, 4271 Hilray Dr., Saginaw, Mich. "Dynamite Dan," but when I saw him JOHN J. MCLAUGHLIN of Providence, 48603; BROTHER E. P. MULVANEY last, he was the image of the distinguished R. I., is one of four men from "Little FSCH, Bishop Hendricksen High School, Wall Street executive type. Rhody" in the class of 1934. John is 2615 Warwick Ave., Warwick, R.I. 02889; MAURIE SCANLON, former president president of McLaughlin & Moran, Inc., ROBERT S. RENSBERGER, 192 Berwick of the Glee Club, was the host of that 175 Terminal Rd., Providence, R.I. Their Place, Lansdale, Pa. 19446 and AUGUST singing group when they visited Rome, firm is the top distributor in VON BOECKLIN, P.O. Box 1882, Tacoma, Italy. In our senior year, Maurie was the for Anheuser-Busch, Inc. VIN McALOON Wash. 98401. Sorin Sub roomie of MIKE COYLE. Wc —Mr. Notre Dame of Rome, Italy—^is WILLIAM J. WALSH formerly of 7357 had a fine group down there, including originally from Pawtucket, R.I. Vinnie and Merrill Ave., Chicago, III. 60649 is now NORM DUKE and RAY NABOR. John McLaughlin roomed together in listed as address unknown. Dr. BOB DONOVAN proposes that the Sorin Sub in •33-'34, JACK STEELE is stadium be named the " owner of an exclusive shop in the city by Edward M. Moran '31 Stadium." That is a wonderful sug­ the sea, Newport, R.I. JOHN S. 2501 N. Central Ave. gestion. Bob, and I hope to discuss it with McKIERNAN, who was lieutenant Chicago, 111. 60639 you at the Southern Cal game on Oct. 23. governor and also governor of Rhode The Alumni Association informed me of Island, is now a respected judge in their the death of FRANCIS A. MURPHY of Superior Court. Just recently the famous '35 ATTENTION WIVES 16.6%* 900 Somerset Avenue, Windber, Pa. 15953. Doris Duke (tobacco heiress) case came No details or date of death were given. I before him. Mac handled this interesting This column is directed exclusively to the requested Fr. JIM DONNELLY to remem­ case with distinction. This gives you a wives of the Class of '35. After several ber Frank in his prayers and Masses. Father complete report on the State of Rhode years of frustration as secretary and, after wrote immediately to Mrs. Murphy and Island. my experience this past weekend, and after extended the deepest sympathy of the ND Members of our class who are permanent the Michigan State game, have concluded Class of '33. residents of Florida according to my un­ I've been appealing erroneously to the male My niece, Barbara Metz, Margate, NJ., official records are: PARIS N. COWART, of the species. From now on that is going was awarded the "Daniel Keating Memorial 1430 S.W. 12th Ave., Miami, Fla. 33129; to change! Trophy" for her sportsmanship in playing WILLIAM P. HUGHES, 47 Palm Club. My dear wives of the Class of '35 (pretty and officiating in the high school basketball Pompano Beach. Fla. 33062; CHARLES L. good approach, I think), this column is league. This trophy honors LEO HUISKING, 201 Gaines Ave., Sarasota, being written two days after a swinging KEATlNG's son, Dan, who was lost in a Fla. 33580; WILLIAM J. MOTSETT, SR., boating accident a few years ago. After a has moved. His new address is Apt. 911, great basketball career at ND, I-eo became Sea Ranch Lakes North, 5200 North Ocean a member of the faculty of Atlantic City Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 33308. Bill's (NJ.) High School. telephone number is 305-781-1337. Bill is in DAN CASEY plans to attend the Miami the real estate business, and is associated game as well as some of the home games. with Ivan J. Smith and Co., Inc., 3350 E. His son, Joe, a junior at ND this year, Atlantic Blvd., P.O. Box 2775, Pompano made the dean's list again. Dan lives at Beach, Fla. 33062. His office phone is Evergreen Park, 111. SAM HYDE reminded 305-946-0800. CHARLES QUINN, JR., me that Father Doremus celebrated his 90th resides at 927 N.E. 9th Ave., Delray Beach, birthday on Aug. 4. It is not too late Fla. 33444. RICHARD B. TOBIN's address to send this good priest a card or a note. is P.O. Box 12728, St. Petersburg, Fla. Paul A. His address is: Rev. CHARLES DOREMUS 33733. Then we have three of our class­ CSC, Corby Hall, Notre Dame, Ind. 46556. mates who spend the winter months in Fergus Judge MAURIE LEE will move to a new sunny Florida. They are DANIEL J. "wingding" in South Bend, during the So. home in October and will have the address BRICK, DAVID J. FROELICH, and Cal weekend. Secretaries are supposed to for the column's next issue. Under the new JAMES R. MORRISON. If any other be "chosen" (or "conned" into serving, as (1970) Illinois Constitution he is now an fellow classmates are residing in the Sun­ I was) to meet the challenge of the associate judge of the Circuit Court of shine State besides those I've mentioned, ALUMNUS' deadlines with equanimity (never Cook County. I have not been informed about it. heard of her). So here goes: During August, I had the opportunity to After scanning through the National We finally made it! A successful mini- visit HARRY H. FRANCIS '30, who is Alumni Directory, I learned that FRANCIS reunion at South Bend. The wives of the the owner of a Plymouth-Chrysler agency, T. CRAWFORD now lives at Wolfeboro, Class of '35 did it! About 3 weeks ago Francis Motors Inc., 81 E. Lancaster Ave., N.H. 03894. His phone number is 603- Lenore Fergus and Elouise Ryan decided to Paoli, Pa., 19301; telephone (215) NI 569-3510. His mailing address is Box 44. jointly arrange an affair at their respective 4-2700. Harry, a great baseball player at We have no representation in Maine or homes Friday night and Saturday after the ND, plans to visit his old teammate, JOHN Vermont and only Francis in New "Revenge Bowl." They concluded after 14 (Lefty) MORAN '30. in October. Lefty, Hampshire. phone calls (par for the course) that those a successful Allstate Insurance Co. executive I was happy to receive a postcard today '35ers who had declared themselves—the for many years, now lives in suburban from RAY and Beachie TROY. They were old standbys—VAN HUISSELINGs, Chicago and practices law. vacationing in Voss, Norway. This is the MAFFEIs, BILL BERNARDS, BOB Late in August we were entertained by town where Knute Rockne was bom. ROGERS', TOM STRINGERS, JOE Fran and WALT RIDLEY '31 at their Received another card from Ray Troy SCHMIDTS, etc., were sufficient to get a lovely home in Oreland, Pa. To top a today advising of a trip to Cape Cod. mini-reunion started. To this group they delicious dinner, Fran served Irish Coffee ELI SHAHEEN tells about his annual expected the TOM WELSHs, AL RUBLYs, made from all the necessary additives plus golf outing and dinner held in Sturgis, JOE LYNCHs, GEORGE McGRATHs, a generous portion of TuUamore Dew. Mich. June 17 was the big day this year. JIM O'MEARAs, DAVE LYNCHs and Betty and LOUIS (Bookstore Louie) , Father RIEHLE and others who directly or indirectly indicated ALAMAN '37 were also guests to complete several members of the coaching staff they would be here. Added were the South the ND motif. The only discordant note attended. Eli asks "If ND is no longer a Bend stalwarts for 35 years— the KURT was Lou's statement that the U. of Catholic University, what is it then?" This SIMONS, FAL HARRIS'. TOM HICKEYs, Kentucky with Paul Alaman playing is in response to Father Hesburgh's article JIM McCRALEYs, CHET CHANDLERS, offensive guard would bring that team to that was reprinted in the magazine. Mademoiselle. Eli spent five days at KARL FULNECKYs, and ED SMITH, Pheasant Run in St, Charles, 111., recently. Dr. Mary Fransioli, daughter of VINCE FRANSIOLI, 141 Fairview Ave., Elmhurst, 23 our treasurer. (By the way, Ed is so dear to our hearts that no longer do we allow him to drive after dark without a body­ guard.) Last, but not least, the expected the suave and former Class of '35 professor, CoMsrats LEE FLATLEY, and the reason for his success outside the classroom—wife Kay. Lenore and Elouise's "hunch" that this was the year for a successful mini-reunion was, as usual, correct—much as Paul and I hate to admit their feminine clairvoyance. (For youse guys in Phy Ed that means to "see beyond.") At the zenith of activities Friday night at the Elouise Ryan's 38 were accounted for on their feet, and 7 other­ wise. Lee Flatley attested to the tatter's attendance, but as a member of the National Council of C.P.A.'s, did so with a footnote that they were there and in the party "according to accepted principles of accounting." Not all the "maybes" showed up but other welcome '35ers did—like the wives of BILL MILLER, AL D'AMORA, PAT O'Brien O'Neil Grosso FISHER, ART MULHOLLAND, FRANK McQUIRE (all the way from Europe), JIM McDEVITT and BILL GORGEN. Ill Van Huisseling discovered other wives after the game at the Convocation Center— the HOWARDS, POGUEs, DEMETRIOs, and others, but prior commitments pre­ vented them from coming to Lenore Fergus' party—which was not a sober party despite the afternoon's giveaway program in the stadium. Have no idea how you gals corralled your husbands and kept them going these past 36 years. But you must have a story to tell, and most importantly, you can help this column—if it is worthy of perpetuating— by passing on interesting information about you and your loved ones. Please, may I have your cooperation for future columns? Neaher Gormeley Ford, Jr. Am tired of appealing to the males for interesting news—receive only mundane info. Let's hear from "the gif^Is behind the throne." Promise to lend my by-line to the one who writes first! Have now about reached my quota of Eugene A. O'Brien '28 has been chosen to head a new authority, the words for this issue. However, look for more to come in '72—solicited from Isabelle •'MXC" or Minnesota Experimental City. Appointed by Gov. Wen­ (DAVE) LYNCH, Marge STRINGER, dell R. Anderson, O'Brien is to head the 11-man unit for two years. Elizabeth Jane O'MEARA, Carroll FISHER, The primary responsibility of the group will be the selection of a site and other dolls who surrounded me this and the Michigan State weekends. for a city of ultimately 250,000 population in Northern Minnesota. Really was inundated by news for this O'Brien is vice president of Sun Newspapers in Minneapolis. column—received one letter from TONY CROWLEY! Tony retired and moved to Boca Raton. The Crowleys' children are John W. O'Neil '34 has been promoted to senior vice president in the now technically off the payroll: oldest Banking Division of the Boatmen's National Bank of St. Louis, where daughter married to a doctor—^has two children; son. Bill, starting second year as he is in charge of four departments. Leasing and Equipment Financ­ an IVIBA at 11. of Florida; Mary Anne with ing, Time Plan, Master Charge and the Fort Leonard Wood Facility. a master's, and two years of elementary teaching, starting in Stuart, Fla., this fall as a teacher. Have fun Tony—hope to join you Louis J. Grosso '35 has been named vice president of Marine Midland before too long. Bank-New York. He is in charge of business development for the per­ Attended the wedding a few weeks ago sonal trust department and had been an assistant vice president since of DAN and Dorothy YOUNGERMAN's oldest daughter, Peggy Sue. Couldn't help 1968. He is married and lives in Manhattan. thinking of Dan during the ceremony, and how proud he would have been to walk Edward R. Neaher '37 has been nominated by President Nixon to be Peggy Sue down the aisle. PAUL FERGUS, her uncle, did the honors instead. judge of the Federal Court of the Eastern District of New York. He It still isn't too late to join the "group" has been serving as U.S. attorney for that district. After graduation at the LSU game in Baton Rouge on Nov. at ND he received his lav/ degree at Fordham U. and served as a spe­ 25, i.e.—if you have tickets, a tent, a Coleman lantern and an understanding cial agent of the F.B.L before becoming a partner in a law firm. frau! Seriously, if you are planning to go— get in touch with ED VAN HUISSELING, James F. Gormeley '44 is vice president of manufacturing for General PAUL FERGUS or CAMILLE GRAVEL (Alexandria, La.). Understand Camille has Signal Corp., New York. Before joining General Signal, he served rounded up quite a few hotel and motel for six years in operations for International Telephone and Telegraph rooms—so if you decide to go call him pronto and hope for the best. Corp., most recently in Los Angeles and earlier in Brussels.- He lives Our treasurer, ED SMITH, just told me at 536 Surrey Lane, Fairfield, Conn., with his wife and son. he got a ruling that the "Nixon Freeze" doesn't apply to annual dues for the '75 reunion. You can still pay for the entire John T. Ford Jr. '47 has been appointed vice president for finance of five years—namely 10 bucks—all at one the Chesapeake and Ohio & Baltimore and Ohio railroads. Ford time. Ten bucks from one hundred '35ers joined C&O in 1951 as internal auditor in Cleveland and went to Bal­ timore the next year as comptroller for C&O and B&O. With his wife and three children he lives in Severna Park, Md. 21146.

24 'Percentage of donors to the ND.Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. invested for three years at 7 per cent (we mystery. In closing Buddy again expresses is still another Reardon playing for Iowa, can get it!) is worth 10 bucks from 21 his deep thanks and heartfelt wishes to Terry. '35crs. Or, to put it more factually, and us all. Your secretary attended the Met Club of more enticingly—allows us to supply 35 Buddy lives at 3932 East Poe, Tucson, N.Y. party for Freshmen and parents in fifths of your favorite beverage (at whole­ Ariz. 85711. NYC. No reps of '37 were present to help. sale, of course) "on the house." How aljout From DAN O'BRIEN: "Spent a weekend Missed BILL FALLON, who reportedly is it? And, also, how about some news for at ND and watched the Irish squeak through not the Ford man. JIM McDEVITT, on the this column? a tough Northwestern team." Board of the Met Club, reported that the Presently Dan and his wife are staying ceremony and party for JUDGE NEAHER William F. Ryan in Cleveland for the duration of the home was a large event. 1620 E. Washington Ave. season at ND. Sold our home in Penn­ GERRY ZEILLER, the new commissioner South Bend, Ind. 46617 sylvania and spending most of our time in of HEW in New Hampshire, has his depart­ Florida now that all of our children are all ment making news in the mountains where on their own or away to school. the touring pros start. Other N.E. rep. has '36 THANKFUL BUDDY 20.4%* Dan spent some time with a number of mail from Maine for SKIP COURMIER classmates including that rare Irishman returned no forwarding address. JAMES S. GLEASON JR., has been TOM GRADY and his bride. Dan didn't Don't forget —REUNION 1972. appointed vice chairman of businessmen for say where this took place but I imagine on Loyola U., Chicago. He is chairman of the the ND campus. J. P. Quinn, Jr. board and chief executive officer of the ART MULHOLLAND and Mary Frances P.O. Box 275 Mercantile National Bank of Chicago. plus two of their children who go to school Andover, NJ. 07821 IRWIN (Buddy) GOLDMAN writes that in Tampa are going to join us down South it is a crying shame that open-heart surgery for the ND-Miami game. must provide the motivation for a guy to Dan asked me if I ever had seen SONNY '38 BURNIE'S BLARNEY 22.6%* write to his class secretary. Buddy is doing CHURCH. We had visited Sonny about well and beautifully, thanks to the skillful 3-4 years ago and if I am not mistaken I'm warnin' ye right off. I kissed the Blarney hands of the eminent Dr. Denton Cooley I made a report about seeing him. Quite stone in the midst of the Irish mist. Both and the special Mass attended by all the a few of our classmates live close by in my folks and my wife, Helen's, folks came '36ers who met at the reunion, and is deeply this vicinity but seldom see, visit, or get from County Roscommon. So be takin' grateful. Now he can boast a record that calls from any of them with the exception what 1 tell ye from now on with a grain might never be broken under the Golden of JOHN MORAN up in Cedar Grove, as of salt—in your beer. we call one another from time to time. Being with grand families in Limerick, Hope the boys take this hint and give me Cork and Dublin and in Glasgow, Scotland, a ring. My new address is 249 North Day I missed the last issue (Did you notice?) St., Orange, NJ. 07050. Tel. No. is but covered every other issue in the world 673-5290. in the pubs and so am prepared to roll out Incidentally, Dan will be in Florida after barrels of good cheer. Nov. 15 at IID Concourse Drive, Turtle First cheerful bit was a note from BOB Creek Village, Teavesta, Fla. 33458. ORVIS, of Orvis and Douglas, CPAs, Los Angeles, that he had stopped off at ND for Larry Palkovic the first time in 20 years on the way from 249 N. Day St. Boston. He was impressed. Another note Orange, NJ. 07050 Francis L. Laydcn '37 REUNION '72 16.9%* Dome. Back in '31 when as a freshman he contracted pneumonia. That was "BA" Appointment news tells us ANTHONY before antibiotics, etc. so, the victim just (Tony) O'BOYLE has been promoted to lies in bed until the crisis passes. During Class 3 in the U.S. Foreign Service and that time, the entire school participated in confirmed by the U.S. Senate. Tony entered a special novena for him in the Sacred the foreign service in 1956 and is currently Heart Church. Buddy still has the religious assigned to the Embassy in Saigon as bulletin with this announcement. And this consul, a long way from the Scranton- again in 1971 comprises a unique ND Wilkes-Barre Pa. area. record, especially for a nice Jewish fella. Rev. JOSEPH POWERS CSC former Leonard H. It worked beautifully both times, so what E.V.P. of U. of Portland will direct that Skoglund Jr. more could an ND man want except University's overseas center in Salzburg, perhaps St. Mary's girls, who are now on Austria, during 1971-72 academic year. To came from JOE KRUPA, Portland, Ore., the way. All kidding aside, Buddy is using complete the overseas news, JACK Mc- telling me he would be here for the Navy this column to profoundly thank us one AULIFFE, an architect from Honolulu, is game. and all, to ANDY HUFNAGEL, JOHN also a rear admiral in the Navy Seabee MORAN and the rest for their prayers in his Reser\es, a former deputy director of the A newspaper photo showing JOHN behalf. Six weeks after Buddy's operation State Transportation Department in Hawaii. (Jack) A. SCOTT with President Nixon at he returned to work. It involves some Jack's Seabees made history as they con­ the retirement dinner of Purdue's presi­ writing, research and teaching in the College structed the North Field at Tinian from dent, Hovde, which Jack emceed, arrived of Education, U. of Arizona, having with postage due. Glad to pay—^just send changed careers in '65 when he entered grad the news, lads. school and pursued an MA degree while Another note from Krupa said Clare, the teaching in the English department. wife of JIM SULLIVAN, with GE in Bing- hamton, N.Y., had undergone open-heart His only regret was inability to join us at surgery and that prayers would be ap­ the reunion and he is looking forward to preciated. Joe took classes in our sem'or participating in the next reunion so that he year and graduated from Portland U. He can personally thank us all for our prayers has 5 boys and four girls with 5 grand­ and to see his former Scholastic colleagues, children so far, works for Pacific Northwest Moran and Hufnagel. Bell and occasionally sees BOB HUTCHIN­ "The past months of inactivity," he writes, SON who lives in Bend, Ore., where he sells "have kept me out of touch with ND men auto supplies. in Tucson. However, did read in the paper Robert M. REDMAN DUGGAN wrote from 550 the other day that Tim King '36L cele­ Siegfried Waldo Ave., SE, Salem, Ore., where he brated the occasion of one of his daughters has retired, after 30 years in the Foreign taking her vows. Two sons and wife, which the "Enola Gay" took off in 1945 Service, because of total blindness and now Heanor, comprise my family. One son. Bill, with the historic bomb. increasing deafness. He received a Dis­ engaged in the field of special education Back home, we have GLEN RICHARD­ tinguished Service Medal and Citation with disturbed children and the younger SON appointed as associate director of (living in Sorin sub, no doubt, conditioned son, Jim, attends junior college. Wife, personnel for labor relations at the U. of him) from the State Department. Eleanor, is secretary to the deans of boys Chicago. DICK DELANEY anticipates a A letter from BILL COSTELLO in St. and girls at one of our major high schools." trip for a game and also reports the family Louis brought the sad news that MARC I guess you could say that the entire news as No. 1 daughter teaching in Omaha, GRUENENFELDER died of cancer Goldman family is involved in education to son, Richard, with Arthur Young & Co., recently. "My memories of Marc at ND one degree or another. Whether that is good L. A., and two other children teaching in education in general remains an unsolved Ohio. This is Iowa's contribution to the U.S. EDDIE REARDON checked in from Baltimore, there for the Chief-Colt game, with son, Kerry, on the Chief squad. There 25 are that he seemed always to be walking present and future students at both insti­ day in court in Sioux Falls interfere with towards—never away from—the old tutions. I grant you the decision was not his reunion plans. Doesn't sound like the architecture building. It didn't matter based on nostalgia and concern for the Jack I knew in Law School. At that time whether it was morning or evening, Satur­ past; it was based on the needs and goals he didn't let anything get in the way of his day or Sunday—Marc always had a heavy of the future. The past and our experiences plans. He has his oldest boy at Arizona roll of blueprints under one arm and a are ours to hold and cherish all of our State at Tempe, and his No. 2 son has just T-square under the other," says Bill who lives. The present and future of our Uni­ finished his frosh year at ND and will be lived near Marc and his wife, Lorraine, in versity must be directed to the needs of taking his soph year at ND in Rome. the city of Des Peres, near St. Louis. the present and future students. FRANK WEMHOFFs oldest boy. Drew, Bill is now with one of St. Louis's oldest Let us not become disgruntled and real estate firms. He and wife, Kathie, have antagonistic because our University is not three children married, with 7 grand­ the same as it was in our day. Let us pray children. They also have a son. Jack, who that God and Our Lady of Notre Dame is a deacon and will be ordained a priest and St. Mary's will guide all associated with on May 20. Bill sent a full-page pictorial the schools to even greater accomplish­ story of Jack's work in SL Norbert Parish ments. One way we can display this hope is last summer. Another son is at home. Bill by continuing our support and interest in would like to hear from TOM FITZ­ the University that has given so much to us. GERALD, CHARLIE CALLAHAN, In pursuit of news of the Men of '40 my 1 4.- FRANK BRIGHT, JOE MESSICK and visit to Missoula, Mont, was successful. JIM DOUGHERTY. Although visiting other friends, we tracked Another sad note: EMERSON HYNES down Dean ROBERT E. SULLIVAN. Bob M.A. '39, a close friend of mine who was is dean of the Law School at the U. of William E. in the two-year apologetics program and got Montana and active in many areas Cotter Jr. to know many of us in our senior year, associated with the education of lawyers. died July 30 of a heart attack in Arlington, We had a pleasant visit reminiscing and he started at ND this fall. Frank sees BILL Va. He was Sen. Gene McCarthy's assistant looks just great. We also enjoyed his fine, MORREY occasionally in Chicago and also and close friend from the time when both sociable family, and Sully assured me he visits just about every summer with his old were on the faculty of St. John's U. in will do his best to make the '75 reunion. roommate, BUD POGLIANO in Colorado. Minnesota. Emerson and his wife, Arleen, While attending an accounting con­ Bud is with Honeywell. had 10 children and we often visited at vention in Lexington, Ky. I saw JIM GEORGE RASSAS is still in the con­ each other's homes—that was a full house! CULLATHER and other ND accounting struction business in Chicago and sent me Fr. Leo Ward said a special Mass for him a very nice article on Dr. JIM CARROLL at ND attended by his ND friends. who is doing great work as the police On Aug. 22, Bro. REGINALD surgeon in Chicago. JUSZCZAK CSC died of a heart attack. Marty and I spent a weekend in Phoenix He taught at ND and had served as recently and met ART ERRA '30, who is principal of several high schools. a hearing officer for the Insurance Depart­ To end on a happy note, GEORGE B. MORRIS JR. has been appointed vice president and chief negotiator of General ment, and also saw an old friend, JOHN Motors. George lives at 1420 Pembroke MILLER '48, who is now practicing law Rd., Bloomfield HUls, Mich. there and has just become a partner in the law firm with which he has been associated Bumie Bauer for five years. 1139 Western Ave. Waller L. My son, TIM '69, is now in the Teacher South Bend, Ind. 46625 Fleming Jr. Corps and is teaching at Boligee, Ala. This December 28 will be the 25th professors. Jim reports all is well with him anniversary for my bride, Marty and me. '39 JIM 21.3«; and his family. We are going to celebrate a little earlier Fr. JOHN F. ANTON '38, was a house though. As soon as I get this column off in guest who reported among other things the mail, we'll be winging our way to that he sees JOE THESING often. Joe is Hawaii for a short stay at the Royal with the Toyota Co. with offices in the Hawaiian. Oakbrook, 111. area. JIM DONOGHUE Come on all you '41ers, let's hear from informed us of the death of the mother of you so I can keep the rest of us informed. PAUL LENIHAN. The Men of '40 assure As the years go on there will be fewer of you of their prayers, Paul, for your mother us, and it becomes important to know more and your intentions. about the remainder—so write. Received word that CHARLES A. WAECHTER has been named an instructor Bill Daly in sociology at Walsh College, Canton, 1204 Indian Springs Drive Ohio. He holds an M.A. in sociology from Glendora, Calif. 91740 the U. of Akron. It is strange that shortly after seeking informaUon about NORV HUNTHAUSEN '42 -nVO DIE 19.4%* '40 BOTHERED BY a routine change of address notice was M.R.U. 21.2'; received. Norv has left that famous JOHN P. CRONIN has been appointed metropolis of Mexico, Mo., and now resides manager of sterile products for the Upjohn in Davenport, la. His address is 2130 Before reporting the class news I want to Company. He lives in Kalamazoo, Mich, Kohler Dr. It is only proper that you with his wife and two sons. make some comments pertinent to our Davenport men check on Norv and see University. It bothers me that some of the We are deeply saddened by the deaths of that we receive more information. two of our classmates. DANIEL F. address changes received are marked As you can see the news is not lengthy M.R.U. (mail returned unopened). If the DUGGAN died June 19, and RICHARD and since the vast majority of you are T. MATLAVISH in July. To their widows reason for this is dissatisfaction with the reluctant to write I expect to see many of St Mary's College merger, please give some and families we extend our deepest you at the Convo Center after the games sympathy, and we shall all remember Dan thought to my brief comments. and thus come up with more news. Constructive change is necessary to every and Dick in our prayers. Thanks to Rabbi ALBERT PLOTKIN organization no matter what its goals and Robert G. Sanford purposes might be in these days of constant for his very nice note in July thanking uf 947 Oakcreek Dr. for mentioning him in our column. It is change. If you will recall changes were Dayton, Ohio 45429 being made during our years on campus; always nice hearing from our classmates many appeared to be minor, but our campus and we wish more of you would drop us a life was different from that of those who line and let us know what you are doing preceded us. '41 FOUR IN COLLEGE 21.6%* and anything that might be of interest to The merger was considered for a number all of us. News has been very scarce lately. of years before it became an actuality. It Had a note from BOB SAGGAU. He and A good time was had by all at the Miami was investigated and studied by many Marge will have four in college this year, game. Among members of our class that experienced and vitally concerned religious Barbara at Witchita State, Dave at U. of your reporter visited were TOM WALKER, and lay men and women. The primary Wisconsin at Milwaukee, and Tom and LARRY KELLEY and JIM CONWAY. concern was the welfare and education of Catherine at U. of Wisconsin at Oshkosh. We stayed at the Key Biscayne Hotel. I We'll have to keep selling a lot of skis. Expects to be at the Northwestern and Southern Cal games. Heard from JACK BURKE who let a 26 *Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. am sure there were many others of our vice president of Turner Construction Co., us expected. Estherville is my home area class who stayed on the Beach at the New York, the firm he joined upon gradu­ and in the heart of the rich Iowa com belt. Deauville and the Fontainebleau. ation. He is operations manager of the There are few ND graduates in the area Congratulations to JAMES D. MORAN company's Philadelphia office and will but I occasionally hear from BOB who was elected president and chief continue in that capacity. OTOOLE, MIKE GARRY and BOB executive officer of the Flintkote Company, Recently an early morning call was SINKLE. My life is devoted to our White Plains, N.Y. Jim lives in Larchmont received from JOE CHRISTEN, Western children and my law practice. The children, with his wife and six children. Springs, III. He was en route with his fortunately, are all in excellent health, DON FIGEL reports there was a minia­ family to D6or County for a vacation and reasonably intelligent, active and apparently ture reunion of the Class of '42 at the had stopped overnight in Green Bay. Un­ happy. We have severe winters in Iowa, Purdue game in Lafayette. TED MC­ fortunately it was the morning following a particularly in this area, but fortunately DONALD and his wife, Corrine, hosted tragedy in my family so it was impossible we have a ski area less than a mile from MIKE CARR and Betty Lou, DON to suggest a breakfast meeting before his our home so the winters are active and MARTIN and Mary, DON FIGEL and departure for the Door County Peninsula. enjoyable. We have a summer home in the Marge, JOHN MALONE and Ellen, and Joe is with the A. G. McKee Construction Lake Okoboji area, some 20 miles from JIM McNULTY and Mel, also STEVE Co. and just had completed a big job in home. This area is one of the last beautiful GRALIKER. VINCE SHIELY was Memphis. His family consists of three inland lake areas in the world—a deep scheduled but had to cancel. children—a daughter at Marquette, a son (100-150 feet) lake that is unpolluted and at Southern Illinois and a son at home. serene. Our visitors from the Wisconsin and William M. Hickey Does anyone know the whereabouts of Minnesota "lake states" are amazed at this 5500 West 73rd St. RICHARD KISGEN, originally from Iowa? beautiful lake. Estherville is also one of the Chicago, III. 60638 A letter came from TOM CUTSHAW who few places left in the country that does not is on a sabbatical from Morehead State U. have the large city problems. We have and presently is doing research on inter­ excellent schools, a small community college, '43 FAME LUNCH 18.2%* national law in Washington, D.C. If Dick little if any serious crime, little if any can be located, write to Tom in care of poverty, and no racial problems. We are 5502 Decatur St., Hyattsville, Md. 20781. only about two hours from the Minneapolis- Your secretary was in Chicago for the Perhaps several of you have sons or St. Paul area so we can enjoy the benefits National Football Foundation and Hall of daughters who entered ND this fall. Some of the metropolitan area without the many Fame luncheon. of them have been mentioned in previous inherent problems. I am sure you will GEORGE CONNOR '48 is president and columns. For those desiring such publicity, conclude that we are very happy. I believe our own JOE KEENAN is vice-president drop your secretary a card with the infor­ the good priests and brothers and teachers of the chapter. JOE JR. '70 has signed a mation. It will be used in a future issue. at ND were trying to teach us how to live contract with the and is One recent entry is Mike Christman '75, a happy life. I believe in my case this has with their Sarasota, Fla. team. son of WALLIE CHRISTMAN, Green been accomplished ... the Lord has been TONY GIROLAMl, ED MURRAY, and Bay's gift to ND. good to our family." BUD DUDLEY were other NDers in Col. WILLIAM KELLY is on the move More nice news is that JOHN G. MACK attendance. The Murray family left shortly again. That is par for a career serviceman. Jr. has been named president of the thereafter for an extended tour of Europe. For the past three years he was in Wash­ container division of the Inland Steel Co., Had a great visit with "Inspector Shindler" ington, D.C. where he was a member of the Chicago. He joined Inland in 1946 at East Dudley who was in for All-Star week, Armed Service Board of Contract Appeals. Chicago, Ind. promoting the Liberty Bowl game. Now he is in Dallas where he is General DR. WILLIAM E. CASTLE is a dentist MARK PFALLER writes that eldest son, Counsel to the Army/Air Force Exchange in Lockport, New York. He too has a small Mark II, started in Fine Arts at Wisconsin Service. He feels it will be an exciting and family of few children . .. seven in his case. State U., Oshkosh, and after three years interesting experience and should be an His wife Jean and he supervise the house­ started fresh in Architecture at Ball State assignment of about four years. The Kelly hold consisting of Mary Beth (23), Michael U. This fall he transferred to ND where family lives on the south side of the city (21), Carolyn (18), Ann (17), Stacy (15), he will be a junior again. The junior at 6529 Braddock Place. Fellow '44ers in William, Jr. (13), and Kerry (9). Mary architectural class is studying in Rome this the Dallas community take note and Beth is a nurse in Boston, Mass.; Michael academic year. Mark left for Paris in welcome Bill and Helen to the ND family is a junior at St. Bonaventure; Carolyn is September and after a tour will continue in that area. on the dean's list and is a sophomore at on to the Eternal City. Mark sees BOB St. Mary's; Ann is starting her studies in HACKNER occasionally and had plans to Joseph A. Neufeld nursing at Niagara U.; Stacy is a freshman see BILL and JACK SHERER. ED KAM- Post Office Box 853 at DeSales High School; William and Kerry MERER '67 and PAT WAITE '65 are Green Bay, Wis. 54305 are still in grade school. And Jean? . . Bill aspiring young architects with Mark F. writes that "she's tired!" We say it's nice Pfaller Associates, Architects-Engineers, to be tired in such a wonderful way. 3112 West Highland Boulevard, Milwaukee, '45 ITS NOT ALL BAD! 23.8%* Rev. JOHN VAN WOLVLEAR CSC has Wis. 53208. been named director of admissions and THOMAS MILLER, 11 Mt. Lebanon There's a certain risk of having to work financial aid at the U. of Portland, Oregon. Blvd., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15228, writes that extra, to type more, to send out more JACK FENA and his wife Kathleen live daughter, Michele, graduated from St. letters, and to stand by the front door and in Hibbing, Minn., where Jack is practicing Mary's in '70 and Diane is a senior there wait for the mailman . . . especially as law and has been a member of Minnesota this year. Eldest son Timothy is a freshman deadlines arrive . . . but when a job involves State legislature for 12 years. Their family at ND in A. B. and Walsh Hall and will be getting word from some old friends and •of 10 consists of James (19), Urslynn Ann the first of the third generation of Millers classmates telling you how their children (21), Susan (18), SaUy (16), Peter (14), to play football at ND. are doing great, and how they themselves Margaret (13), Christopher (11), Barth­ Thanks, Mark and Tom, for coming are happy, progressing, working hard, olomew (10), Mary Ann (8), and through. making money, living good . . . then the Andrew (5). job can't be all bad. There's plenty of CLIFF MARKS and his wife, Virgima, Frank W. Kaiser compensation in it. It's nice to hear from have just celebrated their 25th anniversary. 307 Charry you guys. So please write. "Hard to believe," writes Cliff, "seems a Chatsworth, 111. 60921 Received a nice note from FRANCIS lot less than that . . . they've been good FITZGIBBONS telling me that he and his years." Cliff and "Ginny" are ^andparents wife Evelyn (St. Maiy's '45) and their eight since son Mike (19) and his wife had '44 REJOICE! 18.8'; children live happily in Estherville, la., a daughter, Christine, bom on Cliff's where Francis practices law in association birthday, Jan. 5 of this year. Cliff writes: Autumn is here. For some it is a time of with his two brothers. His oldest boy, John "I'm working on Space Shuttis Program much excitement because the football (20) was recently elected president of the for McDonnell Douglas, Des Peres, Mo., season is once again in full swing. For Student Body at St. Norbert's College, as director of the orbiter stage. Prior to others it is a time of great pleasure because Green Bay, Wis. John is now a senior there. that I was director of ad'anced systems and the change in season from summer to fall Ann (19) is a junior at St. Mary's College; technology for MDC in St Louis. I see brings with it a majesty of glorious colors. Tom (18) is a sophomore at the U. of FRANCIS J. (Paddy) McCARTHY For a few it is a time of increasing sorrow Iowa; Joseph (16) is a senior at Esther­ frequently . . . he's in same parish . . . because age has dimmed their outlook and ville High School. Coming up in the rear, coaches all teams ... his Tom and my Pat the approaching winter with its long cold but strong competitors to older brothers (14) were high-point men on St. Clement dark days is a continuing of a long tired and sisters are Julia (15), Kathleen (13), basketball team . . .also have daughters in life. Let us rejoice, however, because as Joan (9), and Mary Claire (7). Francis same class. CAL BLATTNER '46, was one winter turns to spring life here is but a adds a few notes which I found interesting semester behind, works at MDC and I see prelude for living in eternal splendor. to read, and sort of relaxing compared to him frequently of course. Saw JIM RAYMOND J. CUSICK has been elected my hectic Fifth Ave. and 45th SL, survival DUGGAN and his wife at one of ND pace: "I am sure that my life since leaving ND," writes Francis, "has been very ordinary with the accomplishments, awards, successes and disappointments that most of 27 football games last year. He's still one of 1948 Fernando said he could have never the nicest guys you'll meet anywhere." By '47 CHAPLAIN 21.0%* believed that ND would some day be a the wav, the other two Marks' children are coed university. That goes for a lot of us Mary Beth (10) and Carol (8). REV. JOHN VANDENBOSSCHE CSC, and probably would have been the most That's the short visit for this time. See who has spent the past year as chaplain of acceptable change compared to everything you real soon. And write me meantime. Holy Cross Junior College at ND, and in else going on! graduate study at the University, is to be LEO COSTELLO took in the Southern A. V. Lesmez chaplain for the next year in the Newman California game and brought along a portion 122 TuUamore Rd. Center at the San Bernardino Valley Junior of the family for the tailgate lunch and Garden City, N.Y. 11530 College in the Diocese of San Diego. He view of the campus. FRANK TRIPUCKA will live in the nearby parish of Immaculate has two sons who were winners in the Ford Conception where he will serve as assistant "Pass-Punt-Kick" contest in their respective '46 GOOD WORK 18.7%* pastor on Sunday. His address is 1090 La Cadena Drive, Colton, Calif. 92324. Please be advised that TIM HUGHES, the Had a nice note from SAM ADELO, he ALIJMNUS Managing Ed., has forwarded to said he was happy to see the Class of '47's yours truly three articles concerning our column revived, said the column has classmates. Tim was kind in his brief note appeared and disappeared. He is living in to tell me to keep up the good work. Might San Juan now as counsel for Gulf companies I say to Tim he's doing an excellent job which operate in Puerto Rico. Before his for me. transfer there in JiJy, he was on the staff You will be pleased to hear that THEO­ of the law department of Gulf Oil Company DORE C. RADEMAKER was appointed —Latin America for four years with head­ to the position of assistant regional com­ quarters in Coral Gables, Fla. He has had missioner (Appellate), North Atlantic the opportunity in his law career to travel Region, New 'i'ork, N.Y. This region in­ to many foreign countries where he has cludes six New England states and New had the pleasure of keeping many friend­ York. Ted began his IRS career in 1948 as ships that were formed while he was an a special agent in South Bend, Ind. Ted undergraduate and law student at ND. age groups in local competition. The older holds a bachelor of science degree in Well, that is all for this month, but please boy was in the national finals last year in accounting and finance from ND. He keep the news coming, and keep in mind New Orleans between the halves of the married the former E Nancy Anderson, the the 25th reunion next year. We all have to Pro Bowl. BOB TAYLOR is on his way to belle from Peru, Ind. Mrs. Rademaker has get together for that one. recovep' after a recent illness per TOM four wonderful children. What arc their Sincerely, to critics, Alumni and friends of ND who names? wonder "what's going on out there at ND?" PRESCOTT O. WILLAMAN of James J. Shea One other thought, first read Father Ted's Ossining, N.Y., vice-president of sales for 35 Liberty Terrace HERBERT. I guess this is about it for now. New York Air Brake Co., Watertown, N.Y. Ashley, Pa. 18705 Cannot write a column without any news, was graduated from the Advanced Manage­ so I look forward to hearing from you. ment Program of the Harvard U. Graduate School of Business Administration. Con­ George J. Keenan gratulations, Prescott! '48 NEWS NEEDED 22.4%* 177 Rolling HHls Rd. EDWARD M. SCOTT is deserving of CUfton. NJ. 07013 our congratulations for his recent book I know you have been anxiously awaiting entitled "The Adolescent Gap." It will be this column which has missed the last few published in 1972. The text has a foreword issues but due to lack of information or '49 CLASSIC ANSWER 23.0%* by Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC. Dr. enough of it, I preferred to skip rather than Scott is the clinic director for the State of have a short writeup. So those of you who I know that many of you read the Oregon Mentali Health Division's Alcohol have been thoughtful enough to send some ALU.MNUS magazine, or at least this portion and Drug Section. My warmest and sincere material, this is your moment to be high­ on occasion: But how often do you take a good wishes go to you three. Keep up the lighted. good look at Insight: Notre Dame? The excellent work. BILL SIEBERT was elected to the reason I ask is that I would like to point It was indeed a pleasure to communicate position of controller-treasurer in Stevens out an article in the summer '71 issue titled with PETER RICHISKI, our past excellent Point, Wis., last April. He had been con­ "Notre Dame—How Catholic Is It?" written secretary. Peter and Helen pass along that troller since 1961 but in the last election by JAMES T. BURTCHAELL CSC the they are all fine and in the best of health the job was made controller-treasurer so provost of the school. It's a classic answer and spirits. now he is in charge of tax collections and commentary on page 2. It leads quite The school bells are ringing for me so it is custodian of city funds. CHARLES V. naturally to this very real analysis by Fr. is another interesting year of teaching at OWENS Jr. has been elected vice president Burtchaell. Barringer High School in Newark, NJ. I of the Professional Products Group of Miles My Tom, Paul and Peggy are showing am fortunate in being able to team teach Laboratories Inc. in Elkhart, Ind. BRUCE numerous signs of a mounting anxiety as with a great NDer, WILLIAM HEWSON E. HILL, VP of marketing for the Olin they almost daily remind (at this writing) '58. Corp., Chemicals Division, has been gradu­ me that the Southern Cal game is next I am happy to inform you that JOSEPH ated from the advanced management pro­ month. It will be history by this reading DeLIA '47 is now interning and hopes to gram at Harvard U. Graduate School of and we shall still be licking our chops, as hang the shingle with M.D. following his Business Administration. the perfect season unfolds. cognomen next year. Joseph or Doc and his We were indeed sorry to hear about the Now for class news. U.S. Air Force Lt. charming wife, Gloria, are blessed with four May 21 death of PATTRIXLER, BSC Col. RICHARD J. BUSTIN has assumed children Debra, Joseph, Robert and Richard. '48, who was living in Huntington. Ind;' command of the 100th Field Maintenance This summer was not a good one for me Had a communication from GENE. LA Squadron at Davis Monthan AFB, Ariz. (I as I had the disheartening task of informing FAVE who is out in El Cajon, Calif^, with spent a little time there in a B-24 many long Michael DeCicco, fencing coach, that the Input/Output Company. Gene makes a years ago.) He and his wife, the former Doug Gemmell '72, captain-elect of the noteworthy suggestion of having a Class Betty J. Munn, have three children: Joseph 1971-72 basketball team suffered a terrible Reunion in California or New "Jersey. (17), Jame (16) and Michael (14). accident resulting in a bad fracture of both JIM DRONEY had remarried and thereby Someone will have to check me as to how his tibia and fibula. Douglas will be back increased the size of his fampy twofold. "new" this item really is, but I received a I hope. It was wonderful to hear from Doug He and his wife Lois now have jJ'sons. note undated informing me that LEWIS J. about the ND family in my hospital visits. Jim is president of the Mt. Lebanon Ofiice SHIOLENO was named president of May I take this time to thank Coach Equipment Co. in suburban Pittsburgh.- ' MEPCO Inc., a subsidiary of North- JOSEPH YONTO '48, our exceHent BILL GRIFFIN, now a prosperoiis architect american Philips Corp. Mepco produces assistant football coach, for advising my in Bridgeport, Conn, attended Jim's, wedding metal film, carbon film, wire and power son, Vincent, during his visit last June. since they were roommates in '42. ED resistors, miniature capacitors and hybrid Coach, your counselling and St. Benedict's McBRIDE a Miami attorney, and his • integrated circuits. Lew? Is this current coach Gene Schiller's expert teaching are brother ART have developed a cablevision information? (No pun intended.) coming to the fore. system in Miami. They also have interest DR. ALBERT \y. BERGSTAHLEN, who Hoping to hear from all. Go, Irish! in some shopping centers and Art is VP is professor of origahic chemistry at the U. of of the Yellow Cab Co. in Cleveland. Kansas, recently presented a report against Diamond Commisa Had a nice letter from Fernando Luiz fluoridation to the city council of Cincinr Jamestown Apts., Apt. 27A Magno de Carvalho who was in the College nati, Ohio. Al is president of the' Inter­ 221 Harrison St. of Science and is now teaching in a high national Society for Fluorine Research. I Nutley, NJ. 07110 school in Rio de Janeiro. He would like to don't have an identifying date on this item, hear from some of his old friends from either, but a memo was passed along to me ND and invites anyone down Rio way to visit him at his new address: Rua Barata Ribeiro No. 611. Apt. 803, Copacabana, Rio de Janeiro, Guanabara, Brazil. Back in 28 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. saying that Rev. ALFRED F. D'ALONZO gration of SMC and ND is really a revival Real Estate Company, Aspen, Colo, and CSC '49 was appointed dean of students at of the way it all started from the beginning. has a complete rundown on ranches, King's College, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. to fill the We visited Father Henri Jambon CSC, acreage, building sites, houses, condo­ post left vacant by the death of Rev. Tom rector of the Sacred Heart Church of Notre miniums, businesses, etc. Sheehy CSC. Dame in Le Mans, France, and he gave us RAY SULLIVAN writes from Mount FRANCIS E. GAUL has been named a a fine tour of the church and facilities, Mercy College, Cedar Rapids, la.: "My councilman in Cleveland, Ohio, to succeed explaining that the Holy Cross Order is wife Mary and I keep busy feeding and James V. Staunton who was elected to divided into three branches, the French, the educating our six. I am now business Congress. Frank, who was a varsity tackle Canadian, and American, and one can see manager here at Mount Mercy College in at ND in 1947 and 1948, is a trucking firm the stained-glass windows in the Church Cedar Rapids. My activities other than executive. He lives at 17119 Ernadale Ave. over one side altar represented a ND those at the college pretty much center in Cleveland and is a founder member of graduate in cap and gown with Our Lady around music and church. I am in our St. the Don Bosco Guild, a big brother on the Dome in the background along with Jude's Choir and plan to rejoin the Barber­ organization. priests and nuns representing our campuses shop Chorus here as soon as time •will Well, Gents, I've done it again. The mail (East and West); stained glass over the allow. I am lector at church and will be bag is empty; I've used every bit of news main altar representing the Canadian branch teaching CCD this fall. I am also a member data at my command. Football season and over the other side altar representing of our Catholic Layman's Club here. I usually promotes some class contacts. Write the French branch. feel very sorry for people like yourself me about games you've seen and class­ In the same church there are other when you have no copy. It's a little like mates who crossed your path. 1 surely can stained-glass windows of nuns, whom SMC throwing a party and no guests show up." use some Help! girls would recognize, as well as of Father Nice note from DICK CORDASCO, who I received (or more correctly, Joan and Moreau and Brother DuJarfe. When talking was selected ND Man-of-the-Year by the I received) congratulatory notes from Rev. with Father Jambon and seeing all of the ND Club of Jersey Shore and handles the BILL NEIDHART CSC and BILL unity of N.D. and S.M.C. in this church State of New Jersey for Economic Develop­ BROCKHOFF on the birth of Dan Wesley where the Holy Cross Order was founded ment Administration, U.S. Department of in April. Fr. Bill says he plans to visit us for both nuns, priests and brothers, before Commerce, with offices in Trenton. Dick's next summer to supervise Dan's training they sent any missionaries to America, boss is Bob Podesta, Assistant Secretary of table and backyard "workouts." Brockhoff one realizes that they were unified from the Commerce, who has three daughters also looked into the future, saying "Some­ beginning and that this year's agreement graduated from SMC and married to day you will experience the thrill and joy between SMC and ND is another step in ND men. that is mine this week as our son, John, the progress of the order. DAVE ROBINSON is President of begins college life at Notre Dame. Further­ Mary Pat and 1 were walking along the RO.MO Photo Labs in St. Petersburg, Fla. more, 1 cannot agree with any of our side of the Notre Dame Cathedral, which is ROBERT E. WELSH has been named Alumni who say that ND has 'gone to the on an island in the Seine River, downtown general manager of the Foam Division of dogs.' There is far more good here than Paris, and who should be sitting there in Scott Paper Company, Philadelphia. bad." Well said, Billy boy! this beautiful park on the island but Prof. WILLIAM HOPKE, Jr. has been elected My final piece of mail came from the Joe Evans, now Dr. Evans, who taught most to the Advisory Board of Woodlawn Alumni Office and announced that Dr. of us philosophic psychology. He was National Bank, Grovetown. Va. ALLAN ALBERT J. MOTZEL of Waukesha, Wis., spending much of the summer on the "Left LANDOLT has been appointed by Gov. has been named director of medical edu­ Bank" translating from French to English Richard Ogilvie as director of the Illinois cation at Waukesha Memorial Hospital. Dr. many French philosophers' works. He spoke Department of Aeronautics. JOHN MEN- Motzel is a graduate of St. Louis U. of old friends Vince Cunningham, Armand DENHALL, a partner with Arthur Ander­ Medical School and has been on the D'Agostino and John Evans, among others. sen and Company, Washington, D.C, was a hospital's medical staff since 1958. He will Joe invites us to drop in and see him on recent speaker at a meeting of the State maintain his private practice in the field the Seventh Floor of the Library at any Planning Council of Chattanooga, Tenn. of general surgery on a. part-time basis. time. John is in charge of his company's Wash­ All that remains to me is to thank all TOM and MARY ANN WEITHERS at­ ington Tax Department. who contributed in large and small effort tended the Defense Research Institute and Our prayers to Marie MOULTON and toward my pleasure in assembling this news the International Association of Insurance family. Her late husband, WALTER, was corner. The year of 1971 has been a fruitful Counsels' meetings in Washington, D.C. We a partner in Beaudin-Moultin Associates of one with many new correspondents. But my had a wonderful visit and it was a pleasure Winooski, Buriington, Vt., an architectural needs never wane. Please make a promise to sit down next to Tom at the same dis­ and site-planning firm. He was a member of to yourself to write just once to your class cussion tables. We saw MARTY and Joyce the Vermont Chapter of the American secretary in 1972. What a year we '49ers O'CONNOR at Marco Island near Naples, could have! All the Wesleys wish you a Fl., with their fine family. You will recall Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year. Marty contracted polio when he was a basketball coach at ND, and then gradu­ Leo L. Wesley ated from ND Law School with GEORGE 155 Driftwood Lane SULLIVAN and myself: He is living in Rochester, N.Y. 14617 Sarasota as the president of a seafood corporation and has the same great family '50 LETfERS that he had in Vetville. We received a nice note from Joyce and APPRECIATED 23.9%' CHUCK BAIER (Vetville, Apt. 22 and former Mayor) Westminster, Colo., as well Here's hoping that you have all had a good as from JACK and Mary McHALE, Wash­ summer and are having a fine fall. I ap­ ington, D.C, ED and Barb KELLY, A. B. (Gus) preciate the letters that have been written Chicaeo, FR. KUNKEL. Huntsville, Ark., Cifelii so that we can have some information in ROD and Sarah FORBES. College Park, the column and would encourage the rest Md., JACK DOYLE in Birmingham, Mich., Institute of Architects, and he and Marie of you to please do so for me. Gloria and JOHN FERRY; and last but (St. Maty-of-the-Woods '50) had the JOE SCHEIDLER has been appointed not least Rosemary and her famous travel- blessing of six daughters. director of public information for the tour-to-the-games husband ED FOLEY. JACK SANFORD reports from Oxon Chicago Commission on Human Relations. DON and Fran BUSECK and their family Hill, Md.: "Right now I am a systems He is married to the former Ann M. are doing well in Erie, Pa. DICK COLA- engineer and technical advisor on the Crowley and has three sons, Eric, Joseph SURD pays us a visit from time to time. Department of Army Staff in the Pentagon, and Peter. WILLIAM D. GORDON and He is General Counsel of the American Washington, D.C. Having resumed graduate family, including daughter, Mary Susan, are Flint Glass Workers' Union, still lives in school I'm nearing completion of my M.S. now in Carson City, Nev. Toledo and from time to time sees JOHN',. degree in operations research with a hopeful Edie and BILL O'CONNELL's Mike, PETRIKOWSKI. eye toward the Ph.D. The golf is down in TOM and Marge O'GRADY's Margaret STAN STEVENS writes: "In 1960,:we'' the low 80's now. Perhaps JIM CREAMER and Kathy, DICK, and Lee KLEE's Mary moved from South Bend to Niles, lll.;when is interested in taking me on now. My home Beth and Rick, and Mary Pat and my son 1 went to work for the Intematidiial is open to all men passing through the D.C John and Jane have returned to ND this Division of SKIL Corp. In .1966-67 I was area. Just give a call." fall under the newly integrated University, transferred to Australia (along with my May God bless you all. now colloquially known as the East and wife and two sons) tO:start up their West campuses. I did not realize until this Australian subsidiary and returned as John W. Thornton summer when Mary Pat and I visited the SKIL's international marketing director. In 4400 Monserrate St. Church of the Sacred Heart of Notre Dame October 1969 I became the director of sales Coral Gables, Fla. 33146 ihUe Mails;' France, that this' 1971 inte­ - and marketing for the International Division —Gases and Related Products Group of Chemetron Corporation. Incidentally, my family name has been legally changed form 'Tsalikis' to 'Stevens'." DICK FITZGERALD has the Fitzgerald 29 '51 KELLVS POEM 26.6%* JOE EUSTERMAN sent this epistle from his ofiice at 1040 W. 7th Ave., Albany, Ore. 97321: "It was great to read in the ND ALUMNUS the names of many of my old pre-med classmates who were reunion 71 attendees. Please remember me tfirough your colunm to the following great guys whom I remember with fondness and grati­ tude: BILL ANHUT, PATRICK: J. BAR­ RETT, JACK BOEHM, LEO BRENNAN, FRANK CROVO, CHUCK DESCH, BILL HARTY, BUD HERR, MIKE JACOBS, RANDY McNALLY, TOM MEYER, JOE INSLEY, VINCE STE MARIE, NICK SCALERA, DON SONDAG, HOBE TAYLOR. "Sorry I was too busy building a new medical complex and luring new doctors to this fine city plus many duties such as chief of medicine for the local hospital and vice president of the Oregon Medical Associa­ Corey Sheridan Ghiglieri tion, to attend the reunion. I definitely plan to make the silver reunion in 1976 and hope to see all of the above fellows and more at that time. "Of course would be very happy to have any of tlie guys visit if they are ever out in this great Pacific Northwest for any reason." JIM HENNESSY sent this poem, which Jim promised to read for BILL KELLY at the Class meeting—which didn't meet. TO THE CLASS OF 1951 Greetings to all oj my jriends of old. Whose stories of success are being told. By every one of you that's there. Though you have much or lack of hair. It's Reunion Time at Notre Dame, Bartlett Finney Noonan And you know it won't be the same, fVithout Kelly, the Wit, from Louisville, Whom you know by the rmme of Bill. In Cincinnati he is today. Attending a convention that is not so gay. Paul A. Corey '49 has been appointed director of personnel for the Office product dealers from five large state of Ohio. In that position he administers the state's program for states. Have met there to discuss their loves 57,000 employees. Prior to his appointment he was clerk of the board and hates. of the Cuyahoga County Commissioners in Cleveland. He was a So please think of me when you raise teacher in the Cleveland schools from 1950 to 1961. your glass. To recall old times of this famous class. Thomas R. Sheridan '50, who received an M.S.E.E. in 1957 at the Good Luck, I wish to everyone. Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, has been appointed manager of data May your reunion be mucfi fun. communications systems at RCA's Government Communications Sys­ Bill Kelly 'SI tems, Camden, N.J. Sheridan is a recipient of the RCA Achievement Award. Thanks to Jim, Bill, Joe and the Xerox machine for meeting this deadline. Congratulations and many aspirins are due lames P. Ghiglieri '51, president of the Citizens National Bank of CHARLIE O'DONNELL, who is now in Toluca, III., has been elected second vice president of the Illinois Bank­ charge of the price freeze problems at Sears. ers Association. Active in the affairs of the association since 1953, JACK BECKER is now with the leasing subsidiary of B. C. Ziegler & Co., in West Ghiglieri has served on a number of its committees and has served as Bend, Wis. Jack is still commuting; he a group officer. expects to move the family in 1972. Hate to lose such a good member but we're sure he can activate a branch of the poker club James J. Bartlett '52 is now manager—finance and production—at the in the environs of Milwaukee. JIM Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory, Schenectady, N.Y., which is oper­ LACESA is now chief engineer for Bachi, ated by the General Electric Co. for the U.S. Atomic Energy Com­ Inc., in Chicago. At the ND-So. Cal. game, saw FRANK mission. Bartlett, his wife, Betty and their two sons live in Schenectady. MULLER and Maureen, JACK MUL- DOON, BUD O'BRIEN, JIM HENNESY, Robert G. Finney '53 has been named president of Teleprocessing In­ JIM FRICK, and PHIL FACCENDA and dustries, a subsidiary of Western Union Corp., New York, N.Y. His Kathy. All were fine and their families in good health. most recent assignment was as vice president of the Western Union JACK HARNETT reports he has been Telegraph Company's planning and engineering operation in Mahwah, with A. E. Staley in Decatur for a year and N.J. Finney and his wife have five children. They live in Franklin a half now, specializing in patent and food laws. The four girls are fine, but Jack did Lakes, N.J. ask for prayers for his wife Muriel, who has a recurrence of a health problem. Please William F. Noonan '54 has been appointed general manager of the do your best. Send a card to your old secretary at a New York ofiice of Burson-Marsteller, international public relations new address. company. He joined the firm in 1961 and became a group vice presi­ dent last year. With his wife and four children, he resides in West- Jim Jennings 600 N. Franklin SL field, N.J. Hinsdale, lU. 60521 30 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. MORSCH. Bob was completely taken un­ that he will be at the reunion in 1973. Jim, '52 THIN MAILS AG 22.8%* awares and thoroughly enjoyed the affair can we count on you? attended by many of our resplendent class­ "I have been reading your comments The mailbag is extra thin this trip. Every­ mates—TOM REEDY, LOU BOUR- regarding our class in the alumni news for one must be getting off vacation and JAILLY, TOM McNAMARA, DAVE the past few months and I am only soriy settling down to the routines for another McELVAlN, FATHER ERNIE BARTELL that I have not responded sooner. I will try year. If you visited any '52ers this year, (who came in from ND), BOB McKENNA, to convey to you some of our fellow class­ drop us a line and let us know about it. JIM GEAREN, PAT MONTROY and mates who are in this area. CHARLES V. FALKENBERG Jr., now DAN JAMES. "JOE O'NEILL is a practicing lawyer practicing law at the famous address of 10 "UND Night was held at the newly and also one of our state senators. He's S. La Salle St. in Chicago, recently was reopened McCormick Place and our class also on the ND National Alumni Board of elected president of the Chicago Alumni was well represented to see PAT MON­ Directors. He is married in the traditional Club and that takes a lot of doing. On July TROY retire as president of the Chicago Notre Dame spirit and has eight children. 30, Chuck welcomed Elizabeth Jeanne to Club. JIM MALOOLY, who handles the BILL ROGERS Jr., my cousin, is with the house which put the odds in favor of diverse real estate interests of the Cuneo another insurance agency and is doing very the girls five to four around the Falkenberg estate, was there; also, BILL READY, who well. BOB GLEASON is still travelling in household. He says he sees RUDY UNGER is still with IBM, but now located in Wisconsin and Illinois and is selling as a Chicago after some years in the East; AL manufacturer's representative sporting HANEY, partner in a Chicago law firm; goods. CHUCK RITTEN is owner of Louis and JIM BLACKBURN, oflicer of a paper N. Ritten Co., grain brokers, and is cur­ container company. rently in their office in Chicago. "FRED TADROWSKI has his own "PAUL GABLER is sales manager for appraisal company with offices on LaSalle Foley Manufacturing in Minneapolis. Street. Had lunch with CHARLEY DAVE KENNEDY is a lawyer and is top BILLERBECK, not having seen him for man with the League of Municipalities. BOB many years. Charley heads a technical KELLY is with the Kelly Furniture Co. in marketing division of Standard Oil and Winona. Most of the peojrfe I see quite travels the world. He reports that Fr. often. All are married with three or more MIKE McKINSTRA is being assigned from children and are in professions and are Freeport, 111., to the Woodstock area (closer community leaders. William V. to Chicago), very shortly. See JIM GAL­ "I am owner of an insurance agency here Cuddy LAGHER every now and then through in St. Paul with many extracurricular business contacts; Jim is a principal in an activities in the promotion fine and am quite often in the Chicago area. Rudy is asphalt paving company. Saw DICK also a scout with the Montreal Canadiens. still reporting for The and HARVEY after one of the games last year Trust this will bring you up to date about his by-line appears on a regular basis. Chuck and tipped a few downstairs in the Morris some of the fellows in this area." also received a visit from HANK BOLLING Inn. Dick has his own business and also Thanks Jim very much and say hello to and his wife who are living in Buffalo. They does some traveling. Saw JIM WILCOX were in Chicago for a meeting of the at the opening of Ernst & Ernst's new Retreat League. Chuck played golf with offices in Chicago; Jim is an officer and TOM DURAND at a recent Chicago principal in a nursing home management Alumni Club affair. Tom is a great golfer corporation. Also saw BRYAN COUGH- who shoots in the 70's and is rarely caught LIN at that reception; Bryan is chief ac­ cheating. counting officer of the Midwest Stock TOM DEVINE is still selling real estate Exchange. in Chicago and longing for the big sale to "Had dinner recently with JACK MIL- make his bundle. LIGAN, BOB McKENNA and Al Crowley; BILL SANTINI writes from Kittanning, Al was with us for our first two years at Pa., that he is president of Phoenix ND, but left then for his dentistry studies Materials Corp. He seems to be generating at Loyola U. and is now a practicing den'tist a great deal of calluses and work which in Deerfield; Bob is executive vice president «»> Joseph L. is good for the soul, Billy-boy. He and of ILG Industries and Jack is treasurer of Pagliari MATT DUGGAN were scheduled to attend Burton-Dixie Corp. I saw JIM (Luke) Southern Cal game and are planning on the MOORE at a wake recently and it was the •all of the boys from "The Cities." Do you great reunion come June '72. first time I'd seen him in probably 15 years; ever see RAY DIETRIECH? JOE CELUSNIAK is now romancing out he is in marketing as an officer of a national BOB DREY writes from Des Moines, of Monterey, Calif. He sent some beautiful company. I asked Luke if he heard from la. that he is the partner in a law firm, pictures of his boats and companions. Joe JACK MANIX but he said it had been married and has three children. He oc­ has decided to play it straight and rejoin quite a while since he had and as far as casionally sees JIM HIGGINS of our class the establishment. he knew. Jack was still on the West Coast. of Kansas City fame. Higgins was always DR. ARTHUR A. SCHULTE Jr. has "I did enjoy dinner with FRANK (Buck) going to bless us with some information been named executive vice president of the O'CONNOR, our wives, and another couple respecting his activities. We keep getting U. of Portland, Portland, Oregon. in New York last year; Buck is an officer reports of peoide that see him in Kansas Gents, that's all for now. Please write of one of the large banks in Manhattan. City so he must be up and around. and let me know what you're doing before "I see DAVE McBRIDE occasionally; he I also take the liberty to provide the I start telling all kinds of stories. is a partner in a law firm and a highly information sent along by JOHN CLARK, respected authority in zoning matters (I from 830 Hudson Road, in Glenview, 111.: William B. King know because he represented a venture I "I occasionally see AL and JERRY 613 E. Donmoyer Ave. was part of on a sticky suburban zoning ELLSWORTH. Jerry, some few years ago, South Bend, Ind. 46614 petition and he was persuasively successful became chief financial oflicer of C. F. for us). JERRY O'CONNOR is a builder Murphy & Associates, the largest archi­ and real estate developer, with offices in tectural firm in Chicago. BOB MUNNS '53 MISSES TICKLER 27.8%* the northern suburbs. JIM CELANO is also is in the plastics business and now lives in in the real estate business with one of the Leominster, Mass. As for me, we have six Through inadvertence, I neglected to pro­ nation's largest real estate firms. children and live at the above address. I vide materials for the October publication "That should hold you for a while." recently moved my manufacturing company of the magazine. The "tickler" from the Joe is a Chicago mortgage banker with to Northbrook at 1825 Holste Road. We Alumni Office escaped my attention. Sorry manufacture and repair extrusion equip­ O'Brien & Pain, Inc. Thanks a milUon, Joe. ment. We also have another company. about that. REV. ERNIE BARTELL has been ap­ The contribution to the column by you, Plastics & Equipment Sales. PHIL pointed president of Spring Hill College, CLEMENS is also in the jdastics business, the membership, is great. Keep up the good Mass., a Holy Cross institution. BILL work. From JOE PEGLIERI of Chicago as is JIM PFOHL, Phil in Fort Wayne and KEANE has taken a two-year leave of Jim in Long Island City. Along with ART we have, with very little paraphrasing, his absence from his position as an accounting letter in detail: MEDILLI, we comprise a firm foundation professor to join Price-Waterhouse in New in the growing plastics world." To you "Like most of us, I always enjoy reading York. He apparently will be with JIM gentlemen in plastics, we extend our sincere about classmates but have not been a KLINGE in New York. The Alumni Office congratulations. Are there any butter and contributor of the column. Hope this will reports that the U.S. Senate has confirmed egg barons out there? rectify that failure to an extent. A few the promotion of LOUIS N. CAVA- months ago we attended a formal dress, NAUGH JR. to a Class 4, Foreign Service The end of August, I was at the Mayo surprise 40th birthday party for BOB LEE Officer. He has been in the foreign service Clinic to pick up my father-in-law (BOB hosted by Bob's wife and by TOM since 1960 and is now stationed in Kuching, MAHOWALD's dad) and stopped by Malaysia. How about that, Louie? Winona, Minn, to use the telei^one. Ran The great JAMES C. ROGERS of the "Twin Cities" Rogers provides the following letter, which unfortunately doesn't indicate 31 into JOHN J. O'CONNER, who is in the "I apologize for any confusion caused furniture business. The coincidence was by my error." '55 BUSY IN VIENNA 25.8%* additionally rewarded with a good visiL He As we say in the law, res ipsa loquitur. appears in good health. He promised to For the price of a first-class stamp, this I knew it couldn't be true that DICK write to the column someday too. "job" can be had by anyone that wants it, REAMER was back in St. Louis, and sho ROLAND GRABELLE's letter of Aug. including Roland GrabeUe or his secretary. nuff, he wrote to say that he has a very 30, 1971, is completed in full: I pay for the postage, and my law firm large psychiatry practice in Vienna and that "Dear John: provides the logistic assistance. I get no he also is a member of the Psychosomatic "Upon reading your column in the August money and want no money. I sit low down Department of the University Clinic. issue of the NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS, I was in the end zone at the football games and Although busy in Vienna, Dick manages dismayed to find, what I consider, a very high up above the basket at the basketball to the convention trail—Brussels, Rome, inaccurate reporting on my activities as games. Madrid, London and Mexico City. "Took mentioned to you in my letter of April 29, Late flash: DAN COLLINS, M.D., my vacations in the fall in '69 and '70 and 1971. I do not understand your reference reports that FATHER GORSKI is back on got to campus for ball games both times. to my functioning as a 'financial architect' the campus. This will be confirmed by the Had good weather and big ND wins. Ah, and as you say in brackets 'his words.' The next column. nostalgia! Both the buildings and the kids service of Grabelle and Company, which is seemed bigger." financial designing, is registered in the state John T. Mulvihill Dick adds that he is on the board of of Illinois and California as a unique 645 First Bank Building both the American and Irish societies in service mart and service. This is our main South Bend, Ind. 46601 Vienna "and did my damdest to get a good business, and as I mentioned to you, I am turnout for the ND Glee Club last June." also a general agent for Mutual Trust Life Dick says the welcome mat is out for Insurance Company of Chicago, NOT an '54 UNDEFEATED? 28.2%* anyone making the European circuit—^home agent as you so indicated. There is a vast address is Altgasse 25-5, Vienna, Austria, difference. My function as president and As I write this column, with the usual lack 1130. His phone is 82-78-394. owner of the Grabelle and Company is of material, it's preseason and the forecasts FRANK MAIER has been named primarily to provide asset accumulation and for ND are glowing, to say the least. By Chicago bureau chief for Newsweek. Frank distribution programming, as 1 indicated the time this is published we'll be fast has six years' experience covering Chicago, in my letter, and secondarily, we are general approaching our deadline with LSU in first with the Daily News and since 1970 agents for Mutual Trust Life Insurance their snake pit and hopefully we'll be un­ with Newsweek. He is responsible for the Company. defeated. The annual reunion party was magazine's coverage in 10 Midwestern "You report that 1 anticipate opening a another great affair. The first one I missed states. Among the assignments that Frank London Office soon. I did not indicate since we started them in 1962 or 1963. If remembers best are his coverage of the soon, I merely stated that we are planning you plan to make the LSU game be sure Texas Tower sniper and an 18-month to open an office (for your information) to look up DICK LYONS and have a quick investigation of a major Chicago park as a subsidiary of Grabelle and Company. drink before the game. scandal that resulted in the indictment and "You also indicated that numbered Another regular reunion partygoer who's conviction of six park officials, and which among my clients is Forrest Tucker who, moved is JIM (The Bern) BERNHART to also won him the Chicago Stick-0-Type as you say, 'apparently' has been utilizing 3411 Monterey, San Mateo, Calif. 94401. Also award in 1968. Frank credits all his success my service for years. I resent the inference noticed that GEORGE (Gapper) PFLAUM to his wife, Ginny. (I had to put that in of the word 'apparent' and do not feel has left Dayton for La JoUa, Calif. I must because a reporter from their local paper that anything that I write you has to be say, after being here in New England for listed their four children and neglected to authenticated or verified by a notary public. a little over a month now that this is a mention Ginny!) However, to satisfy you, I am enclosing a great place to live. The only disadvantages NEAL HALLORAN met LARRY copy of the photograph of Forrest Tucker are the high taxes, the crazy drivers and BUCKLEY and his family while on vacation and myself, which was printed in the the distance from ND football. We love it in North Carolina and reports that Larry's Chicago Tribune newspaper. so far though and welcome calls and visits. wife is delightful. Neal couldn't figure out "You also indicate that I am a partner in How about a postcard from DAVE how such a nice person could have put up the Arlington Park Theatre, which is DEVLIN (Close enough to paint the mural with Larry all these years. correct, but which you refer to as a portion you promised in 1951?) GEORGE Here are some new entries for your of the Chicago Park Race Track in Arlington KOLASA, DON PENZA, BOB STANTON, Christmas card list: CHARLIE BROAN, Heights; this is completely inaccurate since FOSTER PACKARD, JOE AZAR, VAL- R.D., Prattsville, N.Y.; DICK MANNION, it is, as I indicated, at the Arlington Park CHUN and VINCE RAYMOND? Hey! 2601 Greenacre Drive, Findlay, O.; FRANK Race Track. I clearly stated that we were Want to have some fun? Take out your DELL'APA 401 Talus Way, Reno; BILL having Joan Fontaine as our first star and 1954 Dome and leaf through it. There's a GLASS, P. O. Box 313, Portage, Mich.; mentioned nothing about having Vincent great picture (page 220) of FRANK Price, Mickey Rooney, or Betty Grable for VARRICHIONE on his back saving the the Grand Opening, as you so reported. Iowa game. As I recall BENGIE As you can read, from my letter, I said SCHRADER helped just before the game 'hoping to have name performers such as ended with his clock-stopping injury. the forementioned stars in the near future.' JOE LEASER, Hummelstown, Pa., has a "In summary, John, I resent the in­ rotating internship at Harrisburg Hospital. ferences of the validity of some of my He was a National Institute of Health statements and your inaccurate reports and Fellow at Pennsylvania and graduated subtle allocations. You state that there are from the Hershey Medical Center at Penn limitations of space yet you seem to be State. Two letters since last article: Lieut. able to find more space than was allocated Col. CHARLIE (Beautiful, Chariie!) to your report on me for other alumni. SPICKA is enjoying his tour at the Penta­ I really do not care how much space I get, gon, managing to take in all the sites but I at least expect to have all the facts between trips to Hawaii, Canada and ND. Geoi£e H. as relayed to you printed accurately. Yerna. his better half, is working towards Shelton "I expect that you will print a retraction her M.A. in dramatics at Catholic U. If all and correction of your article on my went as planned. Charlie and FRANK and DALE RENAULT, 35968 Ashton PL, activities as soon as possible. Correct me (Hooks) WISNIEWSKI made it to the Fremont, Calif. if I am wrong, but I am under the impres­ Northwestern game and the party after­ Dr. BILL TUNNELL is now assistant sion that your job is to relay the facts that wards. professor of surgery and chief of the section are sent to you by the alumni of the class Had a great letter from BOB McGLYNN, of pediatric surgery at the Louisiana State of 1953 via the NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 4251 Alder Brook S.E., Salem, Ore. 97302. U. School of Medicine. His address is magazine without any personal interpreta­ Bob and his bride, the former Betty Foley 1542 Tulane Ave., New Orleans. tions." SMC, have three children, Beth (16), Dr. ED TOOMEY of Concord, Mass., The sequel, dated September 2, 1971: Maureen (15) and John(13). Bob studied writes that Dr. DON SANTSCHI of Home- "With reference to Mr. Grabelle's letter hospital administration at U. of Minnesota wood, HI., has been named a fellow ot the dated Aug. 30. There is an inaccuracy in and since then has been administering at American College of Physicians. At the the second paragraph on the second page. hospitals in South Bend. St. Louis (taught same time, Ed was made a member of the I wrongly interpreted allegations as alloca­ two yrs. at St. Louis U.), Fresno, Calif.; college. Now if I knew the difference tion, which more than changed the meaning Pullman, Wash., and Salem, Ore. In 1970 between a "fellow" and a "member" . . . of the sentence. he assumed his present job with the State Ed reports that his Elisa is now 5 and that "This letter was signed by myself as of Oregon as assistant superintendent of Cynthia celebrated her first birthday in secretary in Mr. Grabelle's absence and the three mental hospitals. Well, gentlemen, July. mistake has been brought to my attention that concludes this article. Write if you One of the Chicago Tribune's sports on his return to Chicago this morning. find work. columnists wrote about the Baltimore Colt training table prior to the AU-Star game: Milton J. Beaudine "At lunch the desserts were waiting at the 6 Russet Lane Andover, Mass. 01810 32 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. table and if there were any weaklings who that I won't be able to get my typewriter Namath all the time. Lee also reports that passed them up there was always some­ around this juicy event for quite some time. he sees a good deal of DON BROPHY, body waiting to pounce. DICK. SZYMAN- And you won't be able to read about it who writes for the Catholic Press in New SKI was the champion. He devoured six much before Christmas. York. (Naturally, I forget for which dishes of custard one noon-time." In the meantime I'll just sit here and publication.) Stopped overnight in Milwaukee last wonder about all you guys out there who Speaking of bachelors, our final face in week and watched JOHN McCULLOUGH could (and should) be helping me get over the news is none other than the Hippie report the 10 o'clock news. He's the anchor­ the news-gathering hump. Let's see now— himself, S. EDMUND RESCINI'H Jr. (He man for \VTMJ-TV, the city's No. 1 station. working geographically from right to left, calls himself S. Edmund and not Silvio, John does a smooth job, utilizing the new there's ED COSGROVE in Buffalo to begin relaxed format to introduce his cohorts. with. Ed's a great lawyer and knows how Incidentally, while driving around town, I to track down leads. (Let's give him New noted that JIM BARRY had his name on York State for openers.) Besides, Ed's had many industrial development sites. His plenty of experience in this sort of thing real estate business must be going very well. since his partner is last term's class secre­ On the same swing, I called TOM tary, cigar-chomping GENE O'CONNOR. O'MALLEY in Kansas City, but his wife, Moving into the New England area why Jackie, said he was still at the office. They don't we settle on Boston's JOHN enjoyed another Colorado vacation this O'CONNOR as our far-flung correspondent. summer. He should be good for a spicy item or two Other class members on the move include: now and then. BOB RUSSELL, 135 Ashdale. Los Angeles; Traveling south to Manhattan there's of RAY GENDRON, Stratford House, 150 course the Hippie and yours truly to get in Overlook Ave., Hackensack, NJ.; JIM touch with, and if anything of note is TWOHY, 1200 Madeira, S.E., Albuquerque; happening further south, say along the JIM CORCORAN, 929 Sheridan Rd., Mason-Dixon Line or below, there's always Evanston, 111.; and JACK GITS, 39 PETE CANNON and my good friend Devonshire Dr., Oak Brook, III. JOHN MURRAY who'll be happy to hear because he's ashamed people will think he's TOM HAYES called to say that he had from you; they're both out of Washington, Italian. What S. Edmund doesn't realize just received word of the death of TOM D.C. is that we wish he'd "rescind" his last FINNEGAN. Our condolences to his Moving rapidly along into our beloved name, so there'd be absolutely no mistake widow, Sarah. Midwest and smack in the hotbed of ND about it.) It seems that S. Edmund spent PETE BEIRIGER writes to say that he news, Chicago, you might consider getting the entire month of August on the French and his family have moved from Los in touch with any one of the three JOHNs— Riviera. Biarritz to be exact (or was it St. Angeles to the Pittsburgh area (108 Over­ MANNION, KEGLEY, CORBETT. Ready Moritz?) S. Edmund reports that he didn't look Circle, Monroeville, Pa.) to work for to add assistance, if necessary, are JIM run into a single Notre Damer along the a division of Westinghouse Electric. "Now REVORD and BOB (Benito) CARRANE. bikini-clad beaches, but he did run into that I am much closer to South Bend, I (One guy I'd love to hear from out there quite a few bikinis. I'd tell you all about look forivard to the next reunion and is ED KRUPKA, one of my freshman it but I know your wives read these perhaps some football weekends on roommates.) columns. I'll show you the picture, however, campus." Pete, who has three children, has At school, I think RON WEBER and at our next get-together—after which S. been in California since graduation. DON SNIEGOWSKI ought to help out our Edmund is going to rent out the slides for Speaking of football weekends and re­ class vice-president FRANK BEYTAGH, stag parties. Meantime, you'll just have to unions, Sandra said that BILL (Always on don't you agree? LEO LINBECK, being the eat your hearts out, the way I did one the Alert) McLAIN called to say that he great guy he is, has volunteered to blanket night recently when S. Edmund burned my had a problem. Seems that he ordered MSU not only Texas but all of the Southwest. ears and my eyes until 3 a.m. tickets, thinking that it was our reunion (The \Vhale is big enough to do it too.) Have a great Thanksgiving holiday, and weekend, despite the fact that each column So that leaves just the West Coast. At the keep the peace. carried a notice that USC was our rallying June reunion another of our illustrious point this fall. We'll report next time on lawyer-classmates, TOM CREHAN, agreed, Albert M. Parillo whether Bill made it to the real reunion— if I'm not mistaken, to handle the repor- 6 Brantwood Terrace and on those who showed up. torial chores all along the Pacific Coast. Short Hills, NJ. 07078 Guys like BERNIE ALLARD and Paul Fullmer ANGELO CAPOZZI, for example, might 1922 Larkdalc Drive take a minute out of their busy days and '57 NEBRASKA NEWS 27.6%* Glenview, 111. 60025 drop Tom a line. It won't hurt, really. That's a pretty formidable line-up, I DAVE THOMPSON writes to give some would think. So I'll expect to hear from a info on '57 grads in the Midwest: '56 ASSIGNMENTS RICHARD SHAFER is with Northern good many of you before my next deadline, Natural Gas Co. He's the father of four GIVEN 25.6%* Dec. 6. children. ARTHUR KIDDOO, also the Actually, I do have a couple of interesting father of four, is with Western Chemical There is a clear and present danger that items to report. One involves RICHARD Co. in St. Joseph. Mo. JOHN GLENSKI I'm failing at this job. I had similar J. VAN MELE, who's just been elected is an engineer with Colgate in Kansas City. vibrations 38 semesters ago during freshman assistant vice'president for governmental He and his wife are the parents of seven chemistry when "Happy Henry Hinton and affairs of Associates Corporate Services children. Dave is covering City Hall in his helpful household hints"—remember Company, Inc. (a subsidiary of Associates Omaha for Nebraska's largest daily, the him?—zonked me for the only time in my Corporation of North America), right there World Herald. academic life. in beautiful downtown South Bend. Dick, ROBERT W. BOGG is now manager of Now the second coming of zap is ap­ I was just informed, invited all fellow '56ers market research at the Pontiac Motor parently upon me. Here it is another and their wives to a tremendous around- Division, One Pontiac Plaza, Pontiac, Mich. column by your sterling class secretary— the-clock bash at his place following the 48053. ELMER KOHORST has become a number two to be exact—and not a single Southern Cal game. He asked me to let all member of the faculty of St. John's U., letter or postcard from anyone. (Need I of you know about it, but I didn't do it. Collegeville, Minn., as physical education remind you that I once was considered (If you guys won't write to me, I'm certainly instructor. He has done postgraduate work popular by my peers, a status I'm obviously not going to write to you—except only at ND and at St. Cloud State College. in danger of losing should things deteriorate when I have to.) Dick, who received an JOHN W. HANNIGAN and family have any further.) The few bits and pieces of M.B.A. and J.D. from Indiana U., joined returned from two years in Adelaide, news I'm able to scrounge up come by way his present firm last year as director-legis­ Australia, and are now living at 33 Arbor of the Alumni Office, last term's class lative research for the Indiana Legislative Drive, P.O. Box 1268, Attleboro Falls, officers or through my own peregrinations Council. (Good show, Dick. The Hoosiers Mass. in and around New York City. really needed that.) I am just recovering from the traumatic Even the timing of this column has I ran into LEE CROGHAN on the IRT effects of the August wedding of sports fan conspired against me. As I compose these subway a while back. After ND, Lee took PAT SHEERIN and his lovely bride, very words the calendar says it's Sept. 12, a a master's (or was it a Ph.D.?) at the Yale Carol. The ceremony was closed with singing good six weeks before our reunion football Drama School and he's now putting it to of the Notre Dame Alma Mater which was game. What you're actually reading, how­ good use. He's teaching drama at Brooklyn an expected Pat Sheerin coup. ever, probably didn't arrive until sometime College (or is it Hunter?—see how much August was filled with many parties for after Nov. 1, or at least a week or more good reporting help I need!), and living the newlyweds and topped off with a aflcr the' Southern Cal weekend. TTie net at 333 East 47th St. in New York if anyone rousing stag at Johnny Lattner's Restaurant result of such unfortunate scheduling is would like to get in touch with him. (My (where else?). Attending the many functions address is listed below, if anyone would were classmates: BOB COYNE, BOB ECK- like to get in touch with me.) Lee, if anyone's interested, kept matrimony at bay until just a year ago, which is a tough thing to do when you pal around with Joe 33 LAND, BOB CALABRESE, BILL Insurance Co., and has moved to 48 Rural Dame High School for Boys, Niles, III., is WATSON, FRANK HENNESSEY, JIM Dr., New Canaan, Conn. 06840 with his the new secretary-treasurer of the Illinois CULLINAN, JIM MORTON, GUS wife Angela SMC '58, and their three High School Athletic Association, and SCIACQUA and RON PATOIZE. children. They would welcome a call or national chairman of the Junior Olympic Best wishes to JACK D'ARCY, attorney visit from anyone passing through. Fencing Development Committee. Notre and candidate for district attorney in Dame High School will host the U.S. Junior Allegany County, New York. Jack sounds George Groble Olympic Championships in April, 1972. like he has all Uie qualifications for the job. 111 W. Washington St. DAN CULLEN's sister. Sister Irene Jack asks if anyone has heard from Chicago, 111. 60602 Cullen, RSCJ, is the principal of the ele­ BRYAN ROSS and if so to let us know. mentary school here at Sacred Heart, JACK ROBINSON and wife, Marilyn, Greenfield Hills. (Small world!) Dan is a after their return from the Far East settled '58 UNDERWHELMING 29.1%* vice president for the Northwest offices of in New York only to have to pack up and Walston & Company, lives in the San settle in Houston with the move of ESSO's It is obviously time for another of our Francisco suburb of Hillsborough, and has home offices. periodic appeals for news items. As you three daughters: "K.C." (7), Kristin (5) BILL McGOWAN tells me that old can see, the quantity of news at our disposal and Danice (2). BOB SCHOENEMAN has PFA'er ERNIE KLETZLY has become for this issue is . . . underwhelming. How moved from Mishawaka, Ind. to Manhasset, marketing officer with Great West Life in long has it been since you dropped us a N.Y. (136 North Woods Road). JAMES Columbus, Ohio. line? M. O'BRIEN, M.D. has moved from JOHN GIBBS, regional manager for Rev. RICHARD R. MERCY SJ, was Chanute AFB, 111., to Fort Worth, Tex. BASF in Schiller Park, 111., writes that he And BOB GHELARDI made a big move met with BOB BOGG at GMC in Detroit from 300 E. 71st St to 340 R 63rd St in and BILL LANDON is with us in Chicago NYC. The last report we have of BILL at Bell and Howell. John visited with WARDELL is that he is living at 99 ELMER KOHORST in St Cloud, Minn., Cadogan Gardens, London SW 3, England. who is coaching at St. John's College, Minn. Another man of the continent, ED DON HANEY stopped by the Gibbs' and ROHRBACH, must have decided to stay advised he is contract manager at American in Paris. Ed, who is head of the Paris Slating. office for "The Chicago Tribune, finally had Last June I had an opportunity to meet his address at ND changed from Crown with JOHN BRENNAN in St. Louis where Point Ind., to 15 Rue de Marignan. he is now a senior VP in the banking California has definite attraction for some divison of Boatmen's National Bank, John of our classmates, among them: Major refused me a small loan to get back to ANDREW WYRICK, Sunnyvale; GARY Chicago but did pop for lunch and cock- Alfred J. VONDRAN, San Jose; CHARLES VON taUs. HANK LUEPKE checks up with Weimheimer Jr. DER AHE, Studio City; PAUL DECKER, John once in a while and word is that Hank San Francisco; and TERRY MOLONY, is still the biggest lawyer in St. Louis. ordained June 12, after completing his Palos Verdes Peninsula. We also have a few MIKE HYLAND finally has reported in theological education at the Jesuit School men in the St. Louis area. They are: JESUS with a note. He really can write despite of Theology, Berkeley, Calif. He spent the JOSEPH MIGUEL, JOHN ROEDEL, RAY what some people say in Richmond, Va. past summer at St. Joseph's Parish, Seattle, OFFUTT and BILL McDOWELL. BO about that sports writer for the News and is now teaching religion at Beilarmine Leader. Prep in Tacoma, where he will also conduct Mike tells us that ED STUBENVRAUCH retreats and work in adult education. is now in Bangkok for Union Carbide. THOMAS S. SMITH, JR. was an M.B.A. , with a Ph.D. under arm, is recipient in the June 12 commencement at an economics prof at Old Dominion U. the U. of Santa Clara, Calif. "> ^ 1 in Norfolk. CHARLEY McKENDRICK, Maj. RONALD J. JEBAVY was selected attorney and counselor, made a most un­ for the U.S. Army Command and Staff expected and welcome midnight call to College Commandant's list upon graduation, Mike recently. June 11, at Ft. Leavenworth, Kan. He has Mike closes with a challenge to DENNY served in Vietnam and his next assignment BUTT, CHARLEY WITTENBERG and is at Oregon State U. Graduate School, BILL GRANT to show up at the reunion Corvallis, Ore. in June with plenty of hard cold cash for PAUL W. PIKELL has been chosen the "a little game of chance." outstanding employee of 4950th Test Wing BILL McGOWAN "our man in South Engineering Division for 1970 at Wright- Bend" advised that we can be proud of the Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. He lives BROEMMEL lives in Mexico, Mo., which members of '57 now president or senator at 1532 Wedgewood Dr., Fairbom, Ohio. some might claim is a suburb of St. Louis. of their Alumni Clubs! LARRY BEDFORD, Meanwhile back in Chicago—Here's a Dallas; BOB BOGG, Detroit; TOM COR- Arthur L. Roule, Jr. list of guys you im'ght contact: BOB RIGAN, Cleveland; ERNIE KLETZY, 1610 Fifth Street MARSO, Downers Grove; EMIL ZER- Columbus, BOB LAKE, Michigan City; La Porte, Ind. 46350 NICK, Downers Grove; EUGENE JIM MUNRO, Des Moines and DENNIS KELLEY, Evanston; BILL MOLLIHAN, TURNOCK, Miami. M.D., DICK PHELAN and DUKE LOU LONCARIC and family are return­ '59 NEW DISCOVERIES 26.4 ?r* GIBBON, Oak Park; JOE MAIER, Glen ing to South Bend after many years in Hlyn; HARRY KOENIG and GEORGE Atlanta. Lou is joining the Du Pont stock- My new residence in the San Diego area VANDER VENNET, Wilmette; JIM brokerage firm in South Bend and he has proved to be a great experience. One PIOWATY, M.D., and ED HICKEY, promised he would buy a home with of the discoveries I have made is that we Naperville; TOM HOBERG, Oak Park; grounds large enough to accommodate our have seven classmates in this area! PAUL TERRY DALY, Grayslake, and BILL class and friends after the home games. WILLIHNGANZ, 5001 Kensington Dr., BATTALGIA and MIKE MANNING. BOB MARCO has opened Bob Marco and TED BARES, 7838 Cowles Mt., Apt. Buick and Opel in Houston. JIM O'LEARY C-39, are also new to the area. The three of Joseph P. Mulligan is prof and chairman of the O. B. depart­ us join FRANK PRANTIL, 1892 Nautilus, 2100 Greenfield Drive ment at Loyola U. College of Medicine, La JoUa; WAYNE PENCE, 3710 10th a Cajon, Calif. 92021 Chicago. Ave.; MIKE LORCH, 4231 Varona Ave.; JOHN McMEEL, DENNY TROESTER, RUBEN GARCIA. 6301 Lake Athabaska ED HEALY, LOU LONCARIC and your PI., and Dr. BOB GIARRATANO, 5763 '60 SALESMAN OF secretary will be meeting in January at Lance St. YEAR 28.6%* ND to finalize arrangements for our class ANDY SULLIVAN married Marian reunion in June, 1972. So set the time and Hagan of Chicago on Sept 12, 1970. CHARLES M. SINCELL has been named money aside now. Let's make it big. If you Marian is a Loyola Chicago graduate and salesman of the year for the Midwest region have any ideas for the gathering please let teaches in the city. Last month Andy was by the Mueller Climatrol Corp., of Mil­ us know. We'll even consider some wild promoted to associate director of marketing waukee. Sineell is a sales representative in ideas from BERNIE LYONS, the Red research at Libby, McNeill & Libby. His the Indianapolis zone office where he and Baron of Pan Am. address is 10214 S. Walden Parkway, his family reside at 1619 E 77th St The DAVID B. MURPHY, former president Chicago (60643). Fr. MIKE HEPPEN firm manufactures heating and air-con­ of the Milwaukee ND Club, has been CSC has been appointed assistant senior ditioning equipment for residential, com­ named regional vice president for the New vice president of the U. of Portland. Mike mercial and industrial applications. York City group of the Metropolitan Life has served for the past few years as director ROBERT J. NICOLAZZI, a member of of admissions, besides doing quite a bit of the public relations and development work for the university. Another CSC classmate, Fr. LARRY CALHOUN, of the Notre

34 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. the '57, '58 and '59 football squads, has been appointed assistant district manager of the northeast sales district for tractor operations of the Ford Motor Co., at Latham, N.Y. He recently returned from a two and a half year assignment with Ford Tractor (Belgium) Ltd., and has been program timing manager at a staff office in Troy, Mich. He will be relocating his family in the Albany, N.Y. area. LAWRENCE E. VANCE JR., has moved

Mallard! Murphy D. Jeny Duffy McGlynn from Commacfc, N.Y., to Melbourne, Fla. 32901, Box 351. ANTHONY L. WALSH JR., has been appointed deputy managing director of Indofil, the Bombay, India, subsidiary of the Rohm and Haas Co., Philadelphia. Thomas J. O'Connell 3350 Everett Rd. Lake Forest, 111. 60045

'61 FROM LONDON 29.2%* The column would have been even shorter this time if it hadn't been for a newsy Walczy Melody Patchel Jr. letter from Dr. DENNIS P. CANTWELL. Denny writes from London, England: "JIM McVElGH I see quite frequently. He is assistant administrator at Harbor General Hospital in Los Angeles, single, and owner of a fabulous bachelor pad on Donn B. Duffy '55 has been appointed general sales manager for the beach in Manhattan Beach, Calif. "BILL HEINBECK.ER, my roommate for WCBM Radio, Baltimore, Md. Duffy joined the Baltimore Metro­ four years, is teaching at Missouri U., in media Radio station in 1963. He is president of the ND Club of Bal­ St. Louis, married, and has three daughters. timore and lives at 4304 Norwood Rd., with his wife and four children. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch recently ran an article on him after he swept all tennis He is a member of the Baltimore Radio-Advertising-Television Society. titles in the St. Louis area. "JOHN CARELLA is in private law Michael P. Mallard! '56 has been elected vice president for planning practice in the San Francisco area. DEAN JACOBSON is working in engineering in and analysis for American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. Mallardi Pasadena and FRANK FASEL, single, is is rejoining ABC after 10 years with Straus Broadcasting, Radio Press working in aerospace in Fullerton, Calif. International and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. He is married and Administration and has relocated his family in the Albany, N.Y. area. He writes lives at 10 Charnwood Dr., Suffern, N.Y. 10901. David B. Murphy '57 is the new regional vice president in Metro­ politan Life Insurance Company's New York City group office. He joined the company as a service supervisor in Chicago in 1959, later being transferred to Milwaukee. Murphy and his wife have three children. The Murphy home is at 48 Rural Dr., New Canaan, Conn. Robert J. Walczy '58 is now chief systems consultant of the Manage­ ment Science Department of International Computers, Ltd., of Great Britain. His office is in Computer House, Euston Centre, London, N.W.I, England. Walczy previously was a project manager with Booz, Allen and Hamilton in Chicago. Lawrence J. Melody '59 has been elected executive vice president of "J. J. MACEDONIA, finishing general surgery residency in Columbus, Ohio, plans the Northland Mortgage Co., St. Paul, Minn. He joined the firm in private practice in Stevensville, while ED 1967 and is also president of Northland Investment Co., a subsidiary KOMPARE, in internal medicine residency engaged in real estate brokerage, equity joint ventures and other ser­ in Chicago, plans to work in Arizona. "Sadly I have to report that TODD vices to developers. EMMANUEL was killed when his car was hit as he was driving to work as an internal Thomas E. Patchel Jr. '60 has been appointed director of marketing medicine resident at St. Louis U. for Holosonics, a Richland, Wash., firm specializing in the application "Finally for myself, I am on sabbatical of acoustical holography to medical, nondestructive testing and geo­ physical applications. He joined Holosonics after serving as national sales manager of Photophysics, Inc.

35 leave in London until July 1972. Then I'll been teaching in St. Joseph and Marian scenario for a small reimion. The return to the UCLA Ne?ro Psychiatric High Schools. STUCKOs, GOULDS, and TOM KELLYs Institute in Los Angeles as director of JIM RHODES has been awarded the were all there. PHIL KNUTE HANSEN residency training in child psychiatry. My Peace Fellowship of the Hoover Institution and wife drove in from White Plains, N.Y., office address here is: Institute of Psychiatry, at Stanford U. and will begin a year in where Phil has been working at Title Room 109, De Crespigny Park, Denmark Palo Alto this fall. JOE WHITE has been Guarantee & Trust Co. for the last nine Hill, London S.E. 5, England. My home named director of portfolios in the years. Dog "Flair" did not make trip. address is No. 16 the HanJet, Champion securities investment division of the Massa­ PAUL McNELLIS and Jan were there. Hill, London, S.E. 5. If any of the Class chusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. Joe Paul, calm and collected as ever, was of '61 are in London this year, give me a joined the firm in 1964, is married and the driving a big orange and white sporty ring at 01-274-0203." father of three children. sedan, the car, he said, that was most fitting STEPHEN W. BENNISON has taken a My cry for news two issues ago ap­ for a store-front lawyer. He and Jan have long-awaited Federal appointment in parently worked. While I didn't have three boys and operate out of Ft. Wayne. personnel management with the Veterans enough to publish last time, all of a sudden My ticket benefactors, JOHN COSTELLO from 24A Commodore St., Albany, 12205 letters poured in. Would like to hear from and JOE SULLIVAN, and their wives, that he is looking forward to activity with more of you now as we approach our 10th Mary Lou and Patti, co-hosted with DICK the alumni of the area. reunion. In the meantime, Giadnto here CLIFFORD the parking lot postgame we come. cocktail party. John and Joe are both with Arnold Leporati Jr. Make your plans now for our reunion. Associates of South Bend. John is assistant 225-23—108th Ave. You will be getting periodic notices from general counsel and has been doing a lot Queens ViUage, N.Y. 11429 the Alumni Office but as you read this of travelling around the country in con­ column try and set aside those few days nection with several lawsuits. Joe is in next "June for a trip back. charge of the legislation section. LARRY '62 ISLAND EPISTLE 25.8%* Recently returned from our annual MANDYCK, our FBI man in NashvUle, pilgrimage to a ND football weekend— Tenn., drove up with his spouse. Larry, as MIKE GIACINTO sends an epistle from this time it was the Michigan State game. witty as ever, said that he is ready, willing Marina Cay "the island of tranquility" in We motored out with EARL and Darielle and able to heed the call for a reunion. the British Virgin Islands where he and LINEHAN then merged with JOHN and CHARLIE O'MALLEY, who was a few wife Fran own and run a resort hotel. Mike Jeanne MACHECA, MIKE and Theresa years behind us, flew in from Massachusetts. sent me a picture and believe me the HARRON and JOHN and Linda TIDGE- Charlie's a litigator in Boston. EMMET "Dunes" never looked like this. In addition, WELL. BILL and Roberta WEINHEIMER TYRRELL, who has been handling a Mike builds homes on a neighboring island goodly amount of trust and estate litigation and is thoroughly enjoying himself after in Youngstown, Ohio, appeared Friday spending three years in the Marine Corps night and managed to brighten up the halls and three years with an ad agency in New of Sweeney's, the situs of our postrally York. Mike has squired a son and daughter cocktail party. Lots of class. who have as their godfathers JOEY BAL After the game I had the pleasure of and ROSS ROSI. For a brochure on his spending a most enjoyable 24-hour period island paradise write Mike at Marina Cay, with the Stuckos in their new home in Tortola, British Virgin Islands. Deerfield, a suburb of Chicago. Jim, Maiy, DAN KOENIG has completed his sons Jimmy and Stephen, and daughter doctorate in sociology at Illinois and is "Beloved Erin" were the perfect hosts. The now teaching at the U. of Victoria and can visit gave me the opportunity of logging in be reached in care of the Department of a few hours of tv football with Jim, who Sociology Victoria, British Columbia, John C. must rival only Dandy t)on Meredith for Canada. MICK BIALLAS is the new Dearie football witticisms. assistant program administrator for the Speaking of John Costello and Jim Petroleum Research Fund of the American joined us briefly to aid a weekend filled Stucko, both have appeared with some Chemical Society in Washington, D.C. He with memories. Also ran into the tem­ frequency in the Big Apple recently. John and wife Cam: have three children and pestuous trio from "Motown," JOHN and I have been working on a case which recently visited JOHN LEFELHOCZ who SHUFF, JOHN HARDY and TOM has required his absence from Mary Lou is now teaching at Virginia Commonwealth FALLON all of whom live near each other and Baby John and his appearance on a in Richmond. in Detroit. Their wives have much in number of occasions. Naturally, we have JOHN ECK is a partner in a CPA firm common since all graduated from SMC. made the most of each visit. Once we in Springfield, 111. and the father of four Was good to see RUDY KOLOSZAR, teamed up with MIKE SCANLON who chUdren. JOHN PUGLIESE works for ROGER BROWN, JOHN GULLIARD started with us in '59. Mike is now a Alcoa in Chicago and has five children. and RON NASSER. Must admit however partner in the N.Y.C. office of Arthur MIKE HARTs better half, Dottie, writes that each year fewer classmates seem to Andersen & Co., lives in New Jersey and that they are moving back to Arizona, this return. If one significant aspect of this sends his best to all. Another time John time to Scottsdale where Mike will be the weekend stands out it has to be the and I had to travel to Syracuse and man­ district manager for Ford's new customer emergence of the team of Harron and aged to snare ED KEARSE from his service division. This is Mike's fourth or Krauser as an unbeatable darts duo. This municipal duties. Ed is corporation counsel fifth move with Ford. JIM MIKACICH is or John Macheca's ability to play golf in Syracuse and has been playing a very back in Sacramento where he is in his in the woods. active role in its management. He's part second year as a deputy district attorney. Received a note from PAT METTLER of the new breed in that city and doing He reports seeing LINSEY KRAMER who announcing the adoption of their first son. quite a job. John is still very much his old is practicing law in Vacaville, Calif. Pat is a general insurance agent in Hunting­ self, lots of fun and just one hell of a guy. Dr. MIKE WILBRAHAM has recenUy ton, Ind. Pat writes that TOM NOONAN Jim Stucko has been practically living opened an office in Swedesboro, NJ. for the is in the sales department of a drug here for the last three months. His firm, practice of pediatrics. Mike has spent two company in Indianapolis. Congratulations Pedersen & Houpt, just completed a major years in the Navy at New London, Conn, to JOE ECHELLE who in his first year as acquisition which saw Tom Kelly called to as a pediatrician. BILL SWEENY is an general manager of the Dallas professional action to flyspeck the usual sundry docu­ associate professor in the math department soccer team guided them to the North ments in small, medium and large prints. at Rutgers University. Bill and Gail are American soccer championship. Anyone Tom, who has been mostly involved with living in North Brunswick, NJ. JIM who is in Miami please stop at NICK real estate work, lives with wife Gail and MAHER is the accounting manager for the BUONICONTI's new restaurant. Nick, an their son in Park Ridge, a Chicago suburb. Monrovia, Calif., operation of the DuPont all-pro linebacker with the Dolphins, has He and Jim Stucko, who is still coining Company. Jim and Gloria have two his law degree as well and is very active those phrases—a martini is now a "see children. GEORGE O'KEEFE writes from in the N.F.L.'s player association. thru," made quite a pair. The nights that we Taipei, Taiwan where he is a partner in If you have any thoughts concerning the spent together had to be the funniest times Pacific Keystone Company which represents reunion please convey them my way. Some that I have enjoyed in quite a moon. various American and European companies of you may be called upon in the near In early October the Stuckos, Goulds and in the Far East. George's address: Pacific future to help put together a reunion which PETER KELLY and wife Suzie came into Keystone Co., Ltd., 123 Nanking East Road, surveys indicate brings more classmates N.Y.C. for a long weekend. This has de­ Sec. 3 Taipei, Taiwan. CYRIL DE- back than any other. veloped into an annual trek and gives us VLIEGHER has been appointed manager all a nice chance to get together, see a few of events of the ND Athletic and Convo­ H. James Krauser off-Broadway shows and just generally cation Center. He will be responsible for 8301 Garfield St. "shoot 'em up" (another Stuckoism). Need­ crowd control, and event setup. Cyril had Bethesda, Md. 20034 less to say, we milk these opportunities for all that they are worth. Jim Gould, who '62L ALL NEWSED UP I just returned from the So. Cat game and am all "newsed up." While the game was a disappointment, it did provide the 36 *Percentage of donors to the ND Animal Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. until very recently had been handling up to PAT O'BRIEN is the proud parent of a are living in Silver Spring, Md. five workmen's compensation cases per new boy also. BRIAN RICHARDSON is THOMAS O. BENSON Is legal counsel week, has since delegated this work to now with the IR dept. of Kelsey-Hayes. for the Denver Regional Council of Govern­ another member of his firm and now, much CHARLES DRISCOLL is now employed ments. Tom is the college recording chair­ to the satisfaction of Nancy and their three with a wholsesale office furniture company man for the ND Club of Denver. ED­ children, is doing mainly trial work in in the Merchandise Mart in Chicago. Thank WARD M. HUGHES competed 5V4 years Grand Rapids and its environs. Pete Kelly, goodness for wives, if not for them, this of Navy service and is emiHoyed as a the third member of Pedersen & Houpt to column would never get written. Note here senior engineer for Bechtel Corporation in grace our shores in the last month, had from Mrs; RICHARD KUZMICH. Dick is San Francisco, Calif. Ed married the former quite an experience on this his first trip to now working for May Company as as­ Susan E. Brown of Santa Ana, Calif. N.Y.C. After one of our late night meetings sistant manager of internal auditing. Dick MICHAEL P. KIRCHEN is department at Christo's, Pete decided to take a walk and Barbara have two children, a boy and manager for Abbott Laboratories. He Uves and promptly fell off a curb and severely a girl. They are living in Sappington, Mo. in Waukegan, 111., with his wife and son, twisted his ankle. He sought refuge in an Guess who turned up finally! FRANK Christopher. T. A. KULICK completed law adjacent coffee shop where amidst his DICELLO, living at 4451 Q. St. N.W., school at the U. of Detroit J. GERALD groans the counterman dropped dead Washington, D.C. Note that address, future YOUNG married the former Kathryn right in front of him. items for the class column should go to Taaffe. They are living in New York where Don't forget to return those complex Good Old Frank! Jerry is a resident in psychiatry at St reunion questionnaires. Merry Christmas and Frank reports that he recently married Luke's Hospital Center, Columbia U. for the New Year: "May the wind be Mary Janice Lord, SMC '67, and is working CHARLES G. BRAGG was with SheU Oil always at your back." in the Tax Division of the Justice Dept. He in Cincinnati and is now at the U. of reports that TOM VOLLMER is working Cincinnati at the Graduate School in Paul K. Rooney for the late Gov. Dewey's law firm in NYC. Philosophy. JAMES E. HOUGH is an Rooney & Robinson PHIL RYAN is working for an ecology attorney and executive secretary of the 60 East 42nd Street related consulting firm on Cape Cod and Wisconsin Judicial Council. Jim and his New York, N.Y. 10017 recently became the father of a new girl. wife Sally live in Madison and have one son. TOM JOLE recently returned from Catholic FRANK J. KENNY Jr. is a stockbroker Relief Service work in SA and is now with Kidder Peabody in San Francisco. He '63 WHERE THEY'RE AT 25.6% * working in Chicago. married the former Elizabeth O'Hare of Dr. FRANK MARTORANO is interning New MUford NJ. JOHN J. ORAS Jr. STEPHEN PETERS reports from Union- at U. of Colorado Hospital in Denver. He received his Ph.D. in Aero-Space and town, Pa., where he, wife Miralynn, and and wife Geri are expecting their third mechanical engineering at ND. ROBERT two little girls are living. Steve is working child. Since this is my last column (until F. CORRAD received his M.B.A. at UCLA as a registered rep for Parker/Hunter, Frank goes to Vietnam again), I should and Adel(Aia U. Bob and his wife have a stock brokers. He spent two years in grad report that Dona and I recently became the son and are living in Farmingdale, N.Y. school in W. Va., and three years in the very proud parents of a future ND line­ backer via the adoption route. We now have Clay Stephens a family of three, Tara 5, Megan 3, and 2 S. 120 Big Horn Drive Patrick, new. We've been here in Coming Wheaton, lU. 60187 2 years, where I am a marketing/financial guy for Coming Glass Works. '65 ALL THE NEWS Thomas Hotopp THAT FITS 29.5%* R.D. 1, 55 Churchill St. BILL McGRAW is in his second year of Big Flats, N.Y. 14814 Radiology residency at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn. Bill has one son, Noel. STEVE VAN HEYDE and his wife, Nancy, Michael H. '64 ROSSMAN RETURNS 24.2%* had their first child, Stephanie Heaton, last McCarthy May. Steve received his J.D. in 1968 from PAUL ROSSMAN has joined the Com­ service, including a hitch in Munich. Maj. puting Center staff at ND as an admini­ DICK TUSHLA reports from Hanau, strative applications analyst. He and his Germany, where he is practicing out­ wife, Mimi, have moved with their three patient medicine. Dick expects to return children to Mishawaka, Ind. to the States in '73. DAVID D. CIRULI has been appointed DAVID M. KENNEDY is a director and project engineer in the Boulder laboratory president of Valentine Smith Co. Inc., of of IBM's systems Development Division, New York and Los Angeles, an organization Boulder, Colo. Ciruli and his wife, formed to develop and produce program­ Elizabeth, and their two sons live in ming particularly in the educational and Boulder. instructional field. He is the former head Dr. ROCCO R. TUTELA was voted the of the New York office of Trans World outstanding intem of the year bythe house International and its director of program staff of St. Michael's Medical Center, and sales. Newark, N.J., and was recipient of the JOHN M. RAMMEL, M.A. '63, L. '64, Upjohn Award and Honorarium at the Ohio State U. College of Law and is was awarded the degree of master of laws seventh annual Dr. Philip R. D'Ambola associated with the firm of Porter, Stanley, in taxation by the lawyers Institute, the Night of the hospital. Dr. Tutela received Treffinger and Piatt in Columbus, Ohio. graduate division of the John Marshall Law In 1968 TOM DeCOURSEY earned a School, Chicago at the June 19 com­ J.D. from the U. of Kansas Law School. mencement in the auditorium of the Subsequently he served as a Peace Corps Prudential Bldg., Chicago. He is a trust municipal adviser near Caracas, Venezuela. officer with the First National Bank of Upon returning he joined the staff of the Chicago. Wyandotte County (Kansas City, Kan.) DAVID M. COOPER '63 has been ap­ Legal Aid Society. Tom recently was ap­ pointed manager, marketing communications pointed general counsel of that organization. for General Hectric's General Purpose In August Tom was married to Joy C. Control Department at Bloomington, III. Hemphill in Denver. He joined GE four years ago as a pro­ JOHN KOONS and his wife, Kathy, are motion specialist at Hendersonville, N.C., living in Falls Church, Va., where John and later transferring to Schenectady and then David W. his father have the largest Ford dealership to Phoenix, Ariz., where he became manager Ellis in the world. John will be opening a new of advertising and sales promotion. He, his Chevrolet dealership in the same city. JIM wife and their three children will live in his degree in medicine and surgery from CARROLL and wife, Paula, have moved the Bloomington area. the U. of Bologna, Bologna, Italy. He is back to Annapolis, Md., where Jim is Note here from TERRY DESMOND. married to the former Francesca Cunti and serving as the general manager of the Ford MATT MURPHY has been transferred to they liave a son, Arthur. JAMES P. dealership. John has a son and two Albany, hf.Y., where he is a district manager CROWLEY received his M.B.A. degree in daughters and Jim has one daughter. for Chevrolet. Matt's family recently June at St. Louis U., SL Louis, Mo. After graduation BILL CARETTA expanded to S with the addition of a new WILLIAM C. RUETER is now a Real worked for IBM for six months until the boy. Estate Officer with the First Pennsylvania Bank in Philadelphia. JAMES C. McGRATH is now special assistant to Bob Mardian, the assistant attorney general for internal security. Jim and his wife, Sherby 37 Army caught him. For three years he was wedding in Iowa that weekend and was the public defender's office in Midland, Fa. stationed in the surgeon general's oBice in unable to attend. I've been assured that and that DAVE McSORLEY is practicing Washington, D.C. Bill then developed everyone who was there had a wonderful law in Pittsburgh after graduation from hospital-oriented computer systems for time. I want to thank you all for your Duguesne Law School. Lockheed. He left that company recently confidence in electing me as your class GORDON NASH is back in Chicago to form his own corporation with several alumni secretary for another five years. I after serving with the 101st Airborne partners. It will function as a consulting hope I can live up to that confidence. Division in Vietnam as a defense attorney company at Sunnyvale, Calif. In March, CHUCK NIGRO was also unable to with the JAGC office. Gordon and his Bill received his M.B.A. from the U. of attend the reunion but he had the pleasure lovely wife, Roseanne, had their first baby, Santa Clara and in October he was married of receiving a midnight long-distance collect a darling girl, Caroline, last Christmas. to Mao' Campbell in Palo Alto, Calif. call from Sweeney's from TOM HOLLAND, There are other '66ers who are still in the BOB DITORIO took over Bill's job at FRANK MALLEY and HUGH Mc- service: Capt. JOHN KUMINECZ has the surgeon general's office in 1968 and has GOWAN. Chuck writes that be and his assumed command of the American forces now completed his military obligation. Bob wife, Judy, are expecting their second child television station at Ramstein AB, Germany. is single and is working for IBM in New in the immediate future. LT. PAUL AHR Dr. THOMAS COOK is now a flight York. Living in Sunnyvale is HAL FEENEY is the proud dad of a year-and-a-half-old surgeon with the Navy. The U.S. Air Force who is married and is working for INTEL, son. TTiomas Brady and CapL GARY Outstanding Unit award has been earned by a semiconductor company. FISHBURN is living in San Antonio with the I2th Tactical Fighter Wing of which In 1970, TOM HECK received his Ph.D. his wife and new son, Steven Arthur. Capt. CARL P. PARLATORE is a member. in musicology from Yale. His training CHARLES ROACH, Jr. has been ap­ Capt. JOHN WALTERS is on duty at included a Fulbright fellowship in Vienna. pointed one of the managers of the Devon Udorn Royal Thai AFB in Thailand as a Early this year Tom obtained an honorable Office of Roach Bros., Inc., Main Line civil engineering officer. discharge from the Army as a conscientious The success of Apollo 15 precluded use objector and now remains active as a draft of Capt. THOMAS R. LOVEs Air Force counselor while pursuing a career as a unit which was ready to provide support if teacher of music histoiy. He and his wife, the lunar mission had ended prematurely. Anne, have a two-year-old daughter named Tom is an HC-130 search and rescue air­ Latissa. craft pilot with an Aerospace Rescue and WYN NORRIS is serving as director of Recovery Squadron at E^in AFB, Fla. planning for CRC-Crose International, a Capt. JOSEPH W. FOBES received the Air division of Crutcher Resources Corp. Wyn Medal at Korat Royal Thai AB in Thailand and his wife, Carolyn, live in Houston with for outstanding airmanship and courage as their son and daughter, ages 3'A and VA. an F-4 Phantom fighter-bomber pilot. Last spring JOHN MEULEMAN earned MIKE RUSH after graduation from an M.B.A. from Northeastern U., in Boston Syracuse U. with honors and a remarkable where he resides with bachelor status and Army career was married last year. While works as an application engineer for the in the service, Mike was awarded the silver Power Breaker division of Allis Chalmers. star for gallantry in action, two bronze BOB McKEEVER and his wife, Kathy, Realtors of Devon, Pa. ANTHONY LISA stars for bravery in the face of armed live in New London, Conn., where Bob is has joined the 'Trane Co., in Boston as a enemy, three air medals for operation in a employed with the Department of the Navy sales engineer. JOE BLANK writes from hostile area, the commendation medal and as a personnel management adviser for the Columbia, Md. where he is with Eastman two South Vietnamese government medals. Underwater Systems Center. In June he Kodak as a Micrographics Sales Repre­ Men of '66, keep up the good work and earned his second M.B.A., this one from the sentative. Joe and his wife, Carol, have keep the information coming! U. of Hartford in public administration. three children, two boys and a girl. BOB GAENSSLEN spent the summer in BOB STRAKER is in Chicago working Richard H. Angelotti London where he worked with Scotland across the street from me with Fidelity 4620 Clausen Ave. Mutual Life in their Advanced Financial Western Springs, 111. 60558 Yard on a blood identification program Planning Division. Bob filled me in on some under a research grant Bob has a Ph.D. of our other classmates in this area. JIM in biochemistry and holds an assistant pro­ STARSHAK and JIM EGAN are with the fessorship at John Jay College of Criminal IRS. TERRY KEWELA is working as a '66L GOOD NEIGHBORS Justice, City of New York U. special assistant to Judge Thaddeus V. After receiving his J.D. from Georgetown Adesko and BOB BASCHE is in a training I received the notice that JOE DELLA Law Center, JOHN MORAN moved to program with Jewel Food Stores. MARIA has become associated with Roth­ Chicago where he was admitted to the schild, Barry & Myers in Chicago. Perhaps Illinois bar. While in Chicago John served RICHARD J. STEINLE is a staff writer with the Goodyear Tire Public Relations we will get to see Joe more often now. as a public defender doing criminal appeals PETE IPPOLITO is moving to Washington, and also had the opportunity to study the Department in Akron. Dick was an Air Force newswriter from 1966 to 1970. JOE D.C. and will be employed as an attorney psychological, social and legal implications with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He of the Chicago confrontation between police KAMINSKI is with General Electric in Syracuse after receiving his M.B.A. with has purchased a house near us. and various factional groups several years BOB MURPHY moved to 5202 Glen- ago. His report was included in the analysis distinction from the Harvard U. Graduate School of Business Administration. wood, Bethesda, phone 301-530-5841, after by the National Commission on the cause his promotion to acting chief of the and prevention of violence. John is now TIM STREB has been promoted to account officer at the Security Pacific Criminal Section of the Civil Rights planning a European trip in order to reflect Division. We understand that MARTY on the political structure of the U.S. National Bank in Los Angeles. MICHAEL HANNIGAN has been appointed assistant IDZIK has extended his stay in Europe JIM BORDA is at the U. of Toronto mortgage officer for Colfax-Waterfield with the Army, but will be back in the working on his Ph.D. and CHARLEY Corporation of South Bend and is re­ United States by Christmas. O'LAUGHLIN is working with South­ sponsible for origination of residential SAM BERNARDI's new address is 459 western Indians in Oklahoma for the Public mortgage loans in the South Bend- Roane Lane, Valparaiso, Ind. 46383, and Health Service. After an extended Army DENNY SUNDERHAUS' address is tour PETER VINSON in 1969 joined the Mishawaka area. LOUIS BARTOSHESKY is compleUng rumored to be 557 Belvedere St., Apt 2, Prudential Insurance Co., in Boston where San Francisco, Calif. 94117. I promised he works in their ordinary agencies depart­ a pediatric internship at St. Louis Children's Hospital in St. Louis. He received a doctor that I would specify DICK STEIN- ment His wfe, Kitty, presented him last BRONN's address, R.R. 7, Kennedy Manor, June wth their first child, Kristen Monica. of medicine degree from Cornell Medical College and was the recipient of the Milton Elkhart, Ind. 46514. Dick is looking for­ Within a few months Tom will be moving ward to seeing anyone who gets back for to a field agency in the New England area. Spivak award for excellence in pediatric medicine. Another doctor classmate is the football games. TOM HARVEY is MICHAEL J. OSBORN who graduated attending graduate school in London after James P. Hamish M.D. from Minnesota Medical School in June of being released by the Army. 8661 S.E. 75th Place 1970 ranking third in bis class. Mike was Mercer Island, Wash. 98040 elected president of Alpha Omega Alpha Francis M. Gregory, Jr. Honor Medical Society. He is presently 5018 Woodland Way interm'ng at Parkland Memorial Hospital Annandale, Va. 22003 '66 SWEENEY'S 28.0%* in Dallas and is preparing for his two-year stint in the Army. I want to thank TOM SULLIVAN for ED CALIOR is in the Army JAGC unit '67 FALL CALL 25.7% * covering for me as to the happenings at serving his commitment with Uncle Sam our class reunion. J was really sorry to have after graduating from U. of Pittsburgh Law ND, fall and football conjure up dreams had to miss the goings-on but I was in a School and passing the Pennsylvania bar of heaven for many a NDer. Not that our examination. Ed is in charge of legal first two correspondents represent heaven, assistance. Ed is working with classmates but they surely experienced fall at ND GEORGE GRAY, a Geoisetown Law School graduate. Ed informed me that his Pittsburgh classmate RICK DAVIS is with 38 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. because the gridiron was their home for many hours of their campus days. For TOM RHOADS, the present finds his wife Kathie, Tom Jr., (I), and himself settled in the Bluegrass country which, Tom reminds us, is also the home of John Kay, head coach at the U. of Kentucky. Tom has been working for Batesville Casket Sales Co., since last October and so far is ex­ tremely pleased with what he considers to be a pennanent assignment. A "big news" item from Tom states that JOHN OVER­ MAN will have been led to the rail as of October 9 by Phyllis Blaise, a Barat Bomber from Cincy. Last summer the Rhoads' spent a night with JIM THORTON, his wife Barbara, and son Jamey in New Albany, Ind. Jim has joined the family leather goods business. Tom reports that "still single" ED BRANDT has changed locations with his employer Budweiser—^from SL Louis to New York and that MIKE BRENNAN and his wife Adrian have joined with the forces of Uncle Sam as of the end of this past Hicks Killilea Carmouche summer. (Mike completed ND Law this past June.) Tom's old roommate, JIM RYAN, will finish LSU Med School in the summer of 1972. He and his wife Mary are expecting their first this fall and better be prepared for the arrival of the Rhoads' for the LSU game. Tom also sends forth a special request: "If any of the members of the 4th floor of Badin are still alive, I'd like to hear from them."—Creekside So. 2220 Devonport No. 56, Lexington, Ky. 40504. ANGELO SCHIRALLI writes that as of this summer he has become engaged to Bonnie Parker Cameron of Palm Beach, Fla. The wedding is to take place Oct 31 at Sacred Heart (day after the Navy game), and Angle extends a warm invitation to all friends on campus that weekend to stop in Hamilton Eustice Raspitha at the reception at the Monogram Room. At the time of this writing, ushers stand at DICK SWATLAND, TIM GORMAN, and JOHN LIUMl. Angle's present address is Palm Beach Shores where he's employed 3. William Hicks '62 has been named associate dean for academic af­ fairs in the College of Law at Syracuse U., Syracuse, N.Y. He has been a member of the faculty since 1968. He received a J.D. from the U. of Michigan in 1965 and an M.A. in history at New York U. in 1968.

Alfred G. Killilea '63 has received an award for excellence in under­ graduate teaching at the U. of Rhode Island, Kingston, R.I. The assistant professor of political science has taught at Rhode Island for two years after receiving his M.A. and Ph.D. from the U. of Chicago. with Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Company. TIM WENGIERSKI recenUy joined the Charles H. Carmouche '64 has been promoted to vice president of insurance firm and is also living in the TeleCom Corp., Houston, Tex. Since July 1967 he had been legal Palm Beach area. ANDY REARDON informs us of his counsel of the firm which has interests in trucking, investments and completion of duty with the Navy as of manufacturing. July 30. Andy's assignment just prior to his discharge was as damage control officer of the aircraft carrier fVasp. With the service Richard M. Hamilton '65 was appointed advertising supervisor for the behind him, Andy and wife Michelle have sold their home in Fall River, Mass., and Electro-Products division of the 3M Company, St. Paul, Minn. After have moved to Oxford, Miss., where Andy graduation he earned an M.B.A. degree in marketing at the U. of will be a first-year law student at the U. of Mississippi. With BOB SEVIER having Wisconsin and joined 3M in 1966. He will be responsible for develop­ been recently discharged from the Army, ing the division's annual advertising program and supervising advertis­ Andy was trying to coax him and his wife to join them for the Southern Cal game. ing plans for each market area. Andy mentions that PHIL AZAR, after graduating from Tulane Law School in January, is now doing legal research in John T. Eustice '66 is now manager of the new Barclays Bank branch Washington, D.C. in San Francisco. Eustice had been a lending officer in another San JACK DONAHUE has been busy getUng Francisco bank before joining Barclays earlier this year. Barclays is a ready to start grad school in aerospace management at USC. And he's going to subsidiary of Barclays Bank D.C.O. with main offices in London. have company because his wife Mary Jo will be starting law school. While with Uncle Sam, Jack was iniured, and as a Bro. DePorres Raspitha O^.F., Ph.D. '70 is the new academic dean result, part of Jack's Calif, preparations at St. Francis College, Brooklyn, N.Y. Bro. DePorres has been a member of the faculty since 1965 and has been assistant professor of chemistry.

39 have included surgery for a complication centrates from French, Spanish, and involving a pinched nerve in the legs. Hope '67L TIME FOR CHANGE? California vineyards along with instructions. all is going well. Jack. Jack and Mary Jo JIM MOONEY is now working as a welcomed a daughter, Audra Christine, into A secretary in the Alumni OfiBce thought computer engineer in Clifton, NJ. and is the world a year ago in November. This it was time for a change and removed my engaged to Miss Joan Arbogast of Bridge­ past summer Jack was in Chicago for a name as Class Secretary, substituting KEN port, Ohio and expects to be married next weekend of sailing with his old roommate LAZARUS. That may not have been a bad April. Jim received his M.S. in electrical CHARLIE McMANUS. CharUe is stiU with idea but your chance is gone; I'm reinstated engineering from Ohio State and is now Procter and Gamble. Remember Father Joe and here goes another column of newsdips. working on his dissertation for his Locigno who taught Theology for a year COUCH, JACK separated from the Navy doctorate. at ND during our junior year? Well, Jack in May, has established the firm of Steuer- A correction from the April-May crossed Father's path this past year and so wald & Couch in Hudson, N.Y. Going ALUMNUS. JOE BLAKE was stationed in did I through the old pen and paper against all the rules the firm is prospering Vietnam with C Company 1st Battalion 5th method. Fr. Joe is dean at Manhattan right from the start. Snoopy, his wife Pam Marines, 1st Marine Division. Joe returned College in NYC and has been teaching and Courtney (IVS) have bought a home to the States in May and his new address is both there and at Fairfield. He claims he at 16 Eichybush Rd. Kinderhook, N.Y. H&S Co. 1st Battalion 5th Marines 1st has gone the way of the old—^he's the proud 12106. Drop him a card. Marine Division (FMF) MCB Camp owner of a female terrier which he quotes LUBER, ANTHONY. His wife Mary Pendleton, Calif. as "the woman of my life and a real joy." wrote to share their joy in their adoption Fr. Joe is living away from the dorms but of Elizabeth Anne, lliey hope for another Leonard J. Pellecchia is on the campus; and his bachelor pad in 1972. That's family planning. Tony is a 1300 Rock Ave. L-5 turns into a home for many. public defender in South Bend and generally N. Plainfield, NJ. 07060 THOMAS W. RIECK. writes from Evans- having a good time. Tony, please tell Mary ton, III. where this past spring he received not to address me as Mr. Heinhold. his J.D. degree from Northwestern and is HARGROVE, JOHN. StiU stationed in '68L DOES NANCY KNOW? now practicing general corporate and tax Calif., he and Jane flew East and we were law in Chicago. Tom also received his CPA lucky enough to get together with them My apologies for missing my last deadline, shortly after graduation from ND. Penney and Maureen and DAVE FRANCESCANI. but things have been pretty hectic for me and Tom's neighbor BOB BROWNE gradu­ You would think we'd talk about what has the last couple of months. As can be noted ated from the U. of Wisconsin Law School happened since we left law school but the from my new address, I am no longer and is now a patent attorney in Chicago. conversation was repeatedly prefaced by stationed in Norfolk but have been trans­ Bob and Connie also have a son Robert, "Remember the time the Chief. . . ." It ferred north. Between cleaning up loose Jr. Last fall STEVE (Buzz) HARTEL, was a good evening. Dave of course is a ends and getting moved, somehow my who is a law grad of Tulane, and his wife patent attorney in N.Y. City and lives in column got lost in the shuffle. At any rate, visited with the Riecks' and saw ND defeat Pt. Washington, N.Y. I am now attached to the Navy's Office of Georgia Tech. Tom also reports that New Address Dept.: KENNETH Legislative Affairs in the Pentagon, the VERN RODEN graduated from St. Louis LAZARUS. 7231 Hadlow Dr., Springfield, primary functions of which are to stay on Med. School this past spring with special Va. 22152. SEAN KEENAN. 4704 Blue­ top of pending legislation of interest to the honors in pediatrics and will be doing his berry Ave. N.W., Canton, Ohio 44709. I naval service and to prepare the Navy's internship at Cardinal Glennon Mem. didn't think Canton was big enough to have position thereon, provide information to Hosp. in SL Louis. Congress where needed, etc. My last two its own zip code. years in the Navy thus promise to be busy JOHN J. CORRIGAN II has come out ones, but I hope that any of you who wind of four years of hiding to report that after Jim Heinhold up in the D.C. area will be sure to drop attending Villanova Law School for a year 16 Morris Rd. by for a visit ('67-'68), he now finds himself serving as East Haven, Conn. 06513 the property officer for Hqrs. Co. at the The big news of this column, though Nha Trang Ran command. John says he has somewhat belated, has to be the announce­ been with Uncle Sam since January '69 and ment of the loss of one more bachelor. On received his commission from Infantry '68 ACTIVITIES May 30, that eligible former editor-in-chief O.C.S. at Fort Benning where he also com­ UPDATED 27.9 %•• of the Notre Dame Lawyer, FRANK pleted airborne and ranger schools. After SMITH, married Nancy Jean Kasmarik in his discharge in November, he hopes to Received a very nice letter from BUD Latrobe, Pa. I'm sure I speak for us all return to Villanova. DUFFY the other day bringing us up on in conveying our sincere wishes to both of MIKE WALSH reports from Bethesda, his current activities. Bud is married to the them for every joy and happiness in the Md., where he and his wife Jean have set former Miss Ann Hoffmann and is stationed years ahead (and our sincere hope that up housekeeping while Mike is doing his at Ft. Benning, Ga. as a lieutenant in the Nancy knew what she was getting into). internship and residency in pathology in Army. Prior to his entry into the Army, Next in order of precedence must come conjunction with the Armed Forces Bud was working for his M.B.A. in financial congratulations to the new parents in the Institute. This assignment follows Mike's analysis at NYU and he hopes to continue class. This month's awards go to the recent graduation from the Medical College his endeavor next spring. HERRs and SCRIPPs (again). Mathew of Wisconsin where he was president of his William Herr dropped in to stay with BOB class and a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, and Andrea for a while. He weighed in at National Honorary Med. Society. 8 lbs. 9 oz. on August 3. And it was a CLAYTON LEROUX graduated from second girl, Susanna, for JOHN and Sue Cleveland State U. this past June with a Scripp. J.D. and has since passed the Ohio bar. Europe will probably never be the same. He's currently with the Legal Aid Society As if the New Economic Policy was not of Cleveland. Apart from his interest in enough, London, Paris, and Rome were all law, Clayton and his wife Janet are busy blitzed by that terrible trio of TOM with two boys, John (3) and Timothy (18 CURTIN, LARRY BONENBERGER, and mos.). Clayton also had news about two JOHN COYLE during this past summer. other men of '67. RICHARD GRANT is According to JC, a good time was had by living the good life in Hawaii where he and James all. (I wonder if he means the English, his wife, the former Cynthia Fontana, are Smithbeiiier French, and Italians, too?) JC also writes expecting their first child in October. that DICK KIRCH has now completed GERARD (Ace) HECK is completing working on his master's at N.Y.U. and will work on his Ph.D. at Duke U. Ace and his Also received a couple of notes from soon be heading back to California. JC wife Maureen have two children, Elizabeth RICH FLAVEY. He is a programmer himself is working with a small firm in and Trevor. analyst with Ford in Dearborn and is Newark. DENNIS COLLINS is now with married to the former Miss Nancy Halicki. the NLRB in St. Louis, Mo., and living with Just as most of you guys have signed off And now some notes from the Alumni CHARLIE WEISS. JIM COOLING is in in your letters, "that's about it from here"; Office. THOMAS CORBETT is an estate private practice with a firm in Kansas City. but I have been impressed also by the tax attorney in the St. Louis District office JOHN and Pat PUSEY have just bought number of you who are talking up Reunion of the IRS. AL VAN HUFFEL is now a a new home in Peoria. To Pat, though, it —1972. Continue to think positively and sales engineer for the Wheelabrator Corp. doesn't seem like John spends a great deal 111 attempt to handle questions as you fire in Pittsburgh, Pa. FRANK BLONSKA has of time there. In addition to a heavy load them to me. been named a public relations assistant at of trial work, John is working as. a volunteer the Babcock & Wilcox Co.'s power genera­ attorney and counselor with a local court John A. Buttler tion division headquarters at Barberton, counselling program for youthful offenders. 4023 Elaine Place, S. Ohio. Our class has its "little own wine- As if that were not enou^, he has just Columbus, Ohio 43227 maker" in the person of BOB HIGGINS. recently been elected president of the Peoria Bob took up wine making as a hobby while ND Club. working as an industrial engineer at Uni- royal. Inc., in Mishawaka, Ind. and now it has grown into a full-time business. His shop includes wine making kits and con­

40 ^Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as oj Sept. 30, 1971. In early August, DICK and Laurie were able to attend the affair. has moved in with a firm in a nearby suburb MANNING hosted a mini class reunion in Juan had a teaching assistantship at ND and settled the Zak household in Denver. Chicago with TOM WARD as guest of while working for his master's in mechan­ honor. Tom had been in Madison, Wis., ical engineering. Currently he's employed Scott Atwell taking some courses before heading to teach with Carton de Colombia (subsidiary of 1050 Lafayette No. 501 down in South Carolina. Present at the get- Container Corp.) as a controller for their Denver, Colo. 80218 together were JACK, and Carol SANDNER, mills division. He invites everyone to visit SKIP and Mary Ann GRIFFIN, BILL and south of the border noting that Cali was the Kathy COLEMAN, MIKE and Juanita home bf the VI Pan American Games. '69MBA LOST IS FOUND WILLIAMSON, and LOU BIANCI. Received a couple letters this month from OWEN and Vicki LOPEZ are now the women in our lives. Mrs. DAVID We were pleased to hear from one of the happily settled in Santa Fe, according to PRUSIECKI, the former Cynthia Niero of long lost brethren when we received a letter Owen an "almost ideal place to live." As Flemington, NJ. informs us she and Dave from DUANE MERTL. Here's Dewey's most of you know, Owen and Vicki were were married July 17. JIM SINCLAIR and two-year progress report: Nine days after married in April of 1969. Among those in JOHN CORGAN assisted as ushers. Before graduation, Dewey joined the staff of one attendance at the wedding were JOE the wedding Dave spent eight months in of our largest finns, the VS. Anny. After LADD, JIM and Kathy McGOVERN, the Western Pacific off Vietnam, for which training and working at Fort Leonard Wood, DENNIS COLLINS, CHARLIE WEISS, he was awarded the Navy Achievement Pvt. Mertl was sent to Vietnam in March, and Professor RODES. After completing his Medal for outstanding performance. Cur­ 1970. Fortunately, an office job rather than clerkship with Judge Oliver Seth of the rently he is serving as Staff Operations a foxhole awaited him there. After spending Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals, Owen Officer in Long Beach, Calif. nearly a year in Vietnam, he returned to joined a firm in private practice in Taos, Mrs. CHARLES HOF wrote to say her the U.S. and an early discharge in February. N.M. After eight months of burdensome son is stationed in Los Angeles with Navy He has recently taken a position with a commuting, he decided that a change of Space Systems Activity. JOHN KOEPPEL bank in Michigan City, Ind. His address location was in order and made the change­ Chuck's roommate, entered the Air Force there is 2904 Roslyn Trail, Michigan City, over to a small firm in Santa Fe. Accord­ in Laredo, Tex. and ED RETTERER is Ind. 46360. As the AU-MBA wide receiver ing to Owen, he "couldn't be happier" with somewhere in Germany with the U.S. Army. on our intra-mural team, Dewey asked his present arrangement and anticipates Military intelligence has located MARTIN about the other members of that nationally that it will be permanent. (Rip) McCOY at Luke AFB, Arizona. Rip ranked squad. So let's hear from that group While passing through Chicago in June, just graduated from a special training of pseudo-jocks. Owen spoke with Joe Ladd who, he reports, course for F-lOO Super Sabre Pilots. BOB An address change reported by KEN is enjoying private practice and doing an DEPIERRE finished his navigator training CULLUM is as follows: 1716 Havenwood "inordinate" amount of sailing on Lake at Mather AFB, Calif. Bob will remain Drive, Richmond, Va. 23233. Michigan ("and still chasing all the there as an electronic warfare trainee. It seems that nearly all the pollsters have 'chicks' "). CHRIS CARROL is both Keep sending those cards and letters. put the usual pressure on Ara's Irish by practicing law and teaching high school Your classmates are anxious to hear what ranking them Number 1. As I write this, in Ohio. JIM HANCOCK has resigned as you've been doing for two years. One short Linda and I are looking forward to being assistant U.S. attorney in Las Vegas and, note will keep everyone informed. in South Bend to see the opener against at last report, was contemplating returning Take care. Northwestern. We hope to see some of you to grad school for an advanced degree in there and gather some information which English. Finally, PAT PACELLA has left Mike Neumeister will allow us to report on the activities of Oklahoma and returned to private practice 64 West Winspear Ave. more MBA's in the next colunm. in Youngstown, Ohio. Buffalo, N.Y. 14214 That's about it for now. Please note the Joe Cavato new address and drop a line. 7122 Vernon '69L ALL-TIME DOMER University City, Mo. 63130 Dennis C. Thelen 1400 S. Joyce SL The absence of my column in the two Apt. B712 preceding issues was based upon a com- '70 FLEET'S IN 19.0%* Arlington, Va. 22202 mum'cation gap-^about two issues worth of gap! By the mailing of this issue I hope Just as I prepared to compose this month's that most of us at least will have been class report, I was greeted by the smiling able to meet at one of the home games. face of none other than CHRISTOPHER '69 NO CUTS 21.7^ As you must all know by now, in a E. SERVANT. Since Springfield, 111., is not The Irish continue to succeed and we can­ surprise upset in the ratings JIM (Star) a Navy town, I inquired of Lieut. Siervant not help but recall the good times we had STARSHAK has been surpassed in his the reason for his visit The reply was for four years. The professional life is nice position of "greatest Domer of all time" astounding! The Navy, on an economy but without unlimited cuts it certainly can by TIM MCLAUGHLIN. Tim and his kick, is releasing junior officers early. Chris, drag at times. family have returned to South Bend to live, for this reason, was given an honorable JUAN ANDUJAR wrote from Cali, selecting a homesite nearly 90 miles closer discharge after IS months, thereby saving 21 Colombia to report on our Latin American to the Dome than that of the former all- months of active duty. He is now slowly classmates. CARLOS MOLINA'S father time greaL winding his way back to Attleboro Falls, There appears to be a significantly in­ Mass., where he will try to decide what to creasing number of lineal descendants of the do with himself. His current idea is operat­ class members of '69 Law. Susan and ing an ice cream parlor, but I think he was DENNIS MACKIN have a second daughter, a little touched by the heat Mary Frances. Dennis has recently joined Another ^obe traveler made his way the staff of the Fulton County District through Springfield at summer's end, but Attorney in Atlanta. Cathy and JIM this time I wasn't home. Remember Hiuri- BRADY'S second child is a boy: Michael cane Doria in August? Well, the blustery George. Peggy and DAN HEBERT are old gal kept me at Cape Cod long enough expecting No. 3 in February. to miss KELLY KNAUER, fresh from a The Brady family hosted the HEBERTs, summer in Europe. He spent a few weeks the STAMPS and the TROGANs for a at his home in Springfield-the-lesser (Mis­ weekend in August. Cathy dropped a line souri) before trekking back to !.^rist the to advise that VINCE STAMP spent five King School in Middle Village, N.Y. I months in the active reserves at Ft. Polk expect a full report soon. and at Ft. Sam Houston and now has only ReUy's feUow teacher MICHAEL MOR- died and he took on the hard task of run­ his yearly summer duty to look forward to. RISSEY has temporarily sdiandoned formal ning the family's business which he has He and Anne are presently living in Cin­ academic pursuits in favor of a personal done well. GERMAN CALLE is with cinnati. NICK TROGAN has opened his investigation of Lake Mendota in Madison. International Petroleum in Cartagena, Mike will sail the Wisconsin waters until Colombia, as an industrial salesman. He own law practice in Saginaw, Mich. JOE (Zep) FRANTIN, as most of you Jack Frost nips his nose. Then on to Fitch- misses all the football, pizzas. Bud and girls. burg, Mass., unt0 February, when he will MAURICIO CANO is working with know by now, is living in Coconut Grove, Fla., and attending Miami law School for make the grand tour of &irope. Two of his Coltejer, a Colombian textile firm, in their sisters live there now and Mike i^ans to export department RODRIGO URIBE '70 his LL.M. in Taxation. I am pleased to report that he got an "A" from Prof. inspect their quarters. Hopefully, too, he is a salesman with FUTEC, a foundry in wni find a way to destabilize the European Medellin. Last July GUSTAVO MOLINA Chaumee. Patsy and I took a brief trip to San currencies enough to make the dollar appear '70 was married to, Maria Isabel Estrada sound again. his long-time girl triend. Several NDers Francisco this summer. While passing through the L.A. area we tried to reach On my way back home at the end of JEFF CAVANAUGH without success. August I stopped at ND to visit my old Where are you now, Mr. Cavanaugh? Meanwhile, Denver is increasing its ranks of practicing ND Law alumni. JIM ZAK 41 roommate TONY ALHOLM. Tony has just PAUL WHITE is at Ohio U. studying third child). Congrats to mothers and begun the third of a new four-year law economics. fathers alike. Wonder what a college edu­ program there. He reported that his London MIKE McALEER reported he saw DON cation for these kids will cost in 1988? experience was wonderful. ND's contract SCHMIDT and his wife recently in San Talked to KEVIN TINNEY recenUy; with the U. of London expired, and the Diego. They were trading commanding he's on the road quite a bit with Associates program is being revised considerably. Most officers, and now Don is on the U.S.S. Iwo and has moved into Scottsdale (about VA important is the fact that ND contracts lima LPH-Z. PAUL RODGERS has joined miles south of our home). individual teachers rather than a whole the Concerned Officers Movement, accord­ Had occasion to ask STEVE ANELLA school to teach the 2S second-year students. ing to Mike. I'd like to hear some more for some professional architectural advice— Fr, WILLIAM LEWERS of our law school about the organization, if anyone knows. well, they say that the M.B.A. doesn't have will be resident coordinator this year. Join­ JACK and WILL PIERCE are still living to know everything—only where to get the ing him will be at least two of our class, in San Diego (as of August), although information!! RON BASSO and JOHN KREIS. Both Jack at that time was deployed on a two- Speaking of M.B.A.'s, I'm told that 97 were aware of potential communication month turnaround cruise. first-year students entered the program this problems in a foreign country, and inten­ JOEL CICERELLA was working in fall. sively studied the language this summer. Toledo in a hospital for his CO. alternate Leona Pestka and Monica Groom were Although I'm not a law student, I do service. In July he left to look for another visiting the IMPARATOs in mid-August enjoy parties, so I stayed for the annual position. and we had them all over for a cookout. student-faculty picnic. Several old class­ Mike (who certainly is good for news) JOHN PESTKA is on special projects with mates were there, including BOB RIGNEY, had a final report on Authentically Merri- WE in Chicago and GARY GROOM is PAT McDONOUGH, and ED SMITH, weather, that talented group of folk artists busy taking the C.P.A. review course for who is teaching a freshman section of the from our class. He had heard that TONY November's exam. expanded collegiate seminar course. After DEL FAVERO and TOM CONNOLLY Not much else new, the HENNs took a listening to him as devil's advocate in our were on tour, although the whereabouts of five-day vacation over Labor Day—stopped junior year with Professor Chris Powers RICH MEEHAN and DENNY WILLIAMS off in Indianapolis, and then spent two days (still at Assumption College I presume) were unknown to him. in a cabin at McCormick's Creek State I'm sure he will be a fine teacher. That rounds out the news this month. Park. We took a three-mile hike through Another familiar face at ND last month Now it's back to work as I immerse myself the park—it was grueling and yours truly was JOE BRADLEY, who is now a first- in an 1800-page pharmacology book. had to go the complete hike without a year law student. He taught at a junior high Camel—that's what I call roughing it. school in South Bend last year and was Don Graham kind enough to pick me up as I hitched to 1155 Claytonia Mike Henn Frankie's from the new, improved Circle. Richmond Heights, Mo. 63117 1955 Trent Way The guardhouse is now in the middle of South Bend, Ind. the street, allowing passage of twice as much traffic. Down at Frankie's I ran into '71 FROM THE TAL YOUNG, who was granted a C. O. BETTER HALF 3.0%^ last year and is doing alternate service as an orderly at Memorial Hospital. A fellow I'm not too long on news this month but I dropout from chemistry, he was especially will pass along what I've got. I received a good to see. Tal reported that our freshman letter from Lois Ann Walsh, who married class president, LEO KLEMM, is now KEN WALSH in June. Lois wrote to tell living in Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and teach­ me that she and Kenny are now living in ing at a Catholic school across the border South Bend. He's starting Law School at in Laredo, Tex. ND this fall and she works for ND's Sports I heard from MIKE O'BRIEN several Information Department. weeks ago in Frankfurt, Germany. He's I also heard from Cathy and JACK trying to make the base traveling tennis SCHAEFER. They are now living in Stur- team and so far feels he- has a good chance. btidge, Mass., Jack has a job with Reynolds I wish him luck, but want him to know the Aluminum. He probably expects to get a Washington U. Medical School Softball cut rate on some metal skis. I know be team wants him to hurry back to catch for and Cath plan to wear theirs out this winter. CHE.MISTRY us. This year could be tough without him. Word has it that a few '71 grads sweated In case you forgot, O'B was at Ft. Leonard out the summer at Army training camps. Reilly lecturers scheduled this semester Wood last spring and visited us every week­ JOHN ZURCHER and DAN DELL'ORTO include Or. Earl L. Muettenies, associate end in St. Louis. were at Ft. Riley, Kan. CHARLES DE- director of research at the Central Research FRED NACHTWEG and I had a nice MONACO, LARRY LEROY and PETE Laboratory, du Pont Co. and adjunct pro­ dinner in July with BILL and Ruth SOR- MOULDER put in their time at Ft. fessor of chemistry at the U. of Pennsyl­ RELL, just before they left for the East. Knox, Ky. vania, the week of Oct. 13; Pro. Leo A. Bill is now at Cornell Law, while Ruth is I had a few complaints about my last Paquette of the Ohio State U., Nov. 8-12; finishing her training in occupational column from DENNY CONROY and and Dr. Joseph J. Katz of the Argonne therapy in Boston and will join him in PAUL HICKEY. Rumor has it that they National Laboratory Nov. 29-Dec. 3. Ithaca early next year. (I presume there accused me of deliberately not mentioning Among those who recently received, or will be interim visits, however.) them although I knew that they are at the completed the requirements for, the Ph.D. Also in Boston will be RICH MORAN, Navy's Supply School in Athens, Ga. I are GEORGE ABELL, postdoctoring in the now in his second year at Tufts graduate in didn't really do it on purpose. All I was Radiation Laboratory; MERLE ARNOLD, English; KEVIN MYLES at Suffolk Law trying to do was avoid thinking about the engaged in postdoctoral research at the School. DENNY CLARK, PAT DOW- wild weekends they are having, while I Catholic University; CHARLES BATTEN, DALL and JOHN GARVEY are also study. postdoctoring with GERRY MEISELS '56 studying in Boston, but their roommate of BERNIE RYAN is getting MBA from at the U. of Houston; SUSAN LESKO, at last year, LARRY KICKHAM has finished Wayne State U. at night. He works for the Altoona Hospital, Altoona, Pa.; JOAN his studying. Larry now holds a master's U.A.W. in Detroit during the day. Bemie MAY, at Roswell Park Memorial Institute, degree in accounting from Northeastern U. never was satisfied with just sitting around Buffalo, N.Y.; TOSHIAKI MATSUSHIGE; and will take the CPA exam in November. taking it easy. ROBERT NORRIS, a research associate at Best of luck, Larry! One other bit of good news is that JOE Louisiana State U.; and DONALD PUCCI, A little Texas news is now in order. PAT SCHAPPERT will be going to George postdoctoring at the U. of Michigan. BARBOLLA is a 2nd-year law student at Washington Medical School this fall. I ARMAND BOISSELLE '61 has recently Texas and in the top half of his class. At haven't heard from Joe but I hear things joined the law firm of Oberlin, Maky, last report he was working for the Fort look pretty good in D.C Donnelly & Renner in Cleveland. JACK Worth district attorney and hoped to make Until we meet again, peace. DUGAN '65, with NASA at the Lewis the Law Review this year. FRANK Mc- Research Center in Cleveland, presented NALLY is working for Prudential in North Tony Earley three papers at the International Conference Texas and will be married this falL Also 1505 E. 4th St. on Electronic and Atomic Collisions in tying the knot will be LARRY MOSER in Bem'cia, Calif. 94510 Amsterdam and chaired a session on ap­ November. plications of computer films to molecular FRANK SESAK, whom I had seen at the collisions. PAUL HOPPER '51 has recently ND-Missouri game in Columbia last fall, '71 MBA STORK CLUB ._ joined the General Foods Corp. as director is now working in Lorain, Ohio. After six of environmental sciences, Tarrytown, N.Y. months in the Army Reserve he is making Since our last column the stork has been Recent visitors to the campus included a bid for a CO. both busy and well-traveled. He stopped in GIANCARLO BERTI '53 professor at the South Bend on Aug. 19 to deliver John U. of Pisa, who presented a paper at the Anthony to STEVE and Louise ANELLA (1st boy, third child), then reappeared in Albuquerque Aug. 21 with Laura Jean for TONY and Helena STRATI (2nd giri. 42 'Percentage of donors to the ND Annual Fund as of Sept. 30, 1971. lUPAC Meeting in Boston in July; Sr. pin a $10 bill on a. 6-cent postcard and and accounts of activities of some of our IRMA GERBER OP '57, returning from a mail it to "Red Cadillac," Notre Dame, older physics Ph.D. alumni. summer of research at the U. of Utah; Sr. Indiana. FRANCIS G. NAGASAKA '56 (the­ MARY O'ROURKE SCL '67 from the oretical physics), wife Akiko, and five NSF institute on applications of computer Bernard Norling children, Michiko, Naoka, Kiyoshio, Etsuko, science to chemistry at NYU; and FRANK G66 Memorial Library and Itaiu live at 65 Yamazato-cho, '33 and JOHN BS '56 (Ph.D. U. of Penn­ Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Showa-ku, Nagoya, Japan 466. Frank sylvania, now teaching at Union College, received his B.S. degree from Tokyo Schenectady, N.Y.) SOWA. Frank's fifth University in 1949, and came to ND for son Joe is a junior at ND. LAW his graduate work in physics. He currently holds the rank of professor at Nanzan U. Bro. Columba Curran CSC Prof. Mike Mclntire addressed the New He is a member of the Physical Society of Department of Chemistry York State Bar Association, Section on Japan, and also of the Japanese Philosophy Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Insurance, Negligence and Compensation at of Science Association. Frank stopped in Cooperstown, N.Y., regarding an environ­ for a brief visit about a year ago, on the mental law program. occasion of a visit to this country to deliver HISTORY The Law School registered 150 freshmen a paper on the philosophy of science at a this year. The last LSAT average was over meeting held in Boston. As the fall terra began the most noteworthy 600, and the average cumulative grade was CARL G. ADLER '66 (theoretical immediate change in the affairs of the 3.3 on a 4.0 scale. The students represented physics), wife Catherine, and two children Department of History was the retirement nearly 100 different colleges and universities. (as of April, 1968, report) live at 217 of VINCENT DE SANTIS as departmental Dean THOMAS SHAFFER '61 served Harmony St., Greenville, N.C. 27834. Carl chairman. Prof. De Santis led us ably for on a panel Sept. 23 and Oct.-7 concerning received his B.S. in physics degree from nearly a decade and deserves the best wishes the new Indiana Trust Code sponsored by ND in 1961, and stayed on for his graduate of all of us as he returns to full-time the Indiana Continuing Educational Fund. work in physics. At last report, he held teaching and research. He has been replaced Twenty-six students have left for the new the rank of associate professor of physics by PHILIP GLEASON. Phil received his London program under Fr. William Lewers' at East Carolina U., Greenville, N.C. Ph.D. from ND and has been an esteemed supervision. Assistant visiting professor, WILLIAM R. ALLING '65 (theoreUcal member of our faculty since 1959. Our Chris Osakwe, Professor of International physics), lives at Rt 1, Moorhead, Minn. congratulations to Phil, who assumes the Law, has recently published an article in 56560. At last report (April 1968) Bill was unenviable task of working out the in­ the American Journal of International Law still single. Bill came to ND from LeMoyne numerable practical details of the imminent on contemporary Soviet doctrine on the College where he received his B.S. in merger with St. Mary's. Congratulations are juridical nature of universal international physics degree in 1958. After receiving his also in order to RICHARD BALFE, a organizations in Volume 65 of the 1971 Ph.D., Bill went to Moorhead State College member of the Loras College History issue. Prof. Osakwe has also coauthored as an assistant professor of physics. He faculty since 1958, who was recently "Agreements of International Orgam'zations was promoted to associate professor in elevated to the chairmanship there. and the Vienna Convention on the Law of 1966, and since January of 1966 he has Among the more enjoyable events of the Treaties." been serving as chairman of the Department summer here were long chats with RAMON Prof. Bud Murdock will teach a joint of Physics at Moorhead. ABARCA from Canisius College and program on minority business planning in That's all for this time. WALTER GRAY from Loyola, both of the Law School and School of Business whom visited friends in South Bend. Walter Administration. Robert L. Anthony had just returned from a year in Rome. Prof. Chris Osakwe and Prof. FER- Department of Physics (By contrast, I feel cosmopolitan anymore NAND DUTILE '65, are now on campus. Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 if I spend an afternoon in Mishawaka.) Prof. Bob Rodes is back in Hoynes after RICHARD BOURLAND is teaching at two years in Britain. Prof. GERALD St. Mary's this year. GALLIVAN '61, U. of Wyoming Law Social Notes—On Sept. 7 the Union of School, visited here Aug. 24-25, and Assist­ Graduate Historians (UGH) launched the ant Dean GERALD CAVANAUGH '69, new school year with an outdoor picnic at Loyola of Los Angeles, visited oh Aug. the home of Mr. and Mrs. ALFRED 14-15. ROACH. This was followed by the annual THOMAS M. WARD '68, is now assistant History Department reception at the Uni­ professor of law at the U. of South Carolina versity Club 10 days later. The purpose in Law School. both cases was to promote camaraderie among new graduate students, UGH Leslie G. Foschio ATLANTA veterans, and faculty members. Success was Law School iidmirable on both occasions. Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 On Aug. 14, the ND Club of Atlanta put t'-Near the end of the spring Softball season on its annual family picnic at the Mathis a "day" was held for your correspondent. Dairy Farm. The picnic was especially It was replete with the gifts, speeches and PHYSICS enjoyable by reason of the presence of a refreshments common on these occasions. number of the incoming freshman students Detractors said the purpose was to single According to the August 1971 Commence­ from the North Georgia area. The students out the Most Decrepit Participant in ment Exercises Bulletin, the ranks of our who were present were: Michael R. Snider, Twentieth-century Sports. (Somehow, I had Physics Ph.D. alumni have now been in­ Jules C. Beale, William K. Principe, and always thought of my activities as an en­ creased from 169 to 174 members. The five Joseph J. Gaspierik. The ND alumni who deavor to bridge the generation gap.) Near newest members of this very illustrious attended were: BOB MULSHINE '63, the end of the summer season a similar group are KENNETH W. BRODA PETE MURRAY '64, FRANK COTTER "day" was held to honor RICHARD (theoretical physics), KEVIN W. COR- '65, PAUL LOMBARDI '60. BOB HUETZ WALTERS. Of all the famous huriers RIGAN (nuclear physics), PAUL M. '58, LOU LONCARIC '57, PETE DANCE who have performed through the years in DeLUCA (nuclear physics), STEPHEN '65. and BILL RICH '64. the ND graduate Softball league Dick not A. LONGO (theoretical physics), and 'The club has planned a number of only totalled the most lifetime victories but DENNIS R. ZOLNOWSKI (nuclear functions for the near future: An infor­ also compiled a sparkling 14-2 record in spectroscopy). Broda accepted a teaching mation day program for prospective stu­ 1971. During his "day" it was suggested position at Canisius College, Longo is now dents, a party after the Georgia Tech-ND that Dick's right arm be sent to Coopers- an assistant professor of physics at LaSalle basketball game in January and a party in town, a proposal subsequently abandoned College, and Zolnowski is a postdoctoral connection with the televised broadcast of for technical reasons. It was then proposed fellow in the Cyclotron Institute at Texas one of the football games. that since Walters' earned-run average has A&M. DeLuca accepted a postdoctoral sometimes been compared with that of research associateship in the Department of WiUiam N. Rich '64 Vida Blue, and since Blue was given a blue Radiology at the U. of Wisconsin, where Cadillac last spring, that Walters be given he joins three other former ND physics a red Cadillac now. Because Dick's athletic graduate students, Jim Hevezi, Chuck BOSTON achievements, not only in Softball but as Kelsey, and George Spalek. Kevin Corrigan player-coach of the basketball team, have is still with us on a temporary appointment, On Sept. I we had the first joint freshman reflected great credit on the whole profession while preparing the results of his work for sendoff for St Mary's and ND students. of history, it seemed only fair that you publication. The event took place at the Fargo Naval readers be invited to contribute to the Nine new graduate students joined the Building under the chairmanship of our past purchase of the Cadillac. The procedure department this year, giving us a total of Boston Club president. ARTHUR MURPHY is absurdly simple. Nothing to buy. No 56 graduate students for the 1971-72 '59. Representing the St. Mary's Club of jingles to write. No forms to fill out. Just academic year. There are 73 undergraduates Boston were the president. Marge Belander (sophomores, juniors and seniors) in the and the secretary, Noreen Burke. Approxi- department this year, and about 29 fresh­ man physics intents. Now for a few more names, addresses, 43 mately 80 guests attended—10 St. Maiy's On Aug. 24, student orientation night was ladies and 30 ND men, along with their CENTRAL JERSEY held at the St. John's College Auditorium fathers. for the Cleveland area 1971 ND-SMC We were very fortunate to have JOHN The recent election of officers for the freshman class. TONY and Julie DeBAG- MOROZ '70 and Anne Patterson SMC '71 Central Jersey Club saw DAVE GIBBONS GIS did a great job in organizing and address the incoming freshmen. Also, Val '64 take office as president. Assisting Dave coordinating this affair as co-chairmen. Madden '73 answered many questions the wiU be DAVE COLLINS '56, vice presi­ Forty-five students and parents listened to freshmen had concerning University life. dent; HOWARD J. GILLESPIE '34, speakers from the St. Mary's and ND It was a very successful affair. JACK secretary; PAT KEALY '65, treasurer. Alumni offices. Gary MetaJois, president of KARLE '56 introduced the scholarship Gibbons succeeds NORRIS HARDING '57 the Cleveland Club Student Organization, winners, Charles R. Falcione '75 from who held the president's office for two welcomed the incoming freshmen and spoke Shrewsbury and George Sibley '75 from fruitful years. of his organization's activities on the Gloucester. The ND Club of Boston is very The annual golf outing and dinner was campus as well as in the Cleveland area. proud of the new freshmen from our local held in June and the winner of the trophy The Alumni Assoc, was delighted by the area and wishes them continued success at was DAN GRACE '51. Scoring was on the student participation in this affair. The the University. Callaway system and out of respect for meeting broke into small groups according Congratulations to '52 Dan's family and friends we will not dis­ to the number of colleges at ND, with on his team's victory 20-6 over the Oakland close his score. It is enough to say that his Cleveland area alumni from these respective Raiders. Also, to JOHN MEYER, '65, handicap was higher than his net score. colleges running each group. assistant coach to Mazur, who also did a Through an unfortunate error, the outing President FRED FRIEND will be an­ fine job. was held on primary day and there is still nouncing the new board of directors as well CHUCK PATTERSON '47 is chairman on the books in the town where the club as a schedule of this year's Alumni of the pilot Alumni Fund raising program is located an archaic law banning the sale activities and the Chairmen who will preside. in the Boston area. Also serving on the or serving of liquor on election days. ND Good luck to FRANK GAUL '49 and board are LOUIS DiGOVANNI '49, ingenuity came to the fore and no one NICK DEVITO '63 both of whom are RICHARD P. HYLAND '50, JOHN Mc- went thirsty. We now know what Texans running as candidates for Cleveland City CULLOUGH '63 and ROBERT LYNCH mean by brown baggers. The outing was to Council in the upcoming fall election. '49. be repeated on Sept. 28 at the same club— WILLOUGHLOY M. MARSHALL '47 Fiddler's Elbow. Dennis F. BuUer '62. vice chairman of the New England Litur­ The annual freshman sendoff was held gical Committee, had a Liturgical Week at on Aug. 30 in combination with the New Cranwell, Mass. Representing the University Jersey Club and was attended by over one COLUMBUS as- a keynote speaker was Fr. Burtchaell, hundred incoming men and their parents. CSC, Provost of the University and Dr. JIM GIBBONS '53 attended and gave his On Aug. 28, the Columbus Club held its William Storey, professor of Liturgical usual fine presentation. annual alumni-student picnic. A new twist Studies at KD. They, with other learned Future events include a wine-lasting was added this year by combining the fresh­ individuals, discussed the new liturgy in party. Communion breakfast and trip to man orientation with the picnic. President the Church. the Garden for the ND basketball game TOM GERLACHER '64 chaired the picmc with North Carolina. We invite all resident and JOHN GUENIN "62 oriented the fresh­ David A. Fay '60 alumni in the Central Jersey area to par­ men. It was a mutual orientation; the ticipate in the club activities. For infor­ freshmen learned beer drinking and poker, mation, you can call me during the week and John learned how your ribs can get BUFFALO at 796-1311 or weekends and evenings at cracked in an ND "touch" football game. 232-3413. Dave Gibbons can be reached at The alumni were, as always, victorious, but The ND Club of Buffalo extends its con­ the Cranford Motor Lodge just off the this year the students defaulted by lack of gratulations to former president Dr. Garden State Parkway in Cranford, tele­ numbers. The "exhibition" game was hard MARVIN J. LAHOOD '58 on his appoint­ phone 272-4700. The Lodge is a great fought and required much liquid "balm" ment as academic dean at Misericordia place and serves fine meals. Convenient to to soothe the sores it caused. As usual, College, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. The presidency New York, being only 30 minutes from much money changed hands at the poker of the club passed into the able hands of Manhattan. If there is any charge for tables, and much chicken was consumed. Vice President DAN BRICK '65, attorney, advertising, send it to Dave. Next year the alumni hope to continue until the election of PATRICK RYAN '67. their win streak, but not by a hollow Friday, the 13th, was a lucky day for Howard J. Gillespie '34 default—let's see more of you there next HARRY QUINN, '53, the winner of the year. annual golf outing. JOHN ALLEN '56 CINCINNATI handled the successful event in which 30 Bob O'Shaughnessy '66 alumni participated. The Cincinnati Club held the annual fresh­ The annual freshman sendoff, for the man picnic at Mt. Airy Forest to welcome first time, included the St. Mary's girls. all incoming freshmen. The annual softball DALLAS BILL O'CONNOR '64 and BILL KANE game between alumni and students was '59 were in charge and the club was the again won by the veterans. Following the Notre Dame Information Night was held guest of John LaDuca and the Buffalo game a steak dinner prepared by chefs, and Aug. 27 at Holy Trinity Auditorium and Savings Bank. chairmen PAUL KELLEY '66 and TOM was attended by approximately 75 people. And finally, local alumni will have the HOCK '69, was served. Special congratu­ TOM SULLIVAN '66 was on hand from opportunity to watch all the ND football lations go to Paul and Tom for the the University to answer questions on games this year, as a new local station will success of the outing. FRED WOLTNIZEK subjects ranging from the prospects for the telecast Irish Football on Sunday mornings '69 won two season tickets to the Cincinnati coming football season to the merger and again Sunday evenings. Bengals games. between ND and SMC. As usual, Tom did an excellent job and we look forward to James P. Julian '69 Timothy D. Schilling '69 having him in town again soon. The club also took this occasion to intro­ CENIRAL CALIFORNIA duce and welcome incoming ND and St. CLEVELAND Mary's freshmen and their parents. We wish The ND Club of Central California's the new students well in their Weekend Sweepstakes winner is On July 9, the Cleveland Club held its studies. We would like to express our sincere Mrs. H. R. Wilson of Modesto, Calif. Mrs. annual golf party at Tanglewood Country thanks to MIKE McDONOUGH '63 and Wilson, a widow, made the trip to the Club. Mike Stock, assistant ND football his crew for a job well done for this- Southern California game with her son. coach, showed movies of the 1971 Cotton gathering of the Irish clan. The Club president, Andre P. Provost, Bowl victory and addressed the assembly TTirough the efforts of local radio station wishes to thank all who assisted in the concerning the Fighting Irish. One hundred KIXL and the generosity of some loyal project. alumni were present to enjoy the cocktail alumni, ND fans in this area will be able party, dinner, entertainment and prizes. The David C. Hudson '61 grand prize was a set of custom-made irons won by Joe Mawby. Also present was Eric Pennis, a freshman at ND, attending with a football scholarship. Eric is a past state champion in track and an all scholastic Cleveland area football irilayer. Congratu­ lations go to the golf party co-chairmen, JOHN HUMMER '57 and BOB SCHRINER '51. These co-chairmen did an excellent job and the Association extends its appreciation.

44 to listen to all the Fighting Irish football the McNamaras with 11, including Kevin games this season. We are extremely grate­ who is spending the summer with Tom and FORT LAUDERDALE ful to Dick Bove, station manager, and Jan in conjunction with the New York City ART DURBIN '29 of Texas Distributors, Fresh Air Program. What a fantastic weekend! AH of the 350 JACK SCHROEDER '44 of Fieldcrest/ A touch footbaU game was scheduled for ND fans who came to the Mass, party, St. Mary's, JOHN RODGERS '55 of Sept. 12 at the Boys Home of Delaware. busses and Miami-ND game will not soon Wynnewood State Bank, SAM WING Results later. forget the fun and good food at Emerald '44 of Sam A. Wing Company, VICK This year an ND man starred in the Hills or the well-fought victory in the CLESI Jr. '58 of Saffron Tree Restaurant Longwood Gardens Open Air Theater. Our Orange Bowl. and CHICK MARTIN '59 of Schneider, former club president, BOB DALEY '58, Our thanks go to Fr. David Russel, pastor Bemet, and Hickman, for their support of played a leading role in "Rose Marie." Jack of St Maurice, for the special Mass and ND footbaU. McVeigh worked behind the scenes. his eye-opening sermon. We look fotward Coming events include a resumption of In arranging the picnic we learned that to the next time ND visits Miami so that the monthly men's luncheon after a summer J. DAVID SCHLAAK '56 is moving to the good times may roll a^iin. recess, a club home Mass, a ladies' sherry Ohio in October and that GEORGE RAAB With the fabulous Miami game and party, and the Christmas scholarship '59 has moved to Chicago. party behind ns, we look ahead to the fund party. Our Universal ND Night was successful LSU-Notre Dame TV game and party on and enjoyable with MICHAEL JORDAN Nov. 20. This promises to be an exciting Jerome J. Bradley '64 '68, assistant director of the Alumni evening with good food, good drinks, prizes Association, as speaker. and hopefully a big victory for the Irish. All our alumni in the South Florida area are DAYTON James E. Vachris '55 invited. Send your reservations now to: Notre Dame Club of Ft Lauderdale—100 The ND Club of Dayton held its annual E. Las Olas Blvd., Ft Lauderdale, Fla. golf outing and steak cook-out at the DENVER 33301. Walnut Grove Country Club on Aug. 26. If by any chance you ought to be on the Fifty members turned out. Golf prize The Denver Club completed its summer Ft Lauderdale Club mailing list and are winners were: Low gross. Dr. LC5UIS activities with two excellent events. On not or an address change is needed, send HALEY '50; low net, JIM BRITT '53; Paul July 24, Crestmoor Pool was the scene of the correct info c/o Dick Stritter, secretary, Lammers trophy, JACK O'BRIEN '41 and the annual family picnic. FRANK at the above address. longest drive (300 yards?), MIKE HERR POTENZIANI '67 and his committee did a Fr. MARTY DEVEREAUX '56, wiU •65. superb job in making arrangements for a serve two roles for the club this yean first The 1972 officers were elected at the delightful evening. Needless to say, there as chaplain and second, along with outing. They are: JOHN D. O'BRIEN '66, was plenty to drink and the swimming and MARTIN SULLIVAN '64, as a director. president; LARRY DONLIN '65, vice various games and races provided great PAUL GORE '65, treasurer of the club president; JIM BORCHERS '70, vice presi­ entertainment for both young and old. has re-entered the academic world by dent and JIM IRETON '66, secretary- TOM BENSON '64 is to be commended aiming for his master's in tax-law at the U. treasurer. These new trustees also were on the fine turnout for freshman orientation of Miami as well as teaching an evening elected: WILLIAM SEALL '68, PETE which was held on the evening of Aug. 25. course at a local college in real estate law. DONAHUE '51 and Ireton. Ten freshmen plus several underclassmen, EDWARD ZIEGLAR '71, who received In the evening of Aug. 31 the Dayton alumni and wives were present. The evening his Ph.D. in economics this past June from Club held a sendoff for the first coedu­ began as an informal gathering and was ND, is now teaching at Florida Atlantic U. cational ND freshman class at the Dayton concluded by a panel discussion of the We all cheered JIM EVERTs '48 Country Club. A panel of recent graduates, underclassmen informing the new freshmen daughter Chris, as she won the hearts of Borchers, Ellen Hansman SMC '71 and about what to expect at the University. "The millions by her spectacular victories in the STEVE COOKE '71, discussed with fresh­ freshmen found the evening to be most Forest HiUs Tennis Championships. Con­ men and their parents what to expect during informative and responded with many gratulations, Jim and Chris—^fceep up the their first year at ND. questions to the underclassmen and alumni. great work. Upcoming events for the club are an DICK McMANUS '65 and JOHN ROGAN Our dynamic young president JOHN informal get-togelher for one of the tele­ '65 assisted Tom in making the evening a KEENA '62, has been very busy lately vised ND football games and a game party success. making speeches and organizing conventions for :he annual basketball game between the Fall events included a golf outing on in his capacity as a national director for the U. of Dayton and ND. Sept. 24 at Park Hill Country Club, co­ Jaycees. His efforts in Florida residted in a ordinated by ROBERT ZEIS '54 and a hard-fought victory for this area's candidate James E. Ireton '66 dinner party on the evening of Nov. 20 for president of Florida Jaycees. during the ND-LSU game. This year promises to be one of the The Denver area ND Alumni Directory busiest for the Ft Lauderdale Club as many DELAWARE is nearing completion and will be mailed to activities are fanned for our many members all active alumni in the area sometime in not only to have a good time but to keep The summer picnic was held Aug. 22 at the November. us more in touch with the activities of the home of ART and Ruth BAUM '36 with For all new alumni in the Denver area, University. 74 persons attending. PAUL CLEMENS '57 we encourage your membership in our and DENNY PETRILLO '61 were chair­ club and suggest that you call the secretary Richard T. Stritter '64 men of the event. Others there were the at 534-0809. families of LEX PETRILLO '54, TOM McNAMARA '51, JIM VACHRIS '55, Richard V. Damm '64 GREEN BAY-FOX VALLEY JIM KEEGAN '59, ROBERT KANE '49, MARK FAULHABER '56, TOM DILLON On Aug. 21, a beer and.brats event was '66, Ed Dillon, and DAN MOTZ '54. TOM DETROIT held for students and incoming freshmen at DEGNAN '42 and JACK McVEIGH '51 were loners. The largest family there were Our Annual Fall Kickoff Party was held at the Botsford Inn on Sept. 7. MOOSE KRAUSE, our keynote speaker, brought those in attendance the latest pre-season report on this year's Fighting Irish. Roger Stanton, editor of the Football News, and VINCE DOYLE '48, WWJ Radio Sports- caster, served as anchormen adding color and insight on our team. DAN O'LOUGHLIN '62, chaired this very enjoyable party. Gary W. Dillon '65 At the conclusion of the business meeting, refreshments were served and two films shown—the "NBC First Tuesday" film featuring ND and also 1970 ND Football Season Highlights. With the exception of the final game played in the rain, the films were enjoyed by aU. Ambrose F. (Andy) Salansky '57

NASHVILLE On Aug. 28, the ND Club of Nashville held its annual picnic at Edwin Warner Park. We had an excellent turnout and those who participated in the touch football game had many aching muscles the next day. The following members were in atten­ dance: Dr. PHIL DAUGHERTY '40, JOHN KURTZ '55, DICK MARTIN '54, FRANK RHODES '59, JUDE LENAHAN '66, PAT CARROLL '34, Dr. LARRY FREANT '63, Dr. AL KERNS '62, Jim O'Hara '72, JOE WHITE '71, PAT Mc- REDMOND '66, Joe Holymer '73, AL ABBEY '51, PAUL HEER '57, BILL KORTAN '51, Rev. OLLIE WILLIAMS •61, Rev. ED MULLOY '61 and Rev. JOHN HENRICK '57. The Club presented an engraved plaque to DICK MARTIN in appreciation for his fine efforts as president during the past three years. During his term of office, the membership in the club has increased from 45 to 65 along with the members' active participation. The new officers look forward to exceeding this accomplishment. WASHINGTON, D.C.—Frank N. Hoffmann '33, left, and Peter J. Cannon '56, right, chat with Congressman Joseph M. McDade 'S3 of Pennsylvania at a luncheon of the ND Club Paul Heer '57 of Washington. McDade was the speaker at the affair. The club's luncheon series, held each month at the Club in the District of Columbia, has brought in many distinguished alumni and friends of the University as speakers. NEW ORLEANS The New Orleans alumni welcomed the the Lake Winnebago home of RANDY members of the Class of '75 in fine style at MELZER '68. President TOM BROGAN INDIANAPOLIS the Holiday Inn on Aug. 26. The incoming '48 served on the welcoming committee. freshmen and their parents were honored A family picnic was held Sept. 12 at The last Friday football luncheon for the just prior to their departure for South Bend. Way-Morr Park. Co-chairmen George year will be on Nov. 12 at the Murat Among the alumni in attendance were Judge Kerwin and JAMES SIDALL '36 did a Shrine Club for the Tulane game. WILLIAM REDMANN, ALBERT E. line job of organizing games and races. The club officers and directors recently CARPENTER, JR., and WALTER BABST. Other families attending were Dr. EUGENE lunched with MIKE JORDON '68, assistant Local alumni are looking forward to SCHRANG '53, JEAN BEAUDOIN '60, ND alumni director. The current status of hosting ND fans from all over the country Dr. MIKE CROSS '59, Dr. FRANCIS the ND student was discussed along with on the ND-LSU FootbaU Weekend. The DEGA '56, Dudley Burger, WILLIAM the present non-existence of the Indianapolis weekend includes a pep rally cocktail party KERWIN '40 and Tom Brogan, president. student club. Mike suggested that the club on Friday evening, Nov. 19, at the Royal Brogan reported that our club membership support some type of student activity for Sonesta Hotel, ND headquarters. On has now reached 102. the Indianapolis ND students during the Saturday, chartered buses will be available The next club event will be a Communion month break between semesters in January. for the trip to and from Baton Rouge for Dinner on Dec. 8. with NICK. CONLON Alumni having suggestions on this matter the game. and RANDY MELZER in charge of should contact any of the club officers or arrangements. directors. We are sending a representative Leon J. Reymond Jr. '64 to the Alumni Senate at ND on Nov. 11 Graham Werner '61 and 12. More on this later. NEW YORK CITY Jack V. Moriarty '63 HAWAII More than 300 New York metropolitan area alumni and friends assembled in the The new and returning students from MID-HUDSON VALLEY Sky Room atop the Statler-Hilton Hotel Hawaii were honored at the annual Aloha (the old Pennsylvania) for the annual party held Aug. 20 at the Olaa Steak House The most recent meeting of the Mid-Hudson kickoff meeting of the ND Club of New in Honolulu. Valley ND Club was held on Aug. 19, at York on Sept. 16. They were welcomed by A very special Aloha was extended to the Knights of Columbus Hall in Wap- GERALD F. SAEGERT '40, club president, TOM HOPKINS '30 who recently retired pingers Falls, N.Y. with CONNOR who introduced Digger Phelps, new Irish as senior sports editor of the Honolulu HAUGH '57, president, presiding. It was basketball coach. Digger delivered an in­ Star Bulletin & Advertiser. The mayor of an excellent turnout of alumni—ioth spiring message about the type of basket­ Honolulu, Frank Fasi, paid tribute to Tom subway and regular. ball player he and his staff are now coaching for his many years of outstanding citizen­ The first order of business was election at ND, getting ready for the 1971-72 season. ship. President WALT CABRAL '55 of new officers for the coming two years. Col. JACK STEVENS, assistant director of presented Tom with a plaque commemo­ The new slate of officers is: TED athletics, followed with an appraisal of rating his past service and leadership to the KENNEDY '63, president; CHARLES prospects for the 1971 football season. Then club. Mr. and Mrs. Hopkins are moving to MANERI, JR. '60, vice-president; ANDY the capacity audience thrilled to the the mainland and will certainly be missed SALANSKY '57, secretary, and JOE complete film in color of the Irish Cotton by their many friends in Hawaii. GAGLIARDI Jr. '58, treasurer. Bowl victory over Texas. Gerry Saegert was The next order of business concerned the chairman of the event, assisted by PAUL Jim Rakers '65 relatively recent merger of St Mary's with T. SMITH '60 and DEON SUTTON '31. ND. By vote of the members, it was Earlier in the same room a freshman decided that all SL Mary's alumni in our sendoff drew more than 100 new students area would automatically be granted membership in the Mid-Hudson ND Qub. We feel that this may possibly be a first for ND Alumni Clubs. Have any other clubs taken similar action? 4i and their parents. Among the speakers were Various activities are planned for the days. (Hell need at least another Howard JACK McNAMARA '31; Kevin Quinn, '71-'72 club period. Any alumni in the Harpster to do that) president of the Metropolitan Club on the Orange County area not receiving the club's and JOHN MASTRAN- ND campus; and Jerome Koch, a junior at mailings can contact Tom Keogh, 714- GELO '47 were looking to the reunion of ND who told the incoming freshmen just 838-2503 and be placed on the mailing L'st. the 1946-47 national champions. Neal what they could expect. Featured speaker Seaman and ED FAYE '49 also were from the campus was JIM GIBBONS '53. Thomas Keogh '58 present. Saegert served as chairman of the successful At the end of the evening. Pirate fans event. were listening to the radio reports of the Plans are being formulated for the PEORIA latest game in the pennant race, and the Communion dinner, Wednesday, Dec. 8. pool players, including TOM MITTLE- Smith is chairman. Later in December, the The ND Club of Peoria met Sept. I to HAUSER '65, were matching their wits Notre Dame hockey team will be competing honor the new and current students at our and skill at the table. in the Eastern Collegiate Athletic Con­ bacfc-to-school-m'ght. After a terrific meal, The next club function was the rally on ference tournament at Madison Square we had the pleasure of meeting the students Nov. 5, the night before the ND-Pitt game, Garden, Dec. 20-21. The Irish basketball entering ND and SMC this fall. at the Webster Hall Hotel. ND alumni and team and Digger Phelps will meet North JOHN E. CASSIDY Sr. LL.B. '17 pre­ subway alumni coining to Pittsburgh for the Carolina on Feb. 19 in the Garden. sented the Lt. James A. Cassidy Award to game were cordially invited to join us. All graduates in the New York metro­ GERALD McSHANE '71, who was the politan area have received a dues notice. John Ryan '65 Payment of SIO annual dues entitles Peoria area ND undergraduate having the members to reduced prices and preferential highest academic average for the previous treatment for other club events in addition school year. Gerald is now a first-year RHODE ISLAND & to providing support for the club scholar­ medical student at the U. of Illinois College ship fund. New arrivals in the New York of Medicine in Chicago. We are proud of S.E. MASSACHUSETTS area arc invited to call the club office at Gerry and thank him for his remarks 420 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 directed to the new students to "make the The annual freshman send-off dinner was (212-685-4254). They will be put on the best possible use of their years at ND. Pick held on August 25 at the Ramada Inn, club mailing list and membership roster. the best teachers and the top courses. Enjoy Seekonk, Mass. This year we were honoring them and get the most out of them." 18 young men, candidates for the class of Our guest speaker was MIKE JORDAN '75 and one young lady entering St. Mary's. John B. Powers '43 '68, assistant director of alumni affairs at The highlight of the evening was a film on the University. He urged the new freshmen student life at ND taken from the National not to be let down by the first few days in Broadcasting Company Television Series, their new surroundings; that things change "The First Tuesday." This was followed OHIO VALLEY quickly and that if a person gives of him­ by an extremely interesting discussion on self to others the adjustment will be easier. "Current College Life" led by seniors Bob A dinner meeting of the Ohio Valley ND Mike stressed the point that ND is great Hall, Bob Gill and Linda McMahon, a Club was held Aug. 25, at Figaretti's because of the people that it brings together. sophomore at St. Mary's. Restaurant, Elm Grove, Wheeling, W. Va. Notre Dame is people who have been drawn Jim Donaldson, sports editor of the The meeting was to welcome students together through friendship, interest and Observer, gave us a rundown on ND Foot­ entering ND this fall and to make plans to personality. We thank Mike for joining us ball for the coming year. Senior Jim Ih'llon invite SMC graduates to become interested in giving our students a great send-off. was also in attendance with his parents in the club. Our back-to-school night was the first and Jim commented on student life at ND. After the dinner Secretary-Treasurer of a full slate of activities for the coming All and all it was a very interesting evening BILL MITSCH '33 welcomed Tom Burke year, and we are pleased with the great talking to students about the "changes" '75 and his father Walter Burke into the participation of the ND and SMC at ND-—and a word of encouragement for club. Tom Burke thanked the club and graduates. the incoming freshmen. asked any alumnus going to the campus this fall to look him up. Mary Lou Hartley SMC '69 Thomas McHale '59 Incorporating SMC alumnae and students into the club was discussed. Some local SMC graduates are already members of PITTSBURGH ST. LOUIS Ohio Valley ND Club because they are married to ND alumni. These will help the The Pittsburgh Club had a freshman With the end of summer, two events were club contact other local SMC graduates. orientation meeting for new students and a held by the St. Louis Club. The first was Future plans suggested for the club golf outing for members and guests on the annual picnic at Babler State Park include a TV party for one of the televised Aug. 12 at the Press Club in Pittsburgh. It headed by DONALD HEMMER '66. Then ND games, a bus to the ND-Pitt game and was a joint meeting with the local St. Mary's on Sept. 1 our party for incoming freshmen a Communion breakfast. Ideas to reinstill College alumnae group in recognition of was held. Both MIKE MCCARTHY '40 and enthusiasm in the club's activities were the coming merger between the two schools. JOHN POELKER '64 did a great job. offered, and it is our hope that more About 50 freshmen and their parents at­ Some 13 of the 20 ND freshmen from the activity can be reported in the future. tended. Several students gave their com­ St. Louis area were in attendance—along Present at the meeting were: Mr. and ments and advice on university life. From with several seniors who held an open- Mrs. FRANK SIMONIC '63; Mr. and Mrs. their remarks, it appears that intellectual question session. The successful event RAY KEYS '49; Mr. and Mrs. Bill and social life at ND has continued to included a back-yard barbeque at Mike's Mitsch '33; Tom Burke '75, Walter Burke; grow, but that the food is still lousy! BILL house. About 75 people attended. Mr. BILL DUSCH '34; BILL HOGAN '51; GOMPERS '48 handled the affair on the Fall activities included a trip to ND for and Mrs. BOB MITSCH SMC '71. ND side, with NEAL SEAMAN '59 and the North Carolina game. ROBERT JOHN RYAN '65 also on hand. The St. McGLYNN '50, '51L was chairman of the Bill Mitsch '33 Mary's side was represented by Cathy trip. Connor (wife of MIKE CONNOR '63 and '66, of our executive board) and Bobbye Phil Tomber '64 Flecker (wife of Dr. CARL FLECKER ORANGE COUNTY '64). This summer the club was reorganized and The club's annual golf outing was held ST. JOE VALLEY currently has a membership of 70 alumni. on Sept. 8 at the Latrobe Elks Club in the Elections were held and the following Allegheny Mountains. We had 35 golfers The annual freshman send-off luncheon officers will be serving;: NEWELL on hand to assault the course on the clear was held at Eddie's Restaurant on Sept. 2. STICKLER '64, president; ROBERT LIES and sunny day. Winning scores were turned Twenty-eight incoming freshmen heard '63, vice president; TOM KEOGH '58, in by DICK KLUCK '49 and his partner. Dr. Emil T. Hofman, Dean of the Fresh­ secretary, JOHN McSHANE '55, treasurer; PINKY MARTIN '27 won the honest man Year of Studies Program, discuss the board members, JOHN DECOURSEY '53, scoring award for having the highest score. varied services and activities available ROBERT SCHADE '56, JOHN BALLAS The day was topped off with refreshments through his office. '52, TOM GETZINGER '53, TIM HAID- and a steak dinner. Prizes were presented. The 1971 dues notice has been mailed INGER '63. H. F. (Dutch) HOFSTETTER The golf winners received a set of golf to all area alumni. President DAN O'BRIEN '43 and PHIL BERTONI '63. A family balls for future accomplishments. Other '58 is seeking 100 per cent participation. picnic and TV party on Oct. 23 was at­ prizes were ND golf hats. Bill Gompers' Our club should lead the nation. The $5 tended by 120 alumni and families. special first-aid kits, and a case of Fritz dues can be mailed to P.O. Box 111, South Wilson's favorite beer. JOE GASPERELLA Bend. We need the support of everyone who '50 was in charge of the affair and Mike really cares. Connor was the accountant of both cash Chairman DENNY TROESTER '57 has and golf scores. Joe had some of his Carnegie-Mellon football staff with him and related how he had hopes of challeng­ ing our alma mater again one of these

47 JORDON '68 was in Terre Haute and held a meeting with the members of the club. Mike is assistant Alumni Director at ND. In addition to a new club president, the club has a new club chaplain in Fr. RALPH FISHER CSC '55. Fr. Fisher is stationed at the Gibault Home for Boys south of Terre Haute. James P. Boyer '49

TRIPLE CITIES The annual freshman send-off party was held Aug. 27. For the first time in the history of the club the gals from St. Mary's were included. Perhaps for this reason the turnout for the event was the best it has been in some years. Special thanks go to TOM BENEDICT '49, for making the lion's share of the arrangements. For all you alumni in our area, the officers have a pool going on how TERRE HAUTE — Five students going to the ND campus were honored at the back-to- many of you will pay your dues. Let's school dinner of the Terre Haute Club. Shown here are Freshman William Grimes, Junior surprise BILL BURTIS '59, and make BOB Don Ferris of Robinson, 111., and Freshman Steve Grohovsky. Also attending, but not CANNON'S '50 optimism come true. pictured, were Senior Fred Chrislman Jr. and Freshman Steve Kendrick. John F. Stanley '64 announced the 5Ist Annual Football on the active members of the .dub and Banquet will be Dec. 2 in the A&CC. that information will be used now to stream­ "The Twelfth Night party is scheduled line the mailing list and to prepare a TWIN CITIES for January. It is a joint activity with the Directory to be made available to all dues- St. Mary's Club and represents closer paying members. You will receive more The Twin Cities ND Alumni Association cooperation between the clubs. information about the Directory in the Inc., of St. Paul and Minneapoh's held ils near future. annual election on Sept. 28 at the Joseph Brian C. Regan '61 Board member J. PETER CLARK '64 Schmidt Brewery. The following officers has been transferred to Florida and we wish were elected: Pete the best of luck in his D»W position. JIM BREHL '56, president; JOHN SAN DIEGO The vacancy created by the forced resig­ MADDEN '58, vice president; JOE RUSCH nation of Pete has been filled by BRIAN '57, secretary, and JACK THOMAS '59, The San Diego Club started the new school NAGLE '61. treasurer. year by hosting ND students and their dads We take this opportunity to welcome the Named directors were: EMMETT at the Flare Path restaurant TOM following recent graduates who have taken BARRON '27, LOU BRENNER '59, JOHN HENNESSY '67 directed this annual event up residence in the Bay Area: BILL CANDELL '63, VINCE FILERS '56, JIM which provided the old grads a chance to LAJOIE '70; DAVE KRASHNA '71; JIM GIBBONS '58, JOHN HEALEY '50, BILL "rap" with the new breed of Irish. In­ PAQUETTE '69; TONY EARLY '71; HERBER '48, ROBERT HOODECHECK cidentally, we do have an excellent group TERRY LEE '71; ALLEN GABRIELE '71. '53, JOHN NEIS '64, JOHN PETRICK '24 of returning students. Effective the first Friday of October, the and JOE SUMMERS '62. Club members were guests of JOHN club's monthly luncheons were renewed The name of the organization was changed McCABE '64 for a superb dinner-dance after a summer break. Club members should to the Notre Dame Club of Minnesota to on North Island. The predinner social note the fact that the location has been encompass the whole state in a single group. hour provided opportunities to rediscover changed from St. Francis Hotel to the Activities and social events were planned. old friends and meet new ones. Had an Barbary Restaurant in San Francisco. The Auxiliary potluck supper was scheduled opportunity to swap politics with MIKE The club extends its special welcome to for Nov. 12 at St. Frances Cabrini Hall. SCHAEFER '60, a candidate for city our good friend JOE MULLIGAN '59, who The stag night featuring the TV game of mayor, and torts with CLEM O'NEILL '56. is now a Bay Area resident. the week, LSU vs. ND was set for Nov. 20 Our Wives' Club held its monthly social at Hamm's Hospitality Room. gathering at Consuelo's restaurant, con­ Gerald C. Smith '61 Jack Thomas reviewed ND activities to tinuing a policy of eating their way across interest local high school students in be­ San Diego County. Co-hostesses were Mrs. coming ND students. JIM COONEY '59, Rosemary (MARVIN) RICKLING '52 and executive director of the Alumni Associa­ Mrs. Norma (DOUG) GIMBER '60. tion, presented an enlightening and enter­ Minor notes—SAM MIRABITO '64 has SPOKANE taining program on the past, present and become a land baron in San Carlos, BILL future of ND and St Mary's combining to WALSH '62 has joined the faculty of The Club mourns the death of a long-time form one coeducational university. Grossmont College, Southern California member, FRANK H. HERRON '35, who Plans for an evening of fun at the Old did not fall into the sea and club members died Aug. 16. Club members attended the Log Theater an a Scotch doubles bowling did not provide newsy items for this issue. rosary on the evening before interment. party were presented. Dates for these events Arrangements were made for our annual are early 1972. Other events are planned, BiU Walsh '62 closed retreat on the weekend of Oct so pay dues and stay informed. A member­ 22-24 at Immaculate Heart Retreat House. ship fee of S4 is required before any additional mailing will be sent out Atiyone SAN FRANCISCO BAY Joseph M. Walsh, '14 interested in ND-Minnesota hockey tickets, please contact the secretary at 1587 McLean The San Francisco Bay Area ND Club Ave., St Paul, Minn. 55106. enters another fiscal year with high hopes The meeting adjourned after viewing for a successful program of events. Presi­ TERRE HAUTE highlights of the victorious ND football dent JIM O'DONOGHUE '58, in coopera­ season of '70-71. tion with his board of directors, has The ND Club of Terre Haute held its For additional information on local events prepared an interesting assortment of social annual back to ND dinner party on Sept. 1. send dues to: and educational activities which, by this The affair was held at the new K of C writing, should have been made the subject Building. Cocktails were served prior to the Joe Rusch '57 of a genera] mailing to all members. dinner. Those returning to Notre Dame Included in the fall calendar will be the included Fred Christman Jr. a senior, and annual TV football game which will feature Bill Grimes, Steve Grohovsky and Steve WALL STREET ND vs. LSU on Nov. 20. Kendrick, freshmen, all from 'Terre Haute, During the past several years, the board and Don Ferris, a junior from Robinson, 111. The Wall Street Club held a meeting of directors has been gathering information DENNEY PENNY '61, new president for on Nov. 23 in the New York Stock the Terre Haute Club, was chairman of the Exchange Lunch Room, seventh floor of dinner. Helping was BERNIE BURDICK, the Stock Exchange Building, with Donald dub secretary. The evening was a big success. Members, wives, guests and families had a fine time. On SepL 8, MKE 48 T. Regan, chairman of the board and chief Mr. and Mrs. EDWARD T. McAUUFFE SISTER M. ROBERTA BRESNAN executive of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner '67, a son, Edward Timothy, June 16. HHM '27. Aug. 9 at Lourdes Education & Smith, as the speaker. ITie talk was Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT HERR '68L, a Center, Oeveland, Ohio. followed by a question-and-answer period. son, Matthew William, Aug. 3. WILLIAM F. ROEMER Ph J>. '27, Sept Refreshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. JOHN SCRIPP '68L, a 25. He is survived by his widow, Cannd, Club officers urged all alumni involved in daughter, Susanna. 422 E. Angela Blvd., South Bend, Ind. the investment business to attend and were Mr. and Mrs. STEVE ANELLA '71MBA, 46617; five sons, WILLIAM F. JR. '50L; particularly interested in the presence of a son, John Anthony, Aug. 19. JOSEPH E. "49; THOMAS J. '52; JAMES recent graduates. A large turnout was ex­ Mr. and Mrs. ANTHONY STRAT A. '51, LL.B. '55 and CHARLES '53, LL.B. pected for the meeting because of Regan's '71MBA, a daughter, Laura Jane, Aug. 21. '58; a daughter, Mn. Thomas Kusbach; 27 world leadership in financial affairs, his grandchildren and a great-grandchild. ability as a speaker and his interest in the CHARLES F. (Chile) WALSH "28, Sept University. 4 in Hollywood, Calif. He is survived by a SYMPATHY brother, ADAM '25, 8 Haipswell Place, Deon Sutton '31 Brunswick, Maine 04111. ADAM WALSH '25 on the death of his DAVID A FIELDS SR. '29, Sept 17. brother CHARLES F. (Chile) WALSH He is survived by his widow, Bemadette, 78, Sept. 4. 103 Oak Dr., Catonsville, Md. 21228, two AUGUST M. GRAMS '28 on the death daughters and four sons. of his brother, JOHN A. GRAMS '33, DR. PHILIP C. HEMMING "29, Sept 1. March 31. He is survived by his widow, Janet 415 LOUIS C. CHAPLEAU '30 and Cabrillo St., Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627; RICHARD J. CHAPLEAU '34 on the three sons; a daughter, and a grandson. death of their mother, Mrs. Mary C. GEORGE R. SCHMIDT '29. He is sur­ Chapleau, Sept. 6. vived by his widow, Jessie, 620 Summit St., DR. PAUL ROARK '37 on the death of Elgin, 111. 60120. his wife, March 27; and DR. MICHAEL JOSEPH STANLEY SULLIVAN '29L, ROARK '65, Mame Roark SMC '68 and Aug. 24. He is survived by his widow, Kay, Jane Roark SMC '69 on the death of their 9250 S. Damen Ave., Chicago, 111. 60620 mother. and four children. J. GORDON MURPHY '37 on the death CLIFTON J. TROMBLEY '29, July 25 of his brother, Robert Murphy. in Detroit. FRANKLIN R ECK '44 on the death FRANK J. (Spike) McADAMS '31, of his mother, Mrs. John H. Sheehan, Sept 19. He is survived by his widow, Aug. 5. Irene, 415 S. Lombard, Oak Park, III. PATRICK H. MARTIN '48 on the death 60302; four sons and three daughters. of his son, Josepii W. Martin, Aug. 29. REV. GEORGE J. BAXTER CSC '32, of LEONARD A. DENTE '49 on the death Via Coeli Monastery, N.M. He is survived of his mother, Mrs. Mary Dente, Aug. 8. by four brothers, John, Edward, James and JOHN J. ELLIOTT '50 on the death of William, and by two sisters, Mrs. Ann his father, William Francis Elliott, Dec. 5, Quinn and Miss Mildred Baxter. 1970. JOHN A. GRAMS '33, March 31. He is WILLIAM F. ROEMER JR. '50L; survived by his brother, AUGUST M. MARRIAGES JOSEPH E. '49; THOMAS J. '52, JAMES GRAMS "28, LaVOla Riviera, 1930 Gulf A. '51, LL.B. '55 and CHARLES W. '53, Shore Blvd., Naples, Fla. 33940. Miss June Hester and JOHN \V. LL.B. '58 on the death of their father, JOHN J. O'SHAUGHNESSY '33, Sept McFADDEN JR. '58, July 24. WILLIAM F. ROEMER Ph.D. '27, II. He is survived by his widow, Efleen; Miss Eolina De Rossi and JAMES Sept. 25. four sons, MICHAEL '63, TIMOTHY '65, DENIS O'HARE '64, Oct. 2. JAMES CASE "51 on the death of his TERRENCE "70 and Dennis: a daughter, Miss Margaret Jane Roberts SMC '69 father, CHARLES R CASE '25, May 26. Mary; five grandchildren and two sisters. and DAVID G. RICHARDS '67, '71L, JOSEPH P. SCHAEFER '56 on the death MELVIN D. HARBAUGH '34, Aug. 26. July 31. of his father. Dr. Leo J. Schaefer. He is survived by his widow, Margaret Miss ROSEMARIE R. ULIS M.A. '67 JOHN FAZIO '59 on the death of his 19652 Sunset Lane, South Bend, Ind.; his and THOMAS P. GREEN '65, M.S. '67, mother, Mrs. R. J. Fazio. Sept. 16. mother, Mrs. Minm'e Harbaugh; a daughter, Aug. 7. MICHAEL '63, TIMOTHY '65 and Mrs. John Lester; three grandchildren, and Miss Nancy Jean Kasmarik and FRANK TERRENCE O'SHAUGHNESSY '70 on a brother. Noble F. SMITH '68L, May 30. the death of their father JOHN J. CHARLES J. HORAN '34, March 26. Miss Mary Alice Herod SMC '69 and O'SHAUGHNESSY '33, Sept. 11. He is survived by his widow, Margaret RICHARD JOHN LAJOIE JR. '69, Aug. 21. 4801 Connecticut Ave., N.W., Apt 805, Miss Cynthia Niero and DAVID Washington, D.C. 20008. PRUSIECKI '69, July 17. FRANCIS H. HERON JR. M_A. '35, Miss Joyce A. Niebrugge and MARTIN DEATHS Aug. 15. He is survived by his widow and A. KUHARICH '71, June 12. two sons. LADISLAUS A. WIECZOREK '00, Sept. DR. WILLIAM P. CALLAHAN JR. '39, 6. He is survived by his widow, Frances, in August He is survived by his widow, ADOPTIONS 1005 N. Wilber St., South Bend, Ind. Joan, 41 Mission Rd., Wichita, Kan. 67206. 46628; two sons, a daughter; 11 grand­ MOST REV. RUSSELL J. McVINNEY Maj. and Mrs. GEORGE D. NAVADEL children and 10 great-grandchildren. '39, bishop of Providence, R.I., Aug. 10. He '58, a son, Stephen, Aug. 13. WALES R FINNEGAN '10, Aug. 5. He is survived by a sister, Mary L. McVinney. Mr. and Mrs. ANTHONY LUBER '67L, is survived by his widow, Katherine, 10616 SR. FRANCIS de SALES DUFFY, IHM, a daughter, Elizabeth Anne. Mantz Rd., Silver Spring, Md. 20903, a M.A. '40, St Mary Convent Monroe, Mich. sister, two nieces and a nephew, Rt. Rev. 48161. John Waterhouse. MARC A. GRUENENFELDER '40, BIRTHS CLARENCE J. CENTLIVRE '13. He is Sept 27. He is survived by his widow, survived by his family at 2616 Terrance Rd., Lorraine, 11717 Claychester Dr., Kirkwood, Mr. and Mrs. CHARLES V. FALKEN- Fort Wayne, Ind. 46805. III. 63122; three daughters; a son; his BERG JR. '52, a daughter, Elizabeth MSGR. FRANCIS OCONNELL '14, mother and his grandchildren. Jeanne, July 30. Sept. 20, at St. Mark's Parish, 235 R REV. ELIAS DENISSOFF, professor of Maj. and Mrs. GEORGE D. NAVADEL Fourth St., Emporium, Pa. 15834. philosophy '48-'57, Sept 7 in Chicago. '58, a son, David, Sept. 3. EUGENE F. McENlRY '17. He is sur­ RALPH J. HOLMES '50, MJi. '52, Aug. Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT HASSENGER vived by his family at Creston, Iowa. 27. He is survived by his widow, Rosemarie, '59, a son, Robert Kennedy, June 27. EDWIN T. BREEN '18, in September. Route 1, Bark River, Mich. 49807 and four Mr. and Mrs. DONALD A. MODICA He is survived by his widow, Bemiece and children. '64, a son, Donald Joseph, Aug. 31. two brothers. Mr. and Mrs. PETER W. MURRAY '64, GEORGE E. TRAFTON '22, Sept. 10, REV. BONIFACE J. KRASZEWSKI a son, Trevor Thomas, Sept. 22. in Los Angeles, Calif. He is survived by his OFM, M.A. "54, Christ the King Seminaiy, Mr. and Mrs. STEVE VanHYDE '65, a widow, Jacqueline; a son, George R Jr., P.O. Box 246, West Chicago, 111. 60185. daughter, Stephanie, in May. and a daughter. Bliss. THOMAS D. FINNEGAN '55. He is Mr. and Mrs. PETER VINSON '65, a " EGBERT L. CURTIN '23. He is survived survived by his family at 134 Sheafe Rd., daughter, Kn'sten Monica, in June. by his family in North Adams, Mass. Wappingers Falk, N.Y. 12590. Mr. and Mrs. MICHAEL J. HANNIGAN CHARLES R CASE '25, May 26. He is JR. '66, a daughter, Carrie Marie, July 19. survived by his widow, Beatrice, 1575 Perry St., Denver, Colo. 80204; two sons, JAMES '51 and Edward; a daughter, Margaret; seven grandchildren and a sister. just sit and listen to the speech, and I called upon Professor Simon — I sit and watch the movie. think at the suggestion of the Cor- Here's a couple of random thoughts. betts. By this time. Professor Simon How about a ban on all articles that had learned of his illness, but he wel­ deal with symbols instead of realities. comed me warmly into his book- The recent Mitchell-Swift controversy strewn study. We discussed my work was a laugh. Why do Americans of and once again he demonstrated his all points of view have this mania for kindness by searching through his defending and attacking words and books and papers and giving me a symbols? To each of the gentlemen, I large stack of French journals as well award a fine piece of country music as several pieces of personal corre­ by John Prine entitled "Your Flag spondence for use in my research. Decal Won't Get You Into Heaven This was the last time I saw Professor Anymore." Finally, Terri Buck seems Simon. to draw a lot of commentary and Now, as I work laboriously over the publicity, but I think that someone pageproofs of a book on Yves Simon's should mention, above all else, that beloved country, these recollections she is a fine and thoughtful human seem especially meaningful. In my being. — KEVIN RODNEY '70, 960 "Acknowledgments," the name of Barrie Ave., Wantagh, N.Y. 11793. Professor Simon appears in what 1 hope is something more than the usual YVES SIMON perfunctory manner. — RUFUS WIL­ I would like to add a brief recollection LIAM RAUCH, JR. '50, Department of FAVORS MERGER of my own to Professor Corbett's History, Temple University, Philadel­ I am in favor of the merger of the moving "Yves Simon at Notre Dame" phia, Pa. 19122. Notre Dame and St Mary's College (October, 1971), As a faculty mem­ Alumni/Alumnae Associations. How ber's son I met Professor Yves Simon VARSITY 6, GRADS 5 can they not be merged, now that the a number of times over the years, but On behalf of the Notre Dame Alumni two schools are almost completely it was not until 1955-1956 that I had Lacrosse Association, I'd like to take united? The mere physical presence of an opportunity to know him person- this opportunity to express our sin­ SMC has always been a factor in ND nally and, indeed, to become his stu­ cere appreciation for the article you student life. Most of ND's recent dent. That year, while beginning re­ published on the Second Annual Old- graduates will testify to the fact that search on my doctoral dissertation at Timers Lacrosse Game in the October our friends from across the road be­ Columbia University, I commuted issue of the ALUMNUS. Your interest came so much an ordinary part of our several times a week between South and efforts are appreciated. The lives, that we no longer felt haunted Bend and Chicago to take several Varsity won the game 6-5. — JACK by the spectre of a Saint Mary's Girl, courses at the University of Chicago. TATE '64, '66MA, 90 Broad Street, a Sly Siren of the St. Joe. Early in the year I spotted Professor New York, N.Y. 10004. I cannot accept the argument of Simon on the old South Shore and Mr. and Mrs. Sanford that appeared somewhat hesitantly greeted him and PRAISE FOR HESBURGH in the October ALUMNUS. If two took a seat beside him. I immediately I have been regularly receiving ALUM­ groups of college-educated people, learned that he was teaching at the NUS magazine and enjoy it very much with fairly similar backgrounds, can­ University of Chicago but our con­ since I graduated in 1960. not join together without, "some versation turned quickly to my own It seems that many alumni who alienation and rejection and probably work. When Professor Simon dis­ "sound off" in the pages of the maga­ further polarization of the different covered that I was working on a topic zine are the same guys who were attitudes," then I guess that we are that was central to his La grande always griping about the food, laun­ all in trouble. crise de la Republique Francaise, he dry, teachers, etc., when they were Furthermore, perhaps the women­ converted our seats on the South on campus way back when. They folk could add a little spice to alumni Shore into a mobile mini-classroom. have grown little since teen-age days, meetings which presently tend to the­ For the remainder of the academic it seems. ologize blandness. The '71 Cotton year, as we rode home together at I, for one, approve of the radical Bowl movie is cool, but I think we all least once a week, we discussed France changes in campus life. I further feel know the tale by now. At a recent of the '20s and '30s, my graduate that ND is blessed with the greatest meeting, a respectable alumnus, (not work, and, most important, the quali­ president of any school. Indeed, Sorin one of us young anarchists) presented ties of the genuine scholar. It was the and Hesburgh divide Notre Dame a series of well-researched questions latter that left its mark on me, for between them: there is no third! I wish regarding the athletic department and Professor Simon, as Professor Corbett that the sour-grape alumni who want its finances, to the assistant athletic points out, was much more than a to turn back the clock and the restive director, John Stephens. However, the narrow professional scholar. Professor students whc want to throw away the alumnus was ruled out of order, by Simon suggested time and again that clock would unite and support their the chairman of the meeting, on the my work should be something more visible head. Does it take a "wake" grounds that it was supposed to be a than a narrow and rigid kind of in­ until the ND family really will ap­ "fun" evening. "Fun," I suppose, de­ tellectual exercise. preciate Father Hesburgh? — TERRY fined as that which does not require Several years later, shortly before LAUGHLIN '60, 1117 South Wilke Rd., mental exertion, i.e., "fun" people will leaving for a year's research in France, Ariington Heights, 111. 60005.

50 NUS will be retained, and several new both :nagazines to engage in similar alumni features added. Severe space editorial activity. Insight, which had limitations in the current magazine been created to report on campus have had us up against the wall in progress, began like ALUMNUS, to ad­ terms of class column expansion, in- dress campus change. And, so, the depth features, etc. And, the new rationale for separate publications was magazine's 84 pages will give us ex­ severely diminished. tremely welcome elbow room. Economic exigencies while not the Neither of the two current maga­ paramount factor in the decision, zines was overstaflfed. But creation of nevertheless came into play. It's MMiziKMenir the consolidated magazine will focus simply going to be cheaper for the by James Cooney, Director the creative efforts of both staffs onto University (which had budgeted both ND Alumni Association one publication with greater depth re­ publications) to hit the post ofBce The Notre Dame-Saint Mary's College porting of alumni and University six times per year with one magazine, unification was not the only union dis­ scenes. Alumni profiles in particular rather than eleven times a year with cussed at the October Alumni Board will be expanded . . . Mike Jordan two. And, in this age of financial meeting. One of the major actions will highlight the Alumni Club scene, crisis for private institutions such a taken by the Board was the agreement a readers' forum will be established move is more often than not essential. to merge ALUMNUS and Insight maga­ welcoming literary debate on topical It reflects a wise usage of alumni zines. The approval, which was wel­ issues . . . and alumni-authored arti­ support income as well. comed by University officials, paves cles will be sought. The new publication will actually the way for creation of a new publi­ Inevitably one must ask: Why the fulfill a lot of old ALUMNUS staff cation, NOTRE DAME MAGAZINE, after merger? Weren't ALUMNUS and In­ dreams (pipe dreams we thought on the first of the year which will serve sight alive and doing well? The occasion) with improved budget, Alumni better than ever. The new answer is a resounding, yes! ALUMNUS space, staff, graphics and design. publication will be an 84-page bi­ served the growing alumni body emi­ We're kind of excited about it monthly, distributed to all 50,000 nently well for 47 years, and was in So, shortly after the first of the alumni and some 25,000 friends of fact a premier publication in the field year, with the blessings of the Alumni the University. of alumni affairs. And Insight was Board, the Alumni Office staff (and I Alumni should welcome the new created primarily as a communica­ might add that of predecessor Jim publication since it will be a larger tions vehicle with the University's Armstrong), and the University, the magazine than ALtn^NUS, with im­ nonalumni family. ALUMNUS shall retire after having proved design, graphics and photog­ But, in recent years campus evolu­ fought the good fight, and a new star raphy. All current content of ALUM­ tion (and, some revolution) caused with an old name shall be bom.

Bavarian Academy and the only active There was a temptation to view the U.S. professor to be a corresponding whole scene as somewhat quaint and GdriBl. tie Sdiolv fellow of the Bavarian and French irrelevant. I mused silently over my by Richard W. Conklin, Academies. Bordeaux about what Maximilian m, Director, Information Services The Madison Hotel luncheon — elector of Bavaria and founder of the A great deal happens on college cam­ served from what is reputably Wash­ Academy in 1759, would think about puses apart from academic activity, ington's best kitchen—^was flawless in parietal hours, the issue galvanizing chiefly because a substantial portion food, wine and conversation. The the campus back in South Bend. of the personal development of post- West German embassy's cultural More tangible than this sense of adolescent but preadult men and counselor greeted Prof. Gabriel with apparent incongruity, however, was a women takes place outside of books. a continental flavor, addressing him in distinct feeling of historical and cul­ So preoccupied have we been of the languages of the five nations he tural continuity reaching back to late with the personal development could call home — French, Italian, Gabriel's own Middle Ages and per­ aspects of higher education, however, Hungarian, German and English. (He haps further. In the midst of Marshall that we have tended to obscure the could be forgiven for having missed McLuhan's audio-visual global village, fact that scholarship still lies at the Gabriel's sixth "home"—the Gibson here was honor being paid to a priest- root of the educational enterprise. I Bar of the Washington Hilton, where scholar who cared passionately about was reminded of this recently when the waitresses never serve him flat preserving a culture far removed in I represented the University at a champagne.) time . . . and linear at that (It was a luncheon in Washington, D.C., at Gabriel responded into Voice of small irony that Gabriel was preserv­ which Dr. Astrik L. Gabriel, director America microphones with appropri­ ing the best that was said and of Notre Dame's Mediaeval Institute, ate gratitude. He is a man of books, thought in Mediaeval times by using was inducted into the Bavarian and he noted that the Nazis had some of McLuhan's tools, microfilm Academy of Sciences. burned his first library and the Com­ and colored transparencies.) Nineteen people — an interesting munists his second. America had given It came to me—^the Bordeaux might melange of government agency and him a chance to build a third, and have helped some—that the luncheon private foundation executives, scholars with liberal financial backing from was really a kind of ritual, an attempt and patrons — had gathered to pay the National Science and Kress Foun­ to link up, for deeply human reasons, their respects to an internationally dations, he had brought to Notre with the spirit embodied in the Me­ known specialist in Mediaeval edu­ Dame one of the finest collections of diaeval monks who first copied the cation who was about to become the Mediaeval manuscripts and Christian manuscripts preserved in Gabriel's eighth American professor to join the art to exist outside of Europe. library. 'r^immmmmmm^^^swF^M Vit. Franeis P. Clark Head, Microfilming & Photo, Lab. '-^Ur^''---^ "emorial Library Notre Dame, Ind. 46556

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