Georgetown University Alumni Magazine

Volume 15 Number 2 GEORGETOWN ALUMNI CLUB ROSTER • Officers of local and regional Georgetown Alumni Clubs are listed here us a regulur fea­ ture of the ALUMNI MAGAZINE. Club Secreturies are requested to notify the Executive Secretary of the Alumni Association of any changes as soon as they occur.

Los Angeles, Calif. Northeastern N. Y. Pres.: Edward S. Kuglen, Jr., FS '52, California Motor Express Pres.: Dr. Ernest Beaudoin, '54, 67 Chestnut St., Albany, N. Y. Co., 1751 South Santa Fe, Los Angeles, Calif. MAdison 7-8251 HO 3-4668 Secy.: Jay F. MacNulty, '58, 143 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y. Northern California Binghamton, N. Y. Lesser, '41, 54 Belden St., San Francisco 4, Pres.: Alvin M. St., Binghamton, 6-0292 Pres.: Jeremiah E. Ryan, '38, 107 Murray Calif. YUkon N. Y. 3-6161 Denver, Colo. Buffalo, N. Y. er, Col. Pres. : Charles P. Gallagher, '49, Central Bank, Denv Pres. : John F. Connell y, Jr., '52, 295 Voorhees Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. AC 2-0771 Secy.: John H. Napier, '47, 235 Cleveland Drive, Kenmore, Connecticut N. Y. BEdford 1646 Pres. : Bernard J. Dolan, '49, 207 Greenwood Ave., Beth el, Conn. Metropolitan N. Y. Delaware Pres.: George Harvey Cain, '42, Cerro de Pasco Corp., 300 Pres. : Joseph T. Walsh, '54, 2230 Pi ne St., Wilmington, Del. Park Avenue, New York 22,, N. Y. MUrray Hill 8-8822 Washington, D. C. Mid-Hudson Valley, N. Y. Pres. : James J. Bierbower, '47, 1625 K St., N.W. Washington 6, Pres. John J. Gartland, Jr., '35, 226 Union St., Poughkeepsie, D. C. STerling 3-6590 N.Y. Florida Rochester, N. Y. Pres. : Irving M. Wolff, '45, Biscayne Building, Miami, Fla. Pres.: Dr. Erwin J. Boerschlein, '49, 1616 Chili Ave., Rochester 11, N. Y., BE 5-1817 Chicago, Ill. Secy. : Robert N. Kl eisley, '55 28 N. Country Club Drive, Pres.: Thomas A. Reynolds, Jr., '48, Rm. 1400, 38 South Dearborn Rochester 18, N. Y. St., Chicago, Ill. Fl 6-3600 Syracuse, N. Y. Indianapolis, Ind. Pres.: Edward J. Kea rney, Jr., '51, 214 Sunnybrook Dr., Syracuse Pres.: William A. Brennan, Jr., '39, 5732 No. Pennsylvania St., 9, N. Y. HO 8-4493 Indianapolis, Ind. CLifford 1-3542 Cincinnati, Ohio Secy.: Martin McDermott II, '54, 9211 Washin gton Blvd., Pres.: William L. Dolle Jr., '50, 1245 Forest Court, Cincinnati 15, Indianapolis 20, Ind. VIctory 6-2039 Ohio Ohio Louisville, Ky. Cleveland, Robert F. Anthony, '51, General American Transportation, obt. P. Adelberg, '59, 94 Valley Rd., Louisville .4, Ky. Pres.: Pres.: R Terminal Tower, Cleveland, Ohio. PR 1-1391 JU 3-3618 '57, 209 Statler Hilton, Cleveland, Ohio, Secy.: Fitz Corr, '56, 200 Crescent Ave., E4, Louisville, Ky. Secy. : John A. Winter, MAin 1-4160 Baltimore, Md. Toledo, Ohio Acting Pres.: Rev. William M. J. Driscoll, S.J . '39, 720 No. Calvert Secy.: Erwin R. Effier, Jr., ' 39, United Savings Bldg., T oledo, St., Baltimore 2, Md. SA 7-1885 Ohio Boston, Mass. Tulsa, Okla. Pres. : Paul J. Hanl ey, '51, 50 Columbine Rd., Milton 87, Mass. Pres. : John E. Rooney, Mid-Continent Bldg., Tulsa, Okla. Secy.: Dr. Thomas J. Giblin, Jr., '54, 8 Tappan Rd., Wellesley 81, Portland, Ore. Mass. Pres.: F. Leo Smi th, '28, 2335 N.E. Everett, Portland 14, Ore. Springfield, Mass. Secy.: George Van Hoom issen, '55, 331 Pacific Bldg., Portland Pres.: Raymond Larrow, '49, 352 Pleasant St., Holyoke, Mass. 4, Ore. Erie, Pu. Detroit, Mich. Dr.· F. Joseph Brinig, Jr., '38, 2620 Sigsbee St., Erie, Pa. Pres.: I. Paul Tesorero, FS '4·9, National Bank of Detroit, 611 Philadelphia, Pa. Woodward Ave ., Detroit 26, Mich. WO 5-6000. Ext. 2456 Secy.: Daniel N . King, L '54, 82p Ford Building, Detroit 26, Mich. Pres.: Joseph C. O'Connor, '50, 422 East Spring Ave., Ardmore, wo 3-3400 Pa. Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn. Pittsburgh, Pa. Pres.: Robert C. Drake, '50, 2400 Oliver Ave., Sout h, Minneapolis Pres. : Harry J. Schmitt , Jr., '52, B. F. Jones Law Bld g., Pitts­ 5, Minn. burgh 19, Pa. Secy.: Willi am LaHiff, '45, 917 Soo Lin e Building, Minneapolis Rhode Island 2, Minn. Pres. : James E. McGwin, '53, 16 Rosewood Ave., Edgewood Kansas City, Mo. 5, R. I. STu art 1-5676 Pres.: William G. Wald, '55, 3702 W. 76th St., Kansas City 15, Mo. Richmond, Va. St. Louis, Mo. F. B. Sitterding, III, P.O. Box 418, Richmond, Va., ELgin 5-7697 Pres.: Gerald J. O'Connor, '51, Boyd's, 6th & Olive Sts., St. Louis Seattle, Wash. 1, Mo. John D. Spellman, '53, Suite 907, Artie Bldg., 704 3rd s Pres.: Secy.: William P. Carleton, Jr., 6630 Clayton Rd., St. Loui Ave., Sea ttle 4, Wash. MA 4-8370 17, Mo: Trenton, N. J, Mexico City Pres.: John A. Waldron, '38, 28 West State St., Trenton, N. J. Pres.: John E. Smith, Jr., FS '57, Foote, Cone & Belding Inter­ EXport 3-3044 national Division, Av. In surgentes Sur Nun 102 Mexico 6, D. F. Albuquerque, N. Mex. Puerto Rico Pres.: John B. McManus, '47, 3005 Hyder Dr., S.E., Albuquerque, Pres.: Man uel F. Iglesias, '42, P. 0. Box 6412 Loiza Station, N. Mex. 3-2021 Santurce, Puerto Rico Canada Pres.: Harry 0. Trihey, ' 38, 358 Grenfell Ave., T own of Mount Royal, Montreal, P.Q., Canada. REgent 8-6012 JULY 1962 • VOLUME 15 NUMBER 2

UNIVERSITY

MEM BER OF THE AMERICAN ALUMNI COUNCIL

EDITORIAL BOARD TABLE OF CONTENTS: OF ALUMNI MAGAZINE

Edwin W. Beitzel!, '28 4 Commencement-1962 Edward M. Castle, '40 Rosalia l. Dumm, '48 8 Thoughts While Listening to the Drone John Robert Ewers, '57 of a Commencement Speaker Rev. Daniel E. Power, S.J . Dr. James S. Ruby, '27, Editor 9 Alumni President Writes Dr. John Waldron, '30 10 Class Reunions-1962 Ketterman, Advertising Manager Ruth 14 Review: The Integrating Mind Joseph C. Cruml is h, '46, Club Ed itor James P. Reed, '53, Athletics 15 With the Alumni Clubs 16 Class Notes 30 Engaged 30 Marriages 31 Class of 1983 31 Necrology

COVER: The end of th e l63rd Com· mencemen t brings PHOTOGRAPHIC CREDITS: happy famili es to­ Bob Young: Cover, 4, 5 geth er around the 6 statue of John Car­ • 7, 8, 10, 11 , 12, 13 roll, Founder. Anthony Weins, 15

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY AL UMNI MAGAZINE: published each two months by the Georgetown University Alumni Association, Inc., Washington 7, D. c. • Sustaining Membership $25.00 per year, Regular Membership $5.00 per year, of which $3 .00 ·is for subscription to the Alumni Magazine • Second Class Postage paid at Washington, D. C. • Editorial and Executive offices: GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Alumni House, 3604 0 Street, N.W., Washington 7, D. c.

COPYRIGHT 1962 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Return Postage Guaranteed A Picture Story

Comme

The Baccalaureate Mass in McDonough Gymnasium

n alumnus speaking to the newest Georgetown alum· He warned that "you will not go far before discover· A ni group said, on June 3, 1962, that he and they ing, in graduate schools, professional circles, or places owe a debt of deep gratitude 'to the president and fac­ where you will work, there are unfortunate persons ulties for the immense good they continuously render who, far from knowing or loving God themselves, will to American higher education. ridicule and scandalize you who do know, love, and The Reverend John J. Slater, '46, who is now the want to serve Him." assistant to the president at Gannon College in Erie, There are specifics to strive for according to Father Pa., said that in addition to the graduates, the parents, Slater, first to be an exemplary religious person, then priests and teachers, friends and fellows were also to be a competent professional person, an honest employee, a congratulated. just employer, a faithful parent or religious, a loyal He said that although Georgetown traditionally re· citizen, a good neighbor, an asset to your community vered the highest objectives of the Catholic college in and to the world in every way, a credit to this uni· America, it was up 'to each graduate to use the knowl­ versity and all it stands for. edge and principles imparted to achieve a goal worthy of his noblest effort.

Officers of the Mass Rev. John J. Slater, '46 delivered the Sermon ncement

82 -Nursing,

At the Pre-Graduation ceremonies of the various -, schools, Father Bunn and the Deans welcomed as Alumni the new Graduates in ,

II languages and linguistics, Commencement - 1962 (con 't.)

-and at the traditional Tropaia of the College of Arts and Sciences from the historic of Old North.

Under threatening skies on Monday, June 4, the Grand Marshall, Albert E. Branson, '37 (L.) led the Academic Procession and

Archbishop O'Boyle and Father B u n n marched last in the place of honor.

Frederick B. Sitterding Ill, '41 received a plaque honoring his father, the late Frederick B. Sitter­ ding, Jr., '12, and A Word to the Graduates

"Intelligence is an in-built capacity o f all men; some use it more effectively than others," said Com­ mencement speaker Reverend Gustave Weigel, S. J. at the June 4th activities. Father Weigel, professor of theology at Woodstock college, believes that true education must strive to make man ripe in terms of the strenuous use of unimpaired in­ telligence wrestling with ideas. He sees man as an enigma, a g lory and a shame be­ cause of the intelligence factor. The glorious power in man is about us daily, but on the other hand, human intelligence can construct the Tower of Babel. Mrs. Miriam Leahy accepted a "Prosperity brings forth corruption of a nauseous citation for her late husband, kind; our youth is delinquent; our civic leaders are William E. Leahy, '12, President venal; our better means of creativity are employed to of the Golden Jubilee class. satisfy the pleasure drive in its lowest f orms; our self­ seeking makes us ignore the misery of the neighbor," said Father Weigel. The 1070 graduates of the l63rd Commencement were told to create in the light of intelligence and with the energy of freedom-for this is always man's mission. The real men embraced their mission; the fake men refused the responsibility. Today's graduates face a mission exactly the same as that of the ancients. "To the ancients we give our reverence and to yo u our hopes and fears," said Father Weigel.

In response to an honorary degree, Comedian Bob Hope delivered a few priceless bits of advice to the class of '62, and

Rev. Gustav Weigel, S.J., LL.D. looked over a sea of mortar boards to give the Commence­ ment address.

JULY, 1962 7 gowns. There w as unhurry, except dresses, flowery s peeches, h oods and to make checks-7-9-10-ll "in bed, black go wns, latin prose, mispro­ While lights out! " In between, a b eer, a nounced n ames, clicking c ameras, book or two, a c all to , a rolled degrees___.:the class of '4 7, a tea at Vizi- a scholarl y, gentle­ patch-work quilt of m en who had be­ Listening manly life in coat and tie. And on the gun in '41- before o r after- moved watch was Father Law, Dean of Dis­ out of Georgetown. cipline, with Father G eib, admin­ "Proud . . . Sons of . . . alma To The istering s uspensions and evenings in mater . . . " The man on the plat­ study hall to the Mass-skippers, to form hadn't paused a s I had. I Drone the wall-leapers, to the c heck-absen­ looked around. Here is Georgetown, tees. In class-small classes then­ 1962- bigger, racing fast, book­ there were tall, co rpse-thin Father laden, and class-crammed. The bar· Of A O'Gara-wh o was to die in the war racks o f lower Slobovia are g one. -teaching New Testament line· by Gone too is the rattling tin biology li ne, and old Father T oohey, t otter­ lab, its s ite hidden b y New South. Commence- ing on a c hair to reach the top of No w G eo rgetown sprawls over h er the b lackboard with "Barbara Celar­ hill, trickling down here and there ent, Darii, . . ." There was Ed­ to meet H oly Trinity and run lop­ ment mund Walsh, w ith his fl owering sidedly past. She reaches backwards, cape and his fl owing hair- gracious too, to g rasp at the lonely observa­ di gni ty and drama. tory a nd place at its feet n ew build­ Speaker "Brave . . . with fai th, courage, ings, a gym, and across, as a neigh­ hope . . . to the future." The man bor on the o pposite hill, a new sci­ on the platform h ad said them. I re­ ence building, brick and chemically peated them. 194.6. The wa r was over pure. and Georgetown h ad f ought it. Poul­ Within her buildings, Georgetown ton was built, a surplus barracks en­ has g rown too. H er classes are filled cased in brick. There were o ther to overfl owing. There seems to be barracks o n the lower fi eld with a n ew eagerness for study, an honors paper thin walls between the re­ program ever improving and books, turning vets. The unhurry was gone. books, books, paper and bound. Size had commenced. The c heck sys­ There seems to be a n ew freedom ; By Father Royden 8 . Davis, '47 tem staggered and shuddered under checking o ut, c hecking in are at a the influx o f m en. G.l. language and minimum and no one but God counts HE MAN on the p latform shift­ G. l. thoughts. Studies were heavier. the heads a t d aily Mass. There seems T ed his weight to another sentence The fat Thomas and the thin Suarez to be a new intellectual questi on· and I shifted mine too, outdistancing glowered at each other fr om op­ ing a nd searching, a n ew a sking for his leap to the bright future by a posite walls across Father McMul­ -and a new giving o f-greater and leap to the b right past. He had sa id lin's phil osophy class, while Butch, greater student responsibility a nd "Georgetown" and "Hoya" and "Gen­ the campus great Dane, snored at participation. These are the e lements tl emen of . . ." thirty times in as his feet. In the Quad, from Old in a growing Georgetown '62, striv­ many minutes. I was co unting. He No rth porch, the Flask and Bottle, ing s till to mould, to form, with the had known Georgetown fift y, sixty poor now-defun ct pep-rally p layers, old and the new, the men she c an years ago. I had kn own h er twenty, made fun of the sacred in the name be proud of.. .. fi fteen, and then n ow . . . . of school spirit. And in stuffy o ld "Men of Georgetown." Applause. I firs t saw Georgetown in 1941. Gaston H all, the shields o f J esuit col­ The man on the p latform was wind­ Then she was a s leepy southern, tra­ leges diml y s hone o n processions, ing up. " . . . and God's men in the dition- ornamented Geo rgetown. There academi c assemblies and convoca­ world." Applause. The s peaker had was no New South. No Poulton Hall. tions, on F ather Lombardi, on Evelyn finished. Commencement was over. No Annexes. No McDonough G ym. Waugh, a nd, o ne s trange night, o n There was the s nap, rustle, scrape o f No tip-tap clicking o f high h eels i n Vaughn Monroe, campus visitor the c rowd r eady to be o ff. The line the masculinely cold stone corridors. complete w ith orchestra. of graduates formed. Applause. "Men Instead, there were woo ds a nd grass Commencement came in June, '47 of Georgetown ... God's men." More and a deep-valed swimming pool. on the front lawn, under a hot sun applause. The g raduates began to file And seni ors very lofty in their fl ying and threatened showers, with fl owered out.

8 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE The President Writes •

Wm. S. Catherwood, '42

and privilege of voting for officers and members year every active alumnus has the responsibility Each These officers and board mem­ of the Georgetown University Alumni Association. of the Board of Governors Association--{;ontin­ and varied activities of the National Alumni bers are responsible for directing the work serve the more than 20,000 living alumni. ually striving to aid our great University and Officers are elected for a two-year term, officers, members of the board and senators. The Board consists of were elected. new President, Recording Secretary and Treasurer in alternate years. This year for example, a each representing a school of the Univer­ elections will be held to fill the eight Vice-Presidencies, Next year, is the Senior Vice-President representing the College of Arts and Sciences sity. Incidentally, the Vice-President for a three-year University. Members of the Board are elected since this College is the oldest school of the year. One group whose term expires classes of board members serving in any one term, so there are three has just begun and years, and then the newest group whose term next year, another whose term expires in two has three years to run. active in the Board's affairs for life officer or board member, an alumnus may remain Once elected as an to debate and serve right to attend board meetings and the right as a senator. While he has no vote, he has the as needed. three or four times per year on intended to be a working group. They meet The Board of Governors is pay their convenient locality. All officers and board members a weekend, either in Washington or in another relation to board meetings and association activi­ lodging, meal and entertainment expenses in own travelling, the Association more effective. of men, always seeking new ways to make ties. So they are a dedicated group and advisory group to the President of the University should be noted, that while the Board is a principal It as a pressure group but rather to assist does not se't University policy. It does not act its officers and deans, it solve problems. free debate often will help give direction and give counsel. Investigation of problems and and 23rd. This meeting is reported in the first time in Washington, June 22nd and The new Board met for of a number Board's work over that weekend primarily consisted detail in a later edition of the magazine. The of meetings of the committees listed below: Finance Membership Athletic Advisory Magazine Committee on Regional & Local Clubs John Carroll Awards &Dinner Insurance Annual Giving Fund Council Secondary School Contacts Constitution Alumni Headquarters Alumni-Student Relations Public Relations & Publicity !75th Anniversary activities and decided upon a direction discussed its purpose and the scope of its Each committee met, the entire Board activities and future plans was then given to for future action. A summary of the committees' for discussion and action. progress is expected to be re­ will continue through the summer and further These committee activities John Carroll Din­ Rochester, New York, at the time of the annual ported at the next meeting of the Board in ner, September 29th and 30th. than it is in each local area. One of the prime activity on the national level is no more important Alumni local alumni to band together and will be to encourage and foster the efforts of aims of the Board of Governors columns. will be hearing much more about this in future Work on behalf of their Alma Mater. You WILLIAM S. CATHERWOOD III '42 President, 1962-1964 ' '

JULY, 1962 9 Class Reunions 1962

Over the week-end of June 8-1 0, some four­ teen hundred Alumni ( ae) and their wives or husbands returned to Georgetown for the most successful Re­ union in our history.

They were welcomed at the main gate.

and registered in balloon festooned Copley Lounge,

while they enjoyed that rarest of Washington phenomena, cool, d r y weather,

10 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE and attended class parties like those -'17,

-'57, -'22,

11 JULY, 1962 Reunions - 1962 (con 't.)

and sat in on a series of Academic Programs, •' enjoyed a lavish buffet luncheon

non-reducing with shrimp in ice bowls desserts. with frozen roses and

The Silver Jubilee Class of '37 received congratu­ lations from Father Bunn and adjourned for Cocktails in the Quadrangle, followed by

where they w~re addressed by Fathe; Bunn and then

The 1962 Reunions were a lot of fun for the classes of '17, '22, '27, '32, '37, '42, '47, '52 and '57. The 1963 Reunions will be even more fun for '18, '23, '28, '33, '38, '43, '48, '53 and '58. If YOU are a member of one ?f those classes plan now to be at Georgetown on June 14, 15, and 16, 1963. Answer your first Reunion notice •n January and avoid disappointment.

13 JULY, 1962 Review The Integrating Mind William F. Lynch, S.J (New York: Sheed and Ward, 1962) By George H. Dunne, S.j. this is the temptation to which Mc­ great harm. There is nothing wrong HIS IS NO T a book to be Carthyites and some anti-McCarthy­ about seeking the detente of an oc­ T quickly read and as soon for­ ites, the communists, many anti-com­ casional escape from the pressures go tten. It is not a book that can be munists, and some anti-anti-com­ of reality. But it is aberration when hastily devoured and easily digested. munists have yielded. the fantasy becomes fact, when Right Father Lynch does not write that It is a t emptation t o which lib­ is mistaken for coming to grips. kind of book. He writes books which eral and anti-liberal are exposed. When the good guys-bad guys dich­ deal wi th concrete, vi tal, and prac­ In the s tate of siege in which the otomy is thought to refl ect 'the in­ tical problems, but it is the nature world now lives it is a t emptation ner structure of the real, we go of his mind, one of the best minds to which more and more people whirling off into the mad world of in this co untry, to leave the surface succumb. It is rampant on Madison Dr. Caligula. This is madness. This aspects of such problems to the journ­ avenue and on Main street, at home is why the aberrant behavior of alist while he plunges for their meta­ in convention hall and congress ional certain people and groups more no­ physical r oots. The kind of writing chamber, not unfamiliar with podium toriously addicted to either-or dog­ that wells up from the metaphysical and pulpit. There are, in fact, no matism manifests so many symptoms deep is not t o be read on the s ub- precincts quarantined against it. It of the irrational. way. substitutes diatribe for dialogue, ep i­ The fact i s that the real world This book is not likely lo be read thet for etiquette. It separates art is filled with contraries, not set off in Hollywood; and that is a pity, for from theology, politics from human­ rigidly one against another like con­ one of the concrete problems touched ity, man from society, and thought tradictions, but interpenetrating each upon here, more extensively dealt from r eality. other. It is a world or shadow as well with in earlier books by Father Father L ynch is against it. He de­ as of light and darkness, of greys as Lynch, has to do with what goes on scribes his book as "an attack on well as of whites and blacks. Father in and comes out of Hollywood and all unnecessary alternatives and un­ Lynch credits Plato with having dis­ other centers of the e ntertainment necessary conflicts, espec iall y in our covered this. "His supreme achieve­ world. Neither is it likely to be national society." He attacks it he­ ment was to modify, control and dis­ read in assemblies of the John Birch cause he is persuaded that we are cipline the severe rigidity of the Society or at Fred Schwartz' anti­ in great danger of hei!Jg destroyed Parmenidean divisions between ab­ communist rallies. That too is a by it. "The West is threatened," he solute dichotomies." For having re­ pity, for the problem of what is writes, "and the temptations are very introduced the Parmenidean rigidity wrong with the kind of mind that great, the temptations to many of he blames Descartes who "at a crit­ swims in that orbit is another one the forms of totalism." ical time in the history of the West, of the practical problems dealt with The fri ghtening thing about it is drove us decisively in the direction by the author, one time editor of that fantasms take the place of ideas of the pure and univocal idea and Thought and present member of and phantoms replace reality. This away from the great human art of the Georgetown's faculty. Another pity is mental illness of a serious kind. interpenetration of the contraries." would be to think that this book All mental illness is in one degree The Cartesian method, based on the deals only with such subjects as or another a withdrawal from r eality. notion of "the clear idea, that is, on these. The mind which deals with every­ the kind of idea that could in its What the book rea ll y deals with thing in terms of either-or is not in perfect boundaries be blocked off is what the author calls "the total­ touch with the real world at all, perfectl y from every other idea," in· .istic temptation," which is to say the because reality is not structured in evitably sees reality as one sees cul­ desire to reduce all problems 'to such simple and absolute terms. The tivated fi elds from the air, each area simple answers, to do away with all good guys-bad guys dichotomy of sharply, absolutely marked off, set complexity and contraiery. What the TV Western represents not the off with geometric precision against Father Lynch is against is the tend­ real, but a dream world. Except that its neighbor. Perhaps it is not strain­ ancy to demand either-or solutions, there is such a literall y awful lot of ing the analogy to point out that to see everything in black or white, it, the TV Western would do no (Continued on page 18)

14 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE With 7he Jiluwtni C9lubs

Cincinnati Joseph ]. Sussen, Jr., C '49; and High or Prep Schools: Christian John R. Wall, C. '39, L '42. Brothers College, St. Louis Univer­ On May 24 the Georgetown Club Reverend Joseph A. Sellinger, S.J., sity High School, the Priory School, of Greater Cincinnati held its an· Dean of the College, was a special Chaminade Preparatory School, Au­ in the Governor's Room and McBride nual meeting guest at the affair. gustinian Academy at the University Club. Cocktails and Hi gh School. The first award will be dinner preceded the 8:00 meeting. made in June o f 1 963, but we will St. Louis Dr. Joseph D. Crumlish, C '46, G '54·, notify the school pres idents of this Annual Giving Fund Director gave a Jerry O'Connor, C '51 President of award in the early Fall. brief talk on the progress of the Uni­ the Georgetown Club of St. Louis re­ "We plan to present six George­ versity. ports, as foll ows: "Since issuing our town Year Books to the above men­ The foll owing officers were elected: Spring News letter, we have spon­ ti oned school libraries. The awards President William L. Dolle, Jr., C sored our fir st Georgetown Club of and library presentations are being '50; Vice President J. Richard Sten· St. Louis retreat at the White House, made in order to bring about a closer ger, C '47, L '50; Treasurer Ralph B. south of St. Louis. Although small in relationship between the Alumni Club Kohnen, Jr., C '57; Recording Sec· number at least it was a s tart and we of St. Louis and our loca l schools. retary William E. San ten, C '50; Cor· hope to double the size of the group In this way we hope to s timulate responding Secretary William V. go ing down next year. greater interest in Georgetown by our Finn, C '42. Dick Stenger and Mar· "At a meeting of the Board of Di­ local High and Prep school students, tin F. Connor III, L '58 were named rectors o f the Club on May 8th, we and in turn to raise the caliber of the Chairman and Vice Chairman of the discussed the foll ow ing points: to student applying for admission to ae dues for the coming year- Georgetown from the St. Louis area. 1962-63 Annual Giving campaign in charo Cincinnati. $3.00, and to set up a 'Georgetow n "At Father Moffitt's request, we The Club will hold its annual sum· Club of St. Louis Award for Aca­ have established a screening commit­ mer picnic soon. Also planned was demic Excellence in Modern Lan­ tee to interview prospective appli­ the annual Blue and Gray Scholar­ guages'. This award will be given cants to the University. ship Ball which provides funds for a each year in the foll owing St. Louis {Continued on page 17) Cincinnati area student to attend Georgetown.

Cleveland

The Georgetown Club of Cleveland Confederate fla as at fl• ew Union and 0 •ts annual dinner dance held April 23 at Hotel Statler-Hilton. The oc· casion was the centennial celebration of Georgetown's blue and «ray par· • 0 hcipation in the Civil War. Proceeds from the dance will provide scholar· ships for Cleveland area students. Among the comminee members, headed by John A. Winter, C '57 Were: Robert F. Anthony, C '51, Club President; James A. Butler, C '21; Lewis C. Canan, C '25; Hon. Francis CLEVELAND ALUMNI CELEBRATE CIVIL WAR CENTENNIAL. Left to right, X. Feighhan, C '35; James A. Glea· bock row: John A. Winter, C '57, General Chairman; Reverend Joseph A. son, C '28; Mrs. Daniel J. Gorman; Sellinger, S.J.; James M. Mooney, C '58; Robert F. Anthony, C '51, Club Mrs. Ewald E. Kundtz, Jr.; Henry J. President; Neil T. Ruddock, C '50; center row: Mrs. Ewald E. Kundtz, Jr., Miss McGinness, Jr., C '54.; James M. Barbara Taylor, Mrs. Francis A. O'Brien, Mrs. Robert F. Anthony; front row: Mooney, C '58; Francis A. O'Brien, Ewald E. Kundtz, Jr., C '50 and Francis A. O'Brien, C '51. C '51; Neil T. Ruddock, C '50; 15 Carter will make his home in Fort Lau· derdale, Fla. Edward J. Flanagan, FS '22, has re· tired from his duties with the New Jersey State Commission for the Blind and has taken up the life of a gentleman CLASS farmer on R.F.D. # l, Narrowsburg (Sui· !ivan County), N. Y. He will be most happy to hear from his friends. , Dr. Jo seph A . Lane, M '22, of Roches· NOTES ter, N. Y., was installed as President of the Medical Society of the State of New York on May 17, 1962, at the annual meeting of the Society in the Statler Hilton Hotel in New York City. 1905 recently. Attorney General Robert F. 1923 Kennedy presented the award. Edward T. Quigley, L '05, retired As· Dr. Carl A. Surran, M '15, of Margate Dr. John F. Victory, L '23, GL '24, sistant Solicitor of the U. S. Department City, N. 1., hus retired from the practice former director of administrative affairs of Commerce, resides at 3800 14th St., of Medicine because of serious illness. for the National Advisory Committee on N. W., Washington, D. C., and is anxious His son, Captain Carl R. Surran, Pro· Aeronautics (recently named NASA) to hea r from his classmates. tocol/ U.N.C., is at present stationed in visiied the Seattle World's Fair recently. Seoul, Korea. 1924 1910 1916 Hon. Charles Emmet Daly, L '24, for Edwin Lang Miller, C '10, and Mrs. mer assistant Attorney General and a Mill er announce the marriage of their Hon. Francis B. Condon, L '16, of Paw· member of the California Youth Au· daughter, Claire Marie to Mr. Gerard tu cket, R. I., was recently appointed by thority for the last three years, was ap· Francis McGowan in Blessed Sacrament Pope John XXIII, Knight Command er pointed a judge of the San Francisco Chapel, Saint Joseph's Cathedral, Buffalo, wi th Star, Knights of St. Gregory. In Municipal Court by Governor Edmund N. Y., on February 24, 1962. June, 1962, he received the LLF honoris G. Brown on March 24. With A. F. causa from the University of Rhode Bray, Presiding Justice of the State Dis· 1912 Island. trict Court of Appeals, administering the Hon. Julien C. flyer, L '16, of the oath of office, and John A. Sutro, Pres· William F. Callander, L '12, after 44th District Court, Dallas, Tex., has ident of the Bar Association of San grad uation passed the District Bar Ex­ a daugh:er, Martha Hyer, who has Francisco, acting as master of ceremonies, amination, then moved to Wisconsin, achi eved success as a top actress in the induction took place Monday, April where he took graduate work at the Uni· Hollywood. 16. That evening, several hundred judges, versity of Wisconsin in Economics and Harry ]. Kelly, C '16, and Mrs. Kelly lawyers and other friends gathered at the Statistics. In 1922, he returned to Wash­ attended the ordination of their son, Fairmont Hotel to honor Judge Daly at ington, where he was pl aced in charge James G., to the Priesthood on July I, in a testimonial dinner. of most of the statistical work of the Louvain, Belgium. Father Kell y will eel· Roy Hall, L '24, is in the general prac· U. S. Department of Agriculture and wa& ebrate his first Solemn High Mass in tice of Law at Jackson, Tenn. made Chairman of the Crop Reporting Buffalo, N. Y., on August 5, 1962. Cyril L. Thiel, C '24, FS '26, after Boa rd . From 1950 to 1958, he served as almost 38 years of wandering round the a Professor of Statistics and Director of 1917 world, has retired from the Foreign Serv· the Statistical Research Laboratory at the ice of the Department of State and is University of Florida at Gainesvill e, Fla. Frank T. Fuller, Jos eph A. Rafferty, living at 4320 Garrison St., N. W., Wash· In 1958, the University of Florida con· Francis W. Hill, Edward Rosenblum, and in gton 15, D. C. Mr. Thiel's most recent ferred on him the Honorary Degree of South Trimble, Jr ., L '17, were hosts for post was as America n Consul General, Doctor of Science. Since 1960, he ha& th e Presidents' Reception and Dinner, Belfast, Ireland. been assisting the Department of Agri· honoring the Georgetown University Law culture in the preparati on of a history Class of 1917 on Sunday evening, June of the Department whi ch is celebrating 10, at Indian Spring Country Club, Glen· its lOOth Anniversary this year. mont, Md. Northern Dr. Thomas R. Gagion, M '12, of Pitts· California ton, Pa., has been presented with a 50 1921 Year certificate by th e Luzern County Alumni (Pennsylvania) Medical Society. Charles CarrolL Morgan, C '21, of Wash· ington, D. C., has been elected chairman A "No-Host" Cocktail Party 1913 of the executive committee and l st Vice· The California Room Presid ent of the Hospital Council of the Dr. John M. Higgins, M '13, has been National Capital area. Al so, recently he SHERATON-PALACE HOTEL elected President of the First National was reelec ted to the Boa rd of Managers August 8, 1962 Bank of Sayre, Pa. and Treasurer of Chevy Chase Village, thus making 13 years of service. 6-8 p.m. 1915 1922 Arrangements should be made Hon. E. Barrett Prettyman, L '15, LLD '46, who recently retired from the U. S. Elmer J. Carter, L '22, GL '23, has through Alvin M. lesser, Court of Appeals, was cit ed for distin­ retired as Vice- Presid ent of Semct-Solvay 54 Belden Street guished service at the Federal Trial Ex­ Division of Allied Ch emical Corporation, San Francisco 4, California aminers Conference's 15th annual dinner, a ft er 26 yea rs with the company. Mr.

16 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 1925 partment. On May 7, Dr. Finucane re­ (Continued from page 15) ceived the first Edward Kramer Funk­ "The date o f our Fall Football , R t. Rev. Msgr. Albert D. Cannon, L houser M emorial A ward for Di stinguished 2_5, celebrated the 25th Anniversary o f Service a t the annual dinner m eeting o f Smoker was set for September 12th. h• s ordination to the Holy Priesthood on the D. C. Tuberculosis Association. This eil F. Ryan, C '51, will chairman i~nd ay , . May 20, 1962, wi th a 1ass of award is presented to persons who have the affair. This will be our fourth lanksg•vmg at Christ the King Church, made distinguished contributions in the Co rpus Christi, . fi eld of in the Di strict of annual Smoker, the purpose of which Col. Cecil J. Dowd, L '25, has retired Co lumbia. is to get n ew freshmen and their from th e USAF and is teaching Mathe­ mah cs at St. Pius X H igh School in fathers acquainted with the local Albuquerque, N. Mex. 1928 Alumni. Bill Bidwill, C '53, Vice­ Dr. Walter H. E Jaeger G '25 G '26 L ' 3 . , ' ' Frederick L. Smith , L '28, has retired Pres ident of the St. Louis Football C 2, CL '34, Professor of L aw at a ft er many years' service as an att orney eorge:own, spoke to the Delaware Chap­ Cardinals, always graciously pro­ in the Civil Division of the U. S. Depart­ ter, a tional As ociation of Leual Sec­ men t of Justice. vides a film of the Cardinal high­ r e ~ a ri e in Wil mington, Del., ~ece ntl y. Leo Smith, L '28, received an h onorary lights for the previous season, and H,s topic was "Products Liability." degree of D octor of Laws from the this makes for a most enjoyable eve­ Uni, ersit y of Portland on Sunday, May 1926 27. · Mr. Smith served three sess ions in ning. th e Oregon Legislature a nd was instru­ "J. Vernon McCarthy, C '51 was Alois W. Johannes, L '26, has become mental in enacting legislation to assist an associate in the Law firm of H arris chil dren att ending parochial schools in elected Chairman of the holiday cock­ Bnd Alii on, 505 Florida National B ank having the use of state-owned busses, tail party, the date still to be set." uil din g, St. Petersburg, Fla. and he has appeared in Court on nu­ G Dr, . Jo hn J. O'Connor, 'C '26 G '27 ' L ' 31' merous occasions defending the rights 36, Professor of History and Phil- of children attendin g parochial schools. Boston o ophy at Georgetown, and President of He is c urrently o ne o f th e a ttorneys ap­ the National Catho peali ng th lic Conference for In­ e tex tbook d ecision from the The President's Dinner in honor terracial 1u stice, spoke recentl y in Syra­ upreme Court of the S tate of O regon c1u e, ·. Y., at a meeting of the Catholi c to th e U. S. Supreme Court. of Father Bunn was held at the Par­ nt crrac1al Counci l. ker House, Boston on April 28, Martin F. O'Donoghue L '26 delive red 1929 1962. Through their att th e Commencement add~e ss at' the 102d endance at graduation exercises of St. Bo naventure Dr. Emil Gribovsky, M '29, attended the dinner, New England Alumni University on June 3rd and also received th e World Congress of made possible the contribution of the honorary de"ree ~f Doctor of L aws in •lunich, Germany, in May and dis­ from the Univer;it y. w sed three papers there. He also at­ $5,140.00 to Father Bunn for the tend ed th e meeting o f the Societe Na­ 1962-63 Annual Giving Fund. tionale Francaise de Castro Enterelogic o f 1927 Paris, as well as clinical sessions at St. Hon . Oden Bowie Duckett, L '27, Ann e Mark's Hospital in Lond on and the Gas­ 1930 Arundel County Circuit Court troenterological staff meeting at the In­ 1u dge, Marcus Daly, FS '30, o f Lincroft, N. J., 1Md .) has played a key role in Mary­ stitute o f in Rome. Dr. Gribovsky has recently published was named chairman f or the Children's land 's legislative reapportionment dis­ Psychiatric Center, Eatontown, N. J., pute. The Co urt of Appeals has direc ted papers on "The Di etary a nd Medicinal Treatment of Postgastrectomy Symptoms," recently. The center w as founded in Judge Duckett's Court to determine 1960 to provide a n outpatient cl inic for wh ether there is an "invidious discrim­ and " Variations of Duodenal Diverticula ; Source of O ccult Bleeding" in the Amer­ the county's emotionally disturbed chil­ ination" against urban vo ters in the dren. makeup of the House of Delegates and ican J ournal of Gastroenterology. State Senate. Fran k J. McGuire, L '29, has joined Dr. Francis R. Meyers, M '30, of Pater­ the son, N. 1., was elected President of _Dr. Daniel L . Finucane, M '27, former Wilmington, Del., Trust Co., as a trust offi cer in its Business Development the Passaic County Medical Society re­ 0. •rector of th e D. C. Department of Pub­ Division. He will be primarily e ngaged cently. Dr. Meyers is a m ember of the ~c. Health, is now associated wi th the American College of , the nnce Georges County, Md., Health De- in estate pl anning.

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17 JULY, 1962 (Continued /rom page 14) tribution to that mind of the dis­ no less a b etrayal of the intellectual the higher one fli es in the air the covery of the interpenetrating char­ tradition of the East than is the more sharply defin ed the geometric acter of contraries. Cartesian absolutism a betrayal of divisions appear. There is a civilized mind, often a the tradition of the West. This is one Father Lynch sees m this Carte­ highly refin ed mind, which is of the of the slender threads of hope to sian method a betrayal of the intel­ East. It seems to me furthermore that which the world may still cling, that this mind of the lectual tradition of ·the West which East has tradition­ the mind of the East may yet re-assert ally been much more at home with he credits with finding out "that many itself against the absolutism of contraries than has been the mind contraries, instead of constituting al­ Marxist-Leninist thought so greatly of the West. It has more easil y recog­ ternatives for choice, are mutually at odds with its own traditional bent. nized and accepted the fact that It was the mind of creative of each other." The task of reality is fill ed with contraries and the East re-as­ developing this discovery in the con­ has had much less difficulty than the serting itself (only, of course, to be crete reconciliation of contraries he Western mind in reconciling them. immediately silenced) in Mao Tse­ describes as "the vocation of the {I wonder why at this point the tung's "let a hundred flowers bloom" civilized mind, the mind of the name of John Foster Dulles comes declaration. It would be foolish, no West." to mind and his difficulty understand­ doubt, to ground great expectations This is the one point on which I ing Nehru or neutralism? ). It is, I upon the incompatibility of either­ differ with Father Lynch. The dif­ think, doing the West too much or absolutism with the Eastern mind, ference between u s is, however, not credit to claim this as its unique dis­ because given a few generations of one of contradiction, but of con­ covery and pre-eminent task. complete control it is possible to up­ traiety. I question the apparent equa­ The present, and let us hope mo­ root traditional habits of thought. tion of the civilized mind with the mentary, ascendancy of the good That is why the thread is a slender mind of the West, as well as the at- guy-bad guy dichotomy in China is one. Yet it exists.

Medical Society of New Jersey, and the from the Medical Society of Delaware; Seminary, Rochester, N. Y., celebrated American Medical Association. appointed to the Council on Mental Health at the Seminary the Silver Jubilee of his Eric A. Moore, C '30, was recently by the Board of T rustecs of the AMA, ordination to the Priesthood, December elected to the City Council of the City and elected President-elect of the Na­ 8, 1961. Father has been on the staff of of Avalon, Calif. tional Association of Blue Shield Medi­ St. Bernard's since 1938 and is also a cal Care Plans. director of the Liturgical Arts Society, 1931 Rev. Robert F. McNamara, C '32, Pro­ Inc., of New York. fessor of Church History at St. Bernard's Thomas A. Murphy, C '32, has moved C. DeWitt Coffman, C '31, is the direc­ from R eading, Pa., to 5247 N. 15th St., tor of the Hotel Division of The Futter· Philadelphia, Pa. man Corporation, which moved recently Lt. Col. F. Stanley Nishwitz, USMCR, from Chicago to headquarters located at GEORGE A. COMLEY FS '32, of San Juan, P.R., has been ap­ 580 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Mr. pointed to the General Services Admin­ Coffman is also a Vice-Presiden t of the istration as Supervisory Transportation Company. Florist Operations Officer. His daughter grad­ Dr. Leonard F. Del Vecchio, M '31, is uated from the Marjorie Webster School, Chief of at St. Vincent's Washington, D. C., in June. Hospital, Bridgeport, Conn. • Leon Sarpy, GL '32, was a welcome Hon. Michael V. DiSalle, L ' 31, Gov­ visitor at Alumni House in early May. ernor of Ohio, received the Annual Alum­ 3209 M STREET, N.W. ni Award in Recognition of Outstanding 1933 Record of Public Service, given by George· FE. 3-7220 town University Law Center at a Law Dr. John W. Buckley, M '33, is Chief Day luncheon sponsored by the s tudents of P ediatrics at St. Vincent's Hospital, and faculty in the National Press Club, Bridgeport, Conn. His daughter, Kath­ Washington, D. C., on May l. Governor erine, New Rochelle, '61, will study Di Salle made the principal speech, Mathematics at Georgetown's 1962 Sum­ "Wellspring of Liberty" at the Luncheon. mer Session on a grant from the Na­ Gerard ilf. McAllister, C '31, executive tional Science Foundation. Vice-President and General Counsel of MOVING? We know a lot, but we Dr. Carl ]. McKenna, M '33, of West McAllister Brothers, Inc., has been elec t­ don 't know everyth ing . For example, Hempstead, N. Y., has a son, Thomas P. ed a Director of the New York Board you know when you change your address. McKenna, who is a member of the Class of Trade, thus bringing to 13 the num· We don 't. If you move, don 't leave of 1963 of the College. ber of executive and director posts held Alumn i House in the dark. Send us Charles P. Nolan, G '33, has been re­ by him. your new address so that we may keep assigned from the American Embassy the Alumni Magazine coming to you at Buenos Aires, Argentina, to the De­ 1932 without delay. partment of State, Washington, D. C., for a t our of duty as Special Advisor, Dr. H. Thomas McGuire, M '32, of Transportation & Communications. He New Castle, Del., was re-elected D elegate resides at 3230 N. Abingdon St., Arling­ to the House of Delegates of the A.M.A. ton 7, Va.

18 mal e Mercury Mass. The talk was part of the college's Joseph G. Smith., C '33, Vice-President­ astronauts. Mrs. Hart is staging a campaign Foreign Aff airs Lecture Series. purchases and raw materials, Pittsburgh against the "men· only" character of Project Mercury; she ~! ee l Company, was one of four execu· wants to shatter lives of the company interviewed and it by being the first worn· 1935 an to take the sam featured in the press. Mr. Sm ith de· e sort of trip as Astro· nau t J ohn Glenn-or John L. Cecil, L '35, GL '37, has been scribed how the competitive advantages at l east see to it that some other American woman rath er elected Vice-President and Secretary of ?f expanded ownership of raw materials than a Russian woman, will score this Western Bancorporation, the nation's IS related t o the company's 544-million "first" in space. Although the mother of largest bank holding company, 600 S. capital improvement progrJm. eight children, she is completely serious Spring St., Los Angeles 14, Calif. Prior Dr. James J. Vand erbeck, M '33, of in this desire to go into orbit around the to this, Mr. Cecil had been with the Ridgewood, N. J ., is the proud father of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation seven children. earth. ]. Joseph Hillary, FS '34, made a ten since 1946, serving as Counsel until 1953 weeks' trip through Europe last summer and then as Assistant General Counsel. 1934 with his wife and three children and Mrs. Margaret Baggett Dolan, N '35, father and is now back in Claremont, Fla., was elected President of the American Sen. Alan H. Bible, (D.-Nev), L '34, growing oranges and raising cattle. Nursing Association at its mid-May meet­ w.a ~ presented with a plaque in recog· Richard F. Mc Partlin, Jr. , C '34, of ing in Detroit. She is Director of the nl!ton of his services to the Di strict oi Chicago, Ill., was recently elected Pres· Department of Public Health Nursing Columbia during eight years as a member iden t of the Little Flower Council, a at the University of North Carolina. and chairman of the Senate Distri ct Com· lay affiliate of the Carmelite Order, which Dr. Leo William Dufault, M '35, of mittee. The presentation was made at a group as part of its fun ctions raises funds Washington, D. C., celebrated his 25th $50 a plate din ner held in the Washington to train and educate boys for the priest· Wedding Anniversary on April 26, 1962. Hotel, attended by 750 persons. He has one grandson, three years old; a hood. Thomas J. Jenkins, C '34, L '39, John M. McEvoy, C '34, recently re· daughter, Andrea Camille Dufault who ~ p ecia l agent in charge of the FBI office signed from General Foods and joined is a speech therapist f or the Prince 1 " Charlotte, N. C., spoke at the regular Systems Consulting Company in New Georges County (Md.) School Sys tem ; weekly meeting of the Lions Club of York City. His son, Michael, was a and a twelve yea r old son in the 7th grade Statesville, N. C., recently. His topic freshman at Georgetown 1961-62. at St. Francis Xavi er School. was "The Work of the FBI." John J. Powers, Jr., C '34, senior Vice· Dr. William J. Mc Laughlin, C '35, was Hon. Philip A. Hart, C '34, Democratic President of Charl es Pfizer & Co., Inc., and appointed Attending Surgeon Holy Fam· Se n a t~r from Michigan, has a wife, J ily Hospital, Brooklyn, ane, Presiden 1 and Chairman of the Board of N. Y., on Jan· who IS an ex perienced airplane and heli· Pfizer International, spoke o n "A Busi· uary 1, 1962. copter pilot, and one of 12 persons of nessman's View of Foreign Affairs," re· Ferdinand R. Montani, C '35, has sold h_er sex who have successfully passed the centl y a t Assumption College, Worcester, his automobile dealership at Warren, n gorous physical tests taken b y our seven - THE ELEVENTH ANNUAL JOHN CARROLL :JraJilionaf :Jajhionj DINNER of the /or lhe (}enlleman GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION in cooperation with THE GEORGETOWN ALUMNI CLUB OF ROC HESTER

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19 Ohio, and is practlcmg Law at 510 Ma­ David A. Kidney, C '37, is practtcmg Board of Governors of the Oyster Bay honing Bank Building, Youngstown, Ohio. Criminal Law in Santa Monica, Calif. Hospital. Dr. Jo se Munoz, D '35, has a daughter, He is married and has fiv e children and Dr. Marion F. Kaletkowski, M '39, an Victoria, a sophomore at Georgetown's In­ resides at 475 19th St., Santa Monica. Anesthesiologist at St. Mary's Hospital, stitute of Languages and Linguistics. She He has a son entering Loyola High Clifton, N. J ., has been named one of and her roommate, Toni Cesarano, have School in Los Angeles in September. two of the community's doctors to head waged a campaign to persuade the D.C. Chaplain (Lt. Col.), Arthur H. Marsh, a special professional committee of the offi cials to relax parking restrictions in USA, C '37, has been selected for pro­ American Cancer Society. He also serves th e vicinity of the University, even carry­ motion to full Colonel on the permanent on the Medical Board of the Clifton De­ ing their appeal to the chief of the District list, and since he is number 2 on the partment of Health. Traffi c Investiga tions section. . selection list should receive his promo­ Thomas F. Morrow, FS '39, Adminis­ Lawrence ]. 0' Brien, C '35, has been tion within the nex t several months. trative Director, Lockheed-Georgia Com­ elected Vice-President of the American F. Richard McCarthy, Jr., FS '37, is pany, Marietta, Ga., was a visitor at Alum­ District Telegraph Company, a nation­ Vi ce-President for Traffi c with the Great ni House on April 13, 1962. wid e organiza tion specializing in fire and Lakes Forwarding Co., in Detroi t, Mich. burglar alarm services. He resides in Capt. Leonard R. Raish, USN, FS '39, Upper Montclair, N. ]., and is the father L '51 Director, Radio Frequency Spec· of four children, three boys and a girl. 1938 trum Division, Office of Assistant Chief Fran /; J. Toole, C '35, is presently serv­ of Naval Operations (Communications), Chester S. Dads, Jr., FS '38, feature Washington, D. C., has had published an ing as State Advocate of the Pennsylvania writer for the Winston-Salem Journal and State Council Knight s of Columbus. He article in Signal March 1962, entitled, Sentinel, Winston-Salem, N. C., was the "International Agreement: Key to Military is also a Past Grand Knight and Past principal speaker, recently, on the oc­ Faithful Naviga tor. Attorney Toole is Global Telecommunications." The article casion of a meeting attended by about demonstrates that the military services serving as President of the Schuylkill 100 persons interested in promoting a County (Pa.) Bar Association. need personnel trained in diplomatic work new library building for Mount Airy, as well as the State Department. Capt. N. C. Raish is the author of several other 1936 Edward L. Ko epenick, L, '38, and Gerald articles in the telecommunications field P. O'Grady L '39, announce the forma­ and a co ntributing author to Brittins "In LCDR Mary Price, USN, N '36, is an in­ tion of a partnership in the general prac­ structor in the Hospital Corps School ternational Law for the Sea-going Of­ tice of law under the name of Koepenick ficer." at the U. S. Naval Hospital, San Diego, and O'Grady, 1625 Eye St., N.W., Wash­ Dr. D. Harrison Smith, FS '39, G '42, Calif., where she has a class of about ington 6, D. C. 60 students for a course four months in G '50, of the History Department of duration. Francis R. McVoy, C '38, is with the Maryland University and formerly of the C & E I Railroad of Chicago Heights, Ill. Georgetown History Department, received the diploma of the Order of St. Mark 1937 1939 in colorful ceremonies at Munich, Ger­ Peter ]. Brennan, C '37, L '40, of many attended by NATO Army officers Dr. Walter C. August, D '39, attached Winnetka, Ill., was appointed recently and foreign consuls, recently, when the to the 817th Evacuation Hospital Unit of to the New Trier Township Board of Lord Abbot of the Orthodox Church in­ the Army Reserve, has been promoted to Auditors. He is an attorney with Harris vested him with the Order. The diploma Li eutenant Colonel. Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago. ci ted Dr. Smith for his historical re­ Leon Esenstad , FS, '37, has been as­ William J. Dumas , C '39, was recently search and role in education. sociated for the last three years with appointed Vi ce-President of the Ekco Hughes Spalding, Jr., C'39, of Atlanta, the Legum and Gerber Realty Co., 3315 Products Company, Chi cago, Ill., and is Ga., was elected a Director of the Trust Connecti cut Avenue, N. W., Washington, moving his family, wife and three chil­ Company of Georgia to succeed his father, D. C., handling commercial and resi­ dren, from Rye, N. Y., to Chicago this Hughes Spalding, C'08, LLD '56, who re­ den tial property. summer. His son, Michael, will attend tired in January, 1962. George B. Haney, C '37, is head of the Spring Hill College in the fall. Newark, N. ]., office of Auchincloss, Dr. Bern ard J. Ficarra, M '39 has been 1940 Parker, and Redpath, members of the appointed Ch ief of Staff and Director of New York Stock Exchange. He is the th e Department of of the Oyster Capt. Richard S. Balch, USN, B '40, 1962 chairman of the Essex County Can­ Bay Hospital, Bayville, L. 1., N. Y. The is a student at the Industrial College cer Campaign and Vice-President of the appointment was made by Lt. Gen B_lack­ of the Armed Forces, located at Fort Arthritis and Rheumatism Foundation. shear M. Bryan, USAR, Chairman of the Lesley J. McNair, Washington, D. C.

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ev. William F. O'Donnell, C '43, L '51, Alonzo P. Bro wn, Jr ., C '40, is also a Joseph M. Moran, FS '42, has assumed R celebrated his first Solemn Mass at St. student at the Industrial College of the duties as district sales manager, Los Apostl e Church, Washington, Armed Forces. Angeles, Calif., for the British Over· Thomas D. C., on Sunday, June 3. Frank X. Brown, L '40, of the firm seas Airways Corporation. Prior to this ct sales manager Dr. William B. Walsh, M '43, Founder ~ox, Langford & Brown, 1625 Eye St., assignment he was distri and Presid ent of Projec t HOPE, was pre· h. W., Washington, D. C., announces in Denver, Colo. Edward L. Ryan, C '42, with his son sented th e 1962 Humanitarian Award ~at Daggett H. Howard and John P. daughter, Mary Eliza. given annuall y by the Lions Club of fi urman have become members of the Edward, Jr., and n, D. C. rm. beth, visit ed the Campus in April. Washingto '42, and H. Col. Walt er Holoman, USA, C '40, is Leo F. Simpson, Jr., L a student at the Industrial College of the Paul Comisar have opened new offices 1944 for the general practice of L aw at 260 ~rme~ Forces, located at Fort L esley J. Reynolds Arcade Building, Rochester, Dr. Joseph G. Troisi, M '44, resides cNalf, Washington, D. C. at 777 E. 17th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Cdr. Margaret Kloetzli, USN, N '40, N. Y. elos, D '42, writes: Dr. Morris W. Yarrow, J\'[ '44, is one has been transferred to the Radio Isotope Dr. George A. Stamp asure to meet with the of a three·man research t ea m, all doc tors Laboratory at the National Naval Medical " It was a real ple residing in Cheltenham Township, Pa., Center, Bethesda, Md. faculty and cl assmates at our 20th Re· . . My wife and I express our and supported by Research Laboratory Dr. lames L. Lanzillo M '40 has been union. . those who made o ur of the Albert Einstein Medical Center appointed Chief of th~ Obst;trical De· hea rtwarm thanks to stay so pleasureabl e, and extend an in· Philadelphia, Pa., who will try to deter: ~artm e nt of St. Mary's Hospital, Troy, . Y. vitation to c all when yo u visit Miami mine how oft en silent h eart attacks occur Beach f or the National Meeting." and how they can be prevented. h Frederick ]. Miller, C '40, of Man· The Magazine expresses the sympathy Richard ]. Bartlett, C '45, has formed Ja~set, N. Y., is Assistant Dean of St. of the A lumni Association t o Grover A. a partnership for the practice of Law 0 . n's Boys School and also a Chern· Whalen, Jr ., C '42, on the recent dea th with Alfred D. Clark and H. Glen Caffry, tstry professor. of his father, Groven A. Whalen, Sr., .10 Harlem St., Gl ens Falls, N. Y. Mr. Dr. Matthew Pupilla D '40 has moved in New York City. Bartlett represents Warren County in the HtoRe 0 II In' ~ Hill Road, Old' ' Westbury, N. Y. Assembly of the New York State Legisla· has live children, four daughters anJ lure and is Chairman of the Temporary one son. 1943 State Com mission on R evision of the Vin cent W. Allen, FC '43, has just be· Penal and Criminal Code. 1941 gun his seventh year as Chief of Industrial Proj. ]anus Popp e, FS '45, G '47, G '48, Security. for the Atlantic Missile Range, is a member of the faculty of the Indus· I Cdr. Richard E. McVoy USN C '41, is which ext end s from Cape Canaveral to trial Coll ege of the Armed Forces lo· ocated in Philadelphia, 'Pa. ' the Indian Ocean. He says, "Any old cated a t F ort Lesley J. McNair, Wash· fri end s are welcome to drop in and see ington, D. C. me. His a ddress is 266 Alma Drive, Dr. ]ames E. Printy, C '45, M '47, of 1942 Sandusky, Ohio, assisted by Dr. Frank I Dr. Robert R. Cross, M '42, has been Eau Callie, Fla. Dr. Phillip L. Calcagno, M '43, Pe· Leake, delivered Siamese twins by Cesar· \ ec~ed Chief of the Department of Anes· diatrician of Lackawanna, N. Y., was the ian section, recently. The babies were t estology at Suburban Hospital, Bethes· considered to be in satisfactory condition da, Md. guest speaker at the Passion Sunday Breakfast of the Holy Name Society of and were pl aced on the pediatric surgical b Hon. A. Fran cisco Linares, FS '42, Am· service to see if they will be able to St. Anthony's Church. Bonn, Ger· assador of Guatemala to Mrs . ]am es E. Fl eming, (Mary M. live separately, through surgery. many, made an official visit to his class· Korfonta ), N '43, is doin g volunteer work ~ate~ Dr. John F. Parr, FS '39, G '48, at with the Am erican Red Cross in St. Louis, 1946 M U?tch, Germany, and was received by .Mo., and has recently been appointed, for ' a1or General J eff erson Seitz wi th a the second time, a s c hairman of Special Dr. David L. Cronin, .M '46, was recently guard of honor. Projects for student nurses with that appointed Director of the Department of ]. McVoy, C '42, resigned the at the Pacoima .Memorial Lu· ~d.wa rd organiza tion. QOSthon of Advertising Manager, Heil· theran Hospital in Pacoima, Calif. William C. McLaughlin, C '43, of Wash· O uaker Corporation, Nashville, Tenn., ington, D. C., has been elected Vice Dr. Vincent G. Desiderio, D '46, is the 1, 1961, and joined The Murray O~~ob e r President, Secretary and General Man· father of six children: Vincent Jr., 13 ; 10 Manufacturing Co., in Nashville, ager of Hill & Sanders, Wheaton, Md., Donsian, 12 ; .Mark, 11; Denise, 8; Paula, ts h Sales Manager of the newly estab· the old est F ord agency in the area. 6; and Margaret, 2 years old. ts ed Part Sales Division.

21 JULY, 1962 Dr. Joseph P. Giardino, C '46, M '51, vania School of Medicine. has been re-elected Chief of Medicine at John Francis Reilly, L '47, took the Nathan Littauer Hospital, Gloversville, oath of office on April 16, 1962, as Di­ N. Y., for 1962. rector, Office of Security, Department of John Korba, FS '46, has been appointed H. L. ROGERS Sta~e, Washington, D. C. He resides at Washington Regional Distributor for Me· 5805 Marengo Rd., Springfield, Md. Connon & Company, Winona, Minn. The Tomas L. Ryan, C '47, member of the firm handles a line of more than 160 firm of Ryan and Ryan, announces the household products including spices, toilet· EVERYTHING IN removal of their offices to One Chase ries and cleaning aids. Manhattan Plaza, New York 5, N. Y. Rev. /. Stewart Labat, FS '46, who SHEET METAL AND ROOFING Emmett L. Sheehan, Jr. , C '47, L '49, graduated from the Virginia Theological is currently employed as a Legal Assistant Seminary, is rector of St. Peter's Epis· on the Siaff of Chairman Frank Mc­ copal Church, Lakewood, Ohio. News of Culloch, National Labor Relations Board. his recent marriage appears elsewhere in Serving Georgetown University He is also acting as President of the Wash· these columns. Since 1928 ington, D. C., Chapter of Citizens for William V. O'Brien, FS '46, partici· Educational Freedom, an outfit of 20,000 pated in a panel discussion on "Diplo· parents actively working to protect the macy and the Lawyer" held under the rights of children in private and par ~c hial auspices of the American Society of In· 1249 Congress Court, N.W. schools. ternational Law in March. The meeting was attended by approximately 80 inter· Washington 7, D. C. 1948 national lawyers employed by the State Department; fn,m April 5 to 11, he was a Vincent T. Bogdan, FS '48, of Trenton, participant in the Conference on Extra· FE. 3-6848 EM. 2-2596 N. J., has ben appointed chairman of in­ territorial Effects of Trade Regulation ; ternational activities for the Trenton Area on April 13 and 14, he was one of Chapter, American Red Cross. Georgetown's representatives to the An· Landon Gerald Dowdey, L '48, and Nor· nual Meeting of the American Academy man H. Bartow are pleased to announce of Political and Social Science in Phil· Dr. / ames R. Chambers, C '47, M '51, the association of John Jordan O'Neill, adelphia, Pa. Prof. O'Brien was honored is in the practice of C '58, L '61, with the firm of Dowdey & by being made the subject of an article at Morro Bay, Calif. Bartow for the practice of Law before the in Sign magazine for April 1962. Dr. Donald B. Darling, C '47, M '50, Courts and Agencies of the Federal Gov· Dr. Eugene V. Resnick, M '46, an­ of Belmont, Mass., has been appointed ernment and the District of Columbia. announces the removal of his office to Radiologist-in-Chief for the Boston Dis· Offices are located in the First National 523 Forest Avenue, Paramus, N. J. Dr. pensary and Boston Floating Hospital Bank Bldg., Washington, D. C. Resnick is a Diplomate, American Board for Infants and Children; assistant pro· Brig. Gen. /aroslav T. Folda, /r., USA, of and . feosor of Radiology, Tufts University G '48, was recently promoted to that rank School of Medicine; assistant professor at Fort Riley, Kan., where he is com· Walter / . Rielley, C '46, has been mander of the 1st Infantry Division appointed by President Kennedy as Chief of Radiology, Boston University School of Medicine, and assistant in Radiology, Artillery. of the National Defense Reserve, BDSA, Andre Jean Houpert, FS '48, L '55, is Department of Commerce. He is !Jlarried Harvard . Charl es S. DeVoy, C '47, is manager, IBM Manager, Electric Typewriter Divi· and has four children, Tad, Nancy, Susan, sion, in Honolulu. He and his family ex· and Mary Seanna. Port of New York Trade Development Office in London, England. peel to visit Georgetown in July. Dr. Angelo /. Scarfarotti, D '46, of Donald / . Donahue, C '47, is T~e as ur e r William C. McGowan, L '48, recently Utica, N. Y., has been reelected secre· of American Metal Climax, the chief accepted a position as Vice-President with tary of the Utica Dental Society and is producer of Molybdenum and one of Bankers Mortgage Company of California, also chairman of the Dental Emergency the largest buyers, selle'rs and refiners 141 Battery St., San Francisco. Program started for the firs t time in of metals (total 1961 sales: $575.8 mil· Rosemary E. Metzger, N '48, is em· Utica. lion). ployed at Childrens' Hospital, Washington, Dr. William ]. Spinosa, M '46, is At· Edward G. Hudon, L '47, GL '50, As· D. C., as Director of Student Health and tending Pediatrician at Clara Maass Me· sistant Librarian of the U. S. Supreme Activities. Previous to this, she was ass· moria! Hospital, Bellville, N. J. He was Cou rt, has achieved the unusual distinc· istant Head Nurse in at Provi· recently appointed Medical Director of the tion of holding five earned academic de· dence Hospital in Washington. Student Health Service Seton Hall Uni· grees; in addition to the above degrees, Rev. Gregory / . Moore, O.P., FS '48, versity, South Orange, N. J. Mr. Hudon received ·a B.S. from Bowdoin was ordained to the Priesthood in 1955, Dr. Edwin M. Thomas, D '46, is moving Coll ege, Me., a master of science in Li­ went to Nigeria in 1957, and is presently soon to new and larger office facilities at brary Science from the Catholic Univer­ serving a parish in Yaba . He writes that 542 River St., Mattapan, Mass. He is sity of America, and a doctorate in juri· he would welcome any alumni who come the proud father of eight children, "future dical science from George Washington that way at any time. His address is: St. Georgetown candidates." University. Dominic's Catholic Mission, P.O. Box 44, Dr. Lewis L. Imm erman, C '47, M '51, Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria. Warren E. Morrison, FS '48, G '54, is a 1947 has closed his office for practice of Ra­ diology in Paterson, N. J., and moved his student at the Industrial College of the Keith A. Botterud, FS '47, G '49, has home to 47 Woodmont Rd., Upper Mont­ Armed Forces, at Fort Lesley J. McNair, been with the U. S. Information Agency clair, N. J . He currently maintains an Washington, D. C. since 1955; has been overseas most of the office for the practice of Radiology at 663 Paul 1'. Smock, FS '48, L '50, has re· time since 1953; two years in The Hague, Main Ave., Passaic, N. J., where he is the signed as assistant U. S. attorney in New three years in Oslo, Norway, and two Director of Radiology at the Passaic Gen· Jersey to join American Cyanami_d Com­ years in Tegucigalpa, Honduras. He is era! Hospital. pany's legal department. completing a two-year assignment in Dr. John C. McGiff, C '47, has been ap­ Howard B. Watson, FS '48, was elected Washingtol) and readying for a three· pointed Associate in Medicine and Phar· Police Judge in Albion, Nebr., on April year tour in Tehran, Iran. mocology at the University of Pennsyl· 23, 1962, for a fifth term.

22 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE the high spots of the dinner with the pres­ _Berney T. Wilburn, FS '48, formerly Alphonse J. Mathis, C '49, has recently o the Hunting Park entation to the firm of a membership cer­ Duector of Research for the American been transferred t of The Budd Co., Philadelphia, Pa., tificate in the One-Hundred Year Associa­ M:rchant Marine Institute, has been ap· Plant Handling. He tion of New J ersey, Inc. John is President POtnted Director of Facilitations and Plan· as Supervisor of Material of the company, and James, secretary­ ning in the new U. S. Travel Service, has six children, 4 boys, and 2 girls. Dr. James L. McCarron, C '49, D '53, is treasurer. which reports to the Secretary of Com· of dentistry in merce. He is also a guest lecturer in in the general practice William D. West, FS '49, has completed eaton, Md. He is married and has five Shipping Research for 1962 at the School Wh his first year as a member of the Tech­ of Foreign Service. children, ·two boys and three girls. nical Staff, Systems Planning & Research Jo seph S. McCarthy, L '49, and James Division, Aerospace Corp., El Segundo, T. Wharton, L '56, announce their asso· Calif. Mr. West came to Aerospace from 1949 ciation in the general practice of Law the Boeing Co., Wichita, Kans., where he with offices at 3 North Perry St., Rock· had been a research specialist responsible . Dr. Robert Alexander, G '49, G '53, asso· ville, Md. for customer requirements in the advanced ~~te professor of history at Kings College, llvane, C '49, was elected design group. Prior to this, h e was respon­ , Ilk es-~arre, and Dr. Jane L. Phelps, G Robert E. Mc of si ble for engineering liaison with the Air 56, chauman of the department of history Vice-President-communications products Force Ballistic Missile Division for the at Misericordia College, Dallas, Pa., pre· the A naconda Wire and Cable Company of the company's Norair Division, Northrop Corp, Haw­ sented a parrallel discussion on "The at a recent meeting He and his family live thorne, Calif. United Nations and the Future of Ameri· board of directors. at Karen Way, Summit, N. ]. ~a n Foreign Policy" under the auspices of 51 he International Relations Club of Miseri­ C~l. Robert S. Puckett, USA, G '49, is 1950 cordia, recently. a member of the faculty of the Industrial College of the Armed Forces, at Fort B. Paul Blaine, Jr., FS '50, formerly . IJ_r. Harold C. Cordner, Jr., C '49, M '53, with Trans World Airlines in Washington . Lesley J. McNair. ~s In private practice of Anesthesiology is now an Associate for Transportation John J. Regan, FS '49, James B. Regan, ~ Hackensack Hospital, Hackensack, Research with Systems Analysis and Re­ C '52, and their brother, Peter F. Regan, c· J., as of J anuary 1, 1962. He and Mrs. search Corporation with offices in Wash­ are owners of Regan Brothers, Inc., Mont­ _ordner, (Pauline A. Frederick) N '54, re· ington. clair, N. ]., agency of Allied Van Lines. ~~d ~ at 5 Rev_ ere Road, Emerson, N. J ., and Williarn Peter Blatty, C '50, of Granada en, 3 girls and a boy, ages Their firm is continuing the operation of a>e four childr Hills, Calif., has recently sold a story 8 through 2. the Mullen Storage and Warehouse Com· which began operations in 1862 and called "Rhett Goldgarb, Please Come Robert J. Hogan C '49 was admitted pany, now is part of the Regan firm. Regan Home !" to Shirley Maclaine's production to the State Bar ~f Tex~s and is now the Brothers, Inc., celebrated their lOOth An­ company, and is c urrently writing P_racticing Law in Houston, Tex. He re· ne niversary on May 21 , at a dinner in the screenplay, in which Shirley Maclai sides at 5403 Beverly Hill Lane Apt. 8, of will star. Houston 27. Military Park Hotel in Newark ; one

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23 JULY, 1962 N. J., has been appointed as Assistant ruptcy." Professor Hart livP.s in Brockton, Georgetown Luncheon Attorney assigned to the Trenton office Mass., and is the father of five children. by U. S. Attorney David M. Spatz, Jr. Thomas R. Kingsley, FS '51, L '55, Gen· at the Robert R . Rovzar, FS '50, President of era! Manager of the Movers Conference California Bar Association the International Trade Association of of America, Washington, D. C., was one New England, was chairman of the execu­ of the principal speakers at the annual Convention ti ve committee which planned the 9,h meeting of the Heavy-Specialized Carriers groups held re· Sept. 19, 1962 World Trade Conference held in Boston, Conference and affiliated Wednesday, recently. cently in Detroit, Mich. He spoke on state at noon Dr. Ralph Sanders, FS '50, G '52, G '58, taxation of interstate commerce and the Beverly Gourmet Restaurant was promoted to Assistant Professor of 'need for uniformity of motor carrier regu· 460 North Canon Drive Political Science at the Industrial College lation. Beverly Hills, California of the Armed Forces, Washington, D. C. Aubrey B. Lank, L '51, of Wilmington, James C. Shannon, Jr., C '50, resides Del., was recently reappointed town solici· Col. Russell P. Bonasso, USA, G '50, has at 245 Andover St., Lowell, Mass., with tor for six months by Elsmere Council. been transferred to Fort Rucker, Ala., to his wife, Peggy, and six children. Gov. Elbert N. Carvel also named Mr. become Deputy President of the U. S. Francis S. Shieh, G '50, of the Eco· Lank a member of the State Highway Army Aviation Board. nomics Department of Aquinas College, Commission for a term expiring May 1, Dr. Robert Buckley, M' 50, lives in Grand Rapids, Mich., spoke at the Annual 1965. Santa Monica, Calif., and has eight chi!· International Services Program of the Dr. Thomas W. McCreary III, C '51, was dren, five daughters and three sons. Grand Rapids Rotary Club, which was recently certified by the American Board Dr. Joseph F. Chambers, C '50, M '54, host to foreign students and faculty mem· of Internal Medicine. He plans to leave is a Medical Officer in the Department of hers, April 12, in the Pantlind Ho tel. Boston in July and enter private practice Psychiatry at D. C. General Hospital, Mr. Shieh discussed news from the (Internal Medicine and ) Washington, D. C. Pacific. near his home in Western Pennsylvania. Col. Theodore H. Erb, USA, G '50, is David N. Suskind, FS '50, is Controller, He is married and has three children. a member of the faculty of the Industrial Miller Bros. Co., (Department Store) in Reverend Arthur F. McGovern, S.J., College of the Armed Forces, at Fort Chattanooga, Tenn. C '51, celebrated his first solemn High Lesley J . McNair, Washington, D. C. Capt. William M. Volz, USAF, C '50, is Mass on Sunday, June 17, in St. Catha· Alfred Hammon, FS '50, is Assistant to at Lowry AFB, Denver, Colo., where he rine's Church, Columbus, Ohio. A recep· to the Director of Port Commerce with has been stationed for about two years. tion was held that evening at the parish. the Port of New York Authority in New Father M cGovern was ordained with ten York. 1951 other Jesuits of the Detroit Province at Francis P. Hanrahan, C '50, of Los Colombiere College, Clarkston, Mich., on Angeles, Calif., spent a delightful four Joseph F. Awad, C '51, is with Reynolds Thursday, June 14. week skiing trip in Europe in early spring Metals in Chicago, Ill., as Regional Public Jo seph D. Shein, L '51 , is a partner in of this year and reports he is ready to go Relations Manager. the Law firm Shein & Beilaut, Philadel· again. Plato C. Cacheris, FS '51, L '56, has phia, Pa. Dr. Ben H. McConnell, M '50, will pre· been named first assistant United States Gazzola Vaccaro, Jr. , FS '51, is part sent an original research paper entitled, attorney for the Eastern district of Vir· owner of a lumber company, farmer, and "Host Defense and Chemotherapy in Ex· ginia. He resides at 1030 South Barton recently appointed Captain in Arkansas perimental Cancer" at the 8th Interna· St., Arlington, Va., with his wife, Ethel, State Police. He resides in Forrest City, tiona! Cancer Congress in Moscow, USSR, and two children. Ark., and has three boys. July 22-28. ]ames A. Carr, C '51, is Contract Ad· Capt. John R. McGoldrick, USAF, C ministrator, RCA Service Co., Govern· 1952 '50, is attending Armament Staff Officer ment Services Division, Los Angeles facil­ School at Lowry AFB, Denver, Colo., and ity a nd curren tl y administering EDGE Peter S. Arban, Jr., C '52, L '55, has upon graduation will return to Dow AFB (Electronic Data Gathering Equipment) opened his own Law office for the general in Bangor, Me. He is enjoying skiing in Project for the West Coast. practice of Law in Suite #4, Alexandria the Rockies after being unable to do any Jos eph A. Clark en, Jr., C '51, is an asso­ National Bank Building, 100 S. Royal St., while stationed on Guam. ciate of the Law firm of Mead, Gleeson, Alexandria, Va. Paul R . Obert, C '50, was elected Secre· Hansen & Pantages, with offices at 1180 Capt. William B. Dunbar, USAF, FS tary & General Counsel of H. K. Porter Raymond Blvd ., Newark 2, N. J. '52, and family are stationed at Wright· Company, Inc., Pittsburgh, Pa., at a recent Fr ederick M. Hart, C '51, L '55, has Patterson AFB, Dayton, Ohio. They have meeting of the Board of Directors. been named a full professor at Boston three children, Susan 6, Brian 4, and an Giacomo G. Rosati, C '50, of Trenton, College. He is editor of "Collier on Bank· infant son, Thomas Bart.

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24 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Compliments of J. FRANK KELLY INC.

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MELVERN HARDWARE- PAINTS- TOOLS ICE CREA M 2121 Georgia Ave., N.W. NOrth 7-1341 400 Calvert Avenue, Alexandria, Virginia PLENTY FREE PARKING King 8-0250 - Y. Williams, C '53, has become following graduation from Tulane Law David '52, is asso· alph W. Davis . Drd. John D. Franzoni, M School ; he was recently transferred from a partner in the firm of R c1ate · h h ' Andrew E. of the New York Stock Wit IS brother Dr. Gulf's New Orleans office to the main & Co., members GF ranz om· In· t h e prac,ice ' of and Exchange and Midwest Stock Exchange, office in Pittsburgh, Pa. thYnecology in Trenton, N. J ., and is on Walter H. Russell, FS '52, i s associated 180 West Adams St., Chicago, Ill. F ~I staff of St. Francis Hospital. He is a with Feranley & Eger, Inc., steamship com· / ow of the American College of Obstet· pany of New York City. News of his re· 1954 lcs and Gynecology. cent marriage appears elsewhere in these Mrs. Solange G. Huggins, (Solange C. Dr. Fred ]. Ackel, D '54 ,is President of Glgnac) G '52 h columns. I a d Ji • as been teaching French Dr. Richard M. Torack, M '52, was ap· the Broward County Young Republican Ida~o at. St. Teresa's Academy in Boise, pointed Neuropathologist at the Depart· Club, Second Vice·President of the NDEA This summer she will attend the men t of in Cornell Medical Broward County Dental Society and mem· stit Foreign Language Summer In· School and Assistant Professor of Path· her of the Association of American Ut ~t e at Utah State University, Logan, ology & Associate Attending Pathologist Dentists, an organization d edicated to a.· She was accepted at the NDEA combat any socialtistic inroads into the In at New York Hospital, commencing July 1, (5S lltuteh 'ld at G eorgetown but circums. tances Dental profession. 1962. ne c 1 hren) compel her to go to the o ne John C. Curran, Jr., C '54, has been ap· arer orne. pointed Financial Sales Manager of the Join. lame d As R.. HY d e, FS ' 5 2, of Akron, Ohw,. 1953 Financial Sales Office of the Ford Motor recently opened at 100 Pr ~ d ! side Homes Corporation as Vice· Bernard W. Baron, B '53, is President Credit Company 1961. Alside East 42nd St., New York City. Hoes! ent-Saies, in October, of the Kiwanis Club and Vice·President Philip ]. Griffin, FS '54, G '58, has been in ~ es Corporation will begin production of the Chamber of Com merce of Manhat· h ctober 1962 of the first mass·produced stationed at the American Embassy, Beirut, tan Beach, Calif. since February 1, where he is pursuing wome~. Prior to joining Alside Homes, he Dr. Jo seph H . Benes, M '53, is in the Manufac· a full time course in Arabic s,udies which tua ~ ICe·President-Sales and practice of at Hackensack Hos· ~~g for Scholz Homes in Toledo, Ohio. is due to last approxima

25 JULY, 1962 neuro-psychiatrist at St. Michael's Hos· pita), Newark, N. J. Alfred C. Ryan, Jr., B '55, recently joined Westinghouse Credit Corp., Pitts· burgh, Pa., as fin ancial sales manager. He will supervise the sale of short-term notes Compliments of or commercial papers to industrial and financial institutions. Dr. Pasquale W. Santagata, M '55, is practicing the specialty of Anesthesia at Stamford and St. Joseph's Hospitals in Stamford, Conn. John E. Toolan , C '55, L '59, is a broker as ociated with Hayden-Stone & Co., New York City; he has a seat on the New York Stock Exchange. George Van l/oomissen, L '55, GL '57, received the Democratic nomination for Harding Williams Eastern Corporation District Attorney of Multnomah County, Oregon, in the Primary election; this nomination is tantamount to election. Mr. Van Hoomissen served two terms in the Oregon Legislature, and for the last six years has taught Criminal Law at North· western College of Law in Portland, in addition to carrying on a legal practice in Food Management Specialists the Pacific Building, Portland, Ore. 1956 Thomas ]. Carolan, C '56, is stationed at the American Embassy in Beirut, where he is pursuing a full-time course in Arabic studies, due to last approximately 21 months. Dr. Ronald R. Eklind, C '56, D '60, upon completion of Naval Dental Internship at States Marshal for the District of Co­ Sales Representalivc for the Northwest St. Albans, L. 1., N. Y., was assigned to lumbia. Orient Airlines in New York. duty in Newport, R. 1., aboard the USS Frank ]. Ronan, C '54, is the District John R. Gallagher, III, L '55, has been Cascuale AD-16 and expects to spend from Manager for the Ridge Tool Company, apopinted Chief Counsel, Urban Renewal June to October in Europe. He was mar· Elyria, Ohio. He resides in Annandale, Section, Federal Housing Administration, ried in May, 1961 to the former Gail Voyt Va., and has three boys and one g irl. Washington, D. C. of Iowa. Dr. Edgar G. Sanner, Jr., C '54, will Peter ]. Kiron, Jr ., C '55, of Chicago, Donald R. Furth, C '56, is the father of complete his active duty service in the Ill., started his own Insurance Agency in four children: Donna, 4%; twins, Glenn U. S. Navy, as Medical Officer, and enter January 1958 and has qualified for the and Mary Ellen, 3~; and an infant son, residency training in Urology at Yale Uni­ Knight in Armour Life Leaders Produc­ Christopher. versity's Medical Center, Grace-New Haven tion Club ever year since. He was the Lt. John H. Haye s, C '56, L '59, legal Hospital, New Haven, Conn., in July, 1962. youngest agent appointed· by The Travelers officer at Shaw AFB, Sumter, S. C., was a Insurance Company. guest speaker r ecently at the regular meet· 1955 Theodore B. Kapp, FS '55, is a buyer ing of the Credit Women's Breakfast Club. for Sears Roebuck & Co., in Boston, Mass. Robert F. Hugh es, C '56, has been pro· Gordo11 R. Bennett, L '55, of H elena, News of his recent engagement appears moted to the position of Eastern Regional Mont., is a candidate for Associate Jus­ elsewhere in these column . sales Manager for Owosso Division of tice of the Montana Supreme Court. Emil R. Krahulik, USA, C '55, has com· Midland-Ross Corp., one of the country's Col. lames G. Black, USA, G '55, is on pleted the transportation movement con­ largest m anufac: urers of air and vacuum the faculty of the Industrial College of trol course at The Transportation School, brake systems and pneumatic door con· the Armed Forces at Fort Lesley J. Mc­ Fort Eustis, Va. He is regularly assigned trois. For the past two years, Mr. Hughes Nair, Washington, D. C. to the 199th Transportation Company, an has served as sales coordinator for Owosso. John S. Burns, Jr., B '55, of Arlington Army reserve unit which was recall ed to Toho Inoue, G '56, was recently ap· Heights, Ill., was appointed Assistant Re­ active duty and assigned to the Brooklyn pointed Sales Manager of the JAL Taiper gional Sales Manager-Contract Sales for Army Terminal. District Office. His new address is: Japan Mohawk Carpet Mills on May 1, 1962. Mrs. Bernard G. Miklos, (Catherine Air Lines Co., Ltd., Tapei District Office, James D. Butler, C '55, L '59, has been Pfeiffer), N '55, is living in Elizabeth, Pa., 143 C hungshan Road, North 1 Section, appointed an Assistant United States At­ where her husband is in practice in In­ Taipei, Taiwan. torney for the District of New Jersey, fol­ ternal Medicine and Neurology. News of SP/6 Anthony J. Kobus, USA, C '56, is lowing a visit, on pleasure, to nine Euro­ he recent marriage a ppears elswhere in serving with the 805th Station Hospital pean countries. thse columns. at Fort Chaffee, Ark. The Wilmington Russell R. DeBow, L '55, of Chicago, Dr. John F. Regan, M '55, of Rosell e, Reserve Unit was call ed up during the Ill., has been appointed by Mayor Daley N. J., has been named Medical Director Berlin crisis and assigned this s tation to to the post of deputy commissioner of of the Middlesex County Mental Health open the post hospital and to provide investigation. Clinic at an annual salary of $18,000. Dr. medical support for some 17,000 troops. Frank B. Enneis, FS '55, formerly with Regan also conducts a private practice in He hopes to return to his family who re· the United States Lines in Japan, is now Psychiatry and is an assistant attending mained in Middle:own, Del., and to his

26 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE signed to the Business and Economic Re­ search D epartment of the First National LOCAL ALUMNI , ATTENTION! ALUMNI OUTSIDE OF Bank of Chicago as an economic analys t on the bank's international and domestic Join in the Home Hospitality Progrom WASHINGTON monthl y busin ess reviews. for Georgetown's foreign stud ents. Invite Be host to a foreign stu­ Dr. Eleanor M. Tylka , M '56, is Chi ef one or more students for a dinner on Resid ent at the Children's Hospital in Sunday or an evening in your home, or dent from Georgetown visit­ Piusburgh, Pa. News of her r ecent mar­ a trip to some nearby place of interest. schedule your own ere in these columns. You will be able to ing your city. Send us your ri age appears elsewh activity, as frequently as you like. First, is a name and address and spe­ Dr. Joh n S. Whelan, C '56, M '60, we have to compile a roster. Phone In Resid ent at St. Mary's Hospital, your name, class, address, phone number cific foreign interests, if any. Rochester, N. Y. News of his recent mar­ and any particular foreign interest you Address Foreign Student Ad­ riage appears elsewhere in these columns. may have. We'll try to fo ll ow through from there. Phone Alumni House, viser, Georgetown Univer­ FEderal 7-3300, Ext. 253. 1957 sity, Washington 7, D. C. Dr. William R. Ayers, C '57, M '61, has completed his internship at Grady Me­ and will ent er th e USAF in Jul y. News of morial Hospital, Atl anta, Ga ., and w1Il his recent marriage appears elsewhere in Position with Hercules Powder Company enter the U. S. Public Health Service th ese columns. in Wilmin gton when his Unit is released shortl y. Thomas A. Vett er, C '57, is attending from ac tive duty in mid-August. john Paul Ban.jak, L '57, is Presiden t of the Law School of the University of 1st Lt. Franklin Donald Mar,;iotta, c., Boston, Mass. News Administration, In Missouri. USAF, FS '56, has been made a regular of his recent marriage appears elsewhere Richard S. Wagn er, C '57, is man agin g officer and sent to Squadron Officer's in these col umns. School at Maxwell AFB, Ala. Capt. Monroe Cole, USA, M '57, ~ e ­ his famil y's Lawn Seed Division Plant in Rev. L eo Henry McCarthy, C '56, was centl y completed the Medical FICld Semce New Jersey. He ha two c hildren, Vic­ ord ained to the Priesthood by His Exce l­ Schoo l's military orientation course at toria 3, and Richard 1, and lives at 1 lency The Most Reverend Donal Lamon t, Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Birchwood Ct., Min eola, N. Y. g-Carn~., D.C., on Saturday, June 2, at the Houston, Tex. armehte Junior Seminary, Hamilton, Richard M. Co/email, C '57, GL '61, r_e­ 1958 ~a ss. He celebrated his first Solemn ceived his LL.B. degree from H arva rd ~n ass on Sunday, June 3, at Our Lady William / . Bate, L '58, who is in the 1960 was awarded a Prettyman Fdlowslup Star of the Sea Church Marblehead, Mass. ( ] ~ga l intern eship in volving tnal work general practice of Law at 130 Park Slope, h· Frank J. McGee, GL' '56, has a~no un ce ? a defense counsel for indigent s) at Clifton, N. J., has been adm illed to prac­ ~ d . A IS candidacy for th e DemocratiC nomi ­ Georgetown Law Center,. an m ugust tice befor e the Unit ed States Supreme n_a tion f or Congress in th e 12th Co ngres­ Court. 1961 was appointed Assistant U. S. At- Iona] District of . He is a torney' for D . C· Recentl y, he. transferr.e d Dr. Dominick Cruciani, Jr., M '58, is Practicing attorn ey in Plymouth County to a post as Trial Attorney With a SpeciU! completing h is Op

27 JULY, 1962 Lt. Ronald W. Olson, USNR, GL '58, to enter the private practice of Law with beginning her second year in Ghana at participated in LOGEX 62, a two-week offi ces in Suite 3620, The Le Veque-Lincoln Holy Family Hospital, which has 96 beds, command post logistics exercise and map Tower, 50 West Broad St., Columbus 15, serving a considerable area of many maneuver at Fort Lee, Va., in May. Ohio. villages, and is conducted by the Medical William Cullen Patton, C '58, is with Warren J. Heeg, Jr., FS '59, is employed Mission Sisters. She is gradually master· the Investment Advisory Division of the as director of sales promotion and adver­ ing "Twi", the natiYe language. Bankers Trust Company in New York tising for Hohmann & Barnard, Inc., in Michael J. Petite, C '59, is in his senior City. News of his recent engagement ap· Woodside, N. Y. Recently, he participated year in the Medical School of Ohio State pears elsewhere in these columns. in LOGEX 62, a two-week command post University. News of his recent engage· Thomas J. G. Quigley, C '58, is the logistics exercise and map maneuver at ment appears elsewhere in these columns. father of three children: Deborah 1, Fort Lee, Va. Specialist H eeg is assigned Edward F. Sherman, C '59, has been Sharon 2, and an infant son, Thomas to the 353rd Civil Affairs Area Head­ awarded an interneship in State and Local Michael. quarters, an Army Reserve unit in New Politics by th e National Center for Edu· Dr. Philip T. Rodilosso, M '58, has com­ York, N. Y. cation in Politics, formerly the Citizen· pleted his tour of duty with the U. S. Robert A. Hickey, L '59, recently with ship Clearing House. He will serve on the Public Health Service, Atlanta, Ga. He the Department of Just ice, announces hi s staff of Governor Grant Sawyer, L '48, has returned to medical residency at Mt. association with Russell D. Miller for the of Nerada, where he hopes to make use of Alto Hospital, Wash ington, D. C. general practice of L aw and the practice his work in land use planning at the Dr. Robert J. Thom as, D '58, who has of Administrative Law before the Federal Harva rd Law School, where he received been associated in general practice of Banking Agencies, wiih offices at 711 14th his Law degree in June, 1962. Dentistry with his brother, Dr. Edwin M. St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Dr. Richard A. Sniffen, D '59, has en· Thomas, D '46, has recently opened an LTJG Edward M. Holm es, USNR, C '59, tered private practice of Dentistry in office on Swarthmore Road, Wellesley, was recently designated a bombadier/ Hyde Park, N. Y. Mass. navi ga tor and assigned to Heavy Attack Dr. Peter Philip Totaro, D '59, has en· Squadron Five. He has been flyin g in a tered private practice of Dentistry in twin jet bomber; expects to be sent to the Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 1959 ll'!editerranean in late summer. William F. Vail, FS '59, is working in Capt. Bernard E. Belisle, USA, D '59, Th omas ]. Jenkins, Jr., B '59, i s a the Finance Control Department of Minne· recentl y completed the Medical Field Registered Rep resentative of The New apolis-Honeywell Co., Aero Division, St. Service School's military orientation course York Stock Exchange with Rouse, Brewer, Petersburg, Fl a. News of his recent mar· at Brooke Army 'Vl edi cal Center, Fort Sam Becker and Bryant, Inc., 8521 Colesville riage appears elsewhere in these columns. Houston, Tex. Road, Silver Spring, Md. Anthony M. Vernava, Jr ., '59, has mo ved Dr. Sleven J. Conway, M '59, is serving Richard C. Killeen., C '59, has been from Cambridge, Mass., to 150 Betty Road, his residency in Medicin e at the D. C. promoted t o the position of d epartment New Hyde Park, N. Y. General Hospital, Washington, D. C. He manager of Men's Furnishings at the Dr. Jon H. W etz, D '59, has entered has two daughters, Kathleen and Colleen. G. Fox & Co., department store, Hart· private practi ce of Dentistry in Highland Edward D. CosgroL·e, L '59, is wi th the ford , Conn. Falls, N . Y. FBI, and has been transferred from Jack­ William S. Linsenmeyer, C '59, is work· ing as a private English tu tor to Prince onville, Fla. to Baltimore, Md. 1960 ]ames G. Duffy, C '59, is sales repre­ Sattam, brother to King Saud of Saudi Arabia, in Alberton, Calif. sentative for James B. Hunt Manufactur­ Samuel A. DeGonge, L '60, of Kearny, Hub ert L. Longua, Jr., C '59, after ing Company, Trent on, N. J. News of his N. 1., passed the New Jersey Bar exami· spending the last three yea rs since gradua­ recent marriage appears elsewhere in these nations and was admitted to the bar at tion as a Liuetenant in the Marine Corps, columns. ceremonies before Supreme Court in Tren· has been discharged and can be reached Mary Jo Grotenrath , L '59, resigned as ton, N. 1., on April 30. ut his home address- 344 North Mountain assistant elections counsel in the office of Marie 1'. Driscoll, FS '60, has been Ave., Upper Montclair, N. 1. the Secretary of State of Ohio in March elected secretary of th e Legal Aid Bureau, Francis P. Mead, C '59, was commis­ Harvard Law Schol, where she is a second sioned a second li e ut e n ~ nt in the United year student. States Air Force upon graduation from Dr. Fr ederic L. Gannon, Jr., M '60, is Offi cers Training School at Lackl and AFB, on th e Psychiatric s taff of St. Vincent's Tex. Hospital, New York City. His mother, Dr. Robert J. Murren, D '59, has an­ DON'T JUST BUY MILK- Mrs. Frederic L. Gannon of West Hemp· nounced the opening o f an office for the stead, L. I., was awarded the St. Catherine practice of general Dentistry a t 33 Main GET THE BEST -BUY of Sienna Medal, given each year by St., Danbury, Conn. Molloy Catholic College for Women to an Sister Fernande M. Pelletier, M '59, is outstandin g wo man in the field of Catholic Action. Eugene Margolis, L '60, GL '62, is a RUBBER STAMPS trial attorney with the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice, Washington, RUBBER PRINTING PLATES D. C. News of his recent engagement ap· pears e lsewhere in these columns. CORP. & NOTARY SEALS Jack Carl Pepper, GL '60, is employed Call AD. 2-1011 for in the office of th e Chief Counsel of the AMITY RUBBER STAMP Internal Revenue Service, Washington, convenient home delivery, COMPANY D. C. News of his recent engagement appears elsewhere in these columns. or choose Sealtest Milk 1127 9th STREET, N.W. Jam es Francis Sheridan, C '60, has (Between L and M Streets) joined the Benedictine Order, St. Anselm's in food stores. Abbey, 14t h and South Dakota Ave., N.E., ADams 2-3141 Washington 17, D. C. His name in religion is Dom Mark Sheridan. Joseph M. Stephen, I '50, was recentlY

28 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE promoted to specialist four in Germany 2d Lt. Stephen S. Hall, C '61, has com· orientation course at The Infantry School, where he is a member of the 28th Artillery pleted the officer orientation course at the Fort Benning, Ga. stationed in Bad Kissingen. U. S. Army Armor School, Fort Knox, Ky. Dr. Louis J. Sacco, D '61, has opened Dr. Metin Tamkoc, G '60, has been As­ Donald Francis Flavin, Jr., S '61, is an office for the practice of Dentistry at sistant Professor and Acting Chairman associated with Charles Francis Press, 1936 Grant Blvd ., Syracuse, N. Y. of the Department of Public Administra· Inc., of New York. News of his recent 2d Lt. John J. Sponski, USA, C '61, tion at the Middle East Technical Uni· engagement appears elsewhere in these completed the artillery officer basic course versity at Ankara, Turkey since 1960. Dr. columns. at The Artill ery and Missile School Fort Tamkoc has recently published an article Jst Lt. Stanley J. Clod, USA, L '61, com· Sill, Okla., recentl y. ' "'The Question of the Recognition of the pleted the officer orientation course at the Armas I. Suni, FS '61, is a Trainee in Republic of Turkey by the United States" Infantry School, Fort Benning, Ga., in the International Traffic Department of in the Turkish Yearbook of International May. Ford Motors in De rborn, Mich. Relations /or 1961. David Englar Hohman, FS '61, is with Elizabeth Ann Trainer, N '60, is on the the Department of Health, Education and 1962 faculty of St. Peter's Hospital, New Bruns· Welfare in Washington, D. C. News of his wick, N. J. News of her recent marriage recent engagement appears elsewhere in Pe:er Beardslee App, C '62, has been appears elsewhere in these columns. th ese columns. awarded a Pennsylvania Gubernatorial Horace L. Johnson, B '61, has been em· Scholarship to study Medicine at the 1961 ployed by the Electronic Industries Asso· School of Medicine of Temple University, ciation· since graduation. He is the father Philadelphia, Pa. Dr. John J. Corcoran, M '61, and Mrs. of two sons, Timothy, 2 years old, and Thomas George Balderston, C ·'62, has Corcoran, (Madolyn Christine Mam· an infant son, Christopher Clement. been awarded a Fellowship to study Bustness Administration by the Grad moser), N '60, will be stationed with 812 2d Lt. Randolph M. Kennedy, B '61, uate School of Business Administration of Medical Group, Walker Air Force Base, has entered pilot the University of Chicago. New Mexico, commencing September 1, training at Webb AFB, Tex. He will Ay Robert William 1962. Dr. Corcoran will be a Captain in T·37 and T·33 jets during the year·long Bertrand, C '62, has been awarded an Adenauer Scholarship the USAF. flying training course. 2d Lt. Michaeel H. Devlin USA, by the Federal Republic of Germany to , B '61, A. Paul Lanzillotta, L '61, has been ap· recently completed the officer embarkation stud y at Munich, Germany. pointed Trust Officer of the Old Dominion orientation course at The Transportation Francis Samuel Brocato, C '62, has Bank of Arlington, Va. The Trust De· School, Fort Eustis, Va. been awarded a Scholarship by the Law partment is located in the newly expanded Hunt T. Dickinson, Jr., FS '61, has School of th e · niver ity of Pennsylvania. space at the Court House Branch of Old been promoted from a Washington Sales Jam es Kenneth Connell, C '62, has Dominion Bank on Wilson Blvd. Representati ve to Senior Sales Repre· been awarded a Scholarship by the Grad· ~e ntativ e for the Varig Brazilian Airlines 2d Lt. Raphael A. Riccio, USA, FS '61, uate. School of Columbia University for tn Miami, Fla. recently completed th e eight·week officer Russian area studies, and has also been

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JULY, 1962 29 awarded a Scholarship by the School of School of Georgetown University. Mi ss Sally Fay Gellman of Arling­ Ad.vanced International Studies, Johns Paul H. Mattingly, C '62, will study ton, Va . Hopkins University, to study International for his M. A. in History at the Univer­ Jack Carl Pepper, GL '60, and Miss Pa· Relations at Bologna, Italy. sity of Wisconsin in 1962-63. tricia Ann Todd of Washington, D. C. Jo seph Aloysius Devine, Jr. , C '62, has Neil Justin McCarthy, C '62, has been Richard John Dixon, FS '61, and Miss been awarded a Schol arship by the Grad­ awarded Assistantships to study Chemistry Mary Louise Schneider of Cl eveland, uate School of the University of Virginia. by the Graduate Schools of Iowa State Ohio. Dr. Da vid Jos eph Gorman, M '62, will University and Purdue University. He Dr. Robert R . Duhamel, M '61, and Miss intern at Mercy . Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y. has also received Honorable Mention by Claudette E. Parent of Somerse t, Mass. He will reside at 143 'H ancock St. News th e National Science Foundation. Donald Francis Fla vin, ]r., C '61, and of his recent marriage appears elsewhere Brian John Oak, C '62, has been award­ Miss Sally Lee Murphy of Bright­ in th ese columns. ed a Scholarship to study Medicine by waters, N. Y. ]am es Walter Gu edry, C '62, has been th e Medical School of Yale University. Dr. George C. Flynn, D '61, and Miss awarded a Sch olarship by International William Maurice Risen, Jr., C '62, has Joyce Ann Crowley of West Hartford, Rotary to study History at the University bee n awarded Assistantships in Chem­ Conn. of Brussels, Belgium. ist ry by th e University of Michigan and David Englar Hohman, FS '61, and Miss John Samuel Haller, C '62, has bee n Iowa State University of Science ; and Judith Elizabeth Stuart o( Washing­ awarded an Assistantship to study His­ in Tchnology by Purdue University. ton, D. C. tory by the Graduate School of John Philip Lawrence Quinn, C '62, has bee n Lt. George M. Verdisco, USAF, C '61, ~a rroll University. awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study and Miss Anne Marie Petrucione of David A. Harn ett, C '62, has been Philosophy at Lou vain, Belgium; and in Wes tfield, N. J. awarded a grant by th e Ekblom Founda­ addition, he has been awarded a Fellow­ Ca rol Ann Porcelli, N '62, and Dr. Robert tion to study History at Harvard. ship by th e Danforth Foundati on to study Thomas Cosentino, C '58, M '62 of Nicholas John Kilm er, C '62, has been Philosophy at any University of his choos­ Auburn, N. Y. award ed a Fellowship to study English by ing. Also, the Graduate School of Yale the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. University has offered him a schol arship Robert Courtney Mangone, C '62, has to study Philosophy. been awarded a Scholarsl\ip by the Law John Robert Scott, C '62, has been ?na1z.1z.ia9es awarded a Scholarship by th e Law School ,__ of Northwestern University. ___ Gregory F. Sullivan, C '62, will attend the Medical School of New York Uni­ John F. Butler, C '30, to Mrs. Emily versity. .JJ.aw£in:J (j/a:J:J McLean Shettle in New York City, on Paul John Tagliabue, C '62, has been May 5. awarded a Ben Snow Scholarship by the Rev. J. Stewart Labat, FS '46, to Miss Company, .!}nc. Law School of New York University. Mi ss Anne Tilghman Lytle in St. Peter's Episcopal Church, Lakewood, Rear 43 M Street, N.W. Ohio, on May 12. John Joseph Ford Ill, FS '52, to Miss WASHINGTON, D. C. Lola L. Casentini in San Francisco, Calif., on May 19. MEtropolitan 8-4520 Walter Hildreth Russell, FS '52, to Miss Erin Marie Roach in the Chapel ol Theodore B. Knapp, FS '55, and Miss Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Pelham Jane Stella Stasz of North Newport, Manor, N. Y., on April 24. Mass. Charles Vin cent Sheehan, Jr. , C '52, to Dr. Donald ]. Dowler, C '57, M '61, and Mi ss Susan Ellen Rosar in Saint Jo­ Miss Loan Leritz of Taylorsville, Ill. seph's Church, Bronxville, N. Y., on John Joseph Labash, Jr., C '57, and on May 26. Miss Carol Mary Hogan of Mountain Dr. Jos eph M. Baldwin, M '54, to Miss THE S. S. WHITE Lakes, N. J. Helen M. Flood in Our Lady of the Dr. Raymond E. Mayer, D '57, and Miss Most Bl essed Sacrament Church East DENTAL MFG. COMPANY Lois A. Kinney of Morristown, N. J . Orange, N. ]., on May 12. Dr. Martin Lester R yan, M '57, and Ca th erine W. Pfeiffer, N '55, to Dr. Ber­ Miss Virginia Lee Viens of Green­ nard G. Miklos in Saint Ann's Church, • fi eld, Mass . Cleveland Heights, Ohio, on April 28. Carol B. Kwiatkowski, N '58, and Dr. Frank I. Van Steenberg, Jr., C '55, to DENTAL EQUIPMENT Walther Bohne of Karlsruhe, Germany. Miss Anne O'Connor in Dallas, Tex., on Lionel U. Mailloux, C '58, and Miss April 28. AND SUPPLIES Catherine Ondrey of Manhasset, N. Y. Neil P. Dungan, C '56, to Miss J ean Law Harry Musikas, FS '58, and Miss Cynthia on March 17. Russell of Stamford, Conn . Lt. Cdr. David Jo seph Keeney, USN, L • William Cullen Patton, C '58, and Miss '56, to Miss Marga ret Mary Gallagher Beverly Conger Smith of Darien, Conn. in St. Thomas Aquinas Church, Buffalo, PREMIER BUILDING Robert T. Constantino, C '59, and Miss N. Y., on March 10. Maryann Gerchak of Southington, Conn. Dr. Har vey A. Lewis, M '56, to Dr. Maria 1725 Eye Street, N.W. Dorothy Bernardine Doty, L '59, and Mr. Kl ement in the Church of St. Francis John Ryan Duffy of Jac"sonville, Fla. Washington 6, D. C. of Assisi, Philadelphia, on April 28. Michael J. Petite, C '59, and Miss J ean­ Dr. Eleanor M. Tylka, M '56, to Mr. nette Alessio. John L. Hoffman in Waynesburg, P a., FEderal 8-9310 John W. Coleman, Jr ., C '60, and Miss on March 16. Rosemary Elizabeth Romano of Brook­ Dr. John S. Wh elan, C '56, M '60, to Miss lyn, N. Y. Diane Elizabeth Kolb in Hol y RosarY Eugene Margolis, L '60, GL '62, and Church, Rochester, N. Y., on May 5.

30 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE Coll een Conway, daughter of Frank E. Barrows, M.P.L. '14, in Glen John Paul Ban jak, L '57, to Miss Eliza· Dr. Steven J. Conway, M '59, on December 2, 1961. Ridge, N.J. beth Abbott Washburn in East Green· A boy to Lawrence F. Corroon, C '48, Enoch Brown, L '17, in Germantown, D wich, R. 1., on May 5. born March 2, 1962- adopted April r. _William A. Tedesco, Jr. , C '57, to Tenn. M1ss Patricia Ann O'Neil in St. Rose's 11, 1962. Hans P. Caemm erer, LL.B. '24, in Mary Catherine Dillon, daught er of Dr. Church, Hampton, Va., on June 23. Washington, D. C. John S. Dillon, C '52, M '56, on March Rob ert Stanley Schoshinski L '58 GL '59 Theresa Carmalt, F.S. ' 54, in Washing· toM'I SS Joan L orrain e Ga' llaghe' r in St.' 29, 1962. Thomas Bart Dunbar, son of Capt. Wil· ton, D. C. Anthony's Church, Washington, D. C., liam B. Dunbar, USAF, FS '52, re· Charles W. Cassidy, A.B. '12, in Nor· on May 5 G . . wich, Conn. eraldtne Louise Weakley, FS '58, to Dr. cently. A granddaughter to Dr. Leonard P. Casil· !ohn Paul Wissinger, C '58, M '62, Ja ck E. Cochrane, LL.B. '38, in Arling· lo, D '38, on March 17, 1962. In the Navy Chapel, Washin gton, D. C., ton, Va. Joshua Peter Cohn, son of Albert' Linn Dr. Frank P. Corrao, B.S.M. '30, M.D. Don May 19. Cohn , C '48, on March 11, 1962. orothy Bernardine Doty, L '59, to Mr. '32, in Maryland, N. Y. Christopher Connor Furth, son of Donald John Ryan Duffy i n St. Joseph's Church, R. Furt.h, C '56, on March 5, 1962. William F. Curtin, A.B. '18, in New VPlainfield, N. J., on May 12. Christopher Clement John son, son of Britain, Conn. zn cent Anthony Perciaccante C '59 to M· ' ' Hora ce L. Johnson, B '61, on April 21, Edward P. Dalton, C '30, in Poultney, S ISS Antoinette Carmela Marciano in t. John Evangelist R. C. Church, Brook· 1962. Vt. 1 Cathe.rine Ann Jones, d aughter of Mrs. Hugh F. Doherty, A.B. '14, in Jersey yn, N. Y., on June 10. Audrey Wojcik ]ones, N '59, on March Gerald Edward Sussman C '59 L '62 City, N. J. to M' , ' ' 15, 1962. S ISS Rob ert a S pi egel in B 'Nai Israel Peter 1. Kiron 11£, son of Peter J. Kiron, William Joseph Earthman, C '63, in ynagogue, W ashington, D. C., on Jr ., C '55, on September 24, 1961. Charlottesville, Va. J une 10. Twin boys to Ralph B. Kohnen, Jr., C '57, Francis ]. Fitzgerald, LL.B. '25, in Sil· W~liam F. Vail , FS '59, to Miss Lora grandsons of Hon . Ralph B. Kohn en, Kat%;well in Cl earwater, Fla., o n March 3 . ver Spring, Md. L '28, recently . G een Dorothy Fogarty, N '60, to Robert Michael Marino, s on of Dr. Albert Dr. Robert P. Fl ynn, D.D.S. '46, in . eorge F. Stradar, Jr., C '56, L '61, S. Marino , D '60, on December 20, 1961. Washington, D. C. ~ St. Patrick's Church, Newburgh, Donal Fox M astrangelo, son of Angelo A. Alice J, Gibbons, B.S.F.S. '57, in Silver w· ·. Y., on May 5. Mastrangelo, C '53, L '55, on April ~l~am Richard Lynch II, C '60, to Miss Spring, Md. 25, 1962. S hzabeth Rose Garvin in the Church of Terese Ann McKee, daughter of Richard Dr. Ortille A. Grove, D.D.S. '15, in Long t. Philip Neri, New York City, on P. MeKee, C '52, recently. Beach, Calif. J une 2. Diane Cl . Ph . Ruth Ann Migliorelli, daughter of Dr. Ch ristopher J. Hagan, A.B. '00, in Phila· D fj azre oemx, N '60, to ]ames G. Frank A. Migliorelli, M '57, on April S u Y, C '59, in Notre Dame Church, delphia, Pa. 12, 1962. El' outhbridge, Mass. , on May 12. Antonia Jessica Mu lvihill, daughter of John ]. Hickey, L '10, in Nutley, N. J. .zzabeth Ann Trainer N '60, to Lt. (j.g.) Anthon y D. M. Mul vihill, C '60, and Dr. Martin A. Jo yce, M.D., '55, in Tren· ~~m Gilmore Gilfillan III, USN, in St. Mrs. Mulvihill, (Brenda Hayes), FS o~a s Church, Wood bridge N. J. on ton, N. J. A pnl 28 ' ' 60, on March 29, 1962. Maureen Therese Murphy, daughter of Dr. John F. Keating, B.S. '24, in New Mary p atn·.. cw Brasted N '61 t o Dr Tho ' Dr. John D. Murphy, D '59, on April York, N. Y. 7as E. Murphy, M '62, ' on July· 15 18, 1962. Dr. Edward G. Kerans, D.D.S. '33, in ' 961. Mary Elizabeth Pulaski, daughter of Dr. L t R' I Rockville, Md. . zc lard E. Horo wicz FS '61 to Miss John E. Pulaski, M '44, on March RCabobb . Y ~ L ee Barrow ' in St. ' Frances Cyprian P. Lancaster, D '14, in Wash­ 29, 1962. W ;1n1 Catholic Church, Tacoma, Sean Neil Ragan, son of William F. ington, D. C. D as 1., recently. Ragan, C '43, L '48, recently. John J. Lichtenwalner, LL.B. '14, in rF Jos eph R. Natiella , D '61, to Miss Thomas Michael Quigley, son of Thomas Seattle, Wash. thances X. Sullivan in the Church of ]. G. Quigley, C '58, on December 6, e Annunciation, Williamsport, Pa., Dr. John J. Malinowski, M. '25, in Jer· on May 12. 1961. Seth Gary Sanders, son of Dr. Ralph sey City, N. J. MaryJ L ynn West, N 61, to Dr. David Sanders, FS '50, G '52, G '58, on April Dr. Dav M.D. poseph Gorman, M '62, in Our Lady of id J. Maloney, '36, in 8, 1962. Olean, N. Y. eace Church, Shaker H eights, Oh io, on Thomas Joseph Smith, son of Alfred E. May 19. Smith, FS '50, on November 17, 1961. Clarence E. Moore, F.S. '23 in Monte· Patrick Thomas Stratton, adopted son of video, Uruguay. Lt. Richard A. Stratton, USN, C '55, Major Asa B. Mustain, LL.B. '14, LL.M. on February 9, 1962. '15, M.P.L., '15, in Washington, D. C. Kurt Edward Zurmuhlen, son of Edward ]. Zurmuhlen, C '57, on December 27, Charles F. O'Connell, LL.B. '22, in Washington, 1961. D. C. George T. O'Neill, L '39, in Hyattsville C~~i s topher Ross Ayers, son of Dr. Wil· Md. ' Lam R. Ayers C '57, M '61, o n Feb· ruary 9, 1962.' John R. T. Reeves, LL.B. '05, in Wash­ KathG erin e Man . e Beuchert, daughter of ington, D. C. eorge H. Beuchert, Jr., B '46, L ' 49, Dr. ]. Ernest Smith, D.D.S. '03, in Mon. May 18, 1962. Hon . Henry F. Ashurst, LL.D. '20, in 1 Washington, D. C. oBuck/n1 ca B uc kl· ey, daughter of Dr. Robert Washington, D. C. Dr. fohn F. Zychowicz, M.D. '11, in Th ey, M '50, recentl y. Edmund W. Bache, A.B . '18, in Pied· Corn as Sta cy C arran, son of Lewis Cass Scranton, Pa. mont, Calif. arran II I, C '58, on April 3, 1962. 31 JU LY, 1962 Georgetown Alumni Association 3604 0 Street, N. W. Washington 7, D. C.

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DIRECTORS OF FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP Fast ·Fair· Friendly JOHN C. TYLER ROBERT E. EARLY MORGAN DOYLE Co -Chairman of Executive Director, Georgetown '25 Ll~ the Board Farmers E. A. HEAFEY Underwriters Ass'n. Formers Insurance Group THOMAS E. LEAVEY Georgetown '23 Ll6 Co-Chairman of GEORGE S. ECCLES AUTO • LIFE • FIRE • TRUCK • COMMERCIAL CLAIR PECK, JR. the Board JOHN M. REILY Georgetown '23 LLB, A. J. EYRAUD '50 LLD