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Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus

NOTRE DAME

the emergence

Alumni dialogue

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mmms••• 'i^Vr*,^ Cotnpendium UNIVERSITY East Gallery, O'Shaugh­ by the Dept of Theology's soc. prof, of phil., awarded nessy Hall, May 9-Iune 9. Grad. Prog, in Liturgical a senior fellowship by the CALENDAR Studies. National Foundation on Apr. 21-22. Meeting of Ad­ BOOKS Apr. 11, South Bend Junior the Arts and Humanities visory Councils of Colleges League Seminar. for work on his book of Business Administration, Baymond C. Gutschidc "Theory and Practice from proL of geology, "Bedrock Apr. 15. Adult Education Science, Engineering and Assn. Indiana ConL Marx to Contemporary So­ the Library. Geology," in Indiana Ses- viet Philosophy." quicentennial Volume of Apr. 27-29. Ohio Valley May 2. Senior Class Din­ Conf. sponsored by the ner sponsored by the "Natural Features of In­ diana, 1966." Dept of Soc. GRANTS Alumni Association. May 2-4, Professioncd Edu­ Aerospace Engineering, May 3-7. Meeting of Alum­ Frederick Gusherst '46, ed., "The Quotable Fulton J. cators as Supervisors ConL $15,000 from Naval V/eap- ni Board and Senate. May 4, Priests in Contem­ ons Lab for research in May 5-S, Meeting of Ad­ Sheen," a collection of over 1,000 of Bishop Sheen's porary Society, a national basic dynamics and fluid visory Councils of the Col­ meeting to examine priest­ mechanics of free flight lege of Arts and Letters quotations, Droke House, $4.95. ly vocations, education and under the direction of Dr. and Law School. counselling, sponsored by Jolm Nicolaides, prof, of May S-S, Meeting of Board John W. Houck '54. asst. aerospace engr. prof, of bus. and A. Ed­ Theo. Dept and College of Lay Trustees. Seminary Dept Center for the Study of May S, Old-Timers Game. ward Manier '53, asst prof, Man in Contemporary So­ of phiL, ed., "Academic May 8-10, Human Sdences May 17, Presidential Re­ & the Church Conf., a na­ ciety. $125,000 from AID view—Army, Navy and Air Freedom and the Catholic for study of family and fer­ University," a collection of tional meeting of Protestant Force ROTC. ministers. tility changes in Latin May 19-20, Low Assn. Di­ papers given at the ND America under the direc­ symposivmi on academic May 11, South Bend Estate rectors Meeting. Planning Council ConL tion of Donald N. Barrett May 23, Last Class Day. freedom held last April, asst prof, of soc. Fides Publishers. May 12, Frontiers of US May 24-31, Final Exams. Regional Development Chemistry Department. June 2-3, Senior Class Day William T. liu, proL of soc., $72,430 from NSF for sum­ ed., "Chinese Society Un­ Planning Conf. Exercises. May Zl, Indiana Civil mer institute for chemistry der Communism: A Read­ teachers under the direc­ June 4. Commencement. er," a comprehensive treat­ Rights Commission Conf. June 9-11. Class Reunions. Moy 22-24. National Coun­ tion of Dr. Emil T. Hofman, ment of social patterns in assoc. prot of chem. modern China, Jan., John cil of Catholic Women Re­ gional Training Inst Chemistry Department. THE ARTS Wiley & Sons, Inc. $35,000 from NSF for chem­ Apr. 4-15, First Annual Fes­ Bev. Thomas T. McAvoy istry equipment under the tival of Contemporary Arts, CSC '25, University archi­ FACULTY direction of Dr. Ernest Eliel, sponsored by the ND Cul­ vist, "Father CHara of John T. Canty, instr. Gen­ dept head. tural Commission and Notre Dame," a compre­ eral Program, awarded a South Bend businessmen, hensive biography of the National Foundation on the Chemistry Department, the event will feature late Cardinal - Archbishop Arts and Humanities Fel­ $40,000 from NASA for re­ poetry, music, dance, the­ of Philadelphia, UND Press. lowship to study at Oxford search on polymers under ater and films. Bev. Timothy McCarthy OP U., England during 1968. the direction of Dr. G. University Band, Concert, (John Joseph McCarthy '58), ProL Vincent P. DeSontis, Frank D'Alelio, research Stepon Center, Apr. 7. "The Postconciliar Chris­ history dept head, award­ prof, of chem. Northern European Art, the tian," a full-length treat­ ed a Fulbright Fellowship Badiation Lab, $1,055,830 Permanent Collection, East ment of the priesthood of to lecture in American po­ from the AEC for continued Gallery, O'Shaughnessy the laity, April, P. J. Ken­ litical history in Italy. research on the effects of Hall, Apr. 9-May 2. edy & Sons. Dr. Bobert "E. (Sordon. proL radiation on matter under Folk Festival, Stepon Cen­ of bio. and dept head, the direction of Dr. Milton ter, Apr. 14-16. elected chairman of the Burton, prof, of chem. Irwin Dmer, Viola Concert, CENTER FOR board of directors of the Badiation Laboratory. Library Audit., Apr. 19. CONTINUING Council on Biologiccd Sd­ $4,500 from AEC for work Hans-Martin Linde, Record­ EDUCATION ences Information. on the fifth international er Concert, Library Audit., Apr. 1, River Bend National Thomas J. Jemielty, asst conference on the current Apr. 28. Secretaries Assn. Conf. prof, of English, awarded of radiation chemistry of "How To Succeed in Busi­ Apr. 7-9, Indiana Chapter a fellowship by the Na­ water under the direction tional Foundation on the of Dr. Milton Burton, prof, ness Without Beally Try­ American College of Sur­ of chem. ing," ND-SMC Theatre, geons. Arts and Humanities for O'Loughlin Audit, May 4-7 Apr. 9-10, Bishops Liturgi­ work on a book dealing Economics Department, and 11-13. with Samuel Johnson. $7,819 from US Office of cal Commission, a meeting Nicholas Lobkowics, as- Student Show, DepL of Art, of US Bishops sponsored Education for a conference annixal alumni seminar

Notre name^s Second Annual Alumni Seminar will be launched at noon on June 8, exploring in depth recent changes in today's Church. Open to all Alumni, the 24-hour seminar will be held in the Center for Continuing Education. Details of the program appear on page 20 of this issue. Atuntni Ask on financial accounting for Welding Research Council Bevive "Xost Imog*'' local and state school sys­ of Engineering Foundation TO THE EDITOR: I was particularly delighted to read again tems under the direction of under the direction of Dr. Rev. Ernest I. Bartell CSC, Nicholas Fiore, asst prof, "The Lost Image" by Bud Dudley. I have heard Bud's mes­ asst. prof, of econ. of met engr. sage several times, and it still reads as well as it did when Education Department, four Microbiology Department. I first saw it in print back in the early 1960s. I can assure fellowships from the Office $14,226 from NIH for study you that this has struck sparks from every audience to whom oi Education for graduate of flora and specific im­ it has been directed and has reflected great credit on Bud study in secondary educa­ munization in dental caries as a father, as an American and as a Christian gentleman tion during the next two under the direction of Dr. — all of which add up to an essential description of a real academic years. Morris Wagner, assoc. prof, Notre Dame Man. John P. Dempsey '49 Education Department. of microbio. $44,800 from Office of Edu­ Microbiology Department Philadelphia, Pa. cation for prospective $25,413 from NIH for factor TO THE EDITOR: Congratulations on the wonderful piece teacher fellov/ships under affecting germfree choles­ the direction of Dr. Donald terol metabolism under the of satire in the current issue of the ALUMNUS. I'm referring Wehmeyer, asst prof, of direction of Dr. Bernard of course to "The Lost Image" by one Ambrose F. Dudley. ed. Wostmann, prof, of mi­ The message is perfect: an alien philosophy has crept Electrical Engineering De­ crobio. into the curriculum (Eden's serpent) driving young athletes partment, $10,000 from Microbiology Department from their preternatural roles as campus leaders and cor­ NASA for computer-aided $19,760 from NIH for study rupting those lesser creatures (sissy intellectuals) who design and analysis of cir­ of intestinal transport in secretly want to be athletes themselves but who, under cuits and systems under axenic animals under the the evil influence of unpatriotic professors, refuse to pray the direction of Dr. Eugene direction of Dr. TomooH in the snow or revere their Founding Fathers. Now the Henry, assoc. prof, of elec. Asano, asst proL of mi­ engr. crobio. answer to this crisis is to hove all the Bill Bradleys of the Geology Department, SGcrobiology Department world unite; they must turn out those unwashed, un-Ameri- $38,270 from NSF for sum­ $12,156 for study of oxida­ cans (faculty, too?) who defile American womanhood with mer institute for general tive metabolism in inor­ dirty words and dare question our country's divine mandate science teachers under the ganic compounds under to right the wrongs of the world. It all reads like a spooL direction of Rev. Michael the direction of Dr. Ronald Kenneth L. Woodward '57 Murphy CSC, assoc. prof, Downey, asst prof, of Ossining, N.Y. of geol. microbio. History Depariment$154,000 Modem Language Depart­ TO THE EDITOR: I want to thank you for giving the new from Office of Education ment $7,500 from Office of president of the Alumni Assn. a forum in which to present for experienced teacher fel­ Education for summer lan­ guage institute for French his diagnoses of higher education and collegiate atUetics. lowship program in the his­ The spectacle is so appalling and will give such aid and tory of world civilization teachers under the direc­ under the direction of Dr. tion of Dr. Charles E. Par- comfort to those who deride the University for sacrificing Robert Bums, assoc. prot nell, assoc. prof, of mod. academic quality to big-time athletic competition that I of history. long. must urge the editor of the ALUMNUS, acting as a spokes­ History Department. $7,500 Physics Department $41,490 man for all responsible and concerned Alumni, to repudiate from Office of Education for summer institute for this article as representative of the sentiments of Associa­ for summer institute for ad­ physics teachers under the tion members. It should be made explicit that it is the vanced study in history direction of Dr. Robert An­ opinion of a single individual who speaks solely for himself. thony, prof, of physics. under the direction of Dr. Howard J. Dooley '66 Samuel Shapiro, assoc. , Pa. prof, of hist. LECTURES Law School Legal Aid and Academic Commission Lec­ TO THE EDITOR: Three rousing, sustained cheers for Mr. Defender Assn., $3,675 from ture. Rt Rev. James Pike, Bud Dudley's article in the January-February ALUMNUS. the Council on Professional Episcopal bishop. Library Audit, Apr. 10. I am genuinely proud that the University I attend produces Responsibility of the Assn. individuals of his caUber. I also beUeve that, despite the of American Law Schools Challenges in Sdence Lec­ ture. Dr. Frederick D. Ros­ tiny, noisy and powerful minority of placarding protestors to cover travel, investiga­ at Notre Dame and elsewhere, most college students have a tive and office expenses of sini, Dean, College of volunteer law students. Science, CCE, Apr. 17. deep and abiding love for their country. The leaders of Mathematics Department. Conference on Student tomorrow are those who are thinking today, not those who, $171,900 from NSF for in­ Stress, Student Govern­ in the infinite wisdom they have acquired in the 20 or so stitute for secondary teach­ ment Library Audit, Apr. years they hove lived on this earth, get up on a soapboz ers of math under the di­ 21-23. and tell the world why it is all wrong. . . . For my part, I rection of Dr. Abraham Academic Commission Lec­ hope I develop in my years as a student, and afterwards, Goetz, assoc. prof, of math. ture. Drew Pearson, Libra­ the moving sincerity and sound good sense which Mr. Mechanical Engineering. ry Audit, Apr. 25. Dudley displayed in his article. Joel Connelly '69 $5,000 from E. I. DuPont de Cardinal CHara Memorial 237 Farley HaU Nemours Co. for advancing Lecture. Prof. Manning the teaching of mech. engr., Nash, Library Audit, Apr. under the direction of Dr. 25. TO THE EDITOR: Let us indeed preserve what we hove at Edward Jerger, proi of our university and in our coimtry. But let us not be afraid Academic Commission Lec­ of accusations of disloyalty in facing new ideas and mech. engr. ture. Newton B. Minow, different currents of thought—even of facing "new type" Mechanical Engineering Library Audit, May 4. Department $1,050 from Seminar on American Edu­ students, possibly unshaven, who might bring them forth. Trane Co. for research cation. Dr. Robert Has- One of the fimctions of a university, such as Notre Dame, equipment under the direc­ senger, asst prot of soc. is the dispassionate examination of new ideas, not the tion of Dr. Edward Jerger, Law Audit, Apr. 23 and 30 hysterical condemnation of those who might hold them. . . . prof, of mech. engr. and May 7 and 14. It just might be that we are doing better "in the game" at Mechanical Engineering Senior Class Academic Notre Dame and at other campuses these days than Mr. Department $6,000 from the Commission. Albert C. Cut­ Dudley's scoreboard would indicate. And I trust this might CTS Corp. for research ler, Library Audit, May 8. also be the view of Father Hesburgh, the Board of Trustees, equipment under the direc­ Collegiate Seminar Lecture. the faculty and, hopefully, even of the Alunuii Association. tion of Dr. Jerome Novotny. Dr. Donald Costello, asst prot of English, "La Dolce J. Albert Bailey '51 asst. prof, of mech. engr. Walpole, Mass. Metallurgical Engineering. Vita," Library Audit, May $1,000 grant-in-aid from 16. ED. NOTE: For more reaction to "The Lost Image" see p. 47.

ALUMNUS AWRCH 1967 APRIL A Speclacular or an Excgeralion? TO THE EDITOR: Recently, with pleasure and pride, I read from the about the changes taking place within the administrative echelons of the University. On the other hand, it -was with manaffing shock and disbelief that I listened to Walter Cronkite's gfgMi-fg^w* Institutional anniversaries for CBS-TV news account of the recent relaxation of disciplinary the most part concern tliem- rules on campus. Perhaps the interpretation of events by those students who were interviewed was exaggerated selves with the past. Obviously, it is an appropriate (e.g., girls in the dorms, late hours, alleged heavy drinking). time to pay tribute to tlie principles and to recall fond At any rale, the TV news story marked (and somewhat memories. And, yet, it also is an opportune time to caused) a very black day in Notre Dame's history. I would take stock of that same institution's present circumstance. like to go on record with hopes that the "old lime" and customary and traditional Notre Dame order and discipline It is the latter concern which we treat in our continuing %v-ill be restored on campus. Francis J. Walter Jr. '54, stoiy of the University's 125th anniversary. Major USA Originally, I intended to introduce in this issue a Falls Church, Va. lead article featuring Notre Dame's presidents, 16 in all No Strings Attached from Father Edward Sorin to Father Hesburgh. How­ TO THE EDITOR: What happened to Gregory J. Hobbs Jr. ever, in the short time between editions of the who wrote in the January-February issue of the ALUMNUS ALUJINUS, an even more pressing issue forced the that he could not continue to contribute to Notre Dame "until football ceases to corrupt Notre Dame"? 'Tis sad presidental feature from prime feature space to a one- indeed. There was no corruption when I worked my way page spread opposite tliis column. Hopefully, Notre through the University and there is none now. The athletic Dame's presidents also would agree tliat the rearrange­ program has aided not only in education, spirit and co­ ment was warranted. operation, but also has been some financial odd to the school in several ways. It has brought thousands to the The reprint of Bud Dudley's "The Lost Image" in campus during the years — these people have come to the Januar>'-February issue stirred a response from love and respect ND. If God has given us the means to Alumni tliat surprised even tlie most optimistic. On help others, let us not put strings that cry of corruption on previous occasions, other potentially explosive issues— them. James D. McQuaid '31 the "Yellow Sheet," die change in die University's Vincennes, Ind. governance structure and odiers—drew little if any Debate Still Lingers reaction. Significantly, a stand regarding the youtii of TO THE EDITOR: I completely disagree with the comments of F. C. Hochreiter on "Concepts of Academe" and feel I our time provided the fuel to inspire (or incite) many must reply. I am a teacher and an independent research Alumni to immerse themselves in dialogue widi tlie worker. I consider that I do both reasonably well and I University and each other. do not believe that I am exceptional by any means. I con­ Certainly, this is not the first manifestation of tend that my participation in research contributes sig­ nificantly to my teaching of medical and graduate students Alumni involvement in the affairs of Notre Dame. In in formal lectures, in student laboratories and in informal this issue alone, the ALUMNUS reports a record-giving conferences. I also teach individual graduate and medical year by Alumni; participation greater than ever before students in my own research laboratory. It is not possible by Alumni in ND clubs around the globe; and an ever to separate my research activities from this teaching. Both go on simultaneously and are too intimately interrelated to increasing interest in the Association's program of con­ be divided. Most faculty research workers in universities tinuing education. But now, paralleled in no other throughout the country are involved in this type of teaching. program. Alumni also are projecting their own thinking, I agree that there are good teachers who do no research their own experience, and their own image of what and many research workers who are miserable teachers Notre Dame is today and what it should be tomorrow. but in my experience the best teachers are also research workers. I love both the "hats" I wear. I would not accept In reality, the emergence of Alumni dialogue opens a a position which required that I wear one to the exclusion whole new dimension in alumni-universit)' relations. of the other. Larry Sullivan '53 1967 at Notre Dame in part will be known for tlie Kansas City, Kansas celebration of the University's 125th anniversary. But Worse than a Wedding Date more important it may be remembered longer for the TO THE EDITOR: I read the press coverage of the twenty- unprecedented and still growing Alumni involvement year anniversary of student radio station WNDU with great in a university that yearns to grow even more in the interest. Both the SOUTH BEND TRIBUNE and ALUMNUS articles stated that the first station was started in 1944. ne.xt century and a quarter. To correct the record, and give you the opportunity to have a silver anniversary in 1958, I refer you to the February 5, 1943 issue of the Scholastic. The cover and feature story in this issue shows WND in full operation from Alumni Hall and states that it operated from Walsh Hcdl during the previous year. Dan Tomcik '44 Buchanan, Mich. Useful Item INDEX TO THE EDITOR: Yesterday, I received my copy of the fine Cover Story 47 calendar you sent to the Alumni. This I think is one of the Alumni Ask I Law School 41 best pieces of promotion sent out by the University. For Classes 16 Photoany 60 years I have been buying a similar calendar for family Clubs ...... 42 Potpourri 6 use, because of the space where I can mark on each day Compendium Inside Cover Sports 56 the important reminders. As the parent of a student, I like Editorials 4 the dates concerning classes, vacations, etc. I hope such a Topside Briefs 14 calendar is sent out every year. The ALUMNUS is published bimonthly by the University of Notre Dame, Bernard A. Garber '28 Notre Dome, Ind. A65S6. Entered os second-class motter Oct. 1, 1939, at Bedford Hills, N.Y. the post office, Notre Dame, Ind., under the act of Aug. 24, 1912.

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^ggj^^^jg^^jm Open Window Poiiey For most of the years of its existence, the ALUMNUS, by conviction and by persuasion, avoided controversial material in a magazine which represents thousands of people with widely divergent views. It stressed the unity and the progress that prevailed in their one great com­ mon denominator — Notre Dame. The age of change caught up wth us. In an era of articulation, with a great need for involvement and concern, it seemed that the requests to open the windows of the magazine were valid. With updated format, pro and con debates, and the reasonable reservation that the opinions expressed in the magazine (other than editorially identified or officially promulgated) are not necessarily those of the University, the Alumni Associa­ tion or tile Alumni Office, we moved belatedly into the ideological mainstream. The move arose from change. It reflects change. It should be accepted with changed attitudes. Editorials The personal vie\vpoints expressed by Association President Ambrose F. Dudley — not addressed to Notre Dame in fact — have brought out the existence of a concern, and the articulation of an involvement, that we had not actually gauged. It is not essential to our point to treat the agreement or disagreement, the rights of the vwiters or any of the many relationships implicit in the particular dialogue. What we are pleased with, and encouraged by, is the obviously strong and thoughtful attention which Alumni of different convictions are giving to Notre Dame and the Alumni Association through their magazine. Kept wthin the dignity and the maturity which can be presupposed in an alumni constituency, this new expression can be of great value to all con­ cerned. The old Administration-Faculty-Student tri­ angle has given \vay to the new Administration-Faculty- Student-Alumni quadrangle, which has made the whole world the Notre Dame campus in fact. Few schools have had this physical change in struc­ ture so dramatically correlated as has Notre Dame. Here, Father Hesburgh has defined a new dimension for higher education: the old Depository-Disseminator- Discoverer concept of knowledge and function has been expanded to the Depository-Discoverer-Disseminator- Mediator concept and function. It is in this new dimension of mediation that the new dimension of alumni achieves its most logical NOTHE DAME parallel. Alumni are already in the active channels of their society, where the process of mediation must move from the campus. They are the logical links bet\veen the world that knows and the world that does. Being content with being is no longer an in-thing. Mar. 1967 Apr. Vol. 45, No. 2 Against this definition of our changes we hope to continue to move, more aggressively, more challengingly, more effectively, from a no longer tolerable academic apathy into the ferment of mediation. James E. Armstrong '25 Alumni Association Executive Secretary

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL Senate Convemes Just about a year ago in the President's Letter, the following statement was made: "One of our objectives will be to try to devise programs that will allow the Alumni to become more familiar with campus activities, more understanding of them and even more .participants in these activities. We believe that a group of 37,000 men whose backgrounds span every field <^ activity should be able to contribute more ihan money to die progress of Notre Dame." Regardless of our ambitions and desires in an or­ ganization the size and complexity of the Alumni As­ sociation, every increment of progress takes time. Com­ pared to oiu- forward progress, sometimes I think that the mills of the gods grind with blinding speed. Now, Appiaud Dialogue however, we have reached the stage where we can report In January, the ALUMNUS reprinted "The Lost inage" real progress in one of oiv programs. which I wrote in May, 1965. This article was a com­ No one has ever served on the Alumni Board without posite of many talks that I have given at high school having developed the tremendous sense of satisfacticHi and college athletic banquets across the country. I am that close contact with the University brings. At the not naive enough to think that "athletes" are the only same time there develops a sense approaching frustra­ ones on campus capable of leadership but I am con­ tion when it is realized that cmly four fortunate Alimmi vinced that they represent a tremendous potentiaL are chosen each year to be {tartidpants in this activity. I addressed my exhortation to them. For some time, the Board has been discusang ways by My opinion along these lines was recently strength­ which this active participation and close association ened by the results of a three-year study of the 1,221 might be extended to more Alumni. This m(mth the men who played football at Yale since the day it started. Alumni Association is announcing the creation of the It was uncovered that 97 percent graduated against Alumni Senate as a first step in expanding individual an average of 85 percent. Their grades were higher contact with campus activities. than the average of their class. Their enlistment in two The present concept of the Senate evolved naturally World Wars was far higher, their success in business, from the original idea that, since the local Clubs are the professions, in education also notably higher. Finally, the focal points of activity in the organization, if we their contributions to the Yale Alumni Fund were 100 could bring at least one or two members of each Club percent higher. This does not disparage nonathletes, into closer association ^vith the Board, we -would be but it does add a dimension to the athlete. making progress. For the present, the president of each Apparently the article has triggered the imagination Club will be designated as its representative to the of many of our Alumni and the result has been an im- Senate. The first Senate meeting will be held on the usual flow of dialogue in the form of letters, telephone campus in early May in conjunction with the Board calls and telegrams. Many were quite complimentary meeting. At that time^ plans will be laid for further — many shocked by such an "outdated" attitude. I and permanent constitution of a Senate and for a better fully realize that there are tvio sides to every question definition of its activities. and can understand how some would disagree with my Originally, the concept of the Senate was that it premise. A campus never remains long in one condition, should be a direct extension of the Alumni Board. The and change is inevitable. But I, personally, am still con­ Senate would have one meeting on the campus each vinced that freedom and rights also mean duties and year in order to allow Senate members to have personal responsibilities and that liberty and justice are not pos­ contact with the University administration, the faculty sible without law and order. and the students, and to obtain a better understanding The important thing is that it has led to a healthy of and appreciation for University programs and prob­ discussion and, I hope, to a continued dialogue among lems by finthand contact with them. In addition. Clubs our Alumni which %vill carry over to the activities of would be grouped according to geographical areas, with our Local Clubs. The ALUMNUS, the Reunions, Con­ each area to be presided over by one of the senior tinuing Education, more frequent faculty contact all members of the Board of Directors. The geographical contribute to a better exchange of ideas. The end subunits would meet at least once a year for further result will not only be greater understanding between discussion of problems. the campus and the Alumni but, more important, We believe that the establishment of the Senate is greater Alumni involvement in the affairs of the a very significant step forward in bringing information University. more directly to the Alumni, in bringing understanding Needless to say, the Alumni Board would appreciate of problems to the Alumni and in enlisting the aid of hearing from any Alunmus and would welcome inter­ the Alumni in solving the problems of the University. esting and enlightening observations. Only in this way As we said, we believe the Aliunni should be able to can our program possess current and universal vitality. contribute more than money to Notre Dame. Ambrose F. Dudley Jr. '43 Thomas P. Carney '37 Alumni Association President Alumni Association Honorary President

ALUMNUS MARCH 1947 APRIL THE

competition in hiring outstanding faculty dranands a solid salary scale. The complexities of administering a growing university strain salary and equipment budgets. And construction toads become more scarce in propor- ticm to soaring costs. Schools like Notre Dame and St. Mary's, depend­ ent on contributions from alumni and foundation grants, can no longer bear the burden of duplication costs. By consolidating some aspects of adnoinistration, such as promotion, public relations and purchasing, the two schools can cut running costs considerably. Cooperative use of facilities such as the computors and libraries can avoid the cost of duplica­ tion while at the same time providing increased facilities to the individual institution. While merging of these services would alleviate a great deal of the operating costs, it would at die same time raise the questions of retaining identity and autonomy and establish­ ing standards which would compen­ MERGER: Yes or No? sate neither institution's values. The For many years Notre Dame and problem is not insurmountable as the neighboring St Mary's Ciollege de­ prototype co-ex program demon­ scribed their relationship in the strates. pleasant, but nebulous phrase, "broth­ Under this plan students from ND er-sister" schools. Now the College and SMC are able to enroll in courses and University are engaged in an in- which are not offered at their re­ depth exploration of their relation­ spective schools. While enrolled in a ship. The avowed purpose of the course, the student is measured by study is to develop for the future the academic standards at the insti­ extended areas of cooperation between tution and is subject to the regula­ the institutions. tions, schedule and calendar of the The question arises as to whether school. Grades and credits are trans­ this probe portends a possible merger ferred to the student's transcript at betweeen the two schools. Representa­ his or her home school. A student is tives for both administrations imply also able to declare a major at the that it does. But they are quick to neighboring school provided it is not caution that the term "merger" does offered at his own school. Thus an not equate with consolidation and the ND student might study education at possible loss of autonomy on the paut SMC or a St Mary's girl computing of either institution. science at ND. Dr. George N. Shuster, assistant to However, a large scale interchange Notre Dame's president, says, "No on the academic level would call for one is thinking of absorption, coed­ the establishment of relative equality ucation, or second-class citizenship oa in terms of faculty qualifications and either campus. We have in mind, salaries. At present, such conditions rather, a condition of cooperation do not exist Although it ranks high into which both institutions can grow, among the nation's Catholic women's Potpourt^i imdertaking joindy the education and collies, St Mary's can not be ex­ administrative tasks which th^ can­ pected to compare favorably in this not do as well separately." area vdth Notre Dame. Finances and sexual s^r^ation Some faculty members are adverse are, in Dr. Shuster's beliefs, the major to large scale interrelation between stumbling blocks to the schools* pro­ the two schools for fear that their ceeding along independent paths. academic status would suffer. Dr. Rising costs of higher education Shuster admits that establishing have made it increasingly difficult for equality presents an intricate but schools without the support of govern­ soluble problem: "I believe that ment aid to raise funds necessary for thinking about faculty parity is not providing quality education. The unrealistic, though admittedly the goal

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL UNIVERSITY cannot be reached overnight." Within the last few years the stu­ announcement of its Laetaie Metlal The second major reason behind dent governments have made im­ redpient Chosen this year as the the merger talks, that of sexual segre­ portant advances in this area. St. outstanding American CatlioHc lay? gation, poses a problem which evokes Mary's students are now welcome man was J. Peter Grace, prendent the entire tradition of the "ND-SMC- members to the staff of ND student of W. R. Grace and Company and Dixie Highway mystique." Conceived publications and one currentiy holds chainnan of Notre Dame's Board (tf and maintained for well over a an editorial post with The Scholastic. Lay Trustees. hundred yeais as a women's college SMC involement in the Mock Con­ In confencii^ the Umveraty's beh­ and a men's university, St. Mary's vention, the United Nations project est honor on Mr. Grace, Notre Dame and Notre Dame administrations, last year, Mardi Gras and Homecom­ President Rev. Theodore M. Hes- faculty, student bodies and alumni are ing are also significant efforts in ex­ burgh CSC cited him as "perscolfy- reluctant to sacrifice their identity. panding relations. Future cooperation ing, to a remarkable d^iee, the Sentiment alone does not oppose would open more extracurricular genius of America's buaness and in­ coeducation at the two institutions. activities, such as the clubs, to students dustrial leadership as well as the con­ As Dr. Shuster says, "I am persuaded of both schools. cern and cranpassion of the Ameri­ that colleges for women have a wholly Obviously, the major problem at can people iot those less fortunate warranted role in contemporary life the moment is defining the operating than themselves both at home and provided they develop in addition to structures within which cooperation abroad. Moreover, in this age of the program in the liberal arts forms could be effected without loss of ag^omamento, it is to distix^mshed of preprofessional education suited to identity to the two schools. A number laymen like Peter Grace that the the special needs of women." of plans currently operational at var­ Church and her institutions mil turn Why then, is there such emphasis ious campuses across the country are more and more for leadership and on extending the interrelation between being studied by both administrations. counsel." the sexes at the two schools? The The Harvard University-Radcliffe The newest Laetare medalist has administrations have come to believe College plan provides for the educa­ a long and varied association with that sexual segregation tends to tion of women in the University while Notre Dame. The father of nine, project secondary school backgrounds housing and guidance are provided two of his sons, Joseph '64 and Wil­ into the collegiate experience, an oc­ by the College. Columbia College and liam '65, graduated from the Uni­ currence definitely not in tune with Barnard College have established a versity while Michael is a third-year the concepts of modem education. relationship with Columbia University student. In 1953 Peter Grace ac­ Another important factor is the xmder which both colleges retain their cepted membership on the Board of present emphasis on graduate educa­ autonomy but provision is made for Lay Trustees and was elected its tion which increasingly necessitates instruction by university faculty. A chairman in 1964. The successful coeducation. third program imder study is that Challenge I grpgram was guided by Mr. Grace who served as national Notre Dame this year admitted 108 employed by the Claremont colleges which provides for autonomy of the chairman for the fund drive. He is laywomen to its classes. St. Mary's also a member of the University has a valuable contribution to make in colleges with common use of central facilities and some exchange of teach­ President's Committee of Greater this area through its graduate depart­ New York. ments of elementary and special ed­ ing personnel. Mr. Grace, a 1936 graduate of Yale ucation. At present, its enrollment None of these plans has been University, began his outstanding is wholly female, although it is the (MERGER continued page 11) business career as a clerk in the com­ only college in the area offering these pany he now heads. He assumed the programs. presidency in 1942 and expanded the At least one area of common Layman of the Year company interests beyond its primary interest to both institutions already Since 1883 the University has marked slupping activities to make W. R^ has effected a merger. In September the fourth Simday in Lent with the Grace one of the country's leading the schools announced the union of chemical producers. His executive their separate theaters. Rev. Arthur ability coupled with philanthropic in­ S. Harvey CSC, previous head of the terests has played a significant role in Notre Dame Theatre, now directs the the economic and educational de­ joint faculties of the two schools as velopment of a number of South well as the production of five plays American countries. In recogniticMi per year. of his services he has been decorated There has always been a social by the governments of Colombia, exchange between the two schools. Qiile, Ecuador, Panama and Peru. But it has more often than not been His active participation in countless hampered by the purely social nature dvic and religious organizations give of the interrelation and the infamous ample testimony to his lay leader- "odds." Obviously, a merger could diip. Among other contributions, not equalize the ratio of men to Peter Grace is a member of the na­ women without a drastic change in tional Advisory Council of the Peace admissions ptolicies. But it would Corps, president of the Catholic Youth provide social situations in which the Organization of New York, a trustee students would be thinking together, of the National Conference d Chris­ thereby deriving the greatest educa­ tians and Jews, and chairman of the tional benefit from a male-female re­ J. PETER GRACE New York Conmiittee oa Released lationship. Outstanding laymaa Time for Religious Study.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL STUDENT BODY

Tired of Directionless Summers What are you doing during spring mers to the proj­ break? Once a question answered by ects. "And most of the inevitable "going home for the ND students Easter" or "heading South for sun," working in the field it is now meeting with a new reply of civil rights are from a group of concerned students. not the bearded Each year more and more Notre and rebelling ones Dame students are turning their vaca­ —these kind are of tions into profitable experiences with­ no help," he says. in the realm of human relations. "The fellows work­ They still go South for the break, ing in this field are but hard work in voter registration, those with the sin­ Awaiting Its Fate school integration and adult educa­ cere desire to help tion has replaced the traditional days their fellow man." With the opening of the new Notre During the Eas­ of ease on the sunny beaches. TUs Tom Figel Dame Post Office on Lincoln's birth­ March a small group of Notre Dame ter break Tom was day, the University found itself faced students made the trip to Hampton, accompanied by more than 25 fellow wiih an unusual situation. For once, South Carolina at their own expense students into 's South Side there is room to spare on campus. It to help the local NAACP Youth where they volunteered their services would be somewhat misleading to Group conduct a school integration to the Woodlawn Organization surest that the administration doesn't program. (TWO). Begun in 1959 TVVO is know what to do with it But that is unique in that it involves only residents the quandary — to which of over 40 The volunteers were engaged in a door-to-door canvass of low-income of the Woodlawn area, but crosses all possible uses should the University religious, social and political lines in assign the old post office? families whom they instructed in qualifications and registration pro­ banding the residents together in sav­ Since the first announcement that ing their neighborhood. a new post office building would be cedures for entrance into the all white erected, officials have been swamped schools. Although the families con­ The organization has led Woodlawn with proposals which range from the tacted were predominately Negro, citizens in campaigns for better hous­ absurd to those with substantial merit some were whites who were ignorant ing, education and political represen­ which bear due consideration. Two of the opportunities available in the tation. One of the significant arms of the more serious suggestions have better schools of Hampton. of TWO is the First Presbyterian been put forward by the Student What makes the students es^er to Church. Bob Keeley '60 is a staff Senate and Rev. Charles McCar- tackle projects like these? Dave member there and it was under his ragher CSC, VP for Student Affairs. McMorrow says he was "getting tired guidance that a number of this year's Father McCarragher feels that the of the directionless vacations I had student volunteers worked. spent in the past. And there were building should be converted into a They were engaged in the "Ex­ World War II Memorial Chapel. The such worthwhile projects at hand. . . ." Dave, who is a senior in cluded Children's Program" designed University has had funds set aside to instruct children who were unable for such a purpose for a number of the College of Arts and Letters, led this spring's trip to Hampton. to qualify for regular school classes years. The proposed chapel would be because of mental deficiencies or open to all members of the Notre Students with the desire to par­ social insufficiencies. Still others of Dame community and would have a ticipate in community action programs the group worked with the members priest available all times for confes­ often find the particular project that of various neighborhood gangs. sion or counseling. interests them through the Student The student proposal calls for the Government's Civil Rights Commis­ Texas was the destination of a third establishment of a gathering place sion. Junior Tom Figel, who heads group of students who went to learn that would open after the Student the Commission, reports that more firsthand of the problems of farm­ Center had closed for the night They and more students workers caught in a labor squeeze. would like to see food service ma­ are showing a year Often idled by the influx of Mexican chines installed to provide refresh­ round interest in laborers who work for lower wages, ments for all-night study or bull ses­ the Commission's the Rio Grande" Valley farm laborers sions. The Student Government plan activities. are without an effective means of also called for a contest within the He is also quick bargaining power to raise their own department of architecture to design to point out that social and economic standau°ds. the new center. although students Driving a car borrowed from a With over 40 proposals to consider, first volunteered sympathetic faculty member, the seven the University is in no hurry to de­ their services one students took part in a rally organized cide the fate of the old post office. evening a week as to protest these labor conditions. Nor has the administration given any tutors in the Neigh­ They joined a caravan of 75 cars in indication of preference. Father Mc­ borhood Study Help Austin, Tex. and from there journeyed Carragher believes no decision wll be Program, they are to principal farm areas stretching forthcoming before the close of the now eager to de­ ftiom Corpus Christi to Rio Grande academic year. vote whole sum- Dave McMoirow City.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1947 APRIL r •^ Alumni '67: an Introduction and, as we ourselves beccHne Alumni, we begin to realize that there is no real change in beliefs, but hy John Hughes rather an evolution of attitude. As we shift from the active life of the student in the University to ITH Charlie Simpson still pounding the keys down that of the less active Alumni, our views gain some W at the Senior Bar, most of our thoughts are perspectives that are impossible while still here. turned toward a break in the winter weather and a The Class of '67 has been, to say the leas^ an chance to get up to the dunes. Few seniors are active class. It has seen many changes in the realm considering the complete change that they will under­ of student-administration relations that appeared go the ne.\t few months. impossible four years ago. The next four will see During the last four years we have basically still other seeming impossibilities become realities accustomed ourselves to a certain mode of life. The through the efforts of increased student-administra- stability and security of life here at Notre Dame have tion-alunmi relations. The Class of '67 has the op­ conditioned the students to a degree of informality portunity to remain active. that is rarely found in outside society; and the added responsibility that most of us will be accepting will be something new. It has been looked forward to by most and many will thrive on it. We are on the threshold of becoming Notre Dame Alumni. To the student here at the University the Alumnus is a strange sort, especially to those whose fathers are not graduates. Appearing on the scene usually once a year for one of the home football games, he moves in groups usually in the Red, Green and Blue fields surrounding the stadium. He is the one on whom you count to sell your programs and buttons. Yet, for the student there is a certain sense of alien­ ation. The bond that exists among all the students, no matter what their year, does not seem to extend to the Alumni. It is not felt that they are, on the surface, a part of the force that is so much in the life of the student. To an extent this relationship has been reinforced by some of the conservative ideas expressed by Alumni during this past year. Much has been said concerning the conflict between the liberal attitude that many of the undergraduates hope to possess, and certain conservative views that have been put forth on the part of the Alumni. It has been clear that the views posited by Mr. Dudley in his article in the ALUMNUS were wholly dismissed by not only the Class of '67 but by the student body in general. The mere idea that teachers and speakers at the University be censured to the extent that is suggested is archaic and repulsive. Such methods of running an institution would be unhealthy to its academic climate; and such reins on scholastic freedom would crush academic stability. It should be noted that a Class that can so completely reject the conservatism of an Alumnus can in the same breath give its Patriot of the Year Award to as controversial a figure as General West­ moreland. It is obvious that academic freedom and anti-Americanism are not in the same plane. Surely, we all wish for an institution that is a bastion for patriotism; but the manner of achieving the blind patriotism that is being offered is hardly the ans\ver. The attitude of controlled education is hardly representative of the entire Alumni body—probably Senior C9ass Secretary and President of only a small group. We would like to think that JOHN HUGHES and PAT NASH their beliefs are not diat far removed from our own; f ERSPECTtVES ON ACTION v.. ALUMNUS MARCH 1947 APRIL Free Thinkers In spite of the decreased furor over the question, die debate over aca­ ACADEME demic freedom in die Catholic uni­ versity continues to be waged on the CCE: the Year in Review Fair Teachers Seminar are but a few nation's campuses. Rev. Neil G. Mc- examples of tiie University's newest Cluskey SJ, visiting professor of edu­ When the Center for Continuing means of fostering its avowed pur­ cation at Notre Dame, recently took Education was dedicated in 1966 it pose of public service. the stand in favor of academic free­ was hailed as an experimental con­ For a vast majority of the meetings dom wthin the discipline of theology. cept widiin the structure of higher held at the Center, the staff and Uni­ Speaking before a group at the education. Designed to extend to the versity faculty members are respon­ University of Dayton, Fatlier Mc- business and professional worlds the sible for the program. Dean Bergin Cluskey, a former associate editor of results of research and innovation and his small but efficient staff out­ America magazine, expressed tiie be­ carried on wdiin the academic realm, line a program and contact faculty lief that "there is no more academic the Center opened its facilities to the members whose field of study is most justification for the entry by a local entire international community. Now directly related to the interests of the bishop or provincial into the univer­ one year old, its accomplishments may convening group. Dean Bergin notes sity discipline of theology than there be evaluated in terms of the goals with evident pride, "The Center has is for the local mayor or governor to which it set for itself. developed tremendous faculty involve­ intrude into the field of political Dean Thomas A. Bergin, head of ment and enthusiasm." science." the Center, is more tlian enthusiastic in reviewing the past year. Since its opening last March more than 260 conferences involving 27,850 people have used the Center's facilities. The Center's use is not restricted to the academic community. Gener­ ally, the s^nnposia held diere are of t\vo major types — tiiose spon­ sored by busmess and professional groups and those sponsored by the University or various departments •within its colleges. Some of tlie most illustrious in the latter group such as the "Interna­ tional Conference on the Theological Issues of Vatican II" and "Marx and the Western World" have drawn the world's leading scholars and experts DEAN THOMAS A. BERGIN to Notre Dame. The symposium on Vatican II de­ The man behind the burgeoning concept dicated the new facility and brought The success of the Center for Con­ The Jesuit educator, who ser\'ed as together — in an ecumenical discus­ tinuing Education has been such that academic vice-president at Gonzaga sion of the effects of the Council — conferences already are scheduled University before joining the Notre outstanding Catholic, Protestant, well into 1972, although the Uni­ Dame facult}', believes that die Jewish and Orthodox leaders. Some versity has made no promotional ef­ autonomy of the university com­ months later, philosophers, econ­ forts to attract the professional groups munity exempts it from the direct omists and political scientists from to the campus. The fame of the Uni­ influence of the Church's official both sides of the Iron Curtain met versity and the excellence of the magisterium. He adds, "On the level at the Center to evaluate the ideo­ Center's staff and facilities have been of higher learning, the Church speaks logical and practical aspects of the its best publicity agent. authoritatively to tiie consciences of WTitings of Karl Marx. Notre Dame's Kellogg Center has her members in the academic com­ The array of non-University spon­ consistently drawn larger than ex­ munity. sored conferences and seminars have pected attendance at conferences this According to Father McCluskey, ranged from meetings on civil rights past year. Dean Bergin partially at­ this view is based on the "Decree on legislation to conferences of major tributes this to the central location of the Apostolate of the Laity" promul­ corporations like Bendix, Indiana the University and to the natural at­ gated by the Second Vatican Council. Bell and U.S. Rubber to religious traction of Notre Dame. Another He cites three conclusions of this institutes on church support, leader­ major contributing feature are the document in particular: the temporal ship and mission crusades. facilities available. order enjoys its own God-given Dean Bergin also feels that an im­ There are 22 seminar rooms each autonomy; the presence in time of the portant by-product of the Center is of which is equipped for tape-record­ historical Christ or of the ecclesiastical the community involvement it fosters. ing and closed-circuit TV. The audi­ Christ does not reduce the inde­ "It has developed a whole new edu­ torium, which seats 400, has simul­ pendence of things in the temporal cational dimension for the commu­ taneous translation facilities similar to sphere; the layman has a special obli­ nity," he notes. Such meetings as the those at the United Nations. In ad­ gation and competence for action in Indiana Continuing Legal Education dition, there are an audio-visual cen­ the temporal sphere. Forum, the Coordinated Community ter, theater and reference library The question of extending the prac­ Development Workshop and a Science available for conference participants. tice of academic freedom into the

10 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL realm of theology is but one aspect in MERGER: Yes or No? Recently, Sister Mary Grace CSC, the evolution of the American Cath­ president of St. Mary's College, initi­ olic university. Changes in curricula, (Continued from page 7) ated a College Steering Conmiittee the emphasis on the increased lay adopted yet as a possible guide for for Unified and Long-Range Plan­ responsibility in administration and Notre Dame-St. Mary's cooperation. ning. The committee will assist the faculty, and the problems of finances, At present the administration of both president in planning the develop­ in Father McCluskey's view, have schools are engaged in evaluating ment and growth of the College. made Catholic universities aware that faculty response and opinion on the Notre Dame is also engaged in lon^- they "must exist to serve the \\'hole question of the merger. A compre­ range planning activities. Needless American community in following out hensive survey prepared by the Uni­ to say, one of the major areas of the reasonable norms and practices versity on the modes and extent of Committee will consider is that of the which the American experience in possible cooperation was sent to the proposed closer cooperation between education, has evolved." entire faculty of both institutions. Notre Dame and St Mary's.

f Concepts of Academe: primarily on research while student institutions in which students felt | polls demand a teacher. the necessity of evaluating profes­ A Final Word It would seem to me that both sors. Such institutions as Harvard, by Albert E. Grzebien '49 the teacher and the researcher have Yale, North Carolina, , abdicated a responsibility essential Cornell, North Dakota and the READ with interest the article to the dual capacity of a university. University of Rhode Island are I "Concepts of Academe" by For example. Professor Massey cites but a few. There seems to be no Professors Cronin and Massey. As Allan Cartter in his "Assessment university immune to the chal­ a neophyte in the ranks of aca­ of Quality in Graduate Education" lenge, "I want good teaching." deme, I find myself totally involved as indicating "department strength To meet this challenge and the in the basic concepts espoused by is directly associated with quantity challenge of Professor Massey to my colleagues. To some extent, I of publication performance." I am 95 percent of our collies and uni­ feel at an advantage in discussing somewhat concerned at the source versities, students, researchers, and this particular problem. Having which concerns itself with gradu­ administrators must work together taught from kindergarten through ate education to the neglect of with common goals in mind. The college, I am well acquainted with undergraduate education in seek­ student has, to some extent, already the needs of srood teachinsr. Hav- ing a solution to the problem of fulfilled his commitment by posing mg assumed a position on the an educated citizenry. I am even the challenge. I know there are faculty of a state university, I find more concerned over "the quantity those who say. students are in­ myself in the position of not only of publication performance." Cart­ capable of evaluating professors. having to be a good teacher, but ter, I am sure, would be more We may hide behind the cloak of a "researcher" as well. The duality likely concerned with an evaluation psychologists who say they can't of tlie profession, which none of in terms of quality. define good teaching for us when us with sanity would deny, merits On the other hand. Professor in reality we shudder at the thought the concern of us all. The "either Cronin leads me to believe that of being evaluated. The evaluation —or" attitude is our most formid­ after all the research involved in is inescapable regardless of its able obstacle in reaching a realistic teaching "Ulysses" and basing pubUcation. solution to the problem. much of his teaching on the library Researchers, competent in their There will continue to exist the shelf, it is sufficient to disseminate particular interest, violate teaching advocacy of one side or the other. and discuss the subject. On the principles when they disregard the However, the researcher vAW never contrary, I would propose pursu­ effective dissemination of such deny the import of good teaching, ing the problem a step further to knowledge to those who constitute nor will the teacher deny the very the realm of research. New and the heirs of their labor. The mo­ substance of his profession. So long perhaps significantly different ap­ tivation that initiated the research as we view this problem categoric­ proaches have been discovered must be transferred to the needs ally, as many of us are forced to do, that would serve best if all were to of students here and now. Lastiy, the common ground leading to share in the discoveries. Cronin's the administrator should move some solution will be nonexistent concepts of teaching "Ulysses" then from the realm of the ivory tower Unfortunately, the problem is one becomes valuable to all of academe. and find out what's going on in raised by our own design and not It would appear that the teacher his university. How many times forced by administration. We can and the researcher are one and the has an administrator taken the time contribute in both areas without same. The dual responsibility sug­ to interview a student and find compromising the student and the gested by Cronin and Massey must out who is the good teacher and integrity of research. How much be transferred to the individuals why? Does he really know who is are we willing to give? within the complex. making the significant contribution Professor Cronin speaks of the It is a truism that has existed to his xmiversity? "student" whom we have nurtured for a longer period than any of us Perhaps this three-sided ap­ to become one of our colleagues. would like to admit, that students proach to the problem r^sed in It is this same nurtured student moan the idea that "he knows his "Concepts of Academe" may prove with whom either the administra­ stuff but he can't put it across." more fruitful in reducing the tion or the student is dissatisfied. The four to five percent of institu­ divisive effect we now witness. The lines of demarcation only tions cited by Massey as institutiotjs Certainly, a re-evaluation by all widen when "the most distinguished significantiy research-oriented, how­ concerned is the logical starting departments" base their distinction ever, include among them the very point.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL and problems offering reactions, and ALUMNI supplementary and new ideas. The Club presidents will also be involved in sessions directed toward Club development. These meetings will be styled in much the same man­ ner as the previous Club Presidents Council.

BOOKS Behind tiie Bamboo Curtain CHINESE SOCIETY UNT)ER COMMUNISM: A READER, edited by William T. Liu MA'52, 496 pages, DEAN BERGIN, DR. LIU and JIM ARMSTRONG John Wiley & Sons. $8.50 clodi, The growing concept . . . $5.50 paperback.

and development for G. D. Searle, Although considered a major factor and past president of the Alumni As­ in his future, the average American New Dimension sociation. knows little or nothing about Com­ Spirited audience discussion was munist China. His acquaintance with Continuing education, the new di­ one of the successful by-products of the people of the world's most heavily mension of alumni-campus relations, this pioneer experiment in a metro­ ]X)pulated country is too often based took a great step forward with the politan area. Comment was most on speculation or secondhand ac­ first Seminar on the Population Prob­ favorable from all concerned. The counts of the limited number of lem, sponsored by the Alumni As­ concept will grow. travelers allowed within its borders. sociation and the Continuing Educa­ In this reader. Dr. Liu has con­ tion Center through the Notre Dame cerned himself primarily wth present­ Club of . ing a comprehensive coverage of the The Seminar was an all-day event functions of Chinese society under the drawng 127 Alumni and wives to the Expanding Representation control apparatus of the Communist Empire Room of the Waldorf-Astoria A newly created Alumni Senate of a state. The majority of the material February 25. Registration began at potential 172 members %vill convene was obtained through governmental 9:30. Adjournment was at 5 p.m. at the University for its first meeting sources or condensed from publica­ The direction of the program was May 4-6. The conciliar body will tions in Hong Kong and Communist under Dean Thomas Bergin of the provide a larger cross section of rep­ China. Center. The topic was the same as resentative Alumni who will be di­ A professor of sociology at the Uni­ that %vhich produced such a success­ rectly informed of the programs and versity, Dr. Liu has made Far Eastern ful opening seminar for returning problems of both the University and studies his special area of concern. Alumni just preceding the 1966 Re­ the Alumni Association. His selection of material for the book unions. The panel was largely the The Senate is a development of the was designed to trace patterns of social same stimulating group which national Board of Directors whose 13 control in traditional, transitional and launched the pattern last June. Dr. members are elected to staggered Communist China, providing a his­ William D'Antonio, head of the So­ three-year terms by national Alumni torical treatise of social structures and ciology Dept., spoke on population ballot It was the experience of the underlying ideologies. and public policy and Dr. William T. Board in their learning firsthand in­ Focusing first on the individual, Liu, director of the Institute for the formation of increasing volume and the book examines the changes Study of Population and Social diversity, which was also increasingly wrought by imposed control on the Change, treated the University's role essential to organized progress, that mind and behavior, then explores the in population studies. resulted in the formation of this new effects of the new order on creativity Following a group luncheon (which and larger body. and morality. Every unit of the social was included in the $15 total fee). The new group will consist of the structure is regarded in this same Rev. Charles E. Sheedy CSC, dean presidents of local Alumni Clubs who light beginning with the deemphasis of the College of Arts and Letters, are the elected leaders of the Alumni on the traditionally strong family unit. spoke on responsible parenthood from groups throughout the country. Their Particular emphasis is accorded mar­ a theological approach and Dr. Fred­ objective will be to leam and trans­ riage, divorce, the decline of the im­ erick J. Crosson, head of the General mit information from the University portance of age and the role of youth. Program, on the same topic from a and the Alumni Board to their con­ Proceeding through the ranks of natural law viewpoint After a coffee stituencies. A second vital purpose, increasing social aggregations the break, the final paper of the day, served also in limited measure by the reader offers an insight into the suc­ "The Scientist's Concern With Popu­ smaller Alumni Board, will be to cesses and failures of the Communist lation," was delivered by Dr. Thomas transmit back to the University the order in business and industry, agri­ P. Carney, vice-president for research Alumni viewpoint on these prc^ams culture, the military, law and politics.

12 ALUMNUS MARCH 1W7 APRIL John Faithful's Story concerns were graduate education and The WirM's SchoolhNses faculty improvement. Under his FATHER O'HARA OF NOTRE direction doctoral programs in math, CATHOLIC EDUCATION IN DAME—THE CARDINAL-ARCH­ biology and physics were added to THE WESTERN WORLD, edited BISHOP OF PHILADELPHIA, the curriculum. During his admin­ by James Michael Le^ with a fore­ Thomas T. McAvoy CSC '25, 514 istration a number of buildings were word by George N. Shuster '15, 324 p^es, UND Press. $7.50 constructed including the Rockne pages, UND Press. $7.25 Memorial, the Biology Building and The fusion of faith and fact in the three residence halls. The last few years have produced an life of one man is dramatized in this, Father McAvoy devotes a chapter increasing concern on the part of the first definitive biography of John to each of the succeeding major American Cathdics for an evaluation of their school system. Runors and Cardinal O'Hara CSC. It is the story career roles fulfilled by Father theories run rampant in the face of of an aesthetic man whose apostolic O'Hara. With his elevation to the daily innovations. This bock assures ministry reluctantly spanned the presi­ episcopacy in 1939, Bishop O'Hara American Catholics that they are not dency of Notre Dame, the administra­ resigned his office at the University alone in questioning their educaticHoal tion of the nation's Catholic military and went on to assume the military system and offers them the oppotu- chaplains, the leadership of the Phila­ ordinariate. As auxiliary bishop under nity fcH: compariscm with other major delphia archdiocese and membership Cardinal Spellman, he coordinated Catholic system&i in the Sacred College of Cardinals. the work of the Catholic chaplains in The book is structured along two His career at Notre Dame spanned every theatre of operations during basic premises. The first contends two decades and made him a familiar World War II. that the lack of an international office figure to countless Alumni. "To most for the supervision of Catholic educa­ Notre Dame men of his day," writes tion has resulted in a decidedly national Father McAvoy in his foreword, "this flavor mtlun the school systems. And tall, thin bundle of energy and con­ secondly, it is interested in providing tradictions was a holy man, and they major points along which comparisons may be made. nicknamed him years ago 'John Faithful' because he was always ready Editor Lee, who heads Notre to hear a confession or to give Holy Dame's Department of Education, has Communion at any hour of the day ccHnpiled a comprehensive evalua­ or night." tion of Church educational systems in six countries which, in die 20th Father McAvoy sets out to examine century, have made their mark as the this man of contradictions from the strongholds of liberalism or con­ vantage point of personal experience. servatism. France, Germany, the A professor of history at Notre Dame Netherlands, Italy, England and the and University archivist, he joined US are the countries examined by the faculty just one year before leading educators. Father O'Hara became its 13th presi­ The organization of the book is dent. such that comparison is not only in­ A chronological portrait of the vited but encouraged. The individual Cardinal's life, the book offers a clear school systems are examined in r^ards consecutive treatment of the major to lay and religious instruction, cur- events which led to his acceptance of riculiun and faculty; relationships with the Chiudli, the government, the red hat of cardinalcy in Rome in public school systems and parents; 1958. Father McAvoy is careful not financial support, evaluatory stan­ to sacrifice the subtleties of character dards; and present and pn^x>sed to the interests of logical order. programs in the areas of regular and Father O'Hara was a humble man special educaticMi. who consistently disdained the honors The chapter on US Catholic ed­ which his abilities merited him. O'HARA and McAVOY Biography with the personal view ucation, written by Prof. Lee, has The Cardinal's role in shaping caused considerable reaction to its Notre Dame began in 1917 when proposals for reform. The educator he started teaching business courses. The account of Father O'Hara's has urged abolition of the elementary He organized the College of Com­ elevation to the College of Cardinals schools, the start of secondary school merce and served as its first dean is treated with an understanding education at the age of puberty, from 1921-1924. A parallel campus which captures the true spirit of the merger of Catholic luiiversities with career began in 1918, when occasion. His reluctance to accept nearby secular schools and a definition of the Catholic school system as a as prefect of religion, he began the honor, offset by his obedience to matter of lay, rather than clerical, publication of "The Religious Bul­ the judgment of his superiors, is best concern. Dr. Lee also advocates the letin," famous on and off campus for perceived in Father McAvoy's rela­ establishment of a central agency in its insights into the religious life tion of the Cardinal's own words: I each coimtry and a coordinating among Notre Dame students. would rather wear the confessor's agency in Rome to insure orderly Named to the University presidency two-inch band of purple than the management of Catholic education in 1934, Father O'Hara's primary red robes of office. throughout the world.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1947 APRIL 13 Topside Briefs

MecKcal School Hopes Still Afloat time that a candidate from the campus political group Plans for the proposed state medical school to be lo­ was elected to major office. cated adjacent to the University met with political entanglement during the 1967 session of the Indiana Feature ND in May HARPER'S Legislature. Conflicting interests between representa­ The University will be the subject of a feature article tives from the several areas contending for location in the May issue of Harper's magazine. Author Peter of the medical school resulted in the failure to pass any Schrag, a member of the editorial staff of the Saturday effective l^islature on the question. However, a pro­ Review, explores the developments the University has posal calling for the establishment of a "blue ribbon" imdeigone in recent years in an article entitled, "Notre committee to study the question was submitted to the Dame: the First Great Catholic University?" governor. The proposal empowered the committee to select a site and hire a dean for the medical school. Memorial Dedication But it was killed this spring when the governor failed Former University President Rev. John J. Cavanaugh to take action on it Although the l^islature vnH not CSC was honored in Miami Beach recendy when the regularly convene again imtil 1969, supporters of the new research facilities of the Miami Heart Institute medical school bill hope to take further acdon at a were named after him. Donated by Father Cavanaugh's special session of the legislature tentatively scheduled close friends. Dr. and Mrs. Donald H. Pellar, the for late November of this year. laboratory will carry on neurodiagnostic research. President of the University from 1946-1952 and later National Awards to ND Students head of the Notre Dame Foundation, Father Cavanaugh Annual announcements of national scholarship winners is retired from full-time activities and resides in Holy are being released and Notre Dame students are re­ Gross House on the campus. ceiving a fair share of the prestigious awards. J. Dudley Andrew became the 24th Notre Dame man to be From Rome to the Scandinavias awarded a Danforth Foundation Fellowship for post­ Departing May 16, the "Friends of Notre Dame" are off graduate study. Andrew, who also won a Woodrow for a three-week European tour. Leading the group will Wilson scholarship, \nil pursue PhD studies in the art of be Rev. Jerome Wilson CSC, Notre Dame's vice-presi­ the film. In addition, 11 students received National dent for business affairs. The northern countries will be Science Foundation Predoctoral Fellowships. Seniors highlighted on the trip which begins with a tour of Daniel Bums, Michael Gauger, Carl Houck, Kermeth. Rome before heading north to Germany and the Hupf, Louis lacovo Jr., Peter McAdam, William Scandinavias. Among places visited \vdll be Vienna, StaUings, James Truman and Jacques Yates and grad­ Berlin, Wiesbaden, the Rhine Valley, Amsterdam, uate students Gary Mappes and John Hirschfelder were Copenh^en and the "fairy tale" country of Denmark. the awardees. Further information about the tour may be obtained from Edgerton's Travel Service, 112 West Jefferson The New Academic Year Blvd., South Bend 46601. Several faculty appointments for the forthcoming aca­ demic year have already been effected. Thomas S. Editor's Choice Fern, assistant professor of art at Berea College, Ken­ Turning to the paragons of campus knowledge, the tucky, will take over the chairmanship of the art depart­ editors of college newspapers, McCall's magazine ment Rev. Anthony J. Lauck, who has served as de­ queried them on "the information gap." Answering partment head for the past seven years, will now questions based on the premise "what college would devote full time to his teaching duties and the director­ you recommend for a boy (girl) who wants to be­ ship of the University Art Gallery. The post of the come . . ." the campus editors supplied the "in" knowl­ newly created Hayes-Healy Chair of Travel Manage­ edge not found in catalogues. Notre Dame scored twice ment has been filled by Frederick Warren Dow. among the 97 editors' choices. In reply to the question Presently corporate manager of the office of associated of which college one attends if he desires to become a Dow companies in Latin America, Mr. Dow will be great athlete, the students picked Notre Dame, Michi­ responsible for organizing a new travel curriculum in gan State and the University of Alabama — in that the department of marketing. order. Notre Dame's highest score came in response to the question, "Where would you send your own Elect Student Leaders son?" The answer was "Harvard, Notre Dame, his Student government elections saw candidates from a own choice." A number of the other queries shed light "split ticket" elected to office in March. Chris Murphy, on several long-time campus legends. Notre Dame a junior government major, was elected student body failed to place as the college where one lives in the president by a slim a margin of less than 300 votes. He least phydcal comfort—West Point copped that tide; served as cultural affairs commissioner for student gov­ nor is it the place to find the most or least attractive ernment this year and was a leader in initiating the girls. ND bachelors can rest easier after the survey. Fine Arts Festival held early this month. New student In response to the question "At which college is a girl body vice-president is junior Tom McKenna who ran least likely to find a husband?" the answer was a unan­ on the Action Student Party ticket It marked the first imous "any Catholic women's college."

U ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL President on New York Board New Press Aid* . University President Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC In January the University added a new member to its was recently honored with an invitation to membership public relations and development staff. He is Richard on the Select Committee on the Future of Private and W. Conklin MA'59 who now joins PubUc Information Independent Higher Education in New YorL Ap­ Director James E. Murphy '47 in keeping the ND com­ pointed in mid-March by Governor Nelson A. Rocke­ munity and the world abreast of the day-to-day news­ feller and the New York Board of Regents, Father worthy happenings on the campus. Conklin's primary Hesburgh joins ranks with fellow educational leaders responsibility will be the handling of news releases and McGeorge Bundy, president of the Ford Foundation; Dr. press relations. A graduate of the University's program James B. Conant, former president of Harvsurd Uni­ in American Studies, Conklin received his AB degree versity and ambassador to Germany; Dr. John A. from St Thomas Collie in St. Paul where he has Hannah, president of Michigan State University; and been director of the news bureau since 1961. Formerly Dr. Abram L. Sachar, president of Brandeis University. a reporter for the Minneapolis Star and the St Louis The Committee, which will make its report to the Post-Dispatch, Conklin brought his professional ex­ Governor by January, 1968, will seek to advise the perience to the classroom as a member of the journalism state on means of retaining "the strength and vitality faculty at St Thomas and as moderator of the school of private and independent institutions of higher edu­ newspaper. cation" without sacrificing their independence in return for government aid. Ncmie Rye to Wilson Fellowships Five Notre Dame seniors were informed in mid-March ConKnue ND Upward Bound Program that they had been named Woodrow Wilson Fellows. The Notre Dame Upward Bound program was ^ven James D. Andrew, Raymond R. Fleming, Jdm R. a vote of confidence recently with the announcement Sajbel, Frank J. Yates and Brother Kenneth E. Good- that a federal grant of $70,280 will renew the project paster CSC were among a select number of students for another year. Begun last summer, the project throughout the country to be so honored. Ten other provides intensive educational orientation and training seniors received honorable mention citations. Only for high school youths from low income families. 1,259 students received the graduate study fellowships Participating students are housed on campus and offered from among the more than 13,000 nominees. The collie skill-courses and counselling by members of the Fellows, who must profess a genuine interest for a Notre Dame faculty in an effort to expose the youths career within the world of academe, are granted full to both academic and living requirements of a college tuition and fees plus a stipend of $2,000 for living program. expenses for a year of advanced study in their major field at the college or university of thdr choice. This Community Involvement year's recipients bring to 127 the number of Notre Public service has long been acknowledged as a main­ Dame men who have so distinguished themselves since stream in the University's channels of excellence. This the program's inception. year, commitment to community service has involved more than 100 faculty members and several hundred Increased Rinds for Rodhition lab students in programs ranging from local applications of The University's Radiation Laboratory has once agsun federally funded War on Poverty programs to business proven its worth as a valuable research tool for the seminars to sociological analyses. Some of the projects Atomic Energy Commission. Just recentiy, the AEC which drew the largest pjurticipation were the Neighbor­ granted over $1 million for the Lab's continued study hood Study Help Program in which over 500 students of the effects of radiation on matter. This latest grant volunteered services as tutors and the legal aid program pushes over the $9.6 million mark the government which involved 50 law students. Students and Holy fimds in support of the University's research in the Cross seminarians also played a significant role in behavior, properties and effects of radiation. The work, staffing the St. Peter Claver House and the Christian which has been carried on at Notre Dame since 1949, Community Center for Migrants. received its biggest support from the AEC with the construction in 1963 of the $2.2 million Radiation Inaugurate Art Festival Research Building which houses the Radiation Lab. A new concept in Notre Dame-South Bend relations was initiated April 4 with the staging of the first festival of Statistically Speaking contemporary arts. Jointly sponsored by the ND No picture of the evolving University would be complete Cultural Conmiission and a number of South Bend without a selective study of basic enrollment statistics. businessmen, the festival daily offered such varied at­ The spring semester showed the usual attrition within tractions as lectures, poetry, music, dance, theatre and the undergraduate ranks where enrollment dropped films during its week and a half schedule. Some of the from the fall high of 6,038 to 5,883. The Graduate highlights of the South Bend-Notre Dame Cultural School also showed a lower total enrollment with a drop Festival includes poets Ned O'Gonnan, Robert Creeley from 1,162 students to 1,139. A significant change is and Sandra Hochman, the Erick Hawkins Modem seen in the number of laywomen (123) now attending Dance Company, a student production of Megan Terry's graduate classes at the University. While the day "Keep Tightly Closed and Store in a Cool, Dry Place," divisions of all colleges currentiy register 92 female the New York Opera Company's "Othello," the Chicago students, the fall semester total was only 63. All told, Contemporary Chamber Players, and student produc­ 7,235 lay men, women and clerics now attend classes tions of two plays by Samuel Beckett. at Notre Dame.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1W7 APRIL 15 execution of research programs in The Added Agent polymer chemistry which have led to The Annual Alumni Fund for 1966 the development of materials signif­ will go on record as a pacesetting icantly more resistant to the space en­ year. In its 24th year, the Alumni vironment." Fimd received responses from more Alumni than at any other time in its Another Insomniac history and recorded its greatest cash R^;is Philbin '53 has declared war— total. on Johnny Carson and the late, late In this year's drive 13,709 Alumni movie. In the company of comedian resfionded to top the previous record Joey Bishop he will storm the ABC of 12,538 contributors set in 1962. ^ waves April 17 and every night The 1966 total also marked an in­ thereafter with a live telecast of the crease of 1,910 over last year's Fund. "Joey Bishop Show." Rege sums up Contributions, too, set a new high the spirit of the show's stars: "Our mark with the total figure of $2,165,- nightly show will be in direct com­ 699.78 breaking the former record petition with Johnny Carson so it of $2,102,299.90 set in 1964. won't be easy, but nothing is in this The inauguration this year of the business." Class Agent program can also be No stranger to the world of the credited with making it a record year. late hour show and conversation Under the program each Alumnus format, Rege broke into the head­ received letter appeals from a selected lines with a Saturday night show of "Agent" of his Class. The Agents his own in San Diego. The program evoked a favorable resjMJnse from 762 raced to the top of the local ratings Alumni who had not contributed due to the untiring efforts of its star, during the past five years and en­ writer, producer, booking agent and couraged 17.2 percent of the non- publicist—^Rege Philbin. Succinctly contributors to make their initial gift defining his role, he notes: "I was Number of % o/ Alumni the works." Contributors Amount Contributing 1962 12,538 $1,777,684.88 53.5 % Nelson Boswell Speaking 1963 11,856 1,258,956.86 49.0 Amid the cacophony of music on to­ 1964 10,794- 2,102,299.90 42.9 day's radio programming, the sound 1965 11,799 1,437,341.69 44.7 of the spoken word is certain to com­ 1966 13,709 2,165,699.78 50.95 mand attention. And one of the lead­ ing commentators of the day is Nelson Space His Element Boswell '47. He is the creator and As we watch a rocket lift off for a star of his own program, "Challenge journey into space, few, if any of us, and Response," a daily five-minute are thinking about what the spacecraft thought-provoking probe into the is made of. The technological ad­ challenges of daily life. vances represented in rocket materials First carried on WNDU, the Uni­ actually are well beyond the ken of versity's radio station, the "Challenge laymen. Rather, they are the pri­ and ResfKjnse" program is now broad­ mary concern of a group of NASA cast on local stations from New specialists. And Dr. George Pezdirtz Hampshire to California. In 1966 it '55 and PhD '60 is a leader among received the George Washington these specialists. In October George Pezdirtz's con­ tributions to the nation's space ef­ forts were recognized by the presen­ tation of two NASA awards, die Ex- Classes ceptional Scientific Achievement Medal and the Langley Research Center Special Service Award. Head of the Langley Center's chemistry and physics branch of the spacecraft ma­ terials section. Dr. Pezdirtz was cited for "the conception, organization and

Nelson toswett 'JBi jSeorge Pezdirii '55 ' ftgis fhilbin '55 16 ALUMNUS AMRCH ^967 APRIL Honor Medal, the Freedoms Founda­ tion's annual radio program award. The Foundation cited the program as an "outstanding accomplishment 1966 ANNUAL ALUMNI FUND in helping to achieve a better under­ AmommS Number Number Class Agent Con- •I Con­ 'f . CiassCoU' standing of the American way of life." IribuUd tributors JIumns 1910 & before—Stephen H. Hew $249,111.58 35 105 33.33 Accent on Youth 1911—Colonel R. Otto Probst 1,231.00 14 31 45.16 Giving substance to the belief that 1912—Richard J. Monroe 58,901.84 12 31 38.71 this is the age of the youthful but 1913 10,630.00 17 36 47.22 highly competent politicians are the 1914—W. Poyntelle Dowiung 1,343.59 14 43 31.86 careers of four Notre Dame grad­ 1915—Albert A. Kuhle 6,284.00 20 41 48.78 1916—C. Patrick Maloney uates of the '50's. Congressmen 17,149.04 16 42 38.10 1917—Frederick L. Mahaffey 24,315.15 33 63 50.79 Joseph McDade '53, Thomas L. 1918—John A. Lemmer 2,105.00 25 53 47.17 Judge '37, Robert Moretti '58 and 1919—Louis J. Finske 3,140.00 17 44 38.64 John D. Bums '58 are all counted 1920—John T. Balfe 6,617.00 18 57 31.57 among the youngest members of their 1921—-Raymond J. SchubmeU 4,806.50 34 66 51.51 respective legislative bodies. And their 1922—^Frank B. Bloemer, Jr. 22,892.00 64 116 55.17 competency is attested to by the sig­ 1923—^Joseph J. Casa Santa, Sr. 11,849.00 72 149 48.32 nificant margins of their electorate. 1924—Edward G. Cantwell 7,236.85 73 155 47.10 Joe McDade represents the 10th 1925—Henry C. Wurzer 12,098.24 117 218 53.67 District of Pennsylvania in the US 1926—Malcohn F. Knaus 27.627.03 101 180 56.11 1927—William J. Corbett, JK 13,140.92 132 274 48.18 House of Representatives — a posi­ 1928—^J. Patrick Canny 85,603.45 180 339 53.10 tion to which he has been twice re­ 1929—^Karl E. Martersteck 27,905.75 170 343 4933 elected since 1962. The district en­ 1930—John J. Elder 758,531.75* 189 366 51.64" compasses Scranton and the surround­ 1931^ohn F. Saunders 35,808.99 186 379 49.08 ing area in the heart of the anthracite 1932—Prof. Francis J. O'MaDey 16,768.00 196 384 51.04 coal fields. Congressman McDade, 1933—^Lucien S. Kempf 29,433.57 212 424 50.00 while still a freshman member of the 1934—^Patrick J. Carroll 31,292.34 206 442 46.61 Committee on Banking and Currency, 1935—Paul A. Fergus 19,580.11 202 431 46.87 introduced the first significant legis­ 1936—Francis L. Layden 15,370.33 147 349 42.12 1937—^Robert M. Siegfried 27,838.22 149 353 42.21 lation to provide aid for the rebuild­ 1938—Leonard H. Skoglund, Jr. 19,852.56 193 408 47.30 ing of homes seriously damaged by 1939—^James N. Motschall 17,205.65 214 431 49.65 mine fires or cave-ins. During, his 1940—Walter L. Fleming, Jr. 62,980.45 255 504 50.60 second term he was instrumental in 1941—William E. Cotter, Jr. 22,446.70 232 461 50.33 the passage of mine fire legislation— 1942—William E. Scanlan 14,951.00 228 445 51.24 invaluable to the people of his dis­ 1943—Oliver H. Hunter 17,256.92 240 458 52.40 trict. Recognition of his ability was 1944—John W. Anhut 40,587.94 265 481 55.09 granted by his peers when he was 1945—Joseph M. Haggar, Jr. 9,114.57 139 287 48.43 appointed to the influential House 1946—^H. B. Surkamp 6,438.16 121 241 50.21 1947—Joseph M. Byrne 28,110.35 247 526 46.96 Appropriations Committee. 1948—James L. Feistel 24,887.01 440 802 54.86 Thomas Judge is a freshman mem­ 1949—Peter J. Keman, Jr. 36,964.58 587* 1064 55.17 ber of the Montana State Senate. But 1950—Gus CifeUi 32,768.62 485 887 54.68 he is not initiating his public service 1951—Martin R. O'Connor 22,575.75 396 679 58.32 with this term. As a representative 1952—William V. Cuddy 17,327.43 451 818 55.82 from Lewis and Clark County to the 1953—^Joseph L. Pagliari 23,204.18 458 759 60.34 past three sessions of the state legisla­ 1954—^Thomas J. Nessinger 17,675.59 499 767 65.06* ture he compiled an enviable record 1955—George H. Shelton 19,691.35 466 768 60.68 as chairman of the House Business 1956—John F. Fannon 17,834.94 471 817 57.65 and Industry Committee, vice-chair­ 1957—James A. Morse 15,528.16 4% 898 55.23 1958—^Alfred J. Weinsheimer, Jr. 16,780.77 564 948 59.49 man of the Highway Committee and 1959—Frank R. Reynolds, Jr. 18,016.86 513 942 54.46 a member of the Montana Legislative 1960—D. Jerry McGIynn 12,644.42 506 929 54.47 Council. Senator Judge begins his 1961—Patrick J. Hart, Jr. 10,440.00 468 906 51.66 present four-year term as chairman 1962—John C. Dearie 7,049.28 394 977 40.33 of the Natural Resources Committee. 1963—Kevin G. Hart 7,502.51 393 1030 38.16 A Helena businessman, Tom owns 1964—David W. Ellis 8,327.41 463 1093 42.36 a successful advertising and public re­ 1965—John J. Gearen 13.478.22 508 1030 49.32 lations firm. In 1964 he was Jaycee 1966—^Barry T. McNamara 3,116.00 304 1036 29.34 Man of the Year and in 1965 was Undergraduates 5,040.00 5 honored as one of the Outstanding Notre Dame Alumni Clubs 55,719.43 31 Young Men of America by the US Graduate Student Association 114.80 1 Jaycees. Secretary of the Notre Dame Student Foundation Week 1,612.43 1 Club of Montana, Senator Judge was Gifts in kind 9,844.49 24 chosen their "Man of the Year" in Alumni Total $2,165,699.78 13,709 26,906 50.95% 1966 for his civic, business and Honorary Alumni 624,961.00 18 political achievements. The youngest member of the Cali­ Combined Total $2,790,660.78 13,727 fornia Assembly last term. Bob Moretti won his right to represent the • 1930 Largest Amount • 1949 Most ContiibutoTS 42nd District first by defeating nine • 1954 Largest % of Class Contributing Democratic candidates in the primary ALUMNUS AAARCH 1967 APRIL ^7 election and later, his Republican op­ ponent in the general election. From 1997 FOOTBALL TICKETS: there he went on to achieve a number of creditable accomplishments. In ORED wth reading about nothing the 1968 season, but NOT for this 1965 he was elected a member of the B buhut change,change on thfthet ramnuscampus? Like current year of 1967. Assembly Rules Committee — only co-swapping classes with St. Mary's 2. Alimuii Advance Sale opens the third freshman assemblj-man in via shuttle buses making 40 trips a June 20. Advance Sale forms are lim­ the 20th century to hold such a po­ day? . . . the Senior Class bar in the ited to TWO tickets per game, are sition. A year later, he became the basement of a South Bend restaurant? not transferable and will be honored only freshman representative in Cali­ ... no curfew? . . . beards? . . . un­ tmtil July 15 or until the ticket supply fornia history to chair the Assembly's limited weekend permissions? . . . is exhausted, whichever occurs first. Finance and Insurance Committee. guitars in the chapel? . . . adminis­ Any order received after that date, tration by laymen? Well, old grads, re^rdless of category, will receive don't grouse. We've still got a solid, general use treatment. Nor is an monoHthic, changeless thing going order filled before July 15 guaranteed here that makes Gibraltar, Old Faith­ a preferred location (see Point 4 be­ ful and the Grand Canyon seem as low) . permanent as a Mickey Rooney mar­ 3. The Alumni Advance Sale order riage. We're speaking of the 57,000 form is designated as such in bold seating capacity of Notre Dame type on its face for ready identifica­ Stadium. tion. Eligible Alumni should receive McDADE 'S3 MOgmi '58 Opened in 1930 (I was a fresh­ these just prior to June 20. If you man!) we had a student enrollment have not and you're certain of your of 3,200, an Alumni body of 5,000 eligibility, notify the Ticket Manager and a season-ticket sale of 2,700. at once. Our envelopes are addressed Dues-paid Alumni were permitted by the Alumni Association but filled eight preferred seats and unlimited and mailed by the ticket office. Omis­ additional tickets! In fact, the only sions are usually caused by address people who didn't sit between the 35- changes. So if your address differs yard lines were known smallpox car­ from that used for this issue of the riers. ALUMNUS, forward that change at once to the Alumni Office. JUDGE '57 BURNS '58 By now, you should get my message . . . especially if you've looked at the 4. Seats are allotted in accordance His competency -was recognized when above diagram and its figures. Just with date received, modified only as he was reappointed to the chairman­ compare them for a moment (Alumni follows: Orders arriving BEFORE ship for the 1967 term. In addition, now total over 40,000 of which 15,000 opening day (June 20) are integrated he holds membership on Revenue and contributed in '66) and reflect that with those received on June 20. At Taxation, Social Welfare and Govern­ we still have the same 57,000 seats close of business June 20, all appli­ ment Organization Committees. we had in 1930. So there is ONE cations on hand at that point are Bob's introduction into politics thing on the campus that doesn't thoroughly shuffled, drawn by lot and came through his post as consultant change — but it's no comfort to us. assigned a sequence number to estab­ lish the order of seat assignment for to the Assembly Committee on Elec­ There will be nowhere near enough each game. Since four to five thou­ tions and Reapportionment He was tickets for each of the categories sand orders for each of the more able to acquire firsthand knowledge shown. Sorry — there won't be any popular games will arrive for pro­ of the state legislative process and public sale for Michigan State. Fur­ cessing on June 20 (accounting for election procedures on a state-wide thermore, because the season ticket right to ten thousand tickets) obvi­ tour of country election boards. figures apply for all the home games, ously even a first-day order could be Successful in his first bid for public the general sale for the other games on the 50-yani line or beyond the goal office last November, John D. Bums will be greatly curtailed as well. line, depending on the luck of the was elected the youngest state senator We're at the saturation point now draw. This is the answer to the in Oregon history. His interest in and with interest mounting yearly the Alumnus' question as to why, al­ politics was awakened through a 1967 Michigan State plan will prob­ though he ordered for all games on student job as an assistant to US ably become the pattern for all the the very first day, he received fine Senator Richard L. Neuberger. A more popular games for the next five seats for one game and poor ones for 1961 graduate of Georgetown Uni­ years. versity Law Center, John began his another, or fine or poor seats for all We'll go over the usual regulations — or none for Michigan State! career as assistant solicitor for the US again for you, but please remember Department of Interior. During a that tickets for Michigan State will After Monogram and Season Ticket three year term as a trial lawyer in be allocated as listed above; and the orders (more about Season Tickets the Multnomah County DA's ofiice, follo\ving points apply almost entirely below) are satisfied, ONLY 4,000 he prosecuted more than 250 criminal to the other home games. TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE IN cases. NOTRE DAME STADIUM BE­ Advance Sale Procedure. 1. Con­ A law associate of the former TWEEN THE GOAL AND 50- tributors to the 24th Annual Alumni speaker of the Oregon House, John YARD LINE FOR ALUMNI. Fund in 1966, religious and honorary has maintained an active interest in Hence, for the more popular games d^ree holders plus the June Class of local politics. He is the former pres­ it is readily seen how a first-day 1967 are eligible for Advance Sale ident of the West Side Democratic order could fare poorly. An Alumnus order forms for the 1967 football sea­ Club in Portland and chairmanned who files his order even two or three son. A contribution recorded after the 1964 Multnomah County Young days after June 20 can expect noth­ Jan. 1, 1967 affords ticket priority for Citizens for Johnson-Humphrey. ing but seats bdiind the north goal

18 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL Permanemee Atmid Change (see diagram). Most games away Committee will be glad to send public sand and himdreds of the applicants from home present even more seat­ order forms to any addressee upon were Alumni. As a result we now ing problems because of the small request as long as tickets are available. must freeze the season-ticket sale at allotment normally available to the Alumni Qubs. 7. Alumni Clubs plan­ its present figure of 23,250. There- visiting team in proportion to the ning on a block of tickets for an ex­ fore the season ticket avenue is no geographical balance of our following. cursion must file a request with the longer open to Alumni r or- anyone General and Block Sales. 3. General Ticket Manager BEFORE JUNE 20. else, except for the n^li^bly few Use ticket applications are mailed Final action on block orders cannot season tickets which will not be re­ annually to ALL Alumni the latter be taken until individual sales close newed diis year. If you are interested part of July, prior to the Aug. 1 open­ July 15, and then only if sufficient we'll be glad to have your request and ing of public sale. While it is possible tickets remain. However, a tentative will send you an order form; but that Advance Sale described above reservation will be made and an chances of procuring them are slim could claim our entire ticket supply, Alumni Club will be given preference due to the overwhelming number of as of now we feel there will be public in case of short supply. As to seat requests we've already received since sale for all games except Michigan locations for groups the following is last season. State. However, that cannot be de­ positive: block orders are filled from And Rnaliy ... although interest in termined until June 15. General Use seats remaining after all individual Notre Dame football has soared to forms are transferable and the con­ orders have been assigned. This per­ record heights in the past three years, tributing Alumnus who has already mits only end zone seats, invariably. we've still tried to keep this phase used his Advance Sale form for two 8. Alumni Clubs frequently ask for of the University's relationship with tickets may place additional orders two or more seats in "choice loca­ its Alumni on a personal ba^ Please via the general form. Moreover, the tion" for raffle or fund-raising awards. dim't fail to air your gripes or for­ General Use form is a convenient re­ Because of the problems described in ward your suggestions for you'll get minder to the noncontributing Alum­ point 4, tickets for prizes must be of an answer and a correction if we're nus that tickets are available. These the general sale variety. in error. (We dp make 'em, really!) General Use forms carry no loca- The Season Ticket Situation. For &e Until the computers do take over we tional preferences as all such orders past several years, we have been urg­ still deem it a privilege to serve you are filled after Advance Sale pur­ ing Alumni who need more than the and field your best pitches as we chases. Alumni sale provides to purchase sea­ enter our 27th year in tins job. 6. Public sale of remaining tickets son tickets. Last year, our season- opens annually on Aug. 1. The Ticket ticket sale increased by several thou- hw Bmbert CmhUl '34 GATC'S-4 -3^6 GATS-7

GATE-IM GAKS

\ Season Tickets (includes 1.000 Faculty; 1,000 St. Mary's) 25.250 I Students and Wives Season Tickets 7.750 rs^i-^^ Contributing Alumni: of 15,000 eligible, tickets \ SVs5.^ available for 5,000 ot two eocti 10.000 AK'/O i^!C§ Parents of Students: of 7,000 eligible, tickets ^^S^^ available for 2,000 at two each

ATCll

GAr£-l4 1967 MICHIGAN STATE GAME ALLOTMENT PLAN

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL J 19 Alumni Seminar to Probe Can you pray at Mass anymore? Do you ever have the disquieting feeling that drug usj^e or indifference towards a.Tixiua.1 aluxx^ni seminar the plight of your neighbor may be new sins in violation of the same old Ten Commandments? Can you make up your o%vn mind on these matters? Or must you aw^t clerical interpretation? Do you still think signs like "Wanted Dead or Alive — God" are merely the work of campus oddball humorists? Or does the question confront you daily in your reading and conversation? If you have any doubts or qualms about these matters, then, as the old slogan says, you can't afford to miss the second Annual Alumni Seminar, "Has Change Run A^vay With the Church?" Scheduled for June 8-9, the 1967 Alumni Seminar \vill not only explore postconciliar changes in the Church, but also those wrought by the mores of our times.

Miss Pamela Trenerry and GEORGE LEWIS LEONARD W. CONDON '32 on the death of ENGAGEMENTS HI '64, South Bend, Jan. 21. !us mother, Feb. 1. Miss Laurene Bcinhauer and LEO DAY ifiss Michcle Manzclla and GEORGE PATRICK JOHN C. CAMERON '33 on the death of his O'DOXXELL JR. '56. NOVAK '64, NuUey, N.J., Feb. 4. wife, Oct. 12. Miss Elva Dughi and JAMES L. BYRNE '57. Miss Mary Ann Kotzenmachcr and JOHN J. Dr. JOHN J. DORSEY '34 on the death of Miss Doris Mae Moran and FRED C. SCHE- COFFEY JR. '65, Notre Dame, Feb. 7. his son, Nov. 13. l^aXSKE '57. Miss Elvira F. Lac and ROBERT £. GAENS- FRANK ENGEL '35 on the death of his wife, Miss Bemadette Maryann Dec and DANIEL SLEN '65, Nciv Yorit City, Dec. 26. Jan. 11. KLETTER '60. Miss Mercedes Corpas Uribe and ERNESTO JEROME CLAEYS JR. '37 on the death of his Miss Glenna Ferris and ROBERT B. BURCKEL GUHL '65, Bogota, Colombia, Dec 8. father, Jan. 18. '61. Miss Maria Teresa Mazabel and LUIS £D- JOHN P. MURPHY '38 on the death of his Miss Jeanne Marie Walters and JAMES ROB­ UARDO LAVERDE '65, Bogota, Colombia, Dec. father. Mar. 7. ERT H.ARBISOX '63. 10. GEORGE B. '44 and JOSEPH H. EUSTER- Miss Lucinda Gage MacKenzie and DENNIS iEss Irene Clare and JOHN CHESIRE '66, MAN '52 on the death of their father, July 11. MICR-VEL MURPHY B.A '63. Notre Dame, Feb. 4. JOSEPH G. DONLON '49 on the death of Miss Margaret Ann Hartnctt and KENNETH Miss Shirley Fox and THO%L\S REGNER liis wife, Jan. 14. T. TELESCA '63. '67, Brighton, Wis., Jan. 7. THOMAS D. SINCLAIR '51 on the death of Miss Eileen Mary Blccg and CIURLES CAV- his father. ANAGH 'Gt. BIRTHS WILLIAM B. '52, EUGENE M. '52 and Miss Gailanne Slieridan and MICHAEL J. ALLAN J. RILEY '57 on the death of their Mr. and Mrs. ERNEST E. ZIMMER '42, a. father. Mar. 3. FOGERTY '64. son, Feb. 20. Miss Gloria Jean Glcnnon and HAL RICHARD BERNARD JR. '53 and JEROME J. BURKE Mr. and Mrs. CRAIG A. HEWETT '46, a '58 on the death of their father, Feb., 1967. GRAFER '64 daughter, Pamela Grace, Dec 7. Miss Jean Ann Smith and MICHAEL PAUL JOSEPH KENNEDY '53 on the death of his Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM KLEE '51, a daugh­ father. POLIARD '64L. ter, Ann Helen, Sept. 2. Miss Maureen Mcchan and MICHAEL AN­ MICHAEL '54 and JOHN M. HACKETT '57 Mr. and Mrs. THOAL\S H. COUGHUN '52, on the death of their father. THONY SENXOTT '64. a daughter, Norccn Catherine, Sept. 19. Miss Patricia Ann Gilstrap and STANLEY Mr. and Mrs. PANOS D. B.AROIS '53, a son, ROBERT G. WALLNER '55 on the death of PAUL SZKLAREK '64. Byron Galen, Jan. 21. his father, Jan. 9, 1966. Miss Elena Marie DiNardo and JOHN W. Mr. and Mis. GEORGE BELLIS '54, 3 son, BERNARD G. LYONS '58 on the death of his WOLF JR. '64. Feb. 12. father. Miss ifary Carolj-n Crcmer and TIMOTHY Mr. and Mrs. ^VILLIAM McLAIN '55, a son, DEATHS KRISTL '65. Patrick, Nov. 23. JOHN E. FRANCHERE '06, Memphis, Aug. Miss Marcia XL Kent and JAMES F. LONGE Mr. and Mrs. THOitAS E. KENNELL '56, a '65. 22. He is survived by his widow, 919 Oakmont son, Mark Andrew, Nov. 21. Dr., Memphis, Tenn. 38107. Miss Clare Ann Holmes and CHARLES iH- Mr. and Mis. RAMON DE LA TORRE '57, CHAEL NEWBRAND '65. EDWARD L. FIGEL '11, Chicago, Feb. 17. He a daughter, Cristina. Nov. 17. ^va5 an attorney for 38 ycais and is survived by Miss Siicila .Ann Fislier and TIMOTHY J. Mr. and Mrs. JOHN F. CHRISTENSEN '59, O'SHAUGHNESSY '65. his widow, 7719 Clyde Ave., Chicago, and seven a son, John III, Jan. 24. sons including ROBERT C. '49. Miss Mar>- Ann Montgomery and WILLIAM Mr. and Mrs. EDWARD FERRARA '60, a son, J. PREDEBON '65. Da\id Scott, Nov. 1. EDMOND J. QUINN SR. 'II, Scotch Plains, Miss Margaret Ann Spitz and GERALD R. Mr. and Mrs. EDWARD KENNEDY '60, a N.J., Feb. 12. He received a PhD from Colum­ OLDSTER '66. son, Edward Thomas IV, Jan. 7. bia U. in 1927 and was an asst. prof, of chem­ istry there before joining the Maltinc Co. as an Miss Sara Margaret Wilson and JOHN JAMES Dr. and Mis. DONALD T. McALLISTER '60, McDERMOTT '66. engineer. In 1951 he retired from Merck & Co. a daughter, Maureen, Feb. 14. Surviving are his widow, 24 Land Ave, West- Miss Kathleen Smith and ROBERT CHARLES Mr. and Mrs. LAWRE.\CE E. VANCE JR. MEEKER '66. bury, N.Y., two sons E. JOHN '41 and DAVID '60, a daughter, Karen Marie, Feb. 1. J. '52 and a daughter. Miss Joan Randall Spain and JAMES J. RO- Mr. and Mra. EARL A. BERRY JR. '64, a MANCHEK '66. daughter, Kathcrinc Alarie, Jan. 28. LEO J. SHANNON '12, Grants Pass, Ore., Mr. and Mrs. DENNIS O'BRIEN '64, a son. Dec 29, He was a retired civil engineer with AAARRIAGES Gary Sean, Oct. 10. General Petroleum Corp. and was a member of the Associated General Contractors. He was also Miss Patricia Rocdcr and PAUL V. HORNUNG SYMPATHY a veteran of WWI. Survivors include his widow, '57, Beveriy Hills, Calif., Jan. 18. 1028 N.W. Conklin, Grants Pass, and a daughter. iCss Joyce Lynn Lenold and ALEXANDER K. Dr. JOSEPH C. FOLEY '25 on the death of AUSTIN A. McNICHOLS '17, River Forest, PASZLY '59, Bremerton, Wash., Dec. 11. his mother. Mar. 2. in., Fd). 15. He operated an insurance agency Miss Mary Taylor and P.ATRICK ROMAN WALTER W. SMITH '27 on the death of bii for 40 years and was a past president of the ND GUENTERT '61, Niles, Mich., Jan. 7. wife, Feb. 20. Club of Chicago. Surviving are his widow, 1531 Miss Martha Irene Eikhoff and JHCHAEL JOHN E. &IOTZ '30 on the death of bh wife Winiams St., River Forest, two sons induding MORRISSEY '61, summer, 1966. and WILLIAM J. '58 on the death of his mother, AUSTIN '49, and two daughters. Miss Rachel Flynn and ROBERT LOUIS HAM­ Jan. 19. FRANK B. MARSHALL '18, Santa Monica, ILTON '62, Notre Dame, Jan. 7. DEVERE T. PLUNKETT '30 on the death of C^if., Feb. 9. Surviving arc his widow, 1114 Miss Jacqulinc Appleby and LARRY J. PAUL his wife, and JOHN R. '65 on the death of llis Sixth St., Santa Monica, three sons and a '62, Oct. 29. mother, Jan. 28. daughter. 20 ALUMNUS MARCH ^967 APRIL Changes in Today's Church The Seminar will follow a new format this year. Each hour-long session will begin with a faculty member offering a concise but authoritative presentation of the topic in ques­ tion. Following it, two faculty-reactors wll lead the dis­ cussion period. Topics for this year's conference are: "Can you pray at Mass?"; "New Sins and Old Commandments"; "Wanted Dead or Alive — God"; "Authority, Conscience and Free­ dom"; and "Why Bother Being a Catholic?" Although the Alumni Seminar immediately precedes REUNION '67, it is not limited in attendance to the Reunion Classes. All interested Alumni are urged to attend and de­ cide for themselves whether "Has Change Run A^vay with the Church?" Further information can be obtained by writ­ ing Dean Thomas P.Bergin, Center for Continuing Education.

WILLIAM P. ECKERLE '20-23, Alexandria, Jan. 13. He is survived by bis widow, 26048 EDWARD F. CROWE '47, Oak Ptirk, EL, Mar. Va., Dec. 27. A senior civil engineer at the Naval Fillsbury Dr., Farmington. 2. Fre^dent of the Suburban Trust and Savings Facilities Engineering Command, he is survived by Sister M. CAIUIEL HARNEY FBVU '32, Bank since 1964, he had been VP with that bank his mdow, 2810 Cameron Mills Rd., Alexandria, Aberdeen, S.D., Dec, 1966. and the Maiqaette National Bank. He was past and a daughter. LOUIS N. FOLTZ '33, LouisriUe, Ky., Jaa. president of the Installment Bankers Assn., West­ JOHN P. CHAPLA '23, Lomin, Ohio, Mar. 3. 14. ern Cook Cotmty Bankers Coundl and a member He is survived by his widow, 3407 E. Erie Ave., Sister M. LOUIS LETOURNEAU SSJ "3^ of other professional organizations. He is sur­ Lorain. Concordia, Kan. vived by his widow, 1000 Bellefoite, Oak Krk, FORREST G. "FOD" COTTON '23, Kansas CH-ARLES J. MEDLAND '33, Pittsbuish, Jan., five sons and a daughter. City, Mo. Mar. €. A tackle under Rockne, he 1967. He is survived by his widow, 4921 Flymontlx MICHAEL J. DOYLE '49, Nortbval)^ N.J., later became a basketball and football coach at Rd., Pittsburgh 15227. Feb. 14. St. Ambrose Col. and Catholic U. A founder of EDMUND S.ARGUS '33, '51 L, Bellaire, Ohio, JOHN L. HAGSTROM '49, Cindnnati, Jan. the National Catholic Community Service and the Mar. 4. A fonner member of the State Senate, 17. He was killed in a car accident at El Paso, USO programs, he was the first club director he had just been appointed Judge of the IVobate Tex. while on a business trip. He beaded For­ hired by the NCCS. He is survived by his widow, Court. Surviving are his widow and three children. mica's Industrial Roducts Dept. since early 1966. ^2 E. 70tli Terrace, Kansas City, and a son John JOHN JOSEPH McGRATH '35, Sedalia, Mo., He is survived by bh widow, 9004 Cherry Blossom L. '51. Dec. 23. He is survived by his widow, 1500 W. Lane, Gndnnati, and three sons. EDWARD J. MCLAUGHLIN '24, Detroit, Jan. Fifth, Route 3, Sedalia. Rev. JOSEPH E. HIPP '49, Erie, Ri., Feb. 19. 16. He is survived by his widow, 1600 Antic- ANTHONY J. MULVANEY '35, Arlington, While in the Army he received two Purple tam St., No. 1503, Detroit, and three children. Va., Mar. 3. He was director of the Office of Hearts, a Bronze Star and a IVesidential Citation. JOHN E. WHITE '25, Ida Gtxive, Iowa, Jan. Administrative Services for the Agency for Intel- At ND he served as photr^rapher for the Dome 23. He is survived by his widow. Box 26, Jda national Development and had been with the and Scholastic. Financial aid officer for Gannon Grove, and a son. government office the greater part of his career* Col., he was one of the founders of the Citizens Sister M. ANASTASIA COADY SCN '26, Naz­ He is survived by his widow, 1721 N. Veitch St., Scholarship Foundation. areth, Ky. Arlington, and two sons. DON E. SCHLEMMER '52, Memphis, Jan. 18. SUter M. URSULA MERTZ OSU '26, Laoh, ROBERT T. BURKE JR. '36, Louisnlle, Jan. He was in the cotton business witli his father, Kan., Dec. 4. 4. He was an attorney for the Catholic Arch­ owner of Southern Pickery, before joining Allen- Sister M. BERNADETTE BRYAN OSU '27, diocese of Louisville. He also served in several bets. He is survived by Ms widow, 1210 Wood-, Piola, Kan., Mar. 24, 1964. public offices, on the boards of hospitals and bury St., Memphis, a daughter and a son. Sister MARY ALEXINE BYRNE SO '27, Mt. colleges, and as a member of the Democratic ADOLFO L. CASTELLON '59, Managua, St. Joseph, Ohio. state central committee. Survivors include his Nicaragua, 1966. He is survived by his mother Brother JOHN EVANGELIST CFX '27, Shiem- widow, 323 Jarvis Lane, Louisville, and two of ler Callejon Sur, N. 508, Managua. bury, Mass. daughters. Sister JOSEPH MARIA KINTZ CSJ '60, Con- JOHN STEELE HICOK '27, Hastings on Hud­ MATTHEW G. LEARY '36, Burlington, Vt, cordia, ICan. son, N.Y., Feb. 27. An executive of the GE Co. summer, 1966. He is survived by bis widow, 25 LARRY T. BRO\yN '63, Neenah, ^Vis., Jan. 31, he retired as eastern regional manager of the Hot- N. Prospect St., Burlington. He is survived by his widow, 206 Third St., Nee- point Div. two years ago. Surviving are his widow, THOMAS J. MURPHY '36, Boston, May 1*. s&3kh, and twt> sons. 45 Windsor Rd., Hastings on Hudson, and a 1966. He is survived by his widow, 51 Longfellow Lt. LAWRENCE A. DIRNBERGER '66 daughter. Rd., Needham, Mass., and a son. (USMC), Webster Groves, Mo., Feb. 24. He JOHN WILLIAM CONBOY '28, Mishawaka, Brother RICHARD J. O'KELLY '36, Boston, died in the Philippines of injuries suffered in the Jan. 12. He was a former social studies teacher Mass., 1965. accidental explosion of a grenade in Vietnam. A and counsellor in Mucssel School and is survived JOHN A. GENEGAL '37, JKddleto%vn, N.Y., high schocd star in crDss-country and the mile, by his widow, 417 Studebaker, Mishawaka, Ind. July 30. He is survived by his widow, ^ Wat- he was a Monogram winner at ND. Surviving Dr. GUY L. LORANGER '28, Grosse Pointe kins Ave., Middletown. are hb parents of 526 Forest Green Dr., Webster Farms, Mich., Jan. 5. HENRY POJ^fA.N '37, '38 L, LaGrange, m.. Groves, and a tma brother. BERNARD E. ZIPPERER '28, Niles, Ohio, Mar. 9. He was a member of the 1935 football Jan. 16. He is survived by hb widow, 611 N. team and Monogram Club. Surviving are hSs FACULTY AND STAFF DEATHS Main St., Niles. widow, 727 S. Waiola Ave., LaGrange, a daughter Rev. JAMES J. RYAN CSC '20 died at H0I7 Rev. JOHN J. HARRINGTON CSC '29, Fort and a son. - • Cross House on the campus Jan. 21. A teacher Portal, Uganda, Jan. 1. Sister M. ANGELITA CONLEY OP (MS '39), and rector at Notre Dame from 1929-32, he FRANCIS L. ZAPPONE '29, Spokane, Wash., Columbus, Ohio, Oct. 29, 1964. served in many capacities and locations during Dec. 30. Surviving are his widow, £. 524 Bald­ EDWARD J. GLASER '42, Cincinnati, Jan. 4. his 42 years of priesthood. In addition to serving win, Spokane, a son and a daughter. He is survived by his widow, 703 Carew Tower, as chaplain in a prison, hospital, high schools EDWARD D. CONNOR '30, Detroit, February. Cincinnati. and colleges, he taught at Nazareth College In A judge of Recorder's Court and for 18 years a EDWARD HOYNE '42, Dayton, Ohio, Feb. 3. Kalamazoo, Mich. &om 1933-55 and ixacx member of the Detroit Common Council, he is Director, VP and treasurer of the Hoyne Funeral 195&60. survived by his widow, 19321 Greydale, Detroit, Homes, Inc., he was also a member of the Ohio Rev. Edward Siegman CPPS, associate pro­ two sons including Michael J. '61 and a daughter. Natural Resources Commission from 195S-1963. fessor of Sacred Scripture in the graduate JOSEPH F. TIMLIN '30, Washington, DC, He is survived by his widow, 706 Oakwood Ave., theology program, died Feb. 2. A leading biblical Feb. 8. He is survived by bis widow, 1546 East- Dayton, and six daughter?. scholar, he was current president of the Catholic West Highway, Silver Spring, Md. DON.ALD Hi'BIRREN '47, Morton Grove, DI., Biblical Association of America. Prior to joining SUter M. DE PAZZI WYNN SSJ '31, Con­ July 14, 1966. He is survived by his widow, 8421 the ND faculty last November he was counselor cordia, Kan. McVickers, Morton Grove, three sons and three at the Thomas More House at Yale U. and had NORBERT J. CROWE '32, Farmington, Mich., daughters. taught at Catholic U.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1W7 APRIL 21 As ustial at thb time of )-ear your secretary ^ ^^ m ^^ Birthdar'greetings Apr. 2, received a note from our friend HEINIE (ALVIN) ^ W M^ ^J I>- ^^ NIGRd, MD •17, BERGER indicating that he and his good wife • ^4 • ^^k 1222 McGee St^, Kansas Yeor Club have already established headquarters for the win­ • ^^ 1^^ C>>r. Mo.; Apr. 4, WIL- 50 ter at Eustis, Fku 32726, P.O. Box 996. As ^^ ^^ LIAM NOdNAN, Box might be expected he was elated over the great LOOKING BACKWARD FIFTY-ODD YEARS 470, Pensacola, Fla.; Apr. 6, GEORGE' HAR- season for the football team. '*Wc were vp to BERT, 1623 23nl Ara., Rock Islaiid, lU.; AIR-. 9, Heidelberg on an eastern tributary of the Rhine see the Purdue game this fall — our sdiool if JOHN J. VOELKERS, 1006 Wisley Ave., Oak may be replete with academic and athletic lore certainly gromng." FUdc, HL; Apr. 21, CHARLES CAtL, 1(H7 Bilt- of its ovnif but from this German city comes a A most pleasant surprise xn the fornk of a noie Dr., Winter Haven, Fla. 33380; Apr. 25, nostalgic letter by J. STOCKDALE KOBE '14, newsy letter from HENRY FRAWLEY SR. wlm EDWARD McOSKER '17, 525 N. Melrose Ave., who turns back the pages of time's book 50-odd with his son HENRY JR. (also an ND grad) Elgin, ni. 60121; Apr. 26, Dr. NEIL WHALEN, years and tells of the charges tlirough football operates a 5,000-acre ranch in western South 1023 Caiieux Rd., Grosse Pointe Ri'ric, Mich.; Apr. lines by the late RAY EICHEXLAUB. His let­ Dakota with headquarters in Spear&h. He in­ 28, ALLEN FRIITSCHE, 75 Washington Ave., ter is interesting to us who remember those years quired about THEO N. FEYDER LLB '14 »*o because we loo were Eichcnlaub fans. Eljria, Ohio and WILLIAM KELLY, 1950 lives in Sioux Falls. Later he reported having Reeveston Rd., Richmond, Ind.; May 24, Rev. Iklaybe the record of Eichenlaub's prowess has received a Christmas card from the Fcyders idio GEORGE HOLDERITH CSC, U. of Notre Dame, been partially * dimmed because of the football are sojourning in Palos Verdes, Calif., this win­ Ind. 46556 and HARRY C. BAUJAN '17, 2069 history made by his teammates — ROCKNE, ter. Incidentally, Mrs. Kuhle and I wUI hdp Rustic Rd., Dayton, Ohio; May 28, DANIEL DORAIS and PLISKA —for tlic years that came them celebrate their golden wedding annivenary HILGARTNER JR., P.O. Box 75, Harbert, Mich. after, but Eichcnlaub was then our beau ideal this June 10. We were at their wedding in 1916 49115. Hope you all mark your calendar and of football. and Afrs. Kuhle was one of the bridesmaids. send out a birthday card — you know the "guy" After receiving the ALUMNUS Mr. Kobb ivritcs: Among his many skills I am sturc that be has a will appreciate it. "I see HARRY BOUJAX's name and also those fabulous memory. HANS (as he was called at of DANNY HILGARTNER, JOHN RILEY and Notre Dame) has extended an invitation "to come Talked Kith LAMBERT Q. SENG via phone, Fathers DOLAN and DOREMUS and of FRED out our way and visit the *Land of Infinite tried to get some news and went over the birth- STEERS, the fleet-footed ..one, "and read that Variety* and while here %ve can foster a *buU day list. When ALLEN FRITZCHE's name came NORM BARRY never wore a headgear w'hrle session' and recount the days when a certain up Bert remembered the *'wliite-haired hurdler." fullbacking. But I also recall our days when person threw a bag of water from a third story All the information we got out of "BIG FRANK" Eichcnlaub and DIMMICK, PLISKA and BERG­ window and disrupted the efforts of a plainclothes- RYDZEWSKI was that he is enjoj-ing good MAN carried the ball for tlie greatest team in man from South Bend who u'as looking for health. JOHN H. VOEKLERS offered a nice all the land and never wore headgear, nor did •DOLLY' GRAY and *.PREP' WELLS follow, idea—that we fellows get together for lunch. they have padding in their uniforms. ing an alleged encounter they had with someone Splendid idea. What is your reaction? **It w^s a tliriUing pleasure to sec the great in the city the previous evening. *POP* FAR­ Change of addresses: JOHN E. DUFFY, 7700 Eich tearing through a line with his hair dis­ LEY broke all records running to the third floor South Shore, Chicago, 111. 60649; FRANK B. heveled, his sweater torn almost to ribbons, flying and found only an angelical student from Salem, in the breeze. Eich was indeed sturdy as an S.D., deep in the pursuit of the mysteries of MARSHALL, 1114 6th St., Santa Monica, Calif. oak, covered with s%vcat and mud, forever a metaphysics. Your Giuirdian Angel must kive yon! 90103; JAMES P. LOGAN, 29518 So. Filhnore hero of the day." What a treatise could be written and reported St., Denver, Colo. 80210. What do you think about this quote: "Why do you luds of '18 ivant Those of a later day may tliink Kobb over- about the accounts and recounts of Adler Bros., to know how old your 'seniors' of '17 aie?" enthusiastic but for us he tells facts. Undoubtedly Spiro's, Brother Leeps Confectionery and his the high point as well as turning point was 'lemonade and fotus,' KfcDonald the pho­ Well that comes fcom 'Ole Timer* PAUL J. reached in the great game at West Point in '13. tographer, Shaffner's and Platner's and th^ con­ FOGARTY PhBJ '17, wintering as usual in The "crowd" which accompanied the team down venient entrance to Hagedorm's where a ddidous DelRay Beach, Fla. and looking forward to lots East consisted of GEORGE HULL, MIKE CAL- free lunch was served with a stein of beer, the of laughs with CHARLIE BACHMAN LLB '17, NON (HuIIie and Mike), the late TOM WIL­ Philadelphia, the Oliver Hotel and their $1 Sun­ "PREP' WELLS, PhB '17 and JOE FLYNN LLB LIAMS and EARL DICKENS representing Father day dinners, superb cuisine. For a variety of '17. Bet they are laying plans for their GOLDEN Cavanaugh who was then college president, and social grace there were the Orpheum, Oliver and JUBILEE coming up this June. Then there is not forgetting the late JOE GARGAN and a Auditorium theaters and not the least the mys­ CARLETON D. BEH PhB '17 and Mrs. B. at companion who "rode the rods" on a New York tery and intrigue of famous Lcnie Nichols — just Phoenix, Ariz., their winter home. His neighbor Central express as far as Buffalo where tlieir lives a few steps from the Oliver Hotel and the County is B. J. VOLL PhB '17 and no doubt he, too, were probably saved by being taken aboard the Court House where the legal minds were en­ will be on campus in June. car with the players. lightened. Well do I remember Fathers Farley and Burke, the FBI of the campus, God bless them ALVIN H. BERGER PhB '15 and Alice are During the last part of the first half of the both; the 'Iron Gate* at St. Mary's; Mike the spending the winter in Eustis, Fla. You remem­ game, when the score was 13 to 7 in West Point's night watchman; the beautiful campus under the ber "HEINIE" as halfback on the football team favor, the stiff breeze had handicapped Dorais in direction of Brother Philip and Antoine the Faith­ and as just as good a pitcher on the baseball making the forward pass that he and Rockne had ful; and last but not least the 'discipline was team. They drove over to Orlando to call on faithfully practiced at Cedar Point the previous paternal.' Yes, one could go on and on. Happy teammate, first baseman E. J. "STUFFY" BURK. summer and the Notre Dame team appeared to da>s and happy days, I wonder sometimes ijf Heinie reports a happy reunion but was sur­ be wearing down — Rockne \v2s limping "with a the present student body is as lucky as we were. prised to leam about Stuffy making society pages fake limp." Tlien a play %*"as called in ^vhich As our mutual friend, the late and famous JOHN due to his dancing. Quote from Comdr. CHARLES Rockne ran far down the field with Army's CAV.ANAUGH used to sign hb epistles, GordiaDy, W. CALL, USNR (ret.): "Rev. CHARLES secondary after him. But Dorais threw the ball Henry." to Pliska %vho ran it 30 yards. On the next pby WILLIAMS has just concluded a four-day stay when the Army players had deployed deep, Dorais with us. He is good company and intrigued our threw the ball shallow to Rockne who had doubled Your secretary would like to receive nmilar friends." Sure would like to hear more from back. A third pass to Rockne took the ball to newsy letters from other 1915 Alumnt Why JAMES G. WALLACE, 1132 BcUevue Ave., S>-ia- the five-yard line. Then Pliska went for a touch- not take the time now to write me a note^ ixdog cuse, N.y. Send a "Hi" card, MAX KAZUS, dou-n and Dorais successfully drop-kicked. The >'our ou*n stationery or the helpftd yellow infor­ 101 Knox Ave., Buffalo, N.Y. 14216 or phone half ended with the score 14 to 13 in Notre mation card on page 30? Am sure Hans Fraw- Wallace, Max, and get me some news. Now that's Dame's favor. Icy's letter will arouse the memory of many an order, Kazus. Alumni of that era. For the second half Army had dc^Tsed a float­ Every time Tve talked mth Rev. C. J. WIL­ ing defense against passes. Then Dorais would ALBERT A. KUHLE'15 LIAMS, St. Malachy Rectory, Rantoul, HI., pass the ball to Rockne or Pliska and alternate Father has asked me if 1 have seen or heard from by giving it to Eichcnlaub for charges through 117 Sunset Ave., LaGrange, JOHN L. REUSS, 909 Orlando Dr., Ft. Waj-ne, the line that had been weakened for defenses Ind. Now hope that Reuss drops a card to against passes. Eich carried the ball to two IIL 60525 Father Williams and that you, too, send a "Hi" touchdowns during the second half. card to Father Williams. RAY C. "BUTCH" Coach Jesse Harper had inno\-atcd a new vogue WHIPPLE, Western Ave., Joliet, lU., send a of football with the fon%-ard pass from his great card to your teammate, ARTHUR J. "YOUNG quarterback '*Gus" Dorais to his successor, Rockne, DUTCH" BERGMAN '17, 3910 Rosemary- St., and to Pliska. But it was Eichcnlaub with his Chevy Chase, Md. 15. Introduced myself to a spectacular tise of brawn and bone who for the 1917 guy I found hard to reach via phone, EDWIN time being received the most renown. T. BREEN, 1542 Sherwin Ave., Chicago, lU. On the Noire Dame side only one substitution 60626. After an interesting conversation learned was made that day when Sam Finigan broke a shoe that I was talking mth a Judge. You guys should lace and **Bunny" Larktn w'os substituted for him. ">rise me up on the BIG SHOTS" in our Class. Of the 12 men who played on the Notre Dame You, Wn^UAM H. KELLEY, were in his Uw team that day the following have died: KNUTE class and I know Breen would sure appreciate ROCKNE, KEITH JONES, EMMETT KEEFE, hearing &om you. For that fact, I would like ALBERT FEENEY, FREEMAN FITZGERALD. to hear from all of you in the amount of time GUS DORAIS, JOSEPH PLISKA, CHARLES it takes you to pull out the yellow information FINIGAN and RAYMONT) EICHENLAUB. Only card on page 30 and scratch off a line or two to RALPH LATHROP and FRED GUSHURST me. Why not do it now?!! survive, May you all live to be a hundred. PEACE. WALTER L CLEMENTS '14 EDWARD J. McOSKER GEORGE WAAGE 502 W. Navarre, 525 N. Melrose Ave., Elgin, 3305 Wrightwood Ave., Chicago, South Bend, Ind. 46616 111. 60121 IIL 60647

22 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL Pcnn-Hilton Hotel Bar. While quaffii^, a couple ministntiiHi, ka been lecalled br the VA oa a of other jovial individuals joined ns. FoDowLis qicdal Mtignment—sort of s leseaidi inject — introductions Kelly said, "Joe here played qoartep* a htstoiy of nttnaa^ ifai^ifity oonipcMatioa. back for ND under Rockne. With TV and the J. P. is jojroos in bis new lole of i>ritin( — Us Pros the way they are now he would be worth first love. He presently has P^ru, Ihd. 46900 '18, '19, '20 we didn't have that fast a film. attends Duke U.; Katherine is in NYC; Mjldied Never would have caught him. And for the play­ is at St. Louis U.; and Joane is teaching. It is back— just a blur." Then I told them aboat a pleasure to leport that PAUL "VEKN" •Received a letter from Rockne's hiding the ball and another bystander PADEN has been released from St. Josepb's JOHN T. BALFE spoke up and said: **So that's how they came to Haq>., South Bend. with ncw-s of several putting a white circle on each end of the balL'* The offspring of the WILFRED DWYERS of classmates: **Your let­ I never did know that. Did you? London, Oluo are dinng weQ. Son John is a top ter of the 4th vfas I enjoyed the football season except for that student and athlete. For two years nmning he au-aiting. me as I returned from the Eastern Se­ Klich. St. deal. I wouldn't say in publ^ for has been a MidOhio top-flight football lineman. niors Golf Tomnam'ent and a few days later we these wise guys here but I do think Aia sboolda He hopes to attend NO. T. J. ezpeeu to gradu­ had the ncu-s of *SLIP MADIGAN's death gone for it. And would I have liked to have ate this year bam Dayton U. in bus. ad. Maar which was quite a shock as I had been \«th him been there? I woulda cut that Bubba Smith to Helena is a Ptace Corps volunteer with the WoU on a ntunber of occasions in early March when we ribbons. Did I ever tell you how I tied Fats Tribal Senegalese people at Kaffrine, West AInca. v>yte in . Slip told roe he was plan­ Henr>*, the all-time, aU-America from W ft J From the sparkling pen of FRANCIS OTT of ning a trip around the world which he made — into knots? He came in after the game and said, Burbank, Calif., ames this message: "Tine hb great interest was to fly from Ireland over the '^Brandy, I feel just like a bow de." And I an­ wears on out here, bat the year is en£ng with North Pole to San Francisco. His wife Charlotte swered: "Fats, if I had been myself today Hoif a nice event or two to remonber. I ran aeroas accompanied him. dini wouldn't have been able to unravel yon." FRANK CONNELLY at a TV broadcast in an "During the past six months I have seen or Have a pleasant holiday, Winthrop, and say Alhambra church halL He and his wife live at heard from a number of our classmates. LEON­ hello to any of the gang. 8S9 Hugo Reid Rd. in the aiqdiisticated town of ARD CALL who is with Hearst Org. here in New Bbe Arcadia, Calif. (SanU Anita Raceway). He was York and I usually have lunch once a month to hale axMi hearty and sat on the ^^*Knf^ at the keep up our spirits by talking about you felIo%\-5. P.O. Box 177 Southern CaL game which made history and JIM TRANT tells me he is preparing to join ns Syracuse, New YoA 1320! win live through the years out hote. Then when at the 50th Reunion. Jim is with Dyna Corp. Dear Dan: my daughter amd her hndiand appeared in cooxt in Dayton, Ohio. RAY McCABE is now retired Thanks for the note — I was in LA when Jim to adopt a Gttle ^1 this fall, who was the and lives in Larchmont, N.Y., about three months Murray's column 4/23 appeared. But he was Superior Court judge but AL SCOTT. I made and then takes off for DelRay Beach, Fla. sure good to vs. The following Sunday saul, kixnvn my presence when we entered the cham­ "Justice CLIFF 0*SULLIVAN of the Sixth *'So. Cal. came within 51 pts. of a tie" and a bers (or rather my lawyer did so) and ''dairmed" Circmt Court of Appeals tells me he has been so if Al £dn*t remember me. He looks just about lot of other cute things. as handsome as ever and keeps Los Angeles in busy that his golf has deteriorated to a point Spent a week as guest of GENE CALHOUN where he didn't win a prize in the Michigan the right path. He invited me to drop in and — had a ball and met AL SCOTT, JERRY reminisce. Seniois. R.ALPH BERGM.\N writes me from St. JONES, Judge CARBERRY JR. and many Louis that he: 'was laid up all winter. Couldn't others. Just missed LEO WARD and PETE Our grateful thanks to all who sent Christmas watch television, read or go out of doors. This BEHAN. greetings and to cxptea the hope that they can condition is known as tic douloureux. This Is the Lots of Itxk in '67. be on the campus at ND in ear^ Jme to attend most painful and mysterious ailment known to LEO KELLEY our 45th aimiversary Reunion. Here they are: man. The only knouTi positive relief is a brain FRANK BLASIUS, ED BAILEY, "CHUCK" operaUon where they cut the faoal nerve. This CROWLEY, AL CARROLL, JOHN PAUL CUI^ numbs the face and often results in eye infection To All the Class: LEN, JERRY DIXON, JOE FARLEY, Rev. necessitating the rcmo\-aI of it. One thing, busi­ I would like to hear from niore of you soon! GEORGE FISCHER CSC, ED GOTTRY, RAY ness doesn't bother me for I have none. The . . . that is in the amount of time it takes yon KEARNS, WILF DWYER. LOU MOORE '23, economy has out-distanced the drain tub user but to tear out the yellow information card on page TOM McCABE, OLLIE SCHELL, RALPH I hang around like a dog to his pauperized mas­ 30 and to scratch out a line or two to me. Do CORYN, MORGAN SHEEDY, Dr. DAN SEX­ ter.' it today! TON, DAN YOUNG and most of the Sooth Baa "CLEM MULHOLL.\ND recommended DICK Benders. LESLIE for Class Agent telling me that Dick DAN W. DUFFY J. FRANK "RANGY" MILES has agreed to has nothing to do now. As for Clem he is prob­ serve as Rcuiuon director tor the upcoming 45th ably on his way to Fort Lauderdale at this time. 1030 Natl, aty E. 6th BIdg., anniversay Reunion. He iKeds the help of aO DEWEY ROSENTHAL, our Class treasurer, '22 men. usually makes Fort Lauderdale his \rinter home , Ohio 44114 Just s reminder to take advantage of the yeOoiir so perhaps he and CIcm should get together. We deeply itgrtt'To information card on page 30 of this issue to fin HARRY NESTER %mte5 that he is as busy as announce the death of Be in on the latest news. usual and working for the University endowment another fine friend under the Deferred Giving Program. Send Harry and classmate WIL-> G. A. "KID" ASHE one of your old life insurance policies and he will 1922 UAM "PETE" ECK- tell you how to deduct it from your income taxes! 175 Landing Rd. N., Rochester, "Of course, Jim, no report would be complete without telling you that SHERWOOD DIXON N.Y. 14625 is planning to be with us for the 50th Reunion. Sherwood continues to be interested in every­ thing Notre Dame. Likewise MARK VERBIEST of Detroit who has represented the Class in a donation to the varsity room in the new Athletic Center. Keep well, Mark, until 1970. 1923 "One of my recent regrets is that I could not attend the 50th jubilee celebration of Father JIM LOUIS V. BRUGGNER CONNERTON's entrance into Notre Dame. This was a gala occasion on Oct. 10 at the Seminary \667 Riverside Dr., Apt. A, at North Easton. Suffice it to say that starting from scratch in 1946 Jim has developed the ERLE who died in bis home dtf of Alezandtia, South Bend, Ind. 46616 Eastern Prorince of the Holy Cross Order to a Va., on Dec 27. We extend our deep sympathy to community of 157 priests, 38 brothers, two col­ the widow Dorothy and also his daughter Ann and leges, three high schools and Pius X seminary." to other members of the family. Pete, as he was Just a reminder to use the yellow information knou-n to all '22 men, was a senior cbnl engineer card in this issue on page 30 to keep me informed with the Dept. of the Navy in Washington, DC. of your most recent neu'S. He was buried on the vexy day his retirement was 1924 effective. Before going into govertmient service, Pete was with the Kentucky State Ifighway Dept. JAMES R. MEEHAN JAMES H. RYAN in Frankfort. He was also a former LouisviUian. 301 S. Lafayette Blvd., South Bend, 170 Moybrook Rd., Rochester, Thanks go to VfNCE IfANKAIfAN of Chevy Chase, Md. and to FRANK BLOEMER of An- Ind. 46601 N.Y. 14618 peka, Fla., for sending obituary notices to the Class secretary. Brian and Bemie Gaffney of Connecdcut, sons The traffic on 42nd of our classmate CYRIL "CY" GAFFNEY, of St. in little old New happy memory, are married and each has three York win tmt be any daughters and one son. Brian was elected a buuer than your Class state representative and both arc doing well in 1925 on June 9, 10 and 11. 1921 law. RALPH CORYN, TOM McCABE, AL We win be known as "THE GO«OERS Of '25" Dear Winthrop: CARROLL and JOHNNY RAY see each other by "the younger set." This issue of the ALmacDS You may be interested to know that Kelly and quite frequently in the Moline, fU., area. JOHN has a yeUow information card in it on page 30. I attended the Navy game in Philly. Went over PAUL CULLEN, who retired in Dec., 1965 as USE IT AND SEND ME SOME NEWS OF \Ta Pcnn RR and upon the return repaired to the Wisconsin regional director of the Veterans Ad- YOURSELF.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 23 r KING OF THE ROAD James W. Shocknessy ^2S Insuring the safe and carefree has been its guiding force since When he took over in 1949 there journey across northern Ohio of 1949. was considerable opposition to the over 16 million vehicles a year is Since his appointment by Gov­ state's allocating over $300,000,000 a rather large task. But it is the ernor Frank Lausche, Jim's work for a superhighway. It took over primary work of the Ohio Turn­ has been under constant scrutiny three years of patient guidance for pike Commission and the respon­ from critics and champions alike. enough bonds to be sold to finance sibility of one man in particular— But in spite of the sometimes con­ construction of the 241-mile road. James W. Shocknessy '28. Jim is troversial nature of his work, ad­ And even then, Jim Shocknessy's chairman of the Commission and verse comments on Jim's ability troubles were just beginning. He are few and far between. "He is is a man notorious for meeting hard-driving, logical, tough-minded construction deadlines; highway and possesses a rare willingness to contractors were equally infamous get on wth the job" are but a in their failure to meet them — sampling of the widespread tributes until they met Commissioner to his character. Shocknessy. It may well have been for this Under his stewardship the Ohio reason that Republican Governor Turnpike's revenue records have James A. Rhodes approached steadUy increased, a fact which staunch Democrat Shocknessy with caused some friction when Jim an appeal to serve as consultant opted for retiring bonds instead of and expediter of Ohio's newest lowering tolls. In the last two interstate highway construction. years, he has initiated numerous Futhermore, his feliow commis­ improvements and innovations in sioners have eight times reelected services available to travellers. Ohio him to succeed himself as chair­ campers, thanks to Jim, now have man—a. fact which makes him the several plaza stations at which first—^and only—chairman of the they can park their trailers and Ohio Turnpike Commission. set up overnight housekeeping.

While at the Furniture Mart in Chicago PAUL BAKER, DICK APP, HERM CENTLIVRE and ROMWEBER and 1 had a gathering at the Mci^ AL«nUE BOLAND together at the "Why Not?" I have nothing good chants & Mfgs. Club in the Man. We called a Tavern in "old to»-n" Fort Wayne. Good food, to report this issue as few key fellows and all but Dr. CON HAG- good fellowship over a big dish of com beef and no ncu's has been con­ GERTV and VIRG FAGEN came. Con couldn't cabbage made a great luncheon. I had to con­ tributed on our class- get away from his Southsidc office and Vitg vince BOB GORDON that there would be a few 1926 znates. Before I be­ had to go to a wedding in Steubenvills, Ohio. cocktail hours squeezed in our busy weekend. came secretary I Htnild look forward to receiving As usual, Virg helped on the calls. ELMER Today, Jan. 31 DON AOLLER caUed FRANK a letter from JIM ARMSTRONG but now he LAYDEN, JACK SC^LLAN, LEO POWERS, STEEL (AKRON), JERRY MILLER, FRANK mails me copies of letters that he has ^vTittcn to JOHN SHOWELL and BERNIE LIVERGOOD NAUGHTON, CY CALDWELL, JACK KANE the closest of Lin of our classmates. In one joined Paul and I. Bemic lIcK in from Decatur. and my brother-in-law, GEORGE HAHN for a envelope I had three reports, ROBERT "BERT" 1 let the fellows know what was cooking and gathering. They approved of the program and V. DUNNE died Nov. 25, 1966. LYM.\N J. they agreed to pass the word on to all llic '25ers will call the boys who couldn't make it today. CLARK died on Dec. 6, 1966. FRANK J. I hope to see the New York crowd on Mar. 16 they would see or write to. It was at this meet­ WALSH died on Dec 11, 1966. on my return from a three-week trip to South ing we decided to pot Gina and P.\T MANION America where the Hurley family will have a I am quoting below a letter JIM DAVYER re­ on our Reunion program. reunion of our own. It has been wionderful see­ ceived from Beit's younger brother Sam: *'Our Gina Manion's book. Mama Goes to War, is so ing all the gang. I caUed FRANK HOWLAND Big Brother Bert, who %vas hero and an inspira­ good the first edition was sold out. Some of in Detroit to teU EDDIE FOLHAUS, CARL tion to myself and our sister Helen since we were you may have read the editorial in the Chicago SPRENGER, ROY PAULI, and CLARENCE little tykes, died suddenly from a coronary* in San Tribune on Sunday, Jan. 8, "Who's Getting Fat KAISER of otir plans. GIL SCHAEFFER is in Francisco on Nov. 23. His heahh had been poor on Viet Nam?" Charles de Gaulle won't like it Florida so I \viU write him. for over a year as he was suffering from a heart but I am sure you will. The Manion's son Lt. condition and arthritis. He leaves his \nfc Marion DANIEL A. MANION graduated from Notre Here is some sad news. Belated word of the who lovingly waited on him hand and foot for Dame a few years ago and won the ROTO death of JOHN E. BOWER BSC who died 36 years, five children: Pat, Sally, Mariclarc, JOHN CAVANAUGH airard. Dan is "over Sept. 29. John has a son JOHN JR. of the Bart and John Michael along with 19 grand­ there" and is in charge of refueUng helicopters Class of '56. Mrs. JOHN E. WHITE, Box 26, children. The family home is at 47 Kittredge in one of the areas of Vietnam. Gina and Pat Ida Grove, Iowa 51445 wrote JIM ARMSTRONG Terrace, San Francisco, Calif. Bert would have agreed to tell us and the rest of the Alumni about of the death of her husband JOHN E. WHITE been 64 years of age in January and in those the highlights of a most interesting trip to Viet­ LLB on Jan. 23. HA.NK WURZER received years he lived sc\'eral ordinary lives as he was a nam and other strategic positions in Asia and the word of FRANK McSORLEY's sudden death of brilUant^ resUcss, dynamic individual with many far Pacific This affair will be held in the Con­ a heart attack Dec 23 in Pittsburgh. '^Frank's irons in many fires. He was a very successful tinuing Education Center about 3 p.m. It will is 3 passing of another one of our classmates and advertising and public relations executive, a pro­ ^ve us a chance to see this wonderful new as they increase, each one seems to become more fessional baseball player who originally was signed addition to the campus. Having a charming gal significant." Hank wasn't sure of his survivors by John McGraw of the , a base­ on our Reunion program will be another FIRST but thought there were a son and two daughters ball and boxing coach, he wrote a sports column for our Class. and his brother JOHN. Be sure to remember in the San Francisco News, wrote articles for WhHe JIM ARMSTRONG, AL PORTA, BILL JOHN BOWER, JOHN WHITE and FRANK national publications and several books. He made VOUR and your secretary were having lunch in McSORLEY in your prayers. three movies in Hollywood, owned the Salt I.akc Morris Inn last Wednesday we were able to get a Bees Baseball Club in the Pioneer League, con­ "It's later than you think," fellows, so plaa "yes" from Dr. George Shuster to tell us about ducted his own TV and radio programs in Los to be on deck for our "In betweener" June 9, the educational research study on the Catholic- Angeles. While he was a student at NO he 10 and 11. You will be glad you did and so wid primary and secondary school problems. Like the acted as Knute Rockne*s publicity man. He could the other '25ers. And don't forget to serld me Manion talks, it will be open to all the Alumni. run like a deer, was a left-handed, 300 hitter a note today on the information card on page Thb wrill be a *'brunch" following our Class vnUx a classical style and could go down the 30 of this issue. Mass. We liave already told you that our own first base line like he was Jet propelled. His Most Rev. JOHN KING MUSSIO, the bishop brilliant literary style and his sports background of Steubenville, will speak at our Friday evening JOHN P. HURLEY enabled him to turn out football, boxing, basket­ dinner. These three affairs will .be a post­ ball and golf stories that were sports classics. graduate course wrapped up in a weekend. 2085 Brookdale Rd., Toledo, During his undergraduate and' graduate studies, Thursday of the same week' I hit the trail down he attended St. Mary*s College and the uni- Indiana way where BOB GORDON called EDDIE Ohio 43606 veraties of ND, San Frandsco, Stanford, Har-

24 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL GEORGE W. DOHERTY, THOMAS B. DUNN. Ifaacie on tlie dccadi of his mother, age 92. ALBERT DOYLE, A. NEIL GALONE, CHARLES GEORGE CRONGEYER anaaged for a grt- GOSLIN, THOMAS F. GREEN JR., RICHAKD togeiher with BEKNIE GARBER, BOB HAM­ L. HALPIN SR., DAVID HICKEY, WILLIAU ILTON and TOM MAHON and their wives on M. HOLLAND, ROBERT HtMIGER, HER­ the occasion of the BUCKLEYs^ leaving New BERT E. JONES, RAYMOND G. KEISER, VoA Ctr in December. TOM MAHON was in REGIS I. LAVELLE, ALOEN E. LENHARD. New York at the time for a meeting as Uiaiiman CHARLES W. "PINKY" MARTIN, WALDEN of the campaign in St. FuL McDADE, MICHAEL McDERMOTT, EDWARD The fint newspaper I saw on my arrival in du- F. McKENNA, EDWARD J. McLAUGHUN, cago in Decamiber carried a picture of HOWIE FRANK J. MOOTZ, ARTHUR J. MONACO. PBALIN, board chunnan and chief executive FRANCIS E. MORAN, THOMAS E. NASH. oificer of the FieU Enterprises Educational Corp., JOHN NYIKOS, T. E. O'CONNOR, J. FRANK on the occasion of a meeting of 500 managefs OEHLHOFFEN, JOHN C. PETRONE, JAMES of his company. Howie's {nctnte appeared two T. QUINN, ERMIN E. REICHERT, JOHN J. mote times in the past month wlien he was named general chairman ot the 1967 Junior Achievement REIDY.JOHN ROACH, HARRY RYAN, CLYDE Trade Fair and when he was elected pceadent of H. SCHAMEL, ALEX F. SIEVERS, PATRICK the Merdunts and Manufacturers Chib. F. SIZE, JOHN SLOCUM, ROBERT D. STEPH- AN, JOHN E. SULLIVAN, WALTER H. VA. I talked to BILL KIRWAN and lus bride of HEY, ERNEST WILHELM, DONALD J. VOL. one year when they were in Chicago for the fnr- KINS. aitUTe snaxket show from Iowa City where he The following have said they may come: manages the Kirwan Furniture Co. On lus xetnm FRANCIS T. AHEARN, CLETUS S. BAN- from Nassau, BUI saw GEORGE LEFPIG on WARTH, JOSEPH A. BEATTIE, ARTHtm J. TV in Florida explaining changes he had made BRADLEY, GUY H. BRADLEY, HAROLD J. in his department in the sheriff's office in Miami. CASEY, WILLIAM COOGAN, LAWRENCE E. JOE BRANNON had gone to Acapnico for a Such a career record would be CROWLEY, MICHAEL J. DUFFECY, THOMAS vacation when BILL tried to contact him in laudable for any public servant. E. EDMONDSON, BARTHOLOMEW C. FAVERO, Fboenix. AL GURY has lemasried and is living But Jim is a lawyer by profession EDWARD FENLON, GERVASE A. FROELICH, in Dunlap, HL His bride has seven children and LEO FURY, OSCAR E. GARZA, JR., FRANK At has one son by his deceased wife. AI is presi­ and has never run for political HAGENBARTH, HAROLD F. HATCH, LAW­ dent of the Illinois Valley Awning and Tent Co., office. Graduating from Notre RENCE H. HENNESSEY, LOmS W. KOLP, 4419 N. Prospect Rd., in Peoria. CL.AYTON LEROUX, JOSEPH E. Ii{ADDEN, I attended a meeting at Notre Dame in Jan­ Dame in 1928 with an AB degree, RAY C. MARELLI, WALTER McKENNA, uary of the Committee for the Fifteenth Annual he went on to Har\'ard Law School NORBERT M. SCHARF, LOUIS A. SEFRANKA, Union-Management Conference and saw Father JOHN L. SHAW, RUSSELL VOYER, RUPERT MARK F. FITZGERALD CSC. Father Marie where he earned his LLB in 1931. A. WENTWORTH, G. RUSSELL WIOGER. had just concluded a very soccessfid water-air Within a year he was admitted to So far these have said they cannot attend: conference at Notre Dame in December. Father the Supreme Court of Ohio, a feat ROBERT F. BARTH, VINCENT BALL, ROB­ JIM McSHANE SJ was with VDJCE WALSH ERT C. DeLONG, JOHN E. HARWOOD, WIL- and his family in MonticeBo, HI. for Cbiistmas. which he quickly followed up by L1.AM G. HEARN (he is retired and says that Father Jim had seen BILL CRAIG '29 bma being admitted to practice in all he and his wife will be touting Eun^ie for most Munde, Ind. at a broadcasters' conven^on. Bill of 1967; perhaps he can write us an account of has right sons. BOB HELLRUNG '30 took Father intermediate courts of the US and his travels), ORVILLE LOUIS HOUGH, W. E. Jim to the Aia Plrseghian bantiuet in St. Louis. JASPER, FRANK L. KANE, Rev. RAYMOND BILL DOWDALL viated JOHN GOCKE in tlie US Supreme Court. Today, he Los Angeles last year. AL SCHNURR continues is still actively engaged in the A. MASSART CSC, PHILIP E. McCARTY, in the comtruction business in Sandusky, Ohio. JAMES O'CONNOR, FRED A. REED, WIL- Al sees RUSS SMITH who is in the rtady-mix practice of law in Columbus. LMM VAHEY. concrete busmess there. VINCE CARNEY left Afost of these who replied furnished interesting for Mexico soon after I arrived back in the Mid­ information concerning their children and grand­ west. Vince's daughter Katharine will go to work children. I will try to pass this along in the next for the Federal Reserve System in the Northwot \ard and California. He conducted a sports pub­ as soon as she is graduated from Gonzaga U. in licity class at Santa Clara U. and taught courses issue; but in order to get this in the mail today, I will hold up the news right now. I do want May. She will be the 6rst gill hired to act in in advertising and public relations at the U. of their baixk examining division. San Francisco. Bert helped scores of people in­ to point out however that according to present cluding his devoted sister and brother throughout information WALTER VAHEY has the most When I returned to New Yorit Gty late an his life and he leaves the Dunne clan with a grandchildren — 20. Can anyone beat that? January to serve on the oral examining boards host of wonderful memories. Wc salute him with HERB JONES appears to be second with 19. for the New York State Gvil Service Conmus- the Gaelic motto of our ancestors, *Ma)ach a One thing impressed me particularly — the sion, I accidentally met JOHN LEITZINGER Bu,* the highest forever. &fay God rest his number who have either retired or arc going to and his wife in my hotel lobby. I enioyed some noble soul.** retire in the near future. It is hard sometimes fine sessions with them and with John's son Bob Hcre*s hoping I receive some more cheerful to realize that contcmporanes have reached the bom Kttdiurgh and his daughter Kay who is a Items for the next issue via the yellow informa­ age of retirement but we must accommo

ALUMNUS MARCH 1947 APRIL 25 SHERRY and Helen made a long \*isit to Lourdes elected judge of Probate Court, Wayne County, CYRIL THEISEN who died Feb. 22, 1966. Mrs. and other European points in 1966." Mich., a remarkable career of sendee as judge Theisen says that Cyril's son entered Notre Dame Woid was received as we go to press of the and public servant. As judge he has jurisdiction as a freshman last fall and he is Uving in Stan­ death of a BERNARD ZIPPERER on Jan. 16. over all juvenile delinquents, adoptions, registra­ ford HaU. I have asked our Treasurer JOE LANGTON to tion of unrecorded births, cases concerning sup­ "I also received a note from J. Betty Morrison, arrange for a &fass for Bcmtc. port and maintenance of indigent parents by their the widow of our classmate FRANK J. MORRI­ Please note the yellow infonnation card con­ children and vice versa. SON who lived in Rochester, N.Y. She said this, tained in this issue oE the ALUMNUS on page 30. We add our sympathy to the many who mourn 'My husband Frank won't make the Reunion May I ask each of }-ou, as a special favor, to add the death in late January of Mary, wfe of asso­ this year. He died suddenly in September. With some neu3 items about yourself and your family ciate dean DEVERE PLUNKETT *30, brother no history of heart trouble, be had a sudden and send it to me at once at the address below? of our DON PLUNKETT. attack. Ilease tell the Class of '32 to remember Thanks in advance for your help on this request. Agnes and PAUL BARTHOLOMEW will be Frank with a prayer.' " in Dublin for the spring semester where Baul will Among recent changes of address are HARRY LOUIS F. BUCKLEY be visiting professor at the National U. of Ire­ MOSS to 12 Warwick Ave., Albany, N.Y.; JACK land, University College, Dublin 2. To quote RAMILTON to 578 Pine St., Norco, La.; and 6415 N. Sheridan Rd., Apt. 1007 them, "If any Notre Dame people come this way, ARTHUR LARKIN who is with the American we would be most happy to see them.** Red Cross to Hq. US.\REUR DCSPER, APO, Chicago, Illinois 60626 And, lastly, take a moment now to pull out the N.Y. 0M03. yellow infonnation card on page 30 and send me a line or two about yoursdf. We'll all be JAMES K. COLLINS Due to the ri\'alry and glad you did. interest in the ilich- 2982 Torrington Rd., igan State football LARRY STAUDER series, by popular de­ Shaker Heights, Ohio 44122 1929 mand it has been in­ Engineering BIdg., stalled as the game at which the Class of '29 We learned with deep will have its 1967 post-game get-together. The Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 regret of the recent date is Oct. 28 and supersedes any prei^ously death of the mother mentioned dates. Wc suggest tliat it is not too of FRANK McGEE early to make your lodging rescn-ations. 1933 at Bridgeport, Conn. Quotes gleaned from the '29 ^vire-tap: Q, To Frank and his family we extend our sym­ "Where is this Winchester Cathedral e\'erybody is pathy and prayers. anging about?" A. "It's a church at 9205 1930 7n Paradisum Deducant Te AngelL Superior Ave., Cleveland . . . and if you happen DEVERE PLUNKETT On a recent visit to Albany we \*isited briefly to stop by say hello to the pastor Father OTEY %rith our Class President ED ECKERT at his WINCHESTER '29 for mc." O'Shaughnessy Hall, home in Loudonville. Surrounded by his grand­ Second gem: JIM ARMSTRONG, **Your face children and new color TV, Ed gave us a is familiar. Father, but I can't recall which Class Notre Dame, Ind. 46556 Tunning description of the ND games he saw you were in." Father GEORGE DUM CSC, "I on campus last season. His continuing (Usap- really belong to two classes — I entered ND with pointment is the fact that only once in 34 years the Class of '28, took time out for the novitiate has a representative of our Class ever been and graduated with the Class of '29. I'm like the clefrted to the National Alumni Board. During fellow who said he didn't wiorry too much about the annual New York State Bar Assn. meeting in going to heaven or hell — he had friends in both 1931 NYC, Rochester barrister PETE CONNELLY places." Father Dum attended Holy Cross Col., lunched at the Guard Room in the Biltmore with Catholic U. in 1929-33, was ordained June, 1933, JAMES T. DOYLE BILL LYNCH, JIM ROSS, GEORGE ROHRS, received his MA from ND in '34 (that gives him JACK HOYT and MARSHALL McAVENEY. another Class). He was assigned to the U. of 1567 Ridge Ave., Apt. 308, M.\RTIN LINSKEY, the group leader, was Portland in September of '34 and is in his 33ni Evanston, III. 60201 grounded in Chicago as a result of the " *67 year of continuous scr\icc there. He is now Blizzard" and had to phone his regrets to his associate prof of philosophy. From 1936-&4 he lieutenant BiU Lynch. CHARLIE QUINN of was director of the Glee Club. Classmates at JOHN KIENER who Mamaroneck, N.Y. is with Reader's Digest and PortLind include Rev. C. A. HOOYBOER CSC, has operated amateur travels extensively through New York and New Rev. WILLIAM COUGHLAN CSC and Rev. radio station W8AVH England. While in Middletown, N.Y. recently, BERNARD McAVOY CSC. for 42 years recently he visited with ANDREW BOTTI. Charlie is 1932 received a certificate JACK PERKINS, South Bend, is now sales tiie first Class member to become a grandfather manager for Gibraltar ^fausoleum Corp. in his in '67. His oldest boy is a sophomore at ND. area after 25 years \nth Associates Investment Co. During the Navy game weekend in Phila­ in various managerial positions. His son John delphia, CHARLEY CONLEY visited with BILL lives in Cambridge, &fass. He is Northeastern BODO, PHIL FAHERTY JR., TOM GRIFFIN rep of Harper-Row Pub. Co. Jack travels East and Msgr. FRANK J. HARRISON. LARRY often, sometimes to NYC where his daughter SEXTON, the "faithful side-liner," was unable Rosemary is taldng graduate work at Parsons to get to the game due to prior business commit­ School of Design leading to a position as a ments. Last October JOHN BARRETT was fashion illustrator. Jack visited in Washington transferred from Arkansas to the Pine Creek Dam with BOB WILLIAMS, retired editor for the at Valliant, Okla. as resident engineer for the House Appropriations Committee. Bob had news Corps of Engineers. Pine Creek Dam is a flood of HAROLD BAJR and EMMETT McCABE control and water supply project in the south­ whom he had \'isited on a trip West. eastern part of Oklahoma. John's new address TOM RYAN, 5555 Grand .\ve. S., Minneapolis from the First Baptist Church in recognidon of is 3215 Clarksville St., Paris, Tex. Rev. FRED­ writes briefly that he continues as owner of being the radio operator for the medical misaon ERICK A. SCHMIDT CSC is stUl at St. Wil­ Thomas A. Rj-an Co., manufacturers' agents. in which it partook last July in Kfanagua, Nica­ liam's &fexican ^fission. Box 307, Round Rock, Tom's family includes Thomas A. Jr., 28; John ragua. Over 150,000 Nicaraguans were inoculated Tex. CHUCK LAZZIO, who is postal service C, 24; and Charlotte A., 19. HAROLD A. in this four^week program. Another similar medi­ officer for S.E. Oklahoma, has asked for prayers BAIR, 714 W. Har^-ard St., Fresno, Calif, is cal misaon is planned for July, 1967 and two- for his daughter. Sister Mary Sheryl who is owner and operator of Bair Co., specializing in way radio work is now going on with phone- gravely ill. He can be reached at 912 E. Tennes­ religious articles and church equipment which patches between Cleveland and Managua. In the see Ave., McAlistcr, Okla. mdudes supplying altars, pews, wood carved statu­ true spirit of ecumenism, John has also arranged THOM.AS A. GORMAN is dty manager for ary and related items. His son JACK '58 in San radio*phone contacts between the Maryknoll Chicago Che\-Tolet uith offices in the Mcrchan- K^teo with Canteen Corp. has two little Bairs. houses in Cleveland and Chile. *se Mart. LEO W. HODEL, who lives in The Bairs senior have two daughters in Fresno, Capt. BOB LEE USN writes from Hawaii that Evanston, is assistant secretary of Commerce each with four children. Harold adds, "Our he expects to attend the Class Reunion this year Clearing House, Inc., publishers of topical law hadenda b always open to any '29ers traveling after having missed several because of being sta­ reports for the law profession. F. NORDHOFF through Fresno." tioned too far away. Bob is the district legal HOFFMAN, prominent labor counsellor, resides JOSEPH HARTNETT JR. is \-ice-president of officer there and has been the naval escort for in Crandon. lU.' STEPHEN L. HORNYAK is Irving Trust Co. with business address at One Cardinal Spellman on his Christinas trips to the a state sanitary engineer with the sanitary district Wall St., NYC. He travels in Europe every fall. Far East. in Chicago. Steve is a 4th Degree member of HARLEY McDEVITT's business address is 630 Our sympathies are extended to Mrs. NORBERT the Genoa Council of the K of C and is active Fifth Ave., NYC, and he continues as director of CROWE and family upon the death of Norfo who in the American Society of Professional Engineers advertising of National Geographic magazine. died Jan. 13. The fanuly address is 26048 Klb- and in the Society of Professional Engineers. We have an incumbent Indiana State Senator on bury Dr., Farmington, Mich. 48024. JOHN R. JOYCE recently retired from the our roster. WILFRED J. VULLRICH of Aurora PETE STREB told me that his son JAMES Joyce Coal Co. and has become active in the has that distinction as well as that of having IP. was graduated from the Univer^ty last spring, local rod and gun club. THOMAS J. KEN­ been selected Pharmacist of the Year 1%5 for and has been assodatcd \rith the Tint National NEDY is vice-president of Local Loan Co. with Indiana. Wilfred is owner of a drugstore which Bank in Chic^o. Pete is sales manager for offices at 105 W. Ikfadison St., Chicago. WIL­ has been at the same location since 1883. In this Diebold, Inc. and is still very active in the pro­ LIAM S. KNOX resides in Evanston. He is day of '*urban renewal" this may be a greater motion of the Football Hall of Fame in Canton. prendent of Knox and Schneider, Chicago paper distinction than the other two. In Wilfred's mind TED HALPIN writes that his son Cary, who has merchants. BiH belongs to the Evanston Golf and heart he is more proud of his five living been in the Army Dental Corps in Gomany, is Oub and the Lake Shore Qub. JOSEPH J. children and 19 grandchildren. returning to his practice in Milwaukee. FRANK KURTH is with Len iPorzak and Assoc., Inc. THOMAS C. MURPHY, Grosse Pointe Farms MARLEY writes in part, "I am in receipt of a at 5151 N. Hariem Ave., Chicago. JOHN LEV- 36, Mich., for 32 consecutive years has been letter irotn Mrs. John J. Theisen, the mother of STIR is a development engineer with Ctucago

26 ALUMNUS A4ARCH 1967 APRIL Bridge and Iron Co. John lives in Western Springs, 111. and is active in several engineering societies. From the Alumni OfiGce we recently received the following changes of address: ZIGMUND H. KITKOWSKI now resides at 1635 Riverside Dr., South Bend; Dr. LOUIS M. FOLITZ MD is now located at 3323 Medical Arts BIdg., Louis- viUe, Ky.; and AMBROSE E. RYAN has moved from Chicago and now resides at 10124 Alice St., Oak Lawn, 111. Why not use the yellow information card on page 30 of this issue to send news of yourself and classmates? JOHN A. HOYT, JR. Gillespie & O'Connor, UTURGIST, EDUCATOR AND CIVIL RIGHTS LEADER 342 Madison Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017 Arehbi»hop Pmmt t#. HmtUmam '3S The traditional picture of an was a part-time faculty member archbishop calls to mind a som­ of Notre Dame College, South ber, old gentleman slowly moving Euclid, Ohio and St. John's Col­ 1934 down the cathedral aisle as he be­ lege in Cleveland. la 1946 he EDWARD F. MANSFIELD stows his blessing on the congre­ assumed the Cleveland diocesan gation. Not so wth Archbi^op directorship of the intercoUe^ate 523 W. Hillsdale, Paul J. Hallinan '32 of Atlanta. Newman Club activities. For San Mateo, Cal. 94403 Leader of the US's newest arch­ over 15 years he worked viiih the diocese, he is as youthful and vig­ student organization in colleges Dr. FRANK Mc- GUIRE resigned his orous as the age of Vatican II and universities on both the local position as vice-presi- demands. and national levels. dent of special proj­ 1935 ects at Notre Dame to Paul Hallinan was enthroned Bishop Hallinan's ecclesiastical accept a new position with Deere and Co. as as Archbishop of Atlanta in career has covered a gamut of vice-president in charge of their operations in Europe and Africa. Frank is already in Heidel. March, 1962 and the challenge responsibilities. Ordained in 1937 berg, Germany where he will live, but with the the office presented was tremen­ at St John's Cathedral in Cleve­ responsibility for seven factories in Germany, land, he served five years as a France, Spain, and South Africa no doubt he dous. Atlanta had just been cre­ will not see much of Heidelberg. We will miss ated the Deep South's first arch­ curate in his home diocese. With him and his family in South Bend. Frank also diocese and was named the seat the outbreak of World War II, he resigned as secretary of the Class, so PAUL FERGUS "railroaded" me into accepting the of a new ecclesiastical province volunteered for the Army chajj- duties as "interim" secretaty. (Sounds tike a encompassing the dioceses of At­ laincy and spent three years wth football coach's job!) News of our classmates is very scanty for this lanta, Raleigh, St. Augustine, an engineering unit in the South issue, which has also been true in many prenous Miami, Savannah and Charles­ Pacific. When he resigned his issues, for one major reaon — you fellows don't commission in 1945, Father Hal­ communicate. To make it easier for you, en* ton. In addition to ecclesiastical closed on page 30 of this issue is an "informa* changes, the area was the center linan had attained the rank of tion card.'* How about getting your new sccre- of deep social flux. captain and earned the Purple tary off to a good start by using it? In reviewing the current Class list I ran across Archbishop Hallinan met the Heart. many names of '33ers who in my memory have challenge head on. Three months Consecrated a bishop in Cleve­ not returned for a Reunion nor appeared in our Class news for too many years. For example: after assuming the See, he an­ land on October 28, 1958, he was JACK BRAYMER, S.AVIXO CAVENDER, BILL nounced that the archdiocese enthroned in the Diocese of CAS.^ZA, VAIL CLIFF, KIERAN DUNN, JOHN GILLOOLY, JOE KN.\PP, BILL LORD, would desegregate its schools in Charleston, South Carolina one P.AT LYNCH, RAY MARGRETT, GER.ALD time for the September opening. month later. There he estab­ MOLIN.\Rl, RALPH 0"M.-\LLEY, TOM PROC­ lished a diocesan liturgical com­ TOR, MAURICE TOMBRAGEL and JOHN "Our churches have always been RYAN (that's right, my own brother!). How open to everyone, regardless of mission and a Newman founda­ about you fellows, just named confirming same race or color. White and Negro tion. His work and enthusiasm by using the yellow information card on page 30 of this ALUSINUS or e\'en the back of an old Catholics have attended Mass with the former later earned him envelope! and received the sacraments side a position on the liturgical com­ Wc are taking ad\-antage of this column to make a special appeal to the seven vice-presidents by side for generations. I'm sure mission of the Vatican II Council to keep us informed of any items about '35ers we must put our trust in God where he played a leading role in which come to their attention. Due to your geo­ developing Uturgical renewal in graphical location you are in a better position and also in the justice of the to sec or hear about classmates in your area who people." the Church today. may not take the time to write us directly, and This then is the Archbishop of it would be helpful if you would siphon the The Archbishop's concern for information- to us. In other words, let's have education has been a lifelong in­ Atianta and alunmus of Notre eight secretaries in the Class of 1935 instead of volvement. He graduated from Dame ... an iimovator in educa­ just one (another ''first" for the Class). Enough for my pitch. the University in 1932 with a tion, a leader in civil rights and FRANKLYN HOCHREITER wrote news of B.A. degree. Later, as a young a prominent voice in Church his marriage to Carolyn Fryar Ash on Dec. 17. She is a public health educator with the ^fary- diocesan priest in Cleveland, he matters. land State Dept. of Health. Hoch's daughter Cbudia %\'as maid of honor and her fiance Juan Levy the best man. The Hochreiteis are at home in Campus Hills, Aid. Congratulations, Frank. lations to RAY BRODERICK upon his election for the splendid response by the Class to bis TOM HILS, former secretary of both the New as lieutenant governor of Pennsylvanb. GEORGE December ktterappeal for the Aimual Alumnx Haven, Conn, and Miami, Fla. ND Clubs, is DEMETKIO reports that he also has a son at Fund. As a result of this end-of-the-year effort, planning to open his own public relations office Notre Dame, a sophomore in the Class of 1969. the Class came through with a record number of at Cocoa. He operated a public relations office On behalf of the Class, I wish to extend deep, gifts to the Uiuversity in 1966. m Hialeah for years. ANTHONY KUHARICH est sympathy to Mrs. JOHN J. McGRATH and resigned his post as chief probation officer for four daughters on the death of John, Dec 23. WILLIAM F. RYAN the Northern Indiana District of Known to most of us as "Gunner," John wiU District Court on Nov. 30 to assume a post as be, remembered in all our prayers. 1620 E. Washington Ave., special assistant in the Indiana Dept. of Correc­ Class President PAUL FERGUS, also our Class tion. We want to express our belated congratu- Agent, wishes to express bis sincere appreciatioa ;South Bend, Ind. 40017

ALUMNUS AMRCH 1947 APRIL 27 Georgetown and t(Jd Paul that he hoped to be CLIFFORD BROWN REUNION—June 9, able to make the Reunion. Paul also heard from Norwalkj Ohio 10 and U. from Father BOB LOCHNER while in Buffalo, H'ritcs that he lost be­ The coming of our and he meets with JIM IhlOULDER in town. He ing elected Judge of 30th REUNION has made a trip to the coast and met with PARKER 1936 the Ohio Supreme 1937 started to arouse SULLIVAN, %vith a slop-off at Kansas to see Couxt in the Nov, 8th. election. However, he PINKY CARROLL and AL SCHWARTZ. His still has four more years to serve in his present son BRIAN '63 will be a doctor about now and tenn as Judge of the Court of Appeals, sixth Pablo has joined the grandfather stage. Hope district, Ohio. the grandson has more hair. Received vt*ord from Alumni Office of the death ED HOYT checks in with visits with TOM of THOMAS MURPHY of Needham, Mass. and HUGHES who now owns five liquor stores in ROBERT BURKE of Louisville, Ky. Fellow North Jersey — better have him furnish the Alumni and friends will add Masses and prayers. booze for the Reunion. Then he met JOE Received a humorous letter from TOM GRADY SCHILLING, as I did, at the Navy game. ZEKE of Chicago, our newly elected Class president CACKLEY who now has an address In Penn­ along with a contribution for niy secretary's ex­ sylvania after leaving Georgian Court. He listed penses. This contribution came from Tom, TONY Allentown Col. of Francis de Sales as the oper­ MAZZIOTTI, PATRICK DONOVAN and AD- ELBERT von CHAMISSO BAUR, who got the ating base. Hoyt is teaching graduate school at ball rolling in the first place. Thanks loads for some of our old correspondents. DAN SULLI­ CCNJ and makes his li\ing as asst. treas. for the gift. I immediately sent for an Alumni direc­ VAN has things lined up in the Sun Flower Fcncherch Corp., NYC, an international financing tory of ND graduates in this area of which stun State so that he will be able to make it come organization. He should run the finances for the I paid about half that was sent. Wonder how June. Dan''s family is running the schooling REUNION. DICK DEL.\NEY and BOB WEA­ Baur got the name "von" tacked on to his circuit — one in law school, a daughter a teacher VER confirmed our visits and again stated they already given name. Afaybe Bert \viil supply us and one son ready fo find his way to ND or were available for duty at the REUNION. Dur­ vaxh this information. Let me know next time K State. Dan hears from AL SCHWARTZ when ing a trip to Washington had a visit with BILL you write, Tom. Incidentally, about this time they have a train seat heading for one of the FOLEY, counsel for House Judiciary Comm. and Tom lost his mother and I am sure all class­ games in the fall. Dan is also on Father JOE well-situated in the new Rayfaum Bldg. which mates will remember her in their prayers. ENGLISH'S mailing list from Chile and Father was built with no limit on the money spent. Joe expects to get a dispensation to make the Texan WIL KIRK should be proud of the way In closing I wish to inform all that secretaries journey back to Father SORIN's wiMeniess. ED they honored the big man from Texas. BiU are limited to a number of words. ^lany of my REARDON has been a very good informer, hav­ checks on DON H.\NNING who is with the reports may be cut or deleted, so I will have ing made some trips to games — looking for a FBI in Washington. to make them brief and condse. This I hate to Trip to Harrisburg, Pa. resulted in a meeting do as many of you know how I like to ramble home for his son, All-City star Kerry. His son to explain details. But don't let that stop you made history for Rockhurst in KC like Eddie with VINCE "TIP" McCOOLA of Freshman from using the >*eIIow card in this issue to send did along with ED ROONEY and THOM HIG- Hall fame. Vince is well established In the State me information. In the next issue will have a GINS ^vhen they were the representatives at Rock­ of Pennsylvania just having finished a term as word from J. MAHAR, A, HUFNAGLE and hurst Prep. PAUL "PABLO" SHEEDY of the acting secretary for procurement for the state. GEORGE WENTWORTH. Can't get it aU in Foster-Kfilburn Co., Buffalo, took his wife Marie He is now under the new Governor as the asst. this time. to Puerto Rico to get airay from the cold climate commissioner for higher education for the State. that Buffalo enjoys. While changing pbnes in **Tip" finished up at Scranton U, with a master's LARRY PALKOVIC NYC he met Dr. CHARLES HUFNAGEL who from Bucknell. He hopes to hear from JACK had been in NYC for a heart association meeting. BAKER, JACK McCARTHY and BILL FOLEY 301 Mechanic St., You all probably saw Charlie's lucture and article at the REUNION. Again in Harrisburg, but no that he participated in as it appeared in Ufg sign of FRANKIE B.ARBUSH, the musical knight Orange, N.J. 07050 magazine. Dr. Hufnagel is still on the staff at of '37. r Delancey J. Davis '37 has been ap ^ pointed president of the Castings ALUMNI, Division of General Steel Indus­ IN THE tries, Granite City, 111. Davis, who NEWS Congrats is vice-president of General Steel, has been general manager of the castings division since 1966. He Frank D. Hamilton '30 was recently is also past president of the So. was formerly general manager of elected president-elect of the Wis­ Central Wisconsin ND Club. GSI's castings plant near Philadel­ consin State Bar Assn. In his new phia, Pa., which consolidated with position he will be responsible for Bernard D. Broeker '30 has been ap­ the Granite City facility in 1963. a membership of over 7,000 who pointed director and chairman of maintain their headquarters in the the finance committee at Bethle­ Vincent P. Slatt '43 has been hon­ State Bar Center at Madison, Wis. hem Steel Corp. He also will con­ ored by the Spokane section of the Hamilton, who has practiced law tinue to serve as general counsel to Institute of Electrical and Elec­ in Wisconsin since 1933, is a mem­ the corporation. In 1933 he re­ tronics Engineers as "Engineer of ber of the firm of Hamilton & ceived a law degree, cum laude, the Year." Slatt is a graduate of Mueller at Dodgeville and was a from Harvard Law School, where the University's College of Engi­ comt commissioner for 25 years. he was an editor of the Harvard neering and has been general man­ He served three years in the Navy Law Review. Broeker vras a mem­ ager of the Inland Light & Power during World War II and is a Fel­ ber of the legal staff of Cravath, Co. ance 1960, having been as­ low in the American College of Swaine and Moore of New York sociated with that concern since Trial La\vyers and the American City from 1933 to 1940, when he 1949. He was Spokane's ND "Man College of Probate Lawyers. He joined Bethlehem Steel. of the Year" in 1953.

ALUMNUS AMRCH 1967 APRIL ED GARVEY sent in a fine contrihution to get prayers. I sincerely extend condolences of all imfirning identiiicatiaa on the back aad aba the REUNION fund off the ground —in fact the men of *40 to the families of that two fine Year name and addrai to that they ••, be put it in orbit. We now have doubled and men. Rtumed to yon after he more what we had left over from the 25th. Many Earlier in the month Gerry had written that thanlcs, Ed. The committee will put the ^ to he had managed to see many of the football good use. WALT NIENABER has started to games. He also said, ''DON GILULAND and line up the Cincy contingent, BOB BURKE and I, with our wives, attended a fabulous party the JERRY GOHAIAN, and they really hope to have night before the ND-USC game given by the BILL FYLE make this one. Los Angeles ND Club. *Mr. G' has the same The local REUNION committee is headed by pep he had 2S years ago. We had nice vints Father NED JOYCE CSC with JERRY CLAEYS, with MIZE MORRIS, GEORGE MEEKER and KARL KING, HARRY KOEHLER and JOHN­ JOE THESING, who all looked great. TOM NY BRASSELL tailing the brunt of the work. FLAD called us in Calif, to announce the birth So, when you are contacted by the committee, of his first grandchild, a boy, to his daughter give them -a hand. They will be making a Mary. 'Old Dad* Flad was on cloud nine." scries of mailings to keep you informed and to get This column depends more on Gerry than on me some action. The publicity experts are PAUL — take heed, men, and please follow hb examine. FOLEY, ZEKE CACKLEY, JACK GILLESPIE. To make it even easier use the yellow infonna- We regret to report the pasang oo Jan. 4 of CY STROKER and JIM BACON. tion card on page 30. EDWARD "OOC" GLASER and on Jaa. 29 Our deepest sympathy goes to Father Joyce, Results! Yes, results! For the first time that of DAVID A. "JERRY" HACK, who was with Jerry Clack's and Walt Nienaber on the deaths I can recall we received an immediate reply from our Clasi for the fint two yean. of their fathers. one of those "what happened to" questions. Let Why not make nse of the yellow informatioB One final note: it is reported that BERNIE me quote, "If my good friend GEORGE 'GOO­ card on page 30 of this issoe to make known NIEZER's golden locks have turned to silver. BER* FORBECK wants to know what hap­ your plans for the Reunion and other infonna- He*s still the number one fan at St. Mary's pened to Big JACK WILLMANN, he should be tion about yonnelf, £uni]y and classmates. regardless of competition from MARTY BURNS. informed that IVe grown even bigger, balloon­ Use tile postcard insert to check with me on news ing to 220 this year. He also should be in­ WILLIAM M. HICKEY or addresses that you need to contact before formed that I've been real estate editor of the REUNION. Washington Post here in the nation's Capital for P.O. Box 8640A, Oiicago, six years, after a stint on the Post city desk, where III. 60680 JOSEPH P. QUINN BILL BRADY *43, is now night city editor. Prior to coming to Washington in 1937, I was P.O. Box 275, Lake Lenape, with Grit, a national weekly in my home town, Only news of the Williamsport, Pa., birthplace of good friend Clasa of '43 cooes Andover, N.J. 07821 JAKE KLINE. The Willmanns have twt> sons, via the news vrares one graduating from Fordham in *67, and two concetning JOHN Me- HALE's departure Protest! HAL WIL­ daughters. Son Mike has been editor of the 1943 {ram the Atlanta Braves to executive assistant LIAMS, Sunday edi- Fordham Ram and Insists that he is going to law to Conunissioner of Baseball WilUam B. Eckert. tor of the Baltimore school. My old ND library workmate and class­ Chicago area Class membexs interested in a golf Sun, was pictured in mate CLIFF LETCHER stops around the office day May 18 at the Buttei&U Country dub can the Nov.-Dcc. ALUM­ about once a year and we toast ND. Enjoyed 1938 get all the infonnation from JIM McELROY at NUS as a member of the Class of *40. Hal not reading TONY POTENZL\NI*s note —he was 321-1750 or BOB SWEENEY at BL 2-3124. only was one of the big wheels of tht Glass of part of the upper deck mob at Walsh. Last I *38, but also Class secretary and first author of heard about Dr. OTTO STEGMAIER, my This etfition of the Ai.iiiiifDs contains a yellow this column. Just because he has more hair than roomie in St. Ed*s, was from Davenport, Iowa, postcard on page 30 which, should all Class some of us doesn't warrant putting him in a but that was a few yeais ago. See BOB RICH­ column readers mail to me with infonnation, younger Class. ARDSON M2 occasionally." With tlus pleasant should keep the column going for an edition or example from "Big Jack," why don't some of two. How about dropping it in the mail today? This is written while I am serving my second you send a "what happened to** letter. For instance, use it to suggest "SpotU^t Almnni" term as state representative at Indianapolis and from the Class. just a day after I returned from Washington, A few weeks ago I had the honor and prhri- DC as ofHcial delegate from the Indiana Assem­ lege of attending a testimonial dinner for TOM bly at Astronaut Grissom's funeral in Arlington. JACK WIGGINS BRENNAN. It was a gala affair wth many Rode with our Senator Birch Bayh and Senator ND men in attendance. The surprise guest speak­ 5125 Briggs Ave., Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts in the funeral er \*'as Fr. THOMAS BRENNAN CSC from procession. During the session I introduced a the campus. Although the Class of *40 was not LaCrescento, Cal. 91014 joint resolution, which passed unanimously, hon­ Well represented our enthusiasm made up for lack oring Notre Dame as National Champs and Pur­ of numbers. CURT HESTER, JOE McDON- Time passes so quicic- due as Rose Bowl winners, and complimenting OUGH and TOM LEAHY were present, while ly. It doesn't seem both for timing their heroics during Indiana's TED LEONAS, TOM BARRY, TOM HOSTY, posuble that another Sesquiccntcnnial year. JIM DONOGHUE, TOM MONAHAN and ALUMKUS dcadCne ii .At the State House I ran into JIM LAHEY, JACK HUSSEY were among those who wanted 1944 at hand. Of coune, member of the state conser^-ation commission, who to come but couldn't make it. ZIGGY CZAROB- the new schedule of sac issues yearly rather than is plugging for a state park near South Bend. SKI '48 was the MC with many football letter- four, as was the old progiam, does hasten things. Also saw JACK SCOTT, now editor of a news­ men present including JOE ZWERS *38, PAin. Material is becoming rather scarce once again. paper in Lafayette, who is an old friend of our LILLIS *42 and JOHNNY L.ATTNER *54. It A suggestion, more forcefully, a COMMAND — Governor Bramgan despite being on opposite sides certainly was good to sec RUBE MARQUARDT use the yellow infonnadon csird provided in the politically. *41 again and to enjoy the company of Rev. ALUMNUS. It's there for the purpose of pwH No letters — no cards from you fellows. How JACK ANTON '38, one of the older feHows. viding the Class secretary with mncb-needcd about using the yellow information card on page Class news. Sorry to have no more news, men, but I do 30 of this issue to keep me informed? Did receive WARREN LEARY, Rice Lake, Wtf. newipaver need your help and hope that sometime I will a few moWng notices: ED FLANIGAN moved executive, sent word of his sons, James 16 and run into space problems. Why not take the from Buffalo to 81 Nassau Ave., Kenmorc, N.Y.; B£chael 17. Jim was selected for a year's stndy time now to drop me a line or two via the yel­ JOHNNY MOIR from Huron, to Sandusky, in Australia by the American Field Service. He low information card on page 30? AH of va Ohio; FRANK IT2IN from Iowa City to 120* win live with a family in Cantcrbmy, a sobntb would be delighted to hear from you. Eliot Dr., Urbana, 111. of Melbourne. Mike recently Idt for Karisnibe, ROBERT G. SANFORD West Germany where he will live tmtil next BURNIE BAUER August with the family of a student who spent 233 W. Central Ave. the 1965^ school year with the Leary funily. 1139 Western Ave., WALTER BREHMER has been appcnnted dis­ Lombard, III. 60148 trict manager of the Davenport, Iowa office of South Bend, Ind. 46625 Reliance Electric & Engineering Co. He fives in nearby Bettendorf. Previonsly, Walt was man­ ager in Rochester, N.Y. Dr. WILLIAM KEL- LOW has accepted the pontion of dean and VP of the Jefferson Medical Col. of Fhiladelphia. 1941 He will begin Ms new dudes on July 1. Car> 1939 rendy he is dean of Hahnemann Medical GoL JAMES F. SPELLMAN DOM BOETTO has been elected the new presi­ JOSEPH E. HANNAN Spellman & Madden, dent of the St. Fiancb Academy Events Assn. 1804 Greenwood Dr., Dom, his wife and thrir nine chikbcn reade in 342 Madison Ave., New York, JoGet. m. South Bend, Ind. 46614 Wdcome hoHiIay greetii^ were received froin N.Y. 10017 HARRY YEATES, TOM ROLFS* WALUE The honor of being CHRISTMAN and GEORGE BARISdLLO. your Class secretary JOHN C. KKBY of Yuledde letters came from Brother GERMAIN carries one rather dif­ 123 Forest Ave., New FADDOUL CSC, VINCE DUNCAN and BILL ficult aspect — that of RocheUe, N.Y. is tiy- SCHEUCH. Brother Germain's letter came from 1940 notifying you of the ing to arrange a hu­ Baghdad, Iraq where he teaches at the Jesmt- deaths of our classmates. Notification of the death 1942 morous book itC con­ run Al-Hilcma U. He finds the area very Af­ of EDWARD J. MATHIEU was received from nection with our Reunion in June which win ferent; most exotic both in ^it and soond. GERRY SAEGERT at Christmas time. Please contain many photographs. For this project he Occaaonally one hean Western songs and sees tcmcmbcr Ed and DICK STEFFANIAK. in your needs your help. Will you send photos to John Western cfress, but usually It is Arabic monc

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL and Eastern garb. Sevcml times daily people are called to prayer and right in public ^r^d out It was great to see their prayer mats and bow to the East. He will JOE HAGGAR's name have many fabulous stories when he returns to on the Alumiu Board the US. VINCE DUNCAN lives in Englewood, ballot. I think be it a suburb of Denver. He seldom sees any fellow 1945 the first of our dasH 1947 classmates but once in a ^viulc runs into Dr. xaates to be so honored. lUcoved a mcc note PHIL CLARKE a member of the Denver Clinic. from Barbara SNEE, BOB's wife. Bob is start­ Fr. JOE GALLAGHER recently spent 10 days ing his second year as manager of J. C PENNEY in the area, giving a spedal coune at St. Thomas at Smithtown, N.Y. Seven children make vp Seminary. He and '\nnce wiere able to have a their family. I wish more wives would write in> great wsit. In March, BH-L SCHEUCH com­ PAUL HURD is now director of properties for pleted 23 years with North American Aviation, TWA and is located in NYC. GIL GILESPIE the last sax as their Southern representative with chedcs in from Amarillo AFB, Tex. where be is a headquarters in HuntsviIIe, Ala. Since the 20th lieutenant colonel and is commander of the hos­ Reunion when he missed seeing JOE FIEWEGER, pital. Gil and Louiscne have a daughter Karen MDCE MALLOY and "RED" BURKE, he has Marie, two year? old. He has a 1254>ed hospital run into only one classmate, BILL JOTOISTON, to manage with 500 employees and 400 achnis* down in New Orleans. He highly recommends «ons a month and 18,000 outpatients. Bill to anyone travelling in that area because Mr, BOB PHILPOT is a fcUow "GEer** and if PROLOG Johnston really knoiv-s his %vay around that gour­ supervisor, retail advertising and sales promotion* Li 11 more weeks and two more dajs met capital. The Scheuch family consists of three for the large lamp dept. in Cleveland. BILL Reunion weekend starts daughters and a son who is a freshman at St. SWEARINGEN is preadent. Center Col., Charics- Bernard's Col. We hope you all, in diverse way?^ ton, W.Va., a technical training school. Bill is Will dart back to these parts. JOE FARRELL. an assoc prof., dcpt. ol a brother-in-law of DICK SAYERS. QJUftK chemical engineering, Afanhattan Col., Bronx, FISHER is judge of the Superior Court of New saw TO&C KELLY at an American Chemical Jersey. I£s honor holds forth in Monmouth In 11 more weeks and four more days Sodety meeting in New York. Tom, the father County Court House. Long active in the com­ Reunion weekend ends of tu*o giris, is a research chemist and lives in munity, Clark has been counsel to the Housing Come Aascns, Zuccas, Gallou'ays Chesapeake, Va. The Farrclls, parents of seven, Authority, coundlman in West Long Branch, N.J.» Attend, unbend, uitb friends. reside in suburban Westport, Conn. JOHN assemblyman, and judge, Monmouth County HICKEY, gencr^ manager of a department store, Court, before being elevated to the Superior The foregoing advisory is your last meaningful Kves in Wellesley, ifass., is a director of the Court. Clark and Mae have four boys. HANK reminder on the imminence of our 20.ycar Re- Rotary and of the Chamber of Commerce, and PAYNE is district manager for Lof^ Co. of uiuon, gentiemen. Bring something round — be is a collector of early Americana. Chicago. Hank and Dody have three children. it paimch, shoulders or domenloily — and %ve'll PAUL MARIETTA, district agent for Pru­ Their oldest, Elizabeth Anne, is at the new seco- have a ball. In this issue once again you'U find dential Life Ins., reported from his home base, lar school, Webster Col. in St. Louis. the handy yellow card on page 30 deagncd for Terre Haute, Ind. The Alarictta family consists imtant communication. If >*ou'rc pbnning to of four children. In his leisure Paul cnjo}^ fish­ make the Reunion, use the card to tell us so; ing and hunting. HENRY "HANK" DEWES, FRANK M. LINEHAN if you can't get back for the "Big 20," at least iathtr of two, is a value engineer in the Evans- G.E, Co., 600 Main St., bring us up-to-date on your status via the mail­ ville, Ind. division of Whirlpool Corp. He stated ing piece. that he is an ex-Jaycce, ex-naval ensign and ex- Johnson Gty, N.Y. 13790 OUR BOY CHARLIE ND aub prexy. THOMAS McGUIRE, owner CHARLIE LAFRATTA is stiU car boy, but of a supennarket in Pine Village (near Oxford), because too few of our brother Alamni appre­ Ind., is active in veteran oi^anizations — the As we conunence a ciated his credentials the Class of MCMXXXXVII Marine Corps League, VFW, American Legion, new year, I am has yet to place a bona fide member on the Alum­ and 40 et 8 of which be is past commander. The pleased to report the ni Board of Directors. In the immortal words of McGuires have four daughters and one son. number of responses Ralph Honk, "Majbe next year. . . ." THOMAS McLAUGHLIN is executive vcep of 1946 &om Class members the Perpetual S. & L., Lattxenceburg, Ind. There has been on an increase and therefore it Is most THE GLOBETROTTER PAUSES are four children in the AfcLaughlin family. Tom encouraging both for Class column news and Oar multimillion-air-mile nomad and former involves himself in CCD woHc, the Kiwanis and for our anticipated large attendance at the next Class prexy, SAM ADELO, called mid-Feb. dur­ the Chamber of Commerce. WILLIAM SNYDER, Reunion, four years hence. Keep up the good ing a lightning spurt through SB en route from Flossmoor, 111., Is assistant manager of the Ikfetal record by using the yellow information card on Brazil and Peru to Madrid. God and Phillips Industries Div. of Naico Chemical Co. and page 30 of this issue. Petroleum permitting, Sam hopes to be with us enjoys golfing, hunting and fishing when time JACK BARRETT, the former ND pitcher, for Reunion weekend. An expert on Latin Amcr* allows. ROBERT WOLF, ou-ner of the Robert found time during the holidays to ilrop a brief ica via his years of travelling thereto-and-fro, he N. Wolf & Assoc, an advertising specialties bua- note to let me know that he, his wife Sue Ann warns that Fidel Castro — despite the spectacular ness, is an a\id spectator sportsman taking in all and children are in the best of health and still failures of his despotic regime in Cuba — is still ND and Chicago Bear home football games, and reade in Louisville, Ky. He sends his best re­ exporting subversion and terror to his Latin actively participates in tennis and swimming. gards to all. FRANK KOWALSKI wrote to say neighbors. Sam u-ams of a buildup of guerrilla There are seven young "Wolves." he's been very active In the Buffalo Alumni and activity in the hills of Guatemala which is di^ JAMES LLOYD, Grand Rapids, Mich., is VP plans to make it back to South Bend for the 25tlt turbingly reminiscent of the manner in. which of Bissdl, Inc., manufacturers of housewares and Reunion. Frank and his wife Doris have one Castro himself launched his bloody coup horn the laun and garden equipment. His hobbies are diild, Marijane. Received a letter from FRANK mountains of Oriente province. golf, reading and bridge. JOHN ^lORRIS, a L, FOSS apologizing for not being able to attend manufacturer's rep, beadqiiartcrs in Birmingham, last year's Reunion, but he plans to make it to RELIGIOUS REPORT Mich. GiAS and bowling take up his leisure time. the 25th. Frank, his wife and family are to move Letters are at hand from two missionaries —~ JOSEI^ O'KEEFE is president of an automo­ back to the Midwest from CaUfomia this sum­ one is a brief note from Brother IVAN DOLAN bile dealership in Kalamazoo. He is a golfing mer. Frank also informed me that JACK STEW­ CSC _ who has returned to East Pakistan and enthusiast and also enjoj-s ^fonday morning quar- ART, a former pitching teammate of JACK BAR­ promises to send his new address once he gets terbacking. The long '66 football season must RETT, ran into some real tough luck recently. battened down; the other is a fund-seeking form have been most trying for him. D.ANIEL TOM- First, his daughter received a bad injury and message from Father ED RUETZ, an apostie to CIK, an dectrical engineer vnih Elcctro-Voice, then JACK himself became seriously iU and the "inner city" at St. Mary's Mission Scliool Inc. makes his home in Buchanan, Mich. Fish­ underu-ent major surgery in November. Please in Fort Wayne, Ind. His report notes grou-ing ing, photography and bam radioing are some temembcr Jack in your prayers and I'm sure we minces of ecumenism in action involving the of his extracurricular acti\ities. HOWARD J, an hope he has a speedy and healthy recovery. neighborhood P^tcstant ministers, denomina­ SCHMTTT, general sales manager. Laboratory Frank also has been in close contact with HARRY tional college students and underprivileged fam­ Equipment Corp., St. Joseph, Afich., does a SURKAMP and ART KERNEN. ilies of all genera. great deal of travelling, both for business and KERMTT "FRENCHIE" ROUSSEVE, the one­ pleasure. In fact he enjoys it so much, he con­ time Bengal Bouts Champ, operates lus own res­ MILITARY MEANDERINGS siders it a hobby. He is active in the Rotary taurant in South Bend, Ind. Any time you are in The first subject fits both military- and religious and in the Boy Scouts. CHARLES ^fcCAF- that area, stop in and say hello to "Frenchie." categories: He's Chaplain (Capt.) WILFRID A. FERTY, Riverdale, Westwood, N,J., is in the I'm sure he'd like to renew acquaintances. JO> MENARD CSC featured in the "Holy Cross insurance business and is past preddent of the SEPH HANNON's wife sent news that he h Personalities" spoUight in the Frfi. Catholic Boy New York Chapter of the International Assn. of currently stationed in Vietnam as commanding (to which magarine your secretary is a regular Health Usderwriters. He also is active in parish oflker of the 12th EVAC Hospital 30 utiles contributor). The short piece on Father Menard work and is a junior basketball coach. Con­ southwest of Saigon. It is a new hoqittal and notes he was a regular Army man for two gratulations are in order for DAVID CURTIN, vrall be the largest in \^etiiam when oomidcted. years before joining Holy Cross, ordained in vice-prexy of Xerox Corp., who recentiy was CHARLES BARTLETT JR.. manager of the 1955, served as prefect of relipon at ND and made rcspondble for the company's advertiang international department of Valley National Bank returned to the Army to serve in a different and sales promotion. of Arizona, has been {nomoted to the post of capadty. He currentiy has an APO, San Fran- That's it! Do take a moment now and send nce-president. He is also director of tlw Arizonjl osco address. me the yellow xnfonnation card on page 30. Worid Trade Assn. Major BILL RUEVE USAF, reachable via APO New York, recently arrived at Torrejon JOSEPH A. NEUFELD PETER P. RICHISKI AFB_ in Spain as an OB-Gyn man at the base bo^tal; his wife and four children, ages six to P.O. Box 853, 60 Robin Place, Old Greenwidi, 10, are with him. Capt. PAUL A. DEHMER JR is stationed at Green Bay, Wis. 54305 Conn. 06870 Fort Bragg near Fayetteville, N,C

30 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL And Cmdr. DONALD R. HAINES wrote as ED KENEFICK was receatly elected to head now u asrt. pn>f. of math at tlie IT. of Detroit, follows on one of the yellow postcards: **Just Action Committee for Theater in Chicago.' is takii^ a twt»-ycar leave of absence to aem received the *47 Alumni listing and noted no 3kUURICE TESSIN is in Midland, Mich, with Cohmibia U.'s office of foresgn service as. « data on myself — first time it has happened, Dow Packaging in the converted products buu- tcacherK»nsultant at the U. of Candahar, Afghan­ so must be typo error. BSC *47, Aug. — active ncss. JAY FARRON and his wife Helen and istan. During the summer of 1965 he held m duty US Navy in its supply corps since gradua­ family of eight, ranging from lb to one year, nnilar post at an institute of hi^ school teachcn tion. Returned in July '66 from two years in arc living in Spain where he Is the John. Han­ in JodhpuL Rajaster, IncGa. Philippines where I was executive officer of tuival cock Ins. rep. in Madrid. From the Alumm More promooans: ROBERT CIANCHETTI supply depot, Subic Bay. Am now at US Navy Office I received a copy of the 18th cdidon of has been elevated to the post of cfirector of the finance center, Cleveland as director of allotment O'Connell's "Irish News" published each Christ­ Family Services IXv. of the Suffolk (N.Y.) department. After total of 24 years in Navy, may mas and New Year's by DICK O'CONNELL of County Dept. of Welbre. E. ROBERT DAL- make it a career! Best wishes for the new year Marshall, Minn. This is a comprehensive report TON has been promoted to chief underwriter in and Notre Dame." of what the O'Connells have been doing for a the administrative nnderwriting diviskm of the year complete with photographs and yawnal group department of the Travelers Ins. Co. in MEN IN MUFTI greetings. Hartford, Conn. Uh-hnh! The feOa mth the ARTHUR FALK has assumed the new post This is about it for now and I Io(^ Sonmd big red umbrella. of interconnection engineer in Detroit Edison's to hearing from someone soon. Any volunteers RAYMOND CLOUTHIER MS'49, as»c pnC. system development department; he was formerly for the chairmanship of the Class Reunion — the of education and a member of the athletic board responsible for coordinating power pooling pro­ 20th — coming up in June, 1968? Since our at St. Norbcrt Got in DePere, Wis., has bees grams within Detroit and neighboring dectric perennial chairman, BILL BONWICH, has left appointed to the ^strict 14 National Assn. of companies. the campus we are looking for someone to fill his Intercolle^te Athletics executive oommittec. Be Our man in the USDA. HOMER "HAL" spot who is close by and can handle some of mil be faculty rep for independent coOeges at WALTERS, has been transferred from Prospect the arrangements. It's not much bat it would both the district and nadonal levels. JOHN Heights, III., to Washington, D.C. What is the be nice to know we have one of our Class on MOLTTOR has been named rcndent manager nature of your new duties, Hal? the scene sort of lookii^ after things. of Walston & Co.'s Fort Wayne, Ind. office. He In our most recent issue we chronicled the That's it. Take a moment now to send me a was formerly an account executive with the com­ move of THURMAN COSS from St. Paul to line or tu'o on the yellow iofcHrmation card on pany. B. DAVID HALPERN PhD'49 has been Santa Monica; his latest move brings him to page 30. We'd all love to hear Ihmi you! elected a director of the consulting Chemists and still another saintly city, San Diego. Chemical .Engineeix Assn. which is an Interna­ Three other men of '47 have put dou*n roots tiona] organizadim with 102 members and a staff in Sunny CaL: JOHN SMITH, to Newport GEORGE J. KEENAN c^ 4,500 sdentists and engineers. Beach from Jackson, Wyo.; OLIVER McCLARAN 177 Rolling Hills Rd., As b so often the case, happy news of Ahmmi from Tyler, Tex., to Carpenteria; and HENRV success, promotions and laurek is accompanied in STICKELMAIER all the way to Los Altos from Clifton, N.J. 07013 the mails by sad news of Alumni losses. I ask Armonk, N.Y. your prayers for the soul of JOHN L. HAG* Another latter-day Califomian, transplanted STROM BS Mech Engr. '49 yibo died Jan. 17 Hoosier JOHN L. AL\RTIN, is executive direc­ Scribe time on Drift­ and for Alex T. Bodle, father of JOHN F. tor of the Stanislaus County taxpayers* association wood Lane and it's BODLE, who died Dec 5, 1966. and chairman of special events for the American hectic! Editor Thurin Thus do we dose the column at this writiig. Cancer Society in Modesto. timits each Class sec­ But I want to alot aU our West Cout Alumni DON KANE has deserted Indiana for Towson* 1949 retary to only a care­ that our next issue is gmng to feature a tremen­ Md.; JOE THIE has fled Minneapolis for the fully allotted portion of lineage and that's what dous letter written by BOB CONNELLY of San wintry blasts of Chicago; and PAT WILSON is makes this assignment a head-scratcher: I roust Francisco. Bob listed notes on no fewer than living in Ponce, Puerto Rico. pore over my mail selecting whifJi items to use 16 — I said 16 — classmates. That letter alone And congratulations are in order for JOHN and how and where. Both cards are deserving could be parceled out over three issues but out McHALE, who resigned the presidency of the of first position in the column so which to choose? of deference to Bob's effort in assembling this Atlanta Braves to become assistant to Baseball Actually, I do have three or four news items, data, we'll gn-for-broke w^di a full diviaonal Commissioner William Eckert. The sky is seem­ but how much more pleasant it is to make you report — California style. Don't forget those ingly the limit for fair-haired John and more fellows co-authors of this bit by hanng your cards! power to him. quotes, comments and queries to brighten some half-forgotten classmate's day. This issue of the . PAUL GODOLLEI. chief architect for Keene- LEO L WESLEY ALUMNUS has another correspondence card —11 MacRae Assoc., Inc., Elkhart, Ind., has been lines available. I would ask you to use at least 155 Driftwood Lone, named chairman of the public relations committee four of them, if you choose, and let me know of the Indiana Society of Architects. where you are, how* you are, whom you have Rochester, N.Y. 14617 EPILOG seen and any **Iocater" problems you have that From Jack: I may be able to solve. Or just talk about your Here's hoping that "Come Back!" golf game, the reorganization of Notre Dame's your New Year has Board of Trustees, the high price of chocolate, bcgim on the ^ht JACK MILES the low price of your stock-—anything. But use foot and that you and the card! These gents did: 1950 your family have a 3218 Bentley Lane, South Bend, year of happiness and good fortune. CHARLIE WAGNER from BeHevue, Neb., jtot Ind. 46615 received word of his promotion to It. colonel in PAUL SCHAFFER now is the proud father the USAF. Yes sir! Charlie was recalled during of seven, just filling out nicely his six-bedroom the Korean conflict and since then has served hmne near Biscayne Bay. You no doubt have We'll begin the New in Alabama, New Jersey, Massachusetts, New been getting some information from our fine Year with very little Hampshire, Nebraska and Japan. He is now classmate FRANK G. KELLY, director of the to write about as the operations 5>3tem5 analyst in a SAC command Deferred ' Giving Kogram for the Univeruty. news is very light and control center where he works on EDP com­ TOM MORAN advises Uut he resides at 215 1948 these days. The reply puter, applications involved in providing on-line, Edgctt St., Newark, N.J. BOB D.WID is prac­ cards that have been accompanying the recent real-time message input/display output capabitity. ticing law in Cheyenne. issues of the ALUMNUS mean nothing to this Actually, Charlie keeps the cofTce warm while Even though the 1966 football team broke or Class as I haven't seen one in ages. So why not his 40 programmer analysts feed and read data tied many old records our Class still holds quite surprise me this time with a sho^vcr of yellow into that maze of tapes, disc drives, etc He a few. Our wonderful friend LARRY COUIRE, caids? must have found some few spare hours because he who hasn't changed one bit, still holds the record In his annual Christmas greeting TOM HER­ was due to get his KfBA from Creighton this for the longest run from scrimnu^e. EMIL BERT tells me that Rody presented him wth past January. Good work, Charlie. SFTKO has the career record for the most ntt another son in September which makes for a yards rushing; FRANK SPANIEL, the highest total of five. I don't know if it is five boys or BILL WARD started the new year "write" by average per rush on a career record; LANK sending along this advice dated 1/4/67: "ifciy five children altogether but I imagine Tom wants SMITH, the highest aver;^e per punt return for I advise all Notre Dame Alumni and prospective to have an even number because he is still young individual game record, for the season and also criminals in the Los Angeles County area that at heart. Dr. DAVE MOSIER who has been at the longest punt return. STEVE ORACKO, the bunness is booming and I am now a member most PAT'S attempted and completed for a sea­ the Illinois State Pediatric Institute in Chicago of the Criminal Courts Bar Assn. I would also son; EMIL SmCO the most net yards rushing opened his own office in Santa Monica, Calif., advise that my wife Mary and I are very proud in an individual game. No Notre Dame team as of Jan. 1 for the practice of endocrinology. of our three gorgeous daughters ages 5 through has equalled our scmor year 104M) record nnce His address there will be suite 424, 2021 Santa 12, all of ^vhom will be on the marriage market then and our 1949 team still holds the record for Monica Blvd. within fewer yeais than I care to admit." These the h^hcst punting average, most TD passes, FRANK KAYSER has moved from Ames, words from Bill's oHices in Downey, Cafif. most safeties, most kick-c^ returns, most yards in Iowa to Cambridge, Mass. JOHN F. MINICLER kick-off returns. MIKE SWISTOWICZ holds Old faithful. Dr. STEVE GALEA, from 1081 is a lieutenant colonel in the Marine Corps and the record for passes intercepted. is residing in Occanside, Calif. Dr. ROBERT F. Scaife Hall, U. of I^ttsburgh, returned recently DUFFY has moved from Des Moines to Ketter­ from tivo months in Nigeria where he worked Marge (McKeon SMC '50) and DICK DIGAN, ing, Ohio. JIM McCABE has moved from as an anesthesia consultant to several Cath<^ while guests of our Orange Bowl committee, paid Havertown, Pa. to Evansvillc, Ind. JOE SIG- Mission hospitals. Last week (12/17/66) he was US a pleasant vist. INck has been chairman ct NIAGO has moved back to Memphis from At­ promoted to research assoc prof of anesthesiology the Heisman Trophy Award Comnuttce for some lanta. FRANK PAXTON has moved from at the U of Pitt School of Medicine (wronder yean, rendes in Garden City, Long Island, and Paducah, Ky. to Winnctka, lU. JOE DUFFY how that looks on the back of his sweat shirt. is with the John T. Clark, Inc., Blanhattan. They added 10 points to his Zip Code by moving from In October Steve was awarded a three-year grant have not changed a bit and are as wonderful as Portvillc, N.Y. to Olean, N.Y. BOB LIVING­ for $113,000 from the National Institute of Health ever. MIKE CNEIL has accepted an appoint­ ment from Florida's first Republican governor in STON is living in Munster, Ind. These are the to study the effects of anesthesia on Intermedjary 99 years as a member of the powerful State Road highlights of the changes of address notices re­ metabolism. Dept. Lee and DICK KLEE sent a nice note ceived recently. I have word that JAMES ECKSTEIN, who is

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 31 from the BufFalo area. Lee's sister Betty is a MaryknoII doing graduate study at Coady Jnter- national Institute, Antigonish, Nova Scotia. My wife Mary Pat's brother. Father TOM FEELY CSC, spent his vacation with us enjoying the fun in the sun before returning to StonchiU Col. Seminary, North Easton, Mass. — a few miles from where Pat and GEORGE SULLIVAN reside ALUMNI and he is a Superior Court judge. IN THE Congrats DICK KLEE's oldest, Ricky, is six feet; Decnic, Kfary Beth, Dennis and Doug round out NEWS the Klec team. Gloria and JOHN FERRY are enjoying their Margie, Jack, Kevin and Bob. Dr. JOHN BONESSI is practicing in Charlcroi, a suburb of Piltsbuiglt and reports that PAUL HUDAK, JOE ZAKA, JOE GASPARELLI and PETE FLAHERTY arc nearby. C. T. HELL- MUTH has moved Iiis CLU offices to the Bar­ William F. Kellow '44 dean of Hahnemann low BIdg., Washington, DC. BOB SINCAVICH, Medical College has been appointed dean president of the Notre Dame Club of the Ohio Valley, Wheeling, W. Va., and owner of various and vice-president of the Jefferson Medical Minit Car Wash establishments, reports that JIM College of Philadelphia. A native of Geneva, DAILER Is teaching and coaching football at Wheeling Central Catholic HS. GERRY RAMS- N.Y.J he was graduated from the George­ BERGER, Dorothy and their Kerry (in college), town U. School of Medicine in 1946. He Katie, Rebecca, Peter, Tim and Torn arc enjoy­ ing the pleasures of St. Petersburg, watching the did his post-graduate work in internal girls groiv up as cheerleaders, dancers, etc. A medicine at the District of Columbia Gen­ lovely note and photographs from Barbara and ED KELLY (Kelly's Corned Beef in Chicago) eral Hospital, the Georgetown University and their beautiful children. JIM CREAMER Hospital and the Walter Reed Hospital. is in Nonralk, Ohio; JOHN MENDENHALL in Chicago. W.\LT WISSEL reports from his Houston law practice that his son is a freshman Robert M. Cianclietti '49, formerly an as­ at Loyola, New Orleans and his three daughters arc coming along fine. DICK SOISSOX is sistant director of the Family Services Divi­ coaching in Kalamazoo and is enjoying watching sion, Suffolk County DepL of Welfare, has his high school player from his state champion team play offensive guard at Notre Dame. Dick been promoted to the post of director of says, **My family stands at four boys and two Family Sersnces Division. As assistant direc­ girls. ... Sure would like to hear from some of Uie bo\s." BOB McGLYNN is in Belleville, tor since 1964, Cianchetti was responsible for III.; WALT GEUDTNER in Bay Village, Ohio; four field units and the initial training of ED GR-W in Wenham, Mass.; ANDY LECH- NER in BridgcvUle, Pa.; BIG JIM MARTLN' Family Services caseworkers and aides. in Pocatello. Ida.; BILL BERGHOFF in Minne­ apolis; LCDR. MATT ROMANO at Annapolis; GEORGE BREGEL in Kansas City, Mo.; Dr. Andrew A. Baldoni PhD '51 has been ap­ GEORGE ESTOK at St. Edward U., Austin, pointed research director at the Simoniz Tex.; DON KENT at Palo Alio; RON SAN- FORD in Neptune. N.J.: LEO COLEMAN in Company's research laboratory in AVood- Barringlon. R.I.; JOHN HANS in Atlanta; BER- stock, 111. Before assuming his new position. NIE MEYER in Grand Rapids, Mich. LEO.V Dr. Baldoni was assistant research director HART visited Miami with the Leon Hart Enter­ prises, offices in Detroit, factory in Phoenix, ac­ and technical service director for Morton cording to MACK SCH.AFFER. Flo and AR- Chemical Co. in Elk Grove, 111. He joined MAND D'AGOSTINO now liavc four bo>-s and three girls witli Miciuicl Ra],-mond being born Morton in 1950. Dec. 5.

Thomas G. Bennett '56 has been named gen­ I would call >-our attention to the yellow card in tills issue on page 30. Also anyone interested eral manager and assistant to the publisher in the Mianii-Notrc Dame game Friday, Nov. of the Magnificat, the weekly newspaper of 24, please consult the Club news for Greater the Diocese of Buffalo. The first layman to Miami. hold the managerial post since 1920, his ap­ JOHN V\^. THORNTON pointment is regarded as an important step 4400 Monserrate St., in increasing lay involvement in the diocesan Coral Gables, Fla. 33146 administration. Tom formerly was promo­ tion director of the Buffalo Courier Express. ^M ^0^^ B^B ^m Tlicrc arc two announce ^M U M E^~ ^M mcnts for this Issue. First I ^m ^^^ I tlicre will be a Class Re- Michael J. Thompson '57, BSEE '58 has been tt^^^r ^^t^ m union (junior grade) in promoted to head of the digital transmission the Mahogany Room of the Morris Inn on Oct. 28, after tlie Alicliigan department at Bell Telephone Laboratories State game. TOM WOLFF lias promised to in Murray Hill, N.J. In his new post, he attend and, if someone u-ill boost him over the wall and pro\*ide a ladder, will protect the will be engaged in the development of new goal posts after the game. techniques for transmitting voice, television This year the Old Timers game will be held on May 6. Some of our classmates and their and data in the Bell System. older male children have been attending this game each year. Usually there is some sort of picnic luncli along the cast border of Green Field, Victor D. Blankenship MS '59, technical staff in the vicinity of Andre House (that solitary manager at Aerospace Corp., San Bemadino, brick cdt6ce). Wc generally sit in Section 24 near the top, about row 55. If the wooden scats Calif., has been promoted to director of the arc in no better condition this year you had Mark 18 Reentry System in the company's better wear your ledcrhosen or bring large reentry systems division. In his new position tweczcis for splinter removal. Tom WoIfF really plans to attend the Aflchigan he will be responsible for the technical di­ State game. He is vnth Pcnelec, the electric rection and general systems engineering of utility in Penns)'K-ania, and now lives in Johns­ town at 522 Buckncl Ave., zip code 15905. Tom the new Mark 18 Reentry System, which is married Bcmadeite Locpcr in 1956 and they have being studied and developed by the ballistic five children: Mar>-ann 8, Patrick 7, Teresa 5, Freddie 4 and Jimmy VA. With a little help systems division of the Air Force. from Rosemary, JOCKO MULDOON became a father again on Jan. 8. Their sixth is a little girl, &Iaiireen, and everyone is doing fine. We

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL saw TOM KLETT, claims manager for the more to add — drop a line and let me bunr And here's some really big show hSz new: Chicago Motor Club, lost month. Tom was mar­ how you're doing." REGE PHILBIN writes—"Fmany I have some ried in Aug., 1951 to Rosemary IhlcAndrews and And here's a dandy from JAMES ROGERS: news for you. Have received the biggest break they have three children: Tom 14, KeWn 13, and "Just finished reading the ALUMNUS. Thought I of my career. Joey Bishop has picked me to be Mary Beth 11. Tom looks younger than ever and would drop you a line indicating where the '53 ha announccr-ndekick on his own 'Tonight-type' if he still hits the golf ball as well as he did Alumni arc in this area. JOE O'NEILL, lawyer show set to start on the ABC network in AfniL 16 years ago, he will doubtless be blackballed with seven children is also a Minnesota State He saw me cm my own local Los Angeles show, from the poker club before the summer is over. Senator. JOE ROGERS, Twin City manager for the last one in fact and heard me mention this At the last IEEE Show in New York we saw the Employers Group has three children. PAUL was the last one — called the next day and after both ED MEAGHER and JOHN JONES. Ed GABLER is sales manager for Foley Mfg. Co. a series of three meetings he called me in &ui is now vice-president of marketing for Amperex and has three children. PAT O'CONNOR is a Di^o and gave me the good news. It was a Electronics Corp. in Saylcsville, R.l. We will cattle rancher in Mitchell, S.D. and has five wonderful Christmas present and my family and try to look up Ed and John at this year's show children. BOB GLEASON, father of three, is a I are just thrilled. It will be a nightly show in during Holy Week. Evidently the waiter in Rhode manufacturer's rep for sporting goods supplies. direct competition with Johnny Carson so it Island has a diifercnt mineral content than that BOB HOODECHEK is both lawyer and officer Won't be easy, but nothing is in this business. iiere in Chicago, for Ed and Nancy had not with the American National Bank, St, FauL "Am enjoyii^ your work as Class correspon­ added to their original brood of five after they CHUCK RITTEN is an officer and grain broker dent and feel for your problems but still you're moved to the East. John Jones is president of with Louis N. Ritten Co. with the Grain Ex­ getting out plenty of news even though the guys Boontoa Polytechnic Co. in Rockway, N.J. They change in Chicago. HAMPTON LYNESS is with aren't cooperating. Hope you hear from Brother produce electronic moisture meters, temperature the same firm as a broker in Minneapolis. JIM BILL and take care of yourself. My best to and Immidity control systems, and custom in­ ROGERS is in the life and general insurance everyone." That's great, Rege, you can bet stallations. John also docs research and design business in St. Paul and is also scout for the we'll all be poUing for you. His address: KFMB- work and some electronic consulting work. My Afontrcal Canadicns. He is an organizer of a TV, 1405 Fifth Ave., San Diego, Calif. 92112. recollection is that he married late in life, that national collegiate hocJtey tournament which is is, about five or six years ago. Saw JIM called the St. Paul Hockey Clasdc He's very That's it for this issue, PLEASE WRITE! MELOCHE during a recent Washington trip. active in professional and amateur hockey in this Why not use the handy yellow card on page 30 Jim received his law degree from the Detroit area. He has four children." Jim's address is of ihis issue. Col. of Law. Having recently decided to in­ 345 Cedar St., St. Paul, Minn. 55101. Thanks vestigate the patent racked he has been In the for all the news, Jim, you certainly covered a WALTER F. "BUD" STUHLDREHER Patent Office about one and a haU years as an lot of ground. examiner in Group 160. Until April 1, that I'll say this —when JIM BRTTT writes a let­ 11006 Jean Rd. S.E., Huntsvilie, means Room 4519 in the Commerce BIdg, Jim ter he doesn't kid around. How's this for making Ala. 35803 and the former May Rcilly have Diane 9, Linda my job easier: "In reading the Nov.-Dcc Notre 8, Harold 6, and Tommy 4. Dame ALUMNUS, I got the distinct impression A slight amount of precipitation In Chicago that tlic Class of '53 is somewhat unproductive The late evening news has retarded our news search for this issue. We *-at least as far as writing or commtmications indicated that Chicago will try to do better after the spring thaw — with respect to daily activities. Consequently, I has had a Uttle snow, with the avalanche' of yellow information catds thought that I would meet your challenge with with more expected you send. a brief sketch of the various '53ers whom I have 1954 so it's understandable why mail is low firom that quarter. But you all encountered since our last Reunion. don't Uve in Chicago. So how about using the JAMES JENNINGS '*I spent Halloween evening of 19^ hi Miami yellow infonnation card on page 30 to keep us Borg-Warner Corp., 200 S. with my dear wife and one Brian Kelly. Brian abreast of your latest doings? had just finished shooting that year's 'Flipper* Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. 60604 series and u*a5 about to depart for California. If you haven't made motel or hotel reserva­ Luckily, Flipper had other engagements that tions for our Reunion party weekend, hurry. evening so the three of us did the town in a Our parties are pretty well established now and typical Britt-Kelly fashion. you can be sure of meeting at least one or two "We spent a football weekend (*65 season) in zeal good friends. South Bend ^vith HARRY KELLY and wife Jan From the Alumni Office cromes the following 1952 plus another KELLY —ROGER who is with note from GEORGE O'CONNELL: "Since my IBM in Chicago. Harry's in Milwaukee with marriage, Nov., 1963, we have had two children, General Afotors. a boy, Michael and a girl, Bridget." Were there "I ran into Father BOB FITZGERALD SJ at two Geoige O'Connells in our Class? The last Grand Central StaU'on in NYC in the fall of '65. time I saw Geoige he was falling off the Alumni He was on his way to receive his PhD. Speak­ Hall chapel roof. George lives at 15 Salmon ing of New* York — I occasionally run into BILL Rd., Landing, N.J. RAY BUBICK has been MacMURRAY of McGray-Hill fame at Reiddy's promoted to the rank of major in the USAF. Bar on 53rd St. If any of you are ever in NYC, He's presently an instructor in the department stop in and leave >-our card with the bartender. of electrical engineering at the AF Academy. Also, I met and had a drink with BILL BYRD JIM DeCOURSEY, long missing from our Re­ (and Bill MacMurray} who had just been trans­ union parties, was named special asastant for ferred to New York with IBM and who seems urban affain and community relations by Robert to receive a promotion every six or nine months. Docking, governor of Kansas. This was the new "Have had dinner with JERRY ADLER and governor's first a[^>ointment since taking office. JIM BLACKBURN—plus their brides—and they Jim w-as unsuccessful in his bid tor lieutenant HARRY L BUCH all seem to be thriving. Jerry is with the greet­ go\-emor in the last elections. 600 Board of Trade BIdg., ing card business and Jim is in the paper busi­ It's been some time since I mentioned GERRY ness. ED BUCKOWrrZ is now VP for sales FINNEY, so — Gerry Finney! Wheeling, W. Vo. 26000 for a national check manufacturer and he occa­ sionally comes through Dayton in quest of the Heard from BOB RAYMOND. Bob and almighty dollar. Joyce and their three boys are in London. He My t>-ping is usually felt bad misting the great season just past and pretty bad but this "We are happy to report that we see ED MC­ expects to be back for the '68 season. Bob column will take the CARTHY and his family in South Bend with would love to get in touch with any NDeis in cake—I'm typing with some regularity. Ed has just recently purchased London and can be convicted c/o Universal Oil 1953 broken finger so a brick mansion on the St. Joe Ri%*er and Is Products Co., Bush House, Alowycb, London who knows how it uill turn out. I hope the presently installing a marina in front of his W.C, 2, England. house. So if any of you care to bring your ALUMNUS staff bears vnth me. BILL MEYER must have got my address frcun Now for the news. Received a nice letter from houseboats to tlie '67 football games, I am sure that Ed would be happy to supply the dec* an old issue — like 1963 — but I finally got his JOHN CLARK: "I sec with ansicty your plight tridty, etc letter. TOM MURPHY stopped in to visit Bill, in not getting sufficient information on our illus­ Anne and their three Httie ones on the way to trious Class of /53. I see DICK MOLOKIE "D.WE FOX was a frequent nsitor to Day­ Kent State U. for a three-day legal conference. from time to time. Dick is now director of ton as part of the national account department Bill also reports that JOHN J. REIDY has been purchasing for the Joe Lowe Div. of the Con* of the Northern Trust Co. Recently his territory elected an assistant VP of the Union Commerce solidatcd Foods Co. While on the West Coast, has been changed to the East Coast^ but we Bank. John and wife Carol have two children. I saw Dr. CHARLIE FARMER and Dr. JOHN occasionally sec Dave in the Windy City. I have RICHARD £. GERBRACHT, VP and Sohio 0*HARA, both orthopedic surgeons. I'll try to heard through one of GEORGE FARRELL's account supervisor at Marschalk Co., has been send you some more information as I gather it associates that he is now stationed in the Lon­ named general manager of Marschalk's Cleveland from time to time. On our own family, we have don office of the Mellon Bank. JIM SILK — office. Bill also passed along BOB L. AfcGLYNN's five children ranging from five months to eight the last I beard — was with the National Bank Christmas caid which contained enough Info for years. I remain in the plastic machinery busi­ of Toledo. a whole article. AH I can say is whew! are they ness, which I started some six years ago after "As far as we personally are concerned, we busy. Bob's wife Beth almost has her master's. leaving Monsanto Co. and for whom I had have been in Dayton almost 10 years and sinco The oldest of their three children is in junior worked for about five yean.'* John's address is 1953 have accumulated seven chUdren. In case bis^ school. Kinda makes ya feel aged, huh? 7318 Lake St.. Morton Grove, III. 60053. this letter is published and any of the other '53ers That's it lads. See you in S^tember — no Also a note from PAUL J. HARRINGTON get into or near Dayton, our address is 4345 mint daxts please. JR., 1350 Crowley Lane, No. 41, Fairfield, Calif. Trails End Dr. and the telephone no. is 298-6864. 94533: "Now wt>rking as cargo scheduler at "Bud, I trust that some of the others wiU MILTON J. BEAUDINE Tra\is AFB after entering federal service from respond to your request and that you and youis the FSEE Register. The job and area are much are In good health and spirits. See you at the 21 Signal Hill Blvd., E. St Louis, to my liking. Would appreciate hearing from next Reunion!" Thanks a million, Jim, it was other confreres in northern California. Not much swell to hear about so many ND men. III. 62203

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 33 LUOTTO has moved to FoothUI Col., 12345 mediate logic text while on the MSU faculty; Greetings from the Mcnte Ave., Los Altos Hills, Calif., -wlulc JOHN four little Masseys keep them busy. Meanwhile, igloo! What do you SCHANO has moved up to 1640 Fanvell iiom back in the East, Kathryn and JIM MASSEY do when your town Savannah. NOEL KINDT saw the light and enjoy a year on the MIT faculty; the four sons gets belted with two moved from South Bend to 704 Caroline Ct., and parents return to South Bend in August. 1955 feet of snow — write Deerfidd, III. California also is in the news. Shay and NICK RAICH are still planning a new the Class column on the back of whatever PAUL CARDINAL now resides at 2947 Jackson home in the West Bend, Wis. area while enjoying scratch paper you can find, naturally! I tried St., San Francisco (you can move Cardinal -s and a O'REILLY, BERNIE VAN ETTEN. DON received information regarding Father BURKE, giri. "Regulars" FRANK BURKE. 935 Clay- SCHAEFFER, GERRY SPAETH and DON who was the second floor prefect in Farley Hall. brun Dr., Fort Wayne, and JOHN BEXDEL, (TADROWSKI) TODD. Such geographic balance Joe received a recent letter from Father w4io is 5701 Jay St., Yorba Linda, Calif., sent cards around the tou*n would make the job real easy. now in East Pakistan. He is presently caring for from their new homes. I'd like to wind up this If you know anyone who isn't listed (like JOHN a ''small priestless Catholic village by the strange Christmas segment with a section from Father ENGLER — who's doing real well in the stock name of Shoonabazoo." A number of you must JOE O'DONNELL's card: "At a time when I market business), give me a call so we can keep have known Father Burke and because of his would like to be with you but cannot, my prayer our listing current: Chicago 581-4040 or suburbs misuon I am dropping my personal policy against is that all of us may realize the meaning of Christ­ 352-6631. listing addresses in order that you could drop him mas, and may respond to the love of Christ for a note. It is Fr. Eugene A. Burke CSC, Notre us by making our hands the hands of Christ, our This is being written in late January, and Tm Dame College, Box 8, Dacca 2, East Pakistan. eyes the eyes of Christ, our hearts the love of just thumbing through some Christmas cards re­ Hope some will take the time and effort. Christ. Only in this way, through ns, will the ceived from classmate friends. The GEORGE worid come to know Christ today." WILSON family card featured a picture of three Capt. BOB DESMOND is now stationed in pretty daughters and two future tight ends. The Hddelberg and boasted that he had one 16 oz. Our sympathy goes to JERRY PRASSAS, TOM BOTT family photo from Danville high­ bottle of good German beer for each Irish touch­ wliose father died Dec. 20. A special memorial lighted Margaret Elizabeth, bom last Sept. 14, down. He was known as the "shakiest" med in Mass was said on campus Jan. 7. amidst her five brothers and sstexs. Two g"*^ing the area. JIM McCARTHY must have a lovely Happy to hear that W.ALT CABRAL is back youngsters surely brightened the holiday for ynSc in ^farge for she dropped me a very in Hawaii, 12(3 Keolu Dr., Kailua, after a stint Evelyn and DON WALZ in Indianapolis. The pleasant note regarding her husband's activities. in \^etnam as an Army captain. AL PETRA- TOM KERSHISNIK card announced the ex­ She should be proud for Jim is now the new NICK also is a captain. His current address is pected arrival of his number ax heir in Utrch editor of Insulation^ an engineering publication of 1501 Bedford St.. Rome, N.Y. PAUL HART- — still m Rock Springs, Wyo. DON LOGAR Lake Ptiblishing Corp. He received an outstand- MAN is back from o\*erseas and can be reached says he's still plugging away w*ith the Grinnell ii^ written tribute from his boss summing at 49 Nightingale Lane, Gulf Breeze, Fla. LCDR Corp. and they're expecting number three soon^ up Jim's abilities as an outstanding Notre Dame JOHN DAMM has this new address —UNC/ probably here by now. Ann and JERRY MASSEY man who has everything plus a wife and mort­ USFK Comptroller, APO San Francisco. apologized for not providing an edge up in East gage. You just can't beat that combination. Our Chicago still has plenty of '55 traffic JI&£ Landng last November; he's finaUzing an intcx- Congrats to the McCarthys. BILL BARTLING

34 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL TVS AWARD WINNING WRITER, DIREaOR AND PRODUCER James ef. Sieger 'SS In television's own professional mentary on mental illness and its little world, competition between ing seven films for the Department treatment Jim set about to delve its studios and among its people of Anthropology at Harvard Uni­ "into the d^ comers, both physi­ is tough. And yet when the awards versity. Of these seven "Ameri­ cal and mental to which patients are handed out annually for the cana" films, five merited awards scurry to escape the reality they best writing, producing and direct­ including the coveted Venice Film cannot bear." His refined handling ing of films, James Sieger '55 man­ Festival Honorable Mention for of this delicate subject matter ages always to be up front. "Navaho Silversmith." merited an Emmy for the best Now director of documentary Turning to television writing, documentary work in Chicago. film production at CBS's Chicago Jim divided the next four years "I See Chicago: Revolution In outlet, WBBM-TV, Jim has a long between stations KDKA, Pitts­ Religion" recdved highest praise list of award-winning films to his burgh and KYW, Cleveland. As faym both the critics and the gen­ credit. His formal film career be­ public affairs writer-producer at eral public. Jim Sieger wrote, pro­ gan vnth graduate work at the KDKA, he was responsible for duced and directed this penetrat­ University of Southern California writing and producing all public ing study of religion in contempo­ where he earned a master's degree service messages. Five one-half rary life. "Revolution in Reli^on" in cinema. But it was Uncle Sam hour documentaries on heart dis­ was voted the best program pro­ who provided him the first oppor­ ease won him the Hartman Award; duced by a local TV station in tunity for practical experience. a special, American Wind Sym­ America and Jim carried off the During his two-year tour of duty phony, merited the Golden QuiU 1966 national Emmy as well as its as head of the TV writers imit Award; and a film on Stephen local counterpart and on March 11 at the Army's pictorial center, Jim Foster was given a Stephen Foster the film was similarly dted by the wrote or sujjervised over 50 re­ Society Award. While at KYW in Illinois Medical Society. cruiting and training films. He Cleveland his 13 specials on poverty A few weeks ago Jim was notified also "functioned in most produc­ copped the Press Club Award. that another film in the "I See tions as anything from floor man­ In 1964 Jim joined the staff at Chicago" series, "The Illinois Vot- ager to producer-director." WBBM-TV and kept right on with ers Test," had captured the 1967 Jim spent a year at ACI pro­ his winning ways. "Eye on Chi­ Chicago Emmy as the year's best ductions writing education films cago: The Patient Next Door" documentary and was now in the for New York City schools and do- was to be a 30-minute film docu­ running for the national Emmy. K was in tmvn recently and reported that the St. where wife and five little stewardesses are pa* range for the purchase of a block of tickets ifi- Louis crowd is coming in force. This means BIG ticntly playing the waiting game. xcctly from the U. of Illinois to enable all of GUS, JACK, JOE, CONNIE and all the rest. JEROME E. RUTHMAN's name was ixf the group to see the game together. If yoa are Please organize the same in your area. Don't let advertently left off the roster. Add luxa to youxst interested in these arrangements, please send a this ''happening" exist without your presence. 5659 Treevicw Dr., Cincinnati 45238. check or money order for the nm^>er of tickets You will be receiving letters from the Class of­ deared at $5 each to John C. Hitschfeld, 110 ficers luring you to attend. Please follow their That is all for now. Have not one iota of in- West Church St., Champa^, HL 61820. J<^ adv-ice. formation left. How about helping this starving win confirm the receipt of your remittance and It is on the wire that Kathy MALY and secretary out — take a few minutes to drop a WH then see to it that all tickets are ordered-in Joan CASEY are expecting this spring. Also line concerning you and our friends. ... a block. He will either then hold the tickets true of the REICHERS, Colorado Springs. Best MAKE THE BIG 10 in June! for you or forward them to yoa by maiL Al­ get him on the road. T. O. DOYLE says that though . John would fike to be able to arrange JOE NUEHOFF has promised to gather to­ JOHN P. McMEEL for your hotel or motel accommodations, tlus is gether all those bad Texans. Nobody will be ex­ too monumental a task for him to haiidle and cused from the real EXPO *57 in June of '67. 30 E. 42nd St., New York, yoa will have to make these arrangements for Really need information from mates about mates. N.Y. 10017 yourselves. In this issue of the ALUHNUS there is a yellow IiiPaKTANT NOIB: In order to make these ar­ return postcard. See page 30. Please £11 it out rangements, John most lecove yoor oideis by , and return. As the first item in May 1, 1967.' JOHN BARANY, as you know, is the big this issue, we wish to SECOND naoKi/an Roiz: Use &e jdlaw tob honcho for the Reunion. This is not an easy extend our condo­ card on page 30 to keep your Clasa aecretazy job and takes much time and effort. Show him lences to PHHJP posted on yoor doings. you appreciate and make simple plans to attend. 1958 PRASSAS and JOHN We are pleased to pass on the news diat JAMES Gads, even BARR is coming from Paris! HIRSCHFELD who both lost their fathers in O. "HOOT" WALSH was married Dec 28 to the A few changes of locale: Dr. JOHN ROBIN- December. Your praycis would be appreciated. former Miss Gwen Falmieri in Ladd, SL Those SON from Memphis to Atlanta. JIM KINNANE We have an announcement to make to all in attendance included yoor secretary and Bev. from Whiting to Fullertod, Calif. JOHN Mc- those interested in attending the Notre Dame- DONALD McNEIIX CSC, who cddrsted the CONNELL from Palo Alto to Canton, Ohio. Illinois football game at Champaign on Oct. 21, Nuptial Mass. Other matrimonial news is that And BERNIE LYONS is flying the big jets for 1967. JOHN HIRSCHFELD, who resides in of the marriage of LEWIS VAN COUTREN oa Pan Am. He. is temporarily living in Hoboken Champaign, has suggested we plan a get-together Dec. 20 in Rome to the former Ifes Mary Amie while his training requirements are fulfilled. On for all members of the Class who wish to at­ McCall of. Houston, Tex. Lewis is a geophydcist the weekends he buzzes down to Coral Gables tend the game. John has vcJunteered to ar- for Independent Eiqiloration Co. and SM mow ic-

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 35 ndtng with his bride in Afogadiscio, Somalia. Oaks, a military housing area about five mUes LeCours, United American Life Ins. Co., Centre Dr. SAM NIGRO (2167 Westminster Rd., Qeve- outside Kfadrid. Intemadonal, Passage 1, No. 7, Bureau 207, BniS'* land 44118) is beginning residency in child psy­ CHARLES HUMMER JR. is prasently cm- sels 1, Belgium. Jim is interested in hearing from chiatry at Western Reser\-e U. in Cleveland, and ployed by the Navy as a -chemical engineer and any of the Class living or Siting in Europe. finishing his final few months of adult psy­ is responsible for corrosion contrcrf for both the LARRY WENTZ finally jotted down the names chiatry. Sam*s family now includes — in addition Navy and the Air Force in the Canal Zone. of the '59 contingent at the Navy game. Four^ to his wife Suzanne — Rachel Ann 3, Kristin Charles and Greta have a son, Carlitos, and are teen couples met for dinner at Shoyets in iMiiUy. Alarie 2 and Alichael Dominic 6 months. A active in the local Little Theatre. Charies is Included were: Kathy and ED PAULSEN, Kathy Chrbtmas note from Carol and DAVE HOLT- president of the Navy AFGE and legislative chair­ and BILL McCULLOUGH, Carol and BASIL HOUSE reports that the Holthouses are still re­ man of the Canal Zone Central Labor Union. BECK, Patty and MIKE HALPIN (wed in siding in Rockledge, Fla. where Dave is man­ Thdr address is: FO Box 513, Balboa, Canal June '66), Jane and CORNY HAUGH, CARL aging the Holthousc Furniture Store. The Holt- Zone. JOHN UEBBING was recently married to ENGSTROM and wife (whose name Larry can't house children, Joe and Julia, arc now 8 and Roberta Ann Flynn in Palo Alto, Calif. John remember), *'Teddy" and DAVE KESTNER 6 years respectively. HANK ZANG (1306 East has his roaster's from &QT and hb PhD frmn (wed in April '66), ROGER O'NEIL and Dave Groves, Bloomington, 111. 61701) also sent a note Stanford. They are living in Palo Alto and John Kcstncr's ^ter, Carolyn, Trish and BOB at Christmastime expressing eager anticipation of is woriung at Varian Assoc in Mountain View, MURPHY, JIM DULAN and wife (another un- the \Tsit of the Fighting Irish to Champaign next JOE KfAIER has been named brand manager iot remembered name), AL REED, WARREN AL­ fall. Hank began emploj-ment wnth Massachusetts specialty products for the Quaker Oats marketing BRIGHT, JOHN WEIKERT USN, iind their Kfutual Life last September. Hank also reports organization. Joe has been with the company dates, JOHN SULLIVAN (who didn't quite tliat TOM GOZDECKI is a trust officer for the for eight years. TOM TRINLEY has joined make it on time), and of course the Wcntzes. Calumet National Bank in Hammond, Ind. TOM Amoco Chemicals Corp. as patent adWsor in the Larry also mentioned that HARRY SIEGEL left \VOLOH.\N is managing the Wolohan Lumber company's research and development dcpt. at Philly' last June with wife Mary and their three Co. in Rockford. III. Whiting, Ind. BERNARD FLIGER has left daughters to do his residency in pediatrics at Washington, D.C. after five years, for a new job Utah State in Salt Lake City. The Siegel address JOE G.AGLIARDI (3 Burdsall Dr., Port Ches­ as regional director of on-the-job training for..ibc is 2694 Blue Sprocc Dr.. Salt Lake 84117. ter, N.Y. 10573) sent a resume of his recent Institute of Scrap Iron and Steel ~ in •' Detroit. GREG DEVERS SJ was only able to get au-ay actix'ities. Joe received his MBA in June, I960 In May he married Catherine Mary- Leech, Col. from Xa\icr HS (in Greenwich Village) for the from Wharton Scliool of Business after which he of New Rochellc '64. Bemic had news of TOM day of the game. Lou Ann Wcntz is expecting worked for General Foods imtil 1965; thereafter, HALLIGAN who is an Air Force. captain and number six in April. Thanks, Larry, for the he spent a year with Drew Chemical in NYC resides at 260 Stewart Gardens, Newburgh;'-N.Y. hcwil until late 1966; and since November has been a Tom's wife just gave birth to their third child, price policy analj-st with IBM in Harrison, N.Y. a boy. PAUL McALLISTER Is libw'in sales for Joe is married and now has three children: Anne Shell Oil Co. in S>Tacusc, N.Y. PETER BARNES JOSEPH P. MULLIGAN 5/2, Joe III 4/2, and Clarke 2. Joe also keeps recently joined the staff of the Los Alamos Sci­ in close touch with AL ALLEN, JOE DERRICO entific Lab in New Mexico to work as a nuclear 2680 Lehman Rd., Apt. 42, and JIM O'NEIL and would like to hear from ph>'sici5t in the ph>*sics research div. FRANZ Cincinnati, Ohio 45204 MIKE GALLAGHER. Capt. RON BLAKE "PETE" SCHEUERMANN has moved to Kloun- USAF (113 Maine Drive, Jacksonville, Ark. tain Rd., Stowe, Vt. (skiers take no^c!) where 72076) who, although he received his degree in he has established architectural offices^ Pete and Ah, the joy of Christ­ '60, was originally a member of our Class and Ann Marie have a son, Eric mas. The spirit of therefore one of our ou-n, is serving on a Titan giving has over­ II missile crew at Little Rock AFB, Ark. In whelmed this lowly December he was upgraded to creu' commander BOB JOHNSTON writes from 2402 N. 67th St, 1960 scribe. From the four and in January began attending Squadron Of­ Wauu-atosa, Wis. 53213 and contributes the fol­ comers of the land and further have come tidings ficers School. Ron is also working toward a lowing news: *'I hear from Lynn and JIM of old classmates. But first — missing links sal­ master's degree in instrumentation and elec­ SUTTER from time to time. Jim . is a big deal vaged from the cutting room floor of one John tronics at the U. of Arkansas. He is married and computer expert ^vith the Iowa Beef Trust and Thurin '59, editor. With apologies to the has four children. is living in Sioux City. The Sutter family is Louisville gang for the delay, a look back at tlic made up of two girls and two boys. PAUL" NU post game party at the Edgewatcr Bcacli Congratulations to my old roomie, JOHN OBERHAUSER and wife Jane arc. tending the in Chicago: BILL MAPOTHER and AfARTY RUSSO and his wife Anne on the arri^*al of family farni in Belmond, Iowa and doing quite- ROACH and their respective wives, Louisa (CHUCK daughter Christina last Sept. 30 in N.Y. As well at it. DICK COLLINS is practicing/medicine • RIEHM's sbtcr) and Tcrri SMC '60 (LARRY reported pre^ously, John is xnce-prcsident of Cos- in New Orleans so if anyone should need a Jife^ TURNER'S sis). Bill and Marty and Larry Cob, manufacturers of women's sportswear. TOM time supply of birth control pills, just con^ct rpoinctl tbgcthei- at U of Virginia Law School CLUSSER.ATH (12811 Chesney Lane, Bou-ic, Xfd. Dick. JIM DULAN is a public relations asst. for and-all three-mamed'abdut.the same time. Larry 20715) and wife Kaye were expecting a new Blair and Assoc, in N.Y. Blair is a TV station and Roberta. (Hastiiigs), Lairy III'-aml'Mike arc arri\'al in the family in February. Last October rep. firm. JOHN "One Can" MORAN is clerk­ liWng in Philaclelphia where 'Larrjr. is° ^wit'h Tom became administrative assistant to the chair­ ing for a judge in Phoenix, Ariz. He has his law D«kcrt, Price" S^ Thomas. Bill is wilh^Mapo\hcr, man of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board. degree from Catholic U. PHIL ECKERT is in Morgan & Stansberg." "Marty"is a partner* with This agency is responsible for the supervision of the legal dept. of the Wisconsin Gas Co. in Bullitt, Dawson & Tarrant. Hi, *you all.. federal insured sa\ings and loan associations. Klilwaukee. No marital plans for hard-hearted Phil. JOE HEIL snagged a wile a couple of I shed* a tear when TOM PATCHEL said he ARTHUR L. ROULE, JR. years ago and then took olf for a fabulous honey­ was married in JuW '64 — at le^t he lasted moon in Europe. He came home, waited a while awhile. Tom wrote, "Dear Abby O'Connell, 102"!" St., LaPorte, Ind. 46350 and then became the proud pop of twins. Don't married Julia Kathleen Diffley; two sons, Thomas know what he's doing for a living, but I'll bet HI and James. I'm now officially in the running Joe's working just a little harder. Lea and HERB for Catholic *Father of the Decade.* " (Sec. Note: 1958 LAW RIBAND are living in Flourtown, I^ where Herb HA! not with WARD and McCORMICK having is a local lawyer, choir director and front porch a head start you're'not!) "Presently, I'm an oil JOHN F. MARCHAL politician with back porch stories. If he keeps company account , administrator for. Narrington Marchal & Marchal, 116-118 W. his nose clean, ma^-bc LBJ will give htm Alaska Bus.:Mach.-in.Springficlcl,' VaV,li\ing in'Grainbcit, or something." BOB JOHNSTON is stUl with' Md. I- hav;ec-_bccn-a.;5ca-going.,bellhop (USMC^) 4th St., Greenville, Ohio 45331 WTMJ-TV . in Milwaukee as a salesman and*^. ^d worVcdy;as7.a ..rc^rter "'for ^'the Camden writer. The Johnstons have four children: Lisa;' (Courier-Post and' as a 'director' of -P.',- R., Rutgci5> • The best item in this Michelle, Christopher and Robert, bom Sept. 251% Thanks, Bob, for the above items! ,V* .rofr$o:.N:ij:";;:j..\ ;,: •••*/.,. ..:"•...; * ;. ' - issue, as far as Class \ -^EAST: - "The'Gwine.has fallen,'ilong-live-the: secretaries are con­ vGwinc.^'/vY«; tbc:qld^^^ cerned, is the yello\\^ TOM PLOFCHAN wrote a few . lines'. last "is';npw..'filing a joint"return." O'ct, '(56 w'as the 1959 postcard you will find Christmas to give a report on Beth Ann 4, .Tom fateful date. But'his words linger on, on page 30. Afany of the items in the past few Jr. 3, Margaret Mary 2, Piiul Joseph 1 and issues have been reported i-ia tliis method. Please (?) due in February. Tom is employed by'Wayne remember take a few minutes and drop us a few lines. State U. as admissions counselor for international **A man who could ne'er distinguish his chin Thanks! graduate students. Prior to this Tom Was at Is the St. Ixiuis hifister—^D. Jerry McGlynn." DICK SELCER is now on the coaching staff Berkeley High School for over two years. He at Brown U. in Providence, R,L and DON is still directing the men's choir at St. James also LAWRENCE is a football asst. at the U. of Church in Femdale while completing bb PhD **A roan who at Thilman's set up his quarters Virginia. Both had been with the U. of Cin­ in • comparati\*c education at Wa^-ne, Tom further Is the j-oung Philadelpbiau—James Manus cinnati until this winter. Jane and SHANNON reports that long lost JOHN ROCRNE GUINN, Waters." SMITH have a new address in "Sit. Lookout here famous accompanist of the Glee Club is still in and in Cincinnati and chose a rather courageous Centerline, Mich. WILLIAM G. AfcNiUiLY MD "Ah! Poems are made by fools like Gwine method of moving two months ago. They en­ married Anne Connaghan-.(Marywood- GoL •— But only ROCKET drinks Petri wine." listed the help of PAUL KIKLAS, JOHN FREY Scranton) in 1962. Made w-as bom':in.. 1963 and and DICK FAVRET '60 in moving to their new Cathy in 1964. Number three is due^tbis month. Excuse the brevity, Steve, but I want to get some apartment. I merely observed! Major BILL Bill graduated from the U. of Penn: Med. Scliool of your news in here also. We'll get a complete DELANEY '52 wrote from Spain with news of in '63, interned and spent one year reudcncy in one in ere long. Steve says, "Dr. DON AfcAL- FRANK FREIDHOFF and GEORGE WILSO.N. internal medicine at St; Elizabeth Hosp., Youiigs- LISTER, resident in orthopedic surgery. Kings Frank is a captain in the Air Force and he and tou-n, Ohio. Bill is in general practice in Warren, County Hosp., NYC — Dr. JACK LANG intern wife Marion recently had their first baby, a giri. at St. Vincents, NYC, plans to specialize in He left Spain at the end of December for a new Ohio at the present time and in Jujy vtill return ortho or OB/GY and practice in San Francisco assignment at SAG Hq., Offutt AFB, Neb. to complete his residency. JIM BAGLIVI is now where ht finished med school (S. F. Gen. Hosp.). George is also an Air Force captain and is an with United American Life Ii^; Go. in Denver. Still a bachelor, living in &fanhattan's stewardess F-lOO fighter pilot who won a silver star in Viet In a short time he will be working witt the district. MIKE CANAVAN is still among our Nam. He has been at Torrejon AFB about eight company in the European agency somewhere in hardy bachelors. He has to be, because other than months. George and his family live in Roj-al Germany. He can be located through his busi­ ness address:, James '^Bagiivi Jr., • c/o W. D. his Glen Falls Tire business, he runs a dynamite

36 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL company! Also amongst the single swingers are: CHARLIE SCIUVANICH, teacher, winter ski ^H ^0^k ^p^^^H ^'ve just come m irom 1961 LAW bum, summer surfer. PAT MAHEDY MBA ^m M M ^L^^ ^1 shoveling mr %va7 out of Harvard '63, sales manager, Kaufman & Broad • ^>V m *« • the garage. That 12 inches BIdg. Co., Southfield, Mich. ON THE OTHER I ^^^r ^^^F I <*f snow was quite a bit JOHN N. MORELAND SIDE: GERRY LALLY and Mo O'Sullivan will for us here in the Detnnt Bookin&A/toreland,211'^ E. be sending junior to ND in 16 yrs. Gerry is an area and things have been cut down to a crawl attorney in Jersey City. Still very active in K of C here. -I have received some information Iroin Main St., Ottumwa, Iowa 52501 (shades of South Bend picnics). I visited JIM NICK PALIHNICH and I wiU pass it on to COLOSIMO and charming wife Carol and two YOU in this article. RON SAMPSON was le- girls in Detroit. Jim is a crackerjack salesman leased from active naval service as a lieutenant. Many ND men of '62 with an auto chassis company, Hamishfagen. Can During his tour in the submarines, he received have made plans to you imagine — Colosimo of Harnishfagen! And the Vietnam Service Afedal. Ron has returned attend the Reunion iinallyi.Mrs. Barry (Susan Eileen Bubet) a surBng to ND to puisue his doctoral studies in chemical June 9. 10 and 11 — bunny out of St. Elizabeth Col. in Convent Sta­ engineering. In Jan., 1964, Ron married the 1962 HAVE YOU? tion, N. J., is a former therapuctic dietitian, former Celine Estill from Port Hueneme, Calif, which should help me immeasurably." Amen, and they had their first child, a boy, in April, brother. More fi^m Gwine next time. 1966. TRACY OSBORNE has probably graduated from the Creighton U. School of Medidne fay You figure this one. J. C. sa>-s, "scratching out now and has started his internship at Kansas a living with MLPF & Carretta, after three years City Gen. Hosp. for one year. I have also heard with Uncle , Sam. Bought a towhh'ouse and be­ that Capt. RONALD HOWARD and Prisdlla lieve me, Tom, H. Heftier would be surprised." M. Edwards of Arlington, Va. should have been That's scratching? "Am on board of directors of married in Dec, 1966 because of Chuck's ex­ Washington Boys* Club, pres. of tlie Arlington tended tour in Germany. Pliscilla is a school Young _Dems, dir. of Arlington JC of C and teacher. I have heard through Nick that coached Virginia Stale Babe Ruth League cham­ CHILTON MAVERICK is living in San An­ pions two out of three years." Whew!'I need a tonio, Tex. Chilton married Harriettc Rice last x-acation after just reading about all that. Wonder June and they honeymooned in Jamaica. Chiltoa when he sleeps. "Zippy is married. Quite a few had a couple of our ND classmates help get him of the old Badin gang at the wedding." through the wedding — LARRY KEAUGH, who Personal to PAUL F. LOMBARDI, Class is now an assistant trust officer at the Frost Bank ROBERT F. KRAUSE received his PhD in treasurer?, formerly of Atlanta, presently of in San Antonio, and Capt. BOB BARRON. metallurgical cn^neering and materials science Grecnbelt, Md. Where the heck did you put Chilton has been working for the Texas Pharma­ from ND last August. Bob is married and has the money? ceutical Co. and is going to St. Mary's Law a daughter Alison now two years old. The With apologies to Mis. ROGER BERNARDI School at night. There have been a number of Krauscs now live in Monroeville, I^. where Bob for the "come on" Xmas greeting. Here's the our classmates stationed in San Antonio who have is a research metalluigist at the US Steel Re­ word from her. "Rog is captain with the 25th visited with Chilton and he extends an invtta^ search Center. MIKE M.^NCUSI PhD, wife Inf. Div.. 9lh Arty, in Victnain and is career. tion to anyone who is going to be stationed Kathy and their three boys have recently moved He and DAN LYONS are brothers-in-law, Dan there to let him know and he will let you know to C^ Riclge, Tenn. Mike, who holds a docto­ having married my sister." Similar news on Rog who is around and what bis ND Club has rate in nuclear phyncs from U. of Iowa, is from old friend RON ZLOTNICK, Nancy and scheduled. presently an Atomic Energy Commission post­ Amy. ED REIXHARDT will receive his copies doctoral feUow. Lt.Jg. THOXUS J. COX- in the future thanks to his mother who requested TO.\f SMITH received his MD from Mar­ NOLLY married Laura Estelle Wall of Jackson­ change of address to So. Windsor, Conn. She quette U. last June and is now interning at Wm. ville, Fla. last June at Mayport, Fla. Tom is also reports Ed spent five years with USN after Beaumont Hasp, in El Paso, Tex. Tom enlisted in oflScer in charge of USS Fuhnar (MSCO-47) at OCS. Presently working for Pratt & Whitney. the Army for a three year term, including intern­ Ptrth Amboy, N.J. PETER W. KIRK is work­ Married to Prudence Haskell and has Mark and ship, and his rank is captain. GEORGE ing with the overseas div. of the First Nat'L Mike to feed. Cheers for these letter writin', JANICEK received his master's degree from ND. City Bank of N.Y. Pete and his wife and tH'o ever lovin* wives and moms. He is presently living in West Lafayette, Ind. children hope to be placed in an overseas branch where he is working on his PhD at Purdue U. this year. Pete remarked that fae vinted MIKE Ghosts of years past. Capt. "YOGI" DRESKA Since Iea\*ing ND George has taught mechanical POIX recently. Mike is teaching high school in is back from Japan. Mrs. (Lurana) writes, engineering in Afghanistan at the U. of Kabue. N.J., is married and has two children. RICH.ARD "New Orleans and Tulane grad school for two While there he married Stephanie Dawson from M. KULAK and wife Trish are the proud par­ years is our next station. A pleasant change Richland, Wash, who was in the Peace Cor|». ents of Rebecca Ann, bom in Oct., and Lisa after three years over there." Watch that guy — TOM CUBBAGE dropped me a note and said Mkhele almost two yean. Dick was awarded heard he is going to take over the Army one of he is moving from Fort Holabird, Md. to Fort the Army Commendation Medal on his dis­ these days. Speaking of the Army, Dr. ED Bliss, Tex- He will be spending three months charge from active service. The Kulaks now FERRARA writes from Vietnam where he is there learning Vietnamese and then go over in live in Alexandria, Va. where Dick is a stock­ with the USMC, "Finished U. of N.Y. med. the middle of Afay. GEORGE O'CONNELL in­ broker with Reynolds and Co. school and internship and residenc)- in Cincinnati forms me that he was ordained to the deaconate and decided to get this out of the way. Was on Dec. 7, and is finishing a master's degree in CHARLIE SWrrZER is still in the Navy and married in 1965 to a nurse (what else?). Have theology. He will be ordained a priest on May is flying P-3 patrol txHnbers out of Moffett a sort as of Nov. *66, but haven't seen him yet. 13, 1967. Best wishes to you, George, and our Field. Charlie's address is 278 Monroe Dr. No. 9. See you all at the lOlh — hoping to remember prayers are with you. Mountain View, CaUf. 94040. JOHN WILBR-V the faces that I've forgotten in our six years. HAM is now living in Pcnnsville, N.J. and is By the way, TOM HAGAN and CURT B.\KER BOB WILLIAMSON received his MBA in working for DuPont Co. MIKE WILBRARAM are flight surgeons over here." 1963 from the U. of Chicago. He was working MD from Hahnemann Med School is interning OiV THE ROAD WEST: GERRY WILKES, on his PhD in economics untjl the ROTC de­ in Camden, N.J. RALPH D. D'AMORE MD Sue, two boys and two girls are in Ballwin, Mo. ferment ran out. He has served one year at is now living in St. I^uis where he is a resi­ He's "teaching and coaching football at St. Lo. Aberdeen Proving Grounds and taught some ex­ dent in neurosuigery at Bamer Hosp. Ralph and Priory School. JACK HASTED's wife recently tension courses at U. of Dclau-are. He is ex­ his wife have one daughter Lisa and are ex­ had twin girls. Anyone around say hello to 408 pecting to go overseas shortly. Bob married Joni pecting an addition this May. H. ORTHMEYER Andover Lane." O. FLOR and P. B. COSACCHI Kay Lindale from South Bend in Sept., 1963. is currently serving as grand master of the Psi in Seattle. Ollie tises his job as asst. mgr. of Joni Kay is a '63 graduate of Drake U. After Omega Dental Fraternity at Ohio State. "H," First Nat'l Bank branch to keep Fran and Andy finishing his VTOTV for the MBA at Chicago in who is a senior dental student, will soon be -and Elizabeth happy. Old Bruce and Carol, plus June '65, MIKE CURTIN joined the Latin touring the worU na the USN, ROGER K. ' Maureen, Laura, Sheila and Peter receive their American group of W. R. Grace and Co. Mike HARVEY will soon be receiving his doctorate dole from the FBI! He's got such acreage that worked in New York for a while and was trans­ at Indiana and mil move to Ohio State and join he grows grapes and makes wine. Wow! Wait ferred to a subsidiary in Chile. Mike returned thur faculty. Roger and ivife Janet have two until the revcnoors read about this. One of their briefly to the US in June of last K^f to bring boys, Roger S/a and Christopher VA, ROBERT own boys bootlegging. His dog Kelly (leave it his wife, a daughter and his latest addition Ted, A. NASH is currently serving as the manager of to an Italian to give an Irish name to a dog) bom Jan. 23 '66, back to Chile. Mike and his electronic data proccsnng at Visual Services Inc., must have ivalked on the letter at this point family are living in Vina Del Mar where he is a Detroit advertiring sales promotion firm. Bob because there are a lot of silly scratches on the working for Industrias Coia S-A. Mike men­ is also studying for his MBA at Wayne St. U. paper. Suppose he'd be in more trouble if I tioned that he has seen Rev. ROBERT PELTON said they looked like Chinese. Opps. Sorry, Bruce. CSC who is head of St. George's Col. down Congratulations to LEO C. DROZESKI JR. there. and Elizabeth N. Hubcr on their marriage, Jan.> Shimatta! That's Japanese for son of a gun — 7, in St. Louis, Mo. A new address for SEAN. out of space again. If we skipped you blame it Once again I ^vould like to ask everyone to use FOOHEY is 3210 Lothian Rd., Apt. 204, Fair^ on our scissoring editor. In the meantime, don't the yellow information card on page 30. After fax, Va. 22030. JOHN T. McMANUS and wife! forget May 6, the Old-Timers Game. See you ail, fellas, it only takes about two minutes to Dede now have three children, two boys and a at BULLARD's. Ok, Ed? Pit on the back to fill it up and pass on any information to me girl. John is working for General Electric in Ft. our dassmate with six kinder — no names, he's which I can put in the articles to come. Again Wayne. He has recently finished GE's financial shy. But he's not Irish. Remember, medical I would like to thank the parents who have been management trainii^ program. BILL WEIN-. science claims whiskey can't cure the common very helpful in sending me news and I hope SHEIMER has been promoted to captain in the cold. But then, neither can medical science. you enjoy the article and will continue to drop Army and is serving as aide de camp to Brig. Don't forget to send in the yellow info card oa me a line when you can. Until the next article Gen. John Crowley, commander of Western Area, page 30. Au Rtvoir! then! n^itary traffic management at Oakland, Calif. JAlkfES B. GUNNELL MS '62 has been ac- THOMAS J. O'CONNELL WILLIAM HENNEGHAN cepted as a doctoral fellow in a new program at New Mexico State U. He is part of an inter­ 3350 Everett Rd., Lake Forest, 30556 Scrivo DFi, Warren, disciplinary program in educational research. FRED FUZSIMMONS has been named a medi- III. 60045 Mich. 48092

ALUMNUS AAARCH 1967 APRIL r TEACHER SPOKESMAN AXEL COGELS spent two years at the U. George 7. Butt 'G2 of Louvain where he obtained his licence In a very short time the name 1963 en sciences poUtiques ct Jocsales. He is currently in the Army and is George Thomas Bull '62 has be­ a candidate reserve officer in tank school in Bel* come synon^Tiious with teacher gium. He %vill train for eight months in BeN union organization. To parents, pum before going to Germany for another seven months. His address is: Cavalier Cor. Axel students and the general South Cogels G6/103F5. Esc A, Ecole Des Troupes Bend citizenry, the mention of his- Blindees, Stockem-Heinsch, Belgium. DAVU) SHI- VELL has been named Academic Achievement name kindles fresh memories of- Award winner at the Air U.'s Squadron Ofliceis teacher unrest, strikes and public'. ScbooK He maintained grades in the top five percent of his graduating class. He has been picketing. And yet, despite the' selected for special profcs^onal officer training unpleasantries of these pressure in recognition of his potential as a leader and was asugncd to Newark Axr Force Station, Ohio. tactics—^which he himself dislikes FRANK LARSH is currently eng^ed in strategic —^Tom Bull remains firm in his bombing missions from Guam over Vietnam. He and his crew received the Air Kfedal for meri­ belief that teacher group riecog- torious achic\'ement and bravery in action. He nition is a necessity today not is co-pilot of a B-52 stratofort. DENIS O'DON- OGHUE has been assigned as a pilot to the Air only' for the good of the indi­ Training Command at Williams AFB, Ariz. ED­ vidual but for the betterment of WARD KR.AUSE was ordained a priest of the Holy Cross Order in Rome on Dec. 17. HAROLD elementary and secondary, edu­ with the written assurance from BROWN MS '63 received his PhD torn Ohio cation. the school board that they "would State U. As a new teacher of English meet with teacher representatives MICHAEL HALPIN Mca\RTHY yyas married and US history at John Adams to discuss salary and worlung to Barbara Seymour Candcc on June 25. Both are High School, Tom never imag­ conditions." still in PhD programs at Yale — Mike in philos­ ophy and Barbara in French. EDMOND COL­ ined himself in the role of a labor However, Tom's second pwint LINS, MICHAEL SENNOTT and PHIL KIE- spokesman. In his first year of still needed to be resolved. 'Who NAST were in the wedding party. Ed is engaged to Barbara's sister Joan. JOHN R. SKINNER teaching he became a rank and would be the official bargaining was married to Paula A. Bowers on Aug. 6. John file member of the South Bend agent for the teachers? Beginning is now coaching football and basketball at Wash­ Education Association, one of two ington Court House, Ohio. DAVE PALIGANOFF in 1965 and continuing through­ and wife Alary became the proud parents of a organizations representing local out 1966 the Federation chal­ son, Christopher David, bom on Oct. 12. Dave teachers. His personal pleas to As­ lenged the Association to a show­ is mth Allstate Ins. in their Indianapolis office. Lt. MIKE DELMONTE and wife Dorothy also sociation officers for improved down vote. At the same time, become proud parents of a son on Aug. 30. working conditions received little Tom continually prodded the Michael Edward Jr. ^vas bom just before Mike left for Vietnam. Lt. JACK WALKER is serv­ action. So, the following year school board — he and fellow ing as a reconnaissance officer with the 3rd Tom joined the rival, but smaller, teachers even picketed board Marine Div. in Vietnam. He can be reached at union, the Federation of Teach­ the following address: 2nd Pit. C Co., 3rd Recon meetings—to accept the results of Bn., 3rd Alarine Div. FPO San Francisco, CaL ers, and a year later .he was an election as final and official. It 96602. elected its president for a two- wasn't until December that all JOHN G.\RRrrY, 2710 Cranston Rd., PhiU- year term. delphia and wife Sue had a baby giri, Melissa three parties reached an accord. Anne, April 4. John is working as aerospace His tenure ^vas marked by a The result was the school board engineer at GE. Capt. JIM HUGHES was mar­ series of battles which he waged would recognize the winner of a ried April 3, 1965. He and wife Connie have a son, James Jr. Jim is now on active duty with with the South Bend Community special teacher election as sole the Marine Corps in Vietnam. Connie is staying School Corporation on the one bargaining agent for the teachers in Chicago and often visits Barbara and FRANK KAPPLE, the JIM FLEMINGS and the KEVIN hand and the rival South Bend of South Bend. The vote was held O'NEILLS. MIKE MAGUIRE completed his Education Association on the in February with Tom Bull and tour of duty with the Afarine Corps in December other. and has returned to the Philadelphia area ^vith his Federation of Teachers win­ his wife and tu-o daughters. Tom made his first point felt ning by 28 votes out of the 1,502 From the nation's capital our Washington cor­ in May of 1965. Without consul­ that were cast. respondent, Ann "Scoop" KAVANAGH sends the tation with either union the For Tom Bull, now entering his foUoWng neu3: AL KASHINSKI and JOHN MULROONEY are working in the US Patent school board made known their second two-year term as Federa­ Ofike. MIKE THOMAS has joined the FBI offer for a pay boost for the en­ tion president, the election and is in Houston, Tex. and Capt. MIKE suing fall term. The two teacher brought victory at the close of a LARSON is leaving in &Iarch for 13 months in Korea. organizations in response to the four-year battle for teacher A birth announcement, Lt. and Mrs. FRITZ offer split their vote with Tom's rights. In a sense, though, his job WILSON a daughter, Frances Yvonne, Oct. 6. organization opting to strike. Four has just begun. He now has the ED KEARNEY married Kathleen Lanterbom in Albany on Sept. 10. He is woricing for NY State days of classroom boycott by more machinery. His challenge is to use dept. of public works and attending RPI evenings than 350 teachers finally ended it effectively and jusdy. to obtain an MS. Ed ^vrites that BOB HOFF­ MAN is now working at Bettis Atomic Power Lab in Pittsburgh. BOB METZGER is working in Schenectady, N.Y. at GE's Knolls Atomic Power Hant. cal semcc rcp for Flint Laboratories. He will 1962 LAW serve the Boston-South Alassachusetts territory. Closing news flashes — GEORGE KERIN was JOHN PUGLIESE was promoted to sales co- KflCHAEL PHENNER is now assodated widi married m Denver on Dec 17. HAL SUNDER- ortlinator at Alcoa's Richmond, Ind. Closure plant. the Chicago firm of Hopkins, Sutter, Owren, Mul- MANN became engaged over the Christmas holi­ roy, Wentz and Davis. His new address is: 3515 Woods Dr., Richmond, days and leaves for Thailand with the Army in Ind. It must be quite obvious to all you classmates Sept. and Capt. BILL SMITH JAGG completed Why not use the yellow info card on page 30 from the size of our column this issue that tbe Airborne School at Ft. Benning in January. yellow information card on page 30 %viU be a of this issue to fill the Class in on your plans ,Now turn to page 30 to the yellow information for Reunion '67? \-aIuable tool in keeping the column alive. Take the few minutes necessary to fill it out with card and fill it out so that you may be featured TERRENCE F. McCARTHY news of yourself, family, job and classmates. an the next column. LT, (DC) USNR PAUL K. ROONEY FRANK P. DICELLO USNAVDENTCLINC FPO U.S. Courthouse, Foley Sq., 218 Palmer Hill Rd., San Francisco, Calif. 96662 . New York, N.Y. 10007 Old Greenwich, Conn. 06870 38 ALUMNUS MARCH 1W7 APRIL tember. PATRICK McCORMIGK is studying LEY is wo^og on his PhD !a geologjr at la- 1963 LAW for the priesthood at -North Ammcan CoL in dana U. ad sdvisg as a gctdogr instiuetar for Rome. He will be ordained in I>eci,'1968. LEW fresfaman pris. JOSEPH R. SULLIVAN PIERMARINE was ordained Into the'priesthood jm IHRRO was maiiied to loirtta Fiano- last year for the Worcester, Mass. dic^ese. He vich of MomoeviHe, lU., last Jnne. BEKNIE 1526 E. Cedar St., Sooth Bend, studied at St. Bernard's Seminarr, Rochester, KOMPARE is in Navr OCS. TOU MURFUr N.Y. lias completed his master's in English at TuMiiawa Ind. 46617 TOM BROWN is advertising manager for Joyce U. and is now seivuis as a lieutenant in the Air Bros. Bottling Co. in Joliet, HI. Tom sind his Force. JERRY FREMO has graduated Iran the DAVE RAAB has mfe Becky Borchers (SMC '64) and thai- son Maxwell ScbotA of Rifalic Adnunistration at been in Vietnam since Tom Jr. are living in Glen EUyn, lU. BOB STxacuse U. and is woxhing with the Housi^ last July serving as a TANZOLA is with General Motois in New and Uiban Development Oept. of HEW iii lieutenant in the Air­ York working in their international div. He and Washington. BOB ARBOIT coaches football and 1964 borne Infantry. Prior his wife Karen are living at 2375 Hudson Tor., teaches at St. Anthonr's HS in Long Beach, to his paratroop training he was at the Aber­ Fort Lee, N.J. PETE FISCHER is a CPA With Calif. PAUL GEARY is woriong in chemical deen Proving Ground for ordnance training. Arthur Andenen in Denver, Colo. He and his sales for McKesson'& Robbins in Broomall, Fi. JOHN COUNSEL!* is in the insurance business, wife Doris just purchased a new home there and Paul has been the father of a boy snce July. representing the Counsell Agency in his home now have two children. RICH GONSKI who's Ens. TOM BOLAMD is serving with the Naval town of Oconomowoc, Wis. from Oct.-Marcb. well on his way toward joining New York Life support commaiid at DaNang, Vietnam. HUGH The rest of the year he is playing A base­ Ins. Co.'s Million Dollar Club now has an added KNOELL has been asngned oveneas duties 'Wth. ball for the Minnesota Twins. Last Christmas incentive to sell lots of insurance. He and his the Cathdic Relief Seivices program in Chile John became engaged to Jeanette Raw of She­ wfe have a new son, Ibftchael Charles. PETE' where he mil asnst in the supcrvinon of rcGef boygan Falls, Wis. and vnH be married after the MURRAY is an economic analyst for Delta Alt' programs and vdll help organize and implement '67 season. After receiving his AfBA from In­ lines in Atlanta, Ga. He received his MBA in socio*cconomic, ommiunity development and diana in June '66, JOE McGOWAN is working transportation from Wharton and toured Europe . rural education projects. MIKE MURPHY has for Chase-Manhattan Bank in New York and prior to joining Delta last fall. HERB BLACK been awarded the Tobe Scholarslup for study at living with his wife Becky and son Joe in Stalen is at Business School at the U. of Michigan after . the Harvard U. Grad School of Bunness Admims- Island. DAVE NORDONE writes from Wash­ serving as a finance officer with the Army at Fort tration where he hopes to receive his BIBA in ington DC where he and fellow classmates, SAM Benjamin Harrison in Induma. Herb spent a June. The scholarship is awarded to a student CRIMONE, JERRY LUDWIG and STEVE good deal of his Army totur as foreign liaison who plans a career in the field of distribution. NICKNISH arc all well on their way to their officer working with foreign military students who LESLIE WILD has been commissioned a sec­ MD''s at Gcorgetou-n Metlical School. Other were at the finance school at his base. ond lieutenant in the USAF and has been as- noteworthy facts in his news-filled letter are: Don't forget to make good use of the yellow ngned to Lowry AFB, Colo, for training as as Jerry Ludwig was recently engaged to Margo info card on page 30. Send it in today. intelligence officer. WILLIAM PALMER received Lawencc (SMC '65); TOM HUGHES is a his MA from Ohio State U. PATRICK KELLEY. father and is working and attending George WARREN C STEPHENS was married this summer to the former Miss Washington Law at night; JACK STANLEY, Karen Coletti. He will be attending the U. of whose wife is expecting their second, is in his 1100 Clove Rd., No. 5-C Iowa Law School. KHCHAEL MACKIN is third year at Georgetown Law along with MIKE now cnipk>yed by the Associate IKscount Co. m McMANIS, JOE SPERBER and DON SULLI­ Staten Island, New York Van Nuys, Calif. He was married in June, 1965 VAN. BILL STAUDENHEIMER U an intelli­ and is now the father of a son, Christopher gence officer in Vietnam. CARL FLECKER, in Campbell, bom June 27. TOM KISTNER is his third year at Pitt Dental School, was married 1964 LAW attending South Texas College of Law full dme to Bobbie Borchers (SMC '6*) last summer; and is selling life insurance and going through JIM McNERNEY is also at Pitt Dental School. THOMAS F. CONNEELY Aetna's training program for management. JERRY BERTHOLD is at ND Law School and JAMES CAFFARELL is now in the Army. Kathy and BOB MacDONALD are in the DO 556 Elmwood Ave., Evonston, MICHAEL FIORE, who is workmg \nih mem­ area ^vherc Bob is doing research for the Smith­ III. 60202 bers of the ND biology department on w^ter sonian Institute. BOB LYNYACK is working as pollution, was one of tturce persons produdng a a security under\tTiter for Chubb & Son in New paper presented at the Water Pollution Control York. JOHN McCONVILLE is in his third PAT FORD is in hts Federation meeting in, "September. year at Seton Halt Med School. second year of studies BRIAN BARBOUR earned his MA in English Another hefty letter came from PAUL TIER- at Columbia Law from Kent State last summer. THOMAS NEY who is living in Cambridge, &lass. with his School where he has CHEVRAUX has been named a Peace Corpsman new w^fe, the fonner Sue Simon. Paul is in his 1965 been admitted into to Jamaica where he will be part of an in-service first year at Harvard Business School after work­ the honorary Phi Delta Phi legal fraternity. Fat teacher training group. Some changes of ad-' ing for two years in Peru with the Peace Corps, also serves on the Moot Court executive com­ dress: MIKE WEPPNER, 167 Poplar Ave., Efatt- specializing in agricultural cooperatives and land mittee. MIKE HAGGERTY is working as a hurst, m. 60126; LAWRENCE F. ASELAGC, reform. He also taught tn a Peace Corps train­ night police reporter for the South Bend Tribune, 407 Kossutfi St., Sidney, Ohio 45363. ing class at the U. of New Mexico the summer Alike also wrote ND features during the football Take note of the yellow information card on of '66. Since retunung from Peru, Paul has season. Lt. MIKE WEPPNER USAF has com­ page 30 wluch is custom-made for sending news' crossed the paths of several ND grads and passes pleted his F-102 training and is now .flying the (tf younelf, femiOy, job and classmates. along the following: DICK MILES was dis­ F-106 with the Air Defense Command at Kinch- charged from the Navy after three years of rig­ eloe AFB, Mich. His wife Heike is expecdng a JAMES P. HARNISCH orous duty in the French Mediterranean and son in March. They have a daughter Lisa. Ens. will attend Wharton Bus. School. FRED HERO- LAWRENCE COMES has completed tr^ning in 71 Poland Manor, Poland, MAN received his &IBA from LSU and is work­ the Navy's aviation officer candidate school at ing in New York with Grace & Co. TOM Pcnsacola, Fla. and will continue training there Ohio 44514 O'BRIEN is in his third year at Yale Law as an air intelligence officer. School and will marry Allison Reich on Aug. 26. DON SCHUSTER is engaged to Cele Stefanski PAUL CHARRON is in the Navy shipping out of Paintsville, Ky. and is teaching fifth grade at 1965 LAW of Norfolk, Va. MKE COREY is in his third Troy Community School in Joliet,*IIL as well as We have some address changes for aH: JOHN. year at Penn Law School. BILL FALLON and working on a master's in education at North- W. BEATTY, G997 Haines Rd., CinciBBati, Ohio TERRY O'CONNER, also ex-Pcacc Corps volun­ em Illinois U. WARREN RICHESON MS 43227 (could those twins have made conditions teers are at Wisconsin Law School and PAT '^ is employed as a programming analyst with a bit crowded?); WALT RIEBENACK, 1930 WHELAN is at the U. of Chicago Law School. TRW systems at the Manned Spacecraft Center Hobson Rd., Ft. Wayne, Ind.; BOB KENNEDY, JOHN BOWE and bis wife Cathy Yuchasz in Houston. IVeviousIy Warren worited in con­ 8822 Hunting Lane, Laurel, Md. 20810 (this (SMC '65) welcomed the arrival of their second junction with Columbia U. as a mathematics address to summer—info follows). child ^fichael on Nov. 19. Jack is currently a consultant to a six-week science institute at the Since the deadline for this colimm is Fd>. 1, lieutenant in the Army stationed at Fort Lee, U. of Dacca in E. Pakistan. DON SALOMONI reference will be made to Christmas cards even Va. and his tour of duty will be completed this was married last May to Valerie Butvilas of Chi­ though you will not receive this till spring. Our month. Lt. IbflKE DUNCAN served with the cago. PETE CULLEN is working in Naval io- Congrats to the industrious McQUHXANs who 1st Air Cavalry Div. in Vietnam and is in the teliigcncc at Lowry AFB near Denver. Pete has made a beautiful card — that's artistic Kathleen process oE returning home. Ensign DENIS J. been commissioned as an ensign. Lt. (jg) PAUL for you. JIM LEONARD and Sue showed thdr FECK was commissioned after graduating from W. RAY is engaged to Mary Ann Rosswuim of bcautifnl children to us all. You both have much OCS at Newport, R.I. and is in the engineering Detroit. Paul is stationed with the Navy ^lecial to be proud of. An enclosure from the RIE- corps of the Navy. He has been in Vietnam projects office in Washington and reports that Lt. BENACKs tell as that "WALT'S job turned oat since last summer and expects to return early TOM FELLRATH is stationed at Ft. Lee, Va. to be just what he wanted. . . ." Walt is now this spring. DAVE FLLIS graduated this last and Lt. KEN ODMARK has been in Korea unce teaching a course in business law at St. Francis December from the U. of Chicago Law School. October. Col. and Mary Ann wiU soon have earned her Dave, his wife and their new daughter Margaret DICK LEONHARDT, who has been stationed master's degree. , Ann are living in Chicago. Their address is on the USS Fred T. Barry based in Newport, MIKE BISHKO is now stationed at- Fort 6940 Clyde Av., Apt. 312. Also in Chicago are reports that BIFF BAKER is serving as a supply Bragg, N.C for banc training. Recoved a ma^ PAUL CREELAN and his wife and daughter. officer on the aircraft carrier Kitty Haw^ and welcomed letter trom BOB KENNEDY and Fhul is at the U. of Chicago Graduate School. CRAIG RONEY is with the Peace Corps in the "Bobbie" tellii^ us that he is now. assigned to TED DALTON is in his third year at the U. Philippines. RAMON MURPHY is at North­ Army langus^ school, Washington, DC where of Maine Law School and has been elected asso­ western Med School. Ens. FRAN OBERT is he is learning to speak German. They win leave ciate editor of the Law Review, The late 1966 stationed at Treasure Island, San Francisco and for Germany by mid-summer where Bob %vin be issue. Vol. 18 carried an article written by Ted was presented with a boy, Frands X., last June liaison ofiBcer for the local German government. on "Pretrial Mental Examinations." Lt. GREG by his wfc Kathy. JOHN PURDIE has re­ Their stay mil be three yean. Bon voyage and BRADFORD and his wife are the proud parents ceived his AfBA from Purdue and is working for best of luck. Do keep us posted from time to of a daughter, Karen Elizabeth, born last Sep- the Continental Bank .of Chicago; TOM HAN- time, however.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 3» At present I am deep in the "busy season" at also. His bride was Mary Madden (SMC '66). Arthur Andersen and Co. and have found my A stag party at the Lake Shore Qah preceded work takes me far into the "gray area" between the wedding. After a beautiful anvkc at St. law and accounting. I have found fascinating the Barnabas* Church in Chicago, there was a re­ study in the specific areas of oil and gas^ A few ception at the Beverly Country QiA. GORDON months ago I had the unique experience of NASH was best man and BARRY McNAMARA, actually viewing an oil well being dug.. TOM McMANMON and RICK CAREY were ushers. Other members of the Class of '66 present Please note: Within this issue is a Class infor- were BRIAN CONNOLLY, MIKE BRADSHAW, mation card insert — I urge you to use it, so as TOM MULVIHILL, JOHN BUCK, MALACHI to facilitate compilation of a "newsy" column. KENNEY and JIM &fURRAY. After honey­ Without your indt\*idual cooperation, this column mooning in Michigan, the Careys letnined to would be limited solely to my bragging about Chicago %v1iere Peter is a law student t Loyola "my three sons." It's your choice. , . , U. and Mary is a grade school teacher. I was greatly grieved by the deaths ei the JOHN A. HAUTER^ fathers of JOHN BUCK and JERRY HIRSCH- 1050 Indiana Ave., Gleriwood, FELD. I ask you all to xemember them in your Masses and prayers. III. 60425 Universal Notre Dame ^ght b caaung op soon. We ask that you all support it in yoor home towns or wherever you are if it is pot­ 1967 is how well un­ able. The spirit of Notre Dame lies n great der way. and the men deal in the closeness of its Alumni and this zs of the Class of *66 our first real chance to show our true member­ continue to push for­ ship as Alumm. 1966 ward in- their diver­ sified fields, looking back to just a year ago when There is also a yellow information card enclosed their anxieties were geared to die upcoming on page 30 of this issue. I would appreciate graduation. That is all well bchmd us now, you all taking a few seconds off to fill one oat however, and the Class of *66 is "out to make and let roe know what you're doing. Your OH their contributions to society. THOSlAS KIRCH- operation is needed and greatly appredatcd. NER is a fine example of this. Tom was re­ DEAN JOSEPH O'MEAKA cently made a member of the national staff of RICHARD ANGELOni the College Young Christian Student' Alovcment, EAN JOSEPH O'MEARA, who has TOM HUEMMER, who rcccnUy .joined the 1404 Greenfield Dr., Erie, 0*Brien Co. as a senior chemist and -specialist in D directed the Notre Dame Law polymer chemistry, is another example of the Pa. 16512 many talents the Class of *66 has to--bcstow. School through 15 years of renewal Another example of the contributions . of our 1966 LAW and progress, announced recently that Class is seen in those members who are currently serving in the Peace Corps and the Armed As this is the first column devoted to onr he will retire from the deanship at Forces. VINXIE UHL, one member of. our Class, a few general suggestions are in order. the end of the academic year. The Class serving in the Peace Corps, is currently Please keep me informed of all plans and ac­ working in India. Among those in the service, tivities which come to mind, particularly any Dean, who hopes to remain on the GEORGE ADAMS has been commissioned, a and all changes in business addresses. I'm look­ second lieutenant and is now stationed in San ing forward to hearing from everyone. faculty, added that he will continue Francisco, where KEX KRIVICKAS and LOREN The most important event of the winter season in his jjost if a successor is not ap­ KRIENKE, both recently made ensigns, have- -. here in the Chesapeake Bay Area was the also been stationed. MIKE BOONE, MATT ' wedding of TOM KENNEY and JuUe Platz in pointed before next summer. BOYLE and REGIS AMANX have also been Baltimore on Jan. 14. Conspicuous in atten­ commissioned lieutenants and arc now stationed dance were the NIEMEYERs, GREGORYS, Dean O'Meara came to Notre respectively in New York. Craig AFB, Ala. and -MURPHYs, BOB KRAUSE and fiancee Tern Dame after a distinguished career at Sacramento. HANK SCHLACHTER has also Morton in from Detroit, and Washington's most been commissioned a lieutenant in the USAF and eligible bachelor PAUL POLKING escorting Fat the Ohio Bar. He was educated at is being assigned to Fort Lee, Va. for training Guscione, fiancee of FOX CONWAY, unfortunately Xavier University and at the Univer­ as a food scr\ice officer. GARRETT ISACCO, detained by the Marines. During a hiatus in also a recent officer in the AF, was assigned to southern exposure for justice, BOB MURPHY sity of Cincinnati and was a lecturer Amarillo AFB for training as a supply opera­ and Maureen presented their new daughter Amy tions officer. Airman RICHARD STEINLE has Elizabeth to their classmates at a well-attended at the University of Cincinnati School been assigned as an information specialist at christening. Patrick AFB, Fla. of Law from 1943 to 1946. Service news places I^t and DICK STEIN- BRONN under the snows in Alaska where Dick His years at the helm of the Law TOM DONOVAN is studying at Cornell U. is commanding an MP detachment; PETE School have seen expansion and im­ Medical Center in NYC. JOE FITZPATRICK IPPOLITTO on his way to Vietnam to reinforce in the environmental health program at Han'ard the 1st Air Cav. Div.; NORM MANDEL en^ provements of the faculty, increased U. and JOE SYNAN in nuclear engineering at gaged and heading for Texas with Army armor; MIT are "holding down the fort" in Somcrville, Madge and RAY STARMAN at Fort Holabird standards of admission, a modernized Mass. Joe is joined by DAN DENVER, who in Baltimore for intelligence school; Fat and curriculimi and examination system was recently wed and TERRY HOLDEN in MARTY IDZIK heading for an Anny jag at nuclear engineering at MIT. Also studying at Charlottesville," Va.; and Etta and SCOTTY and scores of new programs ranging MIT from the Class of '66 are BILL FITZ­ llIAXWELL. to Quantico for Kbrine infantry from a comprehensive three-year writ­ GERALD and FR-^'K FORCIER in civil engi­ school preparatory to heading for Newport and neering; ERNIE DcNIGRIS and FRANK FEN- the Navy jag. The Maxwells stopped in Washing­ ing program to significandy improved OGLIO in technical engineering, and BOB ton while house hunting in QuantJco and had Law Review and Moot Court pro­ LEFFLER in chemical engineering. LARRY dinner with the local crew. ALLEN and JACK STUTZ, both students at >lbry and TOM READY celebrated both the gram. Under his leadership law grad­ Wayne State Medical School and JERRY COLE, .birth of a son and an outstanding score on the a teacher in Detroit, were seen skiing at Boyne .&Iichigan Bar. BOB SCHMIEGE has begun seeing uates have moved into all areas of Mt. over semester break, as was GORDON NASH, who's in law school at Loyola U. •^e country representing the labor interests of professional opportunity from clerk­ ;the nadon's railroads. JOE DELLA MARIA is ships in every level of the federal JOE BODELL recently completed his under­ rieported to have seen more ND games in com- graduate work and is now teaching in Phila­ -pany. with more different girls than anyone but courts to small-town practices to Wall delphia. MIKE CARROLL is also in the City .'^Ara. JOHN HAUGH writes from the great of Brotherly Love where he is ^vo^king for the •Northwest protesting the lack of news and sug- Street law firms to literally scores of Lee Carpet Co. LEO GREENAVALD is at the .gKting that ND lawyers are more popular than professional posts in the federal gov-' U. of Kttsbuigh's School of Public Health. MAX 'minisltirts on the Padfic shores. ROSiS and TOM GRAHA&f dropped us a line from Berkeley, PETERSON enjoying life in Califonua prefer emment Calif, where he is currently studying law at the t^l minis. Rumor from NY has it that MIKE U. of California. Kfax is determined not to leave SCIUMBERG of Dewey, Ballantine, etc, is willing A later issue of the ALUMNUS will the sun and surf again after spending four years to'^ncede that if law must be practiced, NY describe more fully what has already at Notre Dame. Romance is still in the air is.the only place to do so. despite the cold weatlicr. SHANE O'NEIL has Among: those filling out joint 1040*» for the come to be called "the O'Meara Era" recently announced his engagement. JOHN first "^timc are Mary Elen and RON VETTEL; at Notre Dame. And a special com­ RAHIYA and Susan Murphy (SMC '66) are Bonnie^and SUPER STEVE SEALL; Barb and planning an October wedding. BILL LYNCH SAlhf BEIU^ARDI; Sue and TOM GRIFFIN. memorative issue of the Notre Dame is getting married on June 24. ED AL\CK was Help;kcep.-this brand new column gtnng strong Lawyer will appear later this year. recently married as %*-as ED AUSTIN. MIKE by filUng^^ in via the yellow informatkn card BERNATH was reccndy married to Barb Borchers on page 30^^''- . Moot Court. Mr. Justice Abe Fortas (SMC *66). They are now liwng in Germany iRANK GREGORY where Mike is stationed. presided at the final round of the JOHN CHESIRE was married at Notre Dame 7403; Keystone Lane Moot Court competition February 4. on Fdi. 4. Fr. HESBURGH performed the cere­ mony. PETE CAREY was married on the 4th Foreityille, Md. 20028 He was joined on the bench by Judge

•40 ALUMNUS MARCH \967 APRIL THOMAS "war on poverty" project involving L South Bend lawyers and Law School SHAFFER I Law Sehoot students, published a booklet entitled "Primer of Law" for the guidance of J. Spencer Bell, US Court of Appeals, tional problems raised by both of the persons who seek assistance at the Richmond, and by Judge John W. earlier speakers. program's legal office. About 30 stu­ Reynolds, US District Court, Mil­ Samuel Ragan, executive! editor of dents are now involved in the proj­ waukee. Michael J. Fogerty, Elwood, the Raleigh (N.C.) News-and Ob­ ect's neighborhood law office which is Ind., was awarded first place in the server and draftsman of the report of aimed primarily at legal services and competition and John P. Kirby, the American Newspaper Publishers education of the poor of St. Joseph Brooklyn, was second-place wnner. Assn., explained his organiza:tion's op­ County. Prof. Conrad C. Kellenberg, Both received the Dean's Award and position to either direct restraint or who directs the educational aspects of cash prizes provided by A. Harold limitation of access to newjispurces. the prc^ram, edited the. booklet Ei^t Webber, a member of the Law Ad­ William Smith, chief of police, Syra­ law students assisted in writing it and visory Council. Other advocates in cuse, N.Y., outiined problems the are involved in lectures at neighbor­ the final round were Frank G. Ver- ABA proposals would raise for pmlice hood centers on legal rights. These terano, Hillsville, Pa., and Christopher officers. And Frank G. Raichle, trial legal ex|jerts were assisted by Mrs. C. Foley, Los Angeles. lawyer from Buffalo and ^>: former Herschel S. Lutes of the St. Joseph Symposium. "Fair Trial-Free Press" president of the American GtiUege of Coimty Literacy Coimcil, who helped was the subject for this year's spring Trial Lawyers, discussed proposals to write the booklet, and by Sister Ines symposium held in the Center for broaden electronic coverageTof trials. Maria Ryan, a graduate art student Continuing Education February 18. The discussion periods; brought at the University, who illustrated it. The meeting was conducted along a forth opinions of federajfand state Faculty and Alumni. Prof. G. Robert discussion format with experts on the judges, national television executives, Blakey spoke at the first plenary ses­ subject, in addition to those appear­ newspapermen, la\vyers aiSd legal edu­ sion of the first National Symptosium ing as speakers, attending sessions and cators. Assistant Dean^ Thomas F. on Law Enforcement Science and participating in discussion involving Broden Jr., KSG, chaired the sessions Technology in Chicago, March 7. His the critical problem of assuring a fair and planned the symposium. subject was organized crime and cor­ trial to persons accused of crime. Legal Aid and Education. The Law ruption practices. Professor Blakey Grant B. Cooper, trial lawyer from School's L^al Aid aiid Defender As­ served last summer as a consultant to Los Angeles, former president of the sociation received .a.^3,600 grant from the President's Commission on Crime American College of Trial Lawyers the Council on Professional Responsi­ and the Administration of Justice, and and a member of the advisory com­ bility of the American Association of was largely respionsible for the section mittee on Fair Trial-Free Press of the Law Schools. The grant will be used of the Commission's rejjort which American Bar Association, explained to pay transportation costs of students dealt with wiretapping. The entire the currently controversial ABA pro­ to the Indiana State Prison where report was issued with national pub­ posals to the symposium. In rebuttal they assist the indigent inmates, and licity in February. Prof. Thomas L. Shaffer advanced a for investigation expenses, as well as to Francis M. Gregory '66L, present­ proposal for direct restraint on the pay the Association's office expenses ly law clerk to Judge Carl McGowan, press. Following a discussion of both and to hire a full-time student man­ Court of Appeals for the District of proposals, John dej. Pemberton, ex­ ager for the Association during the Columbia Circuit, has been appointed ecutive director of the American Civil summer vacation months. Students in 1967-68 law clerk to Mr. Justice Wil­ Liberties Union, discussed consdtu- the project volunteer their time. liam J. Breiman of the US Supreme The St. Joseph County Legal Ser­ Court Mr. Gregory was editor-in- In the February vice and Legal Education Program, a chief of the Notre Dame Lawyer. NOTRE DAME LAWYER Howard C. Westwood and Alex­ ander E. Bennett, "A Footnote to the Legislative History of the Civil Aeronautics Act of 1938 and After­ word." Student notes on: the legal pro­ fession's attitude toward dishonest lawyers; subdivision controls; and dealer franchises which are con­ fined geographically. Recent decision notes on four current, important cases. Book reviews by Professor Harold Wren and Robert I. Weil. (In the last six months of 1966, Lawj'er editors granted permis­ sion to 14 specialized periodicals and editors of books to republish PARTICIPANTS IN THE lAW SCHOOL'S SEMINAK on "Foir Trial and Free Press" wen articles from the Lawyer.^ (sealed, from l/ie lelt) William Smith, Grant B. Cooper, Sam Ragan and Frank G. Raichle; (standing, horn the' left) John deJ. Pemberton and Thomas L. Shaffer.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL :4\ programming integrity), with 39 reporting some assess­ ments. Twenty-four reported no dues charges. The ND study reports 66 percent of the Clubs with dues pro­ grams. Half of the schools in the AAC report indicate no clubs involved in admissions programs. The other half range from "some to all" clubs involved, but no distinction was made between academic and athletic recruitment. Although individual members of ND Clubs have firequentiy assisted the Athletic Department in identifying top scholar-athletes, no Club engages in tins activity as a formal program. Over 60 Notre Dame Clubs, however, are actively engaged in formal pro­ grams of student recruitment, interviewing and "college night" activities. An area in which the ND Club structure radically dubs diverges from the national path is in the matter of in­ stitutional subsidization of club programs. The AAC study reports 74 of 78 schools performing "some or all" club mailings—one of the chief operating expenses of any volunteer organization. Notre Dame Clubs have traditionally been formed and operated through local Come, Blow dii| Horn Alumni initiative without University subsidy. Some Amidst the deluge of materials flowing into thisXoffice schools, aside from managing club mailings, have found from other Alumni bailiwicks are the inevitable rejjji^ts it necessary to send advance men from the campus to for survey information. Specifically, their queriesVare club areas in order to plan, manage and execute major concerned about: 1.) general Alumni trends 2.) Alimonif club meetings. club programming trends 3.) development trends: 4j;)i;- Unique Aspects. Here, let's leave the comparison tech­ public relations trends 5.) admissions trends 6.) aiid ,' nique and blow a further tune or two: 55 percent of often, just plain trend trends. Our voracious alterr^' the ND Clubs report Club chaplains, while over 65 society, the Univac set, has abetted the fact-seekers by . perEoit observe annual religious events, reflecting a generously ingesting, digesting and spewing out the strong spiritual conunitment. Twenty-two Clubs offer desired data in less time than it takes to utter "Jack • schplai^p.assistance to current students and 50 percent Millisecond." One wonders whether this insatiable de­ conduct -"Rieshmen Sendoffs" (welcoming the new sire for trend comprehension, especially among Alimi- constituencyj including parents, into the Notre Dame nors, stems from: a.) the suspicion that something is family). One hundred-forty Clubs observed Universal odoriferous in one's own Denmark, or b.) one's desire Notre Dame Night in '66, during which period campus to convince a skittish administration \\dth the help of speakers addressed 12,000 persons. voluminous data that the Alumni ship remains afloat^ While the foregoing ND statistics not only bear up although plagued by normal barnacle encrustment. extremely well in comparison with other institutions, Whatever the raison d'etre for the survey syndrome, they reflect a growing seriousness of purpose and depth this office has participated in half-a-dozen outside stud­ of commitment They indicate, we believe, a national ies the past year and has launched three of its own. network of involved Alumni retaining then- bonds with Two of the three have already been reported in the the University through local unity. The "fund-raising" ALUMNUS, so we'll apply our rusty stethoscope to die aspect of the Clubs on behalf of University development third study, the 1966 Notre Dame Alumni Club Survey, has never been encouraged by the Association as a Club and stack it up against similar studies of other institu­ program. Nevertheless, many of the Clubs, on their o^vn tions. We think you'll agree, rose-colored specs aside, initiative, have seen fit to play sigruficant and consis­ that the ND Club system merits an accolade or two. So tent roles in University development, particularly in the let us come then, you and I, and blow our horn. area of scholarship^aid. Last year's gifts from ND Clubs Comparison. In a recent study authorized by the Ameri­ alone totafiM^war $55,000. can Alimmi Council, Charles Lukes, director of alumni Rooffl'fjtr'Jm^rpvement. Although the ND Clubs report relations at , reported on a survey an av^ei^e invblvement of 25 percent of their potential of 85 colleges and universities. Notre Dame was one cbfmtiti^diw: (an excellent average for any volunteer of the institutions quizzed. The Lukes study reported o^^^^pn), thare is the inevitable room for improve- an average of 48 Alumni Clubs per institution. Although n^E;|t^iyhy_ dp the remaining 75 percent of Alumni respondent schools varied greatly in size and affiliation, findj'^^lpc^ Club activities and programs imappeal- ND's 186 Clubs place it among a select few in terms ing^' "iWtty are only 80 percent of the Clubs active? of scope and breadth of Alumni organization. Lukes' Wfiymot^iiOQ p^cent in both categories ... in all cate­ report lists 75 percent of the clubs as active, with an gories?; >&me of the answers lie in population mobility, average of two functions per year. ND's activity per­ com'irifinigLtkfe difficulties and just plain apathy. centage nudges 80 percent, but with an average of five TteJJatiaal;Nl) Alimmi Board has devoted con- meetings annually. sider^le^^sfidy^iojiese problems. They are about to Fifteen institutions in the AAC document reported be t^kl^Sai^:jby: a national gathering of Club presi­ all clubs assessing dues (a good indication of a club's dents onthe^l^mpUs^te jhis spring in the form of an

42 '^"'^ff;!; , . ALUMNUS AiWRCH 1967 APRIL Alumni Senate. The Board has-devised a new Club But presently. Club labw and involvement remain constitution and charter which will hopefully lend more the heritage of a vast minority. The most important specific direction to the formation /and operation of ingredient in the legacy, the accomplishment and the the Clubs. Expanded UND Night participation, more future of our Notre Dame Clubs is . . . youl We may Freshman Sendoffs, Club discussion groups, continuing have overblown our horn a bit here about the Clubs. education seminars and religious observances, increased But remember, like your favorite, friendly loan com­ placement and admissions activities, greater involve­ pany, "There's a Notre Dame Club near you." Dit^ ment in community affairs, the organization' of profes­ by from time to time and bring your oboe. Lef s keep sional Alumni groups in large metropolitan-areas, bet­ the melody lingering on! ter Reunions — all are considerations being implemented James D. Cooney and improved wthin the ND Club structure. Assistant Alumni Secretary

BOSTON The final event of the Club year ynSL be the Cleveland HoteL It will be a husband-wife i£n- annual'^golf outing at Fiddler's Elbow. This xi ner with guests and friends of Notre Dame in­ Our annual meeting for the election of officers a-bcauHful new course which has been open for vited. Featured guest speaker mil be Reverend l\-a5 held the last week in February. Results, about^three years. It is also convenient to the Theodore M. Hesburgh CSC. Members of the however, were not available by the deadline date large ..number oC Club mcmbcxs who tive in the aniuversazy conmiittee asssting Bob Dowd are: for this column. The meeting featured the "1966 Bedmihstcr^ area. The date for this mil be June 8. VINCENT F. DeCRANE '50. JACK H. DOYLE Football Highlights" fihn in color. ARTHUR .:Any.-^Xlumhus interested in attendii^ any of the '44, JAMES J. FLANNERY '60, FRED W. MURPHY '60 was chairman of the event. Plans above ^^nts'and desiring further information is in­ FRIEND '50, VICTOR J. GULYASSY '42 and are under way for UND Night which will be held vited :to'"

CSim Gabriel VaUn S' William T; 'Cirlirirl—'.Ediraiid^M.. Slahoncy, '52, Naugatuck — Thomas K. Hubbard, DISTKICT OF COLUMBIA Huston, '-51,-612 S.c-FlSwcr St.f : :-i?950':Bfra'dv5y;?pcnve"r, Colo. 80201 '56, P.O. Box 525, LitchfieU, Conn. Walter J. Btennan. MJ)^ '41. 700 -Suite 7% Loi; AngcIg^W-, GaHfT^, Ntm Haveit—Dr. Robert T. Warner, . Duke St.. Alexandria, Va. San Jist^^tit Millen '57. 155J;:Gua^i •53, 1960 Whitney Ave.. Hamden - ' dalajara St;, San jpsei Balifv 95124; '•> 17. Conn. FLORIDA ;CoiifeSciit'.iK'a//f-Robert L. Mc- Cralriif Flo. — Wil&am H. Ricke, '36. ;;^5 •'. - '•" COlJORi^^Jj^gS^:' •^yrGoianck';^;;56,"I5 Drury Lane, W. 2045 Fafanouth Rd., Maitland, Fla. : Cotdfidb Sprihgi ^ LtjGqh'Sfajhanr ^iV?Hartford,'"Conn.' DELAWARE 32751 ';,: Mv.Wakigi '52> QuaJ^ No; ^yfiE,^ , 'FiiffiitdiCourtly^^ordon J. DiRcnzo Robert E. Daley '58, 1212 Crestover Fl. £aiuf" • !56iT7197r-Br6nso'n' Kd., Fairfield, Rd., Graylyn Crest, Wilmington, DeL 19803 Landeidale. Fla. 33308 •, • Sprtng5;Pealo;.r,.^-;^j;>i^^>l->5"%;^f'^4^ K'-'CSSn.K"' ': AtuMi^u^s msM'i^-^'M^X'^i ••'-'; •flkl Greater Miami—John W. Thorntonr LOUISIANA NEW YORK SOUTH CAROLINA '50, 9th Floor Dade Federal Bldsi New Orleans—VaxA E. Hurley '56, Albany — Frank E. O'Brien. '58, 99 Joseph D. Judge, Jr.; '51, 22 ifoorc Miami, Fla. 33131 225 Baronne St., New Orleans, La. Brookline Ave., Albany, N.Y. Dr., Westwood, Charleston, S.C. North Ha.— Robert W. Schellcn- 70130. Buffalo — Edward C. Cosgrove, '56, bcrc, '48. 6842 San Sebastian AS?:. Northern Louisiana—Dr. £dw:ard R- 53 Reed Ave., Lackawanna, N.Y. TENNESSEE Jacksonville, Fla. _ Morgan, '44, 803 Jordan St.. Central — Ke«n J. Ryan. '61, 400 Chattanooga — Edward F, Davis, *43, Paltn. Beacll C<>unl>^-John W. Dell Shrcveport, 1^ Northlicld Way, Camillus, N.Y. 506 Barrington, Signal Mountain, '62, 153 S. Worth Ct., W. Palih 13031 Tenn. 37377 Beach. Fla. 33405 MAINE Golden Circle—Jama F. McVay, '42, Memphis — Roy E. Gillia, '56, Peat Pcnsacola—Leon V. Dulion. '54.. 646 Anthony E. Silra, '56, 224 Walnut St., 49 Parkway Lane, Bradford, Pa. Manvicfc Mitchell & Co., 2500 Whitney Dr., Pcnsacola. Fla. 32503. South Portland. Maine. Mid-Hudson Valley — Tliomas E. Sterick Bld^., Memphis. Tenn. New Mexico—Paul R. Fanner, Jr. Digan, '52, 40 Fuller Lane, Hyde Nasbvitle — William J. Faimon. '54, St. Pctersbure-Tampa — Mark E. M.\RYLAND Park, N.Y. 6705 Rodney Ct., Naslu-illc, Tenn. Mooney, '26, 4525 Gaines - Rd,, /jD//imor<^-Jamcs Mutschellcr '52, 305 Mohawk Valley—John F. Woeppel 37205 Tampa, Fla. E. Highfield Rd., Baltimore, Md. '53, 29 S. Richfield St., Mohawk, TEXAS . 21218 N.Y. 13407 iJa/faj—John C. Rogers '55, 4746 GEORGI.A. • MASSACHUSETTS New York City—Gordon L. Forester, Twin Post Rd., Dallas, Tex. 75234. Atlanta—^J. Tliomas Gunning ^57, Berkshire County—Harold C. Mc- '47, 24 Ward Ave., Westbury. N.Y. a /"aio—Edward T. Jennings, '53, 312 4253 .Ashuoody Trail, K.E.^ Atlan­ Kenna '61, 142 Benedict Dr., Pitts- Rochester—WilVam D. O'Toole, '39, Olivia Circle, El Paso, Texas. ta, Ga. 30319 field, Mass. 01201 101 Mayflower Dr., Rochester, N.Y. Houston — Christie S. Flanagan '60, .Boj/on-Robert L. Jfarr '58, 25 "D" Scheneelad}-—Ri)hen J. Cichodu, '56, 1915 Briarmcad, Houston, Tex. HAWAII St., South .Boston, Mass. 02127 272 Closson Rd., Scotia. N.Y. 77027 Albert Lum '57, Chaminadc College Pioneer Valley — William A. Hurley, Syracuse—See "Central New York." Midland-Odessa — John L. Buckley, of Honolulu, 3140 Waialac .Ave., '28, 33 Elm St., Springfield, ilass. Southern Tier — frank F. O'Brien, '38, 2212 Han.-ard Dr., Midland, Honolulu, Hawaii 96816 01103 '34. 201 Federation Bldg., Elmira, Texas N.Y. San Antonio—S. Chilton ifaverick IDAHO MICHIGAN Triple Cities — Frank Xf. Linehan, '61, 3222 Howard, San Antonio, Francis H. Hicks, '49, 1180 Phelps -Battle Cr«i—Ra>Tnond R. Allen, 40, '45, 2 Elizabeth St., MR 97, Bing- Tex. 78212 Circle, Mountain Home, Idaho. -, 1009 Security National Bank Bldg., hamton, N.Y. Idaho Falls — James il. Brady, '29, Battle Creek, Mich. UTAH P.O. Box 2148. Idaho Falls. Idaho. Berrien'County—Dr. Paul Leonard, NORTH CAROLINA William C. Allen '57, 652 Alola Rd., '43,-;413 S. St. Joe, Niles. Mich. Donald J. Kelscy, '48, 1115 Wcst- Salt Lake City, Utah 84103. Blue Water District — William L. ridgc Rd., Greensboro, N.C. ILLINOIS WilsoTf,; '42, 4080 Gratiot Ave., Port VIRGINIA Aurora — John G. Brj-an, '54, 111 Huroif, Alich. NORTH DAKOTA Bernard E. Nierie '58. 8652 McCaw Downer Place, Aurora. 111. Ocarfcorn =r Charles B. Kitz, '58, 70} Dr., Bon Air, Va. 23235 Wniiam Daner, '53, 1106 S. Highland Charles A. LaFratta '47, 1301 Alsatia Central Illinois—^.Albert O. Eck, Jr., Sandra,) Dearborn Heights, ^lich. Acres, Bismarck, N.D. '58, Old Jacksonx-illc Rd., Spring­ 48127 Dr., Richmond, Va. field. 111. Driroil — G> M. Vcrbicst, '20, 1101 OHIO raearaler-Phillip L. Russo, '49, 153 Chicago — William D. Reynolds, '04, Washingto'n- Blvd., Detroit, ^licli. Citron-James D. Dettling. '61, 230 Cedar Ln., L>'nnliaren, Va. 9539 Monticello, E\-an5lon, 111. 48226 ~ ~ Dorchester Rd.. Akron 13, Ohio. Decatur—Nicholas J. Neiers '58. 11 WASHINGTON FZin/—Emery -A: Shcr^vood, '38, 123 Can/on—Charles N. Koehler '57, 2916 Spokane—Dr. Lee J. McGonigle *52, Third Dr., Decatur. III. 62521. W. Marehg^r Flint, Mich. 48505. 17tli St., N.W., Canton, Ohio 44708 Eastern /(/. — Richard J. Miles, '56, Gogebic /iange-^Eugcne R. Zinn. '40, South 4422 Magnolia St., Spokane, Cincinnati—Robert B. Frolicher '54, Wash. 99203 3810 East Rd.. Danville, 111. Wright & Zinn, Michaels Bldg. 6619 Rapid Run, Cincinnati, Ohio Fox Valley — Geoige R. Schmidt, '29, Ironwood. Mich; : 45233 ir«/^i-n — Thomas P. ^^ay, '55. 3632 620 Summit St.. Elgin. III. Grand Rapids and Western Michigan Cleveland—Fred S. Naegele. '48, 1075 Tenth Ave. North, Ronton, Wash. /o/iV(—Richard E. McHugli, '43, —William F. Tfi^l, '60, 1117 Un- Sylvan Ave., Lakcwood. Ohio 44107 WEST VIRGINIA R.R. 2, Manhattan. 111. der^vood St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Columiuj—William F. Slite '61, 841 McHenry County — William M. Car­ Cyril M. Reich, '39, 903 S. Drew St., 49506 'Z "F" E. Granville Rd., Columbus, St. Albans, W.Va. roll. Jr.. '43, 329 Lake St., Wood­ Hiawathaland — Donald T. Trotticr, Ohio 43224 stock. 111. '44, 604 Ludington St;, Escanaba, Central — John D. Julian. '40, P.O. Dayton—Thomas W. Eiscnhauer, '58, Box 2063, Clarksburg, W.Va. Pcorio—Louis Zumbahlen '49. 2903 N. Mch. 4724 Ackennan Blvd., Da>-ton, Ohio Easton PI., Peoria. III. 60604 Jaekson — Cyril J. Hartman, '23, 612 45429. WISCONSIN JJorA/orrf-John F. Su-anson. '52. 426 Webb St., Jackson, Micht Hamilton—Jerome A. Ryan, '41, 353 Seventh St., Rockford, 111. 61110 Kalamazoo — George R.' "Laurc '38. Fox River Valley—Russell E. Skall South D St.. Hamilton, Ohio. '50, Skall's Colonial Wonder Bar, Rock River Fa/Zo — Paul L. Bcrtet- 8212 Shaver Rd., Kalamazoo. Mich. Mansfield —Herbert J. Fne. '40, 740 lini, '56, 609 Crawford -Ave., Dixon, Lansing — John F. Powers, SJSS. 1500 Inc., South Memorial Dr., Apple- N. Henry St., Crestline. Ohio ton, Wis. 54911. III. W. Washtenaw Ave., Lansing^Mich. A'or(/iaj«tcrn — Walter R. Bcrtiard, Southern Cook County — Robert X. Afonroj-^Huch J. Laughna, "40, 1587 Green Bay—I>r. Daniel W. Shea '48, '30, 433 Johnson .Ave., Cclina, 718 E. Cass St., Green Bav, Wis. CafTarelli. '55. 20851 Sparta Lane, River^'iew, Alonroe, Alich. T,:, - Ohio 45822 Olj-mpia Fields, 111. 60461 Muskegon — Stanley R. Tyler, -Jr., 54301 OAio KB//*)'—Robert R. Sincai-ich, '50, La Crosse—Dr. Philip H. Utz, '48, '58, 2211 Renecr St., Ifuskcgon, 134 Grant Ave., Wheeling, W. Va. INDIANA Mich. C 300 First St. South, La Crescent, Sandusky — Richard C. Hohler, '47, Minn. 55947 Calumcl Dislrirl—Robert J. Welsh Northland—Henry J. Laucrman, '23, ' 2603 Eastwood Dr.. Sandusky, Ohio. Jr. '56, 400 East 5th Ave., Gao". 1975 Riverside Ave., Marinette;'" Merrill—Augustas H. Stange, '27, 102 Tiffin — Fred J. Wagner, '29, 152 S. Prospect St., Merrill. Wise. Ind. 46402 Wis. Sycamore St., Tiffin. Ohio. Eastern Indiana — Thomas .Adams, Saginaw Valley—Eugene J. Case Jr.~ Milwaukee—^John A. Schloegel, '54, -Toledo — J. Blaine Wiley, '57, 550 5976 N. Bay Ridge i\vc., Mil­ 1521 E. Walnut St., Muncie, Ind. '56. 404 W. Genesee Ave., Saginaw, :. East Fifth St.. Perr>sburg. Ohio £/i7iarJ — James D. Ash, '33, 1151 Mich. 4B602 waukee, Wis. 53217 Youngstown — George .A. W'elsch, Jr., Northwest Wisconsin — Ben M. Siri- Strong Ave., Elkhart, Ind. Top of Michigan — Edward L. Molo­ "48, 2540 Sky^rae'Dr., Youngstown, Fort Wayne — John -A. Haley, Jr., ney, '17, 416 East State St., Che­ anni, Jr.. '60, 2719 Keith St., Eau boygan, Mich. Ohio • Claire. Wise 54701 '51, 6735 Hiltonia Dr., Fort Wayne, e OKLAHOMA South Central — Tliomas M. Hinkes, Ind. 46809 AHNNESOTA '51, 5414 Dorsett Dr., iladison. Indianapolis — Robert L. Kessing, Jr., Twin CiliM-Albert D. Eilers, '53, OklaKoma City — Daniel J. Kelehcr, Wis. 53711 '49. 5646 N. Delaware St., Indian­ 2019 Kenwood Parkway, ilinne- '58."=^4201-N.W. 61, Oklahoma City, apolis, Ind. 46220 apolis, Aiinn. 55405 Okb. !- \VYOMING Michigan City — Robert E. Miller Tn/ja-rBemard J. Sulliran. '39, 717 Patrick H. ileenan, '49, Midwest '57, 1524 Springland .Ave., Pottawat- MISSISSIPPI Kennedy Bldg., Tulsa, OUa. 74103 Bldg., P.O. Box 481, Casper, Wyo. tomi Park, Alidiigan City, Ind. William H. Miller, '30, 755 GiUcspie : = OREGON 46360 PI., Jackson, Miss. FOREIGN CLUBS Dr. Ed>ra'rd AL Scott, '46. 3632 N.E. Canada — Paul H. LaFramboIsc. *34, St. Joseph Valley—Edn-ard T. Mc­ MISSOURI Davis, Portbnd. Ore. 97232 St. Hilaire Romillc Co., 212 Blvd. Carthy, '53, AlcCarthy Insurance Kansas Ci(}^Charies L. O'Neill, '57, Richelieu, Quebec, Canada. Agcncv. Marycrest BIdg., South 6820 Dclmar, Shawnee Alission, /PENNSYLVANIA CAiVc—Michael E. Curtin 'Gl, Tn- Bend, Ind. Kansas. Central Pennsylvania—^Dr. George W. dustrias "COI.V S.A., Casilb 6-D, Tcrre Haute—Richard Cronin '47, St. Louis — Joseph B. McGlynn, '55, Katicr, '41, U.S. Bank Bldg. Vina Del Mar, Chile. 2340 X. lOih St., Tcrre Haute, 7319 Chamberlain, University City, Jojinstown, Pa. Colombia—^J. Ramon de la Torre '57, Ind. 478M Mo. Erie"^^ Richard T. AlcConnick, '55, Callc^ 78, No. 8-02, Bogota, Co­ rri'-S/a(<: — .AI H. Harding, Jr., '59, 4425 Cherry St., Eric, Pa. lombia. 3018 East ifulberrj-, EvansvUIc, Ind. MONTANA Robert T. O'Leary, '54, 2920 Floral Haffisburg—Joseph Ellam '58, 4106 Ecuador—Jaime Pinto Davila '30, Blvd., Butte, Mont. . 'Ilillsdalc Rd., Harrisburg, Pa. 17112. P.O. Box 2107, Quito. Ecuador. IOWA Lehigh Valley — David E. Nolan, '55^ Manila — LawTcnce J. Gotuaco, '54, Burlington—Vcm H. Brinck '48. 501 Billings—Claries J. Hcringer Jr. '49. •P.O. Box 486, Billings, Mont. 59103 • :. 835 Edward Ave., Allcntown, Pa. P.O. Box 1152, Manila. Philippines. N. Sbith, Burlington, Iowa 52601 . 18104 Mexico City—Richard C. Leon *44, Des Moines—^.Anthony M. CritcIU '52, NEBRASKA / Monongahela Valley—^Louts W. Apone, Monlc Karacrum 225, ilcxico 10, 619 Savings & Loan Bldg., Des Omaha and Council Bluffs -— Robert '41, 321 Market St., Brownsville, D.F. Mexico. Moines, Iowa 50309. A. Rohling, '50. 5501 Haracy, Pa. Nicaragua—^Noel Palhls _'49, Apar- Dubuque—Rev. William Ktmsch, '37, Omaha, Neb. 68132 Philadelphia—Patrick W. Kittredgc, tado 2119, Managua. Nicaragua. Our_Lady of Seven Dolors Rectory, '58.' 1500 Seven Penn Center Plaza, Pakistan—Rev. Frank J. Burton CSC Fcstina, Iowa. NEVADA Philadelphia, Pa. 19103 Rex A. Bell, '57, 304 Fremont St., '33, Notre Dame College, Dacca StouX'Land — Raymond B. Duggan, Pittsburgh — J. Peter Friday. '50, 821 -2", East Pakistan. '43, 3244 Jackson, Sioux City 4, Las Vegas, Nev. /, ~ • Ella Dr., Pittsburgh, Pa. 15216 Panartta — Lorenzo Romagoza, '45, Iowa. NEW JERSEY " Scranton—Eail E. Holmes, Jr., '54, P.O. Box 830-F, Panama. Panama. Quad Ci

^^m

i^iM world df racia^

HE RECENT article by the new AluffiSJ^ ^^lapial^.idraviBg fiSJce il flie realizadon Aat they have Association president brought home £l?=.4sSaSiif* *iS:»;MVo^'c:gn offcii^b^ valuable, that the communications gap that lies needs IQ be seotii They aren't Tso many of the cliches in common ciifreiicyi ; ;iwi^%et^''ffi§^fti they ihgy not admit that; but they Both Mr. Dudley and today's students refer to ;me ' fa^Ci^^e j^i^'^ "M^^j" Mdj i& IBaBy eas^, are re- University of California at Berkeley to illustrate their ^sp3r§lble2'?or-lti^^j^dc: "^^ adtidn" right how is individual points of argument. As a Notre Dame 'd^^^^avM^im^^ii^ii<'^^7--'0 •<: }<^^ •••; graduate at Berkeley, I would like to try and dispel •^rTlie^iti^^l&S^vQjg^^ o^ Thi^ resent the stu- some of the fog that hampers discussion between .pim£y&°oflS^QiSlwho~fea^^^ think they students and alumni, and, perhaps, contribute a bit see^/l6^ie{iIne^tKSr5'are^riaht:~ Biitliisiial^ are to the concern we all share for education at our just- "d^ipojit^'^ffiSthygLeaiy-Tywsion.''^^^ i^ Alma Mater. that ddes-viplraceitcg^Ge]^ted;nS^^ fe; jlistified.They Here in Berkeley, it is popular to say, "Never delight•ih'ffie;.i^Gor|;tlfeyi "... Anyone who graduated more than five years meant to offend, but to satisfy, to promote*a Veiyl.' ago has no concept of the changes that have taken beautiful concept of love. _' , ...•.> place on the campus," The point really is that the But here is my point, and you may be surprised^ changes haven't taken place solely at Notre Dame; at it: the traits of both sorts of rebels most often are the changes are in people, especially young people, found in the same peison. The same confusion that and it is rather important that everj'one see that. For lumps them together in an adult's mind, combines no effort is going to reverse these changes. More, them in a youth's. There is no real danger for anyone Notre Dame is not going to be a backwater, in spite who tries to listen. of alumni nostalgia; it is a leader in these changes. It is entirely possible that many who may read I have stood in Sproul Hall plaza at Berkeley and this don't believe that education can be improved heard declared Communists proclaim a student strike or that the seeds, at least, of great and ongmaJ ideas to be the forerunner of revolution. As a budding exist among the yoiihg' In that case, >ou should turn capitalist, I am more than a little scared by such promptiy to the iports page or class notes, I need talk. But that revolution, I think, can be circum­ some cbnce^ions tormake my point. vented with wisdom. It certainly is not the source of The^f&t of the matter is that students have besfun the changes I mentioned earlier. However, the danger, to eai;e-'abQut^not only their own state but that of I think, is that observers from afar confuse the two. dti|leIS^mVlhe^^world They care enough at Berkelev In such confusion, the fear can become reality. to-iprp^ae|;inore Peace Corpsmen than any other There really are two sorts of student rebels, but jCa^masj^Kough'at Notre Dame to send missions to the distinction is subde. There are the idealists, whose -Mississippi^;

,j^'

iz-c 48 ON ^LUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL '•^f ¥:-

J/te i'4? [student politics,

f} '^problems and poverty. 0 KffS 2I>

When a Mr. Dudley pfot^g tlhg txeSds 6nuti^^^s|'^'Vr-'- j^tudents consolidated all of their grievances and campusipus., he seems to be p^rotsting Jhe &'y®ly A^t^^^ some of which were unreasonable. Once of students in the world which th,^ JHultiVSggupy^^f^ such a show of power appears effective, the same some day. Perhaj^ he thinks there is ngogeicS^^'a.. tactic is tempting in further disputes. But if the aspires to found another Liberty B@*vl; he is ;prS|iam^>^' •Administration had treated the students like intel­ wrong, for entrepreneur abound, more tha^jsyeriiBiif-';'' ligent humans, the concessions they eventually made many of the athlete leaders he hopes {orjhayigjiot^t. would not have been required. Almost all of Berkeley's callings; witness the Notre Dame.fJ^tball'i|ila^;eS7wfiq present problems have grown out of the essential have given summers in Chile fGti thei, gampus^J^nS;] blunder made in 1964. If one wants to create bogey­ CILA or the others who tutor, in Sguth JfefIdv/5;3^Sr/., men, one must remember that anti-American con­ leadership isn't in the frustrating AvorM^feri^tleiit ^ spirators are not magic, but they are clever op­ politics, but in the even more fnistfatiiig .xeal^^vbrld portunists. of racial problems and pdveftv.? Irir^jsjjs?;^-^;; - •?• The Administration at Notre Dame has managed : I have fought some, Ipnely;jbatjIp^at5Bel;k.elfey;. try­ to be a good bit shrewder than that at Berkeley in ing to explain to friends^whj^p&p^^^ couldn't the way they grant reforms. This may have been undereta4d%IiaLt:?mey;:'we^^ Not all my discouraging for my generation there, but in retro­ friendsr-'are :A'eiv; AV3S& pretty bitter at spect, I am grateful. Little that we ever demanded the treatrneritfthe^JreGeiv^^ they offer their ideas was granted immediately; but a fe\v yeais later, . tb'the;worId.;\.;^ piece, I am merely asking changes would be made. Students can afford to lose thati yqu^^^ that they can often be right; a few battles if the war is won; administrations must npt^;alwa)3,;rbut;.ofe must learn also, but too win batdes and lose wars. often'the^iha^^^bee^^^^ with no fair hearing. I ^vill close with a thought from Timothy Leary, • '::^He-Erfee^^^^ a classical example who is as false a prophet as exists. He claims that of whait'-h'appehsfiwhenV"studerite are treated as idiots much of the opposition to LSD comes from those who iiigtieaa;.!gf;intdligenfc .The; original issue con­ fear the expansion of the mind. I would only say cerned an arbitiary/^apjjli4atidn;;;pf^ that the mind is going to always expand, wth or campus rule. •, Such^ ai^sQdden''%KSr^^^ re­ ^\rithout LSD. He may be correct that people fear quires some explanation^ :feat^bne,%va§'^;p;^duGed. _. such a prospect; I would suggest that we face the If one administrator had siniply sztid tRqt gpifimimityj^;. facts. Given a people with the leisure to contemplate, pressures had.become tbo strong t^it&lerat(e''stM|^" land given ready access to the accumulated knowledge political activity in Berkeley^' the stiidentS~\Vvo,ald

. • ;* •.•.,,-"•"" j;^ '}><555^5iS?S'.|;'r(-;^/Beter-Gfarfc, a cum laade graduate in chemical engineering, .J ""'^o '-^ - = '". ."':'• ~'i'^W'Sf^!C>-^\^w:,is:a candidate for a PhD at the University of Califomia,

ALUMN'JS MARCH 1967 APRIL \MMsmm- 49 T IS distressing to many Alumni like myself to read the one-sided and pessimistic evalua­ itfiSlwasjjaniiamazmff! statements mcKt: amazing" tion of today's college youth as presented^ih* '^jHaE^E^^Ki ^!^?SS"^t^^*?wM ySofii one who, - Si "The Lost Image." Without detracting, froi^v Cp?D^'ii\«^; ,4f Bekdey "ffiat the American dream is strong enough those like Mr. Dudley who thinks he lives "iii*an^-Vy ij tg wgtifefend any reeacam The results of these era in which extremists have succeeded in cdnfiising;:^?' l?Mii^ g) far have been impressive as exemplified in the administration" and who shudders at the thqughty^X>; ? the'-560 yC Beiidey students who are now serving of "bearded young bohemians who wear saridals?and^y \ :ijin:^0¥(aiciC6t^, more than from any other cam- smoke marijuana and hang out on Manhattan's'IbwerS/'YJ East Side. - •;- >•' r^A::;j<»>nIIfe^were^n^ guiding and partici- Well, I am not bearded, nor do I wear sandalssori-•'- r'j^Mg;in^e s6

50 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL freedom of inquiry?*'

twdv&-letter man is to be hnnosexual -r- and this seems to be all he can understand of why he doesn't : .- ^IlB=-= arvTEebruary: issuedpfF^thewAiiUMNUSr. -The like "malctmtents and beatniks." Because he doesn't :' -^ : ; ^ cpressxwhic-h the yAEUMNusr5eiyes"-io,\-vice- have faith in the aUlity of intelligent men to finil and ;^Jii:-S£^^r^lK'^i.':4ia5 defend the truth, he is mortally afraid (d ccaxt- munism and agnosticism. arid Christianity. " L't; Mlk-^-:SSton?se^^at^SftMhy: I have always been imder the impression that We're Here" is at its bfesf naive .«,'3LndfiihtJri6ilwayi' among the greatest words were love, not duty, and is it a credit forJNptre.Darite/to"^iMg^^ justice, not honor, and man — our "neighbor" •— versity. Finally — arid I reahft-timt imreS'lSnnml not country. Mr. Dudley has opted, it seems, for thie danger of offending flie |ensiMfi|ijre of rfe;gy/ireada^ serviceable virtues, not the moral ones. -^ I find the obituary notice f®3^^ TvCGa^Uriinxthe/-; It is not that I am opposed to athletes or athletics. worst of bad taste. - , _;,... - ; <; v^iriP(>5?,«; -Indeed, my credentials in this r^;ard are peihaps as Ail of this is representative of %efnMa!naiMf?is- - 5gdod as Mr. Dudley's. I am not the father of six difference Ijetween Mr. Dudley's poiritT of 3^i^/C^nd^^^ .children, but I am a three-time graduate ol Notre mine. He would say that "Hill 4|@",is .^^s|i^^ 'Dame. I served on active duty with the U.S. Marine eulogy for a great American —^ and I wouMrla^lSiktj^- Corps for three years, and in the inactive reserve for it is a piece of vulgar piety jmd alnicSt p;^mSpggHi&>^: :fiye more years before reagning as a permanent cap­ mock patriotism. I did not ImoW J. ,j>,;Ga^Ut;c;^^^^^ tain. I have been actively engaged in the fidd of I had, however, I would prefer to reniembgr,iliiinijas2 athletics for 27 years — ance I was four years old — somethinar more than "a coiribat Marine'^^-iiwho- as player, fan, professional scout, and son ci a promi­ "planned to make the Marines his life's AwSflSs'^^r. nent coach and athletic director, Ted Homback of feel sure that there must be more to say of ^^iman^S^; Western Kentucky Univeraty. I still play tennis and a Christian, a graduate of a distingyished.^CatnoUfc^, basketball r^ulariy, and I am still an avid qmrts university — than tliis. ,: --^^^-C^ri^^t^S^ fan, and I am still the S^/:^tT<^fi^ Lebanon in 1958), and I hdd a Rotary International Sexton. If Lt. Sexton thinks that ffie/efidJJSf^Kis^^ ^ fellowship for study in Ireland in 1961-62. I am about fighting in our; airrentv-w he now an assistant professor in a distinguished American realizes that Aeisprivoarsidei ffiferiperha^ deserves university and I spend a great deal of my time deal­ the indirect charactCTrSuicide which he has written. ing happily, though sometimes critically, with bright Lt. Sexton's dramatic a^eirtion of seif-justification, young people. that "the mret: iriiportant thing is that in the execu­ I have known and know now a mmiber of college tion of your riii^iqn many friendly lives were saved," athletes who are fine, upstanding young men. But is a statement representative of an insensibility to the to my knowledge, cdlege athletes have never as a nature of our, problems in this war — to the nature class been the "leaders and men of responsibility" on and value of- huhian existence generally — which university campuses. Most of the monogram dubs need not be distributed to the public. in our universities would be hard pressed to find any­ Hubert Hiiriiphrey wonders why God-fearing men one with both the time and the talent for such and women, young "and old, oppose this war. Mr. activities as student govenmient or student journalism. Humphrey quotes tile Seniipn" on the Moimt, ac­ Most athletes spend thdr time — and they exercise cording to the ALUMiiiujs7:'fv'nnie'= Scripture says, their talents — in the activities which their profes- 'Blessed are the peaceniakfei^i'xi^ot'tiie peace pickets, aon requires of them. Few of thdr fdloW students not the peace walkers, not the-peace" pamphleteers — hold this against them, really, or are jealous of them the peacemakers." If Lt Sexton is a peacemaker, even concerning thdr priv­ thai certairdy I prefer to place my hopes in peace ileges. Certainly what dif-^ pickets, peace walkers, '^ci peace pamphleteers — ferences there arc between and I trust that someday,they won't get "lost in the the athlete and the student shuffle" at Notre DariieiV carmot be exjdained by But if Mr. Dudley-has his way, there will never Mr. Dudley's masculinity be anything other thcUi a shuffle — or perhaps a theory, that, the "angry forward pass — at Notre Dame. Mr. Dudley's idea young men" aire "jealous" of the world is a fuzzy orie artificially blocked out ^i-;ir.j':'^'^:i^ 51 UD DUDLEY'S essay "The Lost Image" certainly has captured the spirit of the Vatican Council. Unfortunately, it is the Bspirit of the Vatican Council in 1870 rather than the magnificent effort of an awakened, "Duty, Honor and Country . . . inquiring, and "dissatisfied" Catholic Church of this decade. Perhaps more apropos, Mr. Dudley's essay could be at home in the "American Legion Mag­ t, why not azine" "Reader's Digest," "American Opinion," or in an old Ronald Reagan campaign speech, but it Love, Understanding and Peace?" is disturbing to find it offered as a philosophical ex­ ercise by a semi-official spokesman of a large educa­ tional institution which has taken so many strides toward becoming a great university. We know and care little and are affected not the least by the gladiators of Rome or the medieval jousters or the logrollers of the 19th century. But we are profoundly affected by the thinkers and the angry men (with or without beards) of another area — whether they be Socrates, Aquinas, Beethoven or Marx, Darwin, or Lenin, or Christ driving the money changers from the temple. portant things to occupy their minds than the jealousy Perhaps we could point up Sparta to Mr. Dudley of the 96-{K)und weakling;' — fine athletes all — and perhaps best known for It is unfortunate that Mr, Dudley has chosen to their contribution to the destruction of Greek civiliza­ libel the students in our universities as he has, de­ tion. Bill Bradley and Pete Dawkins and many an nouncing them as immoral,-/godless, and unpatriotic unsung Notre Dame scholar-athlete have great sta­ young people, and attempting.to suggest that they are ture because they were able to keep athletics in per­ communists, sjinpathizers, dupes, and fellow travel­ spective through the realization that scholarship comes lers — and all because some of'them, wear beards, and first and athletics a desirable but distant second. don't dress in Uncle Sam suits. Like many, and I trust most of my fellow alumni, Does it really make it so to "want to believe" that I am immensely proud of my univereity for its great athletes are "not merely men of bra^yn and skill but strides in faculty and curriculum; for the ever-in­ wholesome American youngsters who'were taught the creasing intellectual caliber of its student body; and significance of the Ten Commandments, the Sermon for its leadership in the thorny issues of the day on the Mount, and other fundamental principles of whether it be the Peace Corps-, civil rights, or its religion"? How are the athletes filling their "normal study and dialogue with other faiths, and economic roles as leaders and men of responsibility" and demon­ and political sjstems including Marxism. I am proud strating their wholesomeness in betting scandals, of Notre Dame for its realization that 3500 full study cheating scandals, and slush-fundings? The generaliza­ spaces in the library are really more important than tion won't work — though it is as unfair to malign 59,000 full seats in the stadium; and that Danforth athletes and athletics generally by reporting the sins Fellows have at least equal status with All-Americans. of the gambleis, the cheaters, and the solicitors among I am proud that the University has realized that them as it is to pretend that the athletes in our uni­ inquiry, dissatisfaction, and dissent from old and versities are the pure heart and-the dedicated hope established ideas and resulting changes to meet to­ of our student bodies. '•'" day's problems are as important to the President of It is not my intention to afgiie against athletes and the University and to the Theology and History De­ athletics; but I must answer Mr. Dudley's flabby case partments as they are to the coaching staff. against students and for athletes. And it is in a like I am proud of Notre Dame because it recognizes spirit that I must argue .'against Mr. Humphrey's that smug satisfaction with the same old safe medi­ blasphemous name-calling, and against the false and ocrity is impossible in a great university and that new pious praise paid to the memory of J. J. Carroll, and and even radical ideas cannot be only tolerated but against the metaphysical obscenity reported as the are essential. words of Lt. Sexton. Notre Dame deserves more than I am proud of Notre Dame because of its under­ this — and we o%ve it to ourselves to demand more. standing that college students are not boys to be re­ •< BERT G. HORNBACK '57 strained with cloistered discipline and that the uni­ versity is not a military school or a boarding school Awarded bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees from Notre Dame, Bert Hornback now is an assistant professor of English for delinquents. A university is not a machine where at the University of Michigan. • •• students are to be stamped and propagandized with

52 ALUMNUS MARCH }9S7 APRIL ~^5%.:,.

unexplained and unanalyzed slogans whether they ments andispitriotic goals doesn't, in the eyes of to­ be in the name of "duty, honor, country" or Catholi­ day's yputhj?quite measure up. Today's youth really cism. A great university offers a dialogue between listens to what'the adult world says, and then— student and teacher where the process is to explain, unfortunately fdr{many of us — really looks at what explore, criticize, reject, complain, dissent, and if we do. Small %^nder, given the "credibility gap" necessary, to rebel. Only if Notre Dame continues they find, that nijny are cynical vuibelieveis. They to serve these purposes can it produce the "man for all turn away from jJSyjaSnd from that which molded us, seasons" in the 20th century. The day of the Babbit and attempt to find^her methods of making a "good and "jock," the conformist and the promoter is hope­ world" with a bettpv America. "Is America today fully past at Notre Dame. The era of the Man has really the 'land of th&^free'?" they ask. Watts, Cicero, dawned. Chicago's Lawndale,^d Gage Park shout, "No!" Four When Notre Dame is dedicated to impregnating letter words send ^JMto a tizzy, but the students the acceptance of Catholicism or American life of watch us close dpw^ a Hollywood teen-age beatnik today as the millennium by suppressing dissent, by club a few doors foom the Playboy Club — only to accepting what seems to be Mr. Dudley's definitions find us replacing the'teen-age club with a topless bar. of duty, honor, and country, we can return the plains That doesn't mjikeifsense to our young people; it of Indiana to the Indians. Away with the Hesburghs shouldn't make se^: to us. I am thoroughly con­ and the Shusters, the Noonans and the Rossinis. We vinced that youth^ants goodness — real goodness — can make the library an annex of the Rock and, oh, and that halting.^Sld stumbling along the way, as yes! Ara will have to go, too. His defense has been certainly we hav;ejTthey will reach their goals. Theirs described as "radical" and his offensive formations are the honest .^pp&i minds which are needed and I are often strong to the left! feel today's universities, for the most part, are pro­ REGIS D. MURRIN '52 viding the afrnt^phere necessary for their devdop- ment. Youth today has its heroes as we had ours, but their heroes ar^?more immediate and have won their honors in thcf battles which concern the young. It obviously is wrong to disagree with anyone Rege Murrin has been prac­ who says Wjc' should serve God and coimtry. But ticing law in Pittsburgh since how do we'do it? Frankly, I'm not content to show his graduation from Harvard my eight?children pictures of MacArthur or George Law School in 1959. The father of three daughters, he Washington to instill patriotism. Nor am I excited also is a candidate for a to illustiiite Christian charity with stories of Damien LLM. from Temple Uni­ the le^'r. Not in an era which produces a Rev. James versity. Reebj housewife Viola Liuzzo or seminarian Jona­ than Daniels who died here — right here in the United-States — for the loftiest Christian principle: love of one's neighbor. Am I to tell my children that E ALL agree an athlete is measured the story; of our Foimding Fathers is more pertinent on the field by his accomplishment to America than the revolution for human indepen­ there. When he walks off the field dence they see exploding all about them? Winto the pertinent areas of life, he has I arniconvinced that I can entrust my children to be measured there, also, by his accomplishment. to America's academic community. And as long as I, too, like to see fine upstanding young men lead our educators like Father Hesburgh urge university gradu­ youth. If the athletes of today speak to the issues ates (Univ^iof Illinois, June, 1966): "Commitment, which command the attention and concern of stu­ compassion, i consecration — wherever you go, what­ dents, they will certainly find the students behind ever you do, thSe three values are sturdy companions them. I cannot agree that many of those to whom along the way,"~we need not fear the "robust" nature our young people now look are not themselves fine of our American colleges and universities. upstanding people. To us they may not look like the '-it' JOHN L. WIGGINS '43 leaders of yesterj'ear, but perhaps the problems and concerns of today attract and need new tj-pes. Intelligent students today will have no more of our pulpit oratory. They are calling our hand — "put up or shut up." Surely, we have the Ten Com­ Jack IVig^ns, secretary for mandments and the Sermon on the Mount as guide- the Class of '43, is a regional posts; so have we a multitude of papal encyclicals, sales manager for the Philip bishops' statements plus an abundance of stated pa­ A. Hunt Chemical Corp. Father of eight and a native triotic goals. However, the adults' day-to-day living of Chicago, Jack now lives of these commandments, sermons, encyclicals, state- in La Crescenta, Calif.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 53 AM 22, unmarried, and have been a student divorce after being confronted with the suffering all my life. While in high school I ran cross­ caused by overpopulation, illegitimacy, and unhappy country and track but never participated in marriages? To my way of thinking constant reevalua- I any organized team sportsV I admire and, I tion of tradition is the mark of an intelligent man. suppose, secretly env)' athletes for their physical abili­ Indoctrination is not education. ties. I've ob\'iously never fought in a war, nor do I This brings me to the place of the malcontent wish to. Only vaguely do I remember the Korean both in the univereity and in society as a whole. If "conflict" and the threat of Stalin to Western Europe. it were not for the agitation of "so-called intellec­ The McCarthy debacle appears to me like Cromwell's tuals," change in entrenched institutions would be devastating march through Ireland. The Senator slow, if it occurred at all. came to save America; instead he left destruction and Agitation in the 1930's by labor leaders, some of tragedy where he trod. I hope this background will whom no doubt were Socialists and Communists, enable Alumni to be tolerant of the several points I changed for the better the lot of the workingman would like to discuss. in the United States and in the world as a whole. The first is the relationship of the university to Dedicated civil rights workers have forced a com­ "dut}', honor, countrj" (General MacArthur, fare­ placent middle-class society to reevaluate traditional well address at AVest Point). The job of the univer­ attitudes toward American Negroes. In the Middle sity is to help to teach the student to analyze situa­ Ages, Martin Luther's stand against a degenerate, tions objectively and to keep an open mind while temporally oriented, religious dictatorship prompted seeking to resolve these situations. It should provide much-needed reform within a corrupt institution. an atmosphere in which he can observe various ethi­ Modem theologians, both within and outside the cal codes, reflect on them, compare them with his Roman Church have caused the Church to reevaluate own, and after this reappraisal decide on some sort its role in the modem world. Malcontents, rabble- of system of values. Using this code as a guideline, rousers — all have a very important place in society; he can see there his "dut)'" lies both in professional and I, for one, am willing to tolerate a lunatic fringe and personal situations. provided that such an atmosphere of ferment pro­ At Notre Dame the code which is most strongly duces social progress. The university, as a more or fostered, both because of the relatively homogeneous less closed society, provides a logical forum in which nature of the student body and because of the nature to argue about the ways and means of social reform. of the institution, is one based on the importance of the individual person and indixddual involvement with This brings me to the assumption that athletes the problems of others. This kind of commitment are somehow uniquely fitted to be campus leaders. has prompted many ND men to enter such activities Is it because they usually have short hair and do not as CILA, neighborhood self-help programs in South wear beards? (Long hair is uncomfortable inside a Bend and Chicago, and the Peace Corps in order to football helmet and a beard would be just one more get to know and to understand better the problems thing to grab.) Or is it because they always dress of others and to try to help out when possible. well? Or is it because they are accustomed to taking Unfortunately, the concepts "my country, right orders from a coach or a quarterback and following or ^vrong" and even "my church, right or wrong" their assignments for the good of the team? Obviously are not necessarily part of this Christian commitment. this is the only way to win a game. But is it any way Might not a person honorably follow his duty and to run a college campus or a nation? I think not. object to an Asian war which is being fought pri­ I have known personally and know of many ath­ marily to maintain his country's ideological sphere letes both at Notre Dame and at Indiana University of influence? Might not a person logically question and have found them not much different from other his Church's traditional stands on birth control and students. Dick Arrington, , and other ath-

"At Notre Dame the code which is m.ost strongly fostered . . . is one based on the importance of the person and individual involvement with the problems

54 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRll letes took an interest in the South Bend ndghborhood programs while they were at Notre Dame. On the other hand, there were some athletes, often not the best, who talked for hours, in minute detail, about their latest romantic conquests in South Bend. There were also many who worked about as hard as most of us, enjoyed themselves occasionally, and had a fairly normal college experience except that they were X; in the Sunday morning papers. At Notre Dame the athletes are a moderately good cross section of the student body, but let's not forget that this is not always the case. At many schools the reputation of athletes as moral degenerates with substandard intellectual n' >••" capacity is well deserved. Many schools treat athletes simply as professionals who take courses mainly to fulfiU NCAA rules. ^ A trait that many athletes have in common, which could be put to good use in campus activities, is an ama2ing drive and dynamism which they carry over from the playing field into their everyday hfe. So much time is required of them by their coaches, however, that most have a hard enough time keep­ ing up with their course work let alone getting in­ volved as leaders in campus politics or publications. Due to increased study loads and competition, col­ lege today is much different from what it was twenty years ago. This cramped schedide for the athletes is the fault of the big-time athletic system and not of the athletes. Maybe this is why the Ivy League, sneered at by most Midwest sports fans, produced a Rhodes Scholar-athlete. Frankly, I'm tired of people who get all bent out of shape when they see a guy with long hair or a beard. Many people, and I'm afraid that Mr. Dud­ ley is one of them, jump to the conclusion that any­ one that criticizes the status quo is in league with Satan or in some other way anti-American. Real life is not a football game. You do not run roughshod over people just because someone has something you want, whether you are playing at home or in some­ one else's back yard. In some instances people ought to admit their mistakes and retreat as gracefully as possible rather than attempt to pull the game out of the fire for God, country, the subway alumni and the puppet master. THOMAS B. HANLEY '65

Tom Hanley was a geology major at Notre Dame and cur­ rently is working towards his PhD at Indiana University.

of others."

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 55 PARSEGHIAN Man with the answers

This year the Irish eleven lost 10 players who were each mentioned on at least one All-America team. One of the biggest gaps Coach Parseghian will have to fill is in the backfield where Nick Eddy and set very high standards. Hopefuls for the backfield posts include juniors and Tom Quinn and first-year-man Jeff Zimmerman. Team Captain Bob Bleier is sure to return Season for Questions to his right-halfback spot The center position finds four Five months after the awarding of contenders for 's old the national championship to the post. Junior Tim Monty and senior Notre Dame football team, the signs will vie against sophs of victory linger on. "ND—No. 1" Larry Vuillemin and Terry Brennan. stickers still cover the campus on Veterans Roger Fox and Tom Mc- everything from dorm windows to car Kinley are out to be named regulars bumpers. But now spring is in the in the guard post vacated by Tom air, and attention is turning to the Regner. Giving them competition this 1967 season. spring will be a trio of sophomores— The canvas is up enclosing Cartier Randy Harkins, Jim Reilly and Jim Field behind a wall of secrecy. The Ruzicka. well-padded silhouettes emerge daily from the varsity room and trek their At the ends the Irish have an way across campus to the practice abundance of veterans. Juniors Brian field. Mingled with their shadows in Stenger, Curt Heneghan and Paul the afternoon sun are the shadowy Snow are front runners along with thoughts that are the hallmark of senior Kevin Rassas and newcomer spring football. Primary in everyone's Nick Furlong. Senior Mick Kuzmicz mind is the big question: "How will and soph Tom Lawson are out for the team look this season?" the other end post The loss of key varsity men raises Last season's sophomore "super­ the big question of who; will step up stars" Jim Seymour, to fill the holes in the lineup. Aiailyses and Coley O'Brien will be returning of strengths and weaknesses of the to tibe Imeup as seasoned veter^s Sports team and individuals will be the with a lot of their own records to foremost task of the coaching stafif break. Seymour is No. 1 candidate during the short-lived spring seascm. at split end where he earned All- Untried players will vie for posts in America honors and broke ND records the opening lineup against ihe vet­ for most passes caught in one game erans who will have to prove anew and inqst yards on receptions. their worth in the line and backfidd. The Mme question that plagued Finding out just who will be the 11 followere of Irish football in '66 is men on the fiield for kickoff Sept 23 back this year: "Who will call the is what spring football is all about signals?" Both Hanratty and O'Brien

U ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL will be vying for number-one spot En Garde Hockey, which has been an or' and neither will be content to rest ganlzed sport at ND for only a very The winningest team on the varsity on his laurels of the past season. ijnr years, has grown'rapidly. This scoreboard slashed its way to another Hanratty finished with a .531 com­ ,pjkst season the stickmen played 19 perfect season and set a new record pletion percentage and threw 147 •g^aiagaiast varsity teams across the in the process. The Notre Dame passes for 1247 yards and eight TDs. ;cwEg|^; from Erie, Pa. to Colorado fencers, victorious in 18 matches, O'Brien has a .512 completion record ^§pn^^ Colo. More than 30,000 fans tallied their fifth perfect season in with 82 passes for 562 yards. In his fg^djlitp;; see the Irish hockey team history to set a new mark for total only start of the season at Southern 5sMgJ^;,way to a 14-5 season. The matches won during a single season. California he tied the ND record for ^club monbas initiated the first col- The last perfect campaign for the the number of completions in one ,legi|i^ jockey tourney in the histcvy team, which gained varsity status, in game with 21 tosses good for three ^M jShia^go's Stadium, the Notre 1934, was put on the records nine touchdowns. ^^a^;J[nvitationaI, a coup which the years ago. "^ Big JE^ai'plans to imitate next year. The big defensive question at the The fencers parried their way to a^ :>:-• T^m!-'members contend, however, close of the '66 campaign centered .708 season with victories in 344 bouts.:.' :; iMt jthey cannot continue to repre- around the return of Coach John Ray High scorers for the season were dig." i seat J^otre Dame in the manner the and AU-American Kevin Hardy. Both sabre men who, led by co-cap^iinj ^;nadim|5 sports fans have come to ex- were caught in the quandary of opting Jack Haynes, amassed a 17-1 recqrdsv' \ peftiof all ND teams, if they do not for another season with the Irish. The foil team was close behind comr: ' ha>^>^e benefits of the solid organiza- Coach Ray was offered several head piling a matching bout record of itiOTi,'!. which varsity status aJfTords. coaching posts but turned them down 118-44, but dropping two of its S^mngly, the University is not ad- in favor of molding another outstand­ matches. Epee men finished 16-2 for vei^.to die proposaL Plans for the ing defense for Notre Dame. Hardy the season, winning 108 of their nie~$. Athletic and Convocation Center debated a return for another season meets. of eligibility. He'll be missing from rionv. imder construction call for a The blademen are coached by Mike the spring gridiron, but only because pamanent ice rink in the arena DeCicco, assistant professor of me^ he's a veteran on the baseball team. dome. chanical engineering, whose insistence However, the Athletic Board was In '67 Hardy will be the only on precision and versatility of form not?'quite willing to grant immediate returning member of the defense's earned him NCAA Coach of the Year vaSity status to the hockey players. front four. There is speculation that honors in 1966. This year, he sent At Its meeting held March 15, it was three sophs may join him in holding three men to the NCAA Fencing decided to postpone accepting hockey back the opposition: Jay Ziznewski, Championships. Co-captain Pat into varsity ranks until the 1968-69 Mike McCoy and Bob Jockisch. Korth, and juniors John Crikelair and sea»n. Returning to maintain the defensive Steve Donlon sought AU-American line are juniors Eric Norri, Chuck honors in sabre, foU and epee at the Lauck and Bill Skoglund. NCAA meet. Even in football the proof is in the For ilie Record pudding and no amount of specula­ The; wrap-up of another basketball tion can take the place of seeing the In the Big League season found the ND c^ers bettering Fighting Irish in action. Notre Dame There are now seven active club Coach Johnny Dee's preseason pre­ followers will get their first taste of sports on campus, but the Hockey diction of a .500 record. Putting a things to come May 6 when Coach Club hopes to make it only six by the mark of 14-12 on the boards, the Parseghian fields his potential opening end of the year. The team has peti­ •-predominately sophomore team lineup at the Old-Timers game. A tioned the University's Athletic Board' brought ND back to the ranks of traditional match between graduated to admit hockey to the ranks of var^ : "respectable teams and gave bright stars and the varsity, the game closes sity sports. Acceptance would guar-' • promise for the future. the spring season and opens a new antee the team a full-time eoach^ The season's scoring tally found period in the football year—the wait more ice time and mark it as an 6ir:\ soph Bob Amzen at the top in all for Sept. 23 and the opening whisde. ficial representative of Notre Dame; r' • categories but one. His 597 was the highest ever recorded by a first-year player and placed him niunber two in all-time Irish scoring annals. Lead­ ing the team with a 21.4 scoring average, he completed 147 free throws ior a .831 average and top ranking .'in that department. With such record-breaking per­ formances behind him, Bob's team­ -mates accorded him dual honors. He :'.\^ chosen the team's most valuable player and elected captain of the i%7-68 squad. Not since die 1936- 37" season has a junior lead the Irish cagers. l^/Rounding out the list of three top 'scorers were sophomores Bob Whit- more and Dwight Murphy. Tops in reboimding. Bob had a 13.7 averse ^il tallied 458 points for the seascm. HARDY and RAY D^ght took number-three honors, Men in a quandary scoring a 10.4 average.

ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL A Proposal to All College Basketball Coaches

OTRE DAME basketball coach, Johnny Dee, has a multimillion-dollar N idea for determining the nation's No. 1 basketball team. And he would like to see the NCAA adopt the system which provides for participation by all of the large and small universities and colleges in the country. The financial aspect is not the overriding factor in Dee's proposal, although he does admit this can be an important consideration. Those who have heard Dee explain his postseason tournament idea have liked it and all have agreed that, while it is a radical departure from the system currently used by the NCAA in crowning a champion, it could develop an unprecedented interest in college basketball. The ALUMNUS talked to Dee recently when he discussed in detail his proposed play-off system:

• The NEW YORK TIMES a few more than the number of high the teams would be involved with recently ran a story about your pro­ schools in Indiana. We would start other nonconference opponents, for posal for a new NCAA basketball with this number and match teams instance paired more or less geograph­ tournament. What is your plan? up in 64 sectionals around the country ically. My proposal for the NCAA basketball involving eight team tournaments. play-offs isn't really original. Actually, • How would your play-off system • How would teams be matched it is already in use by some states in begin? up? According to states, existing determining state high school cham­ We would start with the 64 eight-team conferences? pions such as in Indiana. Basically, sectionals. A four-game session would the system calls for every team to It would be far more interesting if be played Friday, a two-game session enter in an elimination tournament. state lines or conference lines were not Saturday afternoon with the finals followed in every case. For instance, and consolation games on Saturday {•-,• How would you apply this you wouldn't necessarily want to night formula in determining an NCAA match up six or eight of the Big Ten champion?. teams in one of the sectional play-offs. • Wouldn't that be too much First of all, I'd like to see all NCAA In this case we could follow state basketball in a short space of time for teams—^majors, minors, the smallest lines in order to get a "different look." the winners? and the largest—in one tournament. The same would hold true for the Yes, it is a lot of basketball but not There are over 500 NCAA teams, only Southeastern Conference. Many of too much. It's as fair for one team

58 ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL as for the other. And, if everyone representative teams in basketball but thought it was too much, you could no football teanos at alL schedule four games at convenient Furtherm(x«, look what Southern sites earlier in the week and then Illinois did this past season. And bring four teams into the Friday night remember, this is a team which is session for two games. listed as a small college. All Southern Illinois did was win the NIT tourna­ • What advantage do you see in ment which included such teams as this play for college basketball fans? Duke, Marquette, Syracuse, Rutgers, I like the idea because of the great Providence, and New Mexico. And interest it would give college basket­ during the r^ular season this team ball. Fans would be talking about the beat Louisville, one of the majtM' college tournament in every section of powerhouses, which was ranked na­ the country. With over 500 teams tionally all during the season. Coa- starting off just think of the interest sequently, I think the inclusion of there would be initially. And this small teams is a plus factor, a bonus interest would carry through until which can add a dramatic element the tournament was over. to the play-offs. • What advantages are there for • What would be the financial the players and coaches? arrangements for participating teams? I think every player and every coach Well, let's say each sectional, played would welcome the plan. Right now, in three sessions, was held in a field- if you are a member of a conference house with a 10,000-seat capacity. team and you lose four or five games, That means 30,000 people for each and don't win the conference title, of the 64 sectionals, or a total of your season it over. There's really 1,920,000 fans for the first week of no incentive. But if you had a tourna­ play. At two dollars per person, that ment shot at the end of February or comes to 3.8 million dollars. And early March, the squad wouFd not lose that's not counting possible television its enthusiasm. If you look over the or radio revenue. results of conference play throughout An end-of-the-season tournament for Following the first week you would the country for this past year, I'm all large and small college teams then have 16 four-team tournaments sure you'd find that in more than a is Coach Johnny Dee's proposal for with two games on Friday and two few cases a conference runner-up determining the NCAA basketball games on Saturday. Tha^s 20,000 finished only a game, or half a champion. Currently before the more people for each of the 16 tour­ game behind the winner. In this new Basketball Coaches executive committee, naments, or 320,000 total spectators the plan must receive NCAA at $2.00 each. Based on the 10,000- proposal the runner-up has another membership-wide approval before being chance at a tournament. The classic enacted. seat capacity, which we mentioned, example is the Big Ten. Michigan the total comes close to five million State and Indiana tied for the con­ dollars for the entire tournament ference championship, but Indiana The $7-8,000 each team would get was the Big Ten representative in the for that first week in the tourney NCAA play-offs because of the con­ would be a big help to thdr athletic ference rule which selects the team programs. That's more than some which has been absent from the post­ teams take in during the seascHi. season tournament the longest. Who is to say that Michigan State would • What do you think would be not have been just as fine a repre­ the reaction to this play from other sentative as Indiana, or better. The coaches? new play should decide this. Frankly, I think the coaches would like it Most college coaches came • Wouldn't small colleges be at out of high school systems where this a big disadvantage in this plan? type of play is used. And it would decide once and for all the No. 1 I don't believe so. Actually, this team. Every team in the country would help create greater overall starts off with a chance. interest. Let's say a team like San Diego State would knock out UCLA • Now that you have the detedls in die sectional. Fans would be talk­ worked out, where do you go from ing about that one for years. And, here with your proposal? realistically, it could happen rather I wrote to the chairman of the Basket­ frequently because many small col­ ball Coaches' executive ctxnmittee leges and universities have fine basket­ some weeks ago asking for an op­ ball teams simply because there are portunity to present the plan at the good basketball players for everyone. Coaches' Convention in mid-March. For them, the expense of a basketball The committee will have to decide team is small in comparison to a foot­ whether or not the plan is wtvth ball program. That's the reason why considering and whether or not it schools like Marquette, LaSalle, Loy­ should be presented to the member­ ola, DePauI, Duquesne always have ship.

ALUMNUS MARCH WST APRIL 5» Its doors have been open but three years, but already the Memorial Library- has become a haven. The students come here to study, Iea\ing behind them the distractions of the PhotoiEny nonacademic world. Laying claim to a familiar chair, each surrounds himself with the tools of his trade. Hunched over a desk or sprawled in a chair, each pursues knowledge in his

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ALUMNUS MARCH 1967 APRIL 61 .Mr. Dennis J. Dugan • Dept. of Economics Bbx U .Notre Dame, Ind. 465o6

ALUMNI ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIREQORS

OmCERS THOMAS P. CARNEY '37 HONORARY PRESIDENT AMBROSE F. DUDLEY JR. "43 PRESIDENT JOSEPH H. CAREY "32 VICE-PRESIDENT THOAAAS W. CARROLL '51 VICE-PRESIDENT CHARLES J. PATTERSON M7 VICE-PRESIDENT JAMES E. ARMSTRONG '25 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY JAMES D. COONEY '59 ASSISTANT ALUMNI SECRCTARY

DIRECTORS TO 1968 JOSEPH H. CAREY '32 NOMINATIONS RELIGION AND CITIZENSHIP 19965 BRIARCLIFF DETROIT, MICH. 48221 THOMAS W. CARROLL '51 NOMINATIONS PUCEMENT 214 V/. 20th HUTCHINSON, KAN. 67501 AMBROSE F. DUDLEY JR. '43 EXECUTIVE 519 SUSSEX RD. WYNNEV/OOD, PA. 19096 CHARLES J. PATTERSON '47 ACADEMIC AFFAIRS CONTINUING EDUCATION 73 MT. WAYTE AVE. FRAMINGHAM, AAASS. 01702 MAGAZINE STAFF DIRECTORS TO 1969 JAMES E. ARMSTRONG "25 WILLIAM D. KAVANAUGH '27 EDITOR BUDGET JOHN P. THURIN '59 3445 ORDWAY ST.. N.W. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20016 MANAGING EDITOR WILLIAM F. KERWIN JR. '40 DUTE WINSKUNAS ADMISSIONS EDITORIAL ASSISTANT 1108 EMILIEST. BRUCE HARLAN '49 GREEN BAY, WIS. 54301 RICHARD STEVENS "51 RICHARD A. ROSENTHAL '54 PHOTOGRAPHERS PUBLIC RELATIONS AND EDWARD E. HERRAAANN DEVELOPMENT ART CONSULTANT STUDENT AFFAIRS P.O. BOX 200 SOUTH BEND, IND. 46624 LEO V. TURGEON "42 ATHLETIC SUITE 107 CRENSHAW MEDICAL CENTER 3731 STOCKER ST. LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90008

DIRECTORS TO 1970 EDWARD G. CANTWEU "24 700 BINNS BLVD. COLUMBUS, OHIO 43204 EDWARD B. FITZPATRICK '54 5 THE AAAPLES ROSLYN ESTATES, N.Y. 11576 JOHN J. REIDY '27 NOTRE DAME 11850EDGEWATERDR. UKEWOOD, OHIO 44107 LEONARD H. SKOGLUND '38 426 DOVER AVE. ,11111^ LAGRANGE PARK, ILL. 60525 a