(Reprint: This column appeared in 62 newspapers nationwide.) SAINT JOHN'S St. John's: the good small college COLLEGEVILLE, MN. 56321 SUMMER, 1977 by Nick Thimmesch Los Angeles Times Syndicate, Aug. 2, 1977

COLLEGEVILLE, MINN. - A few years back, many locking their doors at night." There is more of the "bon private colleges, nearly all "small," were in crisis. En­ vivant" than the monastic in the Benedictines. rollments had plummeted, budgets had gone red and In one instance, they operate an impressive data monster state universities threatened to eat up small center equipped with the latest computers. And yet they schools like so many leftovers. make their own sacramental wine and bake daily 1,000 Academia is healthier now. The small schools which of the best-tasting loaves of grainbread around. For survived the crisis aren't rolling in money, but are doing centuries, Benedictines kept knowledge alive through better. Enrollments are up. A growing number of people quill and parchment labors. Now they dutifully microfilm began appreciating the more personalized attention and thousands of medieval manuscripts in European and state the deeper meaning often rendered at smaller schools. libraries for their Hill Monastic Manuscript Library here. One fine example of this is St. John's University To keep touch with society, St. John's has a national whose excellent reputation was built through the testi­ advisory council of prominent Americans from a dozen mony of its graduates. These word-of-mouth kudos have fields. In recent years, Buckminster Fuller, John Kenneth gotten around to the point that St. John's had to cut off Galbraith, Saul Bellow, Maynard Ferguson, John Denver, applicants for the freshmen class this year. Shana Alexander and Dick Gregory have spoken or ap­ The campus is located on a beautiful 2,400-acre peared here. This fall, a debate series featuring national tract of woodland and lakes in rural Minnesota. That's figures begins, with Socialist Michael Harrington taking good for openers. So are the imaginatively designed on author Bill Buckley on whether the public sector buildings by Hungarian architect Marcel Breuer. More should be expanded in our economy and in society. important, however, is the Benedictine philosophy which St. John's also operates a Center for the Study of pervades campus and classroom. Local Government and was the founder of Minnesota This is not a school which necessarily teaches holi­ Public Radio, which Henry Loomis, president of the ness. Rather, St. John's emphasizes inquiry, a sense of Corporation for Public Broadcasting, describes as the community and facing questions on what values are "flagship for the national system, clearly the country's important. This philosophy is different from the notion best." that the modern university should mirror society in An Institute for Ecumenical and Cultural Research neutral fashion, whatever society's values are at the time. deals with Christian-Jewish relations and provides facili­ To understand the Benedictines is to know they have ties for Protestant, Orthodox, Jewish & Catholic thinkers. been around education for 15 centuries, that while they St. John's, one of the nation's few remaining all­ are worldly like the Jesuits, they do not grab the handles men's schools, will enroll 1,925 students this fall, but of secular power as Jesuits do-a practice which caused expects to reduce enrollment to 1,700 by 1981. Its com­ Jesuits to be expelled from some countries and also pro­ panion school, nearby College of St. Benedict, has 1,600 duce ideologues like Father Robert Drinan of the u.s. female students. Last year, "Johnnies" and "Bennies" Congress. took about half their classes on each other's campus so, Anyway, St. John's admits that it joined the academic in effect, the schools are co-ed. herd in the past decade and let liberal education slip in favor of specialization. But in 1974, St. John's devised There are no athletic scholarships, but St. John's a new plan stressing traditional liberal arts and concluded regularly wins national championships in small college in part that "students should be able to think and write football. clearly" and have "an overview of the cultural and his­ Now St. John's University is neither peerless nor torical context of contemporary society ... " In a word, a a nirvana. It is just one of many private, usually small, college degree should not be designed as a job certificate. colleges which offers a measure of intimacy and diversity But if St. John's poses moral questions in the hope in our higher educational system. that students will apply convictions to life itself, while It cannot be argued that private schools alone are respecting the convictions of others, the school does not the ideal. We need the great state universities, but the avoid the contemporary world. I once heard Benedictines danger is that we might fall into the inevitable trap of sardonically described as "loving their fellow men, but allowing bigness to eliminate smallness. THE GRADUAL NATURE OF DEATH AND DYING

by Fr. Rene McGraw, OSB '58

Saint John's Vol. 17, No.1 Summer, 1977 Message from the Editor: Lee A. Hanley '58 Alumni Executive Director Associate Editor: Thom Woodward '70 Saint John's is published quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer and Fall) by the Office of Communica· The Board of Directors of the National Alumni Association voted tians, St. John's University. Second Class postage at its May meeting to increase the National Board from 14 to 22 members. paid at Collegeville, MN 56321 and additional entry at St. Cloud, MN 56301, granted January 28, Previously there were seven members elected from the ranks of the 1969. alumni and seven ex officio members representing the Alumni Office ALUMNI OFFICERS and University administrative positions. The new Board will include ELECTED ex officio John Rogers '63, President 11 elected and 11 members. Patrick Bresnahan '51, Vice President The purpose for enlarging the Board was to attempt to provide Gregory Melsen '74, Secretory Charles Griffith '67 broader representation for a steadily increasing number of alumni. Randy Holstrom '66 This article rests heavily on the works of Martin Lawrence LuetmN '59 Heidegger, Being and Time; Emmanuel Levinas, Totality Concern had been expressed that the Board was not as chronologically Jerome McCarter '71 representative as it should be and that younger alumni, especially, William McGrann '59 and Infinity; Thomas Mann, Magic Mountain; Leo Tol­ Steven Muggli, Jr. '61 stoy, Death of Ivan Ilych; Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, Death did not have adequate representation. Therefore, three of the elected Paul Umhoefer '57 Robert Welle, Sr. '48 and Dying; and Ernest Becker, The Denial of Death. Board members will be drawn from the ranks of alumni who left EX OFFICIO Abbot John A. Eidensch"nk, DSB '35, Chancellor St. John's during the last ten years. Three will come from alumni Fr. Michael Blecker, OSB, University President who left St. John's more than 20 years ago. The remaining six will Fr. Alan Steichen, OSB '68, Preparatory School Headmaster be of any vintage. Skip Rasmussen, University Vice' President for Two of the new ex officio positions were designed to link the Development Bicycles, track equipment, its physical strength and grace, its weight and height. Fr. Roger Botl, OSB '56, University Alumni camping gear, cross-country skis, YMCA and YWCA National Board more closely to the ranks of alumni. The presidents Executive Director "How do I appear to others?" The adolescent tries Mike Ricci '62, University Annual Fund Director memberships are becoming a growing feature of of the Central Minnesota and Twin Cities chapters are now members Lee A. Hanl"Y '58, Editor, Saint John's to see his/her body as others see it. But during this Jerome Terhaar '48, Past President, National middle-class American life. But a greater and greater of the Board. Because their combined chapters embrace about one-third Alumni Association period of life, a person is rarely aware of the body Tim Scanlan '68, PreSident, Central Minnesota percentage of the people on the bikes, in the track of all alumni, they are in an excellent position to provide true Chapter as it functions. Flu and a cold are about the extent grassroots input. Thom Farnham '72, President, Twin Citi.,. Chapter suits and in the swimming pools are the middle-aged of most of its sicknesses. Appendectomy and ton­ crowd. "Getting into shape," "keeping my body The National Board also lengthened the term of elected alumni silectomy take the body to the hospital, but then members from two to three years. This will provide for a greater INDEX: young," "for good health," "to stay close to my quickly it returns to its normal living situation. The degree of continuity and, the Board hopes, increased effectiveness. Page children"-these are some of the reasons given by opening days of football or volleyball practice make This is an exciting time for the Board. The revised organization THE GRADUAL NATURE the over-30 crowd in explanation for their intense a young person aware of a body which is not with­ activity. But often the bicyclist also pedals to hide and enthusiasm of its current membership give promise of productive OF DEATH AND DYING 1 out its aches and pains. But by and large the func­ from himself his own aging body. The runner has­ activity in the service of alumni everywhere. by Fr. Rene McGraw, tioning of the body is taken for granted. It works, tens to avoid her own feeling of lost possibilities, I am pleased to report that the Board elected new officers at its aSB '58 it runs. The adolescent is undoubtedly conscious of of a missed past that shall never again return. The August meeting. They are John Rogers '63, President; Pat Bresnahan '51, the body, but more as it appears and appeals to swimmer flails his arms and all to avoid the feeling Vice President; and Greg Melsen '74, Secretary. CURRENT others. that at any moment he may no longer be able to do Yet one day serious sickness arises. Some very Roger Botz, OSB CATHOLIC PRIORITIES ..... 4 the laps he has set as his goal. by Archbishop lean ladot real back pains occur, and the doctor tells the patient Alumni Executive Director Counselors and therapists have made us aware that one must learn to live with such things. Even that the middle years of life are sexudly hazardous, KILFENORA REVISITED after the mildest exertion, muscles feel as they did 8 particularly for the male. The reflection that he sees the evening and morning after the first high school by Michael Kernan of himself in a young and attractive woman tells football practices. Tales of people's physical symp­ him that he is yet young and vigorous, that he is still ON THE COVER: toms become fascinating or repulsive-fascinating ST. JOHN'S NEWS NOTES 11 attractive. Often the middle-aged romance is no more In this issue Fr. Rene McGraw, OSB, a professor of philosophy at St. than the self-assurance "1 am not old," "1 am not approaching death." John's, discusses death as a phenomenon that is experienced throughout ALUMNI NEWS NOTES 18 Fr. Rene McGraw, a member of the Philosophy Depart­ life. In this photo by Dan Goede '77, monk-pallbearers carry the body As a child moves into adolescence he becomes ment since 1964, received his doctorate from the Univer­ of their confrere from the church following his funeral. HONOR ROLL ...... Insert strongly conscious of his body, certainly sexually, sity of Paris in 1972. In addition to teaching, he is also but also of its attractive or unattractive character, a faculty resident in a student residence hall.

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t but her feelings reveal something of the world to point of pain. I am helpless before that pain: no because the recital might serve to explain what is possibility is gone forever. Such an admission is her: what matters to her is what she knows. longer is it possible to entertain the illusion that I happening to one's own body or repulsive because frightening. I find it difficult simply to admit that am in control of my life. I am drawn towards death. those possibilities are dead. At this final time, in that shrunken world I the story reminds a person of the fragility of life. of this means that for The adolescent found himself hemmed in by his All have no more possibilities. Nothing is to be done. More and more the body becomes something of most people, the world is expanding, filled with new own psychic, intellectual and moral limitations. Par­ We may weep or get angry or bargain or become which a man or woman is conscious-conscious not possibilities, filled with events and experiences and ents may in addition define some limits: "Be in by depressed. But finally we can do nothing except to only as it appears and appeals to others but also as feelings that are still possibilities for that person. midnight." Peers may circumscribe a person's real­ stare at the death that is in us. We are passive before it works or doesn't work. Even the concern about But one day all that begins to change. The world how the body appears to others changes. This image ity: "You're the class clown." But limits are there. what is to happen. That experience of passivity, of starts to shrink. Possibilities are fewer. All of a sud­ of myself that I detect in another is often little more "Just wait," the adolescent found himself thinking, death has already happened before, in our failures, den, I feel myself alone, individualized until there "until I am on my own." in our lost loves and friendships, in our inability to is little world left around me. People disappear. Few But then new limitations appear. The psychic, do anything about someone else's suffering or death. are left who have shared my struggles, my joys and intellectual and moral limitations are still there. But As Jesus announced to Peter "I tell you most solemn­ disappointments. For many people, this feeling of The man and woman feel on the now the adult has a job and must be there at 8 a.m. ly, when you were young, you put on your own the shrinking of possibilities happens in old age. each day. She is limited in what she seems able to belt and walked where you liked-but when you sidelines with little likelihood that For the poor, the chronically ill, the mentally or accomplish in her work. One day he recognizes that grow old, you will stretch out your hands and some­ physically weak, this narrowing often occurs very that they will be called upon to when he keeps on saying "Oh, I'm going to take one else will put a belt around you and take you early. make any more coaching decisions a year off to travel" or "I intend to start a whole where you would rather not go." (In 21 :18) Death new career" he is fooling no one, not even himself. Could that shrinkage of possibilities not be our then is not what will come at the end, the unexperi­ and even less likelihood that they Quietly, some doors are closed without the person experience of death? Could that not explain the enceable. Death is not even that vicarious experience can get back into the game. noticing. Never will they again open. The body may otherwise curious coupling "Death and Old Age"? I gain as I watch someone I love die. Death, the be in great shape-for a 50-year-old body-but it For old age is often, even economically, accompanied experience of death now, is the Magic of the Moun­ is not a 20-year-old body. The mind may be sharper by an experience of fewer possibilities. Nowhere to tain, where no possibilities any longer exist, where than ever, but there is not enough time to do every­ go. Nothing to do. No one to be with. Could that I am handed over. than a means by which I assure myself that the thing it wants to do. not explain the peculiar terror that seeing the children But into that ultimate loneliness and narrowness, body still functions well, that all the powers are Retirement arrives, just when the person begins leave the home sometimes brings to parents? Is it where we no longer can do anything but wait, a still intact. The mind, the emotions tell the person to feel worthwhile in work. Leisure, such a luxury possible that middle age physical culture is a striving voice may enter, a voice that speaks of peace, a call "you have barely emerged from the cocoon of child­ a year earlier, can now be a heavy burden. The days to keep all possibilities open as long as possible. that asks us to let go of our own possibilities, a hood" and yet at the same time life and the body are now punctuated with few events. The man and Would it be far from the mark to suggest that death word that allows us to say, "Even though I walk in say "like a short-lived butterfly, you are passing woman feel on the sidelines with little likelihood is experienced as we let go of one possibility after the valley of darkness, you are there with your rod away too quickly." What I missed in my adoles­ that they will be called upon to make any more another-peacefully experienced if the new possibil­ and your staff." Possibilities cease: I am helpless, cence, I long to make up now before there is no coaching decisions and even less likelihood that they ities are rewarding and satisfying; painfully experi­ alone, passive, cornered. This is the experience of more possibility. can get back into the game. enced, if no new possibilities appear. death, an experience that is always present as I touch Hundreds of similar experiences tell us the same Friends die. Children move away. Old friends Death individualizes me, because I stand at that my limitations and experience my world shrinking thing. I meet an old friend. For a half-hour, an hour, are less interested in what happens in one's life. No stage without much of a world, more or less alone. to my own individuality. But a voice calls: "Hope maybe even a day we review all the "Remember longer does a person find himself all that excited The pleasant murmur of the people around me grows in Me, put your hand in Mine and I will guide you when" topics and experiences we recall sharing in about his life. What had once been an exploding fainter. The world shrinks from the expanding uni­ through the valley of darkness into the kingdom of the past. But by 10 p.m. we find that the spaces in universe of possibilities-children, work, friendships, verse to one room, perhaps to one bed, even to one light"-this is the hope of Resurrection. D between stories are longer and more awkward. By sexuality-becomes more and more restricted. My midnight when the friend leaves a feeling of relief world, my possibilities, especially if I am poor, are touches me. "I thought he would never leave," I shrinking. say to my wife. "I didn't know how to escape grace­ Part of the problem in this whole process is fully," says myoid friend to his spouse as they our own self-understanding. We have been accus­ settle into their car. There it is again. The friendship tomed to the praise of rugged individualism, of the was no longer a possibility. A good memory, but self-made man and woman. "Go west, young man" dead. Nothing remains. The body is changing. Friend­ describes more than our "manifest destiny" or our C'mon home!! ships are evaporating. A number of the things I own national Shangri-La. "Anyone can be President remember as sacred from my youth now leave me in the United States if he wants to badly enough." cold. Everything changes, nothing is the same. As patently untrue as that statement is, we find ourselves accepting it. The paradigm of the human Tentative Schedule is the individual who stands on his/her own. September 24 But suppose a person looks at experience again. What has happened? The old 11 a.m. Homecoming Mass possibilities are no longer there. The old friendships A girl begins to identify herself in terms not only 11 :30 a.m. Lunch, lawn in front of Great Hall are gone and are revived only with great difficulty. of her own body, but in relationship to the world The good God of my adolescence no longer speaks around her, what her parents expect their daughter 1 :30 p.m. Football vs. St. Thomas in the same way. The odors and tastes of the past to be, what games a girl is expected to be interested 4 p.m. Reception - Social Hour, occasionally recur, but briefly and then are gone. in. "Who is she?" She is the whole world around Great Hall, Alumni Lounge The tasks I set in my youth are still undone. Elab­ her: the people-parents, playmates, school com­ 5 p.m. Student Mass orately I construct defenses: "I shall do that later." panions i the geography i the social environment. Later 6 p.m. Dinner "I'll learn Spanish next year." "I'll take up the piano on she will be identified by the way she works in 8 p.m. Parish Mass again sometime." "I'll read more books later." At the classroom, in her family, in her profession, in 8 p.m. Dance, Old Gym the deepest level of my psyche I know this is not her love, in her religion. She does not know some­ true, but I can't quite face the fact that this or that thing and then get a feeling inside of her about it, Saint 3 2 Saint ! l Thomas Merton and Rene Voillaume, ,through St, CURRENT B d St T f Avila St, IgnatlUs have aI- ernar, " ere sa 0, 'b tween the action of ways cautioned us to dIscern e , , CATHOLIC the Spirit of God and the action of othe~ spmts: one ,sown 1'11' USIOns; the pressure of, education, , cul- PRIORITIES t ure, SOCle' t y an d wor; k the magnetic attractionf h 'I of a psyc h opath 1C' 1ea d er, the temptations 0 tb e eVI one, d "t'es today must e to stu y O ne 0 f our pnon 1 d' f by Archbishop Jean Jadot d d I k' dels for the 1scernment 0 an" eve op ~or m? mo , ' d acce ted im or­ Apostolic Delegate to the United States spmts, The mcreasmg actiVIty an I' , P h IP f f iritua Ity m sc 00 s 0 tance 0 f t h e d epartment 0 sp I h h h' h religious studies are signs of hea t y, ?rowt w lC I applaud, Indeed, the renewal of spmtual theology is crucial. , I n a dd 1't' lon, d oc t'nne has to be continuallyd d bI com- ' t d ' that is un erstan a e to mumca e m a manner , th 20th C t The following message was presented to the persons with consciences formed m ,e , ~n ury, St, John's community on the occasion of the presen­ It should blend the evangelical WIth tradlt~on m tation of the Pax Christi award to Archbishop Jadot, light of recent developments in psychdOlog~ soc~ologl' es science and related fields, BoW °h octdnnte 1ft mto, our I'lvmg, , our carryln' gout t e man a e 0 Christ?· , f My good, friends: in line with an article by Michael Simpson published Although time does not allow an extensl,on 0 As I receive the Pax Christi Award today, I in the London Tablet of May 28, 1977, Permit me m remarks on the Charismatic Church, I ~lsh to have feelings of humble appreciation, The humility to quote him briefly: mSIst, y, on t h e opportuneness of strengthemng our, , arises from the personal aspect of the distinction, "Theology today needs to complement the valid faith in the institutional Church, T~e f Holy S~I~lt however minimal that might be, To be identified insight that the Church is a continuation of the gathers in Christ from age to age and k:om ;as thO with the "Peace of Christ" is a goal of the reflective mystery of the incarnation of Christ with the west a people of priests, prophetIS a~ G l~g~ or e Christian, The list of past recipients documents this further insight that the Church is constituted by glory of the Father, The Peop e 0 0 IS ~ot a e It is a commumty of fact, Thus, the honor touches one deeply, the anointing of the Spirit, the very same anoint­ Ioose b on d 0 f h ope an,d lov d b h While I am personally grateful, greater appre­ ing which Jesus Himself received and promised faith founded on the apostles, and consecrate y t e ciation comes from the obvious fact that the award to hand on to his disciples," sacraments, " ' the l'nstitutlOnal Church WIth is given primarily because of my present respon­ Vatican II provided a strong impetus to this W eave h t 0 VIew . th , Words and sacred actions, sibility, As such, it is a recognition of the achieve­ emphasis on the Holy Spirit, focusing more sharply e eyes 0 f b eI levers, I h 1 f h Archbishop Jean Jadot ments of Pope Paul VI, whom I represent in the a traditional teaching of the Church, ord alne' d mInIS"t ers, serve as specia, c anne sot1 l'f e United States, and his quest for world peace, His Moreover, even though theologians of the Latin S pIn' 't , th e 1"1vmg W a t er Wh1' ch spnngsCh to 'eterna d 1 h e, Kingdom cannot avoid borrowing the elements unrelenting devotion to the peace of Jesus is high­ Church have historically not placed heavy stress on There IS' a pro f oun d I'm k between nst an t e of human culture or cultures, Though independ­ lighted by the day he initiated-the World Day of this aspect of the mystery of the Church, theologians institutional Church: , ent of cultures, the Gospel and evangelization are Prayer for Peace, It is celebrated, when possible, "It' t '1 ftf to recall thIS fact when we of the Eastern churches have consistently emphasized IS cer am y 1, mg I' ing to love Christ not necessarily incompatible with them; rather on New Year's Day, thereby exemplifying the prior­ the mission of the Holy Spirit in the Christian com­ hear people contmually c alrr: ' they are capable of permeating them all without ity of peace in the mind of the Holy Father along munity, but without the Church, to hsten, to Chnst ~ut becoming subject to any of them," (Evangelium Ch h t belong to Chnst but outSIde with the many similar initiatives he has undertaken The Charismatic movement, just as the Cursillo no t the urc, 0 , d' P P 1 Nuntiandi, Pope Paul VI) in the last 14 years, the Church," (Evangelium Nuntlan I, ope au movement, Marriage Encounter, Search, directed re­ Pluralism encourages a healthy sensitivity to I thank Fr. Michael Blecker, the faculty and treats as well as the upsurge of the general retreat VI) different psychologies, social organizations and to Jesus very succinctly taught this notion when students of the University as well as Abbot John movement, is like an iceberg: what is seen above unique cultures progressively developed over the and the entire St, John's Community for the thought­ the water is perhaps only one-third of the total ice he said to His Apostles: "Anyone who rejects yOU rejects me," (Luke centuries, It is a reality deeply woven into the con­ fulness of this cherished honor, I pray that it will mass, Today, more and more of the faithful are text of our own society, The many ethnic groups inspire me to intensify my concern for peace and consciously discovering that it is the Holy Spirit 10:16) justifiably demand the freedom and authority that for social justice, national and international. who establishes our communion with God, It is He ought to be theirs, From the American Indian to who gives us a personal knowledge of God and his The second religious prior­ the Vietnamese refugee, peoples desire to preserve Jove for us, As Michael Simpson relates: ity which I would like to cite is the importan~e of and nurture what has become so much a part of It is my intention this even­ "The renewal of the Church in the power and their identity, I I, 'th l'f f the Church, By pluralIsm I ing to share with you some reflections on what I love of the Spirit is not a matter of like and dis­ p ura Ism mel eo, d 1 ' consider to be three religious priorities for our time, mean dIverSI' 't' y m um't y: r eal diverSIty anh' rea umty, One example of cultural heritage pertinent to like, It is a matter of obedience to God and of , h' landmark ex ortatIon on. our era is a respect for the black American heritage, The order of treatment does not necessarily reflect P ope P auI m IS 'f h living the full message of the Gospel revealed " d d h proclamation 0 t e Under oppression, this people has fashioned a gen­ the order of significance, in His Son," EvangehzatIOn regar e t e h h 1 f , wit t e renewa 0 ius which demonstrated that the human spirit can To many perceptive observers, it seems as Gospel as bemg synonymoUS , A Church living under the explicit guidance of never be crushed, Their song, their solidarity, their though we are moving toward a more Charismatic h umam't y, It regenera t es l'ndl'vidualsL m d'each culture, the Holy Spirit is in need of discernment. Paul in faith, their non-violence, their prayer, their dance, Church, I admit the ambiguous nature of this affir­ making them new and close to the ~r , his Epistles is most emphatic on this necessity, The their shouts for freedom merit preservation in mation, The sense of the term I wish to convey is "Never th e 1 ess, thelf K'ngdom whIch the Gospel dl Catholic mystics, from the Fathers of the Desert to 1 ' '1' d b men who are pro oun y breathing souls, Equality does not involve either proc alms IS Ive y 'ld' f h destruction or uniformity, It requires of the Church 4 linked to a culture, and the bUl mg up 0 t e Saint 5 care, understanding and a willingness to risk being who serve at the head of every segment of the less efficient, being misunderstood, being the scene People of God. ... we need to learn to accept and appreciate differences in life style, of tension. logic, criteria of beauty, emotions. Other sub-cultural groups also flourish in our The third religious priority society begging for attention and service. They might which I consider to be important is social and inter­ be based on age: teenagers, senior citizens, the in­ national justice. capacitated very old. They might be formed around corporations, governments. The victims are the poor, sary to support political leaders in the hard decisions The 1971 Synod of Bishops clearly stated the a mentality: progressive, moderate or conservative. the little ones, everywhere. they have to make about the world economy; it is Church's irreversible commitment to social justice: Geography, work, sex, political affiliation, recrea­ Gifted with an insight on the limitations of necessary to reduce comfort and to avoid waste in tion are other reasons bringing people together in II Action on behalf of justice and participation in property, Christians living in America can be very order to render the due share of our wealth to the groups with unique characteristics. the transformation of the world fully appear to influential in bringing about a proper understanding poorer countries. The respect for diversity is, I suggest, particu­ us as a constitutive dimension of the preaching and use of earthly possessions. To lead others to Justice IS tied to holiness and to self-denial. larly difficult for us whites, heirs of the Anglo-Saxon, of the Gospet or, in other words, of the Church's responsible stewardship is a significant contribution We have been blessed with wealth and goods beyond Greco-Latin cultural traditions. Our education, for mission for the redemption of the human race to justice, to peace. measure. Let these possessions be transformed by the most part, has led us to believe that we stand and its liberation from every oppressive situa­ There is one facet of the misuse of property our magnanimity. Let them remold our trust in God's as the normal persons in the world. What is good tion." (Justice in the World, 1971 Synod of prominent in this great country which is frequently gracious providence. Wealth, in any of its forms, for us is good for everyone. In the global society, Bishops, Introduction) overlooked. It is waste: waste of food, of water, of is ours only in its use. How we use it designates in reality a very limited spaceship, we need to learn Striving for justice is an integral part of the minerals, and more seriously of energy. greatness. Moreover, it reveals our faith, a faith to accept and appreciate differences in life style, Christian life. Pope Paul specified the neighbor Justice involves a series of imperatives: it is that does justice. logic, criteria of beauty, emotions. In addition, in whom we should approach with the liberating news necessary to teach social justice; it is necessary to "Not on bread alone is man to live but on every the Church, diversity is not only due to social con­ of the Gospel: provide objective information about hunger, disease, utterance that comes from the mouth of God." ditions. It is the work of the Spirit Himself who "It is impossible to accept that in evangelization ignorance, unemployment in the world; it is neces- (Matthew 4:4) 0 endows us with His gifts. one could or should ignore the importance of liThe manifestation of the Spirit is given to the problems so much discussed today, concern­ everyone for profit, for the renewal and building ing justice, liberation, development and peace in up of the Church." (1 Cor. 12:7) the world. This would be to forget the lesson The pluralism which I advocate is also rooted which comes to us from the gospel concerning in unity. The Apostle Paul again provides the key love of our neighbor who is suffering and in PAX CHRISTI! to understanding what may seem enigmatic if not need." (Evangelium Nuntiandi, Pope Paul VI, contradictory: "Preserve the Unity of the Spirit in #31) The Rule of our Holy Father Benedict prompts those especially its section on dialogue which states: "before the bond of peace." The more concerned we are for The prophetic role of the Church is not easy. who follow his way of life-a life modeled after that of speaking, it is necessary to listen, not only to a man's upholding the diversity of humankind, the more con­ How many of our sisters and brothers have died in the Apostles-to deny themselves and be of service to voice, but to his heart. In the very act of trying to make cerned must we become for unity. the last year alone because they were hungry for others. Born in 1909 to a prominent Belgian family of ourselves pastors, fathers and teachers of men, we must justice. For a person to challenge abusive authority, engineers, you, Archbishop Jean Jadot, gave up a prom­ make ourselves their brothers. The spirit of dialogue Unity is achieved by the bond of peace. Peace ising career for a life of service in the priesthood, the is friendship; even more, it is service." is possible only when we dialogue, exchange, share to insist on justice for the poor and the weak, is vocation to which you were ordained in 1934. You do not talk about dialogue, Archbishop Jadot, with one another. Dialogue has two dimensions: lonely, taxing and frequently painful. Merely re­ Your continuing response to the call of the Spirit you dialogue. You do not save action for formal occa­ listening and speaking. Many of us speak too much sisting complacency, rationalization and self-right­ has provided you with a variety of experiences which eousness demands both vision and compassion. sions, you move informally. Your desire to learn, to listen and fail to listen sufficiently. Yet we sometimes have been excellent preparation for your present task of and to understand and your ability to discover new neglect to speak when we should, frightened perhaps Ten years ago, Pope Paul made a remarkable strengthening the bond between the local churches and avenues of service to expand the Kingdom of God among to share. contribution to the Church's teaching on social ques­ the Holy See in a time of rapid change. Yours is a men bring to your office the spirit of hope which was commitment to bring about communication-communion Peace becomes real when order prevails. Given tions with the publication of the encyclical Popu­ embodied in the Second Vatican Council. lorum Progressio. Insisting that the right to property -between those who share the hope, the love and the human nature, all communities-even those rooted Your experience in a variety of cultures has made was conditioned, seemed revolutionary at the time: faith of Jesus Christ. in a deep communion of mind and heart, require a Your service to the Universal Church and the Holy you sensitive to the diversity of cultures within American minimum of regulations. Social life does not come "The earth belongs to all, not to the rich. These Father has been distinguished in a wide range of pastoral Catholicism. What others may perceive as tensions in about without concern for guidelines, for laws. Di­ words declare that private ownership confers on experience as pastor, university chaplain, military chap­ the American Church, you view as fundamental signs of versity has to be protected against particularism by no one a supreme and unconditioned right. No lain in and the Belgian Congo and national life, growth and hope. You have resisted cultural reduc­ common legislation where applicable. In turn, peace .. one is allowed to set aside solely for his own director of the Propagation of the Faith in Belgium. tionism which would seek to impose a single cultural legislation, order are ineffectual without some form advantage possessions which exceed his needs, In 1968 you were appointed Titular Bishop of Zuri pattern on all. of authority. And there is no authority without the necessities of life. Briefly, according to the and, from 1968 to 1971, you served as Pro-Nuncio Apos­ As an educational institution we are grateful for obedience. traditional teaching of the Fathers of the Church tolic in Buddhist ; Apostolic Delegate to Buddhist your commitment to scholarship and learning, a com­ , Muslim Malaysia and largely agnostic Singapore. I realize I am unearthing many intricate prob­ and of the outstanding theologians, the right of mitment which earned for you a doctoral degree in ownership is never to be used to the detriment You then served as Pro-Nuncio Apostolic in the Cam­ philosophy from the University of Louvain. lems with a few words. Again time is short. Its eroons and and Apostolic Delegate in Equatorial of the common good." (Populorum Progressio, scarcity prohibits an exhaustive examination of these Guinea before you arrived in Washington, D.C., on July Because of your pastoral presence as representative questions. Permit me only to re-state a deeply held Pope Paul VC #23) 12, 1973, to assume your current responsibility as Apos-· of the Holy Father to the Church in our country; because conviction that in our concern for diversity, we need Today's world situation manifests the foresight tolic Delegate to the United States of America. All of of your emphasis on informed communication; because to nourish an attention for those values which make of the Holy Father. Many social problems originate your assignments have given witness to and intensified of your Christ-like acceptance of diversity; because of the bond of peace possible. In particular, I mean from the mal-distribution of property. It could be your concern for the welfare of aU men and your service your personal emphasis on matters of the heart; and legislation-which for most of us is canon law. I money or land. It could be commodities: food, fuel, to and eagerness to learn from all persons who are the because of your love of learning we, the Saint John's mean authority, which is manifested in the Apostolic minerals, water. It could be resources whether cul­ Church. community, are honored by your presence among us Ministry. I mean obediencl} which is reverence to tural or scientific: education, technology, commu­ Your service to this country has been strongly today and present to you this twenty-seventh day of June, marked by the Holy Father's encyclical, Ecclesiam Suam, 1977, the Pax Christi Award. Our Lord who is present in our sisters and brothers nications, organization. The owners are individuals, KILFENORA REVISITED

by Michael Kernan (Reprinted from The Washington Post)

Arlene Hynes, center, with, from left, Brigid, Hilary, Christopher, T. More, Denis and Patrick. (Washington Post photo) 1:eir people came from "It's a cliche, but they were hippies before their Kilfenora, County Clare, in Ireland. Their farm in time," said their son Thomas More Hynes. doctor told him he'd had a stroke. He retired after hadn't opened our presents yet") grew less formal. Minnesota had the same name. Emerson Hynes '37 1959. Eugene McCarthy was elected Senator, McCarthy lost the presidential nomination. Then he Emerson had been the family's great organizer. and his wife, Arlene, considered themselves academ­ called on his old college friend (and best man at his had another stroke. And his seventh child, Michael, • Arlene discovered bibliotherapy. ics, but there was more to it than that: Hours before wedding) to come to Washington as his legislative drowned at 18 in the Potomac. "It began with some drug therapy I was asked he went off to teach sociology and ethics at St. John's assistant, to turn his back on a 20-year academic "It broke his heart," said Hilary. "He aged 20 to do at the hospital, and I got interested in therapy University in Collegeville, he was up to milk the career. years." through reading, something like poetry therapy. cows, and long after he got back he was puttering "Dad called us all to the table and asked our A month after Michael died, his mother went There was no place to train for it, so I taught myself. around the house he had built himself. opinions. Only Patrick didn't want to go. The rest to work in the library at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, I started running classes in the evenings with maybe He was one of 10 children; so was she. And of us were all for it." making use of her old degree in library science. seven people, training librarians in the techniques." they had ... 10 children. Patrick was to become a Senate page and spend Emerson urged her on, "as though he knew some­ This year she has four trainees who come to "Every night, we all got 30 seconds of loving more time on the Hill than anyone else. He is now thing." A few months later, in July 1971, he died her after a day's work. About 100 patients a week each," said their daughter Mary Hynes-Berry. "They assistant secretary for the majority in the Senate. at 56. do the therapy, reading stories or poems, discussing used to joke that if it was any longer, they'd be at "Actually," Arlene said, "moving here was the their feelings, perhaps writing responses of their own. it all night. But any time anyone of us was de­ low point for me. We'd been in a safe community Robert Frost, Denise Levertov, Langston Hughes. Changes: pressed or needed some special time, she would take where we could let the children go. Children need to "It has to be stuff they can relate to, stuff that us on her lap. There were six of us under 6 at the be free. We came to Arlington and they couldn't • "My father always handled the discipline problems." T. More said, "and when Arlene had appeals to their own basic human experiences. What time." climb trees or roam around. We didn't know our happens is that the patients learn to open up to each If Arlene got off her day's schedule by as much neighbors. I didn't bake a cake for the new people to do it she was lousy. We all agreed on that. My father would hold you by the forelock and say, 'What other, and also they get self-affirmation from the as 20 minutes, it could blow the whole day. She when they moved in-I didn't even know who they material, they respond to it in their own ways." learned not to try to make it up but to flow with it. were. It was all so impersonal." did you do wrong?' It was hard. Because you knew She hopes to get an MA in bibliotherapy. When Progressive Catholics, the Hyneses were active The move proved a watershed for the Hynes it. You, knew you were wrong, but sometimes it . she started work in 1971, the room she worked in in the Catholic Worker movement and the Agrarian children. The older ones compared everything to the would taKe you 15, 20 minutes to admit it. You consisted mainly of books piled on the floor. It was Society. Arlene became chairwoman of the National farm in Minnesota; the younger ones saw those days couldn't get out of it. But it was better than being the former morgue. It had a skylight, like most Council of Catholic Women, wrote magazine articles, as a kind of Eden, remote and mythic. shut in your room where you could sulk and blame morgues and artists' studios. papers. Something was always going on at the farm: One Sunday in 1968 Emerson Hynes woke up everything on somebody else." They tried solar energy, tried to build with rammed to find he couldn't speak very well. He slurred the • The daily work charts got sloppy. The Christ­ 'Tve just turned 60," said Arlene Hynes. 'Tm earth. But no bank loans. reading from the Breviary. The children giggled. The mas rituals, the one-at-a-time gift opening ("the kids delighted." Her identical twin in Houston has six we knew couldn't believe it was after noon and we children. Children, you might say, run in the family. 3 Saint Saint 9 The first six Hynes kids came in six years. happy to see them live. Nobody's rich, nobody's Denis '64 was born in 1942. He is a lawyer for the written a famous book. But that's not what matters. ST. JOHN'S Federal Trade Commission. Put himself through law school. Two children. Patrick, also in Washington, also has two. Mary, married to a British nuclear Few of the children have NEWS REVIEW physicist, lives in Chicago, has a Ph.D. in English. remained as strictly Catholic as their parents ("I Chaucer. She has four boys. Hilary went through don't go to mass regularly, but I never considered Mellon Foundation grants $120,000 four years of art school on a full scholarship, tried myself anything but Catholic"). They were raised to live on his art, wound up (very skinny) as a on family ritual. Each child had a special individual for manuscript microfilm cataloguing painting conservationist and restorer. Brigid Hynes­ prayer. The parents even wrote a booklet on Lent Cherin, a lawyer for the Department of Transporta­ in the home. St. John's University President Michael Blecker, OSB, has an­ tion, put herself through law school at night. Peter "We all have a profound sense of transcend­ nounced a grant of $121,000 from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation is a carpenter, building houses in Austin, Tex. One ence," said Mary. "The rituals are supporting and for the Hill Monastic Manuscript Library (HMML). son. meaningful to us. I think our closeness was a healing, The funds will be used during the next three years to hasten the Then a three-year gap to T. More, who has a rich experience. I couldn't be at my father's funeral cataloguing of thousands of medieval manuscripts held in microfilm picture framing business; Timothy, a writer-artist in because I'd just had a baby, and that made his death at the Hill Library here. The manuscripts were photographed by St. a Califonia commune; Christopher, age 20, at home, much harder to cope with than my brother's. The John's film teams during the last decade in Austria, Spain, Malta and., studying music theory and art at Northern Virginia older kids got this strong sense of the importance of Ethiopia. faith and a sense of Catholicism based on love and "All of us at St. John's were happy to learn of the Mellon Founda­ mutual respect and the absolute priority of human tion grant," Fr. Michael said. "It provides money where we need it dignity." to make the holdings of HMML more useful to scholars around the Arlene herself noted the division They used to line up in two groups and read world as rapidly as possible. the Psalms responsively. They had candles in Advent, "HMML is being recognized increasingly as a national resource among her children, the older ones lived in the liturgical year from week to week. for medieval study," Fr. Michael continued. "Here, under one roof, is "more old-fashioned," reflecting the Church rituals became their own family ceremonies. a unique collection, for nowhere else in the world are these manuscript "All that became more difficult when we went collections available en bloc for the use of students and scholars alike. values of their parents, achieving to the suburbs," said Hilary. "The glue wasn't there. "During the first few years of development, we focused our atten­ academically, and the younger ones Still, when my father died it didn't just stop, the tion on the filming program abroad because of the urgency to film values were passed on. That was the thing, our priceless manuscripts which are constantly threatened by loss, theft, breaking away though not by any parents gave us each a tremendous sense of self." damage or destruction. As a result, we have a tremendous backlog of means dropping out. They used to have a '57 Pontiac station wagon microfilmed collections which have not been catalogued, and uncat­ named The Whale, and once all 12 of them drove alogued holdings are virtually useless for scholarly research. We are to Houston. It took three days. now confident that we will be able to speed up our cataloguing work They used to have a paper route that they and we look to the time when our professional cataloguers will be able Community College. The youngest, including Mi­ handed down from one kid to another. It was in the to keep pace with the film teams which continue to film abroad." chael, are referred to as The Four Little Boys. family six years. According to Fr. Michael, the Mellon grant will be used for the "I could live to be 94," said T. More, "but I'll Some broke away early. Brigid left home at 18 salaries of professional cataloguers; for the purchase of published cat­ still be one of The Four Little Boys." to be a nurse, quit that, went to night school, took alogues of paleographic works, manuscript art and illumination; and He and Tim used to fight a lot (the family called city planning, went into transportation, rose to GS-12 for publishing and distributing a catalogue of HMML holdings. them TNT), and generally the younger ones were with DOT, when to law school nights after her full­ The Foundation also stipulated that the grant may be used to rowdy at school. time job. Hilary rebelled against his father, giving fulfill matching requirements to qualify HMML for additional funding "I had a terrible attitude to education," said them both an unpleasant year or two, but they got from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Hilary. "I got nothing from school. Tried to work together again. "Our father never drew the lines. as an apprentice. Finally landed at the Corcoran. I He never burned the bridges." think the big contribution of my generation was The Hynes family tends to swallow people up Four profs receive National Endowment restoring crafts as a valued alternative way of life." like a friendly fire storm. The in-laws-all of them Arlene herself noted the division among her achievers, film maker, physicist, sociologist, teacher, summer-study fellowships children, the older ones "more old-fashioned," re­ architect-seem to enjoy this. One husband said Four St. John's University professors are participating in summer flecting the values of their parents, achieving aca­ that if he weren't already an honorary Hynes com­ seminars sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities Ortmayer Running demically, and the younger ones breaking away plete with hyphenated name, he'd marry Arlene in (NEH). They are among 26 Minnesota educators selected for par­ though not by any means dropping out. a minute. "1 don't see them so much as achievers," she Every time the Hyneses meet, it's a party. They ticipation. In its fifth year, the NEH summer program has 1,259 participants said, "but as good people living the kind of life I'm aren't a family, they're a gestalt. 0 selected from throughout the United States. St. John's faculty participating are Dr. Louis Ortmayer of the government department, studying business in the history of American society at the University of California, Berkeley; Dr. Thorpe Running, Spanish, society and solitude in Hispanic literature at the University of Oregon; the Rev. Hugh Witzmann, OSB, art, "From Michelangelo to Bernini" at Columbia University; and Dr. Khalil Nakhleh, sociology, "Intellectuals and 20th Century Revolutions" at Washington University in St. Louis. Fr. Hugh Nakhleh Visiting Committee

The newly-appointed St. John's Visiting Committee conducted its first meeting at St. John's on June 10, 11 and 12. The Committee will be charged with advising the faculty and administration as work continues to revise and strengthen the Liberal Studies Program.

Visiting Committee members not pic­ tured: Benjamin Nelson, New School of Social Research; John E. Brandl, School of Public Affairs, University of Minne­ sota; and Paul Ramsey, Department of Religion, Princeton University.

Harold J. Hanham (Chairman) Maryann Schall Dean, Board of Regents 1:: School of Humanities and Social Science St. John's University o Massachusetts Institute of Technology 0. (I) 0::

-

James J. Nordlund '61 School of Medicine Yale University

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.. c: .r:. o J +' Regina M. M. Kyle Maurice B. Mitchell John T. Noonan, Jr. Director of Program Development Chancellor University of California Law School c: Association of American Colleges University of Denver -- Berkeley l\1 Saint (f) ST. JOHN'S UNNERSITY Non-Profit St. John's considering incinerator COLLEGEVILLE I MN 56321 Organization to convert garbage to energy Bulk Rate U. S. Postage A proposal to set up a garbage-burning incinerator to generate PAID heat has been presented by St. John's University to the Tri-County Permit No.1 Solid Waste Committee in St. Cloud.

Collegeville I Mn St. John's is currently considering installing a heat recovery in­ cinerator that would burn 30 or more tons of garbage a day. "You can get as much energy out of garbage as anything we know of," says Fr. Gordon Tavis, OSB, prior of St. John's Abbey and head of the University's energy conservation committee, "and you don't waste energy doing it." The concept has been endorsed by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and the u.s. Environmental Protection Agency, he reports. Fr. Gordon will meet with Stearns County officials in August to get approval for the project. The heat recovery incinerator could save $100,000 a year with the University burning a fourth less coal. Reduced garbage hauling would result in additional savings.

Forum series launched to review current issues, reward scholarship St. John's will inaugurate a new academic program this fall which has among its primary purposes the rewarding of academic achievement. Dr. James Murphy, acting chairman of the new "Congress of St. John's University and the College of St. Benedict," explained that through study and debate The Congress "seeks to inspire academic effort and to aid its members in attaining the intellectual craftsmanship needed to understand and confront the complex issues facing society today." Student members of The Congress will be nominated by the Buckley faculty. To attain its goals, The Congress will sponsor The Forum, a series of debates patterned after those conducted within the Cambridge Union Society of England. The initial Forum presentation is scheduled for October 13 and will feature commentator William F. Buckley and sociologist Michael Harrington debating the question: "The public sector should be expanded in our economy and in society." On Novem­ ber 17, Estelle Ramey and Judith Bardwick will debate the question: "There are no innate differences between men and women beyond the sexual function." Additional Forums for this academic year will be announced later. We need your active participation The Forum will be structured to enable four members of the Con­ gress-two pro, two con-to debate the question prior to the presenta­ tions by the major proponent and opponent. During the debate, mem­ as members of Saint John's community. bers of The Congress may ask questions or make a point. Students will also have an opportunity to offer additional information following Let me assure you that Saint John's the featured presentations. Members of The Congress will then vote to decide a winner. Forums will be open to the public, and there will will continue to strive to be be an admission charge. Dr. Murphy, a professor in St. John's Government Department, worthy of your support. noted that the name "Congress" reflects "some degree of reverence for the national legislative chamber and the open exchange of ideas." Harrington

SJU President M ichaelBlecker, aSB 13 National Advisory Council endorses Institutional Guidelines at June meeting

St. John's University National Advisory Council, in its third annual I meeting this summer, endorsed St. John's Institutional Guidelines 1979-84. A condensed version of the Guidelines outlining long-range I University goals was published in the recent "President's Report 1976." Agenda of the two-day session was developed around five ques­ I tions related to the planning guide: whether the Benedictine character II of the University demands certain behavioral norms; whether con­ tinued cooperation with the College of St. Benedict is the best way of achieving coeducation; how the liberal studies program should be implemented; what rate of spending and saving is appropriate; and whether the Guidelines adequately reflect energy problems. The council agreed that no management objective can be more important than enhancing the relationship between St. John's Abbey and the University. Tom Joyce '60, council chairman, in his report of Thomas Joyce, Chairman the meeting to the SJU Board of Regents, noted the atmosphere created John E. Brandl Michael J. Cullen Harriet Matschullat by the physical setting of the Abbey Church in the midst of a campus of woods and lakes; the educational impact of the example given University students by the monks striving to live holy lives in com­ munity; and the "classic Benedictine elements of worship and work." "An interesting common aspect of these elements," he wrote, "is that they are not a system of ideas but, rather, a place and a life style. One can slowly absorb the sense of the place by just being here. One can only fully benefit from the life style, however, if one participates in it. Thus it follows that the elements of Benedictine character can only be fully realized in the University if the students share the life of the Abbey.... Every attention must be given to enhancing the relationship between monastery and the school." On coeducation, the consensus was that the best education for men and women to be offered at St. John's and St. Benedict's can be achieved if each continues as a single-sex college with well coordinated and integrated educational programs. While the group did not take a position on the Liberal Studies Program and Freshmen Colloquium, they did endorse the general direc­ tion in which the programs pointed. S. Joan Bland Additional discussion centered on University fiscal surplus and Robert L. Shafer John E. Reilly Abbot Jerome Hanus, OSB, its use for either current operations or in a debt service reserve and on future energy problems; no formal action was taken. The Guidelines were formulated within demographics including continuing inflation and a decline in the number of college age students that could cause a drop in SJU student population. Members of the Council expressed approval of the University administration for its foresight and prudence in developing the long­ range plans. New members joining the council this summer are Prof. Henry Bent from North Carolina State Univ.; Dr. Edgar Carlson, dean of students at Luther Theological Seminary in St. Paul; Abbot Jerome Hanus, OSB, of Conception (Mo.) Abbey; Jane Wolford Hughes from the Institute of Continuing Education in Detroit; Harriet Matschullat from Edina; the Rev. Michael J. Sheehan from Holy Trinity Seminary in Irving, Tex.; and writer Nicholas Thimmesch. In conjunction with the National Advisory Council session was a meeting of the "Visiting Committee" of academic specialists who examined the advantages and disadvantages of teaching at SJU and other related topics. William Ball Richard]. Fisher S. Ann Ida Gannon Henry Bent June meeting participants not pictured: John Neimeyer, Leon Cook and Wallace Tintes. 15 26 Soccer - St. Mary's - Home - 3:30 p.m. Graduate School enrollment sets record Voice recital - Axel Theimer - Main Auditorium - 8 p.m. 29 Football at Gustavus - 1 :30 p.m. In its twentieth session, the St. John's University Graduate School Cross Country - MIAC Championships at St. Paul of Theology summer program had its largest enrollment ever this year. NOVEMBER Sister Mary Anthony Wagner, OsB, dean, announced that 220 stu­ dents enrolled for the June 16 - July 29 term. Last year, 192 students 5 Football - St. Olaf - Home - 1 :30 p.m. 8-9 National College Fair (Admissions) Washington, DC - St. John's will were enrolled. represent SIU and CSB. Summer faculty members included Dr. Christiane Brusselmans 15-16 National College Fair (Admissions) St. Louis - College of St. Benedict from Louvain University in Belgium; Prof. Emeritus Samuel Terrien will represent SIU and CSB. from Columbia University; and the Rev. Richard Dillon who recently 18-19 National College Fair (Admissions) Chicago completed doctoral scripture studies in Rome. 19 Wrestling at Stevens Point, Invitational The graduate school offers masters degrees in liturgical studies, Hockey - Stout - Home - 5 :15 p.m. theology and religious education. 22 Piano recital - Willem Ibes - Main Auditorium - 8 p.m. 24-26 MIAC Hockey Tourney at St. Paul 24-27 Thanksgiving Holidays 26 Wrestling at Augsburg - Takedown Tournament Coming events 28 Classes Resume SEPTEMBER 1-2 Faculty Workshop 5-6 Registration - Alumni Lounge 7 Classes begin 9 Dance - sponsored by the Student Executive Council - 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. - Old Gym 10 Cross Country - Royal Invitational at Minneapolis Football - at the Univ. of Minn., Morris - 1:30 p.m. St. John's first again in MIAC all-sports competition 12 Piano recital - Fr. Jerome Coller, OSB - 8 p.m., Main Auditorium Tri-College Picnic - Wilson Park - 5 - 8 p.m. With three league titles, St. John's University second in the conference with seniors Dave Philp 14 Soccer - St. Olaf - Away - 3 :30 p.m. captured its second straight Minnesota Intercollegiate winning the triple jump and long jump and Rod 15 Speaker, Bob Woodward, at the Warner Palaestra - 8 p.m. Athletic Conference All-Sports Championship this Movie - Main Auditorium - 7:30 p.m. - sponsored by the S.E.C. Le Vake setting a league mark of 207' 5" in the 16 past school year. The Johnnies' 82 total points means 17 Soccer - Hamline - Home - 10 a.m. javelin. The golfers grabbed fourth while the tennis Football - Hamline - Home - 1 :30 p.m. the MIAC's George Durenberger Traveling Trophy squad finished fifth. 21 Soccer - Macalester - Home - 3 :30 p.m. remains in Collegeville. Pacing the baseball team were all-conference 22 Dance at the Watab - 8 p.m. - sponsored by the Student Executive Baseball added a conference championship to choices Rick Laba, senior pitcher who threw two Council - in case of rain the dance will be at the Old Gym those won by football and soccer as sJU finished no-hitters this season; junior outfielder Pat Chris­ 23 8 p.m. - Homecoming Concert (performer to be selected) Warner 7.5 points ahead of the College of St. Thomas. The topherson; and catcher John King, a freshman. Palaestra - sponsored by the Student Executive Council runner-up had no MIAC titles. All-Sports totals are based on 10 points for 24 HOMECOMING In other spring sports, the track team finished first, 8 for second, 7 for third, etc. 27-27 National College Fair (Admissions), Minneapolis 28 Soccer - Augsburg - Home - 3 :30 p.m. Piano recital - Br. Bob Koopman, OSB - Main Auditorium - 8 p.m. ~"'\ 30 END OF FIRST MODULE ,;:)<:- .-~ ~ Dance / Lecture / Demonstration - Janet Miller - Main Aud. - 8 p.m. ~ c? ~ 'i-..~ fl.,"'\ ~~~ ~ {;> ;:.J;-fl., r} x:: ~ r," rt- _\~ f-Je9 ~ ~ ~" OCTOBER «.,00 (}o ,:>&0 <00" ~.... fl., ~o'; ':>~ <00- 0 ",O"'~ 0 '".... (J. '"fl.,~ 1 Cross Country, River Falls Invitational Soccer at Bethel - 10 a.m. St. John's ...... 10 6 10 775 8 10 6 8 5 82 Football at Augsburg - 7 :30 p.m. St. Thomas ...... 7 8 8 5V2 8 6 6 4 8 7 7 74% Dance / Lecture / Demonstration - Janet Miller - Main Aud. - 8 p.m. St. Olaf ...... 7 10 6 442 10 8 7 4% 7 69% 5 Soccer at Gustavus - 3 :30 p.m. Gustavus Adolphus ...... 5 5 5 2V2 2 9 4 4 10 4V2 10 61 8 Cross Country (Dual) - Bethel Hamline ...... 4 7 2 854 7 2 4 10 2 55 12 Soccer - St. Thomas - Home - 3 :30 p.m. Augsburg ...... 3 x 7 10 10 9 x 3 3 3 54% 14 Mid-term Holiday Concordia ...... 7 4 x 2% 6 7 x 5 6 7 48% 15 Cross Country, Carleton Invitational St. Mary's ...... x 3 4 5V2 3 3 x x x 4 Football at Concordia - 1 :30 p.m. 29 Maca lester ...... 2 x 3 1 x x 5 2 2 1 Soccer - St. Olaf - Home - 1 :30 p.m. 17 18 Choral Concert - Groupe vocal de France (from France) - Main x - Schools did not compete in sport Auditorium - 8 p.m. Choral Workshop - Marcel Couraud - Main Auditorium - 5 p.m. 19 Soccer at Hamline 22 Soccer at Macalester Cross Country - Dual (Univ. of Minn., Duluth) Football - Macalester - Home - 1 :30 p.m. 24-27 Dialogue on Religion and Human Behavior - soponsored by the Center for Student Development - Alumni Lounge

16 Saint 17 Donald Sheehan, Chm. Christenson receives distinguished '51 Minneapolis, MN 55419 ALUMNI Coming soon ••• WILL DOMBROVsKI is vice presi­ service award for public service dent in charge of finance for Deltak Co, Minneapolis. He is also a full-time NEWS NOTES Last spring we announced arrangements with College and Un~v.er­ Gerald Christenson '53, Minne­ cellence of my staff and of state prof of accounting at the U of Minne­ sity Press to publish an Alumni Directory. We expect the new edltlon sota finance commissioner, was government in general." sota and serves on the board of direc­ to be coming off the presses soon, and alumni may arrange to ord~r presented the National Governors Finance commissioner since tors of the U's grad school of business a copy (hardbound or paperback) by contacting the College and Um­ Conference distinguished service alumni assoc. . .. PAUL H. MARCOTTE versity Press, 200 Park Avenue, Falls Church, VA 22046. 1975, Christenson is responsible has been named vice president of the award for public service in March. for the preparation of the state's board of directors of Convenient Food This first comprehensive biographical reference volume will offer In the first year of the award, biennial budget, projections of re­ Mart Inc. He will continue his respon­ essential and accurate sketches of more than 14,000 living St. John's he was one of 10 outstanding ceipts and disbursements and the sibilities for planning, development and alumni. It will include full name, major, class year, occupation, busi­ key state agency directors from supervision and control of all ac­ administration of programs and services ness and home addresses and telephone numbers. To insure the c~m­ throughout the country honored. for the firm's national office, territorial pleteness of this edition, College and University Press personnel m~l~ed counts and expenditures of state licensees and franchises. His duties have Gov. Rudy Perpich, who jointly government. included advertising and developing and a biographical qUestionnaire to each alumnus and followed that malhng recommended Christenson with with a personal telephone inquiry to verify all facts. implementing a new corporate identity Sen. Wendell Anderson, com­ He has also served as state program. . .. DON MEYERS is leaving The Directory's concise, yet complete sketches provide facts. :hat mended the selection. "This honor planning director, chairman of the for his next foreign service assignment have never before been available from any single source. In addltlon~ is certainly an appropriate one for Minnesota Environmental Quality in Saudi Arabia. He has served in the consulate offices in Singapore, West the Directory contains a unique geographical index listing all alumm Gerry," he said. "His vitality, crea­ Council and executive director of by the city in which they live. Africa, Malaysia and Canada. tivity and good sense have been the President's Council on Youth GEORGE P. PRIBYL is a programmer • Tells where your fellow alumni are and what they are doing. invaluable to the state. I can't even Opportunity under former Vice analyst for Green Giant in Le Sueur. • Provides invaluable professional contacts around the world. begin . to stress the esteem in President Hubert Humphrey. . .. ROMAN J. VAN GORP is an under­ writer for John E. Ireland & Co in • Makes it convenient to reach your friends by mail or phone. which Gerry is held by all of us." Christenson and his wife, Pearl, LaGrange, IL. • Lists alumni living in your own town. Christenson said, "The award is and their six children live in New a reflection of the quality and ex- Brighton. Ed O'Brien, Chm. Note: St. John's does not receive any of the proceeds for the sale of '52 St. Cloud, MN 56301 this directory. PAUL T. FRAWLEY is manager of '45 at 1307 Chestnut, Atlantic 50022. . .. program management for RCA. He lives CHARLES BARON, a dentist, lives at at 9 Clarissa Rd, Chelmsford, MA 01824. ROGER LANDWEHR is in the con­ 5111 Thotland Rd, Minneapolis. . .. EUGENE P. PREISS was promoted struction management dept as projects PAUL A. MULREADY, a member of to asst treasurer recently at General optimistic. . .. ARTHUR C. WELP is divide his time between there and Ohio coordinator for The Weitz Co Inc in the SJU Executive '27 hatchery manager for Welp Inc in Ban­ where he continues as head of the arts Mills. He and his wife, Margaret, be­ Des Moines. Governing Board, came grandparents in June. . .. Rev. Fr. HAROLD FUCHS, OsB, is chap­ croft, IA. dept at Case Western. has been named CLARENCE W. sTANGOHR's new ad­ lain at St. Mary Home, Winsted 55395. group manager of dress is c/o Ebenezer Evangelical Lu­ '46 fishing companies theran Church, 1431 St. Clair Ave, Elmer Meinz, Chm. '36 '41 for Johnson Wax '29 Melrose, MN 56352 DONALD L. LUCAS is retiring this Sheboygan, WI 53081. WILLIAM J. WEISHAR chairs the EDWARD SALK was the guest year after 30 years of teaching. Assoc Inc in Ra­ FRANK A. WEIER has retired from science dept for Elmbrook Public speaker at the St. Cloud Metropolitan cine, WI; he has the Burroughs Corp in Royal Oak, MI. Schools in Wauwatosa, WI. He and his Veteran's Council Memorial Day serv­ been executive vice Charles McCarthy, Chm. wife, Bernadine, live at 12042 Meadow ices. . .. EDWARD M. SULLIVAN is a president and gen­ '53 St. Cloud, MN 56301 Roman Martin, Chm. Ct, Wauwatosa 53222. branch manager for Burroughs; he lives '48 eral manager of Des Moines, IA 50316 '31 at 4302 Ocean Dr, Apt 31, Corpus Fr. ARNOLD WEBER has been named Johnson Reels in GALEN J. BAUER, a tire company JOSEPH D. KOTSMITH, 110 Car­ Clarence loSelie, Chm. Christi, TX 78412. president of Benilde-st. Margaret's High Mankato since 1972. salesman, lives at G Pleasant Ridge Dr, Burnsvilie, MN 55378 penter St, Foley, has retired. '37 School. JWA is a wholly­ Durand, WI 54736. He has a daughter. ALTO BUTKOWSKI, OSB, is pastor Mulready owned subsidiary of ... Fr. CORWIN COLLINS, OSB, is as­ louis Steman, Chm. SC Johnson & Son, Inc, Racine, and is sistant pastor at Holy Rosary Parish in Francis X. McCarthy, Chm. of St. Mary's Church in Park Rapids '43 St. Cloud, MN 56301 '34 Minneapolis, MN 55409 56470. . .. Fr. ALFRED KROLL serves Harry Post, Chm. made up of 16 leisure and diversified Detroit Lakes .... PAUL M. DOHERTY as pastor in North Prairie and Bowlus. Albany attorney JOHN KNAPP was '49 Moose lake, MN 55767 product companies in the US, Canada is a reporter for the Indianapolis Star. Chief U.s. District Judge EDWARD and Europe. Paul will have responsi­ The Doherty family-including 2 daugh­ J. DEVITT has been elected, to the appointed to the first full-time Minne­ Judge DONALD GRAY of Long sota Tax Court by Gov. Rudy Perpich. bility for fishing product companies ters and 5 sons-lives at 3040 Metting­ board of advisors of St. John s Prep Virgil Prem, Chm. Prairie, elected district judge in the including Johnson Reels; Minn-Kota in house Lane, Indianapolis 46222. .. . School for a 3-year term. '38 lompoc, CA 93436 ... JOHN F. McGUIRE has taugh~ com­ Seventh District last fall, has now been position, literature and semantics at Moorhead; Bass Buster and Louis John­ GENE A. EIDEN lives at 1622 34th St E. J. WINDSCHILL is an administra­ chosen chief judge under the unified son Lures in Amsterdam, MO; and NW, Rochester 55901. He is a teacher tive partner for Broeker Hendrickson Ambrose College for 27 years and has court system established by the legisla­ served as a communications consultant HL Leonard Rod Co in Valley Stream, and band leader at Lourdes High. Gene '35 & Co in Worthington. ture in the last session. Don and his NY. The Mulready family is residing has 3 children. . .. JAMES K. HARTY to business, industry and government. wife, Pat, have been active in St. John's MAURICE P. SCHULTE is assistant After complaining for so long a?out at 2809 Village Green E, Racine. . .. owns an insurance company. Address: to the president of the U~ited Steel­ loren A. May, Chm. Parents Program and assisted in found­ EUGENE P. SHEEHY is head of the Box 1248, Jamestown, ND 58401. He '39 51. Cloud, MN 56301 English composition texts, he has wn~ten ing the Parents Council in 1973. workers of America. He hves at 210 his own based on classroom exerCises reference dept of the Columbia U li­ has 2 daughters and 2 sons. . .. JOHN P rker Dr, Pittsburgh 15216 .... After MITCHEL PERRIZO Jr. of Delevan and materials he developed while teach­ braries. . .. NORMAN STENCIL was L. MARTIN, a Univac employee, lives aending most of his missionary life named manager for scheduling and at 140 N Surrey Trail, Apple Valley delivered the commencement address at ing. George Ramier, Chm. sfnce 1943 in rural Mexico, Fr. NOR­ the high school there in June. '50 Minneapolis, MN 55419 shipping at the Nicollet Paper Co in 55124 .... JAMES J. McKEOWN is a ~ERT M. VERHAGEN reflects, "Today, De Pere, WI 54115. He is enrolled in technical director for 3M in St. Paul. ore than ever before, we Maryknoll Bill Oman, Chm. H. J. ARTH is returning to Houston the MBA program at the U of Wiscon­ Dr. Robert Boller, Chm. '44 Roseville, MN 55113 ... HILARY MOHR practices veterinary ml'ssl'oners must be mobile, ready for '40 Minneapolis, MN 55401 as international geophysical manager sin-Oshkosh. Norm and his wife, Joan, medicine in Springfield. He, his wife mchange-and wit hd rawa.I" H'IS expen-. JULIUS WALTER MUGGLI, OsB, is for Texas Eastern Transmission Co .... serve on the board of directors of the and 4 children live at 12 S Marshall, ence and the fruits o~ his recent s~e­ WILLIAM MOOS has bought a house pastor at Assumption Church in Barnes­ LLOYD BAGGENSTOSS is a lab man­ St. Norbert College Parents Assoc. . .. Springfield 56087. . .. JAMES I. OST­ cialized studies in scnpture make him on Diamond Head in Honolulu and will ville. ager for Walnut Grove Products in At­ W. GENE THEROUX is an attorney; ROM owns Valley Insurance and lives lantic, IA. He and his wife, Clara, live he lives in Wolf Point, MT. at 519 N 4th St, Wahpeton, ND 58075. 18 Saint Saint 19 dept at Kansas State U. He and his FISH is a casting director for a TV Robert L. Forster, Chm. the West St. Paul School Board. . .. served on the staff of the academic wife, Betty, live at 1617 Browning Ave, Benedictines station. His address is 6835 Pacific View, '54 Edina, MN 55436 BOB WILLE is regional sales manager vice president at West Point. . .. Fr. Manhattan, KS 66502 .... MICHAEL D. Los Angeles 90068 .... JOHN WALTA RICHARD GOELLEN, who recently SOMMERVILLE teaches political science is in private law practice, specializing JIM BRUTGER is secretary of the for Lear Siegler Inc / Cuckler Division mark jubilees completed the advanced chaplaincy pro­ at St. Mary's College. Address: LaSalle in criminal and personnel injury. He States Assembly Board of the National in St. Paul. gram at Ft Hamilton, NY, is the new Hall, St. Mary's College, Winona 55987. Eight monks of St. John's Ab­ lives at 2318 Marlborough Rd, Colorado Art Education Assn and is head of the Catholic chaplain at the Army's Com­ . . . JOSEPH SPISAK is a chemist for Springs, CO 80907. . . . PHILIP E . U of Minnesota-Duluth art dept. Jerold l. Howard, Chm. bey were honored by their con­ St. Cloud, MN 56301 mand and General Staff College, Ft Penwalt Corp. He lives at 205 S Mill­ WAND has been with the AC Neilson JAMES HESCH was awar~ed tenure at freres July 11, the feast of St. Leavenworth, KS. He recently celebrated vale Ave, Pittsburgh 15224 .... GERALD Co in market research for 10 years. He U of Minnesota Techmcal CoIIeg.e, GERALD F. ANDREWS, South Da­ the 15th anniversary of his ordination. WOCKEN is a senior writer-editor for Benedict, on the diamond and is the father of boys 7 and 4 .... Fr. Waseca. He is asst prof and works m kota commissioner of administration, ... DENNIS R. KEEFE is asst prof of Martin Marietta Aerospace. He and his golden anniversaries of their mon­ STANLEY WIESER has joined two other admissions records and financial aid. has 6 children and can be reached at family econogy at Michigan State U . wife, Mary, have been active in mar­ astic profession. missionaries at the San Bartholome and . , .KENNETH J. SCHWELLING is pres­ Box 668 Pierre 57501. ... Lt. Col. PHILIP ... RONALD M. OLSON is marketing riage encounter for several years and San Jude parishes in Maracay, a city R. COWLES of 251 Harvey St, Eugene, Celebrating diamond jubilees ident of Global Claims Inc. manager for Digital Equipment Corp have written a liturgy for marriage en­ of 135,000 in northern Venezuela. Pre­ OR 97401 is attending Army War Col­ with 60 years of worship and work in Framingham, MA .... KENNETH J. counter Palm Sunday Rally. They say viously, he served as assoc pastor in lege in Philadelphia. He has 11 children. Gerry Donlin, Chm. PLEIN is a senior claim rep for the that any old friends headed for Disney were Damian Baker, OSB, and St. Cloud and Morris and as a Newman 155 St. Cloud, MN 56301 ... ROBERT A. SCHMITZ is an attor­ Fireman's Fund Insurance. Ken and his World are invited to stop by at 3614 Benno Watrin, OSB. Center chaplain. ney with Schmitz & Woods Law Firm EUGENE J. ALTMANN is president wife, Mary Kay, live at 129 W Southern Blarney Dr, Orlando, FL 32808 for an in Mankato .... Fr. ROBERT WYFFELS Golden jubilarians with 50 years of Gene's Kitchen Designs Inc, New Hills Rd, Moon VaIIey Country Club, impromptu stand-up. holds a life-time certificate as school of monastic service are Hubert Richard Banasik, Chm. Ulm. He lives at 426 S Jefferson, New Phoenix 85023. '65 LaCrosse, WI 54601 Ulm 56073. .,. NORB BERG is senior principal from the State of Minnesota. Dahlheimer, OSB; Baldwin Dwor­ AI Woodward, Chm. JAMES F. BRUM and his wife, Barb, vice president for administration and '63 St. Paul, MN 55111 schak, OSB, president of St. John's live at 941 Paloma, Burlingame, CA personnel at Control Data. . .. ROBERT James Gephart, Chm. Austin Ditzler, Chm. University 1950-1958; Arno Gus­ D. BROWN has been appointed chair­ 157 White Bear Lake, MN 5511 0 '60 Minneapolis, MN 55402 RICHARD J. ARBES is a meteorol­ 94010. . .. BERNIE CAHILL is a proba­ ogist for the Environmental Protection tin, OSB, SJU president from 1958 tion officer for the Hennepin County man of the educational psychology dept CHIC CULLEN, recently promoted to ROBERT J. AROLA, 1504 S 11th St, Agency. Address: 1413 Lola Dr, Talla­ to 1964; Cornelius Osendorf, OSB; Court Services. Katherin joined the at the U of Nebraska and has been captain, serves on the staff of Carrier Virginia 55792, works at the 1st Na­ hassee 32301. ... JOHN A. BATA is a family in March from Korea; Bernie named a fellow in the American Psy­ Group 7, homeported in Alameda, CA. tional Bank there. . .. WILLIAM F. Arnold Dittberner, OSB; and Con­ pilot for Frontier Airlines. He lives at says her new sisters Tracy, 9, Emily, 6, chological Assn. He is most proud of ., . JIM M. DALGLISH of 3641 9th Ave CUNNINGHAM, a sales rep for Dain, stantine Thelen, OSB. 3075 S Elmira, Denver 80231. ... Dr. and Molly, 5, are as pleased as mom 7 marathons he has run in the last 4 N, Grand Forks 58201 works for NSP. Kalman & Quail, lives at 5716 Susan KENNETH COSKRAN is a chemistry and dad. . .. ROBERT G. CANAR has years including Boston, Drake and . . . FREDERICK C. ETHEN is vice pres­ Ave, Edina 55436. . .. Address for Lt . J. prof at State U of New York. He lives been in Europe the last 4 years while Kansas Relays. ., . DAVE DUREN­ ident of Old Security Life Insurance Co Col. DANIEL P. SCHNEIDER: Hg. US at 12 Grant St, Potsdam, NY 13676. serving with the Army Military Intel­ BERGER has resigned from the Sta:e in Kansas City .. , .Fr. DENIS F. FOUR­ Army Berlin A.G., APO NY 09742. He JOHN M. STICHA is a hardware cost ... THEODORE T. JACOBSON, 2360 ligence. Bob and Jean are the parents Ethics Commission and announced hIS NIER, OSB, dept chairman and asst and the family have moved from estimator for Sperry Univac in St. Paul. W Tecumseh, Tulsa 74127, is an engi­ of two children: Bobby and CorL ... candidacy for Minnesota govern?r. He prof of English at Mary College, has Heidelberg to Berlin. ... DICK STRAUSS, Omaha, has joined is counsel for legal and commumty af- been appointed to write the history of neer for Sun Oil. ... VINCENT R. the staff of the Federal Land Bank EDWARD D. CURLEY is a senior high Assumption Abbey in Richardton, ND. KINNEY is a senior systems planner there as supervisor of records and proc­ school social worker for Menomonee Falls public schools. . .. THOMAS W. . . . JAMES C. LAING has been trans­ John McKendrick, Chm • for General Mills and lives at 8211 essing in loan information and transac­ Minneapolis, MN 55402 HART and family live at 17875 Collins ferred and promoted to NW Bell's cor­ '61 Patsy Lane, Minneapolis 55427. . . . tions. . .. RICHARD W. SVOBODNY is STANLEY P. KRESKO works with Stix, an instrumentation engineer; he lives Ave, Miami Beach 33160 .... MICHAEL porate headquarters in Omaha where DANIEL P. GAFFANEY is a senior Baer & Fuller in St. Louis. Stan, his at 3524 Boulder Dr, Cedar Falls, IA W. McNAMARA is emergency assist­ he is responsible for costs and pricing materials scientist for Carrier Corp re­ wife, Rena, and daughter, LaDonna, 50613 .... Dr. WILLIAM G. WAGNER, ance planner for the South Dakota studies for the system's 5 states. He search division in Chittenanco, NY. .,. live at 4840 LeMay Ferry Rd, St. Louis 1226 N 8th St, Sheboygan, WI 53081, Dept of Agriculture after teaching Eng­ lives at 1417 Harvey Oaks Ave, Omaha JAMES F. MEYER is a field sales man­ 63129. . .. EUGENE C. MACHACEK practices general and vascular surgery. lish and directing the forensic program 68144 and sends his greetings to all his ager for Standard Oil; he lives in and his wife, Sharon, have 3 children: '" Dr. STEPHEN F. WEBER and his in Huron Junior High for 8 years. His classmates. Colorado. . .. THOMAS F. NOLAN is Greg, 11; Andrea, 9; Stephen, 5. They wife, Mary Ellen, are economists. He job now requires full devotion to re­ asst prof of nursing at the College of live at 6620 Rent Dr NE, Cedar Rapids, specializes in building technologies and search and direction regarding the Wm. Sullivan, Chm. Mount St. Vincent in New York. Richfield, MN 55423 IA 52402. He is a radio systems en­ innovations especially with energy con­ drought and emergency response plan­ '58 DAVID M. NORRIS, just out of the gineer. . .. FREDERICK J. McNEW is servation and benefit-cost evaluation. ning. . .. BRUCE W. MENNING is an Dr. DENNIS J. KELSH says it's hard Army, lives at 13705 Smallwood Ct, a credit and collection manager for asst prof at Miami U .... Dr. GEORGE to believe he will be starting his 16th Chantilly, VA .... Dr. MICHAEL J. General Electric Credit Corp and lives L. NELSON received the highest merit year on the Gonzaga U faculty this PIKAL has 5 children and lives at 540 at 5941 Oak, Kansas City 64113. . .. 864 evaluation at St. Joseph's College in fall. He was recipient of the Gonzaga Leisure La, Greenwood, IN 46142. . .. BOB O'HARA, a biology and outdoor Philadelphia. He has been involved in Alumni Assoc Outstanding Teacher STEPHEN R. TELL lives at 906 Summit education teacher at Cooper High DAVID BRUZEK of 2500 E 24th St, a research program with the Navy Award for 1976-77 but claims it was Ave, Detroit Lakes 56501. School, coaches cross-country skiing Minneapolis 55406 is going to dentistry during the last 5 years dealing with probably granted on the basis of lon­ and track. He lives at 10717 A, 10th school. ... JAMES B. GOSLErN has the discovery of a compound that prob­ gevity. He lives at 1323 W 13th, Spok­ Ave N, B-3, Minneapolis 55427. . .. resigned his position as a school prin­ ably will have a major influence in the ane 99202. . .. JOHN A. POLLARD Bernard Kukar, Chm. '62 Bloomington, MN 55431 PATRICK O'NEILL, in the insurance cipal. ... JOSEPH L. KILLIAN is a area of brain and heart chemistry. The works for the Dakota Manufacturing business, lives at 1326 7th Ave, Worth­ computer technician for Southern Pacif­ research reflects his philosophy that Co. The father of 8, he lives in Mt. RON BAUERL Y, economics teacher ington 56187. . .. THOMAS L. ROST ic Pipeline Inc. He lives at 1317 % North one can maintain excellence in teaching Vernon, SD 57363 .... ARNOLD RAS­ at Cooper High School in New Hope, has written a text book on botany and Catalina St, Los Angeles. . .. BILL in a liberal arts college and still make MUSSEN is in financial management took over head soccer coaching duties a research survey on cell division. He KLING, president of Minnesota Public a significant contribution to major re­ Durenberger for HUD. Address: 1525 Circle Dr, and won the Lake Conference Red lives at 1312 Clara Lane, Davis, CA Radio, has been elected to the Minne­ search projects in cooperation with gov­ Burnsville 55337 .... MARK W. WEIGEL Division championship; he credits be­ 95616. . .. THOMAS C. ROTH's new sota Press Council, the first member to ernment and industry .... Maj. ROMAN fairs at the HB Fuller Co, St. Paul. teaches at Inver Hills College. He lives ginner's luck. . . .Dr. ROBERT V. address is 1018 Olive Lane, LaCanada, represent electronic media .... GERALD W. ROSSMEISL is now wearing a dis­ Previously Dave served as executive at 7557 Inman Ave, Cottage Grove CROW, wife, Florence, and children, CA 9l011 .... THOMAS M. ROUFS is KONRAD is employed by Pansons En­ tinctive service ribbon. A dental officer assistant to Gov. Harold LeVander. 55016 . Earl, Colleen and Janet, live in Cincin­ a sales manager for Wilson Foods, Buf­ gineering Co. He lives at 1176 Elizabeth at Laughlin AFB, TX, with the 47th . . . THOMAS J. MEYER, 5491 Hobe nati. He is an agronomist for the N-Ren falo, NY. . .. DAN SCHNOBRICH is Flying Training Wing, he received the Lane, White Bear Lake 55110, works St, Pasadena, CA 91104. . .. JOHN L. Vernon Rausch, Chm. Corp, a manufacturer of fertilizers and now a major in the Air Force Reserve. McCORMICK has moved to Oregon ribbon as a member of the Air Force's for the St. Paul School System. .., Burnsv; lie, MN 55378 '59 chemicals .... Dr. M. THOMAS HINKE­ He and his wife, Gerri, have 2 daugh­ Two of JON HASSLER's novels are and is a head football and golf coach. outstanding unit. . .. ELMER J. SCHET­ MEYER has sold publication rights to ters, Amy and Julie. . .. DANIEL H. being published this year: Staggerford Lt. Col. DAVE BOYLE was recently Address: 2320 W 14th, The Dalles, OR TLER of Rte 2, Carroll, IA 51401 man­ 4 more novels (for a total of 6): Dark SCHYMAN has recently been named has been selected as an alternate in the transferred by his employer, the US 97058 .... JOHN L. NUSSBAUM is in ages his own business, Schettler Seed Angel Pass By, The Fields of Eden, The manager of field sales training for Book-of-the-Month Club; Four Miles to Army, from the staff at West Point to the electronics business. Address: 2700 Farm Inc. ... TOM SKOOG is per­ Mistree of Coldstream and The Creator. Cardiac Pacemakers Inc, Arden Hills. Pinecone is a book for young readers. a two-year assignment in Seoul, Korea. Beechwood Ct, Appleton, WI 54911 .... sonnel manager for Pfizer's MPM divi­ ... Fr. MICHAEL NAUGHTON, OSB, CHARLES G. MILLER is a middle Dave's son, Robert David, will be a He will be responsible for managing ELDON O'BRIEN is office manager and sion plant in Emeryville, CA. His ad­ is director of pastoral education at St. and coordinating sales training activities ~~hool teacher in Colorado Springs, CO. freshman at St. John's this fall. During loan officer for Hormel Employees dress is 4131 Rhine Ct, Napa, CA 94558. John's School of Divinity .... RICHARD of the field sales organization. ... GEORGE D. LOWE lives at 20 the last year, Dave and Maj. JAMES Credit Union .... THOMAS J. STOCK- . .. LEON G. STADTHERR is a product J. SAUER is head of the entomology Somerset Rd, St. Paul 55118. He is on DAUGHERTY, another Johnnie '63, practice physician for the Brainerd Med­ Hiller reaches 500th cage win ical Center. His address is 604 N 5th, is a technical service rep for 3M. His Brainerd. . .. Dr. WILLIAM LUCKE­ address is 441 Ruth St, St. Paul 55119. John (Buster) Hiller is still a sooth win," he says. "That is the MEYER is a veterinarian in Alexandria. Bill and his wife, Donna, are the par­ magician with lacklustre basket­ peak and most people are out of Jerry McCarter, Chm. coaching before they get near it. ents of daughters, Jennifer Jean and '71 St. Cloud, MN 56301 ball programs. Nancy .... Fr. DOUGLAS J. NOHAVA As coach at St. John's Univer­ I'm just grateful that my health is Newman chaplain for Phoenix Col­ UMUVI A VWUNUMA is in an sity in 1948, he transformed the has been good. I've never missed lege and Glendale Community College. administrative post with the Leather Johnnies from the doormats of a game and I thank the good Lord · .. PETE NOLAN is a pediatrician in Research Institute of Nigeria, a federal that He has kept me healthy." the Navy. . .. TOM ROCHING is an government establishment. His new ad­ the conference to a respected team agent for Mutual Service Insurance. . .. dress is PMB 12, Samaru-Zaria, Nigeria. that finished tied for second place. Hiller, who launched the basket­ JEROME M. SCHUMACHER lives at ... ANTHONY BIEBL is working for In the last 20 years, he has been ball program at Albuquerque Aca­ 3940 Lancaster La, Plymouth 55441. ... Green Giant. Address is Riverside I turning high school cage programs demy in the Sixties and soon there­ HUBERT L. SEILER, MD, passed his Heights, Blue Earth 56013. . .. BUN­ after won the state championship, family boards. His address is Rte 1, WOO BERTRAM CHANG has received from rocks to gems. Coach of Box 2, Rugby, ND 58368. . .. RON his master's degree from Rice U in New Mexico Military Institute in plans to continue coaching for at VESSEY is a member of a 3-man group physics .... JOSEPH CHU has moved Roswell, he pulled his SOOth career least 10 more years. of internists practicing in the Medical to 309 Nottingham, Glenview, IL 60025. win out of the hat during the last "I enjoy kids and that's the Arts Bldg in Minneapolis. . .. E. MI­ ... JOHN F. FORREST has been named season. His career won-loss per­ reason I'm going to stay with it," CHAEL WALSH is a professor at South­ vice president and manager at Brainerd ern Illinois U. He lives at 607 Glenview Savings & Loan.... JAMES B. HOES­ centage is n-plus. he says. Dr, Carbondale, IL 62901. LEM is asst vice president for the 1st "Everybody who stays in coach­ (Ed. note: Appreciation to George Boston Corp in New York. He lives at ing for a while looks toward that Durenberger for the above material.) 160 E 84, New York City 10028 .... Chuck Achter, Chm. JAMES R. JOHNSON has been pro­ '69 Austin, MN 55912 moted to regional sales manager for CHUCK ACHTER is asst principal Kaukauna Klub Cheese, part of Interna­ development specialist for General Re­ appointed head football coach at Rocori at Austin High School. ... THOMAS tional Multifoods' consumer products source Corp. Address: PO Box 57, High School in Cold Spring. . .. FRAN­ R. ENGELS is a product service super­ division. He is based in Kaukauna, WI. Hopkins 55343 .... DOUGLAS WALTA CIS HARTL is a systems engineer for visor, medical products division of 3M ., .Fr. JOHN KLASSEN, OSB, was or­ is a physician; he lives with wife, Dath-100. Address: 2525 W Rowland in St. Paul. He and his wife, Sharon, dained June 11. He has been assigned Trudi, and daughters, Marni and Krin, Ave, Santa Ana, CA 92704 .. , .OTTO live at 7032 Aberdeen Curve, St. Paul. to St. Michael's Parish in Grand Forks, in Portland, OR. T. JEFFRIES is employed with Honey­ · . . Fr. BOB FLANNERY has been ND, for the summer and will begin well and lives at 542 Jalapa, Covina, CA elected president of the Belleville (IL) graduate studies in chemistry in the Tom Wenner & Don Kinzer, Co-Chm. 91724 .... KURT KAISER has been ac­ Diocese Priest Senate. He was ap­ fall. ., . GARY W. SCHEMMEL is a '66 Both from St. Cloud, MN 56301 cepted to the master of fine arts pro­ pOinted coordinator of the diocese's systems analyst for Federal Reserve RICHARD D. BAUER is a field rep, gram at Colorado U. He will also begin youth program, Teens Encounter Christ. Bank of Richmond, VA. Gary, wife, maintenance division for Tremco, Inc, work as a teaching assistant in basic · .. DANIEL L. GALLES is a CPA and Kathy, and son, Stephen, live at 1415 sculpture in the fall. Address: 889 15th Coronet Dr, Richmond 23229 .... TIM­ 10701 Shaker Blvd, Cleveland 44104. He controller for the Methodist Hospital The Dirkheising brothers, Drake '63, Alex '70 and Mark are proprietors of St, Boulder, CO .. ,. DALE V. MLCOCH OTHY WOODBURY is a distribution is married with 4 children and welcomes in Minneapolis. . .. ED KRANZ is city The Silverado, a restaurant in Calistoga, California. The brothers are carrying is a marketing rep for Texaco ... . F. T. administrator in Hopkins. . .. CHARLIE center buyer for JC Penney in Minne­ visits from SJU alumni. ... DOUGLAS on the tradition that made their St. Joseph restaurant, The La Playette, a popu­ P. DIEDERICH is a senior engineer for (TED) MOUDRY is a district technical LANG is a financial accountant with apolis. Martin Marietta Aerospace. Address: director for the HB Fuller Co, St. Paul Honeywell in Minneapolis. He and his lar Central Minnesota eating spot earlier in the 70's. Mark and Drake are 4403 S Dover Ct, Littleton, CO 80123. district. Ted and his family reside in wife, Stella, have 2 boys, ages 6 and 3. shown here in front of their Napa Valley eatery. Tim Hanlon', Chm. ... THOMAS FIDER was promoted at Apple Valley .... ROBERT P. RUSSELL ... MIKE LALIBERTE has been elected '72 St. Louis, MO 63130 U of Minnesota Technical College .... has moved to 108 Lakeshore Dr, Marina president of the Wisconsin Hockey Tower, Old Port Love, North Palm family practice residency at St. John's HAMBURGE is the principal of St. O. ROBERT BENSON manages the BILL HASSING and family (wife, Barb, Coaches Assn and is on the rules ad­ K-Mart and lives at 3442 W Villa Ridge and children, Debra, Paul and Leah) Beach, FL 33408 .... E. PETER SCHOEN­ visory committee for hockey for the Hospital in St. Paul and will join the Joseph's Elementary in West St. Paul. BERG is a reporter for the Times Lake Region Clinic in Brainerd...... MARK HARRIGAN is manager for #B-3, Peoria, IL 61604. . .. EUGENE live in Shoreview. He practices law in state. A psychology teacher at Wausau BURESH is going to law school in St. Paul and recently was elected presi­ Herald-Record in Middletown, NY. Ad­ East High School, he has taught and BRUCE K. CAMPBELL is attending the McDonald's Corp. Address: 5709 27th dress: 29 Gregory Dr, Goshen, NY U of Illinois Dental School. He and his Ave, Minneapolis 55414 .... T AIJU Grand Forks, ND. Address: Rte1: Box dent of the Shoreview Jaycees .... JOHN coached there for 3 years .... GERALD 156, Dickinson, ND 58601. . .. PAT­ E. SCHNEEWEIS is studying for his 10924. . .. Dr. WILLIAM S. SHIMP of LOOMER of 606 Chicago, Lakefield wife, Kay, are living at 2240 G Central HIROSE has been transferred and can 2921 Georgia Ave N, Minneapolis 55427 St, Evanston, IL. .,. Dr. JOHN CESNIK be contacted c/o Liaison Rep, Mitsui RICK J. FINNEGAN has joined the doctorate at the U of Minnesota. His 56150 was selected as outstanding sci­ Jerome Jaspers Law Firm in Shakopee is practicing internal medicine at St. is joining the HURA staff as medical & Co Ltd, Palata Jadran, Parter, Neman­ address is 2241 Minneapolis Ave, Min­ ence club advisor in Minnesota. He is and Belle Plaine .. , . DAVID PETERSON Louis Park Medical Center.... JOE doctor in Crookston. His duties will jina 4, 11000 Beograd 6, YugoslaVia. neapolis 55406. .,. JOHN SILVER is an a senior high school science teacher has been named part-time asst county STENCEL resigned his Air Force com­ include recruiting physicians for north­ ... BOB KNOPICK is moving to 6206 English teacher at Burnsville High and director of the southwest region attorney in Polk County. He will spend mission after 7 years to join the fusion western Minnesota and establishing a Washington St, Downers Grove, IL School. ... TOM YOUNGHANS has science fair. . .. LARRY MILLETT is a the remainder of his time working for project at Princeton U. comprehensive family health care con­ 60515 while taking a new position with been appointed head hockey coach at reporter for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. John A. Winters on private cases. . .. cept for the region. He can be reached Delta Surgical Inc. . .. MIKE McSHANE Brainerd High School. While coaching .. . JAMES V. NOVOTNY works for Fr. ROBERT EDWIN ROLFES was or­ at Riverview Hospital, Crookston. . .. has rejoined the staff of Midland Na­ at Lindberg High, his team entered the John Toncebel, Chm. Swift & Co in Chicago. Address: 202 dained to the priesthood May 28. . .. '68 St. Paul, MN 55105 MIKE DALY is a reporter for the Post tional Bank in Billings, MT, as asst state tournament. He was instrumental Porter, Bolingbrook, IL 60439 .... MIKE JOHN P. SELLNER is a full professional Publishing Co in Bridgeport, CT. Ad­ vice president in charge of new business in developing the youth hockey pro­ SHEA and family (including sons Mi­ member of the law firm of Prindel, BRUCE BIAGINI is a partner in a dress: 16 Essex St, Fairfield, CT. . .. development. His position will also in­ gram in Hopkins. chael Jon, Ryan Oliver and Matthew Maland, Stennes and Sellner.... MARK law firm in Burshell, IL. His address is BILL FARNAN passed the state exams clude related responsibilities in the cor­ 726 Memorial Dr, McComb, IL 61455. Pederson) live at 513 2nd Ave NE, STUDER of 6 LeMoy, Ft Bragg, NC Glenwood 56334 .... Dr. MICHAEL and is a registered architect. He works respondent banking and commercial Tony Pezalla, Chm. ... MICHAEL M. BILLION is working 28307 is a captain in the Army. . .. '67 Crystal, MN 55427 VEVERKA lives at 3363 SE Henderson for Eldon Morrison Architects Inc. . .. loan areas. . .. DAVE MUMMA is em­ for Henry Scholten Co as a CPA. Ad­ ployed by Voigt's Bus Service and St. KEVIN and Sharon TWOMEY have St, Portland, OR 97202. STEVE FORESTELL, director of the moved to 5537 Oliver Ave S, Minne­ THOMAS H. BUTTWEILER of Rte dress: 4104 S Louise, Apt 304, Sioux Judicial Advisory Service formerly con­ Cloud Metro Transit.... HOWARD K. 1, St. Joseph 56374 is starting a new Falls, SD 57106 .... PAUL COUDRON PETSCHEL is a US postal inspector. apolis 55419 .... JOSEPH L. WILLAERT Jay Simons, Chm. ducted by St. John's Center for the is a senior auditor for Gazzola, Morken, law practice .... RICHARD DAWSON is director of special programs at Kansas Edina, MN 55410 ... Fr. CHARLES L. RASMUSSEN was '70 Study of Local Government, now heads Wolk, Etter, Roessler & Co in Mankato. is a systems analyst for the Alaska Dept Newman College. .,. TOM and Peggy ordained in May. . .. RAY ROSSINI is GEORGE ANDERBERG is now living the program for the State of Minnesota. of Labor.... PATRICK DOERNING is DUEBER and family live at 1860 Prince­ The legislature "appropriated" the Judi­ opening a law office at 1730 Midwest an operational research analyst for the ton Ave, St. Paul 55105 .... GEORGE at 14 Michael Ct, St. Cloud 56301 and Plaza Bldg, Minneapolis 55402. Tom Miller, Chm. is employed by ABC Printing. . .. Dr. cial Advisory Service July 1 after its '73 Minneapolis, MN 55402 US General Accounting Office in Wash­ GAFF ANEY practices law in Alexandria. 2-year tenure under SJU auspices . CHUCK SCHOTZKO of 4056 Alabama DAVID F. BORAN is completing a ington, DC. ... PAUL ELWELL has been . . . JAMES A. GELBMANN is a family Steve's new office address is 40 N Ave, Minneapolis 55416, is doing his DAVE ARNOLD has left St. John's Milton St, Suite 202, St. Paul. ... JIM residency in medicine .... JIM URICK coaching ranks to join the family busi- 22 Saint Saint 23 Son, Todd Patrick, to Mr. and Mrs. Letter to the editor Marriages Births PATRICK T. VINCELLI '68, May, 1977. ANTHONY BROCCOLO '76 to Mary Daughter, Louisa, to Mr. and Mrs. Son, David James, to MIKE and Jeannie Editor: which I enjoyed much. He also children with her. Now all of these Elizabeth Stake, March 12, 1977. DENNIS R. KEEFE '59, March 21, LALIBERTE '69, May 13, 1977. Re: "Eight and One Half was dean of the Seminary 1927 are gone and I'm a lonely widower JOHN EDWARD CRONIN III '76 to 1977. Son, J.J., to JACK and Max NORTON Anne Marie Jameson, April 30, 1977. Son, Joseph, to Mr. and Mrs. ALFRED Centuries of Service" until I was forced to leave in 1928 here at age of 73, who even has '69, July, 1977. JOHN HERKENHOFF '76 to Kather­ G. LARSON, JR. '61, May, 1977. by Fr. Daniel Durken, OSB. due to a throat ailment. difficulty walking up the hill to Daughter, Mary Margaret, to Mr. and ine Jung, June 25, 1977. Son to Mr. and Mrs. DAVID W. AL­ St. Mary's Church. Hardening of Mrs. PAUL BERNABEI '69, July, 1977. Actually tears came to myoId Fr. Christopher Bayer was a JOHN J. FITZGERALD '75 to Theresa BERT '61, April, 1977. Son to Mr. and Mrs. CHARLES LOR­ eyes as I read parts of the wonder­ the arteries and two slight strokes Marie Macchietto, July 1, 1977. Son, Michael, to Mr. and Mrs. STEPHEN friend at St. John's whom I re­ SUNG '69, June, 1977. have restricted my active life R. TELL '61, Oct. 2, 1976. ful memorial to the great people member. Son, Matthew Pederson, to Mr. and Mrs. Daughter, Nicole Marie, to Mr. and involved. I personally knew some somewhat. MICHAEL E. SHEA '69, Feb. 10, 1977. Fr. Sylvester was not only the Mrs. THOMAS M. ROUFS '63, Feb. of them, and had heard about Deaths Daughter, Laura Ann, to Mr. and Mrs. I still enjoy walks into the 9, 1977. Professor of a course in Short WILLIAM PIOTROWSKI '71, May, others involved. woods, like I did at St. John's, t WILLIAM M. CHALLEEN '15 Daughter, Margaret Ellen, to Mr. and Story writing which I attended, 1977. For years I had been glancing t MARTIN BRENNEY '72 Mrs. JAMES G. RANWEILER '64, especially when there is a chance Son, Steven Patrick, to Mr. and Mrs. but his roots in Wisconsin also May, 1977. at your Quarterly Magazine hop­ of finding mushrooms. In fall and GARY W. SCHEMMEL '71, May, were in common with mine. He Daughter, Anitra Alexandra, to Mr. and ing to find some news of students winter I frequently go hunting 1977. Mrs. BRUCE W. MENNING '65, Feb. knew the St. Kilian Straubs of Son, John Terrance, to Mr. and Mrs. and faculty members of our times, and ice fishing with another alum­ Diocese of Duluth. . .. Dr. THOMAS 10, 1977. whom I am one. He also knew of PAT HAWS '72, Feb., 1977. and finally it happened. THANKS nus of St. John's, good Father R. LORENZ is serving his residency at Son, Thomas Jr., to Mr. and Mrs. Marathon, Wisconsin, where I Daughter to Mr. and Mrs. JOSEPH St. Luke's Hospital in Fargo following THOMAS W. HARD '65, Sept. 16, a lot. Lloyd Geissler, our local pastor. BAINBRIDGE '72, May, 1977. now have lived forty years. He graduation from the U of North Da­ 1976. I had started to write this letter Daughter to GERALD and Meg KIT­ may recall the large Brick General Thanks for an enjoyable visit. kota's program in medical science. . .. Daughter, Leah, to BILL and Barb to Father Sylvester, then decided TOCK '74, April, 1977. JOHN J. MUHAR received his juris HASSING '66, March 11, 1977. Merchandise Store across the street I hope and pray that our re­ Son, Khyl David, to Mr. and Mrs. that the staff of the Magazine doctor degree in law in May from Son, Craig Thomas, to Mr. and Mrs. from Doctor Harter's home and maining days will be tranquil and DAVID LYNDGAARD '74, April 28, should know how the article was William Mitchell College of Law .... THOMAS J. ARTH '66, May 1, 1977. office. happy. 1977. appreciated. So they can pass it JOHN PATRICK MURPHY has gradu­ Son, Brian Joshua, to Mr. and Mrs. Son, Mathew, to Mr. and Mrs. MI­ on to the good people involved. r operated and owned that bus­ Sincerely, ated from the law school of the U of JOHN SILVER '66, June 27, 1977. Pugent Sound in Tacoma, WA.... In Son, John, to Mr. and Mrs. EARL C. CHAEL MESSERSCHMIDT '75, April, Fr. Basil Stegmann taught a iness from 1937 until 1974. Here Alfred Straub '27 June ceremonies at the U of Minnesota, 1977. 54448 STEMAN '66, April, 1977. Bible Study course 1925 -1926 I found my wife, and raised four Marathon, Wisconsin JOHN and Linda VAN ETTA received Son, John Cloud, to Mr. and Mrs. Son, Tony, to Mr. and Mrs. GORDON doctor of medicine degrees. The couple KURT KAISER '67. J. VETSCH '76, May, 1977. will specialize in internal medicine and Daughter, Katherine Margaret, to TOM Son to Mr. and Mrs. TIMOTHY P. plan 3-year residencies at Northwestern and Peggy DUEBER '68, May 5, 1977. PREISS '77, June, 1977. ness in Janesville. An area sports writer Hospital in Minneapolis. . .. BERWIN said, "Almost a permanent fixture, he'll Twin Cities picnic PING-YEUN YIP has received his PhD be sorely missed by those who knew degree from Rice U in Texas. His dis­ him well." ... WILLIAM BORGMANN sertation in biochemistry was on "The OVERBY, who is employed by American to drop by at 1844 N Hoyne Ave 60647. has moved to 2413 Dowling Ave N, Role of Nucleotide for the Function and Linen, lives at 4642 Pierce St NE, Min­ ... KEVIN SEXTON has his master's Minneapolis 55412 .... After graduating Conformation of Enzymes." neapolis .... JAMES T. QUINN is an degree in business from the U of Min­ from the U of Montana law school with attorney with Dunn & McDonald Law nesota .... JOHN J. WEITZ is a med honors, JAMES R. CARLSON Jr has Greg Melsen, Chm. Firm and lives at 1 Maritime Plaza student at the U of Minnesota. Address: joined the law firm of Bjella & Jestrab '74 Minneapolis, MN 55426 #745, San Francisco 94111. . .. DAVID 1036 27th Av SE #A, Minneapolis 55414. in Williston, ND. He and his wife, STEPHEN FROST is a coordinator RILEY is a nurse-practitioner. . .. Diana, live at 720 5th Ave W, Williston. of the biology colloquium at the U of JAMES SOLTYS is stationed in Ger­ · .. TONY CREA is an installment many .... GEORGE WANG has moved Mike Mischke, Chm. Minnesota. . .. MIKE HAASL works for '76 St. Paul, MN 55104 banking officer in the sales finance Pillsbury's refrigeration division in re­ to 1 Primrose, Apt 3H, Fords, NJ 08863. division of 1st National Bank of Minne­ search development. His address is 1903 ... BILL YOUNG, 4032 Sheridan Ave S, JOHN EDWARD CRONIN III is em­ apolis. Tony and wife, Mary, live at Jackson St NE, Minneapolis 55418 .... Minneapolis 55410, is an accounting ployed by Green Giant in Chaska:. . .. 7932 40th Ave N, New Hope 55427. TIMOTHY J. HESSE is a manufacturing supervisor for Title Insurance. JAMES G. GUBBLES is an RN at St. · .. STEVEN DOOLEY teaches in Pierz. supervisor for Gould Inc. Address: 6741 Luke Medical Center and lives with his · .. THOMAS M. FRANKMAN is an Vincent Ave S, Richfield 55423. . .. wife, Cathy, at 3937 Winona Way, A-8, attorney with Willy, Pruitt, Matthews Sean Han lon, Chm. PAT HIRIGOYEN writes press releases Sioux City, IA 51104 .... DOUG HEY­ & Jorgensen at 801 National Bank of '75 Minneapolis, MN 55414 and speeches for Minnesota's Demo­ VAERT is employed by Oxford Labs South Dakota Bldg, Sioux Falls, SD cratic legislators at the state capitol. THOMAS B. HALEY is the State Inc. He lives at Apt 202, 2800 Hillsboro 57102. His home address is 1405 E 24th Pat is living at 891 Parkview Ave, St. Farm Insurance agent in Miller, SD. Ave N, New Hope .... FRED JOHNSON St, Sioux Falls 57105 .... Dr. STEPHEN Paul 5117. . .. DAVE IGO, 2901 44th His office is at 113 E 3rd St. . . . is a CPA in Mahtomedi. ... TOM HARRINGTON is continuing his med­ Ave S, Minneapolis, is a group repre­ BERNARD IMHOLT is teaching at St. PETERSON is in journalism grad school ical education with 3 years of residency sentative for Minnesota Mutual Life Cloud Cathedral High School. Address: at Stanford. . .. PATRICK RYAN re­ training in family practice at the Duluth Insurance of St. Paul. ... GERALD 616 9th Ave N, St. Cloud 56301. ... ceived an advanced degree. from West­ Family Practice Center.... BILL HAWN KLASEN has joined Domain Industries EDMOND IP is a credit analyst at Roy ern Michigan U in April. . . . JIM graduated from the U of Nebraska as employment manager.... ALLYN J. East Investments, ltd, Hong Kong. His SAWYER has begun grad studies in Medical Center in May.... PATRICK KRAMER lives at 3824 Beau D Rue address is D2 Marigold Mansion, Shun developmental biology at the U of Cin­ J. HOGAN recently graduated from the Drive, Apt 105, St. Paul 55122. . .. Yung St, Hunghom, Kowloon, Hong cinnati. Address: 3813 Brotherton Rd, Kansas City College of Osteopathic EDDIE LEE is a quality engineer for Kong .... ROBERT J. KIEFER has mov­ #5, Cincinnati 45209. . .. RONALD Medicine. He is serving a I-year intern­ Sperry-Univac defense system. He lives ed to 3101 Village Ct, Apt 10, Janesville, TSANG has moved to 1315 Kellogg ship in internal medicine .... Fr. MARK at 7700 Penn Ave S, Apt 113, Richfield WI 53545. . .. BIll MANTHEY has re­ Ave, Ames, IA 50010 .... GORDON J. T. HOLLENHORST was ordained to and would like classmates to give him turned from teaching in Australia for VETSCH of 3259 Adair Ave N, Crystal the priesthood for the Diocese of a call. ... CRAIG LIETZKE works for 18 months. He lives at 1311 7th Ave N, 55422, passed his CPA test in Novem­ Duluth in June. He is now an assoc St. John's alumni and their families take a break from the Twin Cities picnic the Hennepin County Data Processing St. Cloud 56301. ... TOM PIEKAR­ ber. He works for Liason, Allen Weis­ pastor at St. Francis Church in Brainerd. Center. Address: 3201 Millsboro Ave S, CZYK is in the personnel and training hair.... MATT WILCH is a correctional ... Address for DARYL KOHLHASS: August 6 for a group photo. In the back is Jim Holmes' 69; in the middle (from St. Louis Park 55426. . .. TODD MUEL­ division for the Chicago Dept of Hu­ officer at a new prison "medium secur­ Rte 1, PO Box 105, Livermore, IA 50558. left) are John McCambridge '69, Bob Marchon '69 and Mike Dady '71; in LER is ad director for Road Machinery man Services, a city-wide social service ity unit." Address: PO Box 465, Mt · .. PAUL LARSON has been ordained front are Chris McCambridge, Mari Marchon and Jan and Erin Dady. The & Supplies in Bloomington. . .. NICK agency. He welcomes visitors to Chicago Pleasant, IA 52641. to the transitional diaconate for the picnic was held at Como Park. Woodward photo.

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