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9-1945 The aC rroll News- Vol. 26, No. 1 John Carroll University

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PRINTERS for John Carroll University, Ca e School of Applied cience, The Play House, lA e tern Reserve Uni ver ity, Flora Stone Mather College, Fenn Col lege, Hathaway Brown School, leveland ommunity Fund, Clev land Foun­ dation, Citizens League, ity lub, Federation of Women's lub , Junior League, and many other organ­ izations and in titution that are making notable contributions to the communi ty. THE WILLIAM FEATHER CO. 812 HURO ROAD CARROLL

VOLUME XXV I CLEV EL AND, O H IO • SEPTEMBE R, 1945 No. 1

PUBLISHED monthly (except July,_ August) by the students of John Carroll University from their editorial and business offices at University H e1g hts , Oh1o (Cleveland 18, Oh10, P.O .); telephone: YEllowstone 3800. Subscription rate: $2 a year. Entered as second-class matter September 20, 1943, of the Post Office at Cleveland, Ohio, under the a ct of March 3, 1879. Ed itor - RICHARD F. MICHALAK Navy Editors- Reporters- Business- DONALD ) . HUHN, (Manager) R. N . ROBERTSON, A S, USNR JOHN E. DEPKE J V . McDONNELL, A S, USNR FRANK de BUONO Advertising - Circulation­ EDWARD). REILLY (Manager) ROBERT A. WRIGHT (Manager) STANFORD P. BERRY

11/ The Charter Ratified 11 We Want No Territory JJ ITH surprisingly little oppo ition, t he enate ha Jl FEW weeks ago, Pr sid nt Truman r marked to ratified t he nited ations barter by a vote of 89 to 2. the world that the nited Stat s do not \. ant "a Reversing its stand of a quarter century ago, the richest ~i ngl pi ce of territor from this war.'' By making thi · and most powerful nation on th e face of the earth i now t tatement, he started a ball of supposition rolling that commill d to international collaboration. ha now gain d breath-taking spe cl on a very dif!lcult and intricate course. Although t he ratification i a significant step, it is but a beginning of t hat collaboration. While the failure of the United Slate to join the League of Nations may On th part of mo l citiz ns, it i · very difficult to have contributed to th collapse of that effo rt to pre­ com prehend just what all the eli t urbance is about. ·erve peace, t he failure of its members to live up lo the Many aUempt hav b en mad to analyz Mr. obligations t hey had accepted was no negligible factor Truman's meaning, but thee attempts ar reminiscent in undermining t hat co ll ective ef'Tort to prevent war. of such vague hi~torical stat m n l a Pre id nt If its members had not fai led the League, the League oolidge' · "I do not choo e to run," and in fact very pr bably would not hav fail ed the world. little in terpr .tation is needed or want d.

This point was expressly poin ted out at San Fran­ ci. co by many elder ·taLesmen who, having participated More t han likely, Pre id n t Truman made a simple in that first effort toe tablish a unifi d system of ecuri­ statement of policy which he a nticipal d \ ou ld b ty, wanted to profi t from t hose ea rli er mistakes and tak n and accept d a ·uch, and probably was more form a more lasting struct ure. As Field Marshall Smuts surprised and confu eel t han anyone to find that the pointed out, t he Charter of t he United Nations is a tatement. had boom ranged and was again staring him much better compact than was the covenant of th e in t he face with a different angle added. The facti,; that League of a tions, because it lak es a more realistic he said this to call attention to th id a that the nil I account of the world as it is. Smuts also remarked t hat Stat s ha · no European colonial ambitions and t hat t he covenant would have worked if the member nations was all. would have lived up to it and h e probably would con­ cede t hat t he harter will wo rk under t he same condi­ But, a usual, in to th se words ha · been r ad a r buke tion . to Russia becau e of t he o iet'::; terri torial demand ·, Any feeling that t he main job is finished now that t he and t he word has been rai:ed t hat we will give up our Senate has ratifi ed the barter would do much to base· in t he Pacific. Both of the e ac u ations or a - neutralize a significant accomplishm nt. A fal se f eling sumptions seem nl ir ely unjustified. As far as th of security is worse t han none a t all. The most laudable rebuke to talin is concerned, why not ignore it as ideas expressed in the moot hest words cannot . top a simply preposterous, and t he Pacific bas s are c rtainly single V -2 rocket, l t alone check the for e s of aggres- not territory in t he ·ense which one speak · of as terri­ ion. Only a· the Charter enables peace-loving nations torial acqui ilion. Mo ·t peopl b li e ~hat ~ e mu ·t to implement their high purpo e with an eft' ective keep our Pacific ba. e because t hey are essential, but organization wi ll it lead to t he control of might t hrough i makes no difference wh th r t hey bel n r lo us or right. whether we hold them under a trusteeship from the nited ations. T hus in ratifying the Charter and helping to set up an in ternational organization to provide a lasting peace under Jaw and order, th United tates assumes a prime Inasmuch as Mr. Truman's words may be interpreted responsibility for carrying out the purposes of the with a translation t hat will atisfy everyone, it prob­ United ration . If t he e purpo"es fai l to prevent a ably would not be a bad idea if the President were to third world war, because of indifference, bungling, or make a few more remark in order that all could under­ shortsightedness, we wi ll at least be able to say tha t we stand exactly what he did mean in the little speech t hat did no t refu ·e to make the attempt. has r ached such enormous proportions. 3 f> y Uidwrd .Y. Uolu>rtso11 . . 1/S. l S.YU

new sem .

O uR n w Commanding Offic r i truly a "Hoosier Daniel Birmingham, G orge Davies, Robert Marble, born and bred." Lt. Wood receiv d his B .S. from Raymond I owers, Lawrence Spellman. Indiana State Teacher · Coll ege, T erre Haute, and b fore e ntering the service h was working on his Jncomin~ Freshmen M .. at But! r n iversity in I ndianapolis. Joining t he Navy in 1942, Lt. Wood carne to John W ITH t he arrival of th new men another y ear, Carroll in August of 1944 aft r serving for eighteen schola tically, started at John Carroll. In a hectic w ek months on the Commander's Service Force of the of induction, July 2- , eighty-two apprentice seamen 7th I< leet in the ou th wes t Pacific. and t hirty -nine new civili an students set forth on their Lt. and Mrs. Wood call Cleveland home for the quest for college in ·truction. JJresent, but they will be glad to return to Indianapolis. The majority of t he avy men had been away from Their two ·ons a re both in t he avy, Rober t, t he sch ool for several years prot cling t heir country's elde t, a patient in t he U N Hospital, Tampa, Florida, shores. These men received two months pre-V-12 and Richard in t he Tavy V-12 unit stationed at De­ instruction ' neath Princeton's Ivy covered wall·, thus, pauw niver·ity, Greencastl , Indiana. in a ·mall way, orienting th em elves for t hing to come. Before he ent red t he servic Lt. Wood wa t he As t he "old sal ts" and "greenhorns" arriv d many director of financial activitie· at Shortridge High chool introduction were neces ary . B ernet Hall, the new in lndianapolis. This school is on of th few high home of the former, held many mysteries, a did t he schools in the country to publi..;h a daily newspaper. awe-in piring admini tration building. 4 In th administration building thing· happened fa t man, M., Kokomo, Ind., Palm·, . L., D troit, Mich.; and furiously. Form. were distribul d with daily r gu­ Pu Li, J ., leveland, 0.; Rancour, I v land, 0.; larity to be filled in in lh "prescribed" mann r, and Regula, R., Beach City, 0 .; Rh ades, . T., K nt, 0.; daily entertainment wa al ·o provided by batteries of Rob rts R. ., Columbus, 0 .; Robert on R. . Jac·k­ achie,·emenl t.e ts. In the p.m., ach day, physical sonvill e, Fla.; Roething, D. D., Wat rloo, Iowa; Ruks, education consist. d of "sacking out," a r al br ak; thi F. J., leveland, 0.; Rumpke, J. H., Cincinnati, 0.; was to change suddenly and radically a· of July 12. chaer, H., \ apello, Iowa; , chatzman, B., hicago, Ill.; ch rm ist. r, P. E., Maywood, Ill. ; chmal, R. J., A t.h term began, . ixty returning arroll \ '-12' r Crown Point, Ind.; chneider, R., t. Louis, ~ o.; swell ed the u nit to approximately 150, and battalion chultz, R., D fianc , .; cibor, J. F., Detroit, Mich.; rganization wa put into immediat practic . Ther humate, W. , Denver, Colo.; k\ arran, C., ou th were still many unan wer cl que ·Lions but the new a rri vals seemed Lo have their har of "savvy." Bend, I nd .; lack, N.C., Grand Rapids, Mich.:, mith, . J., Dayton, 0.; na hall, W. , Columbus, 0 .; tewart, Prof ssors \Vi s and Gavin produc cl enough wo rk \ ., ap Gerard an, o.; t rain, A. C'., nion, f o.; Lo keep every hap! ·s fro h busy all hour of the clay trait, D. W ., Spar a, Wise.; Turpen, R . R., Detroit, and nighL. Messers. Hart and Armstrong, repre ·enting Mich.; Walk r, H., Kokom , fn d.; We ·. !hoff. D., the Navy, and Herb Bee, of the Carroll athletic depart­ Chicago, Ill.; W ton, D. R., Oelw en, l owa; \ iley, ment, Look hold and r ally put th swabbie. through R. P., Sioux Falls, D.; Wilkinson, W. L. , Harri - their pac s. Luckily for the recipients, th ere was a four­ burg, 111. ; \ rona, T., leveland, 0 .; \ yszynski, H., day grace, t. he lack of hot water being the rea on, b for P ula ki, Wise. t hese gentlemen introduced their devactating program. Rumor, and. o-call cl fact, had it that \'-1:2 at John It was noted, surprisingly, that them n in while were Carr ll wa to officiall y end lasl June. Well, once again, mor than alisfied with "chow." In Lh majorily of f und don w 11 establi :h d grounds, llH' avy claims ca es it certainly was a welcome change, and e p ciall y that 0 Lober will d finitely bri ng down th curtain on the ab~ence of me s cook , .M.A.A.'s, and t.he lik , pro­ Lhe \ -12 here at J.C . . duced many beaming faces. Vl e understand that the men from thi unit will be Doors to t he Scienlific Academy were t hro\ n open t ransferred to a co li ge or uni versity with a aval and ·everal fro, h joined with th old m mbers to form Re erv Officers Training Corps d tachm nt and work an almost blank t Y-12 organization . oftball in the will be continued per us al. Thofe men who ent .r d evenings off red a v nt for pent.-up en rgy and league in J uly will probably go through on mor ' t t r in pl ay produced much competitive spirit.. Late in July, Lh V-12 curriculum at the new school. There is only the navy band began Lo take hape and in !ale August one J ROT unit in Ohio, at Miami niver.·ity. thi group made its first appearance. The,e activities do It i definitely lru tha t \'-12 will be mi ·:eel, al­ not in clude t h entire scope of extra-curricular activilies though J ohn Carroll undoubtedly will b glad to :tart at Carroll , but they do con Lil ute Lho e in which the "reconver ion" back to the day of p ace. ince the majority, especially \" -12 ers, participal . conception of \'-12 here, two years ago, va t tricl s ha e been made, both in the unit a nd in certain of the The new men a r : ch ool faciliti s. Maintenance of the~ standards will Archer, C. E., anton, Ohio; Arm Lrong, W . F., Ea t assure t h uni ersity a leading r I in postwar educa­ Al ton, Ill.; Benjamin, R . 0., Rockford, Ill. ; Bennell, Lion . E. ., B rwyn, Ill.; Berghuis, F. C., Chicago, IlL ; Bren­ nan, R ., Hammond, Incl. ; Brockhouse, \ ., Kan a · i y, Mo.; Brown, R. T., Maple H eights, O.;Burns, C i\' ilian A ddil ion :< P . M., P eo ria, Ill .; Byers, D. W., Henderso n, Iowa; Th r are Lhirty-nin e new civilian ludents, of whom Caldwell, W., Camden, Incl .; alhoun , D., Columbus, Le n are li vi ng in t he dormitory. Th : ten ar : Dani I 0.; opeland, D. M., ort h Madison , Incl.; Corn, T. R., \V. al lahan, M eadvill e, Pa.; John M. D eVol, Zanes­ Maumee, 0.; rane, J. R . Waynesvill e, 0 .; D ahm, L., ville, 0. ; Richard D. Ennen, Yp ilan ti. Mich.; Thomas Merrill, Wise.; DeJong, H ., Rockford, Ill .; Duck, H., L. Hogan, Chicago, Ill. ; Donald J . Huhn, Van Wert, Chicago, Ill. ; Egan, D., St rea tor, Ill.; Elson, H. E., 0.; E ugene . Lippert, orwall<, 0.; Bernard A. ~e ) ­ Waukee, Iowa; Erhart, R ., Kansas City, Mo.; Erick­ son, orwalk, 0.; Edward J. Sherman, hicago, Ill.; son, R. E., Stockton, Calif. ; Fintel, J., Osceola, Wi se.; H erbert J. Smith , Mas ilion, 0.; D onald W. myth , Ford, K . W ., Cl veland Heights, 0 .; Ford, W . A. , Amh r ·t, 0. Detroit, Mich. ; Gane, M., Flint , Mich. ; Green, J ., Edinburgh, Ind.; Grim, D., w Springfield , 0.; Gus­ Ot her new civilian students, wh o ar fr m Clev land tafson, P ., Burli ngton, Iowa; Hardie, G. H., Jackson, and its suburl s are: John D. Blake, George W. B ym r, Mich.; Harlin, F. J., Deca t ur, Ill. ; Har tzheim, J . F., orman A. Burkhardt, John P . Faragher, Robert J . Juneau, W ise.; Hewitt, D. C., Lan ing, Mich .; Johnso n, H ill , Edward P . Kelley, Richard T . Luke:, James V. R. L., Eau Claire, W ise.· Johnston, E. E., Lakewood, Me ahon, Raymond L. MajeE ki, Edward J . Mascha, 0 .; Kaemmer, H. H., Milwaukee, Wise.; Keskitala, Will iam E . Ma on, Thomas G. Matowitz, K nn th H . H., Republic. M ich.; Kuntze! man, J., Albion, Nebr.; Minch, Edward V. Morrow, Richard E. O'Boyle, Hugh Lindseen, T., eattle, Wah.; Lower, R. L., Ioma, 0' eill, Francis E. P icklow, Rob rt E. Rist, Will iam Mich. ; Mar hall, J ., Steu benvi ll e, 0 .; McDonnell , J. Ro celli, Philip A. Ros kopf, Norman C. Siewko, J . V., Painesvill e, 0. ; Medley, R., Cleveland, 0.; Moll­ Franklin E. Simek, Clarence G. m it h, Stephen B . man, G. R., Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Monks, R . L ., Bay Skladany, Ernest A. Szorady, R obert W . Thompson, City, Mich .; oils, F ., Cosh octon, 0.; O'Connor, W ., Peter C. Vardakas, Donald L . Vondriska, Jack M . Chicago, Ill .; 0' haughnessy, J., Chicago, Ill. ; Otter- Wygon ki. 5 ACTIVITIES

of orwalk, Ohio, still clai ms that he polite terms that: "Each man ( ·o-callecl ' hasn't seen a good-looking girl in Cleve­ attached to avy V-l2 (pre- ROT , Janel. Won't some kind, cute, female must reach a score of 55 instead of the reader do something to alter this feeling former 50 on his strength test before ... Here's wishing luck to the five ex­ graduating from four days of calisthenic· resident stud nts who have left for the to three." Well, fella's, don't feel too hy Frank de Buono service: .Jim Pojman and Don Mali­ bad because your present Alma Mater For those of you who are new this kowski Navy; Lowell Chri ty and does maintain one of the best record s mester, this column is what some would Larry Seger Army; and Jim "really?" (avg.l for a V-l2 unit, 64 . "0, my aching wish to term, "a gossip sheet." verthe­ Quilter in the Merchant Marine. How's back!" less, we on ly print news and rumor. that about dropping us a line and letting us * arriv to us from th most reliable know what's cooking? . . . Is it true Scorecard notations: J.C.U. men pro­ sources of th arroll Crap vin . A II tid­ that Bori · Ros elli spends mo t of his mise to see Lou Boudreau's Indians after bits will b gratefully accepted by this spare time at a certain Ea t Side pub, aiel I ndians have maintained a .500 or humble writer, so don't be shy, boys; namely Moe's? . . . A typical after-class better av rage for more than five clay· we're all one big happy(?) family. What's . cene at Carroll; Mr. Wiess, Professor of .. Football pickers: Pay attention to buzzin, cousi ns? ? ? ... English, bumming a cigarette from one Pitt's Panther. in thi · year's calcula­ Is Vondriska's first name really P.lmer, of his stud nts, Ken Minch. The "weed" tions ... Lou Little promi e that if or have the Benedictine boys been pull­ situation has reached a low ebb ... Columbia breaks into the win column ing my leg . . . an you top thi. : Bob The Dorm now boasts a new "Don this year, she de erve a bowl bid ... Wright has shifted the scene of his .Juan." It is none other than that ·uave Speaking of football, this topic eems to romantic carryings-on from the informa­ man-about-town, Dick Ennen, formerly be all one ·an hear around Carr II and tion cl ·k of arroll to I 14th and Euclid. of Ann Arbor, Mich . ... Dates by ap- yet we do not have a team . . . ot even That's quite a jump, Bob! . . I am pointment only, girls ... I'd like to intramural teams ... How 'bout that? sorry to r port that the T ower has been devote a little space to give the Sodality ... V- 12 concept of high jumping, get defiled. Don't worry though, Norm, we and its leader: a little well-earned prai e the feet over t he bar. Ha, ha. . . The are personally caring for the crocodiles, for the marvelous work they'v done in m aintenance men don'ts em to be hig hl y and the ivy is watered every day, UGH! formulating some school spirit, and al o in favor of mass ba ·ketball , rainy day . From what I gather, Father Schell to remind everyone that the oclali ty i parlor ga me . has had to convert several of his students not a closed organization. All sugge tions before h could begin /Pachin(l them for the good of the Sodality will be grate­ fully accepted, I'm sure ... So if you Moral Guidance . . . One-third plus During t he pa t month navy and have any sugg stions, don't keep them to on -third q uals one-half, Koenig .. . civilian tudent. have been givin g each yourself. Give out, boy· ... That's a ll Ralph Lugo has been working diligently, other stiff co mpetition in a ten-team for now, gang. I'll dig you later. trying to crash the D.C. set of Akron 0. oftball league. Play commenced July 15 P.S. K eep at it J.L. You'll get an A. D.C. doesn't stand for Debutantes and ended with the championship game Galore; just the Delta Gama sorority of August 27. Akron's noted university . . . John S~'a LEA GUE . TA DT GS Bevington's ball and chain was attending T eam8 IV L T Arfl. the summer session here at Carroll ... Admiral Striker· l 0 8 A. J. Scoli o ha · departed from Carroll , Sfta't~ Stupe 8 1 0 . 8 leaving a certain blonde fro m rsuline At the insistence of Lt. Wood and Ta ·k Force 6 2 0 .750 with a shattered, if not broken heart. under the supervi ion of Gene Oberst, 2 1 Club 4 ~ 0 .571 Perhaps it will comfort her to know that the Navy lad have put l's clay Buzz Bomb~ 4 ~ l .571 .J. Long will be more than happy to take tennis court in excellent condition. * • acuity . . ~ ~ 1 .500 up where A ..J. left ofT . . . At this A complete overhaul of the two court *Dodgers 2 5 I .2 6 moment nothing has been said about a was nece · ·ary, o after the "Engineers" *Draft Bait 1 5 l .167 fresh man dance, but I'm sure this event went into a brief huddle, several days of Fly 1 6 .143 will take place very .·oon . When it does, draft labor were in order before the clay Tiger 1 fi .143 we're all hoping that the new freshm n a nd weed became two, in ·tead of on , * ivilian will make a good turn-out. Let'. all get a nd the finishing touche. of lining and Championship together and become acquainted at this grading were complet d. Admiral Striker: 14 , Stupes 4. shindig. What do you say, fresh men .. . Hats off to Carrol l' " ea-Be !" * * At the rate Don I luhn is go ing at his typ­ * * Gordon H art selected the fo ll owing as ing practice, he should have the world's Another worry to new men (whoever members of an all-star team which ex­ record l eaten by the end of the semester said that :ail ors oulcl .-wi m ?) i the pects to play Crile General H o pita! an I . .. Eel Sherman, of the dormitory, is pas ing of second cia swimming tests. the Diesel School: Fabry , Vo mik, carryi ng on a :teady c rrespondence The thought, to many, is terrifying, yet 0' eill , Kilroy, Sullivan, Brennan, Got­ with Henry Ford and Esther W illi am . upon arrival at the pool, lo and b hold, termeyer, T a rvin, Lake, R ubin, Turpen, It is t o long a story to write, o see Ed the boy· really do put out. I s it becau e Nolls, Murphy, Lind een, We elh otf, for further d tails ... If you want to of the on-looker , H erb Bee and Gordon Brown, R. T., Monk , Finte!, and Moll­ h ar the prize ·tory of the month here at Hart, or maybe the li feg uards? Huh? man. Carr II, speak to Mr. Petit. He is about .. Could be! These men lost their first engagement, the onl y per on I know of who almo. t * * * 6-2, to the oldiers of Crile H o ·pita!; witne d rocket ship taking off from Joe Gi ·h, b ill et 407, bemoan "Ath­ winning a second game play cl with the C leveland' airp rt .. Bernie I on, letic Order o. Umpteen" stating in no Schola tics, 3-2. 6 gether with Lt. Paul W. Cavanaugh, S . .J., an alumnus of John arroll, who just returned home after being imprisoned in Th faculty and tudents offer The Rev. Edward C. McCue, .J ., a German camp. Father 0' allahan was th ir heartfelt sympathy to Herb ean of .John arroll University, wa on a nationwide bond tour in behalf of Bee on the recent d ath of his the ixth War Loan and topped off in celebrant at the Student Ma s, July 27, father. and officially received a total of 46 new Cleveland to be the f atur d peaker at member · of the odality. Twenty-two of the annual Festival of Fr dom. the e are joining the Sodality for the first time, an l fourteen had their mem­ bership in other Sodalities recognized and validat d in the organization here. A the oftball ea on draw to a clo e, s~~otd4P~ In his address to the Sodali ·ts after we are advi eel that intramural ba k t­ the reception, Father McCue made a Sunday afternoon, July 22, aw thr e ball and volley ball tourneys ar b ing arloads of odali ~ on th way to F 11 mo t eloquent plea that the college man worked out. During September, pre­ ". hould make his spirituality keep pace Lake, on Route , for an outing and teak liminary boxing bou will be held to roa t. Bill Barker, .Jack LaVielle, and with his intellectual development." "Our determine the contendets for October's am Imbro ciano did th driving. In aim in all the works of our Sodality," he big moker. Se n weights have been tok n of good f llow hip the thre car empha ·izecl the point, "is to form our­ outlined and it i expected that in orne kissed bumpers at every stop light, selves with a mature spirituality so that weights several pairing· will be arranged much to the concern of p ac able drivers our atholicism be highly intelligent, before the top men are determined. Late on th road. Ball game, wi mming, danc­ having its proper infl uence in the world in August, trial for the track meet ing (ther were lots of girl there), steak about us." cheduled for the second week in Sep­ roasts, cards and mor dancing made a Membership in the odality in propor­ tember were held and a large and repre­ busy afternoon and evening. am I rn­ t ion to the small student body is higher sentative field has been elected. Be­ bro ciano was absolutely super over the this year than it ha. been in many years cause of lack of equipment the meet will broiling steak . Fathers McQuaclP and at Carr II . ixty-six out of a po·sible be limited to running races, high jump K rupitzer mad up the faculty r pre­ ·eventy-two make a rather high per­ and shot put. sentation. cen tage. The fine spirit of co-operation a mong the men, a evidenced in their ge ner . ity to the Missions in the F riday Mass Collections, augurs well for an activ term ahead.

With the open ing of the July term a new li ttle publication appeared on the horizon of John arr ll journalis m. It is the Reli gio us Bull tin of the Sodality of John 'an·oll Univer ity. p to the pre ·ent it ha · b n i ·ued twice weekly, but it· issuance i depend in g on the need rather than on a ny set dead-line. So many thing have b n happening in t he odality that uch a bull etin is neces. ary to keep the member aware of what is go­ in g on, ·o that the ful lest possible partici­ pation in all odality activity is available to all. I n a !clition to the news items, proposal of fut ure projects, t he I ulletin usually run an editorial by the D irector of the odality, Fath r McQuade, on . orn e aspect of the ideals or philo ophy of life fo r wh ich t he odality stands. The Glee Club Celebrate.·

@«d. '8~t b ringi ng back Carroll recognition in t he t:jtee city. D r. Louis Balogh, the dire tor, then July Fourth was a r d l tter clay in the Because of the great success of the an­ ro and gave a short talk to tl1e club. He hi tory of John Carroll. On that day nual concert held a few month ago, t he congratulated the mem ber on the J . . U. played host to Lt . Comdr. Jo eph Carroll Glee lub was given a banquet in marvelous succe ·s they had attained and T . O'Callahan, S.J., of Boston, heroic the Carroll cafeteria. Approximately spoke his satisfaction a· to t he power at­ padre who prai cl the Lord and pas ·eel thirty members of the club arrive I with tained by a club of such small size. the ammunition from t he burning maga­ t heir dates for thi event held as a token zines on t he ex plo ·io n-racked aircraft of uccess. Roast Virginia ham , rn a ·heel By popular demand, Larry S g r of er U.S.S. Franklin. Father O'Calla­ potatoes, and a good number of other Toledo, Ohio, rose and sang Romberg's han, the fi rst cha pl ain to be reco m­ dishes afforded the member a well­ well-known and lov d, "De ert Song." mended for the Congre ional Medal of de ·erved t reat. When Lar ry wa fi nished the Gl ee H onor, aid Mas at the Ge·u hurch. After the meal F r. Gilbert H. K rupitz­ Club, at the uggestion of D r. Balogh , After the Mass a breakfast wa held at er, S.J., the clu b moderator, delivered a rose and sang the Club motto, "Loyal t he cafeteria in hi honor. Mayor Burke short talk, praising the Gl ee Club and and Strong," bringing to an end a very and other ci ty offi cals were present to- saying that it ha afforded a mean of enjoyable evening. 7 " Jnstead of raising th launch back on forts th y ,,. re succe: ·f ul in getting him board ship each night, we would usually fr e. tie a line to it and let it drift near the Sating with their fi ngers, wa bing said Salt Stpuu; stern. Aft r the launch was secur d in fingers in the ·cuttl bu ·, bumming hy .J oe ;\ 1e Donndl this mann r, we would have to cli mb cigarettes, and squatting o n their from it to the ship's rleck by means of a haunche., was the Indian · fo UJ-day sea-ladder. effort. We all f It orry for the poor devil " I harl just returned from my last t rip but we wer c rtainly happy to see them E. N. Bennett relates- .,omewhat a.~hore and header! fo r the stern of th scamp r clown the gangplank at Cape humorously one of his xp rienc .· of ship where the line was dangling ov r CrPtP. naval volunte ring in connection with the the side. After secu ring the launch, I a mphibious for<"es. started the climb up the twenty-five f et " There I .·toorl," he says, "shaking in of sea-ladder. I was tired, and that didn't ~fl ~«-Pr4l4 my boots anrl foul-weather gear, on the help matters any. S~4U A~eHtfl ·hore of the enchanting Pacific· Ocean in " I managed to get within five f t of Holdi ng their first m ting .July 11, the sunnyl? 1 California. The <' nsign stood the ship's deck when suddenly the chain Scientific cademy ha been bu tling glaring at us; surld nly he snapp cl, \ o on the right sid e of the ladder snapped with activity ever since. Bu:ine of thi · vol unteers? Well, I'll have to pick some in two. I wa.~ hanging in m id-air with first meeting was the lection of offi cer · of you m n for the job of engineers on only the remaining chain holding th for the final . erne ter. R. .) . Gratz wa thos landing barges. I'll call out names ladrler and me. elect d P resident, K .] . Reif, Vice­ at random.' "There wer two alternative for me. I coulrl hope the left chain would hold President, B . H. llud ·on anrl D. W. "The worrl 'random' clangerl against while I tried to climb the rest of the way, Willing retained their re ·pective po:itions my fancy. Bennett, T t hought, was an or 1 could jump into the water below. of ecr tary and Trea. urer. obscure nam Th odds seemed in my "When I looked down to see where I'd Three members of the faculty have favor. How wrong J was! been gue t · of the Academy at this writ­ "'B nn tt,' shouted the ensign, 'will land if I chose the latter cour · , I noticed the launch gaping at me. Thi meant ing and several more ar expected to be the fir. t volunteer.' lie dronerl on and talk to th m mbers before th end of on, picking out about twenty of us. that t he chain had to hold. I continu d to eli nb toward the deck which was so October. Fr. Lionel V. arron, .J., dis­ "We were then chained together to be near ::nd yet so far. To my surpri. e the cu. sed mental disea ·e, the variou types, driven to the docks where the landing chain held and soon I was telling about the cau e ·, and the po sible cure.. A vi it boats wer s cured. There they un­ my e:· perience." to th m ntal ho pi tal ha · been planned shackled us and we were politely shoved and a tentativ date t for eptember. onto the well deck. A rough-looking in­ * * Dr. Rene Fabien delivered an excellent dividual came up and nonchalantly asked An old salt , Phil !Robin l Burns, give· talk favoring socialized medicine in the if I was one of th new trainees. At that out with a story of some Jap prisoners U nited State . He outlined the programs same instant, I heard a cracked voice liberated at n ol landia, ew Guinea. as they were carried out in J<;urope and call out, 'No, no, you can't do that to Phil was aboard LST l22 when this pointed ut their general succe·:. me. I won't do it. I'll die first.' incident took place. The standard com­ Before leaving John an·oll, Fr. Wil­ "As the li eutenant cal mly put hi: plement of this ship is about one hundred liam F. Ryan, S.J., wa gue t of the aca­ pistol back in his holster, I heard him men of the crew and two to three hun­ demy, speaking on the . ubject "Origin of mutt r, 'Well, I guess I'll hav to find dred troops. After landing at Hollandia L ife." A very informative explanation of :omeone else.' it was discovered that the crew num- t he science of life in all it aspect , in­ 1 ered ixty and the liberated prisoners corporating philosophy in hi variou ob- "Aft r I saw the engine my fears over three hundred. calm cl down a trifle, but I wondered if ervations, l• r. Ryan l1eld all the mem­ Living conditions were crowded enough bers' intere. t in his farewell a ppearance. that rl iesel co uld get the best of me or not. with ju t the crew, so the reader can That evening I was a little more de­ Social activities of the organization imagi ne what li fe must have been like consisted of a ·Ja m-bang beer party held pres ·eel than usual; the engine had got the for the four days required to tran port best of me. .July 28 in E uclid Creek Park. oftball the prisoners to Cape Crete in occupied and other games were the order of the "Nevertheles., after a good night's ew Guinea. It would have been a dif­ day unt il late evening when t he dates sleep on the beach, I arose with new ferent matter l1ad the pa senger been "broke out the chow." vitality and determi nation. I would con­ white and use to certain civilized ways, quer. F rom that day on I wa one of the but no such luck. Hold Dance rugged, swaggering, volunteers of the Member of the Brit i h I ndian garrison amphibious force." on Singapore, t he three hundred had n Augu t l, the Academy pr en ted • • * really been through quite an experience. the first dance of the ummer ·ession. Leavin g our friend Bennett to ponder The Jap , in ta king them to New A candle light afl'air, a group of mae tro': the workings of his diesel, we go now to Guinea, ran into unexpected company from the Bureau of Supplie · and Ac­ his roommate, H . II. Kaemmer, to hear and the I nd ian had to swim everal counts, the " R hythm Mates," gave out of a n incident in t he earning of his "Spam miles before J ap submersibles came to witl1 the mu ic. Both civ ilian a nd navy r ibbon" better known as t he Europea n t heir re. cue. After arrival at Hollandia, st udents attended with their dates. theater of operation ribbon - but so­ the I ndian ·, consisting of Hindu , Sikhs, Member of the academy, now a t full called for reasons be ·t known to us who and va rious other Indian types, were trength are: Bayliff, Bi · meyer, 13lom, were there. used in wo rk batta lions. Bower, B r o wn, Cher venak, Coons, H e begins - " We w re anchored inside When they boarded the LST t hey were Crane, Cucln ick, Dierker, Duffin , Egan, the breakwater of Marseille, F rance. T he a d i.s heveled, emaciated lot. All sergeants Ford, K. W., F ord, W . A., Gottermeyer, weather was fair, but the water was and some corporal in the Briti h Indian Gratz, Hardie, H ejl, Hudson, H uesgen, choppy. It was my t um to act as cox - army mu t speak Engl i,sh so a few com­ K oach, Law, Liebman, Lower, Manner, wain of t he li berty launch, and I was none mand. were obeyed after a fa hion. Manor, McDonnell , McFall , Monks, too happy a bout it . I knew t he job wo uld E arly in the trip one brilliant fel low 0 ' eill, Reif, R eill y, Robertson, Rooney, have me feeling li ke t hree h ts in the stuck hi head out t he port hole and to R umpke, Schermeister , Schmal, Schultz, wind before the day was over. It took a his dismay was unable to pull it back kwarcan, mith, Slack, Thomas, Van lot of n rgy to ke p our launch on the through. Hi buddies were quite in­ Ne , Vosmik, Walker, F ., Walker, J ., course in choppy seas. trigued and after ·everal herculean ef- Willing, and Wood . 8 life! urely no one can afford to let this o;> rortunity pass. When t he saili ng get · a littl on th rough. id , ober thinking on valu s at stake should convince any trainee that such a chan e dema ncls con­ ;i! tPnt and ('On.·ci ntious effort at all The a val Re erve Off1cer's Training timo'S. Corps was stablished by an act of T he .R.O.T. . program is, and will we t syncopations may be heard ongre s in 1925 to provid e a p rmanent cont inu to be, a successful experim nt daily, wafting t hei r way into th sweet, system of training and instruction in e­ in cl mocratic ducation, open to quali­ ·ummer air from the windows of t he sential naval subjects at civi l ed ucational fied a pplicant regardless of race, color, Bern t on ervatory of Music ... but institutions to ·elect d tra ine for or ere d ! //. T . II ood. service with t he a val Reserve, Marine what's this no-mu. ic-aftl?r-study-hour orps Reserve, Regular avy, and hu iness? ... no lullabie. b for we re­ Ma rine Corps. tire? . . it's been poi nted out to yours T hi original act was amended recent ly fl:>u.dtu ?louH9 S~oev. truly that that incl ude. the bugl r ... gucs. he hadn't thought of it . . . yet. in order to more adequately meet the /lve, from vicini­ Di enroll ment from the ROTC is Plan · are being fo rmulated for seating ty ... Don't 1 be awfu l .. . Huh??? accomplisl1 ed in the ·arne manner as the large. t crowd ever to ·ee a I oxi ng The gru nt-and-groan class wil l hold its separation from V-12, namely, (a) fo r sh \\' at arroll. The Alum ni have al­ regula r weekly m tings at thP appointed discipli nary rea ·on ; rb ) becau ·e of poor ready requ ted a large block of ringside hours . . . o be ur to be there or you'll offi cer-li ke qualitie ; rcl for academic s at . It is quite po sible the performance miss all t he fu n. failu re; (d ) for phy ·ical eli. abilities. of Wedne day eveni ng, October 17, will Tho e thr e it inerant culprits are stick­ Upon t he successful complet ion of the r inaugurate for mal publi c athletics at ing a little clo r to home he one course, and upon the recommendation .John a rroll . away from home as of late . . . Won­ of the professor of naval cien e and tac­ der why? . . . or are th y! tic with the approval of the Burea u of vVho' that swirnm r of r·enO\I'n who aval Personnel, t he trainee will be ap­ tets ick every aturday morning? IT poin ted En ign in t he U.S. a val Re­ ?lad LWet-ta Uft- 1H4pedioH doesn't know what he's missing . . . On serve. H owever, the physical require­ Lat e in J uly, F r. Murphy pas eel t he ~eco nd tho~;ght, may be he does . . . ments for Ensign must be met and the word that a band ll'as neces ary. T hen Common questi n : Where did Arm­ trainee must be 19 years of age and not t here " came a littl li ·t" and t hirty men strong get the in atiable d si re for over 2 . After a pproximately one year volu nteered for this honor. Ja k Hearn·, Chesapeake Ba. oy:ters. We know where of ser vice on board ·hips of the Navy , director of several high school band in that glam r-build came from now. the officer may request transfer to the leveland, arrived one T hursday morn­ Oyst r: with lead paint some dish. regular Navy, provided he i · not over ing and d iscover cl what in t rumentation Observ rs of t he hip company twenty-ftve years of age at the t ime of he had. civilian softball fraca · of late J uly w r the request. Beginning on t he foll owing T hursday , exhilarated by the orps gift to arroll, It is de>ired that the trainee pos3ess band practice developed into a real " Mac" Me orkle, who a mbled around the following e sential qualifications of thing and as Avgu ·t' econcl inspection cent r fi eld a · in a daze . .. Too much a junior officer in t he Navy : rolled around wh o shoul d be on l1 and liberty, Mac . . (a ) A good genera l education. but the ba nd. At thi writing concerts L a t est J apanese o m m un i q u e: (b) A practical working knowledge of es­ are flitting through the minds of t he cratch on city! ential naval subjects. di rector and the other powers that be, Latest Russian ommunique: Let u: (c) A well-disci plined mind a nd body. but t he m ain duty of t he band is to make in on it, Harry. (d ) An alacrity to a ume respon ·ibility music fo r it fellows each Saturday. Late. t . S. Communiq ue: lt begin · and initiat ive. Member of the band and their resp c­ to look a if we may, we may, mind you, fe) A well -developed sense of naval ideal , tive instruments are: Brennan, Duck, have omething. customs, and t radition. Monk. , Sni tzer, Strait, and W hitcomb, Any clay now, it is expect d that th In this short article it is possible to give clarinet ; Berk, DeJong, and K nauf, ·ax; cleaner will figure out th gigantic but an out li ne of t he ROT program. Manner, bells ; Robertson, and Corn, problem of pre ·sin g avy uni fo rm · cor­ W hat a wonderful opportunity a man flu te; Armstrong, Fintel, Gratz, Noll , rectly, which bring up the fact f the has upon being selected for thi · traini ng and We t, trumpet; Hue. gen, ba ritone; "sail or suit ." In t he October i ue of t he - a complet college education grati - E ri ck on, and Luby, t rombone; Ke - ews there will be a li ttle pro-con ect ion even the text book , chow, a nd uniforms kitalo, and Walker, horn ; Bayliff, and devoted to thi v ital i ue. Anyone hav­ are furnished - all t hi and at the ame Gustav on, tuba; Burghuis, Schneider, ing any items of interest t hey would like t ime one xperience m any enjoyable Skwarcan, Vosmik, Hir ch, a nd Mc­ to have publi hed in this column, give moment that can come with college F all , percussion. them to either of the avy eels. 9 The class of '25 held a reunion, with a He is doing finance and per·onnel work. Capt. Nick Fa.· ciano. '40, was horne good repres ntation, on Saturday, June gt. Vin cent P. Trapp, ex-'36, a fi eld on leave in .Ju ne for a month' r t be­ 23, at H odous' farm . artilleryman with the 79th Infantry tween the European theater fighting and Gunner's Mate 2, c Patrick E. Pos tle, Division on occu pation duty in Bavaria, mort> fighting in th Pacific .. ex '45, recently home on furlough from wrote home about a visit he had with hr J>au l Robert Pape. U R, '44, the Pacific, tells of shooting down Theresa eurn ann, world fam ous stig­ has 1 ported to offic r ' chool at the several "White Angels," ,Japanese women matic. Nav: Training Station, orfolk, Va. , for uicid e pilot . Ile was on ly a few hundrerl Maj. Thomas J , Gorman. '41, of instr' tion in duties aboard a de t royer feet away fr om the Franklin and the Akron, is ho me on leave after 88 months of th1 Atlantic Fleet. Hwnker I f ill when their tragedi s took overseas in the European theater. He Cor >. Patric k J . M cC'a fTcrly , '43, i. a place. Pat also participated in t he battles joined the Royal Canadian Air 1. Pills, ex '44, USMCR, is is a communication · watch offi ce r serv­ fly ing a Corsair in the Pacific theater. ing with a unit of the Atlantic Fleet in Jo e11 h P. Sanson, ex '4 5, is now the orth Atlantic. located in bus iness at West Los Angeles, apt. Lo ui s J. Nadea u, ex '35, a wing Calif. chemi cal officer, maintain technical Charles La mpkin, ex-'39, has been do­ supervision over several hundred hemi­ ing co ncert work t hroughout the nited cal workers who store and prepare bombs tates and Canada along with vol unteer for deli ve ry to Superforts, and also in­ work in Canteens and Ho ·pita! for the structs B-29 bombardiers. U ni ted Theatri cal War activities Co m­ Among the graduates of the 12th mittee. n has rece ntly bee n chosen Educational and 11th Physical Recondi­ music director of a hospi tal show for the tioning co urse at the School for Person­ USO wh ich will cover the state , playin g nel Services in June wa Lt . Edwarrl J. military hospitals. Shubeck, '43, who is now qualifi ed to Michael P. Neelon, ex '44, U A, is at fill a key position in the Reconditioning present in th Philippine near Ma nila. D. H. Lynch c/ sp, US R program in an Army H o ·pital. 10 Rev. \Vi ll ia m F. llyan, .J. : Lt. T homa J . ,\ lazanec: H e look fine and appear· to be in good I regret that I left arroll with ut an­ Hello from sunny Australia! Thi week spirits. Ray had seen eal arr II and swering all the letters from the boys in make it five month that I have be n Doctor Grauel out here and said both the service, but I ju t did not have time down here and o far I have had a won­ wer doing nicely. to get around to answering all of t hem. derful ti me. I came to thi land to at­ Thank you again fo r the farroll New.~ Would you pl ease let them know my new tend officer candidate. chool and gradu­ and extend my. inc rest regards to all thr address? ation took place n June I. I was plenty fellow and to th faculty. Rev. Willia m F. Ryan, S.J., bu y, but the work was worth it. Then all Lt. M ike w eney, Milford Novitiate, the new shavetail· left for ydney wl1ere 3rd Bn., 2nd M a rin ·,2nd Di ., Milfo rd, Ohio. we had a even day leave which turned c o F.P.O., a n Francisco, alif. into ten clay· when tran portation b - came difficult after heavy rain· had Cpl. Eel wa rd G . Bigler: caused a fl ood over the entir country- This i o rn eth ing 1 should hav don Lt. lj.g.) H . Ke nn eth Fi tzgeral d : ide. At pre ·ent I am weating out trans­ quit some tim ago, but I did not, and por t ation north to my new assignment a that i to tell you h w much th farro/1 In my movement!· sin e having left tl1e ru•s h Ips to k ep us near our hom s, cou ntry shortly after Ea ter, I hav e n­ a rai lhead officer som \ here in th Philippine . the ·hool, and our frie nds that w I ve. counter d many old friends among whom Say hello to all my friend· at arroll 1 left amp an Lui Obi po in p- are s vera! arroll men whom I'm . ure and tell them that I'll drop in for a visit temb r of 194:3 and \\' nt to lfawaii. you will remember. While we were back if I hould come back on rotation or th n w went to w Guinea, tayed in Pearl Harbor, the first top aft r leav­ ~o m thing like that. th re for a year. tation d on ing Fri o, and the last outpost of Lt. Thomas Mazanec, Luzon . civilization, there was John D owling, J. 55 Qm. Rh. o., A.P.O. 74, I atte nd d arroll for a ve ry hort n w a lieutenant in t he Army, d ingduty c o P o ·tma t r, time, but am very · ri ously thinking of with a ·earch light battalion. H i now a an Franci co, alifornia. r turning ther aft r th war . proud fath r of a daught r, having mar­ Again I !;ay thanks for sending thr ried Clare Gardner, whom y u may 0 C Da n S. Ro .. i : Carroll 1eu·s and I , incer ly hope you remember from night chool. AI o saw wil l o ntinu . .J oe Anzivino, Bill L nnon, a li eutenant I am now in F ontainbleau, France, at the famous French arti ll ry school on pl. Edward G. Bigler, in the avy doing gunfire work, and Bob H q . Batry., 0 F.A. Dn., M Conville, a lieutenant in the M a rine , the palace ground of Napoleon I. I am attending officer candidate school. A.P.O. 6, o Postmaster, a ct ing troop q uarterma t r on a nava l an 1• rancisco, alifornia. ve·. el. Just o ne \\' ek ago James Kilbane '44 or '45 wa · com missio ned here. La t unclay ince P earl we hav moved o n to other I met another arroll man Crosby '44. Pfc. James V. Pa tton : places in the Pacifi c where more familiar H e' in an air corps maintenance unit B e t wishes fro m Mar eille even fa es have been almo ·t every tim I go near here. though the heat i almost unbearablE' and a h o r , only tw of which hav been L uck to all Carroll men. the city it elf is hardly anything to rave from arroll. F irst, there was Robert 0 Dan S. Rossi, about the wi h, nevertheles , i. si ne re. M cGraw who wa. a year behind m e, n w O. C.S. Class 29, Let me take this pportunity to thank in the ixth Marine . Only thi morning 3:J;J Reinf. Co., you fo r your grand publication it cer­ I had a most plea ·ant gab fest with non A.P.O. 545, c o P ostmast r, tainly i~ intere ·ting reading and has other than the unfo rgettable Clarence ew York, I Y. given me many njoyabl hours. If in Fox, now an en ign in the avy d oing pi rit o nly it has brought me ba k to duty as a boat offi cer o n an attack cargo Lt. ~ lik e Sweeney : Cleveland often . I searchingly rea I every sh ip . It wa the fir t that we have seen J ust a f w overdue line to let you a rticle, including t he adverti ements. each other in two and one-half year , ·o know that I am r ceiving the Carroll Best regards to you F aculty a nd you can imagin the vast amount of con­ New.~ and njoying it very much. arroll men . versation that w nt forth. My Dad ·ent rn th detail. of the P fc. Jame V. Patton Lt. (j.g.) H . Kenneth Fitzgerald , rec nt Alumni Mass and Break fa ·t and 11 :3 AAA Gun. Bn., Stafl· Ampl1ibious Grp. 3. Pac., >a iel that a great number attended . A.P.O. 772, c o P ostma ter cj o F leet P ost Offi ce, I m et Ray Conr y at one of my -top · ew Yo rk, . Y. an Franci ·co, alifornia. out here and had a s hort talk with him. (Conlinuecl 011 lU' .rl ]IOfie)

YOU'LL FEEL OUR WELCOME AT CAMPUS DRUG ER 2084 - NEXT TO FAIRMOUNT THEATRE COMPLETE PRESCRIPTION AND SODA FOUNT A.IN SERVICE

11 "?'UJ#e {ja#tfz (c. ~ not much one can do at such a ervice at though we could use a fourth for bridge . sea Yet there is always the rosary and ('onti1wcl from p J(I P 11 I On my rounds out here in the i Janel the reading of the proper go ·pel. This I've met many an ex- arroll man ..Just tim e I added a Pray r in tim of War, Cpl. Harry I. Hya n !to his family ): last Sunday I met .Jo:eph W olff at a and even t ri ed reading a chapter from native church on the beach. lie' right I [ere I am again, and this tim I'm on the "Following of hrist." night shift, from 12 to 6 in the morning. near me now, o I may get to see him Lt. (j.g.J .J. .J. Wolff, SNR, I We're still here in Leipzig, and I don't again. About three m onth ago met S LST 284, F.P.O., .John umm r · at Zamboanga, Minda­ know for how lo ng. I like it here very San Francisco, Calif. much, so I hope we don't m ove too soon, nao, and later had him aboard here for but, no d oubt, we'll probably he on our "navy chow. " We had a great talk about Lt. (j .g. ) L . E. ('orr : th "old clays." Other news : Frank ulli­ way v ry soon. It . e ms that a team like " H ello" and "Greetings" fro m a ours very seld om get a v ry permanent van and Dietz Zi eno ar together in the stranger in the Far East. I want to say Marshalls; AI Vanderbo ·ch i ·on Saipan; lo ation. that I just r ceivect two co pi s of the Rus· Kermayer broke his leg n Okinawa I think I'm one of the Occupation ('arroll pu•s and it made me a little and is now on Saipan also ; I draw supplies T roops, and that wil l m an that I won't homesick. My cur for this disease is writ­ from Ens. Roark (V -12 clas: mate of b home for a whil , but some day in the ing letter:. mine); Mik Costello is on hi way out near future I think near hristmas I Father, the Almighty has been excep­ here now and Reel Kearney is a pil ot may get home. That's not a promise, it's tionally good to me. My duty i fine and d oing his share on kinawa. just the new rumor going around. I like my work very much. I am skipper Lt. fj.g. ) L. E. Corr, US R, Cpl. Harry I. Ryan, .Jr. of a small refrigerator ship that works about the Philippines. Two other offi cers U YP- 27 , F P O, aboard sh ip make life nice and easy !al - San Franci co, Cal iforn ia. Lt. (j .g .) .lose)Jh J . Wolff: Right now, Father, we are anchored ofT one of these fam ous Pa ifi c atolls. And to think that men actually fought for so CHAPLAIN' S C O llNE R trivial and desolate a reef! I believe the whole area could be immersed in the /,1/ d (/ !ftet. }!e .A1a;; Shaker Lakes, yet I can easily begin to appreciate its military value. 8nroute I was fortunate to enjoy RELIGION AND POSTWAR EDUCA liON liberty in H onolulu, and found the i: ­ The ew York T imes, for Augu. t fifth m ore, most probably, will want every lands most beautiful, lush with veg ta­ of t hi s y ar, considers the following cap­ thing ju t as it was before the war - the tion, delightful in cli mate. The service tion a worthy of it fro nt page: " Yale Is same old Coll ege, th ·am old Am erica, personnel now stationed there enjoy duty rgecl to tr s Religion a Curb on a nd thi i especially true of t hose who which can hardly be termed "foreign," I ntellectual Anarchy." The article react· now want nothing more than tog t ho me for most mai nland conveniences a re in part: "Formation of a strong depart­ a. fast as sh ips can carry them to the available even to Waves! AI o passed ment of reli gion at Yale niversity as a good old U.S.A., perfectly ati ·tied that Molokai, and loo ked upon the point postwar project, to develop grea ter it remain as t hey remem ber it. T here wil l where once t he leper pric t, Dam ien, ·pi ritual and ethical value. a mong the be some who, b cause of their ex peri­ labored to 1 ring sola ce, relief, and the t uclents, i · recommended . . I n its ence., will know more, or t hin k t hey word of God to H is most affl icted. This report the c mm ittee warn again t k now more, than their professors. T here Belgian missionary ha intere ted me, m oral a nd in tell ectual ana rchy, and will be some revolters against reli gion a nd e pecial ly a fter r ading the masterful Yale is urged to take the lead in p rovid­ m oral , b ut there will be a much larger biography by .John F arrow. I received ing wh 1 s me religious life for t he n um ber ret urn in g with a new seriousne ·s H oly Comm union at noon Ma " in Ou r st udent b dy." T o a nyone w ho ha. been and dept h of fait h. Lady of Peace Cathedral in H onolulu, fa m iliar with the phil osophy of Catholic Is it altogether fair to blame t he war where the good prie. t was ordained. H is coll eges the q ue t ion will at once a rise : fo r the moral a nd intell ectual anarchy rem ai ns wer exhumed a few years ago, Why a postwar proje t?' condemned in t he art icle r ferred to? In Fath r, a nd returned to Europe. I poke I t is t r ue that on cam p use · as well as the hierarchy of causes i n 't it quite t o a naval lieutenant pr · nt at t he occa­ in communities we are deali ng with a pof' ' ible t hat t he war has only watered . ion, a nd he ad mitted that the corpse baffl ed and perplexed generation of young seed. that wer planted lo ng before Pearl showed few signs, after years in a imple peopl e - one t hat sees war as something If a ·bor in the hearts and minds of stu­ wood box, of decay. that mu ·t be gone through with a nd der ts on t he very campuses that are now ews fr om, or even of, the old crowd vaguely hopes t hat orn e high nd m ay getting pert urbed over t he fr uit t hat is has be n . light. I understand t hat C pl. be . erved by t he incomprehensible sacri­ the logical resul t of t he purely seculari tic Ralph Thoma is in t he P hilippin s, a nd fi ce of young life and t he irretrievable vie.v of life communicated to ·tudents? has been ho pitali zed with jaundice. lo s of t rea ure that i taking place . In­ It is, indeed , encouragin g to note t hat And John W helan last wrote from tuit ively, many young peo pl e a re fee ling at no t ime in the past century have so L uxem bourg. D on Coburn adds M.D. that som ething h as go ne wrong with our many outsta nding ed ucators been say­ to hi na me in mid-June, a long with J ack culture a nd our way of life, or t his m ad­ ing t hat h igher education mu t have a McLaughlin, Pete Corrigan, a nd C lete ness of war would have been prevented. religiou · or t heologi cal fo undation t hat Boes hart. St. Louis migh t so me clay be Can anyone be surpri eel if we find ex­ without such a foundation it loses it proud of t hem . I gu ess t hey now all ow a t remes of everyt hing in the po twar co l­ e ent ia I meaning and unity; . till, it is hort in terns hip, a nd then t he boys are lege - opinions, moral , and political to be feared t hat t hese affir mation · will eady fo r active duty. H ow wo nderful a and ocia l action? There will be m any remain pi ous platit udes in those co lleges cl fe rment! tudents ret urning from war handi­ in which t he bulk of t he faculty do not On Sunday, I cond ucted a short. rvice capped by phy ical injuri e and emo­ consider it inte ll ectua lly re pectable to for t he atho li c men a board, though t ional mal adju t ments. Some will be in give a religious interpretation of their t her are not very many. The lot origi nal­ a desperate hurry . M any will want m aterials when t he materials seem to ly fell to me because we had t he doctor leisure and t ime in which t o reorient demand it, and loo k upon science a nd ta ke a hand at it one day and J1 e got lost t hemselves to civi li an life. Some wi ll religion, not a partner , but a co m­ in the middle of the C reed. But there i want everything changed. But m any petitor , in the search fo r trut h. 12 DEATHS Fat.her McManus was the :on of Mr. ;\I ISSJ G Cpl. Francis J . Fi nk, ex '45, ·on of Mr. and Mrs. B rnarrl F. McManus, 6907 gt. Edward L. i\ht('On, Jr .. x '4:2, has and Mrs. Frank H . Fink, :J67 Ohio !Iough Avenue, N. 8 ., and had b en in b en reported missing since June 5, when treet, died in the l ~ uropean Theater of the Navy haplain orps since 19:! 6. th B-29 on which he was tail-gunner Operation , July 5. Be ·id e: his parents, he is survived by two \\' nt down ov r Kyushu. The s rgeant, Cpl. Fink had been ·tationed in Ger- brother·, Richard .). and Edward J ., who i 24 y ar old, went ov r ~eas last many with the inth Air For c Service and a sister, Mrs. Alice Lane. October. ommand . Mifhacl F. Hearon, '92, an offi ial in Hobcrl Di ckey, x '44, wa!l reported A graduate of baron High School, th Municipal court for forty-two yeara, mi sing some t ime ago. !Iis parent.s have he wa a student at John arroll ni­ died August 12, after a t hree-months received a. econd telegram fro m the war ver ity b for he enl isted in the Air illne s. He was buried in alvary em d partmcnt t lling th m that it is not F orce in April, 194:3. H e was a member tery after service. at t. Ro e' church. yet known what ha happened to Robert. of acred H eart pari h and the Knight · Mr. Hearon is urvived by three daugh­ L t. George i\ 1. Coleman. ex '45, was of olumbus. ters, Si ter Michael Franci · of the reported missing in action on August 2. Ur. uline Ord r, Eile n a nd Patricia Hearon. Theodore A. Scnn, '94 , on of the old­ e t mployee of leveland Quarrie Co., where he had work d for fifty years, died of a heart attack at his home at 194 0 Lake hore boulevard, E uclid. H e i survived by hi· wife, Katherin : two children, Mrs. Irene M cDonough, and Ted A. Jr., and t hree grandchildren. L t. Willia m P. Leahy, '45, . . Army Air F rces, who has been mi sing since February 5, 1945, ha now been reported killed. Rev. Haymond J. Gray, ..J., ex ' 1 , who ha been head of the History d epart­ ment at Xavier niver ity, Cin ·innat i, for ten year ·, eli d at Charity hospital, after an illne: there of th ree week . H e wa: forty- ight years old and had b en a .J uit f r almo t thirty year . Be id . hi mother, Mr. . Catherine Gray, he !rave a brother, Willis J. Gray, of Detroit,and a sister, Mrs. M ..J. hesbro, of Glovers- vill e, . Y. Or. J ame · W . ;\ Ially , ' 19, ill ·in c Ia t April, died August 1:3, in Huron Road Lt. George i\1. Coleman Rev. Fra nci. i\ l ezera, ' 22, temporary Hospi tal. Dr. Mally had been Yugoslav assi tant pastor at t . Procop' P arish, counsul for Ohi o during the past five H e had been li sted as mi ing in ce he W. 41 st Street and Trent AvenueS. W., years, and had for year· taken a promi­ fai led to return from a fligh t over China died uddenly .June J 9 after ·uffering a nent pa rt in Jugoslav cul t ural and. ocial on July 12. H wa a mwigator on a B-:l2 heart attack. life throughout the tate. H e was buried bomb r, having gon ov r ·eas Ia ·t .P bru­ A graduate of t. Ignatius' High from St. Vitus Ch urch. ary. In our Ia t i ue we carried t h sad chool and John arroll niver ity, h Sgt. M arv in Schaefer, x '43, was nell'. of the death of George' brother, stud i d for the priesthood at t . Ber­ killed May 22 in Mind oro. H e was a Thoma . T wo other brothers of the miss­ nard's eminary, Roche ter, I Y., and gunner on a B-24 a nd held the Air M eda l in g flyer are lieutenants in t.he Army: at St. Mary's Seminary, Norwood, Ohio . and had completed 35 bombing rni sion . J oh n, a fight r pilot, and .Jam s, in the Be ide his par nts, Mr. and Mr . J ohn H e i · survived by hi parents, Mr. and field artillery. Mezera, he is survived by a ·i ter, Mr.. Mr ·. Harry . , chaefer, a brother, Marie Mar h, and two broth r , both Capt. Leonard in E ngland, and a si ter, phy ician , Dr. Ladd and Capt. Ray, Ruth Jean. recently tationed in Germany with the \VO NDED inth Army 1edical Corp . Lt. John J . Kelley, '40, wa wound d Co mp I i ments Lt. Francis J. McManus, ex '25, Navy May 15 on Okinawa, fighting with the chaplain who erved in St. Ignatiu ' and 77th Division. Winner of several battle St. Malach i' pari he here a an as istant stars, he fought on Guam, Leyte, and Ie of the before entering ·ervice, has been killed Shime. H old r of the Infantry ombat in the Pacifi c area, the avy D epart­ B adge, he has been in uniform since m nt announc d Augu. t 7, in Washing­ March, 1942. Fairmount ton. H e was aboard a Japanese prison Sgt. Charl e L Pa kert, x '4 1, wa ship whi ch wa · unk by our own force wo unded May 1 on Okinawa whil fight­ in Subic Bay Ia ·t December 15, and wa · ing in the 1 4th Infantry Divi ion. H e Theatre one of the 1001 Americans killed at the left fo r oversea duty in July, 1943, hav­ time. ing entered service in June, 1941. 13 much to nhance the morale of the Pacif1c where he had a recurrence of troops, thereby contributing materi::tlly malaria. After a lea,·e, "Dutch" will to the Buccess of these operations." take up hi· former duties a: G unner A Bronze Star M dal wa · awarded to The Bronze tar Medal was awarded Officer on another destroyer. gt. Maurice De nbo, serving with an to Captain Robert E. G neuhs for meri­ Ph.M. 1 c Anthony Ia rnm a rino visited engine r-combat group in the European torious service in six rescue missions to Carroll wh ile on rotation .leave from the T h ater of Op rations. As H.econnais­ mountainous r gions of Yunnan Pro­ Pacific where he ha ·been on the aviation :ance ergeant in his Headquarter:, he vince, China, where Allied airmen had supply ship, Forl>we, for the past 19 often mad hazardous trips into diHput d era heel. f!is d votion to duty and out­ months. territory to gather road and bridge in­ stand ing service was recognized in a Ens. L arry Clifford was here recently fo rmation. The citation reads, " His ceremony at an iBolated Army supply to find out what credit he will have courageous /Torts have rendered an in­ base where the award was made. when he r turn: here. First, though, he valuable service in keeping this group With the "Boomerang Bombers" of the is headed for a tour of duty in the abreast of the ever- hanging tactical First Tactical Air Force, France, F light P acific. situation." Offic r J ose1> h E. Gardner ha b n Lt. Robert Horan r ached the nited Fir:t Lt. John P . Cullin wa. given the awarded thf.' Air Medal. Stat~. at the end of .June after spend ing ilver Star Medal for h roic action in F irt L t. John J. Vitou , veteran com bat some months marching through Ger­ Germany. During t he course of the ac­ navigator, has been recent ly as igned to many a nd sojourning in various pri ·on tion fo r which he wa~ d corated. L t. AAF T raining Command, Ellington camp·. During his vi it at Carroll, he Cullin kno ·k d out a n enemy tank, called F ield, Texas. F lying a: a navigator over told many torie · of his capture after and directed supporting artillery in E urope, he was awarded the D i ·tin­ being ·hot down over Austria and the destroying barges loaded with enemy gui ·hed l• lying Cross, the Air Medal with subsequent adventu re·. After a 60-day soldiers, ferry ramps and dug-in po. itions fo ur Oak Leaf Cluster., and three battle leave, Bob wil l report to the recli t ribu­ on the opposite bank of the Rhine River. star. on his 8 uropean theater ri bbon. tion cent r in Mia mi. Former V- 12 . tudents at Carroll , r - Pfc. Vince nt Fiordal isi has been post­ cent ly commis ioned at Notre D ame hu mously decorated with the Silver Star niver ity, a re Lo uis He mmelga rn, Ro­ Medal fo r the action in which he lost hi· bert O' Donnell , and Thoma Brenner, life in Fra nce. Pfc. F iordalisi was a radio who were recent vi ·itors. operator. Duri ng a heavy a ttack, his Lt. (j.g.) lflin Blos e visited Carroll on Other visit rs a re A S Ric hard A. Ca r­ posit ion as an exposed observation post, .July 1 . V-E Day fo und " Dutch" on t he lucci, T / Sgt. Alv in Zielins ki. " lim" came under direct enemy mortar a nd d stroyer C:off in t he Mediterranean. Rudich, Lt. (j.g.) Joe Bongorno a nd his artillery fi re. D i. regarding his own safety, F rom there he was sent to the outh wife , a nd Angelo 'onsolo. he cont inued to perform hi · duties a nd dir ctecl fi re on enemy positions. He r ceived a mortal wound and died at his post. Fir ·t Lt. David J . Ma rqua rd was awarded the Silver Star Meda l fo r th action wh ich resulted in his death. Armed only wit h a carbine, It. Marquard held off an nemy force, pinning t hem clown with hi · fire until hel p arrived. The enemy patrol wa · knocked out, but Lt. Marquard was kill ed by machine gun fi re. H i: outstanding courage prevented MA RRIAGES Miss .Jo:ephine Lunder to P fc. Elmer the enemy from firing on t he comma nd Ja ncha r, June 23 , at St. Vitus Church. post, t hereby sav ing t he li ve.~ of key Miss M a rj o ri Full e r to Ensign M i s Genevieve K oziak to Capt. John staff personnel and preven t ing dis­ T homas E. Brenne r, .July 11, at Gesu A. He fferna n, J une 9, in the Europ a n organization within the unit . Church. Miss Marie 0' eil l to Lt. Will ia m E. Theater of Operations. Capt. Fra nci s T . Dietz, S ..J ., a lready Kell y, July 21 , in St. Gregory the Great t he holder of the Bronz t a r Medal, was Chu rch. E NGAG Ei\,I E TS given an Oa k L af luster for action in Miss Mary Chri topher to Ensign Mi ·s France Ann uhadolni k to L t . t he P hilippines. Father D i tz wa con­ M itchell Sha ker, July 26, at t . Mary ' · John J . Vit ou. stant ly wit h t he fo remost com bat ele­ Church, Conneaut, Ohio. Cadet Corine R eilly t o A / S Hicha rd ments. U nci r heavy enemy sniper a nd Miss Ma ry Elle n Duffy to Robert A. Carlucci. mortar fire, he admini ·tered t he last Bagley, August 9, at St. Rita's, Solon. Miss Eileen Marie Lenehan to E n ·ign rites to th dy ing a nd bol: te red the Mi · Virginia Aim to Charles ~~ . John R. La velle. morale of badly wounded ·oldiers. The Sma yda, F bruary . M is a rol Jun R audebaugh to Of- a ward read ·, " H is pres nee under t he Miss Rut h France Murphy t o Lt . fi cer Candidat e Ray mond R. Loh man. mo:t trying combat cond it ions wa a (j .g.) J oseph E. H olliday, J une 22, in Mis E: velyn Mari Duchon to Ralph great morale fact or to t he men, a nd h i · St. Catherine's Ch urch. J. Wie mer, Jr. unfl inchi ng at tention to duty under In­ M i:s Rut h E. Decatur to Capt. a rt A. M i Catherine K ozelka to Sgt. J o eph ten. e enemy fire was an inspiration to all De Franco, June 2, at W ayland, Ma ·. . C. Kocab. those with whom h erves." M iss Rita Ann Remay to J ean R. Mis M argaret Mary Toner to pl. Lt. Col. J ohn T . 'lurphy, promoted Moe nk, J une 24. J ohn D. H utchinson. to that rank from major, received t he Mis Mary Teresa Sullivan to Lt. Bronze tar Medal for his work from J ose1>h H. D empsey, Jun 23, in Holy BIRT H S J une 27, 194 4, to May 2 1, 1945, at ro s Church. A baby girl to M r . and M rs. Edward British New Guinea, etherland · E a t; Mi · Marian D uffy t o Lt. (j.g.) John . Bre nnan on Ju ne 7. I ndie ·, a nd Luzon. The citation reads in T. Corriga n, May 24, in St . Luke's A baby gi rl t o Mr. a nd M rs. Leona rd part, " 'haplain Murphy' u n elfi ·h Church. A. Reichelt on J une 3. devotion to duty, che rful and wi lli ng Mi Margery Ann K ramer to Sgt. A baby gi rl to Mr. and Mr . RalJl h attit ude, patience a nd to! ranee, did Ri chard J. G ol(a , J une 9. Verdiec k on Augu t 9. 14 Quality Does It!

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