Santa Clara University Scholar Commons The Redwood SCU Publications 1-1-1953 The Redwood, 1952-1953 Santa Clara University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarcommons.scu.edu/redwood Part of the Education Commons, and the Social History Commons Recommended Citation Santa Clara University, "The Redwood, 1952-1953" (1953). The Redwood. Book 47. http://scholarcommons.scu.edu/redwood/47 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the SCU Publications at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Redwood by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. J] < j^- ' ' ' I I H|l||HIH|I|(llLH|lntt^ [in I immII^m^HI HifflHnlilf mmm lil H^Pi IWollM^H^^BlMlilllifl 11 II IllUflllilllliil\\HM\\WSn a<ii^'W Digitized by tine Internet Archive in 2013 littp://arcliive.org/details/redwood1953unse Foreword It is in the hope of achieving a very basic and clear order that 1953's Redivood is presented as it is. Primarily, the measure of its projected success will be its capacity to serve as a candid chronicle of the year's events. To adhere to a rigid theme is to limit and to channel — often too narrowly — the minds and hands of available talent. Rather than confine poetry and photography, artist and writer, to a single limiting subject, brush and pen were given creative freedom. The seed has been sown, the roots have taken hold, the stalk has shot up, the Redwood has emerged — simple but stately — presenting Santa Clara's September to June record: a perennial account written of the past, read in the present, and remembered in the future. Dedication To the sport that began at Santa Clara in 1902 with a meek five-game schedule, to the sport that for fifty years thereafter provided indelible souvenirs of publicity, including two popular and profitable Sugar Bowl triumphs (1937 and 1938), and still another lucrative victory in the Orange Bowl (1950) ; to the sport, however, whose practicability can no longer match its popularity; to football — to the passing of it from the Santa Clara scene — is this 1953 Redwood dedicated. Table of Contents Academics University Administration 8-21 Student Administration 22-24 Classes :. 25-77 Law _ 78-84 Activities Engineering Groups 87-89 Organizations 90-112 Contest Winners 113 Publications ___ 114-120 R.O.T.C 121-130 Athletics Athletic Committees 134-135 Athletic Staff _ _ 136-137 iuM^:lJ^'i.>i^k^. -V Football 138-151 Basketball..... 152-167 Baseball 168-174 Minor Sports 175-179 Intramural Sports 180-186 Advertising Acknowledgements 189 Advertisements 190-205 Patrons 206-208 / Beginning In this Shadow of Seven Hills The fragment valley green With Slimmer spills A gardened spreading scene, An all-hued sheen Of reborn earthly light, Vibrant, reigning, yet serene; But this quiet moment spend Before the shrine Of Joseph, patron, blessed friend, Here to resign The future to his foster-Child, Hopeful, reconciled ... Our Mission Garden, a valley's heart. The vanished days Remembered — Fall, the start, New friends, new ways — The seeming endless maze Of books ... the sports, dances .. Long hours Near Chapel .. Life's golden rays On time to light our Garden's flowers ... -w \ ':'^' ''^^K^vlf ,;/. <| 4 i r ;* t ^^ Administration Rev. Herman J. Haiick, S.J. Salute to the Graduates of '53 Informally here on this page of The Redwood, in echo of much we have discussed before, I take occasion to commend you for garlands the world may never know you carry, for a victory the world may never applaud you for winning. "It's funny," we say, when we mean to say "it's sad." It's funny how one can never explain to otliers the meaning of the greatest hours of one's life; it's funny how futile are words to tell of those hours. It is fumiy even how little those momentous hours seem to show on the surface of.one's life. And yet they were our realest hours. The Battle of the Books is over. Yoti have won and the Books are yours. You are a college graduate. Who can describe what this means, and who can tell when it happened? It was, I would say, like a shell breaking or a cocoon cut away, or like coming up through water into gasping air— it was like anything in which a new life, a completely different life, is born. And the past, the former life seems an alien thing, a life that never could have been yours —because now you are so different. I shall not here try to map it out even briefly, shall not tr)' to say what the Philosophy did to you, when the Literature first spoke to you, how the History shaped you, what the Theology formed in you, how the Political Science meshed into your mind, what the Physical Sciences revealed to you, how the Economics and Engineering and Law added to you. But I tliink you rea lize now how truly Newman spoke when he said "Educa- tion is a high word." And now you see and from these heights. And you can never be a child again, the same again. For now you are a man. For the magnificence and the vastness of God's creation has been unfolded in all its complexity and yet in all its simplicity before you — and you are educated. And as you turn from your college days you realize with humbleness and pity the truth of the words : "The fool sees not tlie same tree that the wise man sees" — and you realize that trudi holds for seeing anything in life. For that Victory, for your long labors towards and finally catching up with that Vision, for the "wotmds" endured, for the silent hours of study and for the inches of stature you have added to your soul — our commendation. And our thanks! Our world is now a better place .. because of you. God now go with you, and you with God Who has need of you by His generosity. Sincerely, Rev. Herman J, Hauck, S.J. REV. JOHN M. HYNES, SJ. Academic Vice-President REV. JAMES A. KING, S.J. MR. O. ROBERT ANDERSON, A.B. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Acting Dean of the College of Business Administration REV. RAYMOND J. KELLEY, S.J. Vice-President in Charge of Student Affairs MR, GEORGE L. SULLIVAN, PH,D. MR. EDWIN J, OWENS, LL.B. Dean of the College of Engineering Dean of the College of Law REV. JOHN COSGRAVE, S.J. Minister REV. CHARLES GUENTHER, S.J. Director of Purchasing REV. ERNEST WATSON, S.J. Treasurer MR. DAVID ARATA Registror Administration REV. ROGER McAUlIFFE. S.J. REV. JOSEPH MARTIN. S.J. Chaplain Alumni Director REV. HENRY WALSH, S.J. ^ Curator MR. VIC STEFAN Alumni Secretary MR. GENE PERRY Publicity Director REV. EDWARD BOLAND, S.J. Librarian Faculty AIKEN, H., B.S., M.S. Engineering ALLEN, P. N., A.B., C.P.A. Business Administration ANDREWS, J. D., S.F.C. Military Science and Tactics AUSTIN, F. D., M/Sgt. Military Science BACIGALUPI, E. M., S.J., M.A., Ph.D. Physics BEAVER, J. T. Jr.. Cpt. Militory Science BECCHETTI, J. M., A.B., LL.B. Business Law BEILHARZ, E. A., A.B., M.A., Ph.D. History, Political Science BIRD, T. S., S.I., A.B. Latin, Greek BOLTON, L. L., B.A. , M.A. , Ph.D. Biology BOURET, J. E., A.B., M.A. History BROWN, J. E., B.S.. M.S., Ph.D. Education 13 CAMPBELL, D. R., A.B. Mathematics CARTER, W. A., B.S. Chemistry COLLINS, J. E., A.B. Economics COPELAND, R. F., S.J., Ph.D. History CORCORAN, A, C, S.I., Ph.D. Philosophy CROWLEY, W. H., S.J., M.A. Philosophy DECK, J. F., Ph.D. Chemistry DONAVAN, H. C, S.J., M.A, Religion DONOHOE, P. J., S.I., Ph.D. Political Science EARLEY, S. B., S.J., M.A. Religion, Philosophy FAGOTHEY, A. J., S.J., M.A. Philosophy FEERICK, R. I„ B.S. Director of Basketball, Physical Education FLAIM, F. R., A.B. Biology FLUMIANI, C. M., Ph.D. Political Science FLYNN, E. C, M.S. Engineering 14 GALLAGHER, R. F., M.A. Director oi Football GEARY. I. M., S.J., M.A. Greek, Latin GLAVINA, M. C, A.B. German ^S9/////Ma HEENAN, D. A., A.B. Director of Athletics HERMES, R. M., Ph.D. Director of Bureau of Research HUBBARD, B. R., S.J., M.A. Geology LOFTUS, R. L., S.I., B.A. English LOFTUS, W. I., B.A. Bursar KAMALSKI, E. I., Sgt. Isl cl Military Science KEARNEY, P. J., Cpt. Military Science and Tactics MARKEY, J. J., S.J., M.A. Religion MARTIN, I. L., S.J., M.A. Religion McAULIFFE, R. A., S.J., M.A. Religion Student's Chaplain McDonald, g. e., a.b. English McFADDEN, E. a., S.I., M.A. Assistant Student's Chaplain 15 McLARNEY, W. A., M.A. Engineering MONASTA, I. F. X., M.B.A. Business Administration MERRYMAN, J. H., LL.M. Law MURRAY, R. I., M.S. Engineering NAU, A. L., Ph.D. Engineering NETTESHEIM, H. P., B.S. Engineering NILAND, E. J. Ir., LL.B. Law O'CONNELL, J. P., S.I.. M.A. Religion, English OLIVIERI, U. A., LL.D. Italian O'SULLIVAN, C. M., S.J., Ph.D. Chemistry PEFLEY, R. K., M.S. Engineering PLEHN, B. A., M.S. Engineering POCIASK, I. L., S.I., M.A. English RANNEY. D. J., M.A.
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