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- MAY 1952 - Georgetown University· 2019. 9. 17.· Copyright 1952 Georgetown University Alumni Magazine CEORGETOW UNIVERSITY ALUM I MAGAZI E: Publis hed each two months b y the
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MAY 1952 •
THE GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
Offers
The William Gaston Chair Designed for the men of Georgetown
and their Descendants
for your
OFFICE, LIVING ROOM, RECREATION ROOM, LIBRARY
BEAUTIFUL, COMFORT ABLE, DURABLE
$2495 $1295
In ordering, specify finish desired: Black and Gold Mahogany and Gold Antique Maple Red Maple
Cherry Light Pine Dark Pine
Other (Unlisted finishes as specified by you at 10 % increase in price)
The WILLIAM GASTON Chair (Height 31", width 23~". depth 20", seat 17Y:z"x18 1~")
Weight 20 lbs. Express collect.
The WILLIAM GASTON jUNIOR Chair (Height 21 Y:z", width 17", depth 16", seat 12 Y2'' x14 Y:z")
Weight 11' lbs. Express collect.
DETACH AND MAIL TO
ALUMNI HOUSE 3604 0 St., N. W., Washington 7, D. C.
Draw checks to Georgetown University Al-umni Association Enclosed is my check in the amount of ........... .... for . . ... William Gaston Chair (s)@ $24.95 each and for
Finish .
.William Gaston Junior Chair(s)@ $12.95 each.
Name .
Shipping Address . (EXPRESSMAN WILL COLLECT SHIPPING CHARGES)
e EDITORIAL BOARD
OF ALUMNI MAGAZINE
JOHN c. BRUN INI, '19
DoNALD F. FLAVIN, '28
JoHN T. FLYNN, '02
MARTIN S. QuiCLEY, '39
DR. TwoR KEREKEs-Faculty
REv. GERARD F. YATES, S.J.-Faculty
JAMES S. Ruov, '27, Executive Secretary and
Editor
•
e CONTRIBUTORS
TO THIS ISSUE
Vmv REv. HuNTEII GuTHRIE, S.J., is Presiden t of the University.
PHILLIPS TEM PLE is the University Librarian.
FnAI>K PmAL, is Direc tor of Pubilcity for the Department of Athletics.
lAMES S. Ruuv, '27, is the Alumni Secretary.
eOR(lETOWn UUilJERSIT~ LUmnl mRqAZIDE
SPRING 1952 VOL. 5, NO. l
CONTENTS
Swift Potomac________________________________________________________ _____ _______________ 2
The New Administration................................................... ....... 3
The John Carroll Dinner-------------------------------------------------------- 4
The Librarian's Page ·--------------------------------------------------------------- 6
Pictorial Review ........................................................................ 10
Athletics ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 12
Class Notes................................................................................ 13
The Cover Picture:
Alumni Lounge McDonough Gymnasium
Copyright 1952 Georgetown University Alumni Magazine
CEORGETOW UNIVERSITY ALUM I MAGAZI E: Published each two months by the Georgetown University Alumni Association,
lnr., Washington 7, IJ. C. • Sustaining Membership .$25.00 per year, Regular Membership 5.00 per year, of which 83.00 is for subscription
to th e Alumni Magazine • Entered at th e Post Office at Washington , D. C., as Second Class matter February 24, 1948 under th e act of
March 8, 1879 • Publication Offir·e : Henflage Lith ograph Co. , 32.1.1 K Street N. W., Washington 7, D. C. • Editorial and Executive
offices : GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALU~1NI ASSOCIATION, Alumni House, 3604 0 Street N . IT' ., Washington 7, D. C.
"Swift Potomac .. II
The soft breezes and sunny days of spring lure many men of Georgetown out of doors of a weekend. Those with an inclination towards sailing have already given much thought and some time to their avocation. Along competitive lines there are big plans.
After four and one-half years as an associate member of the Middle Atlantic Intercollegiate Sailing Association, Georgetown was voted into provisional regular member· ship last February. This makes it possible to sail in the Distrlct Championships and if successful to participate in the National Championships next June. This spring the sailors have concentrated on scheduling many local regattas to learn the boats and competitors to be met in the District Championships.
Judging by last Fall's performance the Hoyas have a fighting chance of fulfilling their ambitions. They met thirty-nine schools in competition and only six never finished behind the Hoyas at some time during the season. The Hoyas saw only the transoms of Harvard, Brown, Coast Guard, Cornell, Purdue and Michigan but had to be acknowledged victors by:
Adelphi Catholic U. Cincinn11ti Cornell Dennison Duke Fordham George Washington Haverford Hofstra I. I. T. U.S. Merchant Marine
Acarlemy Lafayette Lehigh M. I. T. Michigan State Middlebury
Navy New York State Marine
College Northwestern Notre Dame Maryland Ohio State Ohio Wesleyan Pennsylvania Princeton Rensalear Polytechnic
Institute Syracuse Tufts Vermont Webb Williams Wisconsin
To pile up this record the Georgetown team sailed in ten regattas and traveled some 4,000 miles. It was the only team to sail in the three major intersectional events of the fall: the Schell Trophy at M. I. T. in Boston, the Navy Fall Invitational at Annapolis and the Midwestern Invitational at Northwestern in Chicago. The top college teams in the country participate in these events and Georgetown's record proves her equal to any.
Such a traveling season is nothing new to the Hoyas. In 1949 the above record was duplicated under Commo· dore J. P. McCarthy, Col. '50. Since the resurrection of
2
d I 1 ..,.,
BLUE AND GRAY ON THE POTOMAC
sailing at Georgetown in 1947 by Henry D. "Bud" Rohrer, Col. '50, the Sailing Association has been boatless and necessarily a traveling team dependent for practice on the generously offered facilities of George Washington University and participation in away regattas.
This unfavorable situation is soon to be remedied. A donation of a year ago initiated work on the legacy of Georgetown's pre-war Sailing Association, three old dinghy hulls. The fall saw the Association's members hard at work to recondition the hulls, so long out of water, and procure other materials. Difficult items like masts and rudders are being turned out by the boys in order to pare costs. The new sails are from an old set used by M. I. T. in former years.
Financing of the continued work has been possible through the Sailing Association's share in the campus concessions made available to the minor sports by the Student Personnel Office. As sailors the boys do all right selling corsages for the proms and soft drinks at tlie inter-class football games.
This spring the Sailing Association will lose seniors Chet Peet and Frank Flaherty who have become well known in the intercollegiate circuit during their four years at Georgetown through their consistent sailing. Their places will be ably filled by juniors Hank Fazzano and Pete Johnston. Coming up to push for varsity positions· on the team are a wealth of fine sailors led by freshmen Pete McCarthy and Charlie Van Hagen who took a close second in the district freshmen championships. With boats on the Potomac below campus and many interested sailors from all parts of the country, The Sailing Association looks forward to a good spring and an even better fall.
Introducing On May first the Committee on Elections of your Asso·
ciation announced the newly selected officers · and mem· hers of the Board of Governors as voted upon by the active members during the past month. Officers will serve for two years, Board Members for three.
The new President who succeeds Thomas C. Egan, '17, of Philadelphia is John J. Tun more, '31, of New York City. Mr. Tunmore came to the attention of your Nomi· nating Committee a year ago because of the energy and interest he displayed in reviving the McDonough Gym· nasium Campaign in the Metropolitan area. At that time he was chosen for membership on the Alumni Board, rep· resenting New York City. The keen interest which he has taken in Association affairs in his year's service on the Board naturally brought him to the attention of the 1952 Nominating Committee. He is the youngest Presi· d~nt the Association has had in its history. He is a Dtrector of the Georgetown Alumni Club of Metropolitan ~ew York and has always maintained a helpful interest ~~ all ?f the University's objectives. We anticipate a con· tmuahon of our advances during his Administration.
Six Vice-Presidents have been elected, one for each of the divisions of the University. That provision was ~vritten into the by-laws of the Association in 1950 to msu.re adequate representation of all graduates in the a~aus of_ the Association. The 1952 choice for College Vtce-Prestdent is Charles M. Williams, '34 of Cincinnati. He is a former President of the Georgetown Alumni Club of Cincinnati and President of the Western and Southern Life Insurance Co. He is one of a family of three George· town brothers. The Medical Vice-President is Dr. Joseph A. Mlynarski, a graduate of the Medical School in '39 and of the College in '35. He is a su<;cessful physician and surgeon in New Britain, Conn., and has been a loyal supporter of all our efforts since the establishment of the Association in 1939. The Graduate School is represented by Hartley W. Howard, who took his Ph.D. at George· town in 194.0. He also holds the degree of B.S. in 1931 and for several years taught Chemistry at his Alma Mater. He is a research chemist with Borden's in New York. Vice-President for Law is the Honorable E. Barrett Prettyman, LL.B. '15, LL.D.(Hon.) '46, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals in Washington. He is widely known to Law School Alumni and to the Law School Administration. The new Dental Vice-President, Dr. Francis J. Fabrizio, D.D.S. '35, is also President of th~ active and growing Georgetown Alumni Club of the D1strict of Columbia. Under his administration of the Club it has achieved the largest membership it has had since it was founded in 1948. The Foreign Service Vice· President is E. Theodore Stern, B.F.S. '30, who does Public Relations work for Douglas Aircraft in New York. He was the Foreign Service Vice-Chairman for the Me· Dono ugh Campaign Committee in New York and has always worked hard and wisely for his Alma Mater.
The new Recording Secretary, Carroll J. McGuire, A.B. '18, LL.B. '21, is another whose devotion to his University has been well demonstrated over the years. He is a Washington Patent Attorney. Carroll, Jr. followed in his father's footsteps at Georgetown, indicating further his exemplary loyalty. The Treasurer, who succeeds David Hornet, '13, Vice President of the National Savings and Trust Co. of Washington, is Barnum L. Colton, LL.B. '21, President of the National Bank of Wash· ington.
3
JOHN J. TUNMORE, '31
The new members of the Alumni Board of Governors, who will serve until 1955, are chosen geographically with due regard for age and departmental distribution. This
_year, New England had two vacancies. The men chosen to fill those spots are Col. Thomas A. Clarke, LL.B. '17, of Providence, R. 1., and William D. McCue, LL.B. '32, of New Britain, Conn. Each has served as President of his regional Alumni Club. Col. Clarke has been for the past two years one of the two sponsors of the Georgetown Radio Forum in Rhode Island, sharing that responsibility
. with the Governor whom he replaces, Harry Sandager '21. '
For the Middle Atlantic States representative, the selection is Frank M. Fossett, '26 who succeeds John McShain, '22. Mr. Fossett is an insurance man in Baltimore and long a sparkplug of Alumni activity in Maryland. !he ne\~ repr~sentative of the New York City Alumm group IS W1lham F. X. Geoghan, Jr., '39, imme· diate Past-President of the New York Club. The new Mid-Western representative is Robert E. Sweeney, a class· mate of President Tunmore. He is Executive Vice-President ?f the Buhl Sons Co. in Detroit and was general coordmator of the McDonough Gymnasium campaign for the Mid-west.
The District of Columbia is entitled to five member· ships on the Board. For the two vacancies occuring this year, the Nominating Committee chose William E. Leahy '12 and Richard M. Keenan, '47. Mr. Leahy has Ion~ been a leader in the bar in the District of Columbia and has served since 1941 as District Director of Selective Service. Mr. Keenan is Legislative Assistant to Con· gressman Cole (R) of New York and was President of the Yard at Georgetown 1946-47.
The West Coast States have one representative. Upon the expiration of the term of James W. Hughes, '25, the Committee chose Joseph D. Brady, '20 as his successor. Mr. Brady is a leading tax attorney and holds, in addition
(Continued on Page 7)
The Alumni Association Honors
Its Own A Report of the John Carroll Dinner for 1952
On April 26 the Association honored twenty-two of its members at the first of a series of John Carroll Dinners at the Hotel Mayflower Hotel in Washington. The dinner was a brilliant affair attended by nearly four hundred Alumni and fri ends of the University. The list of those honored, announced by Thomas C. Egan as the last official act of his presidency, was a lengthy one hut representative of the entire membership. Honors were based upon national recognition for public service as well as con: sistent devotion to Georgetown.
The list of honorees included the following:
Dr. Hugh J. Fegan, '01, Dean of the Georgetown Univer-sity Law School
William E. Leahy, '12, Lawyer, Washington, D. C. Frederick B. Sitterding, '12, Business Man, Richmond, Va. Hon. Bolitha J. Laws, '13, Chief Judge, United States Dis-
trict Court, District of Columbia Hon . Charles Fahy, '14, Circuit Judge, United States Court
of Appeals, District of Columbia Major General George A. Horkan, U.S.A., '15, The Quar
termaster General Dr. Thomas Parran, '15, Former Surgeon General of the
United States Public Health Service, Director of the Graduate School of Public Health of the University of Pittsburgh
Thomas C. Mee, '17, Past President of the Alumni Asso- . ciation; Manufacturer, Providence, R.I.
Hon. Francis E. Walter, '19, Member of Congress from Pennsylvania
Thomas A. Dean, '20, Past President of the Alumni Association; Manufactztrer, Chicago, Ill.
Hon. Walter Donnelly, '21, United States Ambassador and High Commissioner to Austria
Hon. Paul R. Rowen, '21, Member of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, D. C.
John McShain, '22, Builder, Philadelphia, Pa. John A. Romweher, '23, Manufacturer, Batesville, Ind. Austin F. CanfiPld, '23, Chairman of the American Bar
Association's Committee to Study Communist Tactics, Strategy and Objectives, Washington, D. C.
Thomas E. Leavey, '23, Insurance Executive, Los Angeles Dr. D~vid J. Fitzgibbon, '25, First Vice-President of the
American Dental Association, Washington, D. C. Hon. Thomas F. Murphy, '27, Associate Judge, United
States District Court, Southern District of New York Hon. Michael V. DiSalle, '31, F orrner Director of the
Office of Price Stabilization Hugh A. Grant, '33, Oil Producer, Bradford, Pa. Charles M. Williams, '34-, Insurance Executive, Cincinnati,
Ohio Charles J. Milton, '35, First Chairman of the McDonough
Memorial Gymnasium Committee, Jersey City, N. J.
Circ*mstances prevented five of the honorees from being present in person and as a result the awards certificates were accepted in their behalf by five of their Georgetown friends. John F. Donahue, '22, appeared for Austin
4
F. Canfield; James S. Ruby, '27, for Judge Murphy; Harry Sandager, '22, for Thomas C. Mee; Joseph L. Dwyer, '31, for the Hon. Michael V. DiSalle, and the Hon. Jack K. McFall, '29, for Ambassador Donnelly.
The speaker of the occasion was a non-alumnus, Hon. Harry N. McDonald, Administrator of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. Father Guthrie's delightful remarks are printed elsewhere in this issue of the Magazine. For further entertainment Thomas A. Cantwell, '08, loaned his fine tenor voice.
Present at the head table, in addition to the awards recipients, were the Regents and Deans of the various Departments of the University, Mr. Egan and Harold A. Kertz, '28, General Chairman of the Dinner Committee, who planned and executed, almost single handed, one of the most successful and delightful Georgetown parties in history.
President Egan's Introduction
Very Reverend Rector, members of the Faculty, distinguished guests, fellow members of the Alumni and their friends, and ladies and gentlemen:
As president of the Georgetown National Alumni Association, I am glad to welcome you on this happy occasion.
We are gathered together this evening to honor the memory of Georgetown's founder and at the same time to pay fitting tribute to Georgetown men, who by their lives and their accomplishments have reflected great credit on the University.
This is the first time-so far as I know-that the National Alumni Association has marked for tribute by fitting public ceremonies distinguished alumni who have been at once an inspiration to their fellow Georgetown men and a credit to their University.
May I say in passing that I think I have just about c.onvinced Mrs. Egan that all Georgetown men are distinguished and that only some are more distinguished than others!
As intellectual descendants of the Carrolls of Maryland, we are the inheritors of a proud tradition and a code of the highest spiritual, moral and educational standards. While Georgetown stems from a small school established in 1634 at St. Mary's City, Maryland, it had its formal beginning about 153 years later when John Carroll and four other Jesuit Fathers announced "Proposals for establishing an Academy at G~orge-Town, Patowmack-River, Maryland". The Proposal named a distinguished list of solicitors in Maryland, Pennsylvania Virginia and New York who would receive subscriptions therefor.
After stating the subj ect and the benefits of the proposed Institution, the document made it clear that religious tolerance was to he observed by saying:
"Agreeably to the liberal Principle of our Constitution, the Seminary will be open to Students of Every Religious 'Profession. They, who in this respect differ from the Superintendent of the Academy, will be at Liberty to frequent the Places of Worship and Instruction appointed by their Parents; but, with respect to their moral Conduct, all must be subject to general and uniform Discipline".
(Continued on Page 9)
The Absent Guest An Appraisal of John Carroll
VERY REVEREND HUNTER GUTHRIE, s. J. President of Georgetown University
At John Carroll Dinner, Mayflower Hotel, April26, 1952
Numerous as this gathering is and important as its personages are, there is missing one guest who would like to have been invited and who would certainly have come, were it possible. In a real sense this dinner is in his honor, while we in turn are honored by the deed. The Reverend John Carroll, S,J., is the missing guest and it is the honor we pay him tonight which brings glory to us, his sons.
A more realistic reason for inviting him and one which will appeal to the harassed financial committee for this affair is John Carroll's habit of picking up the check for Georgetown functions. Just four days, but some 140 years ago, on April 22, 1812, His Reverence footed the bill for a dinner on the occasion of one of his visits to the boys. It amounted to $15.11- pre-Truman dollars, of course.
John Carroll was never President, never Dean, not even a teacher in the school he founded, rather he was Georgetown and Georgetown, in a sense, took on the qualities of this "Prince of Men."
Born on January 8-a birth date l am proud to share with him-in 1735 at Upper Marlboro, Prince George's County, Maryland, he attended the Bohemia Manor School at the age of 12 to prepare for St. Orner's. The next year, "Jacky Carroll," as the Bohemia register styles Him, left for France with his cousin Charles Carroll of Carrollton, the sole Catholic signer of the Declaration of Independence. He was to remain in Europe for 26 years, com· pleting his studies, training for the Society of Jesus and receiving the Sacrament of Orders. The Reverend John Carroll returned to America one year after the suppression of the Society he had joined and one year before the outbreak of the American Revolution. He spent two quiet years living with his mother at Rock Creek and ministering to the Catholics of the neighborhood.
His public life as a great American figure began in May 1776 when with his cousin Charles, Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Chase, he went to Canada in an unsuccessful attempt to win French Canadian support for the Revolution. Six years later in 1782 we have the first records of his desire to found a college, which a year later, in a letter to his friend, Fr. Charles Plowden, he describes as "the object nearest my heart". In .the same year at the First General Chapter of the Clergy ~ 1783·84) he presented his plans for a college in an mformal manner.
With the end of the Revolution and the consequent break with Great Britain, John Carroll was appointed Prefect Apostolic of the new American Republic in 1784. Two years later at the Second General Chapter of the Clergy he presented his detailed plans for the college. They concerned mostly· the raising of funds. This is a preoccupation the college has never abandoned. The tuition was set at 10 pounds a year, payable in advance. !his sum took care of the Masters, books, paper, pens, mk and firewood "in the school"-firewood "for recrea· tion" was extra. In this modest way, the pernicious prac·
5
tice of "extra fees" was born. We have bettered the instruction. We now have 13 extra fees.
By 1788 a site was chosen and work begun. That year Carroll wrote "A house of 63 or 64 by 50 feet (is) to be built on one of the most lovely situations that imagination can frame. It will be three stories high, exclusive of the offices under the whole ... on this Academy is built all my hope of permanency and success to our holy Religion in the United States." In 1789 the deeds were transferred and Georgetown was born.
Carroll's enthusiasm for Georgetown's setting was shared by William Gaston, the first student. Writing to his mother in 1791, he said:
"A more beautiful situation than this in which the College is, could not be imagined, on a high hill with a view on one side of the river, on the other of the town, quite surrounded with trees, and everything that could make it either beautiful or useful, it stands as if it were made on purpose for the erecting of some such building."
I have said that Carroll was Georgetown. This is true, because having founded it, having been appointed Prefect Apostolic and later the first Archbishop of the United States, he never lost interest in his school. Three years before his death, he wrote to Georgetown's Rector: "Let it be your constant endeavor to awake in your Masters a passion for study, reading and literary improvement, an acquaintance with the ancient and modern elementary books of literature and sound criticism, for many useful methods and instructions are to be gathered from the latter as well as from the former. The Masters having once caught a passion for improvement by reading and comparing, they will infuse the same insensibly into their pupils, and teach them to emulate the most distinguished pupils of other institutions. Never relax in your attention to the neatness and cleanliness of the College and the personal neatness of your scholars and to their diet. I know that it is good in substance but I fear your cook is deficient." The Archbishop had evidently learned something about French cooking during his years abroador he was giving first voice to the perennial gripe of the boarder!
I have also said that Georgetown has always shared some of his princely qualities. The first I might mention is his Americanism. Though a Catholic himself and though, therefore, obliged to seek his own education in Europe because the Harvards and the Yales of his time were closed to him, nevertheless, when he opened his school, he opened it for all, regardless of religion. In fact, I wonder if it cannot be established that our beloved Georgetown was the first school in these United States which shattered the barriers of creed as an entrance re· quirement for a college education. John Carroll thought "large" and after him his school soon acquired the habit.
The second quality was greatness born of tradition. By this I mean that Carroll hoped that his · "Academy" would continue the great tradition of European educa
(Continued on Page 9)
RIGGS LIBRARY
The Library and the Alumni By
PHILLIPS TEMPLE
Dr. Alexander A. Schneiders, MA '31, PhD '34, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Department at the University of Detroit, presented us with a copy of his book The Psychology of Adolescence; a Factual and Interpretative Study of the Conduct and Personality of Youth (Milwaukee, Bruce, 1951). In the preface the author points out that while many factual studies exist, and fill a need, nevertheless "too little attention has been given to the explanation of adolescent conduct and personality. The result has been that students, parents and teachers, although fortified with a knowledge of what typical adolescents are like in their thinking and behavior, have little understanding of why our young people behave as they do." The author treats in thorough fashion (his book runs to 550 pages) the physical as well as the psychological factors in adolescent development, the motivations behind conduct, problems of temperament and character, social development and other phases of the subject. There is an extensive bibliography, a glossary and an index. The dedications of books are not usually very interesting, but the one in this volume is an exception: "To my children, from whom I have learned what books and laboratory can never reveal."
Round-shot to Rockets; a History of the Washington Navy Yard and U.S. Naval Gun Factory is the intriguing title of a book by Taylor Peck, MA '48, PhD '50, published in 1949 by the United States Naval Institute at Annapolis. The book is supplied with prefatory aes triplex by Admirals Albert G. Noble, Claude C. Bloch and W. H. P. Blandy, as well as by the author himself who, incidentally, makes kind mention of Dr. Charles C. Tansill and Dr. Tibor Kerekes of the Georgetown University faculty. Anyone interested in old sailing ships will relish the excellent drawings, while photographs amply illustrate the technical development of ordnance. Dr. Peck is Director of the Instituto Cultural Peruano Norte Americana, Lima, Peru. Nor should we neglect to mention that during his student days on the Hilltop he was in charge of our Graduate Reading Room.
Reverend Harold C. Gardiner, S.J., formerly resident at Georgetown University and now Literary Editor of the national weekly America, has edited a symposium entitled Fifty Years of the American Novel; a Christian Appraisal {Scribner, 1951) to which several Georgetown persons have contributed. Nicholas Teynac Joost, Jr., BS in SS '38, appears as the author of" 'Was it All for Naught?': Robert Penn Warren and New Directions in the Novel"; Mr. Joost is an Assistant Professor of English at Loyola University ·in Chicago. Mr. Riley Hughes, Associate Professor of English in the School of Foreign Service, contributes "F. Scott Fitzgerald; The Touch of Disaster."
6
Dr. Bernard J. Ficarra, MD '39, frequently mentioned in these pages ,as a prolific author of medical monographs, is the author of a book which rates as one of the most important in its field: Newer Ethical Problems in Medicine and Surgery {Newman Press, 1951), The author, who is prominent as a surgeon and is associated with several hospitals in the Brooklyn area, treats of such topics as mutilation, sterilization, abortion, euthanasia, and the moral aspect of professional conduct. There is a foreword by the Very Reverend Francis J. Connell, Dean of the School of Sacred Theology at the Catholic University of America, and a preface by The Most Reverend John King Mussio, Bishop of Steubenville, Ohio.
The Reverend Eugene Gallagher, S.J., Chairman of the Faculty of Religion at Georgetown University, addressed a group of parents at the Ursuline Academy at Bethesda, Maryland, on "Sex Education and the Child." His handling of the topic created such a notable response .that he is being asked to appear again next year, and meanwhile was requested to furnish the group with" a selecfed bibliography on sex education. This bibliography of 18 items, with annotations, he duly compiled. lt has been mimeographed, and some copies still remain for distribution to parents or other interested parties. Requests should be addressed "Librarian, Georgetown University, 37th and 0 Sts., NW, Washington 7, D. C."
The Very Reverend Hunter Guthrie, S.J., President of Georgetown University, is a member of the Institute Fellowship Committee of the Institute foi: Religious and Social Studies, a Graduate School conducted with the cQoperation of Catholic, Jewish and Protestant Scholars under the auspices of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America. Among the picked group of scholars chosen to deliver papers at the Institute this year w.as Father Eugene Gallagher, S.J., whom we have just mentioned above. Father Gallagher gave a series of four lectures on the topic: "An Introduction to St. Augustine." The lectures covered the psychological aspects of St. Augustine's approach to Theology, his teaching on the relationship between faith and reason, his philosophy of history, and his teaching on grace and predestination. •
Dr. W. C. Hess, Director of the Department of Biochemistry, Georgetown University School of Medicine, is author and co-author of several articles which have appeared in "The Journal of Biological Chemistry" (November 1949) and in the "Journal of Dental Research" (October 1949) .. :William Emmet Reese, Law '29, is the author of an unusual book entitled Around-the-World Stories (Exposition Press, 1952); it consists of some 60 letters written by Colonel Reese to a young nephew, Mickey Murray, describing the customs of family, society, religion and other phases of life in various parts of the world. Col. Reese was admitted to the bar of the District of Columbia in 1926, and served in the Finance Department of the U. S. Army, being designated Director of Finance for the Military Government Of the Ryukyu Islands in March 1946. The book has the air of immediacy that letters carry, and is well illustrated with photographs and with end paper maps ... C. Eugene Looper, Grad '49 and now Associate Professor of Political Science at Furman University, Greenville, South Carolina, is the author of "Some Aspects of the Legislative Process in South Carolina" which appeared in the Winter 1952 issue of Furman Studies, the bulletin of Furman University ... Mr. Austin P. Sullivan, FS '31, Law '41, a member of the bar of Massachusetts, the District of Columbia, and the Supreme Court of the United States, conducted a study with the aid of a research grant from the Federal Reserve
Bank of Boston. The results of the study are embodied in an article entitled "The Port of Boston; Unsolved Problems Handicap its Contribution to the Prosperity of New England" which appeared in the February 1950 issue of the Monthly Review of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. It seems that the Port of Boston has been declining in relative importance among the leading United States ports since the turn of the century because of shifts in population, freight rate differentials, wartime dislocations and other causes. Mr. Sullivan offers some carefully considered proposals to meet the situation.
Mr. Robert McDonough, FS '49, drove up to the Library not long ago and presented us with 110 books and pamphlets for which he no longer had use, but for which we readily found use, partly for our own shelves, and partly for missions in different parts of the world who can use books that we can spare. Mr. McDonough is Eastern Representative of the Specialized Instrument Corporation of San Francisco.
Dr. Herman J. Schauinger, Grad. '39, is pictured with Mrs. Schauinger in the second issue of the Bruce Publishing Company publication "Writers of the Word." We learn from an informative article accompanying the picture that Dr. Schauinger has completed a St<Cond book, Cathedrals in the Wilderness . Like his biography of William Gaston (previously published by Bruce and the first full length study of the famous Carolinian who was the friend of Henry Clay; the first student at Georgetown University; and a prominent man of affairs) this present book will add another scene to the growing picture of Catholic Americana, the article states. It deals with Bishop Flaget and his group of Bardstown, Kentucky, who pioneered in establishing the mother Church of the West. Dr. Schauinger, who studied at Georgetown under the famous historian of Clay, Dr. Bernard Mayo, received a degree in Library Science from the University of Michigan in 1943.
Introducing (Continued from Page 3)
to his law degree, the degree of LL.D. (Ron.) 1951. This year a new di:;trict has been added to the Board in recognition of Alumni inten~st. That is District IX covering Puerto Rico. The elected representative is Jose G. Gonzalez, LL.B. '27 of San Juan, President of the Georgetown Club of Puerto Rico.
In addition to the newly elected representatives, there are eight members of the existing Board whose terms will expire in April, 1953 and six who will serve until April, 1954. The 1953 group includes Henry Blommer '26, of Chicago, James A. Butler '21, of Cleveland, Raymond T. Cahill '22, of Washington, John E. Farrell '32, of Newark, E. R. Ferguson, Jr. '33 and Harold A. Kertz '28, of Washington, Donald F. Flavin '28, of New York and B. Edward Shlesinger '15, of Rochester, N. Y.
Those who will finish in 1954 are James E. Colliflower '06, and Dr. Robert C. Rush '36, of Washington, John M. Cunningham '18, of Boston, Clair J. Killoran '32, of Wilmington, Del., Eugene P. McCahill '21, of Minneapolis and Hughes Spalding, Jr. '39, of Atlanta.
Thomas C. Egan '17, retiring President, now becomes a life member of the Board of Governors along with his predecessors, Thomas C. Mee '17 and Thomas A. Dean '20. All other retiring members of the Board and former officers will become members of the Georgetown Alumni Senate for life. In that way the Association assures itself of continuity of purpose and policy.
7
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Welcome to Dinner (Continued from Page 4)
It may now seem amusing but the document further states:
"In the Choice of Situation, Salubrity of Air, Convenience of Communication, and Cheapness of living, have been principally consulted; and GeorgeTown offers these united advantages."
The policy of religious tolerance was traditional with the Carrolls because Charles Carroll, the original settler, grandfather of John Carroll, and the latter's cousin, Charles Carroll of Carrollton was Attorney General of Maryland when "Lord Baltimore became the first of the law givers of ancient or modern times to found an asylum of free conscience where persecution was punishable by statute and love of the Lord was not measured by hatred of man who differed in religion from his neighbor" .1
The Maryland Carrolls contributed much to the founda· tion and growth of government in this beloved land of ours, just as they did to our beloved Georgetown.
Charles Carroll of Carrollton was a delegate from Maryland to the Continental Congress and signed the immortal Declaration of Independence with firm con· victions as well as with firm hand. His was the unique distinction of having been, at the same time, a member of the United States Senate and of the' Maryland Senate. During the War of Independence, he sat as a member of the War Board. Together with Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Chase, he was a member of a Commission sent by the Continental Congress on a fruitle.ss trip to Canada for the purpose of persuading the Canadians to join the
'"College Days at Georgetown and Other Papers" by J. Fairfax McLaughlin, p. 22.
The Absent Guest (Continued from Page 5)
tion: continue, in other words, the academic tradition of Western culture. As we have heard in his letter to a former Rector, Fr. Grassi, he looked for the development of an objective and critical sense in the students of his school. This was the tradition of the West as opposed to the modern and liberal tradition, indistinguishable from Communism, of a subjective and voluntaristic viewpoint. Principles, not expediency, were to guide. his training. Principles have guided that training ever smce.. .
The third princely quality Georgetown has mhented from its founder is the priceless ability to mould gr.eat men. That quality stems from the fact that Carroll him· self transcended the confines of provincialism and the static forms of his time. He broke those forms by actively siding with the American Revolution and he levelled provincialism by his own broad European experience of 26 years. The men his "Academy" has produced attest to the scope of his wisdom.
Without them the United States would be poor indeed; without you, whom we honor tonight-you, the descend· ants of John Carroll's giants- this America of ours would be a sorry land.
We, therefore, salute you: We, the unworthy custodians of John Carroll's mighty dreams, salute you, the proven and honored custodians of his hopes. May these honors you are about to receive stimulate and encourage you all to hold aloft the banner of true American culture which our Founder first unfurled for this Nation.
9
Revolution or to stay neutral. Some of our guests may be interested in knowing that his last public act was participation in the formal ceremony starting the construction of the Baltimore & Ohio Railway.
John Carroll, boyhood companion and schoolmate of Charles, was not attracted by public life and entered the priesthood. However, in 1776, at the request of the Con· tinental Congress, he accompanied Franklin, Chase, and his cousin, Charles, on their unsuccessful mission to Canada. He became the first Archbishop of his Church in the United States and died at Georgetown in December 1815, the greatest figure in the Roman Catholic Church of the United States.
Daniel Carroll, brother of John Carroll, also deserves 9} mention. He was a member from Maryland of the old 7 ~e. vt.<' Colonial Congress and later served as a delegate from G fl.~ • 1 that State to a Convention that sat in Philadelphia in 1789 and framed the Constitution of the United States.2
The choice of the present site of Washington as the ~
Nation's Capitol, was advocated by Daniel Carroll. His ; .-JJ farm and one owned by Notley Young-named in the l proclamation as a solicitor for Georgetown-became part of the District of Columbia. As a matter of fact, the Capitol was built on land transferred to the Government by Carroll.
Against this background Georgetown men are gathered here tonight to honor 22 living educational descendants of John Carroll. In his name and in that of Georgetown, we salute the Award winners and say, "Well done and may God speed you on your way to greater and finer
. " serv1ce.
'Thomas FitzSimons of Pennsylvania, who was named as a solicitor of funds for Georgetown's founding, also was a delegate to that Convention. He was a prominent Philadelphia business· man and banker who helped finance Washington's Army.
The Alumni Tie Designed expressly for the Georgetown University
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Washington 7, D. C. Pror.eerl s from the sale of the ALUMNI TIE are being donated to the Georgetown Alumni Club of Washington, D. C., for the fund to furnish Alumni Lounge in McDonough Memorial Gymnasium.
HORKAN, BILL LEAHY
ATHLETICS
By FRANK PRIAL
Buddy O'Grady's resignation as head basketball coach on March 7th climaxed the best cage season Georgetown's enjoyed in the past four years. Buddy, 25 pounds under· weight, gave ill health as his chief reason for bowing out.
Under O'Grady, junior Bill Bolger, from Jackson Heights, L. I., turned in the greatest season of his career. He smashed two long standing records and set himself up to grab a few more in his senior year.
His 435 total points broke John Mahnken's 415, tops since 1943. He got the highest total for one game-38 against Mt. St. Mary's to edge out Andy Kostecka's 35 against Niagara in 1947. Also, the former Xavier star is only 4/10 of a point behind Kostecka's best scoring average of 17.8 points per game.
Next year Bolger is almost certain to become the leading all-time scorer by going way over the current total of 898 set by Tommy O'Keefe.
The team beat the over-all scoring record it set last year by 317 points, totaling 1789 to tlie opposition's 1644. Last year's aggregate was 1472.
* * * * Frank Sevigne's great two-mile rela.y team wound up
the indoor season victorious over all ·comers. Their 17 race winning streak was snapped by Illinois and Michigan at the Cleveland K of C Meet on March 14th, but the boys bounced back a week later to trounce the very same teams at the Olympic Carnival in New York.
Some of the top credit of the season belongs to Charlie Capozzoli, Georgetown's little distance runner from Flushing, Long Island. Tom Voorhees was out most of the season with a bad leg and Cappy replaced him, sacrificing many chances to star individually to bolster the team.
Nevertheless, all the boys-Dave Boland, Carl Joyce, Joe LaPierre and Cappy-picked up a host of individual awards in events all over the East. Joyce, anchor man on the squad, copped the National Intercollegiate 1000 championship, Joe LaPierre got a bid to the Wanamaker Mile, and Capozzoli was invited to England's biggest Spring meet. Only previous commitments kept him from accepting.
On April 18th, the outdoor track season got under way at the Seton Hall Relays in Newark. Joyce, Capozzoli, Voorhees and LaPierre, running in a four-mile relay, calmly sliced 16 seconds off the previous meet record. They were clocked at 17:43.4 and finished 40 yards in front of the nearest <>pposition.
A week later, youthful mentor Servigne caused a mild furor in track circles by passing up the Penn Relays in favor of the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa. His action was a protest against Penn's acceptance of service teams in what are supposed to be college events.
At Drake, the Hoyas met the toughest opposition of their careers-the University of Kansas. On the first day, Friday, the Hoyas started in the four-mile relay, running Capozzoli, Voorhees, Joyce and LaPierre, in that order. They took an early lead, increased it on each leg, and
12
In the spring of 1905 the Prep School Re_lay team was making track history at Georgetown. In March of that year the new photographic firm of Harris and Ewing took a picture of the team (from the left) Billy Sitterding, Sidney Hammond, Freddie Gibbs and Me .. de Lewis. Last year Freddie Gibbs found his copy of the ~hotograph among some old records a.nd suggested to your Executove Secretary that the team should be inyited to Alumni House for a re-run. Accordingly Sitterding came from Richmond, Va., Hammond from Libertytown, Md., Gibbs from w .. s~ington and Lewis from New Y10rk. With some difficulty Director of Athletics Jack H4gerty uniformed them and the forty-seven year old firm of 'Harris and Ewing again sent a photographer. We hope the class of '52 looks as well in '99.
gave Joe LaPierre the baton with a 40 yard lead. He ran a 4:13 mile, but Georgetown lost the race. ,
'A lightning bolt named Wes Santee paced out a 4:07.4 mile for Kansas' anchor, shading out LaPierre by three yards at the tape. Kansas set a new record for the event and Georgetown, running 17.16.1, equalled the existing American record.
The next day, Sevigne entered the same four in the two-mile relay, and again they pushed a team to a new American record. Illinois ran a blazing 7:31.6 with the Hoyas exactly two seconds slower, their best time all year. The Illinois four had been saved just for that race. They had not competed at all the day before.
On May 18th, the thin-clads again journey West. This time to Los Angeles and the Coliseum Relays, scene of their most thrilling victory last year. Occidental, chief c?mpetition in that race, will be on deck this year with the same four runners. _
After Los Angeles, only one meet remains- the IC4Abefore the Olympic trials in June. Carl Joyce and Charlie Capozzoli are Georgetown's best bets for berths to Helsinki.
Strangely enough, one other Hoya has high Olympic hopes and he won't even be at the trials with the rest of the team. Don Stonehouse, a sprint specialist and a junior in the College, hails from Ontario and will try out for the Canadian squad. It will be a small group, but, Don hopes, the competition won't be as stiff.
(Continued on Page 21)
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY LIBRARY OFFERS "GREAT
BOOKS" EXHIBIT
The timeliness of old books is being dramatized in an exhibit in the main Reading Room of the Georgetown University Li· brary, where the newest edition of the "Great Books" is paral· leled by editions of the same titles several centuries old. The central feature of the display is the first three volumes (includ· ing the famous "Syntopicon" of Mortimer J. Adler) of the 54 volume set "Great Books of the Western World," published by the Encyclopaedia Britannica as the culmination of a two million dollar research and publishing venture. Flanking the modern volumes in the Georgetown dis· play are a first edition of New· ton's revolutionary Principia, published in London in 1687; Euclid's Elements of Geomelry in the famous Ratdolt edition (Venice, 1482) in which geometric figures made their first appearance in print; and a 1502 edition of Virgil's works contain· ing many quaint woodcuts.
A gift to the Georgetown Uni· versity Library from Mr. Eugene Meyer, chairman of the board of the Washington Post Co., the handsomely bound "Founders' Edition" anticipates by about six months the distribution of the work to the general public. The set comprises 443 works by 74 influential writers in the Western tradition from Homer to Freud. Formal presentation of the first three volumes of the set was made by Senator William Ben· ton, publisher of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, after a recep· lion and banquet in the Jalfe Room of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City on April 15th, which was attended by the University Librarian on behalf of the Very Reverend Hunter Guthrie, S.J., President of Georgetown.
Comments on the significance of the undertaking were made to a distinguished audience of philanthropists, educators, li· brarians and publishers by Jacques Maritain, the philosopher, Robert Maynard Hutchins, former Chancellor of the Univer· sity of Chicago and general edi· tor of the "Great Books of the Western World", Clifton Fadi· m11n, author and critic, Mortimer J, Adler, editor of the "Syntopi· con" or index by idea or topic of the entire series, and Law· renee A. Kimpton, Chancellor of the University of Chicago, who presided. Senator Benton, .after his own remarks, made formal presentation of a special set bound in blue to a represenla· th·e of Her Majesty the Queen of England. Another special set, bound in red, was later pre· sented to President Truman at the White House.
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CLASS NOTES
1891 JosEPH N. SAUNDERS, Law '91, died
March 3rd in Washington. He had been retired for several years.
FREDERIC M. THOMPSON, Law '91, has entered his sixtieth year of active practice in Albion, N. Y. His family law firm was established by his father in 1856, and has been located in the same office building for 87 years.
1896 ]AMES FALLON, Law '96, died on Feb
ruary 12 in Pittsfield, Mass. He had served five terms as Mayor of Pittsfield from 1938 to 1948.
1904 NELSON WILSON, Law '04, died in Wash
ington on February 25. In practice for forty years, he was widely known for his many charities.
1914 WILLIAM H. PRENDERGAST, College '14,
Grad. '19, was killed in an automobile accident on the Merritt Parkway in Connecticut on February 16. He is survived by his brothers, John J, Prendergast, College '20, Thomas E. Prendergast, College '17 and a nephew William H. Prendergast, College '38. R~v. L. R. McHugh, S.J., Assistant Dean of the College represented the Uni-
13
versity at the funeral which was attended by many of the Alumni of Georgetown.
CoL. HARRY M. CARROLL, Law '14, retired as a reserve officer of the Army a year ago and has been elected District Judge of the 105th Judicial District of Texas. In addition to his duties as Judge, he conducts a program of vocational guidance and a school for Adult Probationers and is teaching a night class in Law in Corpus Christi. Col. Carroll would like to hear from members of the 1914 Law class dispersed throughout the world. His address is Apt. 4, 249 Leming Ave., Corpus Christi, Texas.
1915 THOMAS J. McKEARNAN, College '15, is
President of the Moffett Studios, photographers, with branches in Chicago, New York, Detroit, Cleveland, Fort Lauderdale, Hyannis and St. Petersburg. He has a stable of thoroughbred hunters and rides regularly with the Longmeadow Hounds of Winnetka, III. He has recently left by air for Lisbon for an extended tour of the Continent.
1916 ' STEPHEN 0 . FoRD, Law '16, a firm sup
porter of the Alumni Association and one of the few original advertisers who made
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14
the Alumni Magazine possible, died in Washington on March 1st.
1917 THOMAS C. MEE, College '17, former
President of the Alumni Association and Chairman of the McDonough Gymnasium Committee, has left his Providence home for a business trip abroad. He will be away for about two months.
The Alumni Association extends its sincere sympathy to the Rev. Carl Hess, Col· lege '17 on the recent death of his mother. Father Hess is pastor of the Church of Our Lady of Victory in Washington.
1918 DR. WALTER G. NELSON, Med. '18, for
the past two years has been United States Public Health Officer in charge of activities in Continental Europe and the British Isles. His headquarters is at the American Embassy in Paris.
HoN. MICHAEL A. MusMANNO, Law '18, has been elected to Pennsylvania's highest court for a term of twenty-one years.
1919 ALBEIIT V. SHORTELL, College '19, died
suddenly in December while at work in his office in Salem, Mass. He is survived by his widow, four sons and two daughters.
DR. RoBEIIT A. CoNVERY, College '19, Grad. '21, died at Pinewald, N. J., on March 16. He had received his Medical training at Harvard and practised in Trenton.
RAYMO ND H. REISS, College '19, LL.D. ( Hon.) ( '35) has been made general chairman of the campaign commillee to raise five million dollars for the new Loyola Seminary of the Society of 1 esus in Westchester County, New York. -
1920 A. REA WILLIAMS, Law '20, who special
ized in railway law and represented a number of American railroads before the Interstate Commerce Commission, died after a heart attack in Washington on March 16.
1921 DR. JoHN P. BunKE, Dent. '21, former
Dean of the Georgetown Dental School and enthusiastic supporter of all of Georgetown's interests, died in Washington on March 8th. Thomas C. Mee, College '17, was the Association's official representative at the funeral.
B. MEREDITH REID, College '21, of Pittsburgh, has been appointed to a post with the Enforcement Division of the Office of Price Stabilization in Washington.
Dn. PAUL E. KUHA SKO, Med. '21, is serving his third four year term as County Coroner of Lackawanna County, Pa.
JosEPH F. O'HERN, Law '21, is manager of the Veterans Administration Regional Office for the State of New Jersey. His daughter, Kathy, is a member of the Class of '54 at the School of Nursing, is President of her class and News Editor of "Starch and Stripes", the publication of the students of the School of Nursing.
1922 ADMIRAL EMORY D. STANLEY, U.S.N.,
retired, Law '22, was elected Mayor of Cranford, N. ]. , in early January.
JAM ES O'CoNNOR RoBERTS, Law '22, died in Washington on April 17.
MICHAEL J. BnuDER, College '22, who has been Corporation Counsel of Harrison, N. J., for the past seventeen years, has been appointed Magistrate of the Municipal Court.
ROB ERT A. DALY, College '22, has been elected a senior Vice-President of the Continental Illinois Bank in Chicago.
1923 HoN. WILLIAM H. DALY, College '23,
Special Justice of the Lawrence (Mass.) District Court was the recipient of the 1951 Rabbi Joshua Loth Liebman plaque, awarded annually to the resident of Greater Lawrence who "has accomplished most during the year in fostering good will and tolerance among the peoples of all faiths". Among the officials present at the presentation of the plaque was Mayor 1 ohn J. Buckley, College '41.
GERARD J. C. GuiLFOYLE, College '23, Law '26, is in private patent and civil law practice in Washington, with offices in the Colorado Building and at 3220 Connecticut Ave. During World War II he served as Patent Attorney for the Alien Property Custodian.
JAMES F. DULLIGAN, '26
DR. ANTHONY G. MILLER, Dent. '23, who taught in the Department of Orthodontia at Georgetown for many years, died in Richmond, Va. , in late April.
BEDFORD L. EMBREY, Law '23, is President of the Embrey Investment Co., 7310 Woodward Ave., Detroit, specializing in Automobile and Commercial Financing. He is the father of one son and two daughters.
1924 ANTHONY EDWARD O'BEIRNE, JR., Law
'24, died in California in late January, according to word recently received at Alumni House.
JOHN A. CoLEMAN, Law '24, President of the Burroughs Adding Machine Corporation of Detroit, was the speaker before the Rotary Club of Memphis, Tenn., in midMarch.
DR. JoHN L. GILLEN, College '24, Med. '34, has been practicing Dermatology in San Bernardino, California, since his leaving the Army in 1945. During the War he spent seventeen months overseas.
L. CLARK ScHILDER, Law '24, has recently taken over as Warden of the Federal Correctional Institution at Danbury, Conn. Formerly he had served in a similar capacity at the Federal Reformatory in Chillicothe, Ohio.
HoN. ]AMES CANN, Law '24, is Presiding Judge of the West Virginia State Cot rt of Claims and also Judge of the Police Court of the City of Clarksburg.
PAUL G. FELIX, College '24. was a visitor at Alumni House during Easter Week.
IS
He is with American Radiator and Standard Sanitary Corporation in Pittsburgh Pa. '
The Magazine expresses the sympathy of the Alumni Association to the family of the late Mrs. Patrick 1. Casey of Scranton, Pa., who died during the winter. She was the mother of JEROME P. CASEY, College '23, LAWRENCE F. CASEY, College '28, DR. ADRIAN V. CASEY, Med. '38 and Mrs. Marian Klauberg, wife of LEO V. KLA UBERG, College '16.
1925 .J.. HARRY LABRuM, Law '25, Philadel
phia attorney, has been elected President of the Chamber of Commerce of Greater Philadelphia. He also serves as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Greater Philadelphia, South Jersey Council.
LIEUT. CoL. RAYMOND A. EGNER, Law '25, has left the Berlin Military Post where he served as Staff -Judge Advocate and is now stationed at the Headquarters of the Third Army at Fort McPherson, Ga.
GEORGE G. CozzENS, JR., College '25, is Office Manager and Accountant for Flowers, Inc., at 1431 H St., N. W., in Washington.
MATTHEW S. RuDDY, F.S. '25, is with the Production Credit Corporation of St. Paul, Minn.
1926 ]AMES F. DuLLIGAN, Law '26, has been
appointed Commissioner of Transportation for the City of New York. Operating a Transit System comprising 300 miles of Subway and 600 miles of bus and trolley lines with 45,000 employees to transport seven million passengers daily, leaves him but little time for his law practice. J im is the father of four.
FREDERICK W. FuGER, College '26, has been appointed Architect for the Catholic Student Center at the University of Michigan. The building will be known as the Father Richard Building after the priest who was co-founder of the University, in 1817.
CARMEN V. MARINARO, Law '26, has been practicing law as a trial lawyer in Butler, Pa., for the past twenty-three years. His daughter is a Trinity College student.
OTTO J. SAuR, College '26, Law '29 Assistant State's Attorney for Fairfield County, Conn., since 1937, has become a partner in the law firm of Boardman, Stoddard and McCarthy at 955 Main St., Bridgeport, Conn. He will continue as Assistant State's Attorney.
1927 PHILIP D. DEAN, College '27, died un
expectedly in Norfolk, Va., on February 20. He was the brother of Thomas A. Dean, College '20, and Charles D. Dean, College '27. Rev. Christopher T. Clark and James S. Ruby represented the class at the funeral and the Very Reverend Hunter Guthrie, S. J., represented the University. Phil leaves his widow and an eight year old son.
WILLIAM I. CoRBETT, College '27, is on duty with the fleet in Atlantic waters. Bill is a Commander in the Navy.
COLONEL MAURICE c. HIGGINS, U.S.A., College '27, will miss the Silver J ubilee reunion of his class. He is on duty in Korea.
Dn. JoHN N. McCANN, Med. '27 has become President-Elect of the Stat~ Board Members of the United States and Territories. Dr. McCann is in practice in Youngstown, Ohio.
CHARLES D. DEAN, College '27 has been elected Executive Vice-President' and Vice-
Chairman of the Board of the Dean Co., with headquarters in Chicago.
1929 CoL. FRANCIS I. McGARRAGHY, College
'29, Law '33, has left Washington for a tour of duty in Weisbaden, Germany where he is assigned to the Office of Special Investigations of the Air Inspector General.
WILLIAM A. FITZGERALD, College '29, is Treasurer of the McGill Manufacturing Co., Inc., of Valparaiso, Ind. He was formerly Accountant with Indiana Steel Pro· ducts Corporation.
]OHN E. SAIED, F.S. '29, is President of the Mt. Vernon Clay Products Co. of Washington, D. C. John, Jr. will graduate from the School of Foreign Service in June.
DR. JosEPH A. CLINTON, Med. '29, died in New York City on April 1 following a heart attack. Dr. Clinton was one of the first American physicians to treat victims of the atom bomb attack at Nagasaki. He is survived by his wife, three sons and three daughters.
1930 DR. GEORGE M. ]ANI, Dent. '30, died
recently in Washington. RICHARD F. SAWYER, College '30, who
was formerly Division Superintendent for the American Republics Corporation at Beaumont, Texas, has been made the Company's Assistant Manager for Production and Drilling at the home office in Houston.
DR. EMIL T. MARTYAK, Med. '30, is the newly elected President of the Hazleton Branch of ·the Luzerne County, Pa., Medical Society. Since completing his interneship at Misericordia Hospital, Philadelphia, Dr. Martyak has maintained his of-
HILLTOP CAFE
Serving
CORRECTION The last issue of the Alumni
Magazine carried an interesting story of the University Seal, written by the University Archivist. In illustrating the story we used an impression of the early seal, adopted before 1803, and a photograph of the University arms embedded in the floor of the lobby of McDonough Gymnasium. The official seal which is in the custody of the Secretary of the University Corporation, is encased in a press in such a way thar"it is impossible to photograph and a mere impression of the seal would not photograph well either. The photograph on page 4 of the Winter 1952 edition of the Magazine is not, therefore, the official seal.
fices in Hazleton where he is a member of the medical staffs of Hazleton State Hospital and St. Joseph Hospital. He is the father of six children.
DR. JosEPH R. JoHNSON, Med. '30, who has his practice in Cleveland, Ohio, is the father of six children ranging in age from three to twenty-one.
WILLIAM J. McLARNEY, College '30, has merged his business (JameS E. McLarney and Son) to form a new firm, the Abbey Funeral Directors, Inc., at Lexington Ave. and 66th St., New York City.,
1931 Word has been received at Alumni House
of the death of Dr. Eugene A. Hagan, Med.
Fine Foods - Steaks - Chops - Sea Food Sandwiches - Fountain Service
GEORGETOWN CLUB OF CHICAGO The Chicago Alumni will hold their
Officer Installation Dinner for 1952 on June 17 at the Swedish Club, 1258 North LaSalle St. co*cktails from 5 :00, Dinner promptly at 7 :00. The price $5.00 per person (for $10 worth of food), according to the Committee.
'31, on January 30 in Pawtucket, R. I. MICHAEL V. DISALLE, Law '31, who re
cently resigned as Director of the Office of Price Stabilization, has returned to active law practice as a member of the firm of DiSalle, Green and Haddad in the Security Building in Cleveland. Mike is now ac- · tively campaigning for election to the United States Senate.
RoBERT J. ILLIG has moved into his new home at 521 Shenley Drive in Erie, Pa. He has one son for the class of '71.
1932 WALTER A. SHELLEY, Law '32, of Day
tona Beach, Fla., has announced his candidacy for the office of State Attorney for the Seventh Circuit of Florida in the May Democratic Primary.
WILLIAM J. GERETY, JR., College '32, General Chairman for the twenty-year reunion of the class, reports great progress and rising interest in the reunion program. He has working committee& in several cities, including Lou Fisher in Detroit, Ray McNally in St . . Louis and Bob Avery in Washington. This -one looks like a 100% turnout.
COMPLIMENTS
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GIFI' TO ALUMNI LOUNGE
The furnishing of the McDonough Room in the Gymnasium has been considerably enhanced by the gift of a handsome directors table, measuring four· teen feet, four inches by five feet, four inches. The table was made expressly for the room at the order of John A. Romweber, '23, President of the American Furniture Co., Batesville, Ind. The room, immediately adjoining the Alumni Lounge, will be completed shortly when the por· trait of Father McDonough is hung over the fire-place. It will be used for Alumni Board meet· ings and Committee meetings and as an adjunct to the less formal Alumni Lounge.
1933 JoHN A. O'DONNELL, Law '33, formerly
Commissioner of the United States-Philippine War Damage Commission, Major in the Judge Advocate General's Department of the Army of the United States, and Attorney in the Interstate Commerce Commission's Bureau of Motor Carriers, announces the opening of offices in Washington for the general practice of law before all Courts, Government Departments and agencies. His Offices are in the Bowen Building.
JoHN J. POWER, JR., College '33 announces the birth of his sixth child and fourth daughter, Suzanne, on March 6th in Youngstown, Ohio.
JoHN A. LAllGAY, College '33, is President of the Connecticut Screw and Rivet Co.
STEPHEN A. FANNING, Law '33, has been appointed Associate Justice of the Superior Court of the State of Rhode Island.
DR. ALOYSIUs T. KELLY, College '33, is busy with his practice in Obstetrics and Gynecology in Far Rockaway, N. Y. He is the father of four daughters.
1934 MAJ. GEN. EDCAR ERSKINE HUME, LL.D.
(Honoris causa) '34, died last January in Frankfort, Ky. Gen<"ral Hume who served for several years as Curator of the Army Medical Museum in Washington, was Military Governor of Rome after the Liberation.
STEPHEN E. KINDELAN, ]R., College '34, has been elected President of the New England Plumbing and Heating Wholesalers.
PHILIP A. HART, College '34, is United States District Attorney in Detroit.
TnoMAS F. ScuLLY, College '34, of Chicago has become a member of the firm of Kirkland, Fleming, Green, Martin and Ellis of 33 No. LaSalle St.
ABRAHAM FRANKEL, Law '34, City Attorney of Asbury Park, N. ]., argued the first case in the United States in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division, :w~erein the Court granted a preliminary InJunction which allowed a radio station to broadcast a council meeting. The case has attracted widespread interest.
JEREMIAH J. O'CoNNOR, College '34, Law '37, is Legal Advisor to the U. S. High Commissioner to Austria, Hon. WALTER DONNELLY, F.S. '21.
DR. PAUL A. KENNEDY, College '34, is practicing surgery in Buffalo, N. Y ., and is associate in surgery at the University of Buffalo. He is the father of two sons and three daughters.
WILLIAM B. SPOHN, Law '34, is Chief Trial Attorney for the Office of Price Stabilization and Special Assistant to the U. S. Attorney in San Francisco. He also lectures in Public Law subjects at the University of San Francisco Law School. He and Mrs. Spohn have five children.
1935 The Magazine expresses the sympathy of
the Association to HOWARD N. RAGLAND, F.S. '35, on the recent death of his father in Cincinnati.
LAWRENCE W. HALL, College '35, is VicePresident of the Baldwin-Hall Co. of Syracuse, N. Y. The Halls have three children, David Lawrence, Georgetown, '63, William Francis, '71, and Mary Regina.
MAJOR ORAL J. JENSEN, F.S. '35, is in Japan with the Far East Air Force and expects to be there for the next two years or longer. Mrs. Jensen plans to join him in Tokyo soon.
DR. JosEPH F. CoRLESS, College '35, Med. '39, North Bergen, N.J. Physician and Surgeon, reports a family of four children, Joseph M., '65, John Kevin, '71, and Kathleen Ann and Mary Ellen.
1936 DR. JoHN J. KLOBY, Med. '36, is anxious
to inform his classmates that he has forsaken New Jersey for Yuma, Arizona. He invites one and all to sample Western hospitality.
DR. RoBERT C. RusH, JR., College '36 Med. '4{), proudly announces the birth of Robert C. Rush, Jr., Georgetown '73, on February 10.
DR. ]ESSE G. FEAR, Med. '36, of Berwick, Pa., is President of the Columbia County Medical Society.
1937 GEORGE PAPANICOLAS, Law '37, has been
named assistant chairman to the Director of the Greek-American section, Ethnic origins division of the Republican National Committee. He is a Washington attorney and real estate man.
DR. ]AMES E. PouLIN, Med. '37, has been admitted to the American College of Sur-
geons. He is President of the staff of Sisters' Hospital, Waterville, Maine.
Mary Gloninger Fleury, daughter of DR. GEORGE J. FLEURY, JR., College '37, Law '41, was born on April 24.
1938 E. ]AMES HICKEY, College '38, announces
the removal of his law offices to 16 State St., Rochester, N. Y.
CHARLES A. CAMALIER, JR., College '38, Law '42, Chairman of the 1952 Connecticut Ave. Easter Parade Committee, reports the birth of Charles III in November. Papa was recently named a Director of the Lincoln National Bank in Washington.
REv. DERMOT CosGROVE, College '38, is pastor of St. Monica's Church at Forestdale, Vermont.
DAviD W. CHEADLE, F.S. '38, has been living and working abroad for U. S. Steel since the end of the war. After tours in the Philippines and Argentina, he is now working in Melbourne, Australia.
1939 . JEROME F. NIEDERMEIER, F.S. '39, an
nounces his fifth daughter and eighth child, Christine, born October 21.
CoBURN KIDD, Law '39, is Director of the Political Division of the Office of the U. S. High Commissioner to Austria, HoN. WALTER DONNELLY, F.S. '21.
1940 DR. KEVIN M. CosGROVE, College '4{), is
practicing Medicine in Rutland, Vermont. He is the father of three, Dennis, '67, Kevin, Jr., '68, and Stephen, '72.
LT. CoL. RoBERT P. CAMPBELL, Med. '4{), is Chief of the Operations Division in the Medical Section of the Eighth Army in Korea where he has been since June of last year. Previously he spent eighteen months at Fort Lewis, Wash., where he was Chief of the Cardiovascular Section of the Madigan Army Hospital. Mrs. Campbell and the three children are in Carlisle, Pa., until papa returns.
MARIO GRF.GORIO, F.S. '4{), is assigned to the Chicago Office of the F. B. I.
BENJAMIN S. RoBERTS, F.S. '4{), is Administrative Assistant to Dr. Elmer Brandes
BILL DALY, '23 RECEIVES THE LIEBMAN PLAQUE
17
HOYAS RUN FOR BAR POSTS
Of the ten candidates for office in the District of Columbia Bar Association, five are Georgetown Alumni. Both candidates for President are Georgetown men, Ralph A. Cusick, '22 and Preston C. King, Jr., '27. Running for Sect·etary is Lohn Lewis Smith, Jr., '38. Rival candidates for Treasurer are Donald H. Dalton, '47 and James C. Toomey, '39.
at the Palm Beach Research Farm at Canal Point, Fla.
THOMAS A. O'CALLACHAN, }R., College '40 Law '48, calls himself a "misplaced pe;son," a Chicagoan working in Washing· ton. He is Executive Assistant to the Under-Secretary of the Navy and a member of the Board for the Correction of Naval Records. The O'Callaghans have three daughters, Marcia Mae, 8, Dian Patrice, 6, and Maureen, three months.
RAYMOND J. HIGGINS, College '40, is workin" for the Shattuck Denn Mining Corpor:tion and spends most of his time investigating new properties in the South· western States and Mexico.
1941 DR. CHARLES P. KusiAK, Dent. '41, was
a caller· at Alumni House on April 19. He called with Mrs. Kusiak, Charles, Jr., '68, and Marianne, two and a half.
Frederick C. Kentz, III, '73, son of FRED· EIIICK C. KENTZ, JR., College '41, was born January 9th. He has one sister, Maryanne.
1942 EDWARD J. McVoY, College '42, was re·
leased from the hospital in January after an automobile accident suffered in June. He hopes to be allowed to travel to Wash· ington for the ten year reunion of his class.
DoNALD L. RITGER, College '42, Law '49, announces the birth of Thomas, '73, on January 6.
JoHN A. McQI:EENEY, Law '42, announces the birth of John Andrew, '73, on April 1. He is the second child.
Edward Brosnan Prial, '73, son of FRANK J. PniAL, II, College '42, was born in New York on January 6.
BYRON E. RonYN, College '42, and Elise Margaret McCully were married on April 19 at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in New York City.
BERNARD J. ScHMIDT, College '42, is Vice· President of Capitol Bakers, Inc., of Har· risburg, Pa., and President of the Central Pennsylvania Bakers Association. Barney, Jr., will be in the class of '71.
ALOYSIUS R. LuJACK, College '42, announces his fourth daughter, born last Sep· tember. His classmate GEORGE L. BoYER also became the father of a girl in November.
1943 DR. JoHN L. ScHIMEL, Med. '43, is a
practicing Psychoanalyst in New York City, certified by the American Board of Neurology and Psychiatry. He is on the staff of the N. Y. D.-Bellevue Medical Center and the Child Guidance Center. He also lectures at Teachers' College, Columbia University.
A visitor to Alumni House in March was LoUis F. DESLOGE, JR., F.S. '43. He re· turned to civilian status on April 10 after
serving a year in Korea with Army Intelligence.
HARRY E. CoNNORS, College '43, is a manufacturer's representative for Connecticut Screw and Rivet Co. in the Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio Tri-State District. He also represents the Vail Rubber Works of St. Joseph, Mich. Harry has three boys, '66, '68 and '70.
Announcement was recently made of the engagement of WILLIAM MAYO SuLLIVAN, College '43, to Miss Jeari Kay Simonson of New York City.
JosEPH A. KozLAK, JR., College '43, and Miss Helen Louise Dunne were married on May 10 at the Church of the Holy Cross in Minneapolis.
JoH N W. RYAN, College '43, announces the birth of his fourth daughter, Moira, on February 8, in Boston.
RoBERT P. DALY, College '43, Law '49, is engaged in the practice of Law at 25-34 Steinway St., Long Island City, N. Y.
LT. CoMDR. JACK F. FLOOD, Dent. '43, Dental Corps, U.S.N., is stationed at the Naval Air Station at Key West and has bought a home there. He is the father of two sons and a daughter.
JoHN L. KoHL, College '43, announces the birth of Jeffrey Kohl, '73, on January 19.
1944 LIEUTENANT PAuL D. DooLAN, College
'44, Med. '47, visited Alumni House in April while on leave from his duties aboard the U.S.S. Macon. He is living in Norfolk, Va.
RICHARD H. KEATINCE, La')V '44, announces the removal of the offices of Keatinge, Arnold and Zack to 621 South Spring St., Los Angeles.
DR. EDwARD B. LEAHY, Med. '44, announces the opening of his office for the practice of Orthopedic Surgery at 259 Piermont Ave., South Nyack, N.Y.
DR. JoHN E. PuLASKI, Med. '44, announces the birth of his first child, John Joseph Pulaski, '73 (eight pounds, four ounces), on March 2, 1952.
1945 MICHAEL W. MosKo, F.S. '45, died in
Washington in February. His first connection with the University was from 1925 to 1927 when he was one of Lou Little's greats on the football teams of those years.
HELEN B. FonD, F.S. '45, died in December, according to word recently received at Alumni House.
DR. SIDNEY G. PINESS, Med. '45, and Miss Carol Welt Waldman of Plainfield, N. J., have announced their engagement. Dr. Piness is a member of the staff of Muhlenberg Hospital in Plainfield.
DR. JoHN P. RIEPENHOFF, Med. '45, is engaged in the private practice of pediatrics at Sullivant Ave., Columbus, Ohio. His first child, Ellen Marie, was born on January 23.
IRVING M. WoLFF, Law '45, is a partner in the law firm of Sandler and Wolff, Ingraham Building, Miami, Fla. He is the father of Diane Patricia, 7, David, 4, and Darleen Michelle, eight months.
1946 WALTER J. RIELLEY, JR., College '46, and
Miss Maureen MacDonald, Visitation '47, Trinity '49, have announced their engagement.
EUGENE V. RESNICK, Med. '46, has moved his office for the practice of Psychiatry to 103 East 86th St., New York City.
Dn. }AMES F. PIERCE, Med. '46, Grad. '39, and Miss Phyliis Marion Bower were married on April 26 at St. Ignatius Church, Chestnut Hill, Mass.
18
1947
DR. JoHN R. CoNLEY, Med. '47, is stationed at Fort Belvoir Army Hospital and has acquired quarters on the post for his family which includes three children, Elise, John R., Jr., and David.
VINCENT E. ScuLLIN, College '47, was married to Patricia Jane Howard at the Church of the Assumption, Fairfield, Conn., on February 2. The groom is Vice-Presi· dent of the Travel Associates in New York.
MAJOR JoH N J. SHERIDAN, Med. '47, has been awarded the Bronze Star in Korea for outstanding work in a mobile surgical hospital near the front.
WILLIAM S. CHEATHAM, Law '47, has been appointed General Counsel of the National Capital Park and Planning Com· mission.
STEPHEN F. MoCARSKI, Law '47, who is on the Editorial staff of the Edward Thorn pson Co. in New· York, is. attending New York University's Graduate School of Law as a candidate for a Master's degree. On September 8 he was married to Miss Imelda Mary McAllister at St. Anselm's Church.
1948
RAYMOND J. GoRDON, College '48 wh8 left College to join the American Petroleum Institute as a research chemist, is now General Superintendent with the Peter Gordon Co., waterproofing engineers and contractors. He has two sons, William Wallace, '70, and Andrew Malcolm, '71.
KENNETH V. WooD, Jn., ' F.S. '48, who is with Standard Motor Products, Inc., has recently beert promoted to District Sales Manager and transferred from Maryland to Kansas City, Mo.
FRANK A. LoPEZ, F.S. '48, and Miss Ana Maria de Angulo have announced their engagement. The prospective bride's father is press attache of the Spanish Embassy here. Mr. Lopez is a member of the bar in New York.
JoHN E. RooNEY, College '48, Law '51, has left his law practice in Muskogee, Okla., for duty as a First Lieutenant in the Judge Advocate General's Department at Fort Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas.
BENITO F. LEGARDA, JR., College '48, is an Assistant Economist with the Department of Economic Research, Central Bank of the Philippines. Previously, after taking his M.A. degree from Harvard in 1950, he worked for E. C. A. and taught at Far Eastern University and at the Ateveo de Manila Graduate School. He reports that Jim Mewshaw of his class is also in Manila on business.
Miss Christine L. Sullina, of Manchester, Conn., and Michael J. Shortley, F.S. '48, have announced their engagement. He is with the Fairchild Aircraft Corp. in Hagers· town, Md.
RICHARD T. HomcAN, College '48, Law '51, has been admitted to practice before the U. S. Court for the Northern District of New York at Albany.
JosEPH E. GATELY, College '48, and Miss Margaret Ann McNamara were married on February 16 at St. Joseph's Church, Garden City, N.Y.
EDwAnD J. BEACOM, College '48, and Miss Paula Sue Burns. announced their engagement in mid-February.
DR. IRWIN M. SCHULTZ, Med. '48, is in his third year of Psychiatric residency at Philadelphia State Hospital.
LuciAN R. RonusTELLI, College '48, was recalled to the Army last June. On October 23, he became the fath er of a second child, David Lucian, '72.
1949 MANSFIELD R. CLEARY, JR., F.S. '49, an
nounces the birth of Mansfield, Ill, '73, in Chicago in March.
DR. ANTHONY L. MILNAR, Grad. '49, is Chief of the Manual and Training Branch, Technical Services, Federal Civil Defense Administration in Washington.
JoN R. CoLLINS, Law '49, of Ely, Nevada, was elected District Attorney of White Pine County for a term of four years ending December 31, 1954. He is also engaged in the private practice of law and has been elected National Committeeman of the Young Democrats of Nevada.
Wendell M. Lewis, F.S. '49, was Professor of Economics at Randolph-Macon College during the aeademic year 1949-50. Since then he has been Field Representa· tive and Assistant to the President of Stratford College, Danville, Va. In his travels he has covered 28 states and the District of Columbia and has met many Georgetown Alumni.
George H. Becker, Jr., F.S. '49, who has been studying at the University of Geneva, has had his thesis accepted and printed and the degree of Docteur es Sciences Politiques will be awarded in May.
DR. JACQUES M. KELLY, Grad. '49, announces the birth of Michael Aloysius Kelly, II, '73, on February 24th.
Catherine Ann McGrail, daughter of. EDWARD M. McGRAIL, Law '49, was born' in Evanston, Ill., on April 9.
CHARLES V. HART, F.S. '49, has been promoted to the Sales Managership of the Plumbing and Heating Wholesale Division of Grinnell Co., Inc., of Buffalo, N. Y. His second son, Brian Joseph, was born on December 12.
JAMES T. NALLS, College '49, is stationed
COMPLIMENTS
OF
EARL H. LUBOEANSKY '49
at Fort Dix, N. J., with an Anti-Aircraft unit. He expects to be dicharged in September.
CHARLES P. LAIOSA and Miss Marie Doris Manning were married at St. Charles Church, Arlington, Va., on February 2.
JoHN F. HANIFIN, Law '49, is Patent Attorney at the Development Laboratories of International Business Machine Corp. at Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
RICHARD F. SABBIA, College '49, is at the
University of Milano, Italy, enrolled in the School of Medicine.
William Joseph Conway, III, '73, son of WILLIAM J. CoNWAY, JR., College '49, was born in Cleveland on March 6. He is the Conways' second child.
HowARD B. WATSON, F.S. '49, purchased the Western Finance Co. of Albion, Nebraska, which he now operates.
DR. RoBERT H. PARROTT, Med. '49, announces the birth of Timothy Robert, '73, in Washington on March 11. Tim weighed in at 7 pounds 2 ounces.
CALVIN L. HAM, F.S. '49, has left Washington for his new duties with the ArabianAmerican Oil Co. at Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
In the recent examinations held by the Maryland Board of Examiners of Public Accountants, Henry W. Eiring, F.S. '49, placed third out of 119.
EARL H. LUBOEASNKY, F.S. '49, has been appointed to the Public Affairs Section of the American Consulate-General in Frankfurt, Germany. He will supervise a U. S. Information Center Branch at Kaiserlauten.
THOMAS S. GALLA, Colle~e '49, announces the recent birth of a daughter, Mary Annaella Galla, in Washington on April 27.
1950 EDWARD M. WALDRON, F.S. '50, is em
ployed by Puden and Puden, Certified Public Accountants. He passed the American Institute Examinations in November, 1950 and expects to get his C.P.A. certificate in August.
PAUL E. SIGMUND, College '50, was a recent visitor at Alumni House. He is working towards his Ph.D. at Harvard.
EDWIN T. BEAN, JR., Law '50, recently became engaged to Miss Susan Roberts of Wanakah, N. Y. He is a Patent Attorney
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with the firm of Bean, Brooks, Buckley and Bean, Buffalo, N. Y.
THOMAS B. YEWELL, College '50, an· nounces the arrival of his second daughter, Lucille, on March 9.
RICHARD M. AsH, JR., F.S. '50, is a Company Representative with U. S. Lines in Yokohama, Japan.
LT. COMDR. STANLEY F. DOYKA, USNR, F.S. '50, has left Washington for the Massa· chusetts Maritime Academy at Buzzard's Bay where he will head the Department of Naval Science.
EDWARD RICHJTELLI, F.S. '50, announces the birth of Margaret Mary in Washington on March 25th.
RICHARD T. DARBY, College '50, died in New York in early March.
Bernard S. Macsherry, Jr., '73, son of BERNARD S. MACSHF.RIIY, College '50, was born April 1, in Columbus, Ga.
JuLius R. KERSTEN, Law '50, JoHN J. Ho NAN, Law '49, and RICHARD H. HuBER, Law '50, have formed a partnership for the general practice of law under the firm name of Kersten, Honan and Huber, Walbridge Building, Buffalo, N. Y.
FRANK HA NRAHAN, College '50, has recently been transferred from San Diego to Los Angeles with the Department of Jus· tice.
WILLIAM L. CoRCORAN, JR., College '50, is completing his second year of Theology at St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, Md.
WALTER B. MucKERMAN, JR., College '50, owns and operates his own Personnel Service in St. Louis.
HARRY F. MILLER, College '50, is with the F. B. I. working out of the Butte, Mont., office.
JoHN J. DALY, College '50, has left Wash·
ington for a two-month indoctrination course at Newport, R. I., before going on duty as a Photographic Officer with the Navy. He was formerly a staff photographer with the Washington Post. He re· cently announced his engagement to Miss Lu Corbett of Washington.
JoHN]. PYNE, College '50, who is a Law Student at Georgetown while working for the Corporation Trust Co., announces the birth of a son on February 12 at Doctor's Hospital.
CoRPORAL FRANK J . SMALL, JR., College '50, participated in the largest military maneuver held in the United States since World War II. Known as "Operation Long Horn," it was a combined Army and Air Force Exercise at Fort Hood, Texas.
GERARD S. RYAN, College '50, and Miss BARUARA BATTLE, F.S. '51, were married on May 3 at St. Bernard's Church, Chicago.
1951 FRANK J. MoHR, College '51, and Miss
Mary Herlihy of Boston recently announced their engagement. They will be married during the summer.
GERALD J. O'CoNNOR, College '51, and Miss Marianne Macheca of St. Louis re· cently announced their engagement. The prospective groom is the son of CHARLES B. O'CONNOR, Law '12.
LIEUT. FRANCIS J. SAMAHA, Dent. '51, stationed with the Air Force at Fitzsimmons General Hospital, Denver, announces the birth of Jeffrey Francis, '73, on April14.
EDWARD T. ]EMISON, F.S. '51, called at Alumni House before returning to his duties in Japan. He reports an active Georgetown Club in Yokohama with a regular attendance of thirty-five.
JoHN G. FLYNN, College '51, and Miss Alice Therese Phelan were married in St. Charles Church, Bridgeport, Conn., on April 14.
PATRICK F. HooKs, Law '51, after being admitted to the Bar of the District of Columbia, has been admitted to the Bar of Montana. In January, Gov. John W. Bonner of Montana appointed him attorney for the Montana Trade Commission with offices in Helena. He is the son of FRANK T. HooKs, Law '14.
FREDERICK M. HART, College '51, is a Second 'Lieutenant assigned to Lowry Field, Denver, Colorado, for studies in Transportation. From there he expects to go to Japan or Korea as an Air Traffic Control Officer with Military Air Transport 'Service.
FRANCIS J. MAGILL, F.S. '51, is workil)g for his M.A. degree in Economics at Columbia University. He expects to receive the degree in June.
FREDERICK LEIBY, F.S. '51, is working for the Air Force in Washington as a Budget Analyst.
Miss Eunice Schubert, sister of WALTER B. ScHUBERT, College '51, has announced her engagement to WILLIAM G. FALLON, College '51.
Word has been received of the death in Paris of GEORGE CHRISTIAN LoBKOWICZ, F.S., '51, in August.
FRANCIS J. O'NEILL, JR., College '51, and Miss Frances Anne Small were married April 17 in the Gesu Church, University Heights, Ohio. ,
THOMAS J. O'RouRKE, JR., College '51, was commissioned an Ensign in the Naval Reserve at the Officers Candidate School in Newport, R. I., in Janu.ary.
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Each shirt $4.50; 3 for $13.00. Add 25c for postage.
Mail orders to:
Georgetown University Shop 1248 36th Street, N. W.
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Summer is Ahead
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Send orders and checks to ALUMNI HOUSE, 3604 0 St., N. W. Washington 7, D. C.
Sport Activities (Continued from Page 12)
. Two ills have plagued veteran baseball coach Joe Judge, m this his 13th season: lack of hitters and lack of days to play. Concerning the latter, one-third of his games to date have been rained out.
As for the former, it shows up readily in the scorebook. The record is 5-5 with wins over Michigan, Princeton, George Washington, Bucknell and Pennsylvania. Maryland, Rutgers, Temple and Penn State have beaten the Hoyas, Penn State in both games of a double-header.
One of Joe Judge's best moves this year was taking Frank Mattingly off the mound and putting him in left field to util ize his hitting power. He is one of the few consistent hitters on the team.
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