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• Officers of local and regional Georgetown Alumni Clubs are listed here as a r egular f eature
of the ALUMNI MAGAZINE. Club Secretaries are r equested to notify the Executive Secretary of
the Alumni Association of any changes as soon as th ey occur.
Los Angeles, Calif.
Donald J . O'Leary, '52, 3440 Wilshire Blvd.,
Los Angeles, Calif.
Pres.:
Northern California
Pres. : Alvin M. Lesser, '41, 54 Beld en St., San Fran·
cisco 4, Calif. YUkon 6·0292
Denver, Colo.
Pres.: Charl es P. Gallagher, '49, Central Bank, Denver,
Colo. AC 2-0771
Connecticut
Pres. : Harry H. Hefferan, Jr., '48, National Bank Bldg.,
Norwalk, Conn.
Delaware
Pres.: Charles F. Daley, Sr., '30, 2113 W. 17th St.,
Wilmington, Del.
Washington, D. C.
Pres. : Richard L. Walsh, '49, 1041 Investment Building,
Washin gton, D. C. REpubli c 7-1610
Florida
Pres.: Irving M. Wolff, '45, Biscayne Building, Miami,
Fla.
Chicago, Ill.
Pres.: George D. Crowley, '34, 135 South La Salle St.,
Chicago 3, Ill.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Pres.: William A. Brennan, Jr., '39, 5732 No. Pennsyl-
vania St., Indianapolis, Ind. CLifford 1-3542
Secy.: Martin McDermott, II, '54, 218 East 28th, Indian·
apolis, Ind. WAbash 4-3523
Annapolis, Md.
Temp. Secy.: Robert H. Whitman, '52, 100 Chesapeake
St., Annapolis, Md.
Baltimore, Md.
Pre:t.: Wallace Ketcham, '51, 307 Thornhill Rd., Balli·
more 12, M~.
Boston, Mass.
Pres.: Francis L. Swift, '46, Suite 527, 11 Beacon St.,
Boston 8, Mass.
Secy.: E. Chester Browne, '40, 184 Boylston St., Boston,
Mass.
Springfield, Mass.
Pres.: Raymond Larrow, '49, 352 Pleasant St., Holyoke,
Mass.
Detroit, Mich.
Pres. : Robert M. Palms, '51, 17153 East J efferson, Grosse
Pointe, Mich. TU 5-1200
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.
Pres,: Robert C. Drake, '50, 1707 West 26th Street, Min·
neapolis, Minn.
Secy.: William LaHiff, '45, 2513 Foshay Tower, Min·
neapolis 2, Minn.
Kansas City, Mo.
Pres.: Thomas A. Sweeny, '52, 1111 Scarritt Building,
Kansas City, Mo. VI 2-2575
Secy.: R. Eugene McGannon, '51, 1009 Commerce Bldg.,
Kansas City, Mo. BA 1-2416
St. Louis, Mo.
Pres.: J. Vernon McCarthy, '51, Edward D. Jon es and
Co., 300 North 4th St., St. Louis, Mo. CEntral 1-7600
Trenton, N. J.
Pres.: John A. Waldron, '38, 28 West State St., Trenton,
N.J. EXport 3-3044
Albuquerque, N. Mex.
Pres.: John B. McManus, '47, 2734 Hyden Drive, Albu-
querque, N. Mex. 3-2021
Northeastern N.Y.
Pres.: Dr. James J. Quinlivan, '33, 20 Lenox Ave., Al-
bany 3, N.Y. ALbany 8-7544
Binghamton, N. Y.
Pres.: Kenneth A. Riordan, '48, 116 Beethoven St., Bing·
hamton, N.Y. 7-5885
Secy.: Dr. J eremiah E. Ryan , '38, 107 Murray St., Bing-
hamton, N.Y. 3·6161
Buffalo, N. Y.
Pres.: John F. Moloney, '49, 20 Duane Terrace, Buffalo,
N.Y.
Secy.: John H. Napier, '47, 235 Cleveland Drive, Ken·
more, N.Y. BEdford 1646
Metropolitan New York
Pres.: Walter B. Schubert, '51, 120 Broadway, New York,
.Y. REctor 2-8800
Secy.: George Harvey Cain, '42, Cerro de Pasco Corp.,
300 Park Ave., New York 22, N.Y. MUrray Hill
8·8822
Mid-Hudson Valley, N.Y.
Pres.: John J. Gartland, Jr., '35, 226 Union St., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Rochester, N.Y.
Pres.: Dr. Peter A. Badamy, '34, Temple Building, Rochester 4, N.Y.
Secy.: James J. Lane, '50, 150 Beresford Rd., Rochester,
N. Y. BUtler 8-1750
Syracuse, N.Y.
Pres.: Edward J. Kearney, Jr., '51, 200 Stinard Ave.,
Syracuse, N. Y. GRanite 8-7405
Cincinnati, Ohio
Pres.: Donald S. Shafer, '48, Watkins Manufacturing
Co., 828 W. 6th St., Cincinnati, Ohio
Cleveland, Ohio
Pres.: J. J. Sussen, Jr., '49, 3632 Rawnsdale Road,
Shaker Heights, Ohio SK 1-9651
Secy.: Leo M. Spellacy, '56, 1249 Gill, Lakewood· 7,
Ohio LA 1-6268
Toledo, Ohio
Secy.: Erwin R. Effier, Jr., '39, United Savings Bldg.,
Toledo, Ohio
Tulsa, Okla.
Pres. : John D. Reilly, '31, Box 1260, Tulsa, Okla.
Portland, Ore.
Pres.: F. Leo Smith, '28, 3736 N. E. 24th Ave., Portland
12, Ore.
Secy.: George Van Hoomissen, '55, 660 County Court·
house, Portland 4, Ore. CApital 7-8441
Erie, Pa.
Pres.: Charles Lovercheck, '51, 632 West 7th Street,
Erie, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Pres.: Joseph C. O'Connor, '50, 422 East Spring Ave.,
Ardmore, Pa.
Secy.: John C. Gilhooley, '29, 1518 Walnut St., Phila·
delphia, Pa. PE 5-6157
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Pres.: Joseph G. Smith, '33, Grant Bldg., P. 0. Box 118,
Pittsburgh 30, Pa. GRant 1-3600
S ecy.: Paul R. Obert, '50, 1310 Commonwealth Building,
Pittsburgh 22, Pa. ATlantic 1-0776
Rhode Island
Pres.: James E. McGwin, '53, 147 Westworth Ave., Ed ge·
wood 5, R. I. STuart 1-5676
Richmond, Va.
Pres. : F. B. Sitterdin g, Jr., '12, P. 0. Box 418, Richmond,
Va. 5-7697
Seattle, Wash.
Pres.: Carl F. Bunj e, '43, 812 36th Ave., Seattle 22,
Wash.
Mexico City
Pres.: Alexis Rovzar, '39, Eastern Air Lines Bld·g., Mex·
ico, D. F., Mexico
Puerto Rico
Pres. : Jose G. Gonzalez, '27, Chase Bank Bldg., San
Juan, Puerto Rico 3-2090
Secy.: Dr. Roberto Francisco, '39, San Juan Diagnostic
Clinic, Santurce, Puerto Rico 2-5980
Canada
Pres.: Harry 0. Trihey, '38, 358 Grenfell Ave., Town of
Mount Royal, Montreal, P.Q., Canada REgent 8-6012
EOR(lETOWD UDIPERSITq
LUmDI mR(jAZIDE
Member
e
EDITORIAL
ALUMNI
OF
EDWIN
BOARD
MAGAZINE
w. BEITZELL, '28
EDWARD
M. CASTLE, '40
LEO A.
'22
CoDD,
S.J.
S. RuBY, '27, Editor
'30
MAY 1959
Alumni
Council
VOLUME 12, NUMBER 1
2
O'Kelly Speaks ------------------------------------
3
Medical Education ---------------------------------
4
Convocation Address -------------------------------
5
Salutation --------------- -------------------------
7
Managing Editor
Class Notes - --------------------------------------
8
Advertising Manager
Necrology ---------- - -------~----------------------
8
Dental School Meetings -----------------------------
9
PATRICIA VAN OvER,
RuTH KETTERMAN,
American
TABLE OF CONTENTS:
'57
REv. DANIEL E. PowER,
DR. JOHN WALDRON,
the
Welcome to O'Kelly --------------------------------
JOHN RoBERT EwERS,
DR. ]AMES
of
Marriages --------------- - ---------------------- -- 19
Engagements -------------------------------------- 20
Births - ------------------------------------------- 20
Contributors to this issue:
Very Rev. Edward B. Bunn, S.J., President
of Georgetown University
Sean O'Kelly, President of Ireland
Dr. Hugh H. Hussey, Dean of the School
of Medicine
Arthur Sherwood Flemming, Secretary, De·
pa,rtment of Health, Education and Wei·
fare
Rev. Brian A. McGrath, S./., Academic
Vice-President of Georgetown University,
presents a citation to Sean O'Kelly, President of Ireland, during the Medical Center
Dedication Ceremonies on March 19.
The Most Rev. Philip M. Hannan, Auxiliary
Bishop of Washington
Copyright 1959 Georgetown University Alumni Magazine
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE: published each two months by the Georgetown University
Alumni Association Inc., Washington 7, D. C. • Sustaining Membership $25.00 per year, Regular Membership $·5.00 per
year, of which $9.00 is for subscription to the Alumni Magazine. • Entered at the Post Office at Washington, D. C., as
Second Class matter February 24, 1948 under the act of March 9, 1879. • Editorial and Executive offices: GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Alumni House, 3604 0 Street, N.W., Washington 7, D. C.
Return Postage Guaranteed
..
Dedication Ceremonies
Welcome to O'Kelly
by Very Rev. Edward B. Bunn, S.J.,
President, Georgetown University
Two years ago I had the happiness of viSitmg your
own beloved country. It was a visit all too brief, but
I assure you it lacked nothing of the warmth and
graciousness of the people of I.reland. When I visited
some of your hospitals, I learned that one great need
was for advanced training for some of your medical
stude~ts in the treatment of heart diseases and related
afflictions.
Georgetown University has recently completed negotiations for two selected medical students to come to
Georgetown Hospital from Ireland for internship. They
would specialize in advanced study and training in the
latest discoveries and techniques in the treatment of
cardiac cases. It is our earnest hope that these students
may begin their two-year period of trammg with the
opening of the next session of our Medical School in
September. It is equally our hope that by this means
we make some contribution to the welfare and well being
of your young people.
And in memory of this historic occasion of your visit
to Georgetown, President O'Kelly, it is my intention,
with your own gracious permission, to designate these
grants as the Sean T. O'Kelly Fellowships of Georgetown University School of Medicine. Thus may we preserve for the days to come, as succeeding numbers of
your countrymen come to accept what we may be able
to give to them, in memory and grateful recall, the
warmth of happiness that is ours at this moment.
Rev. Brian A. McGrath, S.J., Academic Vice-President of George·
town University, Sean O'Kelly, President of Ireland, and Very Rev.
Edward B. Bunn, S.J., President
of Georgetown University, arrive
for the Dedication Ceremonies of
Georgetown's new Medical Center
additions on March 19.
2
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
O'Kelly
Speaks
Sean O'Kelly, President of Ir eland,
responds after receiving his citation.
I have many reasons for pleasure at this opportunity
of witnessing the dedication of the Laurence C. · Gorman
Diagnostic and Research Building and the Kober-Cagan
Residence Hall in the Medical Center of Georgetown
University. I rejoice because of the benefit this Diagnostic
Research Building will most certainly bring to the many
people stricken with cardiac ailments• who come here
for treatment in the course of time.
The work which will be done here for the alleviation
of suffering and affliction represents an activity of the
highest charity. The manifestation of love for their
fellow men as a companion to scholarship has ever been
a mark of the work of the Society of Jesus.
The role of service of the Jesuits has by now a cen·
turies-old history. It is a story in the narration of which
there can hardly be a country in the world which does not
join its voice and by no means least of these voices in
uttering thankful praise, is that of Ireland. Over many
generations, the Society of Jesus has given to our country
of their unique best and we acknowledge their enduring
gift to our Nation with full heart.
I have a further cause for special pleasure in being
present here today, by reason of my own association
with the field of medicine and public health in Ireland.
In the 1930's, when for seven years ·1 was Minister of
Public Health, the problem of cardiac ailments and
their treatment were among the gravest demanding the
attention of my Department. Much progress in research
and in developing techniques of treatment has since been
achieved, but it is clear that heart ailments continue to
be one of the sorest of afflictions with which the peoples
of the advanced countries of the world are visited.
No words of praise and encouragement cim adequately
do justice to an undertaking such as this splendidly con·
ceived and magnificently executed Diagnostic and Re·
search Building and to the noble precious work to which .
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
it is dedicated. I, too• therefore should like to pay my
deeply felt tribute to the inspired and dauntless initiative
of this great University of Georgetown for the achieve·
ment that is theirs in this latest addition to their Medical
Center.
Still a further reason of mine for rejoicing on this
happy occasion lies in the announcement by the Reverend
Rector, concerning the establishment of two scholarships
to enable two selected medical students to come from
Ireland to Georgetown University Hospital for intern·
ship and for advanced study and training in the latest
discoveries and techniques in the treatment of cardiac
cases. Research and the art of healing are activities m
which every country has something to contribute.
It is by way of collaboration and coordination of
efforts between institutions, not only within individual
countries, but between countries as well, that the best
promise is held out of achieving significant knowledge
capable of application in the cause of the good health
of humanity. I express to you, Father Rector, and to
the great University of which you are the distinguished
head, the sincere thanks and appreciation of Ireland for
yo ur enlightenment and your generosity.
My own personal thanks for your most gracious words
and for the beautiful presentation I received from your
College. Dear Father, I wish to acknowledge the gracious
tribute which you have rendered to me by naming after
me these grants of your University's munificence, and
to say how deeply I am touched at the honour intended
by your delicate courtesy. A hundred thanks- a hundred
thousand thanks!
I ·pray that the good God will richly bless these buildings and all who work in them and that He, Who is the
Father of all mercy and goodness, will crown their efforts
with the success that will be to His glory and the welfare
of mankind-and the honor of the Jesuit Community.
3
Dedication Ceremonies
Medical Education
by Dr. Hugh H. Hussey,
Dean of the School of Medicine
On another occasion when I spoke on this topic, "The
Challenge of Medical Education," I gave particulars-particulars of the phenomenal growth of knowledge that
has marked the last two decades, of the corresponding
growth of techniques, and of the related complexities of
communication that arise from the sheer volume of accumulated knowledge. Also considered then was the
matter of consequent .sophistication in that knowledgea sophistication that has created its own barriers to
communication and has led to specialization.
Today, I shall speak in generalities--of the teacher
and his trade-and of the three qualities that tend to
make him successfuL
There was a time when medical education followed
the encyclopedic method almost exclusively. The teacher
was a giant who knew all things. His pupils listened and
were expected to absorb what they could. Two factors
have caused a change-the enlarging scope in scientific
knowledge and an increase in emphasis on the "why's"
of disease.
So it is that the teacher finds himself in a new role.
He is no longer a guide for all of the student's quest.
He can only point the way and hope that his student
will go forward alone. To play that role successfully, the
teacher needs humility-humility in the expectation that
his student will surpass him. That is the first quality.
The second qualification for the educator is honesty.
That ~erm has a meaning obvious to all, yet, so that
there will be no misunderstanding, remember that in
science, honesty must carry a nuance of skepticism. This
is needed . for the avoidance of self-delusion-for insurance that "the evidence" will be carefully sifted.
In the matter of "sifting of evidence" in order that
untruths shall not prevail, Dr. Alpers, the Philadelphia
neurologist, offered a pertinent quotation during a superb
4
lecture here at Georgetown. The quotation, from The
Historian's Craft by Marc Bloch, was from the writings
of Father Delehaye. It went as follows:
"Anyone reading that the Church observes a holiday
for two of its servants, both of whom died in Italy on
the very same day, that the conversion of each was
brought about by the reading of the Lives of the Saints,
that each founded a religious order dedicated to the Saint
patron, and finally that both of the order's were suppressed
by Popes bearing the same name-anyone reading all
this would be tempted to assert that a single individual,
duplicated through error, had been entered into the
martyrology under two different names. Nevertheless,
it is quite true that, similarly converted to the religious
life by the example of the saintly biographies, St. John
Columbini established the order of Jesuates and Ignatius
Loyola that of the Jesuits; that both of them died on
July 31, the former near Siena in 1367, the latter at
Rome in 1556; that the Jesuates were dissolved by
Pope Clement IX and the Jesuits by Pope Clement XIV."
Appropriately, on this occasion of the dedication of
these magnificent buildings, I come to the third quality
--dedication. Here, especially, science and religion join,
and science derives from that union its ultimate strength.
By the quality of dedication, the teacher brings Spirit
to his teaching-concerns himself "with the origin and
destiny of man, the nature of goodness and freedom,
and the relation of man to nature and to God."
If there is any challenge to medical · education and
to medical educators, it is to insure that the products
of that education-the students who are the teachers of
tomorrow-shall have those three qualities-humility,
honesty, dedication. Then "is to be found an air in which
man can breathe and grow, a true and a more abundant
life."
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Convocation
Address
Arthur Sherwood Flemming, Secretary, Department of Health, Education and W el/are.
I have long admired the outstanding contribution that
Georgetown University, as an institution and through
its graduates, has made to the advancement of the good
life in this community, in our Nation, and in other nations of the world.
At this time we are thinking particularly of the nature
of these contributions in the fields of medicine and dentistry. But I am thinking also of comparable contributions in the other professional areas for which training
is provided on this campus. I am thinking of the manner
in which this great university has helped to strengthen
the concept of liberal arts education in our nation. Finally,
I am thinking of the constant emphasis that Georgetown
University has placed on the fact that the pursuit of
knowledge can have real meaning only if motivated by
and related to great spiritual truth.
This spiritual objective must also command our Nation's increasing attention if we are to witness the
continued growth rather than the decline of Christian
civilization. And it is our educational institutions that
must take the lead in focusing attention on and motivation for the pursuit of excellence.
I believe that our system of education is second to
none. It do not share the views of those who have suddenly discovered, as they put it, that we have a .second
rate system of education. We are a strong Nation. We
are a great Nation-both materially and spiritually. Those
who have made and are making sacrifices in order to
provide us with the educational system we have are
responsible for our Nation's strength and greatness.
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
But I also recognize that there are serious weaknesses
that must be eliminated if education is to continue to
contribute in the future to the strength and greatness of
our Nation as it has done in the past.
One glaring weakness is the failure of our educational
system to provide our Nation with an adequate number
of men and women who are able to communicate effectively. This weakness undermines the effectiveness of
the medical profession, the dental profession, as well as
of every other profession.
It is a commentary on our educational system that
Government agencies often find it impossible to recruit
persons for duty in other countries who are capable of
communicating in the language of the nation to which
they are sent.
One other glaring weakness is the failure of our educational system to provide our Nation with men and
women who understand the philosophy that underlies our
form of government, and the way in which our government operates in order to give expression to that philosophy.
The members of every profession, and particularly of
the medical and dental profession, are faced with unparalleled opportunities to strengthen the foundation on
which our Government rests. But many are incapable
of exercising this leadership because the pursuit of excellence never became a part of their way of life.
In the field of higher education, on the basis of my
own experiences, I believe that the members of our
faculties are dedicated to the pursuit of excellence. Thus,
5
one of the best ways in which to eliminate some of the
glaring weaknesses in the field of education is to give
these faculties better support in their pursuit of excellence.
There is no doubt that many of our faculties are
endeavoring to maintain and establish standards that are
higher than the standards of higher education twentyfive years ago. But they are meeting with resistance.
Oftentimes this resistance comes from portions of the
student body, from parents, from vocal alumni, and
even from members of boards of trustees.
The groups that resist these efforts to maintain high
standards are not dedicated to the pursuit of excellence.
They are far more interested in the protection of mediocrity, even though that mediocrity is often the result
of pure laziness. They rationalize their defense of medi·
ocrity by pointing to the material success of some who
have been content to be mediocre, even though they are
possessed of a talent that would have enabled them to
make not an average but an outstanding contribution to
life. They overlook the fact that when any citizen of
this Nation fails to live up to his highest potentialities
he is undermining our most precious resource-our
human resource.
In other words, many who are a part of the educational
life of our Nation, and many on whom the educational
communities must depend for support, are really not
dedicated to the pursuit of excellence. This, it seems to
me, is one of the most serious problems confronting
.
our Nation .
We have endeavored over the last sixteen or seventeen
months to deal with this problem by arousing the
fears of the citizens of our Nation. And our fears should
be aroused. There's no doubt that in certain areas the
Russians are pursuing excellence at a feverish pace, and
that they are making progress.
Sometimes• we have tried to dismiss their activity by
saying that surely those who are in slavery cannot make
as much progress as free men. That is a sound generalization, provided that free men are willing to work and
are willing to make the sacrifice that the pursuit of
excellence entails.
The arousing of our fears has produced some results.
I do not think that the National Defense Education
Act would have been passed if our fears had not been
aroused. But there is also no doubt that fear alone never
results in a sustained effort in the interests of achieving
a constructive result. Even now some have said that the
Nation was panicked into the passing of the National
Defense Education Act.
If the citizens of our Nation are to support pursuit
of excellence it will be only because they recognize that
they have a spiritual obligation to use their time, talents,
e~ergy, and resources for one purpose-to be of maximum
help to their fellow human beings.
We are observing another milestone in the development of a great medical center. It wasn't necessary to
talk about fear of Russia in order to obtain support from
6
public and private sources in order to make this diagnostic and research center a living reality. The support that
makes this event possible today grew out of a conviction.
This was a spiritual conviction that we have an obligation to give our time, talents, energy, and resources to
help those who suffer. It is this conviction that will continue to motivate everyone connected with this great
medical center to pursue excellence. It is this conviction
that will motivate the citizens of this Nation to pursue
excellence and to support the pursuit of excellence in
all areas of knowledge.
I am delighted to have the opportunity of represen ting
the United States Government at the dedication of the
Lawrence C. Gorman Diagnostic and Research Center.
It is one more illustration of what the pursuit of excellence has done for Georgetown University.
I know of no finer investment by the United States
Government than the investment that it has made in
the strengthening of our Nation's medical research facilities. In so doing, we are assisting men and women who
selflessly pursue excellence in order to promote the
welfare of all of us. I know that this center is simply
more evidence of the spirit that has permeated this University down through the years-the spirit that makes
men and women travel the second mile in order to be
of help to others. And I know that this is the spirit that
is going to characterize all of the activities of this University. I know it because I know that this University
will hold tenaciously to the concept that pursuit of knowledge can have real meaning only as it is motivated by
and related to the great spiritual principles revealed to
us by the Lord and Master of us all.
Footnote
The publication in the January issue of the ALUMNI
MAGAZINE of the names and faces of the Georgetown
alumni in the 86th Congress brought us many requests
for information as to how Georgetown's record stands
up against other colleges and universities in this regard.
To get an accurate picture we went to the recently published Official Directory of the new Congress. GeorgetQwn stands in fourth place in the number of her sons
in the Senate and House of Representatives. Among the
following top ten schools Georgetown's ratio of legislators to alumni is the highest of the group.
Senate
Harvard University ______
Ya.le University---------Columbia University _____
Georgetown University_
University of Michigan ___
University of Alabama ____
University of Texas ______
George Washington Uni·
ver~tY--------------- -
University of Southern
California _____________
University of Virginia ____
House
Total
Living Alumni
8
7
9
6
3
3
29
IS
12
11
12
11
12
37
22
21
17
15
14
12
95,811
69,305
51,800
29,228
177,600
58,000
190,000
4
7
11
28,000
1
2
10
9
11
11
65,000
28,000
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Dedication Ceremonies
Salutation
by The Most Rev. Philip M. Hannan,
Auxiliary Bishop of Washington
According to the ancient law of the Church, each large
parish was obliged to provide a hospitium, the ancient
counterpart of today's hospital. For according to the
mind of the Church, the hospital providing care for the
sick and needy was the necessary adjunct of the altar of
worship. "How can we say we love God whom we do
not see if we love not our neighbor whom we see?" The
hospital is the visible expression of our love of neighbor
-a laboratory of charity.
This medical center, with its splendid new buildings,
constitutes more than the personal and imposing achievement of the dedicated priests, sisters, and lay members
of the medical profession. It constitutes, through the
hands of these dedicated Christians, the expression of
the charity of the whole community. Not only the sick
that will be served in these buildings are indebted to
them; each one of us, by his declared allegiance to God,
is indebted to those who have built and to those who
will staff this Medical Center. They are performing our
works of charity, they are expressing our faith, and we
owe them our support and our prayerful thanks. Just
as the great cathedrals and the inspiring works of art
expressed the Christian's love of God in other ages, this
marvelously conceived medical center is the expression
of our love of God through service to our fellow men. It
is my privilege, in the name o'f His Excellency, the Most
Reverend Archbishop, and all the faithful of this Archdiocese to convey our congratulations and our gratitude
to Father Bunn, the Fathers, Sisters, doctors, nurses, and
all who partake in its program.
It is particularly appropriate that these buildings are
associated with Georgetown University. They are the
perfect expression in the material order of the dedication of mind and heart to God for, in their professional
and technical excellence, they indicate the dedication of
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
man's noblest faculties. These buildings, housing the
most advanced techniques, bespeak the devotion of this
University to the old ideal of the Church, "Scientia
nobilitat hominem." (Knowledge ennobles man.)
In this spirit it can be expected that significant advances will be made for the glory of God by benefiting
man, His image on earth. The effort to advance will
not only be man's impulse·to know but also the Christian's
zeal to serve by discovering God's secrets in the spirit of
the great scientist who exclaimed after a discovery, "I
am finding Thy thoughts, 0 Lord."
Obviously, the highest technical skill will be employed
here for the benefit of the suffering human. More important than skill will be the spirit that animates this
service, shared by all but typified best in the habit of
the Sisters. Service that views the sufferer only as a case
or a statistic may be depressing or degrading, regardless
of the skill involved.
Whatever is given in God's name and in His spirit is
ennobling. As the famous Robert Hugh Benson said,
"the Church gives for the love of God and the love of
God never yet destroyed any man's self-respect." It is
the spirit of Christ that vivifies the care given here and
transforms a service into a virtue. This care, given in
the name of Christ, elevates both patient and servant,
bringing them closer to the full image of Christ.
All who share in the work of these new buildings as
in this whole center share in the vocation of bringing
the peace of Christ to everyone here. In times of sickness,
the mental powers wane as physical strength decreases,
just as the rose withers when the stalk is cut. Those who
help the patient not only serve as his hands, but as his
heart and mind. They can think, they can aspire, they
can even help to pray. They will help to bring the peace
of Christ that surpasses all understanding.
7
Reunions
-
Past and Future
June Reunion
With the exception of the Dental School classes which
held their reunions in Washington, D. C., in March, all
of the quinquennial classes will meet at Commencement
weekend, Friday through Monday, June S-8.
The classes holding formal reunions are those of '09,
'14, '24, '29, '34, '39, '44, '49, and '54.
The program calls for registration at Alumni Headquarters in McDonough Gymnasiam starting at 1 p.m.,
June 5, where open house will be held until midnight.
Separate areas will be provided for the various classes.
On Saturday at 10 a.m. a Mass for the deceased Alumni
will be offered in Dahlgren Chapel. Several classes having priest-members will also have Masses for their deceased members. Alumni and their families will be
guests of the University at a buffet luncheon in the College
dining halls at noon. At 3 p.m., there will be a reception
given by the President of the University for the class
of '34, and the presentation of Silver Jubilee Citations.
Individual class chairmen are arranging class reunion
dinners at various hotels and clubs in the Washington
area. The Baccalaureate Mass will be held on Healy lawn
at 10:30 a.m., Sunday, June 7. The 160th annual Commencement will take place on Healy lawn at 5 p.m., Monday, June 8.
Alumni belonging to reunion classes who have not
heard from their class chairmen should notify Alumni
House, 3604 0 St., N. W.
Northeastern Society
The 46th annual meeting of the Northeastern Dental
Society will be held at the New Ocean House in Swampscott, Mass., June 7-10.
Featured clinicians at the meeting will be members
of the Georgetown Dental School Faculty headed by:
Dr. Charles Murto, Director of Crown and Bridge; Dr.
George Emig, Director of Prosthetics; Dr. Gustav Kruger,
Director of Oral Surgery; Dr. E. Reed Smith, Director of
Pedodontics; Dr. Henry Wray, Professor of Operative
Dentistry.
Georgetown men active in the Northeastern Society
are Dr. William McKenna, D'52, Dr. Leonard J. Tocci,
D'53, and Dr. John D. Meola, D'54.
Other featured speakers include: Dr. R. E. Lovell,
Operative Dentistry; Dr. Norman Nathanson, Oral Surgery; Dr. Herbert Schilder, Endodontics; Dr. Gerald
Kramer, Periodontics; and Dr. Frank Turgeon, Boston
Security Analyst.
March Reunion
Dentistry, held at the School on March 14, was the
largest to date, with 185 registering at the school for
a scientific session during the day, and an overflow
crowd of 420 at the Dinner held at the Hotel Shoreham.
Congratulations are due to Dr. Balfour D. Mattox, '48,
and his energetic committee.
Tops in its Field
At the annual meeting of the American Catholic
Historical Society in Washington, D. C., during
Christmas Week, the fohn Gilmary Shea prize and
citation for "the best Catholic historical work to
appear in 1958" was awarded to
Georgetown University: Origin and
Early Years
by Rev. John M. Daley, S.J.
confirming the previous judgment of Monsignor
John -Tracy Ellis that the book "deserves to rank
among the best works produced to date in the history of American Catholic education."
Every Georgetown man of the past and of the
present will thrill to this scholarly and readable
account of the beginnings of Alma Mater-of the
men, the events, the hopes and struggles which
shaped her course to its present place of eminence
among American universities.
The first edition of the work is quickly being
exhausted. Get your copy now to insure for your
personal library a volume that will continue in
future years to give you pleasure and pride in
Georgetown.
ORDER NOW
Georgetown University Press
University Book Store
37th and 0 Streets, N.W.
Washington 7, D. C.
Please send me ------ copies of Father Daley's
"Georgetown University: Origin and Early Years."
0 Bill me at $5.00 each, plus postage
0 I enclose payment to save postage c: arges
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The annual reunion of the alumni of the School of
8
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Frederick J. Rice, Sr., LL. B. '10, m Coral
CLASS NOTES
NECROLOGY
The deaths of the following Alumni
have been reported to Alumni House
since the last issue of the Alumni Magazine went to press. The 10:00 A.M. Mass
in Dahlgren Chapel each Sunday is offered
for the souls of the deceased Alumni.
Walter W. Anderson, FS '40, in Kenilworth, Ill.
Theodore L. Block, LL.B. '12, in Washington, D. C.
George G. Carey, B.S. '49, in New York,
N.Y.
Gables, Fla.
Samuel Sachs, FS '22, in New York, N.Y.
Melvin W. Sandmeyer, LL. B. '16, M.P.L.
'16, in Washington, D. C.
Robert F. Sheahan, B.S. '27, in Memphis,
Tenn.
Julius Sherman, LL.B. '30, in Albany, N. Y.
Elbert Sisson, G '41, in Washington, D. C.
Louis E. Spiegler, LL.B. '17, in Washing-
Charles L. Clayton, L.L. B. '14, in Washington, D. C.
Frank M. Conroy, FS '26, in Port Huron,
Mich.
C. Robert Corcoran, A.B. '31, in Cleveland,
Ohio.
Leo R . Dillon, B.F.S. '27, in Kensington,
Md.
William E. Furey, LL. B. '26, LL. M. '27,
in Washington, D. C.
Dr. Walter W. Gilligan, A.B. '30, MD '34,
in New York, N. Y.
Charles J. Kelly, Jr., A.B. '24, in Minneapolis, Minn.
Dr. Leo J. Kelly, M.D. '35, in Trenton, N ..J
James J. Lynch, LL. B. '18, in Dorchester,
Mass.
John B. Mannion, A.B. '16, in Chicago, Ill.
Hugh E. McLaughlin, M.A. '96, in New
York, N.Y.
Psych1atrst at Seton Institute in Baltimore, delivered the principal address at
a seminar on Religion and Mental Health
The seminar was sponsored by the Com:
monwealth of P ennsylvania: and the Blair
County Mental Health Association at Holladaysburg State Hospital, Pa., on February 17.
1921
ton, D. C.
Rt. Rev. Monsignor Edward L. Stephens,
LL.B. '16, in Alexandria, Va.
Jos eph L. Tepper, LL.B. '04, in Miami, Fla.
Charles A. Watson, LL.B. 'OS, in Washington, D. C.
1911
Dr. Norman T. Shearer, D '11, has been
in practice in Kenosha, Wis., for fortyeight years.
We express the
ciation to John J.
th~ death of his
H1s fath er died at
sympathy of the Asso·
Larkin, Jr., C '21, on
father last December.
the age of 96.
Dr. William N. Manger, L '21 FS '23
~ss!stant Secret~ry General of tl{e Organ:
lzatlon of Amencan States, was in Baltimore on March 12 as the speaker before
the Alpha Sigma Nu Alumni' Club, national
J esuit honor fraternity.
1923
1912
John Hughes Cassidy, A.B. '97, in Waterbury, Conn.
1920
Dr . . Leo H. Bartemeier, M '20, Chief
Frank T. Quigley, L '12, retired attor·
Francis Cabell Brown, L '23, has been
ney for the American Telephone a:nd Telegraph Co., keeps active in Palm Beach,
Fla., in work .for the Red Cross and for
various civic causes.
Hon. Norman L. Wymard, C '12, and
Hon. Thomas C. Egan, C '17, were visitors
to the campus on March 11.
elected a Director of ACF Industries. He
is president and chairman of the board of
the Schering CorporatiQn, a New Jersey
pharmaceutical manufacturing firm.
1914
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
The Norwalk Catholic Club of
Norwalk, Conn., held its sixty-second
annual dinner in February. Presid ent of the Club is Dr. George R.
Cody, M '36. Toastmaster was Harry
H. Hefferan, Jr., C '48, L '50. Speaker
was Rev. Robert F. Drinan, S.J., L
'49.
Behind the speakers' table, the
men of Holy Cross and of Notre
Dame erected a large sign reading
"Mr. President-Is this a Norwalk
Catholic Club or a Georgetown University Booster Club?"
John F. Ryan, C '14, has nineteen grandsons, all headed (scholastic standing permitting) for Georgetown.
1919
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
Hon . Francis E. Walter, L '19, is serving his fourteenth consecutive term in the
United States House of Representatives,
longer than any Congressman from P ennsylvania in the history of the House.
Georgetown
•
In the spring of 1961, the American people will observe the first centenary of the opening guns of the
Civil War in which hundreds of Georgetown men fought
on either side, and from which the University adopted
her colors. By reason of her location, Georgetown was
heavily represented in the military forces of the contending factions, possibly more so than any institution other
than the United States Military Academy.
As our part in the observance, your Alumni Association intends to publish, early in 1961, a roster of the
Georgetown men who served in the struggle. This will
include information concerning the units with which
they served, the actions in which they were engaged,
and any available data concerning promotions, commendations, battle casualties, and prisoners of war.
The Archives of the University contain some informaGEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
the Civil War
tion on Georgetown men in the ~ervice but the record
is far from being complete. To supplement this record
we are now in the process of checking the halfmillion service records of Confederate soldiers which
are on file iQ the National Archives against our records
of students who attended the institution between 1820
and 1865.
To date, the search has been very productive. When
this "project is completed, we will begin the search of
the complete records of the Union Army which are
also on file at the National Archives. Finally, we will
check state and local historical societies for additional
information . .
Any scrap of information which any alumnus holds
concerning former Georgetown students who took part
in the historic struggle will be welcome at Alumni House.
Thomas E. Prendergast, '17, is in charge of the project.
9
Emmet E. Doherty, L '23, has been appointed by Governor Brown of California
to a four year term on the Board of Di·
rectors of the sixth District Agricultural
Association.
William L. Dolle, C '23, was invested as
a Knight of St. Gregory in December,
1958, in Cincinnati.
Hon. Donald E. Long, L '23, Circuit
Judge in Oregon, is a member of the President's committee on juvenile delinquency.
George A. Schutack, L '23, has announced
his candidacy for the offi ce of Jud ge of
the Court of Common Pleas of Carbon
County, P a.
1924
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
Carl W. Bahr, FS '24, is vice-president
in charge of sales for the Pacific Lumber Co.
]ames M. Eagen, C '24, was toastmaster
at the St. Patrick's Day dinner-dance
celebration of the Irish American Men's
Association of Lackawanna County, Pa.
Vincent W. Powers, FS '24, has been appointed manager of the Castle Point Veterans Administration Hospital in Newburgh,
N.Y.
1925
Dr. Maurice ]. Costello, M '25, pro·
fessor of clinical dermatology and syphilology at New York University-Bellevu e
Medical Center, was invested as a Knight
of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of J erusalem on September 6, 1958,
and on January 19 he became a member
of the Associa-tion of Master Knights of
the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.
at th e annual Communion breakfast of the
Laymen's Inter-Church Council of Putnam and Northern Westchester Counties
in February.
Robert W. Coyne, L '25, has been
elected president of the Distilled Spirits
Institute.
R ev. ]ames ] . McLarney, 0. ·p ., C '25,
of the Theology Department of Rosary
Monastery, Summit, N. J., was the leader
of Lehigh University's sixteenth conference on religion in early F ebruary.
1928
lames A. Gleason, C '28, is commanding
general of the Cleveland· Grays, 122-yearold military organization.
Salvatore H. Migliaccio, C '28, is a
member of the county board of supervisors' committee on parkways, highways
and thruways in Westchester County, N. Y.
He has his law practice in White Plains.
S tephen A . Moynahan, L '28, was the
speaker before the distinguished service
award banquet of the Holyoke, Mass.,
Junior Chamber o·f Commerce on February
10.
F. Leo fimith , '28, new president of
the Georgetown Club of Oregon, former
district attorney for Multnomah County,
has returned to his private law practice in
P ortland.
1926
Frederick ]. Haas, L '26, has been
elected a director of the National Association of Manufacturers.
Vin cent O'Leary, C '26, L '29, was a
recent campus visitor.
Walter ]. Thompson, C '26, has been
appointed director of Interpretation of
of Buffalo by The Most Reverend Joseph
A. Burke, D. D., Bishop of Buffalo.
The Senate has confirmed· President
Eisenhower's nomination of ]ames W.
Riddleberger, FS '26, as foreign aid director of the International Cooperation
Administration.
1929
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
1927
Francis X . Dalton, L '27, has left the
Veterans Administration after fifteen years
as a legal member of the insurance division, rated an expert in the Civil Service
Commission on disability benefits. He will
return to private law practice in Boston.
Francis B. Delehanty, C '27, has been
elected national secretary of the Society
of St. Vincent de Paul to administer its
national offices in New York. He is a
member of the New York law firm of
Corbin, Bennett, and Delehanty.
Carl E. Waite, C '27, commissioner of
recreation in the Department of Recreation , White Plains, N. Y. , was the speaker
We express the sympathy of the Association to Hon. Jack K. McFall, FS'29, on
the recent death of his mother in Gary,
Ind.
Rev. William M . Slavin, C '29, Catholic
chaplain at the Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute was the principal speaker at the
evenly-third annual dinner of the F. B.
P eck Hose Co., of Troy, N. Y., in February.
1930
Hon. ] . Clarence H erlihy, L '30, Justice
of the Appell ate Division of the Supreme
Court of New York, was awarded the
1959 plaque as the outstanding mem-
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FS '39 President
James E. Colliflower C '06 Director
C '12 General Counsel
Frederick Stohlman
Joseph M. McNamara FS '49 Asst. Treasurer
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10
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
her of the St. Mary's Alumni Association,
Glens Falls, N. Y., at the Queensbury
Hotel Communion breakfast.
Jay Julicher, C '30, was a caller at
Alumni House on March 23 to make preliminary arrangements for tbe thirtieth
reunion of his class in 1960. He was
accompanied by his wife, two sons, and
two daughters.
Charles P. Nugent, L '30, is a candi·
date for the office of Ju dge of Recorder's
Court, Traffic and Ordinance Division in
Detroit, Mich.
1932
Dr. Ferd J. Crescente, M '32, has been
elected a member of the advisory board
of the First National Bank and Trust Co.,
of Paterson, N. J .
Myles F. Gibbons, C '32, general coun·
sel of the Railroad Retirement Board,
was honored recently in recognition of
his twenty years of service with the agency.
1933
Perry Ellis, G '33, left Colombo, Ceylon,
in September after three years as head
of th e American Embassy's economic section. He now holds the same post &t our
Embassy in Guatemala.
Rome F. Schwagel, C '33, FS '36, vicepresident of Eastern States Soil Builders,
Inc., has been named supervisor of sales
in a six-state area for International Min·
erals and Chemical Corporation, the
world's largest supplier of fertilizers.
Dr. Arnold A. Zacchino, M '33, was the
first physician to be honored as the
"outstanding Italian-American Citizen of
Fort Lee, N. J."
1934
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
Silver Jubilee
Schick, Inc., with headquarters in New
York City.
Dr. Max F. Carozza, D '34, is a Democratic candidate for the city council in
Baltimore, Md.
Robert F. Flood, C '34, h&s been named
vice-president of the Lind e Co., a division
of Union Carbide Corp.
Dr. John J. Torpp ey, M '34, is the new
president-elect of the Essex County Med·
ical Society. At the sa me time he com·
pleted his term as president of th e New
Jersey Diabetes Association.
R ev. Hugh Gearin, L '37, form er district attorney of Curry County, Ore., has
been mad e the superintendent of St.
Francis School, Sublimity, Ore.
Walter J. O'Donnell, L '37, is president
of the First National Bank of Arlington,
Va., which has just opened a handsome
new building.
1937
1938
Dr. John M. Barry, M '38, has been
elected president and chief of staff of
Bon Secours Hospita.J, Methuen, Mass.
Charles Patrick Clark, L '38, has been
named Washington counsel for the National Restaurant Association.
Robert R. Nathan, L '38, was the speaker
before the Westmoreland Club of WilkesBarre, Pa., in late January. He is president of Robert R. Nathan Associates of
Washington, and has served as economic
advisor to France, Burma, and the U. N.
Korean Reconstruction Agency.
1935
The board of correction of the city of
New York has elected Robert E. Curry,
C '35, as vice-chairman. He is president
of the Catholic Big Brothers of New York.
Dr. Joseph T. Gialanella, D '35, writes
"I have two beauti ful daughters, unfor·
tunately for Georgetown, and one, Joan, is
a freshman at nearby Hood College. . . .
I enjoy the MAGAZINE and news very
much ."
Edward A. Henry, FS '35, has been appointed a vice-president of the Manufacturers Trust Co., in New York with headquarters at 43rd and Fifth Avenue.
Dr. Florian R. Maylath, C '35, M '39,
is in Bethlehem, Pa., specializing in Opthalmology from the University of P enn·
sylvania. He took his trainin g at Wills
Eye Hospital in Philadelphia, and was
admitted as an associate fellow of the International College of Surgeons in 1956.
1939
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
Dr. Gustave 0. Kruger, D '39, professor
of Oral Surgery at Georgetown, was a
recent speaker before the Monongahela
Valley Dental Society at Clarksburg, W.
Va.
K. Reed Swenson, FS '39, has been pro·
moted to an executive position with J antzen Knitting Mills in Portland , Ore.
1936
1940
David Horowitz, C '36, L '39, has been ap·
pointed eastern District sales manager of
Vincent G. Dougherty, L '40, who is
with the FBI in Scranton, Pa·., spoke at
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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
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1941
James V. Castiglia, C '41, has been
elected vice-president in charge of the
Life Insurance Department of Wolf &
Cohen, Inc., of Washington, D. C.
Rev. Thurston N. Davis, S. J., G '41,
Editor-in-chief of America, was the principal speaker at the Aquinas Day program
of Loyola University, New Orleans, in
ea rly March.
Henry R. Hergenro eder, FS '41, acting
dean of the Eastern College of Commerce
and· Law, and chairman of the Loyola College Evening School in Baltimore, is a
ca ndidate for re-election to the Baltimore
City Council.
Frederick C. Kentz, Jr., C '41, has been
appointed chairman of the Un ited Cerebral Palsy Fund for Summit, N. J ., where
he has his law practice. He is the father
of four children.
Capt. Charles S. P. Maginnis, C '41,
has returned to the United States and is
stationed at Wright-Patterson Field, Dayton,
Ohio.
Frank G. Shattuck, II, C '41, has been
elected to the board of Casita Maria Settlement House in New York City.
1942
•
3209 M Street, N. W.
FE 3-7220
p~
OPTICIAN
WASHINGTON . 0
the current topics program of the Junior
Century Club on March 3, on "What the
FBI is doing for Juvenile Delinquency in
Scranton."
Parker T. Hart, FS '40, is Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near East
affairs.
Lt. Col. John H. Murphy, L '40, is in
Wiesbaden, Germany, as a member of the
judge advocate's staff. With him are his
wife and four children.
C
George Harvey Cain, C '42, is the author of an article, "What is a House
Counsel?" in the February issue of the
Harvard Law School Bulletin.
Peter J. King, Jr., C '42, has been named
vice-president for corporate and financial
matters by the Colorado I nterstate Gas Co.,
of Colorado Springs.
Dr. William G. Kuhn, Jr., M '42, has
been appointed chief of the Orthopedic
and Fracture Service of Middlesex General Hospital, New Brunswick, N. J. He
is the fath er of eight children- three boys
and five girls.
Charles J. Williams, C '42, L '49, is
a district supervisor for the Interstate
Commerce Commission in Newark, N. J.
He also doubles as an instructor in Transportation Law at Fairleigh-Dickinson University in Rutherford. He is the fath er of
three.
1943
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12
John A. Burmaster, FS '43, is employed
as a senior credit analyst by the Standard
Oil Company of California.
Frank L. Dougherty, L '43, who has
served for the past eight years as security
and personnel superintendent for the Hercules Powder Co., at Radford Arsenal, has
been transferred to the company's home
office in Wilmington, Del., where he will
serve as manager of security.
Dr. Charles E. Jordan, D '43, and his
wife are the found ers of the Hope School
for Blind Mu ltiple-Handicapped· Children
in Springfield, Ill.
Dr. V. James Kennedy, M '43, spoke on
"Sex Education for Children" in a public
lecture sponsored by Beta Sigma Phi
sorority in Sunbury, Pa., on February 11.
He is chi ef of Pediatrics at St. Joseph's
Hospital, Hazleton, Pa.
Dr. Fred C. Leone, G '43, associate
professor at Case Institute of Technology,
was a recent speaker before the Youngstown, Ohio, chapter of the American Society for Quality Control. He is director of the
Statistical Laboratory at Case.
R ev. Leonard R. Toom ey, C '43, is youth
director for the diocese of Trenton with
offices in the C. Y. 0. Buildin g.
1944
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
Peter M. Bonardelli, FS '44, is a special
represen tative for Canad·ian Petrofina Ltd.,
supervisin g petroleum marketing.
Dr. Frank J. Chovitz, D '44, and his
wife were campus visitors on March 16.
Han. Thomas Kongsgaard, FS '44, is a
judge of the Superior Court of the State
of California in Napa County.
Gaston G. Robillard, FS '44, is secretary-treasurer of the Liquid Steel Paint
Products Co., of Montreal. He is also an
executive of the Richelieu Club of Quebec,
the most prominent French-speaking service club in the area.
Alumni House has come into possession of the flag which was used
at the burial of Lt. William A. Bums,
C '45, who was killed in action in
Ge many in March, 1945, shortly
a fter the first crossin g of the Rhine
at Remagen. The fl ag was presented
by his half-sister, the former Miss
Elizabeth Bradley of Baltimore, now
the wife of John C. Whitaker, C '49.
Her brothers are Lee Bradley, C '54,
and Robert Bra.dley, C '52. Their
uncle, R ev. Lee Bradley, S.J., is a
member of the Georgetown fa culty .
1945
Anthony A. Lawrence, L '45, assistant
football coach at Scranton University, is
also chief clerk in the Prothonotary's
office in Lackawanna County, Pa.
Thomas F. Maddock, FS '45, has been
promoted to traffic manager for Mooremack's Robin Line Service. He is the
father of two children.
A. James Martin, L '45, will play a
key role in arranging exhibits of the U. S.
Department of Agriculture in several international fairs this year in Europe. Included in his itinerary will be the Spanish
Agricultural Fair at Madrid, the International Food Congress at Lausanne, and
the twenty-fourth Int ernational Fair at
Thessa.Jon ika, Greece.
Scudder M. Parker, L '45, is the author of In All Love and Honor, published
by the Abingdon Press.
1947
Ernest S. Johnston, C '47, announces
the removal of his offices for advertising
and· publicity to a new location, 151 H
St., S. E., Washington 3, D. C. The office
is across the street from the new building
of the WASHINGTON STAR.
Edward J. Powers, L '47, spoke before
the Gary (Ind.) Exchange Club during
National Crime Prevention Week. He is
special agent in charge of Indiana for
the FBI.
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Dr. E. R eed Smith, D '47, Washington
dentist, presented a clinic on " Pulp Protection " before th e Baltimore City Dental
Society in March.
1948
Lt. Gonzalo E. Aponte, C '48, for the
past eighteen months, has been chief of
laboratories at the Guam Memorial Hospital. He is now a diplomate of the American Board of Pathology. He will complete
his military duty in July and return to
Philadelphia as assistant professor of
pathology at J efferson Medical College.
Walter A. Byers, FS '48, has taken on
the job of assistant sales manager-aviation
products for the Bendix International Division of Bendix Aviation Corporation, at
205 E. 42nd St., New York City.
]ames P. Clair, C '48, has been appointed
to the technical services staff of the Jones
and Laughlin Steel Corp., as a metallurgical contact engineer. He is the father of
three children-Maryann 3, Emily Marie
2, and Jimmy, '80.
Nicholas G. D'Ecsery, FS '48, is in Paris
with the Eastman Kodak Company's European division.
Harold H. Fischer, L '48, after more
than seven years as a trial attorney in the
civil division, Department of Justice, has
transferred to the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare where he is employed as a hearing examiner for the appeals council, Social Security Administration, in Minneapolis, Minn.
]ames F. Fitzgerald, FS '48, L '53, has
become a member of the law firm of Reeves,
Haynes, Fitzgerald and Haislip, with offices in B ethesda, Rockville, and Hyattsville, Md.
Clement]. Kiczuk, L '48, has been named
executive aide for the P. T. Barnum Festival Parade in Bridgeport, Conn.
Palmer ]. McCloskey, L '48, is a candidate for the office of district attorney in
Charleroi, Pa., in the May primaries.
William E. McCullough, FS '48, has left
Continental Oil to form the Tropic 0. D.
Co., which handles "cut-rate" gasoline in
Fort Worth, Tex.
Albert N. Pagnotta, FS '48, who is with
Caltex P etroleum Co., has been transferred
from Karachi, Pakistan, to Brussels, Belgium. His address is 47 Avenue des Arts.
1949
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
Dr. Rogero A. Arosemena, M '49, has
been made a d-iplomate of the American
Board of Surgery. He is in practice in
Balboa Heights, Canal Zone, Panama.
I Edwin C. Bearss, FS '49, resea-rch historian of the Vicksburg National Park,
spoke before the United Daughters of the
Confederacy at Jackson, Miss., on "The
Battle of Chicasaw Bayou" on February
3rd.
Jon R . Collins, L '49, was elected district judge of the seventh judicial court
of the state of Nevada, in and for the
counties of Lincoln and White Pine in the
November elections, and took office in
January. Formerly he had his law practice
in Ely, Nev.
]. Parker Connor, C '49, L '53, is a
member of the Washington law firm of
Rhyne, Mullin, Connor and Rhyne. In addition he is an adjunct professor in the
graduate school of the Georgetown Law
Cent er.
R ev. Robert F. Drinan, S. ]., L '49,
dean of the Boston Law School, spoke
before the Lincoln Day banquet of the
Norwalk, Conn., Catholic Club.
Dr. L eo Friedman, G '49, has been promoted to the post of director of research
of the division of nutrition of the Food
and Drug Administration in Washington.
Guy E. Gallone, L '49, has been engaged as special counsel for the Rhode
Island freeway property acquisition unit.
Dr. John P. Hagen, G '49, director of
the Navy's Vanguard Satellite Proj ect,
has received the distinguished Civilian
Service Award, the highest award offered
to a civilian by the United States Navy,
Th e presentation was made by Navy Secretary Thomas Gates, Jr.
Nicholas ]. Ma rana, C '49, has been
promoted from First Lieutenant to Ca ptain in the U. S. Army Reserve. He is
in Boston doing research on long-range
military intelligence for the Quartermaster
Research and Engineering Command.
Col. Robert S. Puckett, G '49, was the
instructor for a course on the political,
social, psychological, and economic forces
in South east Asia at the National Defense Resources Conference held in Chattanooga, Tenn., in mid-March.
Dr. Eugene Slowinski, M '49, spoke on
cancer before the Upper Mounta·in Section
of the National Council of Jewish Women
in Verona, N. ]., on March 17.
Dr. John B. Tsu, G '49, co-director of
the Institute of Far Eastern Studies at
Seton Hall University, spent last summer as a guest lecturer in ten Asian Universities in China, Japan, Korea, and
Vietnam.
1950
ltalo H. Ablondi, FS '50, has moved his
law offices to 521 Fifth Avenue, New York
City.
Charles B. Brenner, FS '50, is assistant manager of the newly-opened district
passenger office of American Export Lines
in Atlanta, Ga. He was form erly with the
Washington office.
Daniel T. Coughlin, C '50, has been
appointed asistant dean of the Boston
College School of Law.
Joseph L . Czerniakowski, C '50, L '53,
has been appointed assistant attorney
general for Ohio to specialize in the fi eld
of workmen's compensation.
]ames L. Gallagher, FS '50, is assistant
to the chairman of the nationwide committee on export-import policy in Washington. He and his wife, the former Ida
Bucci, G '49, are the parents of four boys,
four and a half months to five years. Mrs.
Gallagher still finds time to be active in
the League of Women Voters and the
Springfield, Va., unit of the American
Association of University Women.
R aymond C. Lyddy, L '50, Bridgeport
attorney, is servin g his first term as a
member of the Connecticut State House
of Representatives, He is the father of
fiv e children.
Arthur G. Pallotta, C '50, G '56, is
chief of the department of pharmacology
and biochemistry of Hazleton Laboratories,
Inc., Fails Church, Va. He also teaches a
course in pharmacology to nursing student s
at Catholic University and· lectures at
Georgetown Medical School.
John ]. Pyne, C '50, L '53, formerly
assistant general counsel of the D. C.
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
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Transit System is associated with th e
law firm of Frost & Towers in the Southern
Building, Washington, D. C. Other mem·
hers of the firm are Norman B. Fro st,
L '21, G. A. Chadwick, Jr., L '37, and R.
D. Foster, L '39.
Joseph V. Smolskis, C '50, L '53, spoke
on " Wills and Real Estate Problems" before the St. Anthony Guild of Prospect,
Conn., in late January.
William E. Timmons, L '50, has been
named insurance commisioner of the state
of Iowa by Governor Loveless, subj ect to
the confirmation of the Iowa Senate.
Merle D. Wranovsky, FS '50, is in his
las t semester as a student in the depart·
ment of library science of the Catholic
University of America.
1951
Henry G. Diaz, FS '51, form erly traffic
manager for Lykes Lines, Inc., in Genoa,
Italy, has been transferred as special
r epresentative of Lykes Bros. Steamship
Co., Inc., to Nairobi, Kenya, British East
Africa. His fourth child , Kevin Bruce, was
born last year in Genoa.
J. Gerard Flynn, C '51 , L '53, has been
appointed prosecuting attorney for the
Trumbull, Conn., town court. In the November elections he was de feated in his
campaign for election as probate judge.
He was very active in the campaign of
Senator Thomas Dodd.
Howard L. Garrett, Jr., C '51 , L '55,
is in Arlin gton, Va., as a sales r epresentative for the Lawyers Cooperative Publishing Company.
L. Aubrey Goodson, L '51, has been
named director of research for Dan River
Mills, Inc., of Ral eigh, N. C.
William M. K eller, L '51, is a partner
in the law firm of K eller and Keller,
Portland , Ore.
Dr. Arthur B. Lissner, C '51, is com·
pleting his first year of residency in Surgery at Bellevue Hospital in New York,
and lives in Montclair, N. J ., with his
wife, three children, and "a large dog."
Herb ert S. Miller, C '51, L '58, is assist·
ant to the legislative counsel of Oregon.
Richard T. Murphy, Jr., FS '51, is in
charge of a survey for the Arthur D. Little
Co., of Cambridge, Mass., to determine
th e inland port potential of Fayetteville,
N. C. He received his law degree at Harvard in 1957.
Dr. Robert T. Murray, M '51, has been
appointed assistant medical director of
the Manhattan Life Insurance Company.
Dr. Edward A. Parten.ope, M '51, G '54,
is chairman of the Heart Fund campaign
in the Colonia section of Woodbridge,
N.J .
1952
Dr. Thomas C. Chianese, D '52, has
opened his offices for prac tice limited to
Oral Surgery and Exod()ntia at 711 Hamilton Ave., Trenton, N. J.
Tucker R. Dearing, GL '52, is a Democratic candidate for the Baltimore City
Council.
Lee D. Jones, FS '52, was a recent
campus v1s1tor from Cuyahoga Falls,
Ohio, en route to Florida with his wife.
He is a· sal es representative for Toledo
Plate and Window Glass Co.
Archibald King, C '52, was a campus
visitor in late F ebruary.
Thomas R. McGee, C '52, form erly with
th e insurance brokerage firm of Thomas
McGee and Sons in Ka nsas City, Mo., has
joined Old American Insurance Co., as
director of the investment department.
Paul J. McQuillan, FS '52, L '56, has
joined the law firm of Lexton & Januszewski in New Britain, Conn.
1953
Dr. Rob ert J. Alexander, G '53, assistant professor of history at King's College spoke before the Knights of St. George
in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., on F ebruary 17. His
subj ect was "Communists and- their Da:nger
to Am erica."
James T . Barker, L '53, has been made
head of the Ogden, Utah, branch office
of the Hulbert Adjusting Co. He had
form erly been with the National Labor
Relation Board.
Albert L. Bonardelli, FS '53, is manager of the Catholic Immigrant Services
organization with headquarters in Montreal. He is also vice-president of the
International Catholic Immigration Commission.
Bernard E. K eleher, C '53, has been
r eleased from milita·ry duty and is with
the Union Bag and Paper Co .. in Franklin, Va.
William L. Kohler, L '53, has been appointed assistant to the preside nt of the
American Waterways Operators. Formerly
he was assista·nt counsel to the Senate
fnterstate and Foreign Commerce Committee.
Michael J. Marlow, L '53, producer of
CBS radio's public affairs program, "Capitol Cloakroom" which begins its twelfth
year on the air on March 26, joined the
Washin gton public affa·irs staff of CBS
News on June 7, 1954. H e also produces
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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
EX 3-4430
15
a weekly program, "Congressional CloseUp," for stations WCBS-TV and WCBS
Radio in New York as well as a monthly
television program, "Capitol Hill to California," for Station KNXT in Los Angeles.
Thomas F. McLister, C '53, is a sales
representative for Sylvania Electric Corp.,
in the Washin gton area. Last year he
was awarded a trophy as the number one
East Coast salesman for the company
and a trip to the Rose Bowl for himself
and his wife.
Arthur W. Mueller, C '53, is with the
city mortgages branch of Metropolitan
Life Insurance Co., in Houston, Tex.
Harold A . Pace, FS '53, is general man·
ager of radio sta-tion WRIB in Provid.ence,
DanieL N. King, L '54, is associated with
the law firm of Waite, Schindel, Bayless &
Schneide r, 1318 Union Central Bldg., Cincinnati, in the general practice of law.
James B. Moore, I '54, is a stud ent at
the Union Theological Seminary in Rich·
mond, Va., preparing to be a Presbyterian missionary to J apan.
Joseph T. WaLsh, L '54, has been ap·
pointed attorney for the Lega.J Aid Society
of Deleware. He is with the law firm of
Logan, Marvel, Boggs and Theisen in
Wilmington.
Richard B. Williams, C '54, is in his
final year at the law school of Southern
Methodist University.
R. I.
Joseph A. D'Amico, Jr., C '55, received
his law degree from the University of
P ennsylvania in F ebruary. He is associated with the firm of Chadwick, Curran,
P etriken & Smithers in Chester, Pa.
After over three years in England with
the Air Force Dr. Joseph F. Harrington,
D '55, has left the service and opened his
dental offices at llO Broad Street, Milford , N. Y.
Robert F. Harrington, L '55, assumed
his new duties as administra-tive assist·
ant to the Supreme Court of Oregon on
April 1. Formerly he was municipal judge
of Coos Bay, Ore., and engaged in private
practice there.
Charles A. Higgins, L '55, has joined
the law firm of Kinkle & Trescher in
Greensburg, Pa.
Francis J. Major, C '55, will be graduated in June from the New York Medical
College. He and his wife, the form er
Paula Busch, N '56, are the parents of
two sons, Francis Gerald, '78, and Thomas
Michael, '79.
James A. O'Neill, Jr., C '55, has been
elected to the Yal e chapter of Alpha Omega
Alpha, national honorary medical society.
Eugene N. Riddle, Jr., L '55, has re·
cently been admitted to the Alabama Bar
and is associated with the law firm of
J ennings, Carter & Thompson in Birming·
ham. He has also been admitted to prac·
tice in the courts of North Carolina and
th e District of Columbia.
Jam es A. Rutte, FS '55, was released
from military service last October and
is with A. 0. Smith International S. A. in
Milwaukee, Wis.
1955
Thomas W. Power, C '53, L '55, is in
charge of the new office of the National
Restaurant Association in Washington.
Dr. William C. Ryan, C '53, M '57, is
doing his residency at the Western Psy·
chiatric Institute and Clinic in Pittsburgh,
Pa. His wife is the former Alice Catherine
Long, N '57.
Donald R. Stonehouse, FS '53, has been
presented with his diploma by the Hamil·
ton Chapter of the Certified Public Ac·
countants Association of Ontario.
Sister Mary Martha . Wiss, M '53, first
medical doctor in the 146-year-old his·
tory of the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth,
Ky., has sailed for her new assignm ent in
India.
1954
Reunion-June 5 to 8, 1959
William F. Fitzgerald, G '54, has been
appointed associate professor of political
science at Loyola University, Los Angeles.
Dr. Michael J. Abbazia, D '55, having
completed his tour of duty with the Air
Force, has opened his den tal offices at
1098 High Rid ge Road, Stamford, Conn.
Bertram Richard Adderley, G '55, was
ordained to th e priesthood on March 14
in Rom e.
Dr. Marie Barry, M '55, the former
Marie Dietel, is married to Dr. Jos eph
A. Barry, M '55. He is completing his
third year of Internal Medicine Residency
at Upsta te Medical Center in Syracuse
whil e she does part-time pediatrics at
Syracuse City Clinic. They have two children, Brenda and Joseph.
Victor G. Bonnell, FS '55, is at St.
Mary's Seminary, Roland Park, Baltimore,
Md., and will be ordained in June, 1960,
for the Salt Lake City Diocese.
Justin C. Cassidy, C '55, is an assistant
buyer for the ]. C. P enney Co., in New
York City.
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16
EX. 3-1931
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Dr. Robert J. Taylor, D '55, announces
the removal of his offices to Suite One,
1609 31st St., N. W., in Washin gton.
Charles A. Van Hagen, B '55, has been
employed by the Ma·rine Office of America
in New York City since his separation
from the Army l ast year.
George Van fi oomissen, L '55, secre·
tary-treasurer of the Georgetown Club
of Oregon is a member of the State Leg·
islature and vice-chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee.
1956
John L. Brunner, L '56, has opened law
offices in McDonald, Pa.
Sydney L. Chandler, L '56, is chairman
of the Western Lane County Rhododen·
dron Festival.
Dr. Andrew T. Colucci, D '56, has com·
pleted his tour of duty with the Air Force
and has opened his office at 112 Walnut
Street, Elmira, N. Y.
Alice Isabel Devine, N '56, has been in
public health nursing with the Visiting
Nurse Association of Milwaukee, Wis.,
since her graduation. News of her marriage
is carried elsewhere in these pa·ges.
Harold E. deW ol/J, FS '56, was released
from the Army as a First Lieutenant in late
1958. He had served as chief of the trans·
lation branch of the 7th Army in Stuttgart,
Germany. He then went to P aris to work
with an art dealer and study at the Ecole
du Louvre. He expects to return to the
United States soon.
1st Lt. John E. Donovan, FS '56, has
com pleted a fifteen month tour in Japan
and the Philippines and is returning via
Southeast Asia, Africa, and Europe to
his last duty station, El Toro, Calif., he·
fore his release.
Phillip R. Dunn, L '56, is a member of
a new law partnership in Hartford, Conn.,
und.er the name Scully & Dunn, with offi·
ces at 35 Lafayette Street.
Robert A. England, FS '56, with his wife
and daughter, Kelley, is living in Arlington,
Va., while he attends the Foreign Service
Institute to study the Serbo-Croatian Ian·
guage. They returned from Saigon, South
Vietnam, last September.
Charles G. Gonzalez, S.J., C '56, is study·
ing at the University of St. Louis.
Dr. Salvatore R . Graziosi, D '56, has
opened his offices for general dental practice at 3 Sioux Ave., Oakland, N.J.
Frederick A . Griffen, L '56, has been ad·
mitted to the New York State Bar.
Neil B. Haley, B '56, and Rob ert C.
Palma, FS '57, are associated with Trans·
port Research, Inc., in Washington.
l smael H. H errero, Jr., C '56, is in
his last semester at the law school of
the University of Puerto Rico. News of
his engagement appears elsewhere in these
columns.
Eugene M. Howerdd, Jr., C '56, has
joined th e Southern F inance Corp., in
Augusta·, Ga., as commercial and resi·
dential property sales representative. He
is married· and the father of three children.
Gabriel E. Khawley, FS '56, is with the
Pillsbury Co. as area representative in
Lagos, Nigeria, West Afri ca. He covers the
area of Nigeria and the British Cameroons
spreading "The Greatest Name in Flour."
John W. McGarry, L '56, has been named
an assistan t attorney general in Boston,
Mass.
Joseph R. Parauda, L '56, is an attorne-y
with the National Labor Relations Board
in th e New York regional office.
John M. Shane, C '56, L '58, passed the
New York state bar examinations. After
the completion of his current military
duty, he will practice in Olean.
Harvey A . Yonce, L '56, was one of
forty-three &uccessful candidates in the
recent Connecticut Bar Examinations.
Nicholas fl. Z1tmas, L '56, is an asso·
ciate of th e law firm of Koerner, Young,
McColloch and Dezandor£ of Portland,
Ore.
1957
Lane Brennan, L '57, has been appointed
legal assistant to Justice Gordon Sloan of
the Oregon Supreme Court.
William B. Borgeson, L '57, has left
the law firm of Black, Kendall, and Tremaine and is now engaged in private prac·
Lice in Portland, Ore.
Pasquale J. Florio, FS '57, has been pro·
moted to the grade of First Lieutenant in
the U. S. Marine Corps. He is stationed at
Cherry Point, N. C., with the Second
Marine Air Wing.
2d Lt. Peter L. Forbes, C '57, is with
the U. S. Marines stationed on Okinawa
with the third Marine Division as a
platoon commander of a 4.2" Morta·r Bat·
tery. He has add itional duties as battery
special services officer and defense coun·
sel on courts-martial.
Edward J. Kane, C '57, is a recent
graduate of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology.
Jerome A . Lacobelli, L '57, was one of
the successful candidates in the recent
Connecticut state bar examination.
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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
17
James A. Pearson, L '57, is engaged
in private law practice in Eugene, Ore.
2d. Lt. Jos eph F. Sheridan, C '57, is
sta·tioned at P ease Air Force Base in New
Hampshire as a navigator on a KC-97
Tanker.
Vinc ent J. Gerace, L '58, has been ad mitted to the bar of the District of Columbia.
Michael D. Groshek, L '58, is associated with the law firm of Dawson, Nagel,
Sherman & Howard in the First National
Bank Building, Denver, Colo. He is developing a specialty in municipal bond law
for a large number of states in the Rocky
Mountain Region.
Dr. Paul A. Gualtieri, D '58, whose engagement is announced elsewhere in these
pages, is stationed at the Naval Dental
Clinic, Naval Base, Norfolk, with the rank
of Lieutenant. He is assigned to the crown
and bridge division of the Prosthetic Dentistry Department.
Timothy J. Harrington, C '58, is a
Second Lieutenant in the Air Force. He
has completed his course in the Pre-Flight
School at Lackland Air Force Base and
1958
Gerald Z. Berkowitz, L '58, was admitted
to the bar of Delaware in early March in
a brief ceremony before Supreme Court
Justice Clarence A. Southerland, L '13.
William A. Carey, GL '58, has been
reassigned by the Department of Justice
from the Washington office to a post as
first assistant of the anti-crime investigation
in the Chicago office.
Dr. Timothy R. Gallivan, D '58, has
opened his offices for general practice at
3709 W. Genesee St., Fairmont, Syracuse,
N.Y.
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Dr. Joseph B. Hobaica, D '58, has opened
his dental offices at 1603 Mohawk St.,
Utica, N.Y.
Dr. Joseph F. Kirkpatrick, M '58, has
been commissioned in the Air Force Reserve.
Lt. John L. Kraft, C '58, is taking pilot
training at Bartow Air Force Base, Fla.
Gerald A. Malia, L '58, was successful
in his bar examinat ions in the District
of Columbia.
Dr. John R. Trepa, D '58, has opened
his office for general dental practice at
2846 E. Genesee St., Syracuse, N. Y.
Richard Van H oomissen, L '58, is in
Portland, Ore., with the law firm of Mc,Guire, Schield s, Morrison, Bailey and
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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
Timothy B. Werner, C '51, to Lisette Ann
Klemm in St. Clement's Church, Mad·
ison, Wis., on January 24.
Raymond M. Keating, Jr., FS '52, to
Miss Mary Elizabeth Kidney, Washington, D. C., on April 4.
Denis }. Scott, C '52, to Marguerite Ruth
Benigni in Sacred Heart Church, St.
Mary's, Pa., on J anuary 24.
Thomas A. Quinn, L '54, to Miss Mary
Evelyn Cooper in St. Cecelia·' s Church,
Englewood, N. J., on J anuary 31.
Charles A. Van Hagen, B '55, to Miss
J eanne O'Hara in Massapequa, N. Y.,
on April 4.
Robert S. Buckner, FS '56, to Miss Mary
Therese Smith in St. Matthew's Church,
Philadelphia, Pa., on February 7.
Alice Isabel Devine, N '56, to James Henry
Stollenwerk in St. Bernard's Church,
Wauwatosa, Wis., on February 7.
Andrew M. Saul, C '27, to Mrs. Louise
Hoover Lanman at the Shrine of the
Blessed Sacrament, Chevy Chase, Md·.,
on March 7.
Miss Marie Y ola Santora, N '50, to Jam es
K. Bruce, C '42, in St. Bernard's Church,
Pittsburgh, Pa., on Janua-ry 3.
Joseph R . Parauda, L '56, to Miss Martina
E. Grady in St. Mary's Church, Uxbridge, Mass., on September 6, 1958.
Dr. Andrew J. Covalesky, D '57, to Miss
Rita K. Zilinskas in St. Ann's Church
Washington, D. C., on January 10.
'
2d. Lt. John Stephen Sullivan, C '57, to
Miss Constance Joan Trombly in St.
Pius X C\mrch, Manchester, N. H., on
February 7.
Donald T. W alz, .G '57, to Miss· Margaret
Clifford Casey in St. Joseph's Church,
Bristol, Conn., on January 31.
Joseph F. Crowley, C '58, to Miss Doris
Sweet in St. Maurice Church, New
Britain, Conn., on January 17.
Philip C. Lauinger, Jr., C '58, to Miss
Claire Fisher of Grosse Pointe, Mich.,
at St. Paul's Church on the Lake, Grosse
Pointe Farms, April 4.
Manufacture rs of Sanitary Chemicals
A. L. HUTTON
High Quality
PAPERHANGING - PAINTING
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Residential - Commerical
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New Address:
New Phone:
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AD 4-3262
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EXPERT WORKMANSHIP
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CALL ADams 2-1832
1812 Wisconsin Avenue, N.W.
W. A. LOCKWOOD DENTAL CO.
Ritter, S.S. White and all other Leading
Dental Equipment
LEO McCORMICK-College '30
Teeth and Supplies
Expert Dental Office Planning
ASSOCIATE
1722 EYE STREET, N.W.
NA. 8-1240
WASHINGTON, D. C.
POOR, BOWEN, BARTLETT & KENNEDY, INC.
GENERAL INSURANCE
EDGEWOOD OFFICE SERVICE, INC.
Washington's Largest Letter Shop
Specializing in
Policy Analysis
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MULTIGRAPHING AND MECHANICAL INSERTING
LExington
703 Edgewood St., N. E.
AD 4-1383
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
9-6004 - Baltimore,
Md.
EXecutive 3-2460-Washington , D. C.
19
Shirley Ruth Gee of London, England.
/ames G. Smith, FS '58, and Miss Marie
Therese Smith of Syracuse, N. Y.
Edward /. Stegeman, GL '58, and Miss
Cindy Szatkowski of Pittsburgh, Pa.
William W. Winans, Ill, C '58, and Miss
Donna Mae Hepburn of Ontario, N. Y.
Albert L. Cohn, C '48, and Miss Sylvia
M. Jacoby of New York City.
Dr. Enzo /. Venanzi, C '48, and· Miss
Marylu Casey of Woodbury, N. J.
John T. Powers, FS '49, ancL Miss Mary
Corinne Wagner of White Plains, N. Y.
Stephen M. Ri{ey, L '49, and Miss Irene
Margaret Tierney of West Hartford,
Conn.
Norbert S. Doyle, C '51, and Miss Frances
Joanne DeVita of Wakefield, Mass.
Charles F. Lombard, FS '52, and Miss
Eleanor Grier Little of Pittsburgh, Pa.
Donald /. Meyers, C '52, and Miss Anne
Cheney Holmes of Syracuse, N. Y.
I ohn Bronson Walsh, L '52, and Miss Mary
Baker Wilhelm of Buffalo, N. Y.
Leo Vaccaro, C '53, and Miss Marion
Eleanor Rychener of Memphis, Tenn.
Dr. Edgar G. Sanner, C '54, and Miss Rose
Marie Wisintainer of Midvale, Ohio.
Monroe E. Freeman, C '58, and Miss Baba
Foster of Wilmington, Del.
Milton C. Gelenian, L '58, and Miss Seda
Armine Khoyan of Boston, Mass.
George T. Graham, Jr., C '58, and Miss
Mary Ellen Amberg of Maplewood, N. J.
Lorenz Iverson, II, FS '58, and Miss Eileen Madigan of Allenhurst, N. J.
Gerald A. Malia, L '58, and Miss Mary
Catherine Carolan of Washington, D. C.
David L. Ottenstein, L '58, and Miss
H. L. ROGERS
Miss Kathleen Flaherty, N '59, and Dr.
William /. Connolly, Jr., D '57.
Miss Marion loan Kaye, N '59, and T.
Vincent Griffith, Jr., C 57.
Miss Nellie Anne Wilson, N '59, and Dr.
Joseph P. Fodero, Jr., C '53, M '58.
lames F. Henry, L '55, and Miss Susan
Cummings Smith of Waccabuc, N. Y.
David D. Lattanze, C '55, and Miss Julia
Splendora Cialini of Coatesville, Pa.
Michael /. Marlow, L '55, and Miss Jean
Ellen Clark of Maple Heights, Ohio.
Edward /. Murphy, C '55, and Miss Bar·
bara Anne Calnan of Brighton, Mass.
Felix Salerno, C '55, and Miss Pauline
Lorraine Palmer of Cowart, Va.
Richard A. Stratton, C '55, and Miss Alice
Marie Robertson of Grosse Pointe, Mich.
Charles A. Van Hagen, 111, B '55, and
Miss Jeanne O'Hara of Massapequa Pk.,
Long Island, N. Y.
Dr. William C. Bashore, Jr., D '56, and
Miss Susanne Wollscheid· of Trier, Germany.
lsmael H. Herrero, Jr., C '56, and Miss
Magdie Domenech of Santurce,. P. R.
Russell C. McDermott, C '56, and Miss
Barbara Mary Wernsing of Indianapolis, Ind.
·
Louis R. Savarie, C '56, D '60, and Miss
Nancy Wolverton Brick of Pittsburgh,
Pa.
Robert T. Coseglia, C '57, and Miss Con·
stance Angelo of Jersey City, N. J.
Dr. William E. Flynn, M '57, and Miss
Nona Marie Mitchell of Washington,
D. C.
To serve your best
• • • serve MELVERN!
Elena Maria Arosemena, daughter of Dr.
Rogero A. Arosemena, M '49, in October, 1958.
Kathryn Lee Bradley, daughter of Dr.
Samuel M. Bradley, M '54.
Deborah Ann Cooke, daughter of Eugene
L. Cooke, C '49, on February 28, 1959.
Rosemary Patricia· Daley, daughter of
Edmund K. Daley, Jr., C '54, on February 14, 1959.
Elizabeth Dolle, daughter of William L.
Dolle, Jr., C '50, and grandaughter
of William L. Dolle, C '23, on April
19, 1959.
Carla Louise Fazio, daughter of Lt.
Charles R. Fazio, C '57, on March 6,
1959.
Mary Ellen Furth a-nd Glenn Donald Furth,
twin children of Donald R. Furth, C '56,
in September, 1958.
Elizabeth Mary Levin, daughter of David
/. Levin, C '58, on March 22, 1959.
Patrick Francis McLister, son of Thomas
F. Mi:Lister, C '53, on January 21, 1959.
Thomas F. Mullins, III, son of Thomas
F. Mullins, C '46, on February 14, 1959.
David Joseph O'Regan, .son of Dr. Daniel
/. O'Regan, M '47, on January 22, 1959.
Thomas Steven Pallotta, son of Dr. Arthur
I. Pallotta, C '50, G '56.
John Gerard Peloquin, son of Robert D.
Peloquin, C '51, L '56, on March 2, 1959.
Thomas D. Rizzo, Jr., son of Dr. Thomas
D. Rizzo, C '58, M '56, on March 3, 1959.
Cecilia Ann Ryan, daughter of Alice L.
Ryan, N '57, and Dr. William C. Ryan,
C '53, M '57, on January 19, 1959.
Sean Patrick Shafer, son of Thomas M.
Shafer, C '47, in October, 1958.
Everything in Sheet Meta/ and Roofing
THOMAS A. NOLAN
SERVING GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY
FOR 30th YEAR
trading as
1249 CONGRESS COURT, N. W.
AMERICAN TYPEWRITER
co.
WASHINGTON 7, D. C.
Business Machines Since 1910
1431 E. Capitol St. Wash 3, D. C.
FE 3-6848
EM 2-2596
Ll. 3-0082
At your nearest dealer
20
GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE
WHEN YOU BUY MILK
GET THE BEST---GET
Compliments
of a
Friend
Call AD 2- I 0 II far convenient home delivery, or
choose Sea/test Mille in food
stotes.
Tudor's
Coll~ge
Shop
CORSON & GRUMAN
1326- 14th · Street, N. W.
Washington 5, D. C.
PAVING CONTRACTORS
Rental and Sale
33rd & Water Street
Georgetown,
D. C.
CAPS-GOWNS-HOODS
CATHOLIC CONFIRMATION ROBES
and COMMUNION ROBES
NOrth 7-1212
Electrical
Contractors
Inc.
•
2123 Twining Court, N. W.
GEORGE A·. FULL.ER
COMPANY
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION
Washington 7, D. C.
•
Electrical Comraccors for the
Gorman Diagnostic Building
and the
Kober-Cogan Medical Dental Dormicory
ATLANTA
LOS ANGELES
BOSTON
NEW YORK
CHICAGO
PITTSBURGH
DALLAS
WASHINGTON
Georgetown Alumni Association
3604 0 Street, N. W.
Washington 7, D. C.
Return Postage Guaranteed
Farmers Auto Insurance
OF ' LOS ANGELES
FAST SERVICE when you need it. The man from Farmers
protects your interests, around the clock, across the country.
FAIR SETTLEMENT of claims is a rul e with Fa rmers. Your
Farmers Agent can inspect the damages, arrange for repairs,
sign the check.
FRIENDLY PEOPLE who are on your side. Never too busy
to stop and help, cheerfully, efficiently. Just call.
WHY FARMERS RATES ARE LOWER
·Farmers Rates are Further Reduced by an
Added 10% Discount to Accident-free Drivers.*
Farmers Insures only Careful Drivers.
If You Have a Second Car and Qualify, You May
Get an Additional 25% Discount on the Second
Car.
Farmers Has Automatic Policy Renewal, Electronic Processing.
" Not avail a bl e in Texas and Was hin gton
DIRECTORS OF FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP
John C. Tyler
Chairman of the Board
Thomas E. Leavey
President
Georgetown '23 LLB, '50 LLD
James M. Smith
Executive Vic e Pres ident
George S. Eccles
James W. Hughes
Georgetown '25 LLB
Morgan Doyle
Georgetown '25 LLM
E. A. Healey
Geo rge town ' 23 LLB
Clair Peck, Jr.
A. J. Eyraud
AUTO • LIFE • FIRE • TRUCK
Exclusive Autoin atic Prot ec tion!
If , through no fault of your own,
you or any memb er of your famil y
is injured in an accident with an
uninsured or hit-and-run dri ver,
your Far m ers auto liability policy
automatically covers you up to
the limits of the State Financial
R esponsibility Laws.
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