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CHRISTMAS 1954 VOLUME 7 NUMBER 4

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CHRISTMAS 1954 VOLUME 7 NUMBER 4

The first sets of the

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY COMMEMORATIVE PLATES

by JOSIAH WEDGWOOD & SONS, of England

Are available at Alumni House for Christmas.

This first edition is limited to 350 sets of six plates each, priced at $19.95

per set. To avoid disappointment, order your plates now by sending your

check for the number of sets you desire. Use the convenient order blank below.

Enclose a gift card with your order, if you wish. Sets will not be broken. No

single plates will be sold.

Old North

Dahlgren Chapel

Set of Six - $19.95 per set.

McDonough Gymnasium

John Carroll

Healy

Copley

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Enclosed is my check in the amount of$--- to cover the cost of -- set(s) of the

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY COMMEMORATIVE PLATES by JOSIAH WEDG­

WOOD & SONS. The plates are to be mailed to

__ Gift card enclosed Signature

Draw checks to Georgetown University Alumni Association

EOR.(lETOUJD Unl~l'ERSIT~

LUmDI mA(jAZIDE

Member of the American Alumni Council

e EDITORIAL BOARD OF ALUMNI MAGAZINE

JOHN G. BRUNINI, '19

DONALD F. FLAVIN, '28

JOHN T. FLYNN, '02

MARTIN S. QUIGLEY, '39

DR. TmOR KEREKEs-Faculty

REV. GERARD F. YATES, S.J.-Faculty

JAMES S. RUBY, '27, Executive Secretary and Editor

• • CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE

EUGENE P. McCAHILL, '21, Investment Bank­er of Minneapolis, is National Chairman of Georgetown's first Alum-ni Annual Giving Fund.

HON. DAVID A. PINE, '13, is a Judge of the United States District Court for the Dis­trict of Columbia.

CHARLES STEELE, '52, is a Senior at the Georgetown Law School.

JAMES S. RUBY, '27, is Editor of the Alumni Magazine and Executive Secretary of the Georgetown University Alumni Associa­tion.

NOVEMBER 1954 • VOLUME 7, NUMBER 4

CONTENTS

So Much From So Few__ _____________________ ______ 2

Judge Pine's Williamsburg Address ____________________ 3

Alumni Get-Together Ball __________ _________________ 9

Athletics ----------------------------------------- 11

Magazine Subscriptions ----------------------------- 12

Class Iotes __ ··--------------------------- -------- 13

Basketball Schedule 1954-55 ------------------------ - 18

Georgetown in the 84th Congress________________ _____ 20

Note on the Cover Picture

"To Georgetown Alumni and their

loved ones everywhere a merry

and a peaceful Christmas."

Very Reverend Edward

B. Bunn, S.J.

President of

Georgetown

Copyright 1954 Georgetown University Alumni Magazine

Return Postage Guaranteed

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 $8.00 i& for subscription to the Alumni Magazine. • Editorial and Executive offices: GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, Alttmni House, 3604 0 Street, N. W., Washington 7, D. C.

SO MUCH FROM SO FEW An open letter from Engene P. McCahill, '21

Dear Alumnus:

The score-board on the first Georgetown Alumni Annual Giving Fund shows a remarkable total of money collected during the first eleven months of our effort, but the number of donors is somewhat of a disappointment. Only 1,818 or less than 9% of the sons (and daughters too) of George· town have felt the urgency of the appeal sufficiently well to rally to the cause. A few donors have given rather large sums of money as evidence of their sincere interest in the program, but those large sums, when squared with the small numbers of donors, have had a tendency to increase the size of the average gift to the point where that average is (and I say it advisedly) too high. It is not that we can't use large gifts, but what we are really after is a large num­ber of gifts in any denomination.

The success of an Alumni Annual Giving Fund is based not upon the amount contributed by the individual donor, but upon the number of Alumni who use the fund to demonstrate their appreciation of the work the University is doing and their determination to see to it that the work is carried on despite a practically non-existent endowment.

The Alumni Annual Giving Fund is not a campaign for buildings or for capital improvements. It is an all-out attempt to assist the University to meet the difference be­lween tuition income and operational expense. Through Annual Giving we should be able to assist Georgetown by providing more scholarship aid for students, adequate pension and retirement funds for professors who have given years to the University's service, and adequate funds

for essential research projects. These are the things which tuition income cannot provide, unless tuition is to be in· creased to a point where only the very wealthy could afford a Georgetown education, thereby limiting the University's wide influence which has been felt throughout the nation for one hundred and sixty-five years.

Georgetown's alumni throughout the world number ap· proximately twenty-one thousand. If each of them would give according to his means and his heart, we could turn over, annually, a startling fund to assist the University Administration with its multitude of problems.

Because of the fine work which has been done at our Alma Mater throughout its long and useful history, her Alumni have, with reason, come to be known as "men of distinction". Each advance which the University makes enhances the value of the degrees we hold: If for no other reason, I feel that widespread support of our Annual Giv­ing program is thus of tremendous importance to us as Alumni.

When the first year of our Annual Giving Fund ends, on December 31, I plan to render a report of my stewardship which will be sent to every Alumnus on our mailing list. In the repm;t I plan to list the names of all who assisted by making their contributions in the first year of our. appeal. However, amounts will not be shown. But each donor's name will appear, and I want yours there.

Sincerely yours

EuGENE P. McCAHILL, '21 National Chairman, First Alumni Annual Giving Committee.

ANNUAL GIVING FUND-NOVEMBER 5, 1954

2

ALUMNI GIFTS TO THE FUND $84,059.13

Donors

College --------------··------- 272 Graduate School ------ -·-··----- 30 Medical School ______________ _ 472

Law School ------------------ 240 DentalSchool _____ ~----------- 125 Foreign Service -----·---------- 153 School of Nursing ------------ 9 Institute of Languages _________ 3 Gymnasium -----------·------- 176 Undesignated ----------------- 559 Alumni House --------------- 10

Amount

$ 7,338.32 416.00

16,268.18 6,383.67 2,246.00 2,223.75

132.00 60.00

21,871.28 26,959.93

162.00

TOTALS ________________ 1818 $84,059.13

Size of Gifts to Date SLOO and up

ALUMNI DONORS-1818

Contributors Percentage

College ··--------------- ____ 701

Graduate School -------~--- - 80

Medical School -------------- 457

Law School --- -------- ·------ 4.14

Dental School -------------·-- 138

Foreign Service ------------- 198

Nursing School ··------------- 4

12.5

10.9

20.0

7.61

9.18

5.10

4 .. 21

Percentage Contributing to Annual Giving to Date- 9.10%

$84,059.13 is the equivalent of the return @ 3V2 % on an invested endowment of $2,401,689.42

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

"REMOVE NOT THE ANCIENT LANDMARK" The speech of

Hon. David A. Pine, LL.B. '13

At the Marshall-Wythe-Blackstone Commemoration Ceremonies at the Col­lege of William and Mary, September 25, 1954. Judge Pine is a member

of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.

You have been surfeited with speeches. Words! Words! More words! And if words be tyrants, you have indeed be­come their liege subj ects by remaining throughout the day, although in a slightly modified sense from that intended by the author of that expression, or my recollection of it. But perhaps it is good training, and designed to put you in condition so to speak, for President Chandler has in· formed me that today's proceedings are but a prelude to a series of programs during the ensuing year, rededicating the Bench and Bar to the traditions of representative Con· stitutional Government. Indeed, he has asked me to select a topic bearing some relation to that general theme, and one which might serve as a basis for further discussion. That would seem to give me wide latitude, but I take it he means a discussion on the Constitution.

And I am happy that he asked me to speak on the Con· stitution, because that is a speaker's paradise. Although innumerable volumes have been written and countless words have been spoken concerning it, the Constitution seems never to pall, and, I am glad to say, insures audience interest, regardless of the speaker. Small wonder that I ac­cepted your kind invitation with such eagerness, as I was provided, so to speak, with a captive audience. And there is another reason, a secret reason! Lawyers and judges are peculiarly su ceptible to the temptation of a discourse on the Constitution.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

On course, one has to be selective in a discussion of the Constitution, because even that great document has a limit to its antidotal capacity to resist audience boredom; and selection generally presents difficulties on account of its many fascinating possibilities.

But here I have an added burden. Adm. Chandler has also stipulated that my topic must be of "broad interest to the layman as well as to ... the legal profession." Ap­parently the layman comes first, but my topic must be suitable for both. And that presents an almost insuperable obstacle, for no lawyer worthy of the name, at least none of my acquaintance, certainly no member of the faculty or graduate of this institution, would admit to a status he· neath that of an expert on the Constitution, in court or out. The lawyer generally acquires that distinction at grad­uation, or shortly before, and never questions his title. How, then, may I say anything of interest to a man of his scholarship which would be within the meager understand­ing of the layman? And by the same token, how may I say anything of interest to the layman which would be other than commonplace to my learned former brother at the bar? I have no answer to these questions, and the two conditions seem to be mutually exclusive, but I have not allowed the obstacle to stand in my way and have come before you nevertheless, in the hope, perhaps born of op­timism, that what I shall say will be of some interest to the layman and not too shallow for polite attention of the expert.

And in casting about in my mind for some phase of the general subj ect which perhaps is not too shopworn, it oc­curred to me that you might be interested in an analysis of the mental state of the men who assembled in Philadel­phia to salvage something from the wreckage of the Arti· cles of Confederation- a sort of psychoanalysis without therapy or need for therapy; if I can use the term in that non-technical manner, for Heaven knows that those giants needed no therapy. In other words, what emotions gripped them? What dominated their thinking and their actions? What were their compulsions?

Of course, such an analysis will have to be based on what they said and what they did in the light of their background and surrounding circumstances. It cannot be comprehensive, as such an inquiry would add another volume to the sagging shelves, and indeed I know that you

Dean Fegan gave 43 years to Georgetown Law School. You are asked only for a few dollars an· nually to assist the school through Annual Giving.

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will be glad to hear that I am not prepared for any such undertaking. My text, therefore, if I need one, might be, "By their fruits, ye shall know them," and at the end I shall be orthodox and point a moral, if you will permit.

These men will have to be considered collectively, and not individually, as their achievement was collective, and individual consideration would be beyond the scope of my remarks. Indeed, what I have to say migl1t not be wholly applicable to each one and might be more applicable to one than to another. With a few exceptions, notably Jefferson, John Adams, and Patrick Henry, who were absent, they constituted the leading citizens of the erstwhile colonies. Lawyers predominated, although there were a number of doctors, educators, bankers, merchants, and others in at­tendance. There were some who had served as soldiers in the Revolution , and a number -who had signed the Declara­tion of Independence. Six were members of the Continental Congress of 1774 .. Six were signers of the Articles of Con­federation, one of whom had drawn it, forty-three had been members of the Continental Congress, and two had been presidents of the Congress.

They were men of deep learning, scholarly attainments, and wide experience in statecraft. They had been brought together under a Resolution passed by the expiring Con-

The late Dean George M. Kober of Georgetown's School of Medicine gave twenty-nine years of his life to his Alma Mater. The Medical School of today is a monument to his memory and to that of his successors. Through Annual Giving we can further the school's teaching and research program.

gress under the Articles of Confederation, for the purpose of "revising" the Articles. The government established by it had utterly failed, because of its weakness. The country was in a desperate condition. Radical measures were being agitated. The French revolution was just around the corner, and its spirit was in the air. The currency was of uncertain value. Credit was practically nil. Life, liberty, and property were not safe. Chaos was imminent.

With their background and under those circumstances, I have no hesitancy in saying that fear dominated them, and that the object of their fear was first a lack of govern­ment. Before them loomed disunion, disorder, and an­archy, which in my evaluation produced profound fear in their hearts. This would seem to be obvious.

On the other hand, I think the record shows that they had a competing fear, equally consuming and tending to counteract the other. They knew that to remove the fear of lack of government, it was necessary to establish one of suf­ficient strength to cope with the situation, and that equated strength on a national scale which was far from platable.

· They were de.voted to their local self-governments, and they had distrust and hatred for absentee authority. The list of grievances in the Declaration of Independence is ample evidence of this, and they were fearful that a strong federal government might, in time, produce a counterpart for that which the sacrifices of the Revolution had sought to destroy. They feared it would be an instrument of tyranny, despotism, and oppre sion; and my conclusion

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

that they were possessed by this fear can be found, as I shall later show, in the Constitution of the United States, without looking elsewhere.

Father Walsh gave a lifetime to develop·the George­town School of Foreign Service. Any alumnus can give something through Annual Giving to keep it where he put it.

And so, when they assembled in Philadelphia, as they later said, " to form a more perfect union," ignoring the mandate of the Resolution appointing them to "revise" the Articles of Confederation, which incidentally could not be amended except by unanimous vote of all the States, it is my view that collectively they were controlled by fear, or more accurate! y, two competing, incompatible fears: a fear of government and a fear of a lack of government. Never­theless, with such dismaying premise, and actuated by such warring emotions, a miracle was performed, and by a strange and unique adventure in the science of govern­ment they did the impossible-they reconciled the irrecon­cilable, they squared the circle. In the oft-repeated words of Gladstone, they forged "the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man." They found a formula by which the hard-won free­dom of the people and the sovereignty of the States could be preserved and at the same time a national government of sufficient strength to provide order and security and perform national functions could be created.

In their plan of government, they took the totality of sovereign power residing in the people, a theory on which there was no disagreement, and vested a portion of it in the United States, reserving the remainder to the States and the people, a distribution, but not an equal distribu­tion of sovereign power. They made the United States supreme in its national sphere, without detracting from the supremacy of the States within their respective state spheres, except for the imposition of several restraints deemed necessary in the national interest or for the pro­tection of individual or property righs, for example, the restraint upon the States against the passing of any bill of attainder, ex post facto law, or law impairing the obliga­tion of contract. They thereby formed a duality of sover­eignty within the same orbit, a device, I believe, withou exact historical precedent.

They created the United States as a sovereignty, and granted it those powers considered necessary for the proper conduct of national functions, but they granted no more than necessary, and thereby lessened its capacity for harm to the States and the people whose powers were only diminished to the extent of those granted away or pro­hibited. And then, to make assurance doubly sure, the people, when it came to ratification, apparently entertain-

Father Toohey has given forty years to George­to wn to make her Philosophy Department illustrious. Our small annual contributions through Annual Giv­ing cannot match that record but they can be of tre­mendous value.

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ing the same fear, but probably more fervently than that which actuated the delegates to the Convention, insisted on the incorporation of the Ninth and Tenth Amendments, which provided that the enumeration of powers in the Constitution were not to be construed to deny or disparage the others retained by the people, and that the powers not delegated or prohibited were reserved to the States or to the people.

Next, as showing the fear of tyranny and despotism incident to the creation of a strong central government, I cite to you the first eight amendments to the Constitution. As you know, they guarantee freedom of religion, speech, and press; secure the people against unreasonable searches and seizures; require indictment in felony cases; forbid a person to be compelled to be a witness against himself; and prohibit the deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, along with the other restraints for the protection of rights inherent in free men. These are all restraints placed upon the Federal Government, not upon the States. Could anything more eloquently qemon· strate the fear alluded to than these amendments which were so uppermost in the minds of the people that it was necessary to agree to add them formally to the Constitution in order to be sure of its ratification? And if this fear was in the minds of the people, is it not reasonable to presume that it was in the minds of the delegates who represented them, but who felt that the amendments were unnecessary because the Constitution itself was so scrupulously careful to enumerate and delimit the granted powers?

ext, fearful of wrongful or excessive exercise of such powers as were necessarily granted to the Federal Govern· ment, the founders diluted their strength by distributing them among three departments of government: the legis-

The late Dean Cogan gave twenty-four years to the building of Georgetown's outstanding School of Den· tistry. What will yozt give annually to keep it out­standing?

lative, executive, and judicial. In this they were prob­ably influenced by the teachings of Locke and Montesquieu, particularly the latter, who advocated some separation of powers as a measure of safety, and also by the historical excesses of monarchs and parliaments when powers were concentrated in one. They therefore granted the powers because of necessity, but weakened their exercise by dis­tribution; and as a further safeguard, in certain categories they set up a system of additional checks by one branch of the government against another. For example, the treaty· making power of the executive is conditioned on the con­currence of two-thirds of the Senate present; the appointive power of the executive in specified cases requires the con­sent of the Senate; the law-making power of the legislative is subject to the veto of the executive, which again is sub­ject to circumvention by two-thirds of the votes of both houses, and although not expressly provided therein, im­plicit in the language granting the judicial' power is its power to nullify acts of either of the other branches and . of the State which go beyond or are in contravention of the Constitutional authority. This was made certain by

GeORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

the historical opinions of Chief Justice Marshall, to whose memory we do honor today. Even within the legislative

Eugene P. McCahill, '21, Chairman of our First Alumni Annual Giving Fund is so convinced of the importance of the Annual Giving idea for George­town's future that he traveled more than 20,000 mil~s at his own expense to inaugurate the Fund in every part of the United States. Most of us cannot do as much, but each one of us can do something. What have you done this year. for Georgetown?

branch alone, there is a similar check in the creation of two houses of Congress, which convincingly shows the fear of government, including a fear of government by an un­bridled democracy as well as a fear of king or parliament.

There are many other road blocks, some express and some implicit in the practical operation of government, growing out of this fear of government because of tyranny and despotism always inherent therein unless curbed. But I shall not elaborate the point further, and shall pass on to several quotations on the subject.

The first is from Washington's farewell address, in which he said: "The spirit of encroachment tends to consolidate the powers of all governments in one, and thus to create, whatever the form of government, a real despotism."

The second is from the 47th paper of the Federalist written by Madison, where he stated: "The accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive and judicial, in the same hands, whether of one, a few, or many, whether hereditary, self-appointed, or elective, may justly be pro­nounced the very definition of tyranny."

The third is from John Adams, who was not a delegate to the Convention because of his absence abroad as envoy to Great Britain, but whose views can surely be considered as a reflection of those who were present. In Volume I of his Works, at page 186, he wrote: "It is by balancing one of these three powers against the other two that the efforts in human nature toward tyranny can alone be checked and restrained and any degree of freedom preserved."

I shall not call other witnesses, although many more are available, but rest on what I have said to establish that fears of the kind I have described dominated the delegates. The marvel is that this experiment in government, novel in so many respects, has worked so efficiently that this nation is now the envy of the rest of the world. Starting as a weak, struggling, uncertain group of states calling them­selves a union, it has been transformed into the most pow­erful of all nations. Instead of thirteen debt-ridden colonies emerging into statehood after a devastating war for in­dependence, there are . now 48 sovereignties, strong and robust, some virtually empires in themselves, two terri­tories, the District of Columbia, and possessions beyond the seas. Instead of a population of four million inhabi­tants, there are now forty times that number. Instead of a national wealth too insignificant to evaluate, it is now estimated at close to a thousand billion dollars; and the legal basis for this phenomenal accomplishment, and the legal basis for the protection of your most priceless posses· sions- your life, your liberty, and your property- -is that

7

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single parchment document containing some four thousand words emanating from those inspired men who assembled in Philadelphia in the summer of 1787.

Now, what is the moral to which I said I would point before concluding my remarks? It is this: Follow the example of the founding fathers and be as alertly fearful as were they, of usurpation of power, the forerunner of tyranny and despotism. Oh, you might say, that is seeing ghosts, the Constitution stands in the way, it is in no jeopardy, and is held in such high esteem and reverence as to be immune from destruction. I agree, if you refer to frontal attack; but what I ask you to fear are attacks on the flanks, made in the cause of expediency and sup· ported by vast popular demand of the moment. The t~ch· nique will be the argument that the Constitution is a living thing and therefore susceptible of growth, and must be adaptable and flexible enough to meet changes in the social and economic life of the country.

There can be no doubt as to the validity of that argu· ment when properly applied, but I ask you to take heed when its application would be destructive in fact, but not in name, of the very foundations and pillars of our Con· stitutional government.

In recent years, there has been a trend toward enhance· ment of the powers of the Federal Government. This has been accomplished by the expansion of what was formerly believed to be the limits of the interstate commerce power and the taxing and spending powers, and the Federal Gov­ernment has thereby taken over the control of great fields of activities formerly considered the province of the States.

There has also been a disposition in the Federal Govern· ment itself toward encroachment by one department upon the powers of another, particularly the executive upon the legislative and judicial. This is not to say that the legisla­tive has not cast covetous eyes toward the executive, nor that the judicial has been demurely free from flirtations with the legislative powers, but at the moment, as I see it, the executive advances predominate.

I could cite many examples, but time will not permit. Suffice it to say that any encroachment by one department upon the powers of another gives added power to the tres­passer and diminishes the balance accordingly.

Take heed that the barriers so carefully constructed are not eroded by subtle means, sometimes not immediately discernible, but to my mind more dangerous than a direct attack.

If conditions require a change in the Constitution in its basic provisions, let it be done by amendment in the man­ner provided therein, and stand out against the plausible but insidious argument of flexibility induced by expedi­ency or the pressure or rewards of the moment.

I am aware that the view I express has vocal opponents, but on consideration of their utterances, I detect, beneath their reasoning, a predisposition to authoritarian govern­ment, hidden by a facade of Constitutional form. So often such people are willing to exchange liberty for efficiency, and freedom for temporary security or reward.

And as I read the opinions of the great chief justice, the incomparable John Marshall, to whom we pay tribute today, he would not, as they sometimes contend, support their point of view, but would challenge it with every OQnce

GEO~GETOWN UNIVERSJ'TY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

of his unconquerable spirit and persuasion. To be sure, he is known as the great nationalist, the anti-states-right ex­ponent, the liberal expounder of the Constitution, but these appellations came at a time when the pendulum was swing­ing toward its nullification. They were applied to the man who bravely stood foremost in opposition to theories which would have vitiated the plain purpose of the Constitution to establish a national government supreme within its sphere, theories which would have reduced it to the san:te state of impotency as had descended upon the Articles of Confed· eration which it supplanted. ow, when the pendulum is pointing the other way, it is useful to recall his words in McCulloch v. Maryland, that "no political dreamer was ever wild enough to think of breaking down the lines which separate the States and of compounding the American people into one common mass." And I believe Marshall, also known as the Guardian of the Constitution, today would be equally fervent in opposing a nationalism or lib­eralism in construction which would imperil duality of sovereignty or separation of powers, or both, because that in the long run would be as destructive of his cherished Constitution as was the narrow, debilitating states-right doctrine of his day. The latter spelled national dissolution and chaos; the former, if pursued to its logical end, spells totalitarianism and tyranny.

"Remove not the ancient landmark, which thy fathers have set."

Proverbs 22:28

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ATHLETICS

By CHARLIE STEELE '52

Frank Pflaging, something of a dark horse distance run· ner when the cross country season started, has proven him­self to be a thoroughbred in the short space of two weeks. The dark haired Foreign Service Junior was just another track man until the cross country meets with Fordham and St. John's, and La Salle. I ow he's being compared with Charlie Capozzoli, and it's not just an idle comparison. In the three way meet with Fordham and St. John's, Frank was third behind a St. John's man and team mate Bob Lippmeier, but the time of all three was sensational in that particular Hoya victory. The following week La Salle was swamped, the Hoyas taking six of the first seven places, and Pflaging came in first. His time for the Georgetown cross country four mile course was just six seconds off Cappy's record, and Frank ran it the day after Hazel "slowed up the track". Of course Lippmeier was pretty close too, so Coach Sevigne appears to have again de­veloped a couple of distance standouts.

Once the indoor season starts a few other Hoya stars will come out to shine. Johnny Peyton in the 880, Capt. Ed Kirk in the mile, Paul Baroncelli with the shot put, Vin Kelly in the 44.0 and John Skutka in the mile should be able to hold their own with the best.

On November 20th the 1954-55 edition of the Hoya basketball team makes its debut in the McDonough Gym. The "old grads" supply the opposition, logically enough, as it's the annual Alumni Game. The usual number of "ancients" (that is 25 and older) will be on hand, but the Alumni's starting five .promises to give the varsity quite a battle. The only two Hoyas to garner 1,000 points for the Blue and Grey will be there, 6'5" Bill Bolger and back court ace Tommy O'Keefe. Georgetown's third highest all time scorer, Frosh Coach Hugh Beins will also be there. Hugh stands 6'6". Miggs Reilly will be on hand, and probably Joe Carroll. It should be an inter· esting evening. Why not try to make it?

The game should also be interesting for another reason. It's the season's opener for the Hoyas, and not even Coach Jeannette can be sure of what this year's club will be like. Because of the mass scholastic withdrawals of last January this will be a predominantly sophomore team for the second consecutive year. Warren Buehler will be back, however, and that's something. Last season Warren sent the ball through the hoops to the tune of 511 points, an all time G.U. record. He stands 6'3", and will start at one of the forward spots. The other three return­ing lettermen are 6'3" Joe Bolger, 6'6" Don Morchower and 6'0'' Jack Walsh. All three might see a lot of action, but they're going to have to hustle. Bolger could wind up as the other starting forward as easily as not. He improved tremendously during the course of last season. Giving him the stiffist competition will be a 6'4" jumping jack named Dale Smith. Dale, a Soph, was a star on last

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

year's great frosh team, and he can really clear those boards. At this writing it would appear that 6'6" Joe Missett will be the starting center. Joe is very strong, very fast and very determined. He hooks well with either hand, and could be bound for stardom. His competitors will be 6'6" Don Morchower, and 6'5" Kenny Rode. Ken may end up playing forward if Missett really takes over at center. Rode is a sophomore. The back court lacks an experienced duo, but it's not short on talent. Junior Jack Walsh returns, but he's going to have some job beating out sophs Matt White and Dick Percudani. White may turn into a real national standout, Ass't. Coach Beins thinks it's a sure thing. 5'9" Tucker Dunn will also be. in there. He may not start, but this set shooting 'phenom' will see his share of action.

Something is lacking from the above preview. That something is 6'2" Hank Morano. Hank has got to play, the only question is where. He can set with the best, and drive with anybody. This qualifies him as a back court ace, which he is. He's also a young bull, with tremendous shoulders. He can jump, and he has real speed. In other words he looks like a tremendous forward. Right now he's Buddy Jeannette's problem, but Buddy wishes he had a few more like it. As for Hank, well he just wants to play, he doesn't care where. He will.

The above should do most of the playing, but sophs Dan Devlin, Dutch Wagner, Dick Farrell, Buck Seymour, Ray Mazza and Junior Jose Casillias could step into the picture without surprising anyone. ·

Time to sum up. It's a young team, with nary a Senior on the club. It's a tall team, center 6'6", forwards 6'4". I! appears to have more talent than any team in tht past SIX years with the exception of the all Senior NIT Club of two years ago. It's very inexperienced. It's got a great coach in Buddy Jeannette.

Come on down the 20th of November and see how they look. It's going to be interesting.

Bob Windish, '52, has returned to Georgetown as soccer and swimming coach. The soccer team is going through its growing pains, but Bob has got the boys out there hustling. Dan Mulcahy, also '52 and an insurance agent in town, has been out helping Windish with the boys.

GEORGETOWN IN BUFFALO TOURNAMENT

Georgetown's basketball team will be one of eight con­testants in the Queen City Invitational Basketball Tourna­ment sponsored by Canisius College, Buffalo, N. Y., to be played December 27, 28, 30 and January 1, in Buffalo's Memorial Auditorium. The other teams in the tournament will be Cansisius, Columbia, Fordham, Georgia Tech, Idaho State, St. Bonaventure and Yale.

The Georgetown Alumni Committee assisting with the affair is composed of John F. Connelly, '14, President of the Georgetown Club of Buffalo, Russell J. Danieu '33 Tournament Chairman for the Georgetown Alumni, F;anci~ J. Offerman, Jr. , '51, Ticket Chairman, Ferdinand J. Cic­carelli, '51, Entertainment Chairman, and John F. Moloney, '45, Publicity Chairman. For the best tickets contact Mr. Offerman at 1300 Marine Trust Bldg., Buffalo.

11

MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS

For Christmas

Two Two One Two 1 Year One Two 1 Year

Magazine Year Years Gifts Magazine Year Years Gifts

America $ 7.00 $12.00 $14.00 Look $ 3.50 $ 6.00 $ 6.00 American Girl 3.00 5.00 5.00 Mademoiselle 3.50 6.00 6.50 American Home 3.00 5.00 5.00 Magazine of Wall Street 20.00 35.00 40.00 American Magazine 3.50 5.50 5.50 McCall's Magazine 3.00 5.00 5.00 Better Homes and Gardens 3.00 5.00 5.50 Mechanix Illustrated 3.00 5.00 5.00

Boys' Life 3.00 5.00 5.00 Newsweek 6.00 9.00 10.50 Catholic Digest 3.00 5.00 5.00 New Yorker 7.00 12.00 12.00 Changing Times 6.00 10.00 10.00 Omnibook 3.65 7.00 7.30 Charm 3.50 6.00 6.50 Parents' Magazine 3.00 5.00 5.00 Children's Digest 3.50 6.00 5.00 Photography 4.00 7.00 7.00

Collier's 3.50 6.00 5.50 Popular Mechanics 3.50 6.00 6.50 Coronet 2.50 5.00 5.00 Popular Science Monthly 3.00 5.50 5.00 Field and Stream 3.00 5.00 5.00 Reader's Digest 2.75 5.00 5.00 Financial World 20.00 40.00 40.00 Redbook 3.00 5.00 5.00 Fortune 10.00 15.00 18.50 Saturday Evening Post 6.00 10.00 10.00

Glamour 3.50 6.00 5.50 Seventeen 4.00 7.00 7.00 Good Housekeeping 3.50 5.50 5.50 Sports Illustrated 7.50 13.00 13.50 Harper's Bazaar 5.00 7.50 7.50 Time 6.00 10.50 10.50 Holiday 5.00 8.00 8.00 Town and ·Country 7.50 13.50 13.50 House and Garden 5.00 7.50 8.00 U.S. News & World Report 5.00 8.00 8.75

_House Beautiful 5.00 7.50 7.50 Vogue 7.50 12.00 12.00 Humpty Dumpty's Magazine 3.50 6.00 5.00 Wall Street Journal 20.00 4.0.00 40.00 Jack and Jill 2.50 4.00 4.00 Walt Disney Comics 1.00 1.75 2.00 Ladies' Home Journal 3.50 6.00 6.00 Woman's Home Companion 3.50 6.00 5.50 Life 6.75 11.00 11.75 Yachting 5.00 8.50 8.50

The above is only a partial list of the more popular magazines. You may order any magazine published, includ-ing medical and technical journals, at the publishers lowest rates through Alumni House. Are all of your sub-scriptions ordered through Georgetown?

Detach and send to

JAMES K . TURNER 20 Eldridge St., Clifton, N. J,

Enclosed is $ _____ for the subscriptions listed below:

12

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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

CLASS NOTES

NECROLOGY

Deaths recently reported to Alumni House:

EDWAIID F. BEATTY, A.B. '13 On. WILLIAM BOYD·CARPE 'TER, Fac·

ulty LEWIS H. DAILY, A.B. '19, LL.B. '26 On. GEORG E H. FRJEI>B RG, M.D. '29 RonEHT A. GALLEIIY, x-Law '27 BEII NA ilD D. Hun:RNAN, LL.M. '21 EDWAll!) P. HODGES, LL.M. '37, S.J.O.

'41 011. ROBEHT L. HUMPHREY, x-Med.

'10 VI NCENT MAIITINO, X·Law '24 Ho . PATRICK A. McCAnnoN, LL.D.

(Hon.) '43 Dn. WILLIAM B. McGUIRE, D.D.S. '31 lnwiN C. McRAE, LL.B. '96 Jou McK. Mo NOHAN, x-Med. '07 FnA 'CIS ] . MuLHALL, LL.B. '99 JOH N B. 0LI'ERSON, LL.B. '39 JoH N G. 0HMSBY, x-College '16 On. RALPH S. PENDEXTER, LL.B. '13 FREDERICK A. QUINN, LL.B. '10 DR. JoRGE RAMIREz-DuQUE, M.O. '34 LOUIS c. RITCHIE, LL.B. '35 ]AMES L. RoO NEY, x-Law '24 CHARLES v. D. SIEGEL, LL. B. '18 DR. JoH A. SIMP ON, A.B. '28,

M.D. '32.

1903 CoL. L. B. MAGRUDER, USA, Ret'd.

College '03, is living at Bluburn Button­wood Lane, Rumson, New J ersey. His father, Dn. G. LLOYD MAGIIUDER, Med. '70, Grad. '71, was a founder of the Georgetown Hospital and Dean and Treas­ure of the Medical School. He also served as professor of Materia Medica and Thera­putics.

1907 JoH N W. CUMMINS, Law '07, was ap­

pointed Divorce Commissioner for the Ohio County, We t Virginia, Circuit Court by Judge J. P . O'Brien.

1913 JUDGE WALTER M. BASTIAN, Law '13,

presently U. S. District Court Judge in Washington, was nominated by President Eisenhower to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the late Bennett Champ Clark as Associate Justice of the United States Court of Appeals. Judge Bastian is a form­er president of the District of Columbia Bar Association and has served as a mem­ber of the Board of Governors of the Amer­ican Bar Association and on the Distri ct Court Committee on Admissions and Grievances.

HON. WALTER M. BASTIAN, '13

RAYMON D W. LOICHOT, College '13, of Canton, Ohio, is the father of Louis A. Loichot, a freshman in the College.

1918 DR. J . GARRETT REILLY, Dent. '18, was

elected to the office of Pres ident-elect of the District of Columbia Dental Society last June to take office as President in June of 1955.

J . RAYMOND McGovERN, College '18, is Republican candidate for the office of Lieu­tenant Governor of the State of ew York.

1921 JosEPH C. McGARRAGHY, Law '21, is be­

ing prominently mentioned as a successor to J UDGE WALTER M. BASTIAN, Law '13, when the latter moves up to the United States Court of Appeals from the District Court.

DR. RICHARD D. Muon, College '21, Med. '26, reports that his son, 1st Lt. Richard D. Mudd·, Jr., a graduate aviation engineer from St. Louis University in 1952, is now an F86 jet pilot in Korea. Another son, 2nd Lt. Joseph F. Mudd, a graduate of last June of the United States Naval Academy was married on June 5th to the former Miss Rosemary McPadden. There are five other Mudd children.

1922 BmG. GEN. WILLIAM H. HoosoN, USA,

Ret'd., '22, THOMAS A. DEA N, College '20, and P. C. LAUINGER, College '22, held an informal reunion at P ebble Beach, Cali­fornia, in July. Previously Mr. Lauinger had been host at the 76th birthday party of R Ev. W. CoLEM AN NEVILS, S. J., former President of Georgetown, on May 29 at his home in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

CoL. J osEPH A. McDoNOUG H, College '22, has returned from Korea and is assign­ed as Assistant Inspector General at the Infantry Center, Ft. Benning, Ga.

1923 RoooLFO RAMIR EZ-PABON, Law '23, was

appointed General Supervisor of Elections of Puerto Rico on January 22. Formerly he had served as Judge of the Tax Court in Puerto Rico, Judge of the District Court of Mayaguez, and as a member of the Puerto Rican House of Representatives.

1924 DR. WILLIAM J. FITZGERALD, Med. '24,

write the following : "My article on 'Evalu­ation of the Episiotomy Repair as ·to P eri­neal Pain with 000 Catgut' will be publish­ed in the 1ovember 1954 issue of the New York State Journal of Medicine. This is the third paper accepted by the Medical Jour­nal for publication in the last two years, making a total of eight papers written by me in the last 15 years.

"At present writing, I'm preparing a new paper on ' ynthetic Oxytocic Drug Mether­gine in Obstetrics.' Re-elected· State Medi­cal Officer of the All State Catholic War Veterans at a convention held in June at Saratoga, N. Y."

LEGRA ND J. P . FICHTI!ORN, Law '24, has been elected Department Adjutant for 1954-55 of the Department of the District of Columbia, The American Legion.

1925 CHAIILES L. NoRRIS, SR., Law '25, was

recently elected ·second vice-president of the Washington Real Estate Board.

MAJ. GEN. WILLIAM E. SnAMBORA, Med. '25, is Commanding General of the Brooke Army Medical Center at Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Recently, Dn. MARCEL E. CoNRAD, JR., Med. '53, reported at the Medical Field Service School at Brooke Army Medical Center for studies in an advanced officer career course.

DR. JoH N G. HAYF.S, Med. '25, is Associ­ate Professor of Gynecology and Obstetrics at Albany Medical College and Obstetri­cian-in-Chief at the Brady Maternity Hospi­tal in Albany.

1926 FREDERICK W. F ucER, College '26, has

been inventing things as a sideline to his regular achiteclural practice. His most re­cent patent is for a portable pottery kiln, covered by U. S. Patent No. 2,662,263.

The Omaha, Nebraska, World-Herald magazine section recently carried a feature story on WILLIAM J. FROELICH, Law '26, as the world's champion long distance com­muter. Mr. Froelich's home is in O'Neill, Nebraska, and his office 650 miles away in Chicago.

1927 REv. CHRISTOPHER T. CLARK, College '27,

on October 16, was elevated to the rank of Papal Chamberlain with the Title of Very Reverend Monsignor. Monsignor Clark is the Assistant Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey.

13

JoH N F. McDoNOUGH, College '27, has recenty taken over as President of the Richard Bennett Corporation, Manhattan Tailoring Firm.

1928 DR. JoH N E. SwiFT, Med. '28, has been

certifi ed by the American Board of Pedi· atrics, and following his separation from the Army Medical Corps last November after five and a half years of service, he is practicing Pediatrics in Scranton, Pa.

1929 DAVID M. CLARK, College '29, F. S. '33,

Professor of Exporting and Importing at the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service, has taken up his residence at the Carlyn Apartments, 2500 Que Street, N. W., in Washington.

FRA NCIS H. FARRELL, College '29, has become a member of the firm of Farrell, Smith and Rambach in general law prac­tice at 294 Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts.

1930 CHARLES P. NuGENT, Law '30, has been

reappointed by the Mayor of Detroit as a member of the Detroit Rapid Transit Com­mission and has been reelected President of the Commission for the second year. He recently completed 20 years as a member of the University of Detroit Law Faculty with the rank of Professor since April, 1948.

Loms 0. HoDGES, JR., Law '30, has been promoted to the office of assistant vice president of the Bank of Commerce & Sav­ings in Washington.

1931 C. DEWITT CoFFMAN, College '31, form­

erly manager of the Convention Bureau of the City of Phifadelphia, has taken over the management of the Hotel Woodner at 16th and Spring Road, N. W., in Wash­ington.

1932 DR. JAMES J. ORTOLANO, Med. '32, has

been named clinic physician of the Ho­boken Baby Welfare Station in Hoboken, N. J . He is also on the Medical Staff of St. Mary's Hospital, J ersey City.

JoHN R. DowNING, College '32, has set up a new optical business in New York City under the name of Downing & Com· pany, at 109 East 49th Street, New York 22, New York.

1933 JoH N FEIGHAN O'BRIEN, son of FRANCIS

O'BRIEN, College '33, is a freshman at the College.

1934 ABRAHAM FRANKEL, Law '34, announces

the birth of Nancy S. Frankel on Novem­ber 22, 1953.

1937 RoBERT E. MooRE, College '37, has he­

gun his last year at St. Joseph's Seminary, the New York diocesan seminary at Yonk­ers, and will he ordained in the spring of 1955.

14

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DR. JoHN J. CANFIELD, Med. '37, an­nounces the birth of his fourth, child , Michael, Georgetown '75.

1938 EDMUND R. K NAUF, College '38, reports

that he, DICK BALLSC HMTDER, College '37, BARD HIGGI NS, College '38, and Bon Hie­GINS, College '43, had a pleasant reunion in Duluth during the past summer. By co­incidence, EuGENE P. McHILL, College '21, had brought FATHER BuNN, President of the University, for a Georgetown meeting in Duluth, and it turned out to be a com­plete Georgetown evening.

REv. J ouN G. FuRNISS, S. J., College '38, is the Execut ive Chairman of the J esuit Seminary Building F und which has been conducting a uccess ful campaign to build the new Loyola Seminary at Shrub Oak, New York. The cornerstone. for the new structure was laid on October 2, and construction of the building is promised by May of next yea r. Loyola Seminary will serve as a Philosophate for both the New York and Maryland· Provinces of the Society.

1939 WILLIAM F . X. GEOGHAN, Collge '39,

became a partner in the law firm of Cu­sack, Shumate, and Geoghan on October 1, 1954. His office is located at 1472 Broad­way, New York City.

Cor.. RoBERT J . O'CoNNOR, Law '39, is staff judge advocate with the VII Corps Headquarters in Germany.

1942 DR. GABRIEL J. GRECO, Med. '42 after

four years of post-graduate work and resi­dency in ophthalmology at New York Uni­versity-Bellevue Hospital Medical Center, is now in practice of ophthalmology at 161

St. Nicholas Avenue, Ridgewood, Brooklyn, New York. His engagement has been an­nounced to Miss Norma Eskin of Perth Amboy, N. J.

REV. EDWARD W. BoDNAR, S. J ., College '42, is living at Morris Hall, Lawrenceville, New J ersey, and attend-ing Princeton Uni­versity Graduate School.

ALBERT E. ScHRADER, Jr., F. S. '42, an­nounces the birth of his sixth child in F ebruary. He is Republican candidate for the School Board of Dade County, Florida·.

DR. DAVID LER NER, Med. '42, of Ridge­wood, New ] ersey, was elected President of the Queens Alumni Chapter of Phi Lambda Kappa Medical Fraternity for the current year.

AlBERT A. RADIDA, F. S. '42, has been promoted in grade as a Foreign Service Officer and reassigned from Li bon, Por­tugal, lo South Africa as Vice Consul. He expects to stop over in Washington be-tween ass ignn1ents.

CHARLES A. CERAMI, F. S. '42, and Mrs. Cerami celebrated their tenth wedding an­niversary on September 23rd at a reception given in their honor at the Alban Towers Hotel in Washington by their many friends and well-wishers.

1943 DR. RICHARD M. Auw, College '4·3, is

resident in P ediatrics at the Georgetown University Medical Center. He is married and the father of three children.

DR. MARCEL A. MERSCH, College '43, Med. '47, after having completed residency training in Anesthesia at St. Francis Hos­pital, Hartford, Connecticut, has become Associate Attending Anesthesiologist at Holy Name Hospital, Teaneck, N. J. He is the father of three children: Drew, Ellen, and Beth . Recently he w·as certified as a Fellow in the American College of Anes­thesiologists.

DR. CHARLES PRINCE, Grad. '43, has opened an office in Los Angeles as man­agement counsel and business research economist. Currently he is completing two major studies : (a) A comparative analy­sis of six major airframe manufacturers in Southern California and (b) current ceo­nomic trends on the Pacific Coast and their probable impact on specifi c industri es.

R Ev. RAYMOND P. CAHILL, College '43, is a: Naval Chaplin stationed with the 3rd Marine Division in Japan.

1943 WALTER H. :MAY, F. S. '43, formerly Pur­

chasing Agent of the Rochester Germicide Company, has been elected to a director­ship of the Company.

1944 P ETER M. BONAROELI.l, College '44, is

now with Stevenson & Kellogg, Ltd., a Canadian firm of management engineering consultants, as Director of Public Rela­tions for Eastern Canada.

EowARO BENNETT WILLIAMS, Law '44, served- as a ttorney lor Senator J oseph R. McCarthy at the recent censure hearings.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

1818 Alumni can read this issue of the Magazine with personal pride since they have responded to our first Alumni Annual Giving Appeal. 18,926 others will have an opportu­nity to feel the same pride if they will send their gifts in whatever amount to the Annual Giving Com­mittee, Alumni House, before De­cember 31. On that date the First Alumni Annual Giving Fund will close.

1945 Mary Julia Bukowski, daughter of DR.

STANLEY A. BuKOWSKI, College '45, Med. '49, was born on August 3rd in Buffalo, New York.

1946 GERARD J. McDoNNELL, College '46, re­

ceived a Master of Arts Degree in Psy­chology at Fordham Universtiy on June 9.

1947 GRAHAM J. LucAs, Grad-. '47, has re­

turned from Karachi, Pakistan, where he was assigned as Deputy to the Representa­tive, United Nations Technical Assistance Board. At present, he is assigned to the United Nations Headquarters in New York as Acting Chief of the Caribbean Section Non-self-governing Territories Division. '

DR. DANIEL J. O'REGAN, Med. '47, an­nounces the opening of his office for the practice of Orthopedic Surgery at 58 Kens­ington Avenue, Jersey City, N. J.

HoN. Eo. A. EDMONDSON, Jr., Law '47, Member of Congress from the Second Dis­trict, State of Oklahoma, was unopposed for a second term in the Democratic pri­maries last July.

DR. DANIEL J. RouRKE, Med. '47, and Miss Barbara Ann McMahon were married in the Lady Chapel of St. Patrick's Cathe­dral in New York City on September 16.

MAJOn JoHN J. SHERIDAN, Med. '47, has been decorated with the highest award of the Kingdom of Thailand "the Most Ex­alted Order of the White Elephant." The presentation was made to Major Sheridan at Fort Devens Army Hospital for services rendered during the Korean War in 1950.

1948 FllANK E. JON ES, Law '48, has been ap­

pointed Associate Professor of Law at the University of Southern California.

ALBERT L. CoHN, College '48, has become associated with David Cohn in the gen­eral practice of law at 152 Muket Street, Paterson, N. J.

JoH N P. STONE, F. S. '48, with his wife and three young children, is residing in Jacksonville, Florida, where he is situared with L. C. DuBard, a floor covering firm.

THOMAS S. ULLIVA N, College '48, is Commillec Inve tigator to the Hendrickson Subcommittee to investigate juvenile de­linquency. He expects ro graduate from Georgetown Law School in February.

CARL D. EISENMAN, College '48, Law '51, has been appointed Assistant Circuit Judge Advocate of the Mediterranean Theater, with headquarters at Wheeler Air Force Base in Tripoli. Recently he found in the desert a skeleton of a dinosaur which is now on exhibit in tbe Tripoli museum.

JA MES P. CLAIR, College '48, and Miss Helen Rose Poole were married on June 8 in the Sacred Heart Church, Pittsburgh, Pa.

1949 JonN F. FoLEY, F. S. '49, is in the Navy

as a Lieutenant (j.g.), serving aboard the Battleship New Jersey after more than two years on carriers in the China Sea.

CAPT. JEROME H. GREENBERG, Med. '49, announces the birth of his daughter, Betsy Ann, at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington on September 3. The proud father has started on a 12 month course in Preventive Medicine at the Army Medical Service Graduate School.

LAWR£NCE F. CoRROON, College '49 and former Yard President, was married to Miss Constance Duffy on October 9 at the Church of St. Ignatius Loyola in New York City.

JA MES G. NEWELL, College '49, and Miss Eileen M. Buckley of West Hartford, Conn., recently announced their engage­ment.

WENDELL M. LEWIS, F. S. '49, and Miss Mary Sheila of Lynchburg, Va., announced their engagement on October 16. Presently, the prospective groom is doing graduate work at the Universi ty of Virginia and Vir­ginia Poltyechnic Institute.

FREDRIC BAAR, College '49, and Miss Marie Paula Tissot were married on Octo­ber 16 at St. Catherine's Church, Spring Lake, . J.

JoHN J. DE GROOT, College '49, has joined the chemicals department of the Atlas Powder Company in a training pro­gram leading to the chemicals department sales staff. Previously he was with Na­tional Dairy Research Laboratories, Inc., as an analytical chemist.

J. PARKER CoNNER, College '49, an­nounces the birth of a daughter, Susan Catherine, on April 2nd. Her father is a member of the D. C. Bar and is in practice at 726 Jackson Place, N. W., in Washing­ton.

DR. FRANCIS C. MAYLE, JR., College '49, Med. '53, announces the birth of Marjorie Louise on August 4 in South Orange, New J ersey.

JoH N W. IsAMINGER, F. S. '49, after leaving Georgetown did some graduate work in Mexico where he was married in 1950. His first daughter, Margarita, was born in 1953. He is now with the U. S. Foreign Service in La Paz, Bolivia, where his second daughter, Amelia Nell was born last July at 12,200 ft. above sea-level.

1950 The Magazine expresses the sympathy

of the Alumi Association to Dn. MICHAEL J. MASTRANGELO, Med. '50; RALPH G. MASTIIANGELO, College '51; and ANGELO

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

A. MAsTRANGELO, JR., College '53, on the sudden death of their father in late Sep­tember.

JosEPH F. KEARNS, JR., College '50, was married on September 11 to Miss Eleanor V. Smith of Paterson, New J ersey. Their wedding trip took them to the Elbow Beach Surf Club in Bermuda.

]AMES S. RicE, Law '50, received the De­gree of Master of Business Administration at the University of Southern California on June 12.

WILLIAM W. CRAWFORD, College '50, took the degree of Bachelor of Laws at Harvard University on June 17.

DANIEL A. DEGNAN, College '50, was sworn in as an attorney-at-law in Trenton, N. ]., on August 3rd after passing the New Jersey Bar examinations.

LT. (J.G.) JoHN J. WEBB, College '50, Dent. '53, and Miss Patricia Jean Schantz of Annapol is, Md., have announced their engagement.

]AMES L. RoDGERS, JR., F. S. '50, former assistant controller of R. Mars & Company in Washington has become associated with C. Carney Smith, general agent of the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company.

SMITH THOMPSON, F. S. '50, and MISS BARBARA PAULS, Trinity '51, were married on October 9. THOMAS A. REYNOLDS, JR., College '48, was best man, and RAYMOND L. BusE, College '48, was head usher. Mrs. Buse, who is the bride's sister, was matron of honor.

In 1948 your Alumni Asso­ciation pledged itself to raise $860,000 to build McDonough Gymnasium. The University ac­cepted our promise and the campus is now adorned with a magnificent athletic plant. But we are still $132,829 short of our pledge. You can reduce that debt by earmarking your gift to Annual Giving for the Gymnasium Fund.

PAUL F. LEONARD, Law '50, has recently ~esigned _as assistant United States attorney m Washmgton in which position he has served since 1951. He will enter private law practice in the District of Columbia.

WALTER E. GILLCRIST, Jn., College '50, Law '53, and Miss Marcia K. Hammond were married at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Scarsdale, N. Y., on Sep­tember 18.

FRANCIS G. Rwss, Jn., College '50 re­ceived his Degree of Bachelor of La,:s at Rutgers University in June.

A DREW C. ScHIRllMEISTER, JR., College '50, and Miss Virginia E. Maloney were married on June 26 at St. Joseph's Church, Amesbury, Massachusetts, and spent their honeymoon in Spain, Mallorca, and Paris. The groom is in the real estate business in New York City.

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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

RoLA ND M. BARRETTE, College '50, re­ceived the Degree of Doctor of Dental Med­icine from Tufts College in June.

ARTHUR J. PALLOTTA, Jn., College '50, Med. '53, announces the birth of his third daughter on eptember 21st. He is doing graduate wo1·k at the Georgetown Medical School.

GEORGE Jost:I'H ZELLER, College '50, an­nounces the birth of his second son, John Thomas Zeller, '75, on September 28th at Philadelphia, Pa.

On. RoBERT J. DASC IIBACH, Med. '50, was recently discharged from the Navy and at present is in P ediatric residency at Stan­ford University Hospital, San Francisco, California. · Mn. Ko TAl-SHAN, Grad. '50, is secretary to the Municipal Government in Formosa.

FRA 'CIS SHIEH, Grad. '50, was a recent speaker over the radio for the Monterey County Catholic Hour in California. His talks concerned Georgetown and the Jesuit Priests in China.

JoHN H. McCooEY, College '50, and Miss Ann Skakel were married at St. Mary's Church, Greenwich, Connecticut, on Octo­ber 2.

THOMAS D. O'KEEFE, College '50, was recently co-winner of the President's Cup for non-master pairs at the nine-day Ameri­can Contract Bridge League National toumament a t the Mayflower Hotel in Washington.

ALOYSIUS W. REILLY, College '50, re­turned to the States last year as a veteran of 45 combat missions in Korea and was d·ischarged from the Air Force in Novem­ber. He has returned to the Far East Air Force as an engineer with Bendix Radio and is again assigned to Korea.

DAVID M. HuTCIIINSON, F. S. '50, is a lieutenant in the Navy aboard the USS Juneau.

1951 Rtc rrARD J . LENACHAN, College '51, re­

ceived the Degree of Bachelor of Laws at the University of Kansas City in June.

AL EXAND Eil C. MAcNULTY, Law '51, and Miss Anne Martin were married on Sep­tember 17 in Spokane, Washington.

On. FRANK P. PALADI NO, Med. '51, has been promoted to lieutenant, senior grade, and has been transferred to a medica l battalion in Korea.

STATE R EPRESENTATIVE THO MAS J. O'CONNOR, Jn., Law '51, is a candidate for reelection to the Massachusetts House of Representatives from the 5th Hampden District.

DAN HENKE, F. S. '43, Law '51, has been appointed a member of the faculty of St. Mary's University, San Antonio, Texas.

Kevin Murray Davis, son of JoHN F. DAVIS, F. S. '51, was born July 12.

JoHN C. McDoNALD, College '51; ERNEST J . HowAno, College '51; and RtCHAllD P. McGRATH, College '51, received the De­gree of Bachelor of Laws at the Harvard University Commencement last June.

LEONAllil P. LISNER, F. S. '51, received the Degree of Master of Business Admin­istration at Rutgers University on June 9.

He is Assistant Director of Market Re­search for the Lambert Pharmaceutical Company, manufacturers of Listerine.

GEORGE H. HIMES, Law '51, took the De­gree of Master of Laws at Harvard Uni­versity on June 17.

HARRY W. CLADOUHOS, F. S. '51, took his law degree at Harvard University in June.

CAPT. VI NCENT J. BACLI, Med·. '51, an­nounces the birth of Thomas Andrew llagli , '75, last August. Captain Bagli is currently on duty in Orlando, Florida, do­ing surgery at the Air Force Base Hospital.

KENNETH KEY HoFFMAN, College '51, passed the Texas Bar examinations in June with the second highest grade made in the state. 187 students took the test, 47 failed.

1952 RICHARD P. McKEE, College '52, was mar­

ried to Miss Virginia Alicoate in the Lady Chapel of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York on October 16. His Emminence Fran­cis Cardinal "Spellman performed the cere­mony which was followed by a- reception at the Hotel Pierre. Following a wedding trip to Bermuda the groom will return to his duties with the National Broadcasting Company.

Rot;EJlT J. BECKMAN, College '52, is a Lieutenant (j.g.) serv ing in the Pacific with the Seventh Fleet.

EllWIN A. MuTH, Grad. '52, and MICHAEL F. PAC E, College '52, received the Degree of Master of Business Administration at the Harvard Commencement on June 17.

Dn. RoBERT A. JACARUSO, Dent. '52, an­nounces the opening of his office for the general practice of dentistry at 317 So. Middletown Road , Nanuet, New York. He has returned from duty with the Dental Corps of the U. S. Air Force.

DR. WILLIAM F. McDONALD, Dent. '52, announces the opening of his office for the general practice of dentistry at 19 W. Pleasant Avenue, Maywood, N. J. He has returned from two years duty as a Lieu­tenant (j.g.) in the Navy, one year of which was spent with the Fleet Marine Force in Japan.

1sT LT. Wn.LIAM B. DuNBAR, F. S. '52, is a Navigator with the USAF stationed at Albany, Georgia, with the 508th Air Re­fu eling Squadron. He has recently re­turned from a Korean tour of service.

DR. BEN J . LIZZI, Dent, '52, was recently married to Miss Rose Marie Magretto at Sacred Heart Church, New Brunswick, N. J. Best man was DR. JACK REDMAND, Dent. '52, while DR. ALBERT E. BuLLOCK, Den t. '52 served as usher.

WILLIAM D. STEWART, College '52, is a Junior at the Dental School of the Univer­sity of Buffalo.

RICHARD A. KATZMAN, College '52, was recently released from the Army and will enter P ennsylvania State University in F ebruary.

VICTOR BREITFELLER, F. S. '52, and his brother Paul, F. S. '54, recently announced a double engagement. Victor is engaged to Miss Marilyn Nordhouse of Port Huron, Michigan, and P aul to Miss Cynthia L. Carter of Morristown, N. J.

LT. (J.c.) ALEXANDER E. RoEDER, JR., USNR, College '52, and Miss Catherine Turney Fetherston have recently announced their engagement.

1953 LT. JoHN R. CROWN, F. S. '53, has been

reassigned from the 3rd Armored Division, Ft. Knox, Ky. , to the 2nd Battalion, 6th Infantry Regiment, APO 742, the garrison force for the American sector of Berlin.

VARSITY-ALUMNI GOLF MATCH

On October 2, at Winged Foot Golf Club in larchmont, N. Y ., the Georgetown Varsity Golf Team defeated a strong Alumni team by a score of 8% to 3%. Pictured here after the match are, left to right, Nevins McBride, '29, Perky Cullinane, '57, Walter Tynan, '34, Joe McBride, '40, Gerald Shattuck, '21, Gene Howerdd, '56, Dexter Munger, '57, John Smith, '41, Marion Vickers, '56, Maurice McCarthy, '30, Charles Slicklen, '56, Arthur lynch, '22, John Sheahan, '57, Dick Quinaan, '56, Joe Turnesa, '54, Owen Mande­ville, '56, and Rev. Joseph M. Moffitt, S.J., '37, Coach of the Varsity.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE 17

BASKETBALL SCHEDULE-1954-55

VARSITY

Date Opponent Place

December 1st Loyola (Baltimore) Baltimore

December 4th Maryland Away

December 7th American University Home

December llth St. Peter's Home

December 15th Mt. St. Mary's Home

December 18th St. Joseph's Philadelphia

December 27th to January 1st Canisius Tourney Buffalo

January 5th George Washington Home

January 8th American University Away

January llth ew York University Home

January 24th Miami University Miami, Fla.

January 26th Mississippi Southern Hattiesburg

January 28th Spring Hill Mobile

January 30th Loyola of the South New Orleans

February 2nd La Salle Home

February 5th La Salle Philadelphia

February 9th Villanova Home

February 12th Fordham Home

February 15th Seton Hall Home

February 19th avy Annapoli s

February 24th Maryland Home

February 26th Mt. St. Mary's Away

March 1st George Washington Away

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18

FRESHMEN

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January 5th G. W. Home

January 8th American University Away

January llth Arl ington Hall Home

February 2nd Andrews Field "B" Home

February 5th Tech High Home

February 9th G. W. High Home

February 12th Bullis Prep Home

February 15th St. John's Home

February 17th Bullis Prep Away

February 19th 1avy Away

February 24th Maryland Away

February 26th U.S. Naval Prov. Home Ground

March 1st G. W. Away

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GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

LT. CHARLES A. GARRETT, College '53, is an Air Control Officer at Cherry Point, N. C., with the Marines. He will be trans· ferred shortly to Tyndall Field, Florida, for eight weeks schooling and then be trans· £erred to El Toro, California, with the 1st Marine Air Wing.

THOMAS F. McLtsTER, College '53, is a 2nd Lt. with the Marines in P ensacola studying to become a Marine jet pilot.

LT. (J.c.) GEORGE J. SEPE, Dent. '53, is in the Navy serving abroad the USS Hor· net off the coast of Formosa.

]EnEMY PATERSON, College '53, an­nounces the birth of David Jeremy on Au­gust 15.

DR. JosEPH H. BENES, Med. '53, has be­come a medical resident at Hackensack, New J ersey, Hospital.

CHARLES F. DALEY, JR., Law '53, has opened his office in the Odd F ellows Build­ing, Wilmington, Delaware.

WILLIAM P. MACKAY, College '53, has been elected Director of Public Relations for the Reading, Pa., Junior Chamber of Commerce. His regular occupation is as head of the Mutual Fund Department of Mackay & Company, investment brokers in Reading.

E NSIGN EAMO N T. FENNESSY, F. S. '53, is stationed abroad the USS Samuel B. Roberts in the Pacifi c, slated to do a four months tour of duty in and around· Korea and Formosa. On completion of that as· signment, his ship will go through the Suez Canal in the Mediterranean and re· turn to her home port, Newport, Rhode Island, in March.

JosE L. CIANCHINI, College '53, has re· turned to Madrid to resume his studies at the University of Madrid School of Med· icine.

VI NCENT E. LuMBLEAU, Law '53, has passed the California Bar Examination and was admitted to practice on July 27. His offices are at 520 S. Western Avenue, Los Angeles.

2ND LT. DAviD R. ScoTTON, College '53, has been assigned to the 3rd Armored Division at Fort Knox, Kentucky, having completed the Basic Infantry Officers Course at The Infanctry School, Fort Benning, Ga.

SAMUEL A. HALSEY, JR., F. S. '53, is with the Veterans Administration in Wash· ington.

ATHANIEL C. KENYON, Law '53, re· ceived the Degree of Master of Laws at Harvard University on June 17.

2ND LT. GERARD NAPPY, College '53, is at Ulm, Germany, with the Army and has recently been promoted to Executive officer of his company. He is also player-coach of the "basketball team which is now in prac· tice for the coming season.

JonN A. LYO NS, College '53, is with the Army stationed at Fort Dix, N. J.

HENRI M. RYA N, F. S. '53. who took part in little theater drama productions in Washington while studying at the George· town Graduate School has accepted· a sales position with Sinclair Refining Company.

DR. Loms J. CARUSrLLO, JR., Dent. '53, is a Navy dentist stationed aboard the USS Tidewater at Norfolk, Va.

JOSEPH RYAN, College '53, is a full­fl edged salesman for the products of Bal· lantine Brewery in the Washington, D. C. area.

Jot·IN M. SERGIO, F. S. '53, is with the Air Force in the grade of 2nd Lt., stationed at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois.

Mtss JEAN MARIE DALY, Grad. '53, and JOSEPH R. WALSH, Law '52, were married at the Church of St. Thomas Apostle in Washington on October 9.

Your gift to Annual Giving, what· ever its size, may be designated for use as you want it used. You may give, through the Fund, to the Col­lege, Graduate School, Medical School, Law School, Dental School, School of Foreign Service, School of Nursing or the Institute of Lan· guages and Linguistics. Or you may designate your gift for the improve· ment and· maintenance of Alumni House, or to reduce our debt on McDonough Gymnasium. Or, if you prefer, you may make your gift undesignated leaving its use to the discretion of the University admin· istration. The size of your gift and its use are for you to determine.

1954 DR. PATRICK J. HENNELLY, JR., Med. '54,

was married on June 12 to Miss Ann Le Strange of Jackson Heights, N. Y.

DR. ANTHONY J. VtSCIDO, Dent. '54, has opened his offices for the practice of gen· era! dentistry in the Springfield Shopping Center, 6416 Brandon Avenue, Springfield, Va.

DR. MARtE EsTELLE NtcOLETTt, Med. '54, was married to Dr. Michael R. DeVita at Union City, N. J., on September 18.

DR. CARL J. STANLEY, Dent. '54, has opened his office for the general practice of dentistry at 184 County Road, Barring· ton, R. I.

SIDNEY B. RtNG, Law '54, has been ap· pointed to the patent services section of the General Electric Research Laboratory at Schenectady, N. Y.

DR. RoBERT E. HoRGAN, Dent '54, an· nounces the opening of his office for the practice of general dentistry at 458 Lees· burg Pike, Falls Church, Va.

JOHN F. STURMAN, Institute of Lang· uages and Linguistics '54, has accepted a teaching position in French and Spanish at the Hatch Preparatory School in New· port, Rhode J sland.

ALBERT H. KIRCHNER, JR., College '54, was married on June 5th to Miss Charlotte Ann Hulse at the Church of the Little Flower, Springfield, Md. The groom is the assistant manager of the Silver Spring, Md. , office of the State Loan & Finance Company. He is also expecting a call from Uncle Sam.

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

DAVID C. REID, Law '54, received nom· ination for one of the offices for Repre· sentative of Muskogee County, Oklahoma, in the State Legislature at the Democratic primaries in July.

DR. JoH N F. KELLY, III, College '50, Med. '54, was married on June 19 to Sheila Klenk at Scared Heart Church in Bloom· fi eld, N. J. The bride is the daughter of DR. JosEPH P. KLENK, Med. '25. Among the ushers were DR. WILLIAM C. MAXTED, Col­lege '50, Med. '54; DR. JosEPH F. ScHAN· NO, College '48, Med. '54; and THOMAS J. KE EGAN, College '50. The groom is living in Bridgeport, Connecticut, and is an in· Ierne at St. Vincent's Hospital.

DR. HAROLD S. SINROD, Dent. '54, is tak· ing a one year rotating interneship at Walter Reed Army Hospital.

CPL. FnANCIS S. GosPODAREK, JR., Col· lege '54, is stationed at the Pentagon. He was married on October 2 to Miss Mary P. Brosnan of Peterborough, New Hampshire. Upon his release from the Army, he will enter the Graduate School at Georgetown.

JOSEPH M. KnAFT, College '54, was mar· ried on June 8 to the former Elizabeth Goods at St. Mary's Church in Alexandria, Va. He has entered Columbia University Law School.

JoHN J. DELA NEY, College '54, is a 2nd Lt. in the Signal Corps School at Fort Monmouth, N. J.

WtLLIAM J. McDoNA LD, College '54, is attending the Cornell Law School.

TIMOTHY J. ToutN, College '54, and Miss Vivian Curran were married on October 16 at St. Augustine's Church, Larchmont, N. Y.

CoL. JOH N L. FRISBEE, USAF, Grad. '54, has been appointed Head of the Depart· ment of History at the new Air Force Academy which will receive its first class in July 1955. While completing work on his Master's Degree, Colonel Frisbee served as an instructor at West Point and later for a short tour with Far East Air Force.

JoHN A. PATERSON, College '54, is a dental student at the University of Poonsyl­vania. Recently he announced his engage· ment.

JoHN M. McCAGUE, College '54, and Miss Eileen A. McCauley were married on June 26th. The groom is now stationed at Ft. Lawton, Washington, with the 26th AAA group.

WALTER P. McHALE, Law '54, and Miss Mary K. Quinn have announced their en· gagement recently. A Christmas wedding is planned.

The size of individual gifts to Annual Giving is important but the number of Alumni Annual Donors is the real index of success of the Fund since it demonstrates an awareness of the need and approval of Georgetown's accomplishments.

19

FOR THE GEORGETO~ HOMrn

AT CHRISTMAS Reproduction of antique Hitchcock Mirror with print of the College in

1831

Mahogany and Gold Ebony and Gold

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$14.95 Send order and check to ALUMNI HOUSE 3604 0 St., N. W.

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ATTENTION:

FOREIGN SERVICE

SCHOOL ALUMNI

THE COURIER

Foreign Service School News-Magazine

Can be subscribed to for

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Address your orders to:

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Georgetown University

20

GEORGETOWN MEN IN THE 84th CONGRESS As a result of the ovember elections we find that the 84th United States

Congress will contain fourteen Georgetown Alumni, four in the Senate and ten in the House of Representatives.

The Senators are Hon. Alan H. Bible, LL.B. '34, Democrat of Nevada, Hon. Dennis Chavez, LL.B. '20, Democrat of New Mexico, Hon. Lyndon Johnson, Law '38, Democrat of Texas and Hon. Joseph C. O'Mahoney, LL.B. '20, Demo­crat of Wyoming.

The Georgetown delegation in the House of Representatives consists of Hon. Antoni Sadlak, LL.B. '31 and Hon. James T. Patterson, Law '39 of Connecticut, both Republican, Hon. John M. Robsion, Jr. , Law '27, Republican of Kentucky, Hon. Harrison A. Williams, Grad. '42, Hon. Edmond A. Edmondson, Jr., Law '44, Democrat of Oklahoma, Hon. Francis E. Walter, LL.B. '19, Democrat and Hon. Richard M. Simpson, LL.B. '43, Republican, both of Pennsylvania, Hon. Martin Dies, College '17, and Hon. Paul J. Kilday, LL.B. '22, both Democrats of Texas and Hon. Burr P. Harrison, College '26, Democrat of Virginia.

Seventy-four Georgetown Alumni have served in the House and Senate from the thirteenth to the eighty-fourth Congresses.

ALUMNI HOUSE GARDEN The patio-garden at Alumni House has been completed· and has already

elicited considerable admiration from visitors. It consists of an area approxi­mately sixty by twenty feet, floored with brick excepting for a raised formal garden faced with a rock garden. The entire plot is surrounded by split cedar fencing, excepting for the front wall which is of brick, seven feet high to insure complete privacy. The patio also holds a stone garden bench and a wrought iron post lantern. The formal garden area is lighted at night by a flood light mounted on the roof of Alumni House. The formal garden holds a sun dial and is planted with azaleas and other perennials and with thirty-six English boxwood bushes, the latter th·e gift of Dr. Edward M. Holmes, '28, Medical Director of the City of Richmond, Va. Formal dedication of the completed patio will be held in the spring after tables, umbrellas and chairs have been installed.

GEORGETOWN TO SPONSOR ALL-JESUIT

ALUMNI DINNER On Easter Monday, April ll , 1955, Georgetown will be the sponsor of the

fifth annual All-Jesuit Alumni Dinner to be held at the Hotel Statler in Wash­ington in connection with the Jesuit Educational Association's convention. A Committee is in process of formation, consisting of representatives in the Washington area of the twenty-six American Jesuit Colleges and Universities. A nationally prominent speaker will highlight the affair, and Alumni and their wives attending will be assigned tables with fellow alumni of their own schools. Future issues of the Alumni Magazine will carry further details.

McCAHILL- TALKS TO STUDENTS On November 4th and 5th, Eugene P. McCahill, '21, ational Chairman of

the first Georgetown Alumni Annual Giving Fund Committee, came to Wash­ington for the purpose of addressing the Seniors and Juniors of all of George­town's Schools to give them complete information on the purposes and objec­tives of the Fund so that they may have an intelligent interest in it after graduation. During his visit to Georgetown, he presented the Committee's check for $10,000 to Father Bunn, bringing the total turned over to the Univer­sity from this year's Fund to $78,000. By the end of the ·first Fund year, Decem­ber 31, 1954, he hopes to bring the total to at least $100,000 for operating expenses, scholarships, student aid and other non-capital assistance to the University Administration.

Foreign Trade and United States Policy Debate Charles P. Taft, President, Committee for a National Trade Policy

vs. 0. R. Strackbein, President, ation-Wide Committee of Industry, Agriculture and Labor

on Import-Export Policy November 23, 1954, 8:00 p.m., Gaston Hall , Healy Building No admission charge Everybody welcome Sponsored by the Student Council of the School of Foreign Service

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY ALUMNI MAGAZINE

1300 36th Street, N. W.

Washington 7, D. C.

1. Pilsner glasses, per dozen -- --- -----------------2. 10 oz. highball glasses, per dozen --------------3. Old Fashioned glasses, per dozen _____________ _ 4. Waste Basket (Campus scene 1830) ____________ _

5. Porcelain beer mug Personalized to 10 letters and class year. In black or white------------------

6. Match box cover ---- - ------------------------7. le tter tray -----------------------------------8. Cocktail glasses -------------------- ----------9. Child's cap (sizes 2 to 6)----------------------

10. Colorful Stein, imported from Germany, with pewter cap ----------------------------------

11. Mahogany bookends, bronze seaL _____________ _

12. Small serving tray ------ ---------------------13. Gold filled and sterling charms, G. U. Seal_ ____ _ 14. Gold fill ed locket and chain ___________________ _

15. Gold filled earrings --------------------------16. Sterling and Gold fill ed Cuff links--------------17. Juvenile sweater, all wool, sizes 2 to 12 ______ _

18. White porce lain beer mug --- ------------------19. Large serving tray ----------------------------

Large serving tray (not shown ), campus scene ___ _

20. Glass a sh tray -------- -- - - -------------------

Please send the following items:

TO:

$ 9.00 Postage .75c 6.50 .75¢ 6.00 .75c 9.50 .60¢

4.25 .25¢ .95 .10¢

1.95 .10 <1 6.50 .75¢ 1.25 .10¢

6.95 .50¢ 6.95 2.95 .25¢ 2.50 4.50 .25¢ 6.50 .25¢ 4.00 6.95 .35¢ 2.75 .35¢ 8.50 .50¢ 9.50 .50¢ 1.00 .25¢

21. Juvenile sweat shirt, sizes 2 to 12 --------------22. Scarf, all wool, 6 footer. Blue and gray _______ _ 23. Mahogany p laques with bronze seaL __________ _

24. Bronze seal paper weight ---- ------------------25. Plaque, colored seal - - ------------------------26. Silk woven seal, on white or blue background ___ _

27. Colorful silk scarf, depicting campus scenes a nd highlights. Hand screened, hand edg od _________ _

28. Old 1830 print of campus scene __ _____________ _

29. 11 in. plaque, seal in color, on mahogany wood __

3:>. Six footer scarf ------------------------------31. Juvenile tee-shirt, grey with blue G eorgetown ___ _

32. Georgetown Tiles, four scenes: Copley, Old Nor th Gates of Georgetown and Dahlgren Chapel (each)_

33. Georgetown a shtrays, four scenes (some as tiles) _

34. Etched sea l, platinum rims, glasses: Highball- 10 oz., per dozen---- - --------------Stem Wine, per dozen ______________________ ·--Stem cocktail, per dozen _____ _________________ _

35. Childs 8ib-" l' m a little Hoya " -------- - -------

36. Sterling silver ring- G. U. Sea'----------------37. Gold fill ed lipstick case with mirror _______ __ __ _

Nome: ______ __ ________ __________________ ______ Address :

PLEASE PRINT

$ 2.50 Postage .25~

5.00 .25¢ 9.50 2.50 5.95

.50 .10¢

5.00 .1oc 9.50 .50¢ 6.50 .35¢ 5.00 1.75

1.50

1.00

7.50 .75¢ 10.95 .75¢ 10.95 .75¢

1.00 .05¢

2.95 .10d

6.50 . 25~

Check $ _________ __________ ___ Enclosed Send C.O.D. __ _____ ____ ____ ____ __ __ _

Georgetown Alumni Association

3604 0 Street, N. W.

Washington 7, D. C.

FORM 354/ REQUESTED

N~OMPLETE

U. S. Postage

2¢ PAID

Washington, D. C.

Permit No. 462

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John C. Tyler Chairman of the Board

James W. Hughes Georgetown '25, LtB

A. J. Eyraud

DIRECTORS

Thomas E. Leavey President

Georgetown '23 LLB, LtD '50

Morgan Doyle Georgetown '25, LtM

Mark Harrington

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George S. Eccles

E. A. Heafey Georgetown '23, LLB

Clair Peck, Jr.