The University of Dayton Alumnus, September 1961

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alUD2.DUS EDITORIAL

THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON • SEPTEMBER 1961 N0.3

VOL. XXVIII

about that closing college door ...

THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF DAYTON OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS Arthur T. Scarpelli '34 .. ..... ....... ..... ..... .............. .... .... .. .. .. .. .... ............ ..President Frank J. Doorley '43 ...... ............. .... .... ...... .................................. .Vice President Mary J\1. Shay '44 .. .. .... ...... ... .... .. ..... .... ....... .......... .......................... .. ... Secretary .John C. Bramlage '52 .......................... .. ................ ... .......... ....... ........ Treasurer MEMBERSOFTHEBOARD Peter Kuntz '50, Charles W. Whalen Jr. '42, Marilyn Catron Nolan '53, William A. Fitzpatrick '39, Arthur Millonig '40, Don Sharkey '34, Mark Smith '52, Paul Wagner '39, George Zimmerman '48.

1962 AN IMPORTANT YEAR FOR THE UNIVERSITY AND HER ALUMNI

EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS Very Rev. Raymond A. Roesch, S.M., University president; Brother Austin J. Holian, S.M., assistant business manager; Brother Elmer C. Lackner, S.M., assistant to the president and alumni director; R. William Patterson '29, past president of the association.

ALUMNI REPRESENTATIVES UNIVERSITY ATHLETIC BOARD Jack Zimmerman '50, Joseph Poelking '32, Art Bok '50, George J. Rau '30, James Finke '48, Charles Grigsby '52, J. Ellis May! '08, Arthur T. Scarpelli '34.

ALUMNI ADVISORY BOARD ~uen~

G_reer Beis '43, Akr_on; Thomas Hildebrand '51, Hamilton; Don Cosgrove 51, CmcmnatJ; Donald Seifert '52, Columbus; Robert F . Seiter '44, Xenia; Dick Barcafer '51, Springfield; Jim Hart '54, Toledo; Linus Boeke '28, Chillicothe; Joseph Quat!fi_an '38, Lima; Ed Crow '32, Cleveland; Jack Eiting '53, Minster; Albert T. Dmnger '48, Tiffin; Charles Kenny '50, Mansfield; Tom Ryan- '29, Coldwater ; James Scheuerman '49, Celina; Constance Ecklar '56, Greenville; James Wade '51, Newark; J. C. Kreidler '52, Sandusky; Richard Dorsey '57 M~rion; David Eynon '49, Portsmouth; Thomas Westerkamp '58, Steubenville; NICholas Braun '49, Troy; Don Kerr '51, Piqua; Don Helmkamp '54, Delphos; Manuel Garlikov '43, Middletown; James D. Whalen '47, Dayton; Harold Hormann '50, Sidney; T. J. Hollenkamp '37, Detroit; Charles Schiavo '43, Philadelphia; James A. Crowley '56, Pittsburgh; Jim Brown '34 a nd R. W. Saunders '58, New York City; John Mehary '52, Long Island, N.Y.; Frank L. Schmidt '50, Louisville; Rita Kinsella Bardo '55, Fort Thomas, Ky.; Francis Gabel '30, Washington, D.C.; William Bruening '57, St. Louis; Joseph G. Hollenkamp '41, Chicago; Mary Jo Huth '50, South Bend ; Donald Custenborder '49, Richmond, Ind.; Milton McGuire '47, Fort Wayne; James M. Murphy '50, Indianapolis; Matthew Marzluft '28, San Francisco; William Meyer '37 and Philip Grimes '35, Los Angeles; Paul McClellan '27, Houston, Tex.; and Lloyd Rensel '43, Florida.

the cover ...

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FEW issues back, on these pages, Alumni Director Brother Elmer Lackner sounded a warnmg to

alumni regarding the difficulties lyin g ahead in gaining admission of their children to the University. The situation has become worse m those few months. His suggestion at that time we are now repeating, with emphasis: If you have children nearing college age, and you want them to study at your alma mater, inform Brother

EDITOR: RICHARD F. BEACH '52 SPORTS EDITOR: JOSEPH J. McLAUGHLIN DESIGN: L. E. O'NEIL & ASSOC., INC., DAYTON 2

Dayton has received from h er

mercial interests in the Dayton commu-

alumni over the past several years

nity, and from alumni throughout the

has been most gratifying. In recent fund

world. The community has demon-

drives, the goal has been consistently m et

strated its willingness to contribute a

and surpassed. Th e percentage of alumni

sizable portion of the goal- if only

supporting alma mater has been con-

alumni will show a proportionate

siderably above the national average.

willingness on their part. This is the second time in fi ve years

About 4,000 young high school grad-

upon her alumni; and each year the re-

the University has embarked on such an

uates applied for admission to U.D. for

sponse to th ese pleas has been m ore than

ambitious campaign . In the 1956 effort,

the current freshman class; only l ,iOO

excellent .

almost two and a half million dollars

of these, at most, wil-l be in the class. Next year's applications are certa in to

This coming year will bring with it

was contributed, with more than half a

an even greater challenge to the loyalty

million coming from alumni. Wohlleben

increase ; but again, only a fraction of

alumni have demonstrated in the past.

and Sherman Halls stand today as testi-

these can be admitted. Every effort will be made to have

In the spring, the University will embark

mony to the generosity of alumni and the

on an ambitious campaign to raise three

community in that campaign.

that the application will be coming. It is even more urgent in regard to the admission of daughters of alumni, if you want them to live in the new women's Few buildings on the campus have caused such a flurry of excitement during their construction as has the new women's dormitory rapidly rising at the east end of the property. There's more about the dorm and other bu ilding projects on pages four thru seven, this issue.

from the business, industrial, and com-

Each yr.ar, the University has called

Lackner as soon as possible.

qualified children of alumni among those admitted. But for this to be taken care of, the alumni office must know early The University of Dayton ALUMNUS, established in 1929, is published quarterly for the Alumni Association of the University of Dayton by the Public Relations Department, University of Dayton, 300 College Park Avenue, Dayton 9, O)lio. Entered as second class m atter April 15, 1950, at the post office at Dayton, Ohio, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription price: two dollars per year.

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HE SUPPORT th e University of

dormitory. There will be room for only 100-150 freshmen in that hall when it opens next September. If you want your daughter among them, let Brother Lackner know immediately. Don't put it off. A year or two ahead of time is not too soon.

million dollars to build a new University

Miriam R osenthal and Associates of

Center (Student Union) and a class-

Dayton will again conduct the effort as

room building for the School of Business

they did so successfully in 1956. For suc-

Administration.

cess in 1962, the University will be look-

The need is self-evident to any alum-

ing to her alumni.

nus who has spent time in the present

During the coming months, alumni

makeshift student union; and to any

will be informed in more detail of the

alumnus of the School of Business Ad-

campaign and their part in it. The Uni-

ministration who has taken his classes in

versity is confident that this important

any number of buildings on the campus,

appeal will be received with the same

from the old business annex to the top

d emonstration of loyalty which has

floor of St. Mary's Hall.

characterized the fine alumni-alma

Three million dollars is to be solicited

mater relationship in the past. 3


Here's how the women ' s dorm will look when com pleted next September. One of the two wings of living quarters are at right, with cafeteria and lounges in the one-story section at left. TOP: This aerial view of the upper part of the campus shows the progress of con struction of the Women's Dormitory (below) . In the upper right (marked by an "X") is the approximate location of the new Men's Dormitory, construction of which may get under way as soon as December. At lower right is Founders Hall, the men 's dormitory built in 1954 through a government loan similar to that which is financing the new dormitories . Also in the photograph are the Mechan ical En gin eering Labora tory, the ROTC Building, the Brothers' Cemetery, the new Eastwood parking lot, and in the small building just above the parking lot, the observatory . The Un i versity's property line runs along the roadway leading to the men's dorm site.

BELOW: This view of the front of the campus shows the new roadway construction and the site of the food service facility being built just behind the Fieldhouse.

The changing ca:n1pu.s

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HREE MAJOR construction projects began on the campus during the summer. At the far east end. beyond the M echanical Engineering Laboratory, the University's first women's dormitory in more than tw·entyfive years of coeducation began rising. Toward the front of the campus, con struction of the new food service addition to the east end of the fieldhouse got under way, and in front of St. Mary's H all and the Chapel, bulldozers churned up th e main street and prepared a bed for a newly relocated roadway and land-

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scaping project. The women's residence hall, towering seven stories above the highest spot on the hilltop campus, will be ready for 375 coeds n ext Septembc;. This $1 .6 million dormitory as well as a dorm for men now on the drawing boards are being made possible through a loan from the federal government. The women's hall has been so designed that two more seven-story wings can be added in the futul'e to bt•il'lg its capacity to 900. A student body many times larger than present cafeterias can handle prompted

the $200,000 food service addition to th e fieldhouse. Snack-bar-type facilities will be included in the 10,000-square-foot building which will also serve persons attending sports and en t erta inm ent events in the fieldhouse. The new roadway proj ect in front of St. Mary's H all will serve a double purpose. In addition to beautifying the front of the campus, it will result in a more

effi t iel'lt mo emet'lt of U.D.

tl'~ffie,

pt·o-

viding access from campus roadways to the corner of College Park an d Zeh ler Avenues.

This photo, taken from in f ront of the Mechanical Engineering Laboratory, gi ves an idea of the immensity of the two seven -story wings which will house 375 women .

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THE CHANGING CAMPUS ...

This is how the back of the fieldhouse will look when the food service addition is completed . It will greatly relieve the cafeteria situ ation on the campus. The new roadway, coming not so close to the Chapel and St. Mary's Hall as the former road, will provide an exit at the intersection of College Park and Zeh ler Avenues.

Now gone is the familiar tree-lined campus street In front of St. Mary's Hall and the ChapeL In its place will come a new roadway and landscaping. 6

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BBUHEOH OF THE CLASSES OF 1911, 1936, 1951 N MAY, members of the classes of '11, '36, and '51 got together on the campus for the annual reunion of the golden, silver, and tenth a nniversary classes. It was a big day of getting reacquainted with the campus and wi th old classmates. Highlight of the program was the cocktail party and ba nqu et in the evening, shown here.

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Representing the anniversary classes were: 1911- Elmer Focke, Brother Tom Price, and Francis Murphy ; 1936- Bob Ashman, Lawrence Boeckerman, O scar Fock e, Bill G erhard, Father C. A. Haluska, Bob Hommel, Bill Koverman, Art Lerch, Bob M ercer, Dr. Sloan Robertson , Father Raymond A. Roesch, Ollie Saettel, Carroll Scholl e, a nd Pete Zi erolf : 1951 - Bob Archdeacon, Jack Auer, Dr. Jim Dooley, D r. Frank Frounfelker, Jim Gilvary, D ale Goubeaux, Foster Harris, Frank Hustmeyer, Bill K essler, Fred Krebs, Dr. Jim L eary, Dr. Ed Leschansky, Jack Malone, Dee McAnespie, Schuh Montgomery, Charles Mort, Al Neff, Art Rieger, G. E. Ridgway, M errill Ridgway, Ray Rieger, Dr. Norm Rose. Dick Shell, Howard Smith, Pau lin e Spring, Pat Stueve, Lou Suttman, Jim Trentman, H ank Train, Harold vVehner, Clara Rohr Weisman, Jackie Pohl Zinck, a nd Tom Zinck. Now you old grads from 1912, 1937, a nd 1952, get set for an even bigger reunion next spring! And there'll be some more reunion-ing for the 1911 , 1936, a nd 1951 gangs m October, come Homecoming. 8

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.H CMMER for the pa t t n years or o. eolo } Profe sor G orge H. , pringer ha packed up hi pi k and hammer, amp! ba , Brunton compa , and s \'ral tud ents, a nd ha h ad d for the north woods on an acad mi adven ture which annua l r petition never dull s. Like th e wild ge c which migrat' towa rd the same r gion each year Prof. Spring rand his Oo k of budding g ologists descend (or ascend, more properly, from Dayton ) eac h year on Mich igan's upper p nin ula in que t of the g oloaic, I trea ure in which the 1arquetle ynclinorium abou nd . The occasion is the annual geology department field trip. a pr gram the L'niver ity logy major find almo t indi pen able in their trainin<Y. Though it i:x credit hoUJ ar not r quired for graduation the xperience of the fi ld trip offers a broadening of knowledae not to be found in any la boratory-not even in thos of modern, well-equipp d Wohll eben H all, wh ich th d partment calls home. Bas of operation for th ix-weck ' summe r camp is just outsicl Gwinn, Mich. fift n mil s south of M arquett and Lake uperior. Prior to 1953 the course was conducted in Rh ode Isla nd, but the urrenl lo ation offers many advantage including proximity to Dayton. The region i deep in

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with Mary Shay, alulllni secretary

TN .E we Ia t appeared on the e paaes with our littl e informal chat about the chapter w ve been able to fulfill an ambition of long tanding. That was to get down to Puerto Rico not ju t to get a good look at the i land paradise so closely conn t d with th oci ty of M ary, but to g t together with a group of alumni which is growing rapidly each year. In July w made it. With the most appreciat d h lp of the many brothers and priest at ol gio an Jo e, Colegio Ponceno and the Catholic niversity, \ e had a truly wonderful vacation and with th valued as i ta nce of Bill Hill 40 we had a fine turnout at an alumni meeting on J uly 17. In all, we have clo e to thirty alumni on th island and in past years, b au e of th distance, we've been for cd to neglect them somewhat in r gard t alumni activities. But now, with th e group organ ized under Bill Hill's dir tion , we are looking forward to mu h a tivity out ther in the middle of the Atlantic. After our meeting at Colegio an J os' Brother Jo ph Baumeister wa kind nough to photograph our group. Th picture app ar I ewhere on thi pa"C.

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J eanne, Phil rim ' wif Midge Dick Rail '56, .!em Buch r. Gene ilberman '55, ·aomi Wi lliam-., heila Bueker '60. o~dra F ella · 0, Brother Ri chard Roesch 44 Paulin Gu en che '4 1, Birdie Roper '49 M rri R per, irainia chimoiler '55, Bill ay'. wife Lois, a nd Brother Elmer Dun. ky '38. The me ting was h ld at erra high school in Garden a and the group set th e next meetin " at Newport Dunes on Sept. 23. It'll be an 11 a.m.-to-5 p.m. picnic with more acti\ iti '. planned than they can po . ibly cram into ix hour . ~1 ary

.'u !\filler is chairman for th e day. \\'orking with her are . ondra F lla, h lia Bu ker, Lois Gorman Bill M eyer. Don chimoller Joe K ay Don tofT, and D n Gra . If most encouraain to u h r in Dayton to ee su h a pirit out on th coast.

U.D.'S GEOLOGISTS HEAD NORTH

* * * PE KING of picnics, th 0L :\1BU chapter h ld its [ urth annual picnic \ ug. 6 at Darby .r k Park. Chapter hairman D on

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(Continued on Page 16)

* * June, the LOS A GELE, cha pt r held anoth er meeting, with Bill M yers '3 7, ha irman, presidin g. llcr ' aga in th r was a fine turnout to sec th · . D . m vi and to get the hapl •r rgani7ed for its participation in th ighth annual upport program. Phil rim '35 i dire tina the program in th L. . area with the. e team captain und r him: Fr, nk Bucher '+I. Lois orman '56. Jerry William '56. Don : himoller '5+, J Kay '53 . Bill Gay '46, Ma1 ' u Miller '60, a nd Bill Gu cnsche '·17. l.o at the meeting were Bill M eye rs' wife 10

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-PUERTO RICO MEETING-Seated, left to right, Alumn i Secretary Mary Shay '44, Mrs. Manuel Yanes, U. D. Vice President Father George B. Barrett '32. Mrs. William Hill, Mrs. Miguel Carbonnel; standing, left to right, Brother Donald Wallace ' 58, Gilberta Rivera, Abdo Hawayek ' 59, Camillo Monforte '49 , Brother Albert Rose '27, Manuel Yanes ' 55, Father John Mueller '32. Abili o Colon '60, Hector Martinez Viera ' 60, Bill Hill '40, Brother George Spahn '36. Jorge Blanco ' 62, Miguel Carbonnel '52, Brother Raymond Glemet '37. Father Vincent Plassenthal '36. Also presjlnt at the meeting were Brother Eugene Friederichs '38, Brother Norman Nitoski ' 51, Father Bernard Stueve '29, and Brother Dennis Curry '59. (Photo by Brother Joseph Baumeister ' 19.)

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te pads In hand, students James Felli, Edward' ;l91t...Di!\oiii!PCojr!man make observations and measuremenls of an:fu ~ syncllnorhlm in Michigan's ~ppe r:.P eninsu)a.

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Student David Coleman about to get his pick and hammer et al wet in Lake Superior.

lunch break on the field-in Michit::·'"· not Cuba man. J~'Yles Felli, Joseph Breuer.

for students David Cole

\ J a \'a t torehou e of trea ·ure to delight the geolo!!) tudent. Tn an area orne ten b • fifteen mile , he can dig in e\·et) thingfrom iron ore to gra niti rock formation more than a billion yea r. old laid bare for th e sci ntist by the waYe erosion of Lake. uperior. D termining the stru turc of tit earth in th e a r a, th e locati n and displace ment of fa ults, th e economi c geo logy of mineral deposit.. the age relation ship of rock forma tions , a nd other technical probl ms keep the stu dent busy fro111 eiaht in th e mornincr until n\' in the e\'enino- each day but .'unday during the cour. e of the ix " ·eek . \\' ritten report on th ir findings t·e,·eal a wealth of practical know! dg-e gain d on the trip. II the work is not abm e rrround .. 'ide trip into iron mint•\ and skin-divin a into Lake .'uperior (for tho e who "i h help to round out the earth . tudy. A tua l campsite for the fidd trip is Little Shag L ake, ju. t outside Gwinn. A rustic, a l111ost primiti\'e locatio n , it on·rrs littl in th e way of rei , xation an I rec reation , but plenty in th · way of work and stud y. Two cottages- on for tlw

tudent , the other for the .'pringer family and the o a ional coed geoloui t makina th trip - are headquat ter for thP daily trip into the field and for the map and chart making a nd other paper work . The Finns who ha\· .cltl din this area of :.'\Iichigan han· helped m a ke up fo r the lack of opportuni ties for rrlaxation. however. They br ught with them from Finland the sauna . a team a nd bath ho ttse whic h Prof. Springer describes a. "a sort of Yanke cl. mbake- but you take tlu· place of th e lob tcr.' In the .\GilliG, the ~tudents steam out the grit of the field a nd refre h th body with a cold clip in tlw lake. and. courte y of the Finm. the,·'re then ready fm anothct bu ' day with the pick and h. mmeL Finns f~uncl the atl'a mmt attractin· ince its ge graphy and ~eology :1Im )st dupli ate their homeland. \Icu arc employed in them. m iron mine-. on the penin ula. E OF the young r sc1ence m a ientific "oriel. geology has been making its mark a t th e l ' ni1 crsity of Davton sin e it was first introduced into the c urriculum in th e · 1920's under a n eminent Europea n geo logist.

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Dt. P.l\11 K ohler .•md .lltt·r hint. llnllhn l.nuis . •lkkl. It' 1l'.\l !!IIlii th lw!!:.\11 shonl~ :1ltn l'wf. "pring-cr :~nd thl' \\ otld \\ ', 11 II •. J.·, arri,-ccl on thl' 'cent· in IC116 .. \ \e:lr latct. tlw departllll'nt h:~d its fir~t ma jot. l .an1 .\fcCrc e~·ey fnnnd IIH· o.,cienre to his liking and \\<I; .1\\.Hdcd l .D.\ fit~t .bach,·lor of ~c i cnce in gcolog-.,.' in 1950. Larn is now with the l ' . S. Gcologir~ll S111\-e,·. ' ' · F or se1eral years. the clcp.u tnwnl plndcled along with other 'l'it·nce departments in till' nt111dcd facilitie' .1n till' fourlh fln<'r of .'t. \Ia n\ ll.tll. 1n.tinta111ing a s]m,. stl':1th gr "th. In 1958. it mmed along-" ith chemi. try and chemical engineering into the ne11 \\ oltlle1wn llall where it nn\\ sene,; a total of forty-fom majnts. Prof. .' pringer i proud to point nut that while the nationwide trend in geolog: enrolllllcnts i~ clm1 n. l..' .D.' i continuing a steady gro,,·th. Pat t of thi . may be attributed . undoubtrdh·, to the fact th at l'.D. is one of ,·ery few C:atho li colleg's in th country with ,\11 accreclite I geology dep:~r t 111 ·nt. ( fn addition to Prnf. Springer as c hai rma n , th e department inc ludes Dr. Il nrace C:nryell a nd Mrs. K a thryn

(;1-:1) on the full-time faculty. and J ohn H erron on tit parttime taiT . .-\]Jan I [on·ath i~ on leal'!' studyincr for hi\ doctorate.) \\' !tete does the g<·nlogio.,t !.\O after hi. fiel d trip and .Jitn he has won his degn•(•? M an) go on to gradual school f01 :1ch ·an eel deg rees, of o ttrS{. Then, most will nter th e petroleum inclt1stry. Second la rgest group will go into 111ining. Sta te and fede ra l geo logica l sur\'eys rank nrxt in arec rs. nd in fourth place is teac hing. Though if . rugged, llHhtl~ outdoor type of work, ~<colog) doc.,n't !)('long l>trictly to the male. Of . ixty-fi, e who Ita\<' !wen !!raduatcd \\ith gcolog) degtees from C.D .. fi~<· ha\t' been women. Amon~ the Clll rent forty-four majors. hm,<'\l't. none is a female . l ncidt·ntallr, Prof. prin(Tcr i. quick to nb etYe that on the ummer field trip , the women tudent' lt.l\ r alway done a. well . s the male . \\'it h st;mmer m·er and another field trip in the tl'COt d hooks, it's back to th e classn 0111 a nd lab. But th e no rth woods ach-e nture will begin a new nf•x t .Jun e for another gro ttp of lleclgling geologists.

<3 PHOTOS, LEFT TO RIGHT: Wading through the lake for a first-hand look at geological formations on Little Presque Isle. Skin -diving, for those with the Inclination, helps round out the earth study. That's Prof. Springer at left. Peridotite, a mass of molten rock on Presque Isle, holds the attention of thes e students. On the shore of Lake Superior. f ive U. D. geologists measure the a tt itude of rock strata in 500-m illion-year·old sandstone dat ing back to the Cam. brian age. Prof. and Mrs. Springer and German Shepherd " Duke" admire the rustic setting of Little Shag lake , site of the geology summer camp. Allan Hor· vath. now a member of th e d epa rtm ent on leave . took the picture while on the field trip as a student several years ago. Other photos on th ese pages were taken by Prof. Springer.

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~速~lfW tl[~~~ w~voo oo~~~w

Young Harry Baujan when he came to U.D. in 1927.

BY JOE McLAUGHLIN, SPORTS EDITOR 14

LOOKING BACK over Harry Baujan's football coaching career as I did last summer, one becomes an admirer of the man, his employers, ball players, assistants, and the Flyer fans who remained with Harry through the years. It's been forty years since Han-y stepped on the U.D. campus in 1922 but you can find dozens of men, including his old players, who still follow the grid fortunes of the Flyers. They've never lost their interest even though Harry has been out of coaching and in the Director of Athletics' chair since 1946. They rejoiced through Harry's numerous successes and they suffered, as he did, through the many rebuffs and heartaches. It follows then that they can understand the problems of the current grid tutor, Stan Zajdel. Zajdel wasn't yet born when Harry began his tenure at Dayton but, in one year at the grid helm, Stan has experienced similar rebuffs and heartaches. Coach Stan has suffered an even greater heartache, in one respect. He, despite all his work and devotion to duty, had to labor through a 1-9 record last fall, a burden Harry never had to carry. Still Stan has bounced back just as Harry had done on many an occasion. He refuses to look to the past but thinks constantly of the future. If his upcoming freshman team produces, as it should, Zajdel and company could be on its ~ay. Harry had to build personnel upon personnel man~ tim~s during his coaching years. Stan is in Chapter No. 1 m th1s respect as was Harry when he took the head reins for the 1923 season. Stan's first unit played good football as long as it was able in each game but wore out as did Harry's forces in that first season. Harry's effort paid off early with 7-3 and 7-2 records in 1924 and 1925. No one expects Stan to do that this fall because, outside of Ohio State, it is generally conceded that Harry and Father Collins have given Zajdel the toughest collegiate schedule in Ohio. The four leading contenders for the Mid-American Conference title, Bowling Green, Ohio U., Miami and Kent State; a favorite in the Missouri Valley Conference championship race, Wichita; and two great independents, Detroit and Holy Cross, are a part of the Flyers' schedule. Yet upon Zajdel's shoulders rests the immediate on-thefield future of Flyer football. He can only experience success if he recruits the type of flashy backs and hard linemen who performed for Baujan over twenty-one seasons. To some degree Zajdel has competent, or promising, backs in veterans Andy Timura, Earl Spivey, Frank Gniazdowski, Bob Michigan, Dan Laughlin, and Jack Unverferth, and newcomers Bob Ireton, Tom La Beau, and Jim Overman, and key linemen in George Kelly, Bob Heckman, Tom Gray, Ron Budzik, Dave Mitro, Chuck Sweeney, and Bob Donley. As he adds to this talent, he hopes to improve his squads as did Harry in going from 4-5 to 7-3, 7-2 and 8-2 in the next three seasons. History, as we shall detail, has recorded Harry's step up the ladder. The verdict is still out on Stan. While it is not possible to record all Harry's achievements in this piece, it should be interesting to you, as it was to us, to go over those yellowed newspaper clippings. Our principal aim was to write stories for the coming football game programs but we can preview some of this history for you. It started auspiciously. A daring, resourceful quarterback, Lou Mahrt; speedy runners, Walt Achiu and Augie Cabrinha; strong ball carriers, Jerry Fulweiler and Cyril Scharf, and a crop of sixty-minute linemen opened the way for better things in U.D. football by licking Indiana Central, 161-0, in the 1923 opener. By the time the present stadium was opened in 1925, these men had compiled an 11-8 record. This was a start and the improvement continued when

the Flyers started the 1925 campaign with a 45-0 victory over Wilmington College in the new stadium. Mahrt, by this time captain of the team, engineered the Flyers to the triumph. Jock McGarry and H erb Eisele combined for a fifty-fiveyard touchdown pass, Achiu drop-kicked the ell.'1:ra point, and Cabrinha added to the point total as the stadium dedication game against John Carroll went 17-0 in U .D.'s favor. Ed Yagow, Bill Belanich, and Bill Blake contributed to the fun that day as they did most of the season. The Flyers were undefeated and their goal line was uncrossed in five stadium games that first year. Part of that gang continued their fine work in 1926, winning all three games in the Ohio Conference. The overall record was 8-2, losing only to the undefeated Haskell Indians and the once-beaten Holy Cross eleven. In 1927, 11,000 fans jammed U.D. stadium to watch the Flyers down Wittenberg 7-3 on Thanksgiving Day and Duck Swan's long runs featured the 1928 season. He ran seventy-two yards for a TD on a rain-swept field in a 13-7 losing effort against Brown at Providence, Rhode Island, and personally licked Chicago Loyola, 12-7, scoring two touchdowns in the last five minutes. The Flyers p layed the first night football game in Dayton history in 1929 beating Indiana Central, 33-0. The Flyers won their first seven games in 1932 before John Carroll upset them 7-0 and in 1933 the Flyers opened with three former Stivers High School aces, J ohn Heller, Marty Armbruster, and Ed Meisner, in the backfield. Heller scored both touchdowns in the opener against Adrian but later in the year was injured twice and a promising career was ended. The 1935 season was significant for U.D .'s first appearance in the Buckeye Conference. They had a 2-2-1 record in the conference which was a surprise and Vince McDonough's long runs highlighted the season. He concluded a great career by scoring two touchdowns and setting up the third in a 19-0 defeat of John Carroll in the rain in Municipal Stadium, Cleveland. The Wonderful Years, as the "oldtimers" call them, went from 193 7 through 1939. The Flyers, with a great collection of backs and linemen, won eighteen games, lost eight and tied one- that memorable 6-6 deadlock with St. Mary's in San Francisco in 1939. Jack Padley scored the touchdown as he did so many others in three years. The era started significantly enough with sophomore Ed Marre going seventy yards for a touchdown on his first scrimmage play against Wittenberg in 1937. The Flyers won 28-7. Harry had so much backfield talent in the first two Wonderful Years that he alternated starting backfields quite frequently with equal success. Joe Thomas, Padley, Coley McDonough, and Marre were in one backfield while such as Jean Stapenhorst, J oe Zotkiewice, Norm Hoelzer, and Willie Bank were in the other unit at various times. The Flyers' 1937 6-0 defeat of Ohio U. on the final play of th e game a t Athens broke the Bobcats' long horne winning streak which had started in 1929. Then the Blue and Red came home to stop Western Reserve's twenty-eight game streak without a loss, 18-6. Zotkiewice, Padley, M arre, and Stapenhorst were heroes in this game. Then came the "rebuilding," or as we like to call them, the Forgotten Years, 1940 through 1942, when the Flyers won twenty-one, lost only seven. Such men as Bill Knisley, Bill Moran , Joe Quinn , Gene Westendorf, Beno Keiter, Lou Priske, Bo Powers, and Joe Paluzzi all drew rave notices from the newspapers of those days. World War II halted Flyer football for three years before Harry closed out his coaching career with a 6-3 record in 1946. Jack Castignola and Don Pinciotti were the principal offensive weapons.

And there it is. R ea lly onl y a sma ll part of Harry's coaching career. We a rc covering more of this in the Ohio U. game program 011 October 7 and will add at least two more instalments in the oth er home game programs. When you read those old newspaper clippings you realize that with a great deal of work and understanding on the part of a ll University personn el and fans U.D. football can again be a great part of the University and City of Dayton life.

The " Blond Beast" today.

15


(Continued from Page 10)

·ifcrt report "'tho e who attend d had a really wonderful time talking, playing ball, hiking, and u ing th playground. It wa. decided that we would try to get th a me facilities for next year."

\VE arc happy to send along greetings to the EW YORK chapter by usincr that beautiful kyline at the top of the column. Along with the "TC ·ting cro the appr iation of the alumni office for all th ex client "ork the NC'w Y01·k groups have been doing. \ ith u h a large number of our students each year coming from New York State, w fc I the hapters there can be of even greater s rvi e to alma mater thr ugh their assi ·tan e in recruiting and other public

relations efforts-not to mention heering the gang on at the Holiday Fe ti\·al c minrr up in December.

* * * THE group in W A HINGTON i planning a meeting for late this month or early October. Watch for an announ ement of time, place, and program from o- hairmen Francis Gab I '30 and Landis Gephart '40.

hou c Feb. 1 7 and a permanent plaque honoring them will be placed in the fieldhou e lobby. Next year, and in ea h ubequent year three new name will b(' added to the list and honored. Your nomination should be of former ath letcs. not necessarily living at this tim , whom you consider outstanding in any intercollegiate sport who has won a d gree or diploma from St. Mary's Institute, t. Mary' ollege or the Uni\·er ity of Dayton. All nominees mu t have been crraduatcd at least five year prior to The award for profe ional achie\·c- selection, explaining the limited 1950ment went to J udcre Robert 1cBride '34 1956 period. Deadline for your nominations i~ "who for many years has distingui hrd himself, fir. t a an attomey. and then ::~s October 11. You may return the nomia judge in the Municipal Court of Day- nations form along with your \' te for ton and in the ourt of Common Pleas th new alumni officers in the em·elopc of Montgomery County .... " Elwood F. you've received with homecomin<r inforZimmer '39 receive I the ci\·ic achieve- mation in a recent mailino·. The selection committee choosing thC' ment award. The xecuti\·e \·ice president of the Davton Area Chamber of final ten names for the Hall will includr Commerce wa ~ited for his "significant Don Donoher. a chairman representing influence in de\·eloping the intere t and the Mont<Tomery Count chapter; a repre entati\·e of the national alumni a. ocoordinating the effort of the busin iation to be appointed by the natiooal leader of the Dayton area with a \'iew to assuring the continued growth and pre id nt: the LniYersity Athl tic Direcprogre _ of our community.· For out- tor, Harry C. Bauja:n: and two CniYerstanding chapter n ·ice, Jim Gil vary '51 sity staff members to be appointed by the was named award ·e in recognition of his athletic board. Two local sports writer many years of acti\'C service and leader- will rve as consultants to the sclc tion comm ittee. ship in chapter work. Now it's ob\·ious many of you will not A special award went to Brother Elmer Lackner, alumni director, for his be familiar with fiye or eYen fewer tellar efforts in behalf of the chapter and the athlete from any gi\·en period. But we urac you to place in nomination those entire alumni a ociation. • amed director f the chapter for the you do know and those you feel hould ha\·e a place on thi elite li t. \\'c d likC' 1961-62 alumni war were thee: Loi K appeler Brei '49, Pet Bo ·le '52 Don to send pccial encouragement to . ome Butler '47, Don Donoher '54, Richard of the old timers to get their nomination \V. Fletcher '40. Rorrer Keith '54, John pr pared so that there will be a solid repC. Kussman '43, Judy Sachs Martin '57, re ntation of early athletes on the list. The Athletic Hall of Farn can be an Sue Schneider '60, .James R. StaA'or I '57, Shirley G hring Walsh '54, and im t r ssive project if a ll of you will take part in the nominations. Robert .J. Wening '44.

* * *

M

ONTGO~ERY

0 TY chapter, with it 4,000 m mber , can always be expected to be full of ne\,-s for our column. No exception thi month. At the big J une dinncr dance at the Plantation ountry ' lub new officers were elected and thC' annual achievement awards wer announ d . J ack Bramlage '52. who also er c as trea urer of the national a ociation, wa elected pr ident to su ceed Rockv Whalen '47. Dick Durbin '55 was elrcBRAMLAGE ted vice Rr siden t. and .Joan Moore Thesing '55 was rrr lc ted secretary-treasurer. 16

* * *

The term of three member of the PROJECT certain to arou e great int r t among alumni, b ard of director of the alumni a o iaan thletic Hall of Fame, has tion and of two member of the athl tic been inaugurated by the Montgomery board come to an end next month. You County chapt r. Purpo e of the project will rccei\·e a ballot in the mail soon. In is to honor ar at L.D. athletes .incr the meantime, we pre cnt the candidate. 1900. H err'. how it will operate: for th Jl\'c offices on the next page so In this i sue of The ALUMNUS, on that yo u may have some background inpage 23, is a form a ll alumni are urged formation to help you decide your \·otc. to complete. It call for your nomination of not more than twenty-five outstanding athlete for the Hall of Fame. Your nomination hould be limited to fi\'C from each of these periods: 1900-1919. 1920-1929. 1930-1939 1940-1949. and 1950-1956. A election committe~ will stud y your nomination and choose two from each period. The ten selected will be pres nted trophies at the Fly r Duquesne basketball game in the field-

A

CANDIDATES FOR BOARD OF DIRECTOR S, ALUMNI ASSOCIATION (three to be elected) Barth J . Snyder '31-'34 Professor of Bu siness Manage. men! and Economics, and Chair· man, Department of Business Management. U . D. Secretary, Central Building As sociation, Dayton. Jack Brown ' 26 Finance Director of Athletics. Ticket Manager, U. D.

Betty Mayl Overwein '43 Housewife. former member of the staff of the department of public relations, U. D.

Marilyn Catron Nolan '53 Housewife, current member of bo-ard, for re-election .

J.

ELLIS MA YL '08 Permanent member of the University's athletic b~:>ard and former presid nt of the alumni association and its Montgomery County chapter. Father of BETTY OVERWEIN '43 and brother of EUGENE '20 and JOSEPH '06. In Dayton Aug. 2.

MRS. MARY PFLA M FISCHER Sister of GEORGE '21. May 29. MR . MAY KI PERSKY Mother of DR. PAUL '43. June 26. HELEN M. BOECKMAN Sister of JOS EPJ/ '49. June 24.

BROTHER ALOYSIUS C. DOYLE '19 Mathematics tea cher at Riordan High chool, San Francisco, and former director of athletics at the University of Dayton. In San Francisco May I 0. ARMI T MAHRT '21 Well known in athletic circles in the community. In St. Cloud, Minn ., May 7.

EDWARD F. KAEPPEL Father of jEAN PORTER '52. May 6.

.JO EPH M . STA BLE '10 Founder of Stauble Food Products Company in Dayton and as a memb r of th e Montgomery County Boxing commission for some forty years, helped promote the first Golden Gloves tournament in Dayton. In Greenville, _Tunc 7. BERTIE M. HARRIS '52 D ayton elementary school teacher. Wife of LORENZO '51. In Dayton, May 27. CLEME:--.lS _T. ROSSE BACH '10 Hotel and restaurant owner in Greece, .Y., .July 21.

Charles W. Whalen J r. '42 Professor and chairman of the departonent of retailing, U. D. State senator. Current member of boaro , for re-e lectio n. Cha rles Helldoerfer '33 Partner, Helldoerfer- Castellinl. Inc., Dayton contractors.

FOR ATHLETIC BOARD (two to be elected) John Chaney '53 Dayton manager, Ditto, In c. 1959 chairman, football ticket campaign.

EMERSON HORNER '35 A practicing lawyer in Dayton for hventyfi,·e years and a teacher at Meadowdale High School. In D ayton, Aug. 5. DR. MAX L. WOOL '41 Prominent Massachusetts psychiatrist, a staff member of Beth I srael H ospital, a faculty member of Tufts University School of Medicine and H arvard Medical School, and director of psychiatric services at Wellesley. In Newton , Mass., .July 31. JACK REED STOUT A senior in the School of Business Administration. In Dayton. May 8. DR. HARRY BRAU '42 Professor of psychology at the University of Pittsburgh and former member of the faculty of the University of Maryland. JOHN H. GLICK Brother of THOMAS '40. May 30. DANA GENUNG Father of PAUL '36. July 17.

Bob Butler '42 Owner, Butler Heating Com · pany, Dayton. 1961 chairman, football ticket campaign. Jack Zimmerman '50 Mechanical engineer, Marquardt Corporation, Dayton. Current member of board, for re -election. Joseph Poelking '32 Owner, Poelking & Marian Bowling Lanes. Dayton. Donor. Vinnie Westendorf tennis scholarships, U. D. Current member of board, for re-election.

FIVE OF THESE MEN AND WOMEN WILL REPRESENT YOU . When you receive your ballot, VOTE .

MRS. HELEN M . T TICE Mother of PATRICIA SUTTMANN '48. Apr. 25.

GEORGE B. \'0 DERHEIDE Father of RONALD '60. July 10. MRS . ESTHER R. LIENESCH Wife of ED WARD '26 and mother of MARY LO SCHAEFER '51. Apr. 30. A C ST TENDORF Father of BERNARD '59 and JOSEP!l '60. Apr. 29. HAROLD PATRICOFF Fath ·r of J ACK '3 1. May 2. MRS . EDNA M. JAUCH Wife of LAWRENCE '03 and mother of MARY SCHWELLER '54, MARTHA HORIV A Til '55, and ED IV ARD '52. May 25. DA \ ' ID JE. EF KY Father of JACK '48. May I. _TOI--l~

T . CA LFIELD Brother of RAYMOND '27. June 12.

ALPHONSE .T. LAMOUREUX Father of C JJARL ES '30. M ay 4. KARL F. KOVERMAN Father of WILLTAM '36 and JACK '52. May 21. THOMAS E . STEBBINS Son of the late WALTER '49. May 23. HAROLD D . GALBRAITH Father of ROBERT '50 and HAROLD '52. Aug. 9. 1'\ATHA A. B RCESS Father of DOROTHY WAG ER '50. June 20. ADAM C. TRAPP Father of BYRON '60. July 28.

Sharkey named to editor's job

DR. STARLI G KAY Father of DR . STARLTNG '57. Aug. 13.

ANN HOEFFEL Six-year-old daughter of THOMAS '50. May 13. MRS. KATHLEEN RYAN Widow of the la te DR. CHARLES '08. July 6. MRS. MARY K. LIBECAP Mother of DR. LAWRENCE '35. Jun e 30. MRS. ELEA 'O R D. MUTH Wife of HOWARD '32. May I. THOMAS E. HERRMAN Father of THOMAS '50. June 10. MICHAEL J. BALSOM Father of MICHAEL '60. May 27. DANIEL W. ALLEN Father of MARY KATHERINE POWERS '58. June 9.

DON HARKEY '34, '44 has been nam d ex cutive editor of Catholic Boy and atholic Mis magazines published by the Holy Ghost Fathers at otre Dame, Ind . A well-known Catholic author harkey won the Marian Library Medal two years ago for his book Our Lady of Beauraing. H e s a member of the board of the U.D. a lumni association. 17


Lynch, Pierce, Fenner, and Smith , GEORGE HUMM has been elected a stockholder of the corporation. The action is similar to becoming a partner in a partnership. BROTHER WALTER E . PUCKETT received his doctorate in English from St. Louis University in June.

1941 1911

GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY CLASS

Representing the class at the May reunion were FRANCIS MURPHY, procurement contracting officer for the Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB, and ELMER ]. FOCKE, treas urer of William Focke Sons Company, Dayton meatpackers. Among those unable to attend was LAWRENCE STRATTNER, retired vice president of the West Virginia Pulp and Pap er Company, who is still residing in Bronxville, N. Y.

1923 FATHER EDWIN MOOSBRUGGER observed th e silver anniversary of his ordination as a Jesuit pries t in June. He's currently on the staff at St. I gnatius' Hi gh School, Chicago.

1929 FRANK KOHLRIESER , after thirty-two years in the military service, is now assistant to the general merchandise manager at MayD&F department store in Denver. He's living in Aurora. JOHN BOHAN's son Patrick celebrated hi~

first Solemn Mass in Cl@veland in May.

1930 ANNA MARIE RYDER has retired after teaching for many years in the Dayton Public School system.

1931 FRANK MARSHALL was a proud man in May when a new wing of Wilson Memorial Hospital, Sidney, was dedicated. Frank is president of the hospital's board of trustees.

1932 BROTHER JOHN PERKO, a member of the fa cu lty of St. Louis High School , Honolulu, since 1958, is now director of St. Joseph's College, Yokohama, Japan .

1933 Visitin g the campus from Drexe l Hill , Pa. , in May was .TIM CLEARY. BROT!-IER GEORGE MCKENZIE received his doctorate from \<\'estern R ese rve University in Jun e. "Stereodome" is the name CHARLES KEMPER has given to a new invention, a kind of three-dimensional rotating machine exp ec ted to have industr ial uses as a mixer, bl ender, or in cas tin g processes. Kemper is proprietor of K em Products in Dayton.

1934 VICTOR REIUNG, general manager of the M ockrn Industri a l Pl astic division of the Duriron Company, ha's been clcncd chairman of the Fluorocarbom di vision of th e Socirty of thP. Pla st ics Indu stry. 18

BROTHER DONALD MCKEE, former member of the faculty at Cincinnati's Purcell High School, is now principal of Hamilton Catholic High School. BILL ROSENCRANS is now with Davis Buick in Davton .

1935 GEORGE WALTHER, ]R . is now president of the D ayton Steel Foundry Company, succeeding his father who died in April. With the firm since 1933 , George will continue as a director and general manager.

1936

SILVER ANNI VERSARY CLASS

BOB ASHMAN continues as manager of Standard R egister's Middle Atlantic Division in BaJa Cynwyd. Pa. LT.-COL. RALPH CONNERS is in Washington as chief of the solid state sciences division of the Ai'r Force Office of Scientific Research. BI LL GERHARD is a cost accountant for the City of Dayton. He and Rose Anne have five chi ldren. BOB HOMMEL is director of systems dynamic analysis in the Aeronautical Systems Command, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. DR. SLOAN ROBERTSON is head of research and development with Goodyear Aircraft in Phoenix, Ariz. OLLIE SAETTEL is in Dayton with Delco as an application and sales engineer.

BROTHER GEORGE SPAHN

i~

chair·

man of the science department at Colegio San Jose, Rio Piedras, P.R. DICK WEBER is in Akron with Firestone as assistant manager of th e cos t administration department. BROTHER VINCENT WOTTLE, after a few years at th e Catholic University of Puerto Rico , has returned to the chemistry department faculty at U.D.

1938 DICK HEMPELMAN, former assistant secretary, has been named secretary and a director of the Premier Rubber Manufacturing Company in Dayton.

1939 DR . ALMA BRAUN KELLY and family have moved to Des Moines, Iowa, where she is now practi cing. ROY GOSS has been named executive director of the Methodist Hom e for the Aged at Danbury, Conn. Dayton attorney Gl?F:GORY KARAS is president of the loca l Presidents' Club. BOB MORAN is an assistant plant superintendent of the Florida Power and Light Company in Miami. .f! M Kl?UMHANSL. a professor of physics. is new director of Cornell University's Labora tory of Atomic :md Solid State Physics .

1940 B I LL IIILL , in San Juan, P.R .. is with the Earl K. Burton Company. He was chairman of an alumni meeting on the island in July. (Sec Mary Shay's "Visiting the Chapters ," this issue.) Mana g<' r of tiH· Dayton officr of Merrill

1942 State Senator CHARLES W. WHALEN has announced his candidacy for lieutenant governor in next May's primary. JOHN ASPELL received his master' s degree in education at Claremont Graduate School. JOHN SOMERS has been appointed supervisor of city parks and recreation bureau of golf in Dayton. Previously he had served the city as supervisor of recreation centers and playgrounds. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Moorman (MAGDALENE SHAY ), a daughter, in May.

1944 ED I SON SICKMAN is new headmaster of Lakemont Academy, Lakemont, N.Y. He's been with the prep school for three years , and prior to being named headmaster, served as· acting president and master in mathematics. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. John Esselstein

(ADf:LE KLOPF ), a son, in July; and to Mr. and Mrs. JIM BERES, their fourth child , second son, James Mi chael, in .J une.

1945 BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. JOHN FARNBACHER , their third child , Barba ra Ann , in July.

1946 DR. DON KREITZER, formerly with Marquette U ni,·ersi ty. has joined the faculty of New M exico State University, University Park, where he'll be teaching political science and American govern m ent. MARRIED : TV Actor DEAN MILLER to Ida Wagner, in J une .

1947 M I LT TOSKY has been named director of vocational and industrial arts education for Volusia County, Fla. In this position. Milt supervises a ll levels of vocational education in that Florida county. He had previously served as director of the vocational division of D<Jytona Beach .1 unior College. FATI-IF:R JOSF:PH PRIF:STLE}' is now chapbin at St. Joseph 's College. Yokohama. Japan . BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. BOB BERNER. their second child . first daughter. Elizabeth Anne . in May: and to Mr. and Mrs. Bl LL SAY F.R. their sixth chi ld. third daughter. Marjorie. in J u11f': to Mr. and Mrs. JOHN STEINBRUF:GGE . their first chi ld. Theresa Marie . in August.

1948 Wi th Standard Reg-ister 111 D ayton stnce

1948. RAY FORTUNE has been named assistant genera l manag-er of the finn . DENNIS GR IFFIN is now assistant director of Dow C h emical Company's physical research laboratory. TOM ROTTERMAN has been named manager of Rike's new suburban store to open this fall. DR . ROBERT FINCH is specializing in interna l medicine and has offices on Salem .'\,·enue in Dayton. MARGAI?ET DIERKEN is with Turnburke. Brock and R aines in Clearwater. Fla. SISTF:l? AI. AUDREY BOURGEOIS has been awarded h er doctor of philosophy degree bv the Catholic University of America. In North Haven, Conn. , ED HERRMAN has been named national accounts manager for the SoundScriber Corporation .

1949 CAMILLO MONFORTE, in Ponce, P.R. , is with the Bigas Bakery. He has two children. RAY MILLER is new Dayton sales manager for th e Blue Bird Baking Company. DR. LUIS MAI?RERO , formerly associated with the Bayamon District Hospital in San Ju an, P.R ., is studying in the United States. MARRIED: JIM BORDEWISCH to Tursia Shaw, in April. BORJ\: to Mr. and Mrs. NORRIS HELLWIG, a son, in July ; to Mr. and Mrs. BOB l"OUNG, a daughter, Pamela, in November ; and to Mr. and Mrs . JIM ALDER, a son, Mark Edward, in April.

1950 BOB MINNERUP is now living in Centerville. DALE BABIONE and family (ANNE GRIFFIN '51) hiwe moved from Dayton to Falls Church. Va. D a le will be workin g in the office of the Secretary of the Air Force in the Pentagon. BILL HOBEN of U .D.'s School of Busin ess Administration faculty has been elected a member of th e American Institut e of Certified Publi c Accountants. DELORES LUDWICK MEEK won her master of educa ti on degree from Miami University in June. DR. BOB LEE is practicing ophthalmology in Honolulu. CAPT. H . D. MATHENEY recently completed the officer career co urse at the Chemical School. Fort M cC lellan. Ala. He's been in the sen ·ice since 1953. JIM RILEY is new manager of Callery Chemical's defense produ cts department office in Dayton. DR. MARY ]0 HUTH has been promoted to associate professor at St. Mary's College. Notre Dame, Ind. DR. ARIEL RODRIGUEZ-MARTINEZ is practicing in Jayuya, P.R. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. DICK ROLL, their ninth child. fifth son , Andrew. in May: to Mr. and Mrs. TOM SHEETZ, a son, in August; to Mr. and Mrs. BOB WOURMS ( ANN FITZGERALD '46), a daughter, in August; to Mr. and Mrs. JOE WHITE, a daughter. in August ; to Mr. and Mrs. JACK ZIMMERMAN, twin daughters , th ei r third and fourth chi ldren. Anne Mari e a nd Mary Lynn, in Ma y; and to Mr. a nd Mrs. Di ck Harmon (GEO RGIA O'CONNELL) their fifth daughter, Martha Margaret, in June.

1951

TENTH AN NI VERSARY CLASS

In th e last issue of The ALUMNUS we put RAY HIEBER , village solicitor of Bell-

brook , in the 1922 Class Notes. It's hi s fa th er who's the 22er. R ay belongs to '51, naturally. DR . JIM LEARY has opened an office for the practice of internal medicine on Far Hills A,·enue in Dayton. FATHER HENRY SETTER, ordained a priest .of the Society of Mary two years ago m Swttzerland. celebrated his first M ass in his 'home parish. St. Savior's, Cincinnati. last month. HARI<Y G IAMBRONE is new assistant desig~ director for M erchandise Displays , In c .. 111 D ayton. BROTHER FRANCIS MULLAN received his doctorate in mathematics from St. John 's University, New York , in Jun e. HOWARD PRITCHARD is in Baltimore with the Martin Company. He and Carol have four boys. Miami University h as awa rd ed BOB SPRENG his master of education degree and JACK STEVENSON his master of arts . FATHER FRANCIS NAKAGAWA, former chairman of th e department of theology at Chaminade College, Honolulu, is now with the Society of Mary's Japan ese province, assigned to Tokyo. JOHN AUER is in Columbus doing field work with th e Big Brother Association. BARBARA YOX BERNARD (C HARLES '52) is a D ayton homemaker with four children . In Canton, DICK BLAES is a senior engineer with Ohio Power, supervisor of the IBM computer installation. He has two children. KEN BORNHORST is with National Cash Register's advanced development division as an electrical research engineer. He has three children. SISTER M. ROSAIRE BREE is mistress of novices at St. Michael 's Convent, R eading, Pa. In Cleveland) DICK BR Q(:KMAN is a senio r sales correspond ent with the Harris Seybold Company. BOB BRUGGEMAN is teaching French and Latin at Dayton Fairview High School. SHIRLEY KRUMHOLZ DAVIS is living in D ayton. She and Bob ha ve three children. A real esta te broker, JOHN DORAN is in North Palm Beac h , Fla. SISTER M . CORDIA EHRMANN is teaching science and mathematics at Mount St. Mich ae l Hi gh School, R eading, Pa. DR . FRANK FROUNFELKER is practi cing dentistry in Dayton. H e and Mary have fiv e children . JOHN GLEASON is an assistant professor of history at th e University of Notre Dame. Livin g in T allmadge, DALE GOUBEAUX is a senior stress analyst with Goodyear Aircraft in Akron . He has his master's degree from Case. In Long Beach. Calif., DON GRAS is president of an insurance agency bearing his name. H e and Georgia have three children. In Dayton , ED GRAUL has his own insurance agency. H e and Shirley have five ch ildren. DR. TOM GRAUL is with the department of plast ic surgery at Franklin Hospital, San Francisco. BILL GREASER is in Framingham, Mass., as branch sales manager with the MicroSwitch division of the MHR Company. In Claremont, Calif., DAN GROSZEWSKI is a senior electrical engineer with Convair. BERNARD GUILFOYLE is teaching and coachin g at St. Joseph's High School, Cleveland. H e an d Joanne h ave six children. DICK HACKMAN is principal of Day-

ton 's Fort McKinley School. FOST F-R H A I? /US is production manager for the Harris- Thomas Company in Dayton . Li vin g in North Benton , IRMA HEINZ is an instructor in medical nursing at the St. Thomas Hospita l School of Nursing in Akron . MATHEW HERMETZ , living in Miami sburg, is teaching art at Smith School in Oakwood . BOB HILTON , with an L.L.B. from Southern M et hodist , is an a ttorney in Dallas, Tex. MARY SLATTERY JANK is a homemaker in Watertown , N. Y. , and has fiv e chi ldren. ED JANNING (R ITA TEGEDER '50) is a project leader at the U. D . R esearch Institute. RUDY KAPITAN is assistant cas hi er with the American Trust and Savings Bank in Whiting , Ind. VICTOR KECK is a project coordinator with Chrysler Airtemp in D ay ton. In Parma H eights, TOM KELBLEY is a counselor at Schaaf .T unior Hi gh Schoo l. H e has his master's degree from Western Rese rve. ANTHONY KELLY is now an associate systems engineer with IBM in Garden City, N . Y. BILL KERCHER is vice president of Radiation , In c., in Melbourn e, Fla. With NCR in D ayton , BILL KESSLER is a department h ead in the electrical engineering division . KEVIN KIRSCH is a stock broker in Sierra M adre, Calif. H e and Betty Lou have fiv e chi ldren. FRANK KREIN, a registered representa tive of th e New York Stock Exchange, is a securities salesman with Quinn and Company in D enver. BROTHER ALBERT KUNTEMEIER is treasurer and teacher at Vianney High School, Kirkwood , Mo. In Hobbs, N.M., MARCELLUS LAC HEY is senior sales representative and resident salesman with NCR. DON LANGE is chief ph ysical therapist at the Lexin gton Clinic, L exi ngton , Ky. JOHN LARISH is in Indianapolis with Ansco. DR . BOB LINDON is a resi dent physician at Nassau Hospital , Mineola, N. Y. DR. JERRY LOGAN is attached to the Navy's deep sea divers school in Washington. DR . DAVID LUCID is an osteopathic physician in Li vonia , Mich . R esiding in Elizabethtown, Pa. , BOB LU KEY is an Air Force p ersonnel officer at Olmstead AFB. BROTHER SAMUEL LUM is teaching music and Spanish at St. Louis High School, Honolulu . BROTHER BERNARD MEDEI ROS is teaching at Chaminade High School, Los Angeles. BILL MILLER is living in Metairie, La., as a geologist with Pan Ameri can Petroleum Corporation. LLOYD MONNIN is a supervising principal at Hustead Junior High School and E!eHERB MEIER is in Tucson, Ariz., as a systems project engineer with Hughes Aircraft. FATHER BERNARD MEIRING, member of the Society of the Precio us Blood, is studying toward his doctorate at the U niversity of California. He's a member of the faculty of St. Joseph's College, Rensselaer, Ind. HUBERT MILLER is an assistant professor of history in Latin America at St. Mary's University, San Antonio, Tex. 19


men tary School and is living in Yellow Springs, Ohio. In Westport, Conn., DICK MONTAGUE is manager of engineering administration for the Diamond National Corporation. SCHUHMANN MONTGOMERY continues to sell those Chevrolets in Louisville. CHARLES MORT is a design engineer and HOWA RD OTTO is a senior project engineer with United Aircraft Products in D ayton . TOM M ULLANEY is in M acon, Ga., as a supervisor at R obins Air Force Base. In St. Louis, BROTHER UR BAN NAAL is teaching at Chaminade High School. Also in St. Louis is BROTHER MATTHIAS NEWELL, teaching at St. Mary's High School. DR. GEORGE OMI ETANSKI continues as a research chemist in the silicones division of Union Carbide in T onawanda, N.Y. In Orange, Calif., GEORGE PAPPAS is assistan t finan ce director of Newport Beach. GUY PORTER, with five children, is a business analyst at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. I n Adrian, Mi ch ., JOHN RAMUS is general manager of M idwest Tire Distributors, Inc. ART REIGER is an engineer with Globe Tool and Engineering Company in D ayton. He's livin g in Vandalia. RAY RIEGER is used car manager for Rubicon Cadillac in D ayton. In Waverly, 0. , ALOYS RINDLER is a hospital administrator. MIKE SCHOCH is a cost analyst for D ayton Tire and Rubber Company and t eaches cost accounting part-time a t U.D. DICK SHELL is a structural engineer with Yount, Sullivan and L ecklid er, Architects a nd Engineers , D ayton. With T exas Gas Transmission Corpora tion in Owensboro, K y., TONY SMITH is a senior engineer. DAVE SMITH is a systems analyst with Continental Can in New York City. HENRY SNOW is a con tracting officer with Wright-Patterson Air F orce Base. PAULINE SPRING is teaching a t E. J. Brown School in D ayton . MILT SUSCO is superintendent of the Montgomery County Juvenile Court detention home.

1952 BOB KIRKPATRICK is living in Wichita Falls, Tex., and is a training supervisor for General D ynamics/Astronautics in San Diego. He has three children. In Canton. 0. , JEAN McNEILL PHILP is director of the Aultman Hospital School of Nursing. BETTY CUNNINGHAM BREUER is a housewife in San D iego. She has two children.. HAZEL ASLAKSON is in Arlington, Va., as a clinical instructor in maternal and chi ld hea lth at Washington Hospital Center. DR. RICHARD WEAVER lives in Perrysburg and is practicing as an oral surgeon in Toledo. BILL KOPP is with American Machine and Foundry in Greenwich, Conn., as a supervisor in Io.gistic support control. He's residing in nearby Westport. Ordained a Marianist priest last year in Switzerland, FATHER WILLIAM BEHRINGER celebrated his first solemn Mass in his home parish, Church of the Incarnation, Centerville, in August. In M ercedita, P . R. , MIKE CARBONNELL is newly appointed assistant to the auditor of Serralles Enterprises. He's married, has two chi ldren. WALT HEBERLE is in Europe as a plastics products sales specialist with Monsanto Overseas S.A. MARRIED: JIM DOUGLASS to Effie .Johnson , in July. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. MATT HOEFLER. a son, in J ulv: to Mr. and Mrs. ED JA UCH ( DOROTHY FOLEY '55), their second chi ld , first daughter, in July ; to Dr. and Mrs. GEORGE BAUJAN. a daug路hter, in Jun e; to Mr. and Mrs. AL CAL DWELL , their fourth child , third dau ghter. Mary Ann , in May ; to Mr. and Mrs. MATT .JOEFREDA, their second child, first daughter, Catherine Marie, in April; to Mr. and Mrs. JA CK BRAMLAGE, a daughter. in May ; and to Capt. and Mrs. CHARLES ZIMMER , their first chi ld, J enn ifer D awn, in June.

1953 EMILIO ANTUNANO is living in Hato Rey, P.R.

SHEARL ROBERTS is in the general practice of law in Dayton's Gem City Bldg. BOB PETERSON has left the Aerolite Window Company and is now a production planning analyst for Sanders Associates, Nashua, N.H. JOSEPH YOUNG has received his master of education from Miami. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. NEIL SOMMERS, a son, in August; to Mr. and Mrs. FRANCIS KLAUS, their fourth child, second son, John Edward, in .July; to Mr. and Mrs. FRANK SIGGINS, their fourth child, second son , Francis Michael, Jr., in .June ; to Mr. and Mrs. JIM CURRIN, a daughter, in May ; to Mr. and Mrs. BOB VANDEVANDER, their first child, Ann Leslie, in May ; to Mr. and Mrs. GEORGE HARR, a daughter, in June ; to Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilleland (IRENE GEORGE), a daughter, in July; and to Dr. and Mrs. LOU GOETZ, their fourth child, a daughter, Janet Louise, in July.

1954 Miami University awarded DAVE EVANS a master of arts in teaching and ED TATE a master of education degree, both in Jun e. JIM FILLENWARTH has been named contr-oller of the Mallory M eta llurgical Company, a division of P . R. M a llory and Company. Jim will be responsible for all financial control of the division which has facilities in Indianapolis and Birmingham, Mich. BOB LOWDEN has opened three paint stores in Dayton to sell products of Victor Paint Centers of Detroit. Ohio State awarded BILL FISHBAUGH his M.D. degree in .June. ED and MARY THESING FElDNER visited the campus en route from Burlington, Vt., to Ohio University where Ed was to

CELESTE TOPE, after several years at .Jackson School, is now t eaching a t Belle H aven School. JIM TRENTMAN is an accountant, treasurer, and secretary of United Toolcra ft in D ayton. HELENE VANGROV is a D ayton homem aker. MARY FREDA WAGNER is a nurse in Tucson, Ariz., public schools. In Baltimore, DR. J. FRANCIS WEHNER is an assistant professor of chemical engineerin g a t Th e .Johns Hopkins University. WALT WOJCIECHOWSKI is an exploration geologist in Houston. TOM ZINCK is selling for Aeroplast Corporation in D ayton. MARRIED: JOHN LARISH to Rose Ellen Quinn, in .June. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. FLAVIAN BECKER, a son, Brian , in March ; to Mr. and Mrs . .JIM WA DE, their fifth chikl , first daughter, Louise Catherine, in March; to Dr. and Mrs. D . A. H UFZI GER ( LYNNE SHOWALTER), their second chi ld, first daughter, .Jean Lynne, in April; to Mr. and Mrs. C HARL ES WESTERFIELD , th eir fourth child, second daughter, Gail Ann,. in .June; an d to Mr. and Mrs. TOM EWING, a son, in August.

20

direct the Ohio Valley Summer Th eater. He's director of drama a t th e University of Vermont. DON DONOHER has been named an assistant basketball coach at Chaminade H igh School , D ayton . MARRIED: BOB EISENLOHR to CLAIRE STEVENS '58, in M ay. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. ED BOLTON thei r sec~nd child, first daughter, Kathl ee~ Suzan ne, 111 Jul y; to Mr. and Mrs.]. R . BOGGAN, their first chi ld , Christopher. in June; to Mr. and Mrs . BILL POEPPELMAN . a so n, in April ; to Dr. an d Mrs. BILL BR ENNAN. a son, in July; to Mr. a nd Mrs. LARRY SOROHAN, a daughter. T empie Susan, in Jun e; to Mr. and Mrs. ED HO EBTCH their third chil d, second son. Edwin Fran~is, in February; to Mr. and M rs. T om Caulfield ( SANDRA MacCALLUM ). th ei r third child . first son , K evin Christopher. in April ; to Mr. and Mrs. DON DO NO HER , th eir second chi ld, second son, Gary Th omas, in Jun e; and to Mr. and Mrs. DOUG MARCUM , a daughter, in Jun e.

1955 DR. PAUL INMAN's wife Ann was named "Miss Van d ali a" in Jun e to comp ete in the "Queen of Queens" con test at the Ohio State F a ir. MANUEL YANES is a self-employed civil engin eer in Santurce, P.R. H e has two children. BORN : to Mr. and Mrs. DICK DURBIN th eir sixth child , a son. in August; to M/ and Mrs . .TIM HAGGERTY, their second child . J oseph. in Jun e; and to Mr. a nd Mrs. VINCE DATZ, th ei r third child , second son, J erome Thomas, in May.

1956 CAPT. NOLAN PITSINGER recently completed an orientation course at Brooke Army M edical Center, Fort Sam Houston, T exas. DR. RALPH BRASHEAR is practicing in Wendell, N.C. He has two children. BOB JACOBY is now assista nt basketba ll coach at Berea, 0. , hi gh school. DR. RAY TSU is a member of th e technical staff of Bell T elephone Labs in Whippany, N .J. RAY DIERINGER won the Associated Press award as Class AA Ohio prep basketball coach of the year for th e 1960-61 season. His Cincinnati Eld er team was rated No. 1 in the state poll, but lost out in district tournament play. JIM SANDMANN is now executive secretary of the Dayton Community Welfare Coun ci l' s metropolitan health division. ANNE RA UC H won h er master's d egree from th e University of Michigan in June. SFC JIM GESSELLS recen tly cond ucted an associa te command a nd general staff course at Fort L eavenworth, Kans. MARRIED: GERALD CASSIDY to Pa tricia Waggoner, in August; DON ROMIE to Dolores Ferdelma n, in M ay; and TOM WOLF to FRANCES MEYER '60, in July. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. BILL UHL, their ~hird child, third daughter, Reb ecca Ellen, 111 M ay; and to Mr. a nd Mrs. T OM M cKENNY, a daughter, in April.

1957 VINCENT CASTROP '30 shows Jesse H. Wilder, associate professor of mechanical engineering, some of the electronics involved in studies of thermionic direct conversion of heat to electricity at the General Motors Research Laboratories in ' Varren, Mich . Wilder was attending the tenth annual GM conference for engineering and science educators. Castrop is director of GM's industrial hygiene department.

. DENNIS MEYER is now living in Wash111gton, D.C. Also in Washington is FRANK N_IEMAN who r ecen tly was awa rded a supenor perform ance award for his work at the D epartm ent of Commerce, United Sta tes Patent Office, as a pa tent examiner. CHESTER R USS recently passed his CPA

examination in Columbus. Aboard路 the famed SS Hope, on a medical mission in th e South Pacific, is IR ENE TEGENKAMP, one of the sixty members of the permanent medical staff on th e hospital ship opera ted by the People-to-People Health Foundation. DR . DAN NEALON is interning at Wadsworth Veterans H ospita l in Los Angeles. M arquette awarded DON BOLLHEIMER and PAUL THESING their M.D . degrees in Jun e. DO N TURNER, JOE TREO N, and EARL SCHEIDLER received their degrees in Jun e from the Coiiege of O steopathi c M edicine and Surgery, D es M oines. D on and Earl are interning a t D ayton's Grandview H ospital , and J oe is at Warren General Hospital, Warren , 0. TOM MAKLEY won hi s M .D . from University of Cincinna ti and is interning at Cincinnati General Hospital. M .D. degrees from Ohio State went to STARLING KAY, DAVE LE.VY, and EARL VAS TBINDER. Other degrees awarded during th e su~mer: J OE KILCOYNE, bachelor of laws, Ohw State; BOB W ILLIAMS, master of science, Ohio Sta te; LEO NEFF, master of education , Mi ami University. Three members of the class have been ordained priests in the Society of th e M ost Pr ecio u s Blood: FATHERS ANTHONY REPAS, J EROME EILERMAN, and WIL-

LIAM H OY ING. MARRIED: DR . DAN NEALON to M ary J ean Freeman, in Jun e; BOB CAROLTNA to K a thl een Coldiron, in .Tune; JOHN Z UCCARO to Sarah Alice H arri s, 'in Api路il; and TOM KAIN to K athl een M alah y, in Tun e. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. NED OSTENDOR F (CA THERINE DEVOL '55), their fourth child , third son . T odd Allen, in July; to Mr. an d Mrs. LEO NEFF (NON A HOD GSON '55), a son, in Jul y: to Mr. and Mrs, BOB WENDLING ( JOYCE FREKING'58) , their first child , a son, Gerard Toseph , in M ay; to Mr. a nd Mrs . .JOHN TUOHY, th ei r first child , a son, Mi chael Patrick. in M ay; to Mr. and Mrs. DON NEIDERT. a son, in April: to Mr. and Mrs. CARMEN RIAZZI (A NN FITZ GERALD '59), their second child. a d aughter , in April; to Mr. and Mrs. WARD KNISLEY, a d aughter, Stephan ie M a ri e. in M arch ; to Mr. and Mrs. TACK NASH, a son , in April ; to Mr. and Mrs. PAUL BJ!SEL, their third child , first son, Paul .Tr., 111 M ay; to Mr. a nd Mrs. ED CICHANOWICZ, th eir first child . a son, in Jun e; to Mr. and Mrs. TERRY STRANGE, a daughter, in .Tune; to Dr. and Mrs. PAUL THESING, th eir third child, a dau ghter, in July.

1958 ABDO HAWAYEK, in Santurce, P.R., is working with his fath er in Home D elivery, .servin g the north side of the island. BUTCH ZIMMERMAN is coaching th e D ayton Triangles in their first professional footb a ll season. H e has a number of form er U .D. footb a llers on his staff~Jim Raiff assistan t lin e coach , and Pete Lanesa, backfi eld. TOM MORRIS is living in Oak Park, Ill. , and working as a stock broker with Thomson and M cK innon in Chicago. FRED DUGAN has been traded by the D a llas Cowboys to th e Washin gton Redskins. JACK DEPPNER, an assistant footba ll coach a t Wilbur Wright High School in D ayton for two years, has been named head football an d basketba ii coach a t the new Bishop R eady High School whi ch opened this month in Columbus. HENRY LONG, after serving as presid ent of hi s sophomore and junior class, has been re-elected to be president of th e senior class a t M eha ry M ed ical School in Nashville. H e ran ks tenth in a class of sixty-two.

1st Lt. JOSE H ERNANDEZ is in Germany with an ordnance outfit. Ohio State awarded ROY MILL ER his M.D. degree in June. CAR L WANNEMACHER is with Lin coln National Life Insurance in Fort Wayne, Ind . BILL RICCO, former head footbaii coach a t D elphos St. John , has join ed the Chaminade Hi gh School fo otball staff. MARRIED: JOSE HERNANDEZ t o D oris Dohn, July, 1960 ; TOM MORRIS to Elaine Loiii , in April ; DUKE BAKER to K atherine Kramer, in Jun e; JOSEPH EDLY to D onna Howard, in Jul y; CARMELA TIACCHIA NO to Alex Pragalos, in Jun e; JIM POWERS to M ary Osweiler, in M ay; MARILEE FAUST to Dr. K enne th Oberheu, in Jun e; GENE LEHMAN to Rose M ary H eitkamp, in April ; DICK S HANE to Judith Ann Stahl , in J une; MA URINE R EICHARD to Albert Zamberlan , in August. BORN: to Mr. and M rs. DALE HO CENKAMP, a son , in July; to Mr. and Mrs. J OE DIGI ACINTO , a son, in Jun e; to Mr. and M rs. CHESTER GINTER , a son, in Jun e; to Mr. and Mrs. J ames M cC rate (MARY DAPORE ), a son, in M ay; to Mr. and Mrs. J ames R ogers (GA YNELLA ROGERS ), th eir first child, J ames D avid , in April ; to Mr. and Mrs. BOB AUFULDISH ( DOLORES GO MBERT '58), their first child , R obert III , in April ; to Mr. a nd Mrs. Brendan O 'Leary (ANGELA BIANCO ), their first ch ild, K evi n C harles, in M ay; to Mr. and Mr s. GERALD BUDDENBECK, a daughter, in Jun e; to Mr. and Mrs. LARRY VINCKE ( BARBARA KAES '57), a daughter, in Jun e; to M r. and Mrs. CHARLES WA MSLEY, their first child , M ary Ann, in Jun e; and to Mr. and Mrs. JEROME BURGER , a d a ughter, in M ay.

1959 JOSE RAFAEL NEVARES is li ving in San turce, P.R. In Ba kersfield , Cal., JOHN MURTAUGH is with Core L abs. With a newly won M.S. degree from th e University of Illinois, FRANK WOBBER has been awarded a Fulbright Grant from th e D epartm ent of Sta te for study in Great Brita in. Frank will attend the University of Wales beginning this month studying paleontology a nd paleoecology. X avier University has awarded SAM DALTON a master's d egree in educationa l ad ministration. H e's teaching a t K etterin g's Beavertown School. JOHN DIRCKX, first in hi s class at Marquette's med school, has won an a nnua l awa rd given to th e sophomore who best exemplifies th e id eas of the American physician. He has a lso won th e Even Carey anatomy award of Phi D elta Epsilon medical fraternity. JOHN WEBER is production manager for Tru ck Cab M an ufacturers, In c., Cincinnati. He has two children. TOM BIER, working on a master's degree in behavioral science a t Case Institute of T echnology, is engaged in an interesting proJect. Tom is spend ing three months in the office of the presid ent of the Chesapeake a nd Ohio railway studying th e impact of the merger of C & 0 and th e Pere M arqu ette R a ilway on personnel of th e compa ni es. Th e internship is designed primarily as a n education a l experience, but th e C & 0 feels Tom's research findin gs could be useful in future relationships with other railroads . MARRIED: NANCY MILLIKAN to John P a tri ck Cronin, in Jun e; RUTH BERNER to Robert Campoli, in July; DAVE D URBIN to M a ry Phiiiips, in July; RALPH ANDREWS to Joyce Tooker, in Jun e. BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. ANDREW NIEKAMP, th eir second child , first son, Andrew 21


III , in M ay; to Mr. and M rs. TH O M BEACH, th eir first ch ild , Theresa, in April; to Mr. an d Mrs. DAVE PARTLOW, their first child , Thom as J oseph, in Jul y; to Mr. and Mrs. BOB GAUBY ( KATHLEEN GIRARD '54), a dau ghter, in July; to Mr. and Mrs. JOHN JONES (HELEN STRAUKAMP '58), their first child , D avid, in July; to Mr. an d Mrs. JIM LJENESCH (E LIZABETH HALEY '60), thei r first child , Steven Carl, in May ; to Mr. and M rs. DON ZIMLICH, a daughter, Cathleen Ann, in Jun e; to Mr. and Mrs. Mar tin M eyer (SHARON HUNT ), th eir first child, T erri L ynn , in M ay; to Mr. and Mrs. GARY KRA USE, th ei r second child , first son, Gary Alan, in June; to Mr. and Mrs. J OHN M U LLINS, a son , John Joseph III , in Jun e; an d to Mr. and Mrs. J ames Upp (JEAN CORR), a son, D avid J am es, in February.

1960 GEORGE FA RKAS is with the D epartment of H ealth, Education , and Welfa re in Chicago as a claims examin er. STEVE PALENCHAR , junior varsity footba ll coach a t Cleveland Ben edi ctin e last season, is now at Gilmour Academy as h ead wrestling coach an d ass istant to fellow U.D. Alumnus Vern Weber in footb a ll and track. TOM CAHILL, form erly with WING in D ayton , is now living in Silver Sprin g, Md., a nd working in the office of th e Secre tary of the Treasury. SUE HORSTMAN, DONNA J UDD , and JACKIE KUHN '6 1 flew to Europe durin g th e summer, a nd in addition to visitin g sevent een countries, h a d a n a udience with th e Pope a nd saw Lourd es. Sue is a secretary at NCR and Donna is teachin g a t K etterin g's St. Albert School. HECTOR GABINO MARTINEZ V I EVA

is a ttendin g Marquette med school. ABI LIO COLON is with Fomento in Rio Piedras, P.R. SHI ELA JAMES is leaving Cincinnati and going to Lon g Beach , C a l. , to join MARY SUE MILLER , SONDRA FELLA, and SHIELA B UE KER . M ary Sue is teachin g a t Grayla nd Avenue School in Norwalk, Sondra a t D.D. Johnson School , a lso in Norwalk, a nd Shiela is a t Eastwood School, L a Mirad a. All three a re active in th e Los An geles a lumn i chapter. Wes tern R eserve University awarded ROY CARLSON hi s doctor of dental surgery degree in J une. MARRIED: PAUL DIERKER to Arlen e Bruns, in August; LT. BILL MULLEN to Carolyn D empsey, in J uly ; ANDREA NAGY to George Sawaya , in August: RUTH ANN RUETH to G eorge Kib ler , in July; ED SABOL to M arilyn Ann M a th ews, in July ; RALPH PAX to MARY LO U ISE FECKE, in Au gust ; SUE GUESS to BOB CALIBOSO, in Aug ust: BI LL ROHR to L ynd a Kay Murph . in Jun e: KEN KA I SER to MARY ] ANE LEARY, in J un e; LOU BOEHMAN to Betty Ann Burn eka, in J un e ; L I N DA EHRHART to John Gchrich, in J une . BORN: to Mr. and Mrs. Gera ld D ieterle ( PAT ZAKOTA), their first child , Vi ctoria J u lie, in J uly ; to Mr. and Mrs. MAR I ON M I NNELL I , a son, in July ; to Mr. and Mrs.

GERALD KUNTZ

~ARAH

MEDLEY

' 6 I) , their first child, a daughter, in J u ly; to Mr. an d Mrs. DENNIS MUNDHENK, th eir first chi ld, a son, in J uly ; to Mr. and Mrs. J ohn Spa ngenb erger ( V I CKY LACHAT), a son , in June; to Mr. a nd Mrs. JOHN BOERGER, a so n , in May; to Mr. an d Mrs. DON S CH I ERLOH, a son, in April ; to Mr. and Mrs. ] OE TACHE, their first a nd second children, twin boys, in April ; to :M'r. a nd Mrs. DON ROSHKOWSKI, a son, in Apri l.

1961 RON KLA US is with Royal M cBee Corporation in D ayton as a d ata processing sales rep . JA CK LABRUYER E is a retirem ent claims examin er for th e D epartment of H ealth, Education , a nd Welfare. BILL SHIRLEY is a p roba tion counselor with D ayton Juveni le Court. JOHN ROBY and JOHN GRISMER h ave joined the Internal R evenu e Servi ce as interna l reve nu e agen ts. BOB CYPHERS recently completed a swit chb oard operation and ma int enance course a t the South eastern Signal School, Fort Gordon , Ga. LT. TOM KARREN BA UER recently completed an eight-week offi cer orientation cours e a t Brooke Army M edical Center, Fort Sam H ouston, T ex. FRED and SANDY CARLILE TRZOS are at F ort Lewis . Wash . LT. PA UL DALEIDEN recently completed the offi cer orientation cou rse a t the Air D efense School, Fort Bliss, T ex. GENE SCHILL is a specifications en gineer a t NCR. DICK MOCNY is with the South ern Europ ean T ask Force in Ita ly. JA CKIE K U HN, a programmer a t NCR, spen t the summ er in Europe with two other a lumn a, S UE HORSTMAN and DONNA J UDD, both of 1960. Th ey visited seventeen co untri es, h ad a n a udi en ce with the Pope, and visi ted Lourdes. MARRIED: TERRY RIESKE to Alice R eitz, in Augus t ; HOWA RD WOLFE to Phyllis Schn eider, in Jun e; WALTER REILING to S UZANNE GEYER '60, in Jul y; LOUISE GLOVER to Lt Bob M erz, in August; BILL BROCKMAN to CATHERINE GAGEL '60, in August; LARRY

RA IFF to Patricia DeBrosse. in June; PHIL D UBENSKY to Doroth y Z abik , in June; BOB RICHARD to M ary Lu Holliday, in Jun e: BILL WESTBROCK to MARLYN RYAN '60, in Jun e ; DAVE SHEPPARD to Carol M auch , in M ay; EARL M CFEA TERS to Patricia Polus, in April; DON STOLLENMAIER to Ann Hose, in Jun e; CHUCK SWEENEY to GEORG/ANNA HOLMES '59, in .Tune; BILL LENZ to R ose Glaser, in J une; BILL SNIDER to Barbara Ann Stouffer, in M ay; DENNIS S EITZ to K athryn Bran t , in J anuary ; JOE PRINCEHO USE to FRAN PA UL , in M ay; RAY GEIGER to Lore tta Ri epen hoff, in Jun e ; WILB UR HO U K to loa n M a ry Clark, in .Tune: DENNIS FINKBOHNER to Ruth Ann Cox, in M ay: JAY BERM'(tN to Carol Ann Stolle, in M ay: ART R UFFING to J oan M yers , in Jun e; DIC K KLE INER to DODI E GIBSON. in .Tune; GENE SCHILL to Beve rly Wisokay, in July ; BILL FOCKE to Miri am Boehm er. in July. 1960 ; FRED BENTZ to M a rth a Zwiesler , in Jun e. BORN: to Mr. a nd Mrs. FRANK MOL ONEY , a son , in M ay; to Mr. an d Mrs.

MEL F.IFERT (S ALLY BRINGMAN '60) , thei r first child . a daughter, in Jun e; to Mr. a nd Mrs. HARRY BEC KER. a dau .ghter, in M ay; to Mr. an d Mrs. JOE FARREN , th eir second child , a daughter, in .Tun e: and to Mr. a nd Mrs. Joseph Brucke n ( JUD ITH WAGNER ) , th ei r first child, Mary K a th erin e, in Au gust .

1962 MARRIED: RO GER BENASUTTI to Betty J ean Burkhart, in June. BORN: to Mr. a nd Mrs. JAROLD ANDERSON, a d a ughter , in August; and to Mr. and Mrs. BILL REBOULET, their first chi ld Edward Charles, in June. '

Faust retires as Chaminade A.D.

Frank Sutter ('82) dies; Was oldest U.D. alumnus

Alumni who a rc n ~ t season-ticket hold ers again this season will have fi;st opport unity to pmchasc tickets for two rrames to be played m the fielclhou sc. Th e games selected arc with New M ex ico State on Satmclay, December 16, and with M em phis State on Wednesday, F;bruary 2 1. Yot~ may o rd er your tickets by usi ng the form below. 1 he number of tickets ava il ab le is limited ; place you r order soon.

• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ticket prices : $2. 25 - $2 .50 Please send me: Dayton 9, Ohio _____ _ tickets for the New Mexico State game on Dec. 16. ______ tick ets for the Memphis State game on February 21. Alumni Office The University of Dayton

I 've enclosed a check for $

, payable to the University

of Dayton. Please send tickets to: class

name address THE MAN credited with putting Dayton's Chaminade High School on the athletic map has retired as its athletic director and will spend his time now in the classroom. Gerard " Fuzzy" Faust '30, who in June turned over his duties to another U .D . alumnus, D on Frericks '56, began teaching a t Chaminade in 1933. During his more th an a quarter century a t the school, h e has taught almost every sub-

ject in the curriculum in addition to developing a first class athl etic program. H e coach ed basketball until 1940, track untill 942 , and football until1952, when he became athletic director. For twenty-one years, Fuzzy was one of the most successful coaches in the country. His t eams piled up 123 wins, forty-nine losses, and ten ties, winning the coveted City L eague championship eleven times. Fuzzy h ad coached two years at the old U.D. prep school, a year at Cincinnati PHrcell, and two years a t Ca thedral Latin School in Cleveland prior to going to Chaminade. Two of his three children are fellow U .D. alumni: Marilee a nd Fuzzy, Jr., both of the class of 1958.

Father Moore gets Newman Award FATHER Elmer R . Moore '44, Newman Club cha pl ain a t the University of K entucky, has been awarded th e John H enry N ewman honora ry society key. H e is the third priest in the United States to be so honored . At K en tucky, Fa th er Moore's Newman Club numbers more tha n 1,000 students a nd serves as the student parish and Catholic intellectual center to the University community.

city

state

THE University's oldest living alumnus and Dayton's old est living arch itect died last month a t age nin ety-five. Frank L. Sutter a tt ended o ld St. M ary's Institute (as the present U niversity of Dayton was known from 1850 to 1912 ) for three yea rs, from 1879 to 1882.

Belo"':' is a f<;>rm ~hrough which you may place in nomination outstandmg Umvers1ty of Dayton athletes for selection to the Athletic H all of !"arne (see Mary S~ay' s ':V!siting the Chapters," page 16, for. d e ta1~s ) . Your nommat10ns, hm1ted to five from each of the penods hsted, should reach the Alumni Office at th e University not later t~ an Oct?ber 11. Yo_u may _use the postage-free reply envelope yo_u v e re_c~1ved (or will receive ) from Mary Shay in her

He had been born in Dayton in 1866.

homecommg mailmg to get your nominations back to the campus.

Dea th came to the nonagenarian at College Hill H ospital in Dayton where l_1e had been admi tted three days earl ier, JUSt three d ays after his ninety-fifth birthday anniversary. Mr. Sutter founded a n architectu ra l firm in Dayton in 1888 a nd retired seven yea rs ago. Th e o ld '\'ayne Ave n ue M arkethouse, now being torn down to make way for the new U .S. Route 35 expressway, and th e old Hol y Angels ~choo l were among the many loca l buildmgs Mr. Su tt er d esign ed. H e was a member of the American Institute of Architects. Among his survivors are a son , two dau ghters, fot~r g ra nd ch ild ren , eight great-grandchJ!dre n , a nd four great, great-grandchildren .

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I wish to place in nomination the followina form er athletes of the University of Dayton for the Athletic Hal!"of Fame: 1900-1919

1920-1929

1930-193 9

1940-1949

Now ... Who's oldest? ITH the death of Fra nk L. Sutter at the age of ninety-five, the honor of being the University's oldest living alumnus passes on to another. Who among you old-timers now lays claim to the titl e? We have a pretty good idea who it might be. L et us hear from you!

W

1950-1956 Return to the Alumni Office, University of Dayton, Dayton 9, Ohio, not later than Oct. 11.

23 22


rrH OME," SAYS our latest edition of Webster's New Collegiate Dictionary, comes from the Anglo-Saxon word ham. It means, among other things, the abode of one's family, or the abiding place of the affections, or seat, or habitat, or even asylum. In various games, so Web ster goes on, it is the goal. As an adjective, home can mean poignant, intimate, or effective. Webster very negligently doesn't even mention "homecoming," at least in the worn edition in the alumni office. But if he had, he no doubt would have said that ''homecoming" is the return to the abode of one's special family, to the abiding place of his affections as an undergraduate. He might even have mentioned that U D's homecoming, on 0 ctober 21, will be the seat and habitat of a pleasant week-end, an asylum even where weary old grads might refresh themselves with the campus atmosphere. H e probably wouldn't have said (but we will anyhow) that at the approaching homecoming, the U.D. campus should be your goal. And he again wouldn't have said that the program lined up for Oct. 21 will be poignant, intimate, and effective. But we will. And it will be. Hope to see you at

. ...:..

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