I
The U. D. Alumnus Established 1929
September, 1954
August 1, 1953
-s
No . .f
James F. Clarke ................................. . .... Editor James F. "Pepper" Wilson . . ..... . .......... ... .Sports Editor
September 1, 1953 "Entered as second class mat ter April 15, 1940, at the Post Office, at D ayton, Ohio, under the Act of March 3, 1879." For wills and bequests, the legal title of the corporation is "The University of D ayton, D ayton, O hio." Subscription price $2 per year. Published Quarterly for the University of D ayton Alumni Association by the Public Relations Office, University of D ayton, 300 College Park Avenue, D ayton 9, Ohio.
October 1, 1953
Member of International Council of Industrial Editors and the Miami Valley Associa tion of Industrial Editors. Member of the American Alumni Council.
November 1, 1953 FRONT COVER Bob Shultz, '41, vice president of the National Alumni Association, and Paul Heckman, '38, chairman of the Alumni Fund appeal, present a check for $69,333.08, the two year results of the Dormitory Furnishings drive to Father Seebold.
December 1, 1953
TABLE OF CONTENTS A Symphony of Threes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3
Sports .... . .. . ...... . ... . .... . ........... .. .... .. . 8- 9 Ready to Go ..... . .......... . .. . ... . ........ . ........ 10-11 Chapter News . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. . .. . . .
January 1, 1954
12
Class-Ics . .. . .. . . . ........... . .. . .... . . . . ... . .. . . . . . 15-20 Among the Alums ................. . ................. . .
2
18
UD Alumnus September 1954
J SfHP80Nf OJ? 1'8RBBS The results are in and the music they make
Meyer and Bro. Maximin Zehler-will be
some savings have been effected in con-
is a .sy.mphony- a symphony of threes.
open for students this fall. The five floors
T wo years of alumni giving toward the
of the building will house 432 students it;l
struction costs. A three-zohe thermostatically controlled
furnishings of Founders H all, the new
216 double rooms.
heating system will provide even temperature controls throughout the building.
men's dorm- make a total contribution to
The building is behind Alumni Hall,
the University of $69,333.08 for this pur-
and is a "U" shape with the open end fac-
As a result of the opening of Founders
ing the ROTC building. Each of the four
Hall, a realignment of living quarters on
floors above ground is divided into two
the campus has been made over the sum-
year of alumni giving, the total gift for
areas-each area with its own student
mer.
dorm furnishings was $37,586.71. The
lounge, supervisors suite, and toilet facil-
Members of the Society of Mary who
year just closed has brought $31,746.37.
ities, and showers. The ground floor also has another area
Zehler Halls, have now all moved into
the University has appealed to its former
for students, making nine separate areas
Alumni Hall. Alumni Hall will now be
students for financial help according to
in the building, each sufficient unto itself.
the Marianist residence only.
each one's means. The appeal was made as
The ground floor will also have a stu-
After a lapse of 20 years, 路students again
pose. On June 30, 1953 , the end of the first
This is the second consecutive year that
have been living in St. Mary's, Liberty and
it was last year ; first to alumn i living in
dent post office for the dorm, a snack bar,
will be living in Zehler Hall. Athletes who
Dayton in the fall , and then to all others
and the usual trunk rooms, equipment
in the late winter and early spring. Principal reason for the smaller return
rooms and boi ler room. All student rooms are doubles. Each
have been living in St. Joseph Hall will continue to be there.
the second year seems to be that some
room contai ns a double bunk, a new type
number of students who can live on the
alumni were under the impression that the
double desk designed especially for UD,
campus and will bring the Marianists all
campaign last year was a one-time appeal
in which the students sit side by side, and
together under one roof.
and they consequently gave more than they
built-in wardrobes. Each room is also
Some 40 students will be living in Zeh-
equipped with a foam- rubber armchair.
would expect to on a year-to-year basis.
These changes will about double the
Beyond the actual monetary gifts the
Because of the special design of the ward-
ler; 60 in St. Joseph's Hall. Ground was broken for the new dormi-
University is heartened by other evidence
robes between each room, the necessity for
tory in March 1953; and the cornerstone
brought forth from the two appeals : are-
bureaus or dressers is done away with and
was placed on October 2.
newed and growing alumni faith in the work and plans of the University itself; the encouragement of others by our alumni to become a part of our ever-increasing family and to participate in the realization of our program ; and the development of the real UD spirit through steadily increasing attendance at and participation in, alumni-sponsored events. In this latter connection there seems to be unanimous acceptance of the annual Homecoming Dinner in the Fieldhouse as the most conductive step ever taken to bring about a solidarity of feeling long missing from the Alumni. Association. Founders Hall-named for Father Leo
UD Alumnus September 1954
,. II
THIS IS THE WAY THE CLASSES DID IT" FIRST ANNUAL ALUMNI FUND
SECOND ANNUAL ALUMNI FUND
Class
1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947 1948 1949 1950 1951 1952 1953
No. Alumni Listed 66 7 14
9 9 16 18 24 31 28 25 28 41 35 32 37 34 33 37 41 72 46 67 58 79 81 95 98 119 100 103 71 91 77 11 0 106 80 54 75 133 119 158 111 176 74 71 62 127 187 346 541 482 415 383
FRIENDS TOTAL
4
5049
No. of Contr.
Amount
2 8 5 6 4 5 4 16 7 15 11 17 19 15 12 26 21 26 19 23 13 28 22 21 16 32 23 29 42 40 57 23 17 11 40 51 92 156 115 86 2
1275.00 0 1600.00 110.00 505 .00 620.00 170.00 250.00 966.00 315.00 733.00 1300.00 3173.00 27.00 1080.00 690.00 132 .00 570.00 235 .00 180.00 515.00 685.00 1520.00 375.00 1610.00 729.20 475.00 570.00 768.00 846.00 595.00 770.00 640.00 375.00 495 .00 1005.00 530.00 492.00 760.00 465.00 481.00 746.75 572.50 1053.00 300.00 125.00 170.00 415.00 529.00 842.00 1422.50 1150.00 739.50 1200.00
80
3959.26
1324
41,856.71
12 0 5 2 2 4 4 3
9 7 5 5
9
Amount
TOTAL FIRST & SECOND ALUMNI FUNDS
30 49 83 113 110 71 29
580.00 25.00 1500.00 5.00 105.00 165 .00 100.00 0 650.00 215.00 70.00 1290.00 3175.00 130.00 265.00 725.00 227.00 175 .00 110.00 110.00 2521.88 1740.00 1485.00 760.00 1294.24 575.00 350.00 620.00 646.00 1211.00 562.00 385.00 325.00 365.00 622 .00 836.00 45 5.00 441.00 417.5 0 520.00 501.00 665.25 437.00 636.0.0 232.00 14 5.00 137.00 290.00 475 .00 681.00 1011.50 914.50 530.50 163.00
1855 .00 25.00 3100.00 115.00 610.00 785.00 270.00 250.00 1616.00 530.00 803.00 2590.00 6348.00 157.00 1345.00 1415.00 359.00 745 .00 345.00 290.00 3036.88 2425.00 3005.00 1135 .00 2904.24 1304.20 825.00 1190.00 14 14.00 2057.00 1157.00 1155 .00 965.00 740.00 1117.00 184 1.00 985.00 933.00 1177.50 985.00 982.00 14 12 .00 1009.50 1689.00 532 .00 270.00 307.00 705.00 1004. 00 1523 .00 2434.00 2064.50 1270.00 1363.00
20
1819.00
5778.26
1119
34,396.37
76,253.08
1953-1954
1952-1953 No. Alumni Listed ~5
7 14 8 7 18 17 25 32 32 24 24 38 33 27 36
34 35 38 41 61 45 63 63 90 79 122
99 120 104 109 80 102 77 107 106 79 55 89 136 117 15 4 124 161 91 75 63 125 181 336 543 461 370 383
5385
No. of Contr. 12 1 3 2 3 2 0 6 4. 7 8 2 4 8 5 4 3 4 9 9 20 16 16 16 14 12 14 22 22 15 12 10 30 20 12 20 20 26 32 41 37 49 21 10
9
UD Alumnus September 1954
ALUMNI FUND SUMMARY 1952-1954 TOTAL OF FIRST AND SECOND ANNUAL ALUMNI FUNDS
1952-1953 ALUMNI FUND 1953-1954 ALUMNI FUND No. Alumn i Listed
No. of Gifts
Total Given
No. Alumni Listed
No. of Gifts
Total Given
Dayton
2,431
932
$27,827.45
2,572
783
$22,957.99
Other Cities
2,618
312
10,070.00
2,813
316
9,619.38
Misc.
1,000.00
Friends TOTAL
5,049
80
2,959.26
1,324
$41,856.71
First Second
1,000 .00
5,385
20
819.00
1,119
$34,396.37
$41,856.71 34, 396.37 $76,253.08
Less
Total Given by Alumni
6,920.00 $69,333.08
Specially Designated by Alumni for Other T han Dormitory Furnishings Total Amount Given by Alumni for D ormitory Furnishings
IN MEMORIAM The President, faculty, students and alumni mindful of the text that " it is a holy and a wholesome thought to pray for the dead" recall with sormw the passing of the following listed alumni during the past yem路 as well as othen whose death may have occurred unnoticed. A Mass for all departed alumni will be offered in the University Chapel on Sunday, October 10, 1954, at 11 a.m . 路
Bienlein, George '97 Burkhardt, H enry '02 Cappel, Harry F. '98 Day, William P. '25 Dohner, Burt '01 Duffy, Dr. E. J. '20 Dwyer, Albert '89 H emmert, Anthony '24 Hess, Pvt. Ed '52 Hess, Howard B. '18 Hogan, Edward P. '12 Janszen, William '4 3 Johnson, William A. '20 Koors, Karl B. '07 Kuntz, Peter H. '94
Pittsburgh, Pa. Dayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Dayton, Ohio Dayton , Ohio Dayton, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio D ayton, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cincinnati, Ohio N ew Lexington, Ohio D ayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio
Larkin, Col. William T . '24 Loges, Leo '06 Macklin, Thomas J. ' 12 Mayer, Wi ll iam H . '5 0 McCann , Jeannette '34 McCormick, Anne O'Hare '29 Miller, Dorothy Dit.1ert '48 Roth, Lt. Bernard '5 0 Rotterman , Richard '04 Sacksteder, Hugh '12 Schauer, Col. Paul C. '43 Seuffert, Lt. Thomas '52 Stone, Patrick H. ' 36 Supensky, George '24 Wetzel, Albert C. ' 14
Albany, N ew York Dayton , Ohio Columbus, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Morristown, New Jersey New York, New York Dayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio D ayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio Fairborn, Ohio Dayton , Ohio D ayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio Dayton, Ohio
ADDITIONS TO THE 1953-1954 CONTRIBUTORS IN THE JUNE ISSUE OF THE ALUMNUS Bersuder, ]. '39* Brown, H. '20* Ca ll ahan, ]. '51* Cirillo, A. ' 51* Clark, E. '48 Crane, C. '24* Cron, A. '16* Crow, E. ' 32* D avis, B. '40* Flotron, F. '36* Foley, D . '50 Graham, E. '49 Gridley, M . '50
H arper, K. '44 Harpring, ]. ' 14* H eld, C. '34* H erkenhoff,]. '27* Him es, C. '26* Hochwalt, G. '20* Horan, E. '21 * Hussey, F. '49 Jackson, E. '41 Koehl, F. '31 * Krueger, A. '44* Krumbholz, S. '51 Mason, L. '51
McCa ll, B. '49* McCannon, E. '49 McCartney, D. '52* Moots, H. '50 Moylan, ]. ' 50* Newton, Rt . Rev. W. '24* Novotny, M . '51 * O 'Connor, W . '38* Penyak, ] . '24* Poeppelmeier, V . '41* Pohlman, G. '48 Poliquin, A. ' 23 Reichard, M . '35
Reeves, W . '42* Rensel, L. '43 Rost, F. '50* Sayre, R. '24 * Schlei, E. '43 Schumacher, ]. '32 Schwering, ]. '39* Shay, M. '44 Sherry, Rt. Rev. R. ' 14* Smith, Rt. Rev . F. '14* Spahr, P. '28* Spencer, D. ' 52 Stovicek, G . '50*
Strattner, L. ' 15 * Stuhlmueller, C. '18* Sultenfuss, ]. '40* Swartzel, R. '43 Sweetman, E. '04* Thomas, T. '38 Velten, E. '43* Warner, R. '38* Wening, R. '44 Wharton , R. '33 Wick, P. '38* Zahn, G. '39* Zummo, A . '50* *Out-of-Town Alumni
UD Alumnus September 1954
5
Donors of Memorial Rooms of Founders Hall Martin C. Kuntz ' 12 Martin C. Kuntz ' 12 Martin C. Kuntz '12 Martin C. Kuntz ' 12 Martin C. Kuntz '12 Richard P. K untz ' 22 William Kuntz '1 4 John L. Macbeth Robert Pay ne '22 Robert Pay ne '22 G eorge A . Pflaum '21 William E. Reynolds '29 Urban J. Ri eger '24 Schweller Foundation Standard Register Company Willi am Stoecklein '04 Stomps Realty Company Stomps Realty Company Rt. Rev. Msgr. ~ · M . Wagner' 10 George Walther, Sr. George Walther, Sr. White Allen Chevrolet Co. Classes 1882 through 1900 Classes 1882 through 1900 Classes 1882 through 1900 Class of 1902 Class of 1908 Class of 1909
Arnalda Becker '53 Arnalda Becker ' 53 Edwin G. Becker ' 11 Edw in G. Becker '11 Myrtle Behringer Frank '2 0 and William '2 3 Bickford Borchers Broth.ers H o race Boesch ' 14 C. Husto n Brown '2 0 John W . Craig '29 Francis Duell '36 Charle Eisenhauer '24 Charl es Eisenhauer '24 Vi ctor Emanuel ' 15 H a rry F. Finke '02 Ben W . Freeman '08 Michael J. Gibbons '02 Michael J . Gibbons '0 2 Clarence H . Gosiger '02 Clarence H . Gosiger '0 2 Dr. Carroll A . H ochwalt '2 0 D r. Carro ll A . Hochwalt '2 0 Dr. N orman C. Hochwalt ' 17 Anthon y G. Horvath '22 C. G . Jauch '08 W . H . Kiefaber '05 Peter Kuntz '94
Class of 1911 Class of 1914 Class of 1915 Class of 1915 Class of 1920 Class of 19 21 Class of 192 2 Class of 1923 Class of 1924 Class of 192 5 Class of 1926 Class of 1926 Class of 1928 Class of 1929 Class of 1929 Class of 1930 Class of 1931 Class-of 1932 Class of 1932 Class of 1933 Class of 1933 Class of 1934 Class of 1934 Class of 1935 Class of 1935 Class of 1936 Class of 1936 Class of 193 7
Class of 193 7 Class of 1938 Class of 1939 Class of 1940 Class of 194 1 Class of 1942 Class of 1943 Class of 1943 Class of 1944 Class of 1947 Class of 1948 Class of 1948 Class of 1949 Class of 1949 Class of 1949 Class of 1950 Class of 1950 Class of 1950 Class of 1950 Class of 1950 Class of 1951 Class of 1951 Class of 1951 Class of 195 1 Class of 1952 Class of 1952 Class of 195 3 Class of 1927
HOME COMING COMMITTEES DINNER COMMITTEE *Lou M ahrt .................................. _____ '26 Robert Shultz --- ---- -- -.. -- --------- ... _________ '4 1 Paul Moorman ---- -·-- -------·-----·--------·- Pauline Spring --- -- -- ---·----· ----- ·----- -----Ed King ------------- --- ----- ·----- -- -------------Geo. Markus, M.D . .. .. ------·-------------Wm. F. Flanagan- ----- -----------·----------Art Scarpelli --- -- ---------- ----- -------------- Mike Moran ------------------ ------ ----------Matt Boylan --- ---- --- ---- ------- ---------------H . G . Weiler -- ·---- ·- ----------------- --------Horace Boesch --------- ---- ------- ------------H erbert Whalen --- -- ·-- --------------------Wm . Stoecklein ·-- -- -------------- ·------ -----
' 30 '51 '49 '44 '39 '34 ' 29 '24 ' 19 '14 '09 '04
DINNER TICKET COMMITTEE Bonni e S. Dirkes ______ __.. ________ . __________ '49 John Ryan ----------- ------- -- ---- -- ------------Lois K appeler ----- ·---·----------·-----------ue A. Wagner ---·--- -------------------·-·---T om Shillito --- -------------------------------Bob O 'Brien ------- --- -------·-------·----- ---Lucille W. Kronenberger --------·-----Marjorie W . Connors -· ------------------Mary Shay ---------- ----- ---- ·--- --·------· ------
6
'49 '4 9 '49 '49 '49 '44 '44 '44
Tom Maher --------·------------------- --------Paul Wagner ---------·-----------·-------- ----Gene Kreusch ----------------------·----·----Jim Cline -- .. --------·-- ·----- .. -------------- ·--Jos. D esch ----------------·-·----·------·------ -Wm . A. Fritz ---------------------·----- -· ---- -Eugene Litkowski ----·-------------- -- ---- -Norb Sacksteder ------------------------ ----Elmer Focke -----------------------·--·------- --Wm . Stoecklein ----- ·------------------ ----- --
'39 '39 ' 34 '34 '29 '24 '19 ' 14 '09 '04
' 51 '45 '45 '44 '51 '46 '5 2 · 40 '44
PRESIDENT'S RECEPTION COMMITTEE *Robert Shultz ----------------------- ---·--- ----Paul Moorman ----------·--------------------- Elmer Will ·- -------·-- ·----------- .. ·------- ----D an Hobbs --- ·------------------------·- --·- --- --
' 38 '27 '31 ' 32 '39 '42
Berna rd L. K ei ter -·----- --------------·-·--]. Ell is M ay ! ---------- -- -----------·----------G eorge J. Rau, M.D. ---------·------·--- --James H anby ·-·-------·-- .. ·-------------------
'42 '08 ' 30 '49
BRUNCH COMMITTEE
DINNER DECORATION COMMITTEE Pauline Spring ----·------·---------------- ----M argaret Carroll ----- ·-----·---------------- Jean Earhart ---- -------------- .. ·-·-----·---- ·Elaine Glossinger ---------·---------------- Virginia MacMillan ---------·-------- ·-----H elen Martin ----·--·----------------------·---M ary Ellen Nagle ---------·------------ ----Irene Veigel --------------------------·-----·--- Janet R_ Weaver -·-----·--- ----- .. ·-·--------- -
Paul H eckman --------·-- ---------------------Robert Renner -----------·- ----·-·-----·------John Duchak, M.D . .... --·---------·- ----Robert M cBrid e-----·- -· ------- --------------Paul Wagner -------------------·-----·------ ·---· Charles Whalen, Jr. .. . ___ __, _____________
'41 ' 30 '3 7 ' 38
* Louis Goldkamp -- --------· -------------------AI Suttman --·--- ·------- ·------- --·-----·---·-Pat Radican ----------- ----- --- ------ ..... ----·-Yin Kirk ·-----·--·--------- ---- -----·------ -- ---Paul H eckman ------ .. ---- -·- ----·------------L. Rense l ---·---------------------·-------------- K enny Smith -------- .. -·-·-----·------·-------J . teinbruegge ------·---·--·----------------James Whalen ------·------·-·--- ---- ·----- ---Fuzzy Faust -----·----·------·------·---------·-· Virginia MacM illan ---- .. -.. --------·------Jack Brown -- -- --- ------ ·---- -- --- -·-----------Martha L. Duffy ----------- -----------------Marita Maloney -----·--·--- ------·--·--------Jack Wagner --·--·----- ------·-----·---- ----- .. -Betty Wick ---- ----------- ---- --------- -- ----- ·---
'4 1 '4 8 ' 52 ' 32 ' 38 '43 '40 '48 '4 7 '30 '51 ' 26 '43 '44 ' 50 '4 1
UD Alumnus September 1954
It's Home-Coming TimeHere are the anniversary classes 1904 During the college years of the class of 1904 many interesting things came about. Do you golden jubilee members remember? The shooting of President McKinley in your sophomore year; and President Roosevelt taking over? The start of the Panama Canal; the first wireless message across the Atlantic and the Wright brothers' first flight during your senior year? And the year you graduated the RussoJapanese war started and the St. Louis Exposition opened. Such was history when you started. And where are your six members now? Rev. Aloys Angel is the pastor of St. Wendelin church, in Pittsburgh. Urban Deger is an organist and music teacher in Dayton and in fact has been organist for summer graduations for several years. Emmet Sweetman is the city engineer in Urbana, Ohio ; and Bill Stoecklein is a member of the firm of Hoefler and Stoecklei n in Dayton, concrete and tile specialists. Leo Kramer, retired after 30 years as an engineer at Wright Field, is living in Dayton. He took a four-month trip around the world in 1951.
1929 The class of 1929 graduated into the teeth of a world depression. But good news was also part of the picture. During their college years Lindy made his flight across the Atlantic and the first talking picture movies were shown. ' There were 104 living members of '29 according to alumni records. Here are what some of them are doing.
Arthur Amorosi is chief chemist at Federated Metals, Perth Amboy, N. J.; Helen Bowman is a Washington attorney; John Craig is chief executive officer Aluminum Industries, Inc.; Howard Crush is supervisor of Lunken Airport, Cincinnati. Theodore Falke and Gregory Floridis are Dayton doctors, and Al Hart is a Cleveland surgeon. George Freitas is back in the Islands and George Houghtailing is assistant plan engineer for the city and county of Hawaii. Other islanders include John McColgan, who is head coach at St. Louis College there; and John Robello who is manager of Jardine Market on Kauai. Joe Keller is another Washington lawyer. Clem Kerner is a lieutenant in the Cleveland fire department; "Step" Lange is the vice-president of Liberty Cherry and Fruit Company, Covington ; Mike Moran is president of his own paint company; Leo Nartker is supervisor of quality control at Delco ; and Joe Park is in the chemistry department at the University of Colorado. Bill Patterson is a Dayton city commissioner; Paul Purpus is assistant controller of the Mead Corp. ; Bill Reynolds is a manager with the Girard Trust-Corn Exchange Bank in Philadelphia. Tom Ryan is superintendent of schools in Coldwater; Pat Wilcox is director of the department of streets in Chattanooga; George Bucherd owns the Dayton TV Service on Wayne Avenue; Jake Froug is a Dayton attorney; C. G . Dehler is an accountant at St. Alexis Hospital, Cleveland ; and Frank Hollencamp is president and general manager of the Gustav Wiedeke Company, Dayton.
1944 The class of 1944 actually had three graduation times-December '43, April '44, and August, '44. The invasion of Europe by the allies came in June and the Battle of the Bulge in December. In November FDR was elected for his fourth term. Tom Butz is general manager of the Talbot Parking Garage and other parking lots around Dayton; Martha Lehman Duffy, a housewife, has been a stalwart in UD alumni affairs; and Betty Rogge Lutz is doing commercials for WHIO-TV. George Markus is a local physician and an assistant coroner. Frances Markus, no relation, is a teacher in the Jefferson Township schools. Rev. Don T. Mcintosh is pastor of the Methodist church in Union Bridge, Maryland. Patricia Somers O'Grady is with her husband in the U. S. Foreign Service; Firmin Paulus is a cost accountant with Dow Chemicals in Midland, Michigan. Lou Pohl is a Cincinnati insurance man ; Bob Reeves is with the Veterans' Administration in Chillicothe ; and Lou Riepenhoff is public relations director of station WEMP in Milwaukee. Ralph Rohner is secretary of the Robison Company, paper distributors in Akron ; Stan Sagan is now at Wright Field after an interesting career including two overseas trips and a spell on the evening faculty of the University of Detroit. Betty Thomas is on the music department staff here at UD ; Frank Welch is a transmission engineer with the Ohio Bell Telephone Company; and John Westerheide is with Westerheide Auto Sales in Minster.
Home-Coming Program Saturday, October 9 10 a.m.-Coffee-time 12 noon-Lunch 2: 15 p.m.-Football game UD vs. Louisville UD Alumnus September 1954
6:30 p.m. -President's Reception Fieldhouse 7 :30 p.m.-Annual Alumni Banquet Fieldhouse
9:30p.m. on-For Auld Lang Syne Reunion Time Sunday, October 10 11 a.m.-Memorial Mass in Chapel
7
No Crying Towel Needed Here; Looks Like An Interesting Year ! Coach Hugh D evore's University of Dayton Chlorophyll Kids, 19 sophomores green, are finding that time is rapidly running out. Yet, if there is a coaching staff in the nation with no need of a crying towel, it's Devore's. Optimism? Nope- just the oppositebut there's no need of crying. It's Devore's first year at Dayton. No sudden skyrocketing of Flyer football fortunes is predicted, anticipated or expected.
Pep's Peeps Street & Smith's Football Yearbook did very well by our Flyers. Six pictures and a lengthy write-up that covered 30 of 3 7 players. Copies are on newsstands. Vaughn (Ox) Taylor has departed from his coaching post at Northwestern High in Clark County for Army service. Don (Monk) Meineke appears headed for the Boston Celtics in the pro loop this year and Chuck Grigsby probably will debut with the Baltimore Bullets. Grigsby also may tour Korea with the Bullets this fall. Disturbing thought: That S & S football book lists four top tackles for Mississippi Southern. The smallest is one Jim (Coondog) Davis- stands 6' 5", weighs mere 242. Smallest, that is! Dell's 1955 Basketball annual will be out in November- watch for it. The Flyers will be featured. Flyers Club, Inc., not only pushed the stadium lights campaign but Jack Brown and Hank Malloy headed a season ticket sale drive. Lee Butler now edits a monthly "Gang News" publication. Ex-athletes write Lee 路who has the letters reproduced via ditto machine.
FLYERS TO FACE CRUSADERS Another big stride in rebuilding Flyer football fortunes has been made with the booking of Holy Cross for a game in 1955. Harry Baujan, Flyer athletic director, has announced that Dayton will meet the Crusaders in the East on Nov. 5, 1955. It will be the third meeting of the teams with Holy Cross holding 20-7 and 18-0 wins over the Flyers in 1926 and 1927.
8
Devore and his staff, which is entirely new to the hilltop university, are entitled to time to get their feet on the ground. So are the players who must learn a new system. No great things are predicted for this season, or next. True, there's an outside chance Devore and his staff can come up with a "sleeper." But Dayton fans aren't banking on it this year. Devore starts with . a squad that will probably number 3 7. Of these a staggering total of 19 are untried sophomores. To say Dayton is a green team would be putting it mildly. Devore has a! ready taken steps to brighten the offensive picture. Jim Haggerty , hard-running senior, has been moved from end to fullback where he'll scrap with last year's No. I line crasher, Ralph Jelic. Devore also has experience in Jimmy Spoerl at quarterback and halfbacks, Don McHenry and Johnny Bettinger. Up in the line veterans have to some extent beaten back a youth movement. Capt. Jimmy Shafor and Jimmy Katcavage, two top linemen, will be at right guard and left end . Vince Werl has moved in from tackle to left guard and Johnny Grogan has fought his way up to the No. 1 left tackle spot at the moment.
Jim Ducato is back at center but is having his hands full with newcomer, Jerry Ward. Here again, however, Devore may do some juggling. 'Ward's an outstanding guard. He may move back there and Paul Dacey, defensive end, may also move in where it's thick . The Flyers need depth through the middle especially since it's unknown at th i time as to just how well the fractured ankle of the highly regarded Roger Towle, junior guard, has healed. Jimmy Martin, another guard, has路 been bothered two seasons with injuries. Devore's greatest asset probably is the fact that his 19 sophomores are champingat-the-bit for starting berth~. There is speed, size, and in some cases, fine potential- but there is also inexperience. Two sophs do figure to crash the starting team- halfback Billy Smith, recently returned Army veteran, and Johnny Kozlevchar, end.
RAZOR CAMPBELL RETURNS TO COACH FROSH CAGERS Dick ( Razor) Campbell, captain of UD's first NIT basketball team in 19 51, has been named to coach the Flyer frosh this season . Campbell, a graduate of Columbus (0.) Aquinas High School and a Navy veteran of World War II, was a star guard for three seasons with the Flyers during their climb to national basketball prominence. Campbell was regarded as one of basketball's sharpest passers during his playing career. The new frosh mentor will work only on a part-time basis and will. not be a member of the faculty. Campbell conducts a carpet cleaning business at present but said he is looking forward to a coaching career.
The redoubtable Jack Muldowney who worked all spring at end may go back to tackle as the Flyers were dealt a rather severe blow to the solar plexus when final grades were posted in June. Dick Miyata, senior tackle who didn't fail a single subject, just didn't have enough quality points to be eligible. UD Alumnus September 1954
..
NIGHT FOOTBALL RETURNS; THREE GAMES THIS YEAR
Beauty To Bloom Anew When Flyerettes Make Bow
The flick of a switch on the night of September 18 will open a new era of football at the University of Dayton. Night football will have returned to the Hilltop. For students, alumni, friends of the University and members of the Flyers Club, Inc., who pushed the drive, it will be realization of hope that sprang up last spring. Bulwarked by Flyers Club members and the Montgomery County chapter of the alumni operating out of the UD Public Relat io ns office, a whirlwind four weeks' campaign raised enough funds for the University to flash the green light on installation plans. Bro. Austin J. Holian, S.M., had hopped the first hurdle by ordering, last spring, the tubular steel poles needed for erection of floodlights. The poles cost approxi mately $8000. Contract for erection of the lights was let to the Wagner-Smith Co. of Dayton on a low bid of $26,180. Completion of the job is exp ec ted shortly. With that eventuality in mind Harry Baujan, U. D. athletic director, reported three changes in the 路54 schedule. The games with Bowling Green, John Carroll and Mississippi Southern were switched to night affairs.
There's a new group blooming this fall on the Hilltop-and it's a blooming good one. Dayton will shortly meet-the Flyerettes. Brain-child of Bob Wood, the Flyerettes may eventually provide for the north what the Kilgore (Texas) Rangerettes have given the deep south-a sparkling, colorful military drill and dance group for performances at athletic and civic functions . The Flyerettes have been in training since February, 1954, with Wood and Rita Hoefler, director of a dance studio, as codirectors. Wood teaches the military precision drill routines and Miss Hoefler the dance steps. Three practice sessions have been held weekly on the campus this summer with co-eds coming from as far away as Paris, Ky. and Delphos, Ohio.
COACHING LURES EX-FLYERS; PROVIDES FARM SYSTEM One of the most refreshing features of the U.D . athletic picture is the increasing number of graduates going into the coaching field . Some of the older hands are, of course, well established. George Wirtz and Bill Belanich up in Cleveland, Joe Thomas off on Long Island and Jim McCarthy in Cincinnati. Last spring the talented Bobby Arnzen missed by just two points of being the coach of Ohio's Class B high school basketball champions. Others heading basketball teams on the high school level include: Brian McCall at Cleveland Latin ; Bill Ginn at West Milton; Don Bolton at Springboro ; Jim Hough at South Lebanon; Ken Boxwell at Spring Valley; and Bob Helmlinger at Sidney Holy Angels.
UD Alumnus September 1954
Jean Bendele N ewest member of the cage-coaching clan is Larry Pedicord at Centerville. A top football job has gone to Bucky Weaver, new grid boss at Chaminade in Dayton with Danny O'Brien, fresh from the Marine Corps, as his assistant. Tennis ace, Bob Holycross, will handle reserve teams for the Big Green . Tom Frericks is cage boss at Chaminade. All-time Flyer great, Leland (Junior) Norris is directing the basketball destinies at Fairmont and Fred George has taken over as athletic director at Toledo Central Catholic. Military academies claim the talents of fan-favorite Gene Joseph down in Wheeling, W . Va., and Ray (Rip) Janaszek in Cleveland. Ripper's teammate and '49 football captain, Bill Gutbrod , opened up athletics at new St. Joseph in Cleveland while Barney Otten did the same thing for new Fenwick High in Middletown. Frank Razzano, after piloting Denison St. Mary's to its most successful football and basketball seasons, now is Otten's assistant. Bill Cutcher is assisting McCarthy at Cincinnati Purcell and Marlo Termini is with ole Johnny Spezzaferro, popular exFlyer line coach, at Holy Name in Cleve.land . After three seasons Julius Hunt has left his basketball and baseball duties at New Riegel, 0 . for Bloomville (0.) High. Lending an international flavor to the picture is Joe Zaleski , who, besides quarterbacking the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, is athletic director and head coach of St. Paul's College in the Canadian city. The very successful Jim Hanby is top man at Dayton Stivers and also heads the Dayton coaches' association while Bob Heidkamp is not only coach but principal of Wayne Township High.
Three Times A Champ A young man with a club pounded the University of Dayton name into headlines across the nation during the summer months. Perhaps chipped would be a better word for although Jack Zimmerman pounded out his drives, it was his accurate chip shots to the green that got him out of troubled situations and brought victory. Back in June the former Flyer golf captain and basketball player annexed the Ohio Public Links crown. With the Ohio laurels in his pocket Zimmerman went deep into Texas in July to drive and chip his way to the finals of the 29th Amateur Public Links tourney in Dallas. After 213 holes of tourney play, Jack finally bowed to Gene Andrews of Pacific Palisades, Calif. August rolled around and with it the Dayton Amateur Golf Association championship. Zimmerman and Pat Schwab, University of Florida senior, finished all even in 36 holes of the title round. Then Zimmerman blasted his drive from the tee of the 37th hole to the very lip of the cup 180 yards away. The deuce won for Zimmerman the city championship.
9
the Supervisor's Eye View
RBJDf fO CO Founder H all will open officially September . It will be dedicated Augu t 29. Here are some preview pictures of rooms in the new bui lding.
It's Completed
Let's Keep Clean
Whatta Workbench
Take It Easy
Chapter News MIAMI VALLEY A capacity group of 225 alumni and their wives attended the annual dinner-dance of the chapter held at the Miami Valley Golf Club, Saturday evening, June 12th. Citation for outstanding chapter service went to Jack Brown, '26; for outstanding community service to Dr. Walter Reiling, '3 0; and for outstanding professional service to Maurice Reichard, '35. Lou Goldkamp, '4~, was elected president ; AI Suttman, '48, vice-president and Pat Radican, '52, secretary-treasurer.
HiUtop Jottings .. . Samuel Finn, D ayton attorney was elected president of the Associate Board of Lay Trustees for a two-year term succeeding S. C. Allyn. David L. Rike was elected vice-chairman; and Merle P. Smith, '25, was elected secretary of the group. Walter H . J. Behm was re-elected treasurer. . . . Dr. Kenneth Schraut has been appointed head of the mathematics department succeeding Bro. William BeHmer. ... Adrian Westbrock has been made head of the department of mechanical engineering. . . . Faculty promotions include four to the rank of associate professor: Erving Beauregard, history; Rev. Joseph S. Bruder, philosophy; Rev. Florian Enders, philosophy ; and Mrs. Alberta Prather, mathematics. Promoted to assistant professors are: Kuo-Sul Laurence Chang, accounting and business organization; Mrs. Elizabeth Reel, physical and health education; Charles H. Scheidler, psychology; Lawrence E. Tagg, music; and Jesse H. Wilder, mechanical engineering. . . . Enrollment predictions for the fall estimate that there will be 2,500 full-time students on the Hilltop and some 1,800 evening students, the largest student body yet. ... After completing the cataloging of the Leon Clugnet collection, a recent addition, the Marian Library at UD is now believed to be the largest such library in the world. More than 10,000 volumes are on the
12
CLEVELAND The chapter has been quite active in a social way during the summer. In late June the group sponsored a picnic in honor of the June '54 graduates. On July 25 a chapter picnic was held at St. Joseph High School grounds. Bill Gutbrod was chairman with a committee of John Bohan, Dan Ferrazza, Mrs. Steve Vargo, Mrs. Paul Varley and Mrs. Bohan .
DETROIT Some 62 members and guests attended the annual dinner-dance of the Detroit chapter held at the Birch Hill Country Club, on June 5th.
shelves, with a union catalog of some 20,000 more. Rev. John Rauscher, S.M., this year celebrating his golden jubilee, presented his parish jubilee gift of $1,700 to the library, the largest single gift ever made to it. ... Rev. Edmund Rhodes, dean of the college of arts and sciences, and Bro. Joseph Mervar, registrar and director of evening classes, celebrated their silver jubilees this summer. . . . The Guidance Center is spreading out with testing programs now centered in San Antonio, Tex., Cleveland, Cincinnati, New York, Pittsburgh, Pensacola, Fla., Mobile and Birmingham, Ala . ; Augusta, Atlanta and Savannah, Ga.; and Memphis, Tenn . . . . Bro. Stanley Mathews .has edited the first book on the Immaculate Conception published in the United States in 25 years. ... The new UD cafeteria won an honor award for outstanding service in food preparation, sanitation and layout in the Eighth Annual Institutions magazine Food Service Contest. This is the "Oscar" of the industry. ... Louis Budenz was the speaker at the annual summer commencement held at Chaminade High School, auditorium, Sunday, August 1. . .. UD is cooperating with the Dayton Graphic Arts Management Education Council in offering courses in the fields of printing management and printing technology. UD now will offer two programs, one leading to the associate in engineering specializing in printing technology, and the second to the associate in business ad-
Cocktails and dinner and a short presentation by Mary Shay, alumni secretary, preceded the dancing.
HELP We're looking for the class pictures of the classes of 1928 and 1933. They are missing from among the photos on the walls of St. Mary's Hall and to make the collection complete we need them . Anyone having a copy of either class picture to loan us, please contact the Alumni Office immediately. We will return it.
ministration specializing in printing management. The programs were worked out by the Council of which Kenneth P. Morse is chairman and Fred Rost, '23, a member. . . . The home economics program for teachers at UD has been approved by the State Commission on Vocational Education, the first private university in Ohio to get such approval.
104th COMMENCEMENT IS RAIN DAMPENED SUCCESS A slightly rain-dampened procession fi led into the NCR auditorium to take part in the University's 104th commencement. A sudden shower just after the procession got under way wet down the academic garb but failed to halt the ceremony. Very Rev. Walter Buehler, S.M., president of St. Mary's University, San Antonio, Texas was the speaker. Part of his remarks were reviewed ahead of time in the June issue of the ALUMNUS. Honorary degrees of doctor of humanities were conferred upon S. C. Allyn, president of the NCR ; and General Edwin Rawlings, commander of the Air Materiel Command. An honorary doctor of laws degree was awarded in absentia to Thomas F. Patton, assistant president of the Republic Steel Company. Some 3 59 students were granted degrees, 29 of these were associate degrees, and 16 of this group are the first graduating class of the technical institute. Many of the class have received postgraduate scholarship and fellowship. For details on these see the 1954 class notes .
UD Alumnus September 1954
president of the Bond Stores because of " too much traveling and time away from home."
1923
rector of public relations for the New York Central Railroad. DoN SHARKEY attended the Marian Congress of Canada held August 5-15. The fourth ed ition of his book, "The Woman Shall Conquer" has been published.
FRANK KRONAUGE 's daughter Mary, is following her Dad's footsteps in tennis. FRED RosT attended the International Exposition of Printing Machinery at Dusseldorf, Germany in May and toured Europe while there.
LT. CoL. WALTER HABERER is serving with the headquarters of the 330th Field Artillery Bn. in Europe.
1884
1924
1936
MR. and MRs. HUGH WALL, SR . recently observed their 43rd wedding anniversary.
CHARLES P. EISENHAUER, SR., has been elected president of the Tool Manufacturers Assn. of Dayton. CoL . FRANK WILLIAMS is serving as chief of the operational service division of the Air Development Command in Dayton .
DR. EDWARD A. MILLOi'o/IG has returned to practice in Dayton, specializing in obstetrics and gynecology, after doing postgraduate work. PETE ZURLINDEN is now living in Tujunga, California.
1930
1939
HARRY B. BECKER has been elected president of the Century Club in Dayton. VINCENT M. SHIELDS has been elected president of the downtown Lions Club, Dayton . CoL. DuDLEY WASHINGTON is now commander of Wolters Air Force Base, Mineral Wells, Texas after serving as executive officer.
GEORGE " BARNEY" D ooNAN is now living at 211 Park Drive, Joliet, Illinois. fRED GEORGE is now athletic director and head football coach at Toledo Central Catholi c High School. GRACE AYLSTOCK NEANDER has been writing friends real newsy letters of life and mores in Puerto Rico. CoL. GEORGE ZAHN visited the campus on his way to assignment in Wiesbaden, Germany.
1896 EDWARD LARKIN has given up his electrical equipment business in Albany after the death of his wife and son, and has moved to Dayton.
1907 REV. FRANCIS KUENLE celebrated 50 years as a priest this summer. His church edifice is almost ready for occupancy.
1908 A. C. BERGMAN, city manager of Oakwood, has been made a member of the board of the Ohio Municipal League. He is also president of Ohio City Managers Assn.
1931 RT. REv. FREDERICK HocHWALT received an honorary doctor of laws degree at the Manhattan College commencement In
1913
June.
FRANK FARRELL has moved to Orange, N. J. from East. Orange.
1933
1915 FRANK MAHONEY is now living in North Plainfield, N. ]. REV. CLARENCE]. ScHMITT is now at the Ma!ia-Joseph Home, Dayton.
1918
JoHN MEDLEY has been elected national president of Te Deum, Catholic lecture forum organization . LT. CoL . RICHARD ZENNI, Air Force Reserve, is with the U. S. Internal Revenue Bureau in Honolulu. RoBERT ZoLG has moved from Phoenix, Ariz., to Oxnard, California.
JoHN L. CROWLEY's son, J. David, was recently ordained to the priesthood.
1934
1919
CHARLES H. BOESCH has been elected a vice-president of the Presidents Club of Dayton. RAY BLOSSER resigned in mid-July as di-
DAVID A . MARGOLIS has resigned as vice-
UD Alumnus September 1954
1935
1940 JEAN STAPENHORST, St. Louis insurance man, handled coverage for a recent track meet there, involving Daytonians.
1941 CHARLES CONWAY has moved from Dayton to Lakewood, Ohio. CHARLES McfARLAND, now living in Lehighton, Pa., was a recent campus visitor.
1942 CHARLES FoR THOFF stopped in Dayton on his way to N evada to a new assignment with the Atomic energy program. THEODORE SHAFER has moved from Dayton to Lafayette, Indiana. CHARLES WHALEN, JR., has been elected president of the Dayton Agonis club.
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fHB BBttS C/1/J/B FOR LT. DoNALD BANGE, '53, married Marjorie Gugel, St. Veronica church, Hamilton, May 29. RoY BEGLEY, ' 51, married PATRICIA SHERMAN, '52 , Our Lady of Mercy church, June 19. DR. CARL H. BERTRAMS, '50, married Mary Ellen Segerson, Blessed Sacrament church, Madison, Wis., August 29. KENNETH F. BORNHORST, '51, married Patricia Drayer, Holy Angels church, July 3. PATRICK J. BYRNE, '54, married JACQUELINE TANGEMAN, '54, Holy Family church, June 12. JoHN CARON, ' 54, married Barbara Feltman, St. Mary's rectory, Greenville, June 19.
THOMAS CARROLL, '53, married Nancy York, St. Joachim church, Costa Mesa, Calif. , June 5. MARGARET ANNE CAULFIELD, '54, married James Fulwiler, St. Joseph church, May 1. JoHN J. CoNNOLLY, '54, married Mary Warning, Holy Angels church, May 15 . LT. JAMES CosiMATI, '53, married Yvonne Dubrul, Columbus, 0., June 12. JAMES CURRIN, '53, married Judith Lang, Immaculate Conception church, May 15 . DONALD DARTT, '54, married Carolyn Mergler, Our Lady of Mercy church, June 26. EvELYN ANN DAVIS, '50, married Howard L. Haight, York, Neb., August 22. JAMES DAY, '54, married Jeanne Butts, Belmont Evangelical United Brethren church, July 31. CoRNELIUS DICKEN, '50, married Mary Rose Schubert, Concordia Lutheran church, May 30. JoHN R. ENSLEY, '46, married Louise Rhoades, Christ Episcopal church, July 17. KENNETH L. ESHBAUGH, '54, married Betty Phillips, Salem Methodist church, Ellerton, June 12. THOMAS FROUNFELKER, '51, married Mary H. Botz, St. Margaret church, St. Louis, June 5.
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LT. JoHN GANNON, '53, married Beverly J. Quatman, St. Anthony church, July 3. RAMIRO GARCIA, '54, married Shirley Roberts, Holy Angels church, June 30. JAMES J. GLEASON, '53, married Ellen M. Bourke, St. Columbkille church, Wilmington, August 7. PATRICIA L. HAGANS, '50, married Donald J. Monnig, St. Albert the Great church, August 21. CHARLES J. HART, '49, married Mary Hildebrand, St. Rose of Lima church, St. Louis, May 1. ROBERT L. HEISTERMAN, '53, married Susan Ann Baker, Westminster Presbyterian church, June 12 . RAYMOND C. HIEBER, '51, married Catherine Batritchevitch, Holy Angels church, June 19. DAviD J. HoENE, '54, married Mary DeVol, St. Thomas church, Zanesville, June 19.
WILLIAM A. POEPPELMAN, '54, married Marilyn P . Simon, St. Anthony church, June 26. (ALVIN K. POOLE, ' 52, married Ruth L. Palen, Greenmont-Oak Park Community church, June 18. MARTHA J. PRINCE, '47, married Robert 0. Nunemacher, Shiloh Congregational church, July 3. RAYMOND RODERER, '53, married MARY C. NAHN, '53, Our Lady of Mercy church, July 30. WILLIAM G. Ros E, '54, married Patricia Steele, Immaculate Conception church, Coldwater, June 26. DAVID SALVATI, '53, married Johanna Mederzizky, St. Alphonse church, Auburn, N.Y., June 21. DR. KENT ScHOLL, '50, married Loretta Downey, Park Ridge, Ill. LYNNE SHOWALTER, '51, married Dale Hufziger, South Park Methodist church, June 26.
DoNALD W . HOHLER, '49, married Patricia Fraas, Grace Methodist church, May 15 .
EDWARD STOERMER, '49, married Dorothy Pax, New Weston, 0., in late August.
NANCY HOHLER, ' 52, married Richard B. Fuller, St. Mary's church, Sandusky, 0., July 17.
WILLIAM J . TALBOT, '53, married CHARMAINE HILGEFORD, '52, Emmanuel church, June 19.
ROBERT HOLYCROSS, '54, married MARY C. BURKE, ' 54, Holy Angels church, June 12.
FRANCIS H. TUITE, '50, married CAROL STOECKLEIN, '53, St. Anthony church, May 15.
ARTHUR J. HuBER, '54, married Margaret M. Wilkens, St. Augustine church, Minster, July 17.
LT . EDWARD VEDA, '53, married JoDY L. FLAUTE, ' 54, Holy Angels church, July 31.
JEROME LoGAN, '51, married Patricia Thresher, St. Catherine church, Milwaukee, July 10. JoAN LOGEL, '50, married Herbert Klar, St. Anthony church, May 15 . ROBERT A. LOWDEN, ' 54, married Barbara Weber, Corpus Christi church, June 19.
JAMES R .. WADE, '51, married Catherine Wilson, St. Francis de Sales church, Newark, 0., July 24. ROBERT H. WALSH, ' 54, married JOANNE FAULKNER, '54, Immaculate Conception church, July 10. BONNIE WINCKELMAN, '47, married Robert Schanz, Westminster Presbyterian church, August 21.
ELEANOR LOWRY, '48, married Jack G. Grifo, Holy Angels church, May 8. LT. WALTER "DANNY" O'BRIEN, '52, married Delores Foster, St. Colman church, Washington Court House, July 31. GEORGE OMIETANSKI, '51, married Mary Lee Brooks, June 12. DAVID PFEIFFER, '50, married Claire A. Rosendahl, St. Joseph church, Hamilton.
1943 (APT. HERBERT HAYES has been assigned to Ft. Benning, Ga., and stopped in Dayton on the way. JERRY HERZOG attended the Young Republican convention in Omaha in late June.
UD Alumnus September 1954
C. J. LAUSE, JR., has moved to Pittsburgh from Cleveland, Ohio.
1945 REv. ANTHONY RoDRIGUES has been ordained a Maryknoll priest and assigned to the mission in Cochamba, Bolivia. DR . RICHARD WELSH has moved from Dayton to Cincinnati, where his address is 4564 Hamilton Avenue.
1946 PAUL E. LAYTON is a practicing attorney in Fairborn with offices at 144 N. Broad St.
1947 JoHN A. RAUSCHER has moved from Anniston, Ala., to Kirkwood, Missouri, with the Monsanto Chemical Company. THOMAS A . SMITH, former personnel director of the Sucher Packing Company, has joined the Dayton agency of the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company.
1948 DR. PAUL HICKEY will start a pedodontic internship and fellowship in pathology at the University of Rochester this fall. ELEANOR LOWRY GRIFO is now living at the Shelbourne Towers, Knoxville, T enn.
1949 ERMA FISTE BOMBECK is now editor of the Dayton Shopping News. J OSE PH J. CONNAU GHTON receive d a bachelor of laws at the University of Cincinnati in June. REV. GEORGE LAWRENCE has returned to this country after two years of graduate study at the University of Edinburgh, in which he received his doctorate in philosophy. He went to Europe on a scholarship from Crozier Theological Seminary. ANN E MERRICK PRICE has joined the medi cal staff of the Chemstrand Corp., Pensacola, Fla. , the largest nylon producing plant in the world. DR . JoHN D . WHARTON, D .O. , has opened his offices for general practice at 3616 N . Main St. , Dayton.
1950 RoBERT L. AMES has joined the Frigidaire
UD Al umnus September 1954
appliance sales promotion department as a copywriter in the sales training section. JAMES B EIRISE has moved from Deer Park, Ohio to Dayton. DRs. CARL BERTRAMS and CoN ]. FECHER, JR . received their doctors of dentistry from Marquette University in June. CARL has returned to D ayton to establish his office. CoN left in late August for service in Japan with the Air Force. BoB HEAD has joined the sales staff of WLW-D in Dayton . MARY Jo HUTH received her Ph.D . from St. Louis University in June. EARL MATRE is now a salesman for the Pittsburgh Steel Company . RAY MoNTGO MERY was a campus visitor during the summer. ROBERT D . PATRICK received a bachelor of laws degree from Harvard Law School in June. DR. VICTOR M. SHAMPTON, M.D. , has opened his offices for general practice at 9 Burns Avenue, Dayton. JAMES F. TULLY has joined the Foreign Operations Administration Mission to the Philippines.
1951 After doing graduate work at Brooklyn Poly Tech, KENNETH BORNHORST is now an electronic engineer with the Army and is living in Arizona. DICK BROCKMAN has been discharged from the Marines and is doing accounting for the Harris-Seybold Company, Dayton . J ULI US HuNT will be the coach and social science teacher at Bloomville, Ohio, this fall. He had been at New Reigel for three years. CARROLL IMBER has returned to Delphos from Detroit. DAN LEARY, JR . had a serious operation during the summer. J EROME LOGAN is at the St. Louis Medical School. HUB ERT J. MILL ER received a master of arts degree from St. Louis University in June. GEORGE 0MIETANSKI is doing graduate work at Ohio State University. MARGARET ORACKO NovoTNY is living at 135 Brady Circle West, Steubenville, Ohio. GLEN RIDGEWAY is living at 71 Beechtree Rd ., Columbus. DR. RALPH SKINNER received his doctor
PROHISBD fiUfUIIB JEAN BECKER, ' 54, engaged to Charles W. Connors, of Cincinnati, autumn wedding. DoNALD DoNOHER, '54, engaged to Sonia McDonald, Dayton, September 2 S wedding. DR . CoN ]. FECHER, JR. , ' SO, engaged to Alice Focke, wedding after he returns from service overseas . RICHARD HECKER, ' 53, engaged to Marilyn Gesler. LT. ToNY KRAMER, ' 53, engaged to Elizabeth Schweier, Dayton . LT. FRANCIS B. MELVIN, ' 54, engaged to Gisela Mestwerdt, September 4 wedding. RoBERT E. MINNERUP, 路so, engaged to Nancy Nutt. Late November wedding. ToM POHLABEL, '51, engaged to Suzanne Scheetz, Lima, Ohio. D ONALD J. SCHIMMOLLER, ' 54, engaged to Virginia Sachs. ERIKA ScHULHOF, '52 , engaged to Walter Rybeck, Dayton . WILMA VAN FOSSAN, ' 50, engaged to Richard J . Kern, Pittsburgh.
of dentistry degree from OSU in June and opened his office in Lima August 1. JAMES R. WADE is with the Owens-Corning Fiberglas Company in Newark, Ohio. GEORGE E. ZIMMERMAN received a master of laws degree from the University of Cincinnati in June.
1952 PAULINE KELLEY CosGROVE and her husband are living at 14 3 West Brighton Rd ., Columbus while he does graduate work at OSU . ROBERT GOODPASTER has moved from Tol edo to Dayton. BoB HECK has been discharged from the service and is working with his Dad at the Handebar on Patterson Rd., D ayton. N ANCY HOHLER FULLER's husband is a
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fbe JUNIOR JlUJ/NI Third chi ld, William M., to Mr. and Mrs. GERALD ANDREWS, '49, June 3. Son, K evin Joseph, to Lt. and Mrs. WILLIAM P. BOLAND, ' 53, June 23, Junction City, Kansas. Third child, Emerson, J r., to EMERSON and PEGGY BuRKE, ' 50, Honolulu, Hawaii, September 17, 1953.
Daughter, Eileen M., to Mr. and Mrs . En MORRISEY, '49, Aprill. Third child, second son, Jerome L. , to Mr. and Mrs. KEN MORRISSEY, 'SO, May 27. First child, Constance Ann, to Lt. and Mrs. HARRY PARR, '51, July 29. First child, Mary M., to Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS REICHARD, '52, August 2. Son, William A., to Mr. and Mrs. DAN RoMER, 路so, June 12. First child, Norman L., to Mr. and Mrs. NoRMAN WEBER, '52, June 8.
Son, Patrick J., to LEE, '54 and KAY PECKOLT BUTLER, '53, June 26. First child, David Michael, to Mr. and Mrs. HAROLD J. DREES, ' 51, May 24. Second daughter, to Lt. and Mrs. DICK EISENHAUER, '53, Champ Chaffee, May 20. First daughter, second child, Lucy, to Mr. and Mrs. HUBERT ESTABROOK, JR., '45, Cincinnati, July 9. Daughter, Mary Jane, to Dr. and Mrs. JOHN FINKE, '50, July 18, Cincinnati, 0. First child, Gary A., to Mr. and Mrs. Lours GoETZ, '53, June 27. First child, daughter, to Mr. and Mrs. ALBERT HODAPP, Jr., '50, July 21. Daughter, Adrienne M., to Mr. and Mrs. FRANK HUGHES, Jr., '48, June 5. Son, Christopher G ., to Mr. and Mrs. NoRBERT B . KELLY, '51, July 26. First child, Mary K., to Mr. and Mrs. RUDOLF KRAFKA, '54, May 28. First child, Gretchen, to Mr. and Mrs . Ron. G. KREITZER, 'SO, July 13, Dallas, Texas. Daughter, to Mr. and Mrs. PETER H. KuNTZ, 'SO, July 22. First child, Kevin C., to Lt. ToM and PHYLLIS LAMBERT SCHNEIDER, '53, in Frankfurt, Germany, June 5. Son, Shaun, to JoE and PATRICIA KINSELLA MALLOY, '54, July 16. First child, Mathew Paul, to ERIC and VERA SEILER McCARTY, 'SO, Warren, 0., July 18. Fourth child, third daughter, to Mr. and Mrs. GEORGE MITCHELL, '48, July 13.
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member of the Sandusky city commission and ex-officio mayor of that community. RoNALD C. HOKE received a master of science degree from the University of Cincinnati in June. EUGENE and MARY ANN ISENECKER MAUCH have returned to Dayton after Gene co~pleted service with the 1 Sth Army headquarters in Chicago. DANNY O 'BRIEN has been released from the Marines and appointed assistant coach at Chaminade High School. CALVIN K. POOLE is working at Dayton Power and Light Company and is a justice of the peace in Bath Township. JULIA RANEY is the educational director of th e dietary department of Miami Valley Hospital in Dayton . RAYMOND J . STITH has returned to Dayton from South Bend, Indiana.
1953 LT. JEROME BOHMAN has been assigned to the Third Armored Division for duty after completing a year of law school at the University of Chicago. ALBERT BROCONE and his wife have returned to Dayton after a year in Paris on a Fulbright scholarship. LT . DoNALD BANGE is serving at Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey. THOMAS CARROLL is stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia. JrM CURRIN is serving at Ft. Lee, Virginia and living in Colonial Heights, Va. KATHRYN DALE finished her dietetic internship at Christ Hospital, Cincinnati , in mid-May.
JAMES GLEASON is serving with the U. S. Navy. CHARLES PRICE is an NCR salesman in Charlotte, North Carolina and recently came to D ayton to attend the sales training camp at Sugar Camp. FRANK RAZZANO has resigned as head coach at D ennison St. Mary, and has joined Barney Otten, '51, at Middletown Fenwick. CARMEN Rozzo is serving with the Hq. Co., 7504 Av RTC, APO 851-C, New York. D ONALD J. SCURLOCK received a master of retailing degree at the University of Pittsburgh in June. FRANK SIGGINS has been appointed a physical education instructor in the elementary schools of Dayton . SISTER M. RosALIE SMITH, S.P.S .F. , has become assistant director of the education program at the school of nursing, St. Margaret's Hospital, Kansas City, Kans. LT. NEIL SOMMERS is with the Third Armored Bn., at Ft . Knox, Kentucky. VAUGHN TAYLOR was inducted into service July 15. CHARLES f. WALTERS is with the 89th EOBC, Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
1954 RAY BEDWELL has a teaching fellowship in the department of speech and dramatics at Ohio University, Athens. DoN BRUHN is going to med ical school at Creighton University, Omaha. LT. JOHN CARON is stationed at Ft. Benning, G eorgia. MARGARET CAULFIELD is working as a secretary in th e C.I.O. office in Dayton. LT. JOHN CHANEY is at Ft. Benning and living in Baker Plaza, Columbus, G eorgia. GORDON H . CHENEZ has join ed the fu el meteri ng engineering staff of Bendix Products Division, South Bend, Indiana. SuzANNE CoNNOLLY is the editorial assistant for the M cCall Spirit, employees' magazine the re . WILLIAM H. DAVIDSON is attending the graduate school of business at the University of Indiana. LT. DONALD DARTT is stationed at Ft. Benning, Georgia. WILLIAM FISHBAUGH and RICHARD
UD Alumnus September 1954
WHITMER are attending medical school at
osu. RICHARD FLOOD and GERALD WEIMSHANK are attending dental school at OSU. THERESA FRICKE, ROBERT SHROYER and HARRY J. SMITH have graduate assistantships in mathematics at Purdue University. WILLIAN FRISTIK is at the St. louis University dental school. RAMIRO GARCIA has joined the engineering department of the city of Dayton and is living on Riverview Terrace. lYNN HARTNETT is a dietetic interne at Henry Ford Hospital, D etroit. DAVID HoENE is doing graduate chemical research at Notre Dame University. RoGER KEITH has a graduate assistantship in chemical engineering at the University of Cincinnati . WILLIAM LEIDER is attending medical school at the University of Indiana, in Indianapolis. RoBERT A. lowDEN is living in Pittsburgh. PETER MARIANI is attending medical school at Loyola University, Chicago. CHRISTIAN MAXWELL is doing graduate work in business at the University of Indiana. LT. FRANCIS MELVIN is assigned to the Signal Corps engineering laboratory. GEORGE O'MALLEY is attending dental school at Georgetown University. GEORGE PERRY is in the research department of the Cincinnati Milling Machine Company. CLARENCE RIHM has been appointed faithful admiral in the Father Kuhlman Assembly, Knights of Columbus, Dayton. MARY ANN RoBERSON is attending graduate school at Ohio State University. PHILIP SHOUP is working for a paper importing company in Columbus . JAMES STRIEBEL is attending the medical school at St. louis University. JONAS STROUTH is attending medical school at the Medical College of Virginia. WILLIAM THOME has a Procter and Gamble scholarship in mechanical engineering at Ohio State. CARMEN VENTURA has a dietetic internship at Cincinnati General Hospital. JANE WALKER has joined the chemistry lab at Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton. VERNE WEBER is doing graduate work at Ohio State University.
UD Alumnus September 1954
COJ/PlBfBD CJIIBBIIS
New York Times, was the wife of FRANK McCORMICK, '88. She died May 29.
Harry F. Cappel, '98
Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. RAY J . MuNGER, '50, May 28.
Infant Munger President of the Cappel Furniture Company since 1932, Mr. Cappel d ied July 20. He was an organizer of the D ayton Credit Bureau and the Dayton Better Business Bureau. He was a director of the Chamber of Commerce and the Dayton Retail Merchants Assn . He was president of the U D Alumni Assn. in 1908 and was actively interested in UD at his death.
lynn Coy Infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. JoHN CoY, '52, died July 1.
Edward Keck Oldest employee of the Dayton Rubber Company and father of VrcroR KECK, '51.
Peter Kuntz, '94 President of the Peter Kuntz lumber Company since 1914, died August 2. He was named a Knight of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre by the Pope in 1951. Having given more than 50 years to the lumber business, Mr. Kuntz also had time for civic affairs.
William T. larkin, '25 Mayme Burkhardt larkin The wife and son of EDWARD C. LARKIN, '96, died within six weeks of each other. Mrs. larkin died November 15, 1953 and her son on December 23, 1953. Bill, it is believed, was one of those having the longest continuous enrollment as a student at UD. He started in 5th grade in 1916 and completed his sophomore year in pre-medical training in 1927.
William H. Mayer, '50 Bill disappeared in the air over the Caribbean Sea on a flight from Yucatan to Cuba, after visiting his classmate AL PoNCE, '50, in Merida. A memorial mass was held at St. Anne's church, Cleveland, July 30. Bill was the son of WILLIAM E. MAYER, '25, and the brother of RICHARD, '51, and ROBERT, '54.
Dennis Murphy Father of Eo. l. MuRPHY, '28, died m Cincinnati, July 17.
Richard Rotterman, '04 Father of THOMAS RoTTERMAN, '48, and former Rike's employee.
Ollie Saettel Dayton grocer and father of CLAYTON H., '28; OLIVER, '36; and JAMES W., '38; and grandfather of PATRICIA RADICAN, '52. Died August 5.
Lt. Thomas W. Seuffert, '52 Tom, who was the first Daytonian to down a MIG in the Korean fighting, died in an air crash at Clavis Air Force Base, N. M ., June 22.
Charles E. Stoermer Son of Mr. and Mrs. ALBERT E. STOERMER, ' 51, died June 17.
Patrick H. Stone, '36 Mr. Stone, former traffic manager of the Dayton Sure Grip and Shore Co., and associated with the Hoffman Trailer and Equipment Co., died July 11.
George E. Supensky, '24 Operator of Supensky's Cafe and captain of the Stivers football team that won two national championships in the '20's, he died May 24. His brother, JoHN, was also a member of the class of '24.
Helen K. Towne Mother of JosEPH D. TowNE, '41, and HELEN TOWNE CAMPBELL, '49, died July 31 in Burbank, California.
Eleanore Windle Mother of CHR1STINE WINDLE, '40, on May 27.
Thomas Ziehler Three months old son of Mr. and Mrs. ELMER ZIEHLER, '23, June 19.
Anne O'Hare McCormick, '29 Hon.
Agnes Zimmerman
Mrs. McCormick, foreign correspondent and member of the editorial board of the
Mother of JEROME, ' 31, and EUGENE, '33, ZIMMERMAN, July 17.
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EDMUND VELTEN, '43 Ed entered the Army right after graduation, serving all his time in the Manhattan Engineer Distri ct, predecessor to the Atomic Energy Commission. He rose to the rank of captain. H e held successive assignments as technical officer in the Madison Square area and the St. Louis area and subsequently as area engineer for both the St. Louis and Iowa areas of the District. H e has been with the Atomic Energy Commission since its inception in January 1947. For three years he was assistant director of the production division of the New York Operations office of the commission. Then he spent a year in Cleveland as manager of the New York production division. Since July 1951 he has been manager of the Lockland, Ohio area office of the Commission, working on a program of development of a nuclear propulsion system for aircraft. He and his wife, the former Caroline Kastl, '43, and their three sons, are living on a farm southeast of Lebanon. Business address: U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, Lockland , Ohio. Home address: R. R. 1, Lebanon, Ohio.
After two years there, she went to Rochester, New York as educational di- . rector at Highland Hospital, where she remained for ten years. Two years ago she moved across New York State's Cherry Valley into Albany where she became assistant director of the school of nursing at Union University, actually working in Albany Hospital. The nursing school is separate from the hospital however. The hospital has 950 beds, and has some of the finest and largest clinics in the East. In addition to Union, the school has affi liations with two other colleges in the area. Blanche's chief hobby now is reading, for as she says, she has little time for anything else. Home address: 82 Chestnut Street, Albany, New York.
REV. RICHARD J. CONNELLY, '31 Father Connelly is beginning his third consecutive term as grand national chaplain of the 1,200,000 Elks in the United States and surrounding territories. This is nothing new, for he is serving his 5th term in the same capacity for the Ohio Elks. He is also Ohio chaplain for the Catholic War Veterans of America and a past chaplain of the Ohio American Legion and Forty and Eight. He spent 32 months in service as a chaplain with the rank of major and received 5 battle stars and the Bronze Star.
Edmund Velten
Blanche A. Davis
Rev. Richard J. Connelly
Harry F. Finke, Sr.
BLANCHE A. DAVIS, '40 Blanche remained on the staff of St. Elizabeth Hospital after graduation as an instructor in science.
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He was the first Allied chaplain on Corsica. His parish in Africa was 1100 miles long as he constantly visited with units from Oran to Cape Bon. He was also stationed at various times in France, Sardinia and Italy. He was guide for the then Archbishop Spellman on His Excellency's war tour of Corsica. For several years after the war, he was chaplain of the Boys' Industrial School, Lancaster, Ohio. Now he is the pastor of St. Colman's Church, 219 South North St., Washington Court House, Ohio, where he recently celebrated the nuptial mass for Danny O'Brien, '51.
HARRY F. FINKE, SR., '02 Harry has twice been president of the UD Alumni Assn. First in 1911 and agai-n in 1930. After graduation he started to work for the Pennsylvania remaining for four years. For most of the next eight years he was assistant city engineer in Dayton. From 1914 to 1917 he was a partner in Geiger and Finke, engineers-contractors. In 1917 the Finke Engineering Company came into being, with Harry as president and general manager. His outside activities are myriad . He was first vice-president and one of the organizers of the Morris Plan Bank, now People's Bank; he's still a board member there. He's a member of the Dayton, state and national societies of professional engineers; the Engineers Club; Knights of Columbus; Elks; the Dayton Bicycle Club; Optimist Club, president in 1927; the Miami Valley Golf Club and St. Joseph Orphan's Society. H e has ten children, six daughters and four sons ; six of them UD' ers. Those from UD include: Mary Ann, 路4 5, now Mrs. Edward H enz; Harry F., Jr. , '45; Dr. John E., '50; Janet, '52; Robert, 路54; and Susan, now a sophomore. Harry's a spectator sportsman now, but hi s chi ef hobby is 3-D photography, both still and movies. Home address: 208 Squirrel Road, Dayton 5. Business address: 114 South Perry St., Dayton 2.
UD Alumnus September 1954
He's An Alaskan Builder Leaving behind him the many marks of Army construction which will endure for years in Alaska, Col. John E. Carroll, '27, Engineer, U. S. Army, Alaska, has left the territory for an assignment "Outside" after three years. Col. Carroll is now taking a year of advanced study at the Industrial College of Armed Forces, Ft. McNair, Washington, D.C. "Inside" since he went to Alaska in October 1951, he has "bedded-down" the Army in the T erritory in many major permanent facilities. When he arrived in Alaska, the military installati ons were either non-existent or were operating from World War II facilities consisting of small wooden structures or scattered quonset huts. During the last three years, it's been his task to supervise an engineering program of a scale not usually found except during
the urgency of war. A further facet of the Army Engineer's job, but vitally essential, is in being able to anticipate and having on hand when needed the right kinds and quantities of equipment and supplies. The failure of a heating system in winter, for instance, can be acutely critical for both troops as well as the building in which they live. Col. Carroll has been associated with the Army since 1927 when he was commissioned in the Reserve after getting his civil engineering degree here. H e worked as an engineer for the War Department from 1929 to 1941 when he was called to active duty. He has been awarded the Legion of Merit for outstanding engineering work by the Commanding General, Third Service Command; and has also been decorated by the Nationalist Chinese government for his work with the American Military Advisory Group in Nanking in 1947-48.
He's a builder. Col. John Carroll , '27, is pictured here with a few of the many structures erected during his stay in Alaska, that have transformed Fort Richardson, near Anchorage, and other posts in Alaska into some of the Army's most modern installations. Upper left, family quarters; upper nght, 200-man barracks; lower left, 500-man barracks; lower right, interdenominational chapel.
These Are The Men Of Good Will They're helping others to help themselves. These fellows spend their professional lives rehabilitating the physically handicapped in Dayton. All of their effort goes into the day-today operations of the D ayton Goodwill Industries, rehabilitation organization. The problems of the blind, the crippled, the paralyzed, the seriously injured and the afflicted are their problems. Through physical therapy, training and aid in ob-
tawwg employment in line with their ca pabilities, Goodwill Industries help s each one regai n an earning status and a self -sufficiency. Goodwill supports itself as a Community Chest through the sale of reconditioned furniture and household items and the donations of old clothing and furni ture. Goodwill Industries is the application of the Golden Rule at its best.
Goodwill staffers from U.D. l-R: Bill Zaenglein, '52, e~pl o yment manager; lee lacey, '49, executive drrector; Joe Accro~co, '47, physical therapist; and Jack Dempsey, evenrng classes, operations manager.
Meet the Family -The Shays of Dayton Here's a D ayton family with lots of UD memories. All six of these brothers and sisters in the Shay family are Flyer alumni . Paula, '52, is receptionist for Dr. H. R. Moore on Far H ills Avenue. Frances, also ' 52, is the wife of John C. Anderson, ' 54, and is a housewi fe and mother. Mary, 路44, is alumni secretary at UD, and should be familiar to everyone reading this story.
UD Alumnus September 1954
Theresa, ex-'54, is now Mrs. Kenneth Lupp, and as these lines are being written is just returning from her honeymoon. She is a receptionist for Dr. Sterling Gerrard on Patterson Road . Bernard, '48, is an accountant at Inland Products of General Motors. Eugene, '55, is associated with Extermital, Inc., of Dayton, while he completes his degree work. Not present for the picture was Mrs. Magdalene Shay Moorman, '47, housewife .
The Shays are all UD'ers. l-R: Paula, Frances, Mary, Theresa, Bernard and Eugene.
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Doctors-to-be Have Tough Job During Interne Year Night duty, day duty, emergency, surgery, O.B., ward duty, no vacations, 7-day weeks; all of this an d more is the lot of at least 11 ~ Iumni who are interning at various hospitals after graduating from medical chool. Ifs at least 12 months of hard work each one of them faces before they can open their own offices and start to practice. Three of the four Dayton hospitals have alumni interns this year. At St. Elizabeth Hospital are Drs. Vinton Young, '49, and James Leary, ' 51, both graduates of St. Loui University School of Medicine ; and Dr. Joseph Gurnick, 路50, a graduate of the Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola Unive rsity of Chicago. At Grandview Hospital are Drs. Glen E. Cook, '50, Art Bok, ' 50, and Russell Fie! , ' 50. Glen i a graduate of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy; Art graduated from the Chicago College of Osteopathy ; and Russ graduated from Kirksville, Mo., College of Osteopathy. Interning at Miami Valley Hospital are Drs. Kent School, '50, Jack Voehringer, '49. Kent is a graduate of Stritch like Joe Gurnick; and Jack is an Ohio State medical graduate. Other internes we know about are Dr. Jack Finke, '50, St. Louis graduate interning at Good Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati; Dr. Plato Varidin, '50, KirksviJJe graduate, interning in Warren, Ohio and Dr. Thomas C. Graul, '51, Stritch graduate, interning at Philadelphia General Hospital.
UD Takes Over Technologists Group UD's leadership of professional groups and organizations continues with the announcement recently of the officers of the Dayton Society of Medical Technologists. Margaret Carroll, 路45, is the current president; and Irene George, '53, was elected treasurer of the group.
Gov. Lausche Appoints Quatman Appeals Judge Joseph B. Quatman, '38, has been appointed judge of the Court of Appeals, Third District of Ohio, embracing 16 northwestern counties in Ohio by Gov. Lausche.
Help Wanted George Humm, '40, has recently been made resident manager in D ayton for Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Beane, inve tment counselors. George bas asked for our help in locating any alumnus interested in the stock and bond business to join his staff. Anyone interested in such a position, with salary plus commissions and bonus, and a training program, should contact George at AD 5042 in Dayton.
Father Sherry Assigned To Reed Hospital When Lt. Col. Robert Sherry, 路 14, and Col. Joe Goetz, '27, met in Washington recently for the first time in years, it was under peculiar circumstances.
Judge Joseph B. Quatman
His appointment is to fill an unexpired term. H e has already been named a candidate for re-election in the fall by the Democratic party. Judge Quatman had been serving in the Juvenile and Probate Court in Allen County (Lima).
Double Visitors When Roy and Pat Horvath, '53, visited the San Jaci nto Battleground outside of Houston, Texas in mid-June they had the surprise of their trip as they signed the guest book. For the name just ahead of theirs was that of Dr. and Mrs. Walter Reili ng, '30. The Reilings had visited the spot in connection with the convention of the Optimist International of which he was president last year.
The two men were both Cincinnatians years back, Sherry as pastor of St. Andrews church, and Goetz as an RKO executi ve in the Queen City. Now they are both serving in the Army. Shortly after Col. Sherry became staff chaplain at Walter Reed Hosp ital, Goetz was admitted as a patient and they had their reunion.
UD Alumnus September 1954