Canisius College - Azuwur Yearbook (Buffalo, NY)

 - Class of 1976

Page 28 of 292

 

Canisius College - Azuwur Yearbook (Buffalo, NY) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 28 of 292
Page 28 of 292



Canisius College - Azuwur Yearbook (Buffalo, NY) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 27
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Page 28 text:

Dedication: Dr. Charles A. Brady i Charles Brady was born in Buffalo's Black Bock section on April 15, 1912-at the approximate moment of the sinking of the Titanic. Later he was to say-only half jokingly-that this probably determined his bent toward epic subjects, both in his serious criticism and in his creative writing. In any case, his birth at that moment was anything but a disaster for Canisius College. Dr. Brady has spent his life at and with Canisius. He is a graduate of Canisius High School and of Canisius College. He joined the Canisius College English Department in 1935 and this semester caps 41 years for him on the faculty here. The city of Buffalo is dotted with his pupils. He has taught and touched thousands of students across two generations. He has, on occa- sion, taught sons and daughters of former students. And he has taught many who went on to be teachers themselves. On Election Day each year he has made it a rule of thumb to vote for the candidates whom he has taught. lVlost recently, however, he has often had to choose between two former students. Perhaps the greatest symbol of his deep involvement with Canisius is the centenary history, Canisius College.' The First Hundred Years. Written over a period of years, the book required massive research through piles of old records. Unlike many a school history, it is not a boring compilation of historical fact upon historical fact. lnstead, the book is written in an impression- istic style which captures the past and present spirit of Canisius College as well as that of the entire Niagara Frontier. Dr. Brady has always said that what the old Romans called pietas and genius loci - that is, a love for a locality and the sense of the spirit of place therein-is the formative impulse in his prose and poetry. For example, he often reflected on the fact that just beyond the fence of his childhood home on Humboldt Parkway was the site of the Six Nations Council Glade where, as late as 1812, the Iroquois took their decisions for peace or war. In 1967, Dr. Brady celebrated an allied association-that his first grandson had Seneca blood, and belonged to one of those Indian nations-by writing Keeper of the Western Gate: For D.J.D. That poem subsequently won the Cecil Hemley Memorial Award, the Poetry Society of America's most prestigious prize and, in his own estimation, the highest honor Dr. Brady ever received. And he has received many. There is a distinct Canisius flavor to a number of these. He was awarded the LaSalle Medal upon graduation from the College. ln 1970 he was the recipient of the Canisius Alumni Association's Peter Canisius lVledal. He has been named to the Canisius High School Hall of Fame. His second Bene lVlerenti medal, denoting an additional 20 years of distin- guished service to the College was bestowed upon Dr. Brady at the College's 109th Commencement ceremonies last year. Canisius, however, has not been alone in honoring its favorite son. Dr. Brady attended Harvard University for graduate study and earned his lVl.A. there. In 1954, LelVIoyne College awarded him an L.H.D. Earlier he had held the Candlemas Lectureship at Boston College, and had given Notre Dame's Summer Lecture in the Humanities. On different occasions he has also spoken at both the State University of New York at Buffalo and the State University of New York College at Buffalo. In 1963 Georgetown University made him the recipient of its President's lVledal. Since 1945, Dr. Brady has been a book reviewer for The Buffalo Evening News. His own caricatures have often accom- panied his Saturday reviews. In addition, he has been, at various times, on the review staffs of the New York Times, the old Herald Tribune, Thought, Renascence, America, The Lamp, The Sign, The Catholic World. Beyond his criticism for newspapers, Dr. Brady's literary essays are to be found in standard critical antho- Dr. Brady's wife, Eileen, was on hand to accept an award for her husband from Fr. Demske at last year's graduation. A second Bene Nlerenti medal denoting 40 years of distinguished service to the College was presented

Page 27 text:

In Memoriam Dr. Sigmund P, Zobel, chairman of the Canisius College Marketing and Management Department since July, 1974, dies in Buffalo's Sisters Hospital on Sunday, February 1, 1976 after a brief illness. A graduate of Buffalo's East High School and the University of Buffalo, Dr. Zobel was a resident of the West- ern Nevv York area since he was four years old. His teaching career began at UB in 1946, vvhere he taught until he joined the Canisius staff in 1971. ln addition to his other duties at Canisius, Dr. Zobel vvas the project coordinator of the Small Business ln- stitute Student Counseling Program in conjunction with the U.S. Small Busi- ness Administration. Dr. Zobel was a noted lecturer and much of his written work has appeared in national journals. James E. Duggan, an employee of Canisius College since 1946, dies sud- denly Sunday evening, February 1, 1976 at his Pierport Avenue home. Mr. Duggan served as director of the CoIlege's Placement and Testing Office from 1946 to 1974. ln Decem- ber of 1974 he assumed his duties as a Counselor in the College's Career De- velopment Center. ln 1962 Mr. Duggan was named the liaison officer for the Peace Corps and Federal College Internships at Canisius. Mr. Duggan was the recipient of the Bene Merenti Medal at the May, 1975 commencement ceremonies, signifying recognition of his years of service to Canisius. Dr. David J. Gorman, an associate professor of history at Canisius Col- lege, died February 3, 1976 at his Vllordvvard Ave. home after a lenghty illness. He had taught at Canisius for 20 years. Dr. Gorman vvas an active member of the Canisius College Faculty Senate, the History Society, the William H. Fitzpatrick Political Science Lecture Committee and the Council to the Dean of the School of Business Ad- ministration. In addition to being the author of historical revievvs, Dr. Gorman vvas a member of the American Historical Society, the Buffalo and Erie County Historical Society and the American Association of University Professors.



Page 29 text:

logies all over the world.The best known ofhis longer critiques are studies of Cooper, Nlarquand, Sigrid Undset, the Volsungasaga, Charles Williams, C.S. Lewis. One of the three letters which Lewis wrote to Dr. Brady has been printed in the 1967 collection, Letters of C.S. Lewis. Dr. Brady's record of creative achievement is as long and as formidable as that of his academic and critical careers. He has had four novels published: Viking Summer, This Land Fulfilled, Crown of Grass and Stage of Fools, a biography of St. Thomas lVlore, which went into multiple editions, including a paperback issue, and outsold any Dutton book on the 1953 publishing list. The titles of his books for children are Cat Royal, The Elephant Who Wanted To Pray, The Church Mouse of St. Nicholas and St. Thomas More of London Town. For older children there is Sword of Clontarf and The King's Thane. A Catholic Reader is a per- sonalized anthology and Wings Over Patmos is a book of poetry. Several of his short stories and poems have been anthologized, some for the blind. One short story which he wrote while still an undergraduate at the College, The Foot That Went Too Far, inspired the appear- ance ofthe fabled Griffin on our campus. iSee page 34.l Yet despite all the foregoing, Dr. Brady's eminence has es- caped the notice of many students. This is due to his precarious state of health which has often kept him away from the campus in recent years. Dr. Brady has been in declining health since the late 1950's and has only managed to carry on his college lecturing under strictly controlled conditions. Early this semester, his health took another turn and he was hospitalized. Precisely one week after his release from intensive care, Dr. Brady was back teaching, in his own living room, a final course before his retire- This tribute cannot begin to tell it all. Dr. Brady was named an Outstanding Citizen of the Year by The Buffalo Evening News in 1970. During his high school and college days, he was one of the premier tennis talents in the Buffalo area. He chaired the English Department at Canisius for nearly 25 years. He has taught in several other departments as well, including languages and his- iry. As he used to tell his classes, if literature was his business, history was his passion. That fact is manifest in his numerous works of historical fiction. No, we cannot tell it all here. Still, while all of this establishes Dr. Brady's eminence, we must express his specialness as well. Last fall, the AZUWUB received a letter from Dr. Brady's colleagues suggesting that we consider dedicating the 1976 year- book to him because: His imprint is lastingly upon the best elements in Canisius and in the Buffalo community. The letter mentioned Dr. Brady's career as a teacher, novelist, poet, scholar, and critic. The missive ended: All of this leaves out the most important fact about him which is that his is one of the richest human spirits of our place and time-he is truly great-hearted. We suggest that your choosing him would dignify us all. And we suggest, further, that our choosing him does dignify us all. -E.B. ment. CHARLES A. BRADY A. B. lt is not easy to be critical with a critic and even more difficult to give a thorough, literal treatment of a literary man. But this is our pre- dicament, for it is a well known and acknowl- edged fact that Charlie is a litterateur and critic of note, far beyond the confines of our own little circle. Though perhaps head and shoulders above any graduate of Canisius in the literary field, his dis- tinctions are not therein limited. As a student of the languages, he has been outstanding. French seems to be his favorite study. Debating, fraternal affiliations and dramatics have come under his extensive activities. Well might we enter on a discussion of how he approaches the personifica- tion of Newman's gentleman, if we didn't think we were intruding on a gentleman's mod- esty. We expect great things of Charlie. Coffin Clubg Sodality, 1, 2, 3, 45 Quarterly, l, 2, 3, 45 Editor-in-Chief, 45 Azuwur, 3, 4, Associate Editor, 41 Academia, l, 2, 3, 4g Intercollegiate Debating Team, 43 Dramatic Club, l, 2, 3g Class Medal, l, 2, 3g Tennis Team, 2, 3, 4. even as the symbo, Dr. Brady unleashed on The prophecy of great things in the 1933 AZUWUR proved to be right on target. Canisius during his undergraduate days-the Golden Griffin-appeared to tender his personal congratulations. 27

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