Brother Raymond Fleck, C.S.C. - Call Me Ray
Monday, January 26, 2015
This morning I received an email from Raymond Fleck.
Alex: I'll be in Austin the end of February for the St. Ed's Homecoming Weekend. Will you be there? Have you been in contact with Mike East? All the best to you and yours. --- Ray Fleck
I answered
that with the death two years ago of my
religious mentor and friend Brother Edwin Reggio, C.S.C. that it would
be unlikely that I would attend. This plus diminishing funds while living in a
big house my wife and I cannot afford to fix is the deciding factor.
Raymond
Fleck replied:
It was fun to get together with you and Mike at that earlier reunion, but time marches on. Sometimes we do have to go through these rough patches. Yes, Brother Edwin was a wonderful guy. You know, he was a native of New Orleans, so when Hurricane Katrina devastated the area, he and I were in contact about it. The Brothers' old Holy Cross High School was wiped out, but after a couple of years, Edwin told me they were rebuilding at a different location in New Orleans, up near Lake Pontchartrain. I went over to see the new place, and what they accomplished was truly impressive. Hang in there, Alex. --- Ray
Mike East, Raymond Fleck, Lee Lytton III - 2011 |
In 2011 I attended a reunion at St. Ed’s and there was the tall and gaunt man in his glasses wearing seersucker sports shirts. Now, not as tall as I remembered him, he was simply Raymond Fleck and he introduced me to his wife. The remote man I thought he was, was warm and friendly . I even had his doctorate all wrong. It was in chemistry not in physics.
During some casual conversations over breakfast I found out that he had a connection with a former classmate of mine Mike East. From this connection I found out that the remote and gaunt scientist had the added talent of being able to get rich but thrifty people to donate money to the university. For years many at the university had thought that East Hall (the university’s first dormitory for women) was simply called that because of its location. Raymond Fleck set the story straight here.
As my
friends move away or die I find it pleasant and rewarding to understand the
making of new friends - in particular my friendship to Raymond Fleck. When he was Brother Raymond
there was an unfathomable gulf between us. It has dissolved. Brother Edwin
would simply say to me, “I told you so. It’s math.”
And here is a clarification of it all from Raymond Fleck:
Lee Lytton III
Mike East
And here is a clarification of it all from Raymond Fleck:
I first went to St. Ed's in 1954, to teach Chemistry at the
University. Three years later, at 30 years of age, I became President. The
office of the President was across the hall from the High School Principal's
office. In those days, the President was the Religious Superior of all the
Brothers assigned to the High School and the University. In 1964, the office of
Religious Superior was separated from the President position. I continued as
President of the University, and Brother Romard Barthel (a long-time teacher of
Physics at the University) became Religious Superior of the Brothers assigned
to the University. In addition to continuing as Principal, Brother Peter
Celestine Maranto became Religious Superior of the Brothers assigned to the
High School.The 1960s were often times of chaos and personal trial. I left St.
Ed's and its presidency in 1969, and left the Brothers of Holy Cross in 1970.
Here is my LinkedIn profile summary:
A native of Brooklyn, NY, Ray graduated from Brooklyn
Technical High School. He enlisted in the Navy while he was 17, towards the end
of WW II, and served for 18 months, ending up as an Aviation Electronics
Technician. A life-long member of the Catholic Church, he served in the
Brothers of Holy Cross for 22 years, including 12 years as President of St.
Edward's University in Austin, TX. After leaving St. Edward's and the Brothers,
Ray engaged in research in environmental chemistry at UC Davis, served as
President of Marygrove College in Detroit, MI for seven years, and worked in research
administration at UC Davis and at Cal Poly Pomona. He retired in 1995 after 41
years of service in higher education.Lee Lytton III
Mike East