Year
Built: 1924
Capacity: 164, 2nd smallest women's dorm after
Badin Hall
Male or female? Men 1924-1987; women 1987-present
They Call Themselves: Ducks, after George Lucas'
oddball 1986 film Howard the Duck about a cigar-smoking,
beer-chugging comic book character from outer space. The film
fizzled at the box office but has since acquired a cult following.
NAMED FOR: Timothy E. Howard, 1862 graduate,
renaissance man. Originally a professor of English literature,
he entered politics after receiving his Notre Dame law degree
in 1873 and was elected to the Indiana State Senate. He eventually
became chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court. He lectured
on law at Notre Dame and at one time was dean of the law school.
He also wrote short stories and poetry, published histories and
became a tax code expert.
DISTINGUISHING FEATURES: With a double-barreled
archway bisecting the building, Howard acts as a conduit between
the picturesque courtyard formed by Howard, Morrissey Manor and
Lyons Hall to the west and such buildings as Badin and Bond Hall
(architecture) to the east. A niche statue of Saint Timothy, the
shy yet courageous companion of the apostle Paul, lords over the
archway's western face. Other bulbous designs decorate both sides.
On the east side, a football player and squirrel represent the
essence of autumn beneath the Golden Dome. On the west, an owl,
representing sagacity, peers at a crying schoolboy. Howard's room
sizes range from singles to quints (five persons) with no two
exactly alike. The newly refurbished chapel houses a Pieta
by sculptor Jean de Marco.
HISTORY MADE THERE: Howard was the first dorm
named after a lay professor, the first example of collegiate gothic
architecture on campus, and the first campus building designed
with an eye toward impending construction. (Morrissey and Lyons
were built one year later to complete the three-sided courtyard.)
Residents held impassioned protests and appealed to the administration
and Student Senate when, two weeks before finals in December 1986,
they received word that Howard would be converted to a women's
dorm the following fall. Lamenting the loss of a fraternity-like
atmosphere and such Howard traditions as the Howard Hat and Tie
Party, residents wore black or white armbands labeling themselves
as the "Howard Homeless." They also formed the Howard Liberalization
Organization and blanketed Howard's exterior walls with banners
including "Walk Like An Eviction" (a play on the Bangles' hit
"Walk Like An Egyptian") and "Rooms for Rent (girls only)."
THEY LIVED THERE AS STUDENTS: Bill Dwyre '66,
sports editor of the Los Angeles Times, and Monsignor
Robert Gabriel Angelle '60, a senior priest in Lafayette, Louisiana.
He lived in Howard from 1958 to 1959 while pursuing his master's
in chemistry at a time when the basement housed graduate-student
priests.
LORE: Howard has the reputation of being "the
quiet dorm," possibly due to its relatively small size and high
proportion of singles, but it wasn't always so demure. In 1978
a fire broke out, supposedly after someone dropped a lit cigarette
down the elevator shaft. The only casualties were a few singed
calculus books, but it spawned an annual Fire Party featuring
fire hats and fire-resistant clothing. The tradition was eventually
extinguished by administrators who determined that it had become
merely an excuse for excessive consumption of firewater. Howard
is said to have a ghost, "Howie," inhabiting what resident's affectionately
call the "fourth-and-a-half" floor, a closet atop a four-step
staircase. A daylight examination reveals nothing more supernatural
than computer cables and equipment. Howie is believed responsible
for eerie happenings on the fourth floor, including doors found
open that are remembered as having been shut and lights turned
on that were thought to have been extinguished.
TRADITIONS: Howard hosts an annual campuswide
marshmallow roast on the first snowfall, and every fall the Ducks
organize the Howard Hoedown, a country-and-western-themed dance.
For the past three years, current Ducks and those who've moved
off campus have reunited at the hall the first Sunday of the month
to share Mass followed by a community dinner.
-- Colleen Ganey '03