Mishawaka Alumni Club
The Mishawaka Alumni Club meets for lunch, entertainment, a full program of events and
just plain ol' comradery the 1st Wednesday of every month at the Mishawaka FOP Building
located at 1210 Commonwealth Drive (for all out-of-town folks...that's about a mile east
of the Union Street/12th Street stop light). Membership includes a 10-12 page
monthly newsletter filled with information about fellow Cavemen from all classes. This is
not a "small-time" club. The current membership is well over 2700.
All 50 states are represented as well as several foreign countries. Classes
represented range from the MHS Class of 1926 to the Class of 2010.
The bi-annual membership dues are $15.00 and $25.00 for a couple..
That's not a misprint....yes it's fifteen or twenty-five dollars for two years... well
worth the Alumni Newsletter alone! There will be a directory printed in March of
2011, and only those paid members' names will appear in the Directory. New plastic
laminated cards will be issued to all paid members.
The actual cost for each member is $8.17 per year, but due to generous donations and the
"Half and Half Raffle" participation, we have been able to hold the cost of
membership down. If interested in membership (include your check and graduating
class) or when submitting news for the newsletter contact:
John C. Moore
511 Rivers Edge
Mishawaka, IN 46544
Email: jmoore3026@aol.com
Additional Alumni info: CLICK HERE
The following articles about the Alumni Club are from the South Bend Tribune.
Friday, September 15, 2006


Wednesday, March 8, 2000
Their kind of town:
Alumni seize chance to gather
and applaud ties to Mishawaka
- by KEN BRADFORD
Tribune Staff Writer
Four hundred twenty-five fans of Mishawaka met for lunch last week in the city.
At the same time, another 270 or so were meeting in Lakeland, Fla., and 51 were meeting in
Port Isabel, Texas.
All but one of them enjoyed the food.
"I'm too nervous to eat," John Moore said. "You always worry about whether
people will come, whether the entertainment will get here."
You'd think Moore would be used to it by now.
He's one of the founders and the major organizer of one of the area's most successful
clubs.
His group, the Mishawaka Alumni Club, has grown in four years from a table full of old
pals at Squad's 2nd Precinct [restaurant] to a banquet hall of 425 at the Fraternal Order
of Police lodge at 12th Street and Commonwealth Drive.
The club's only purpose is, each month, to bring people back together who have lived in
and loved Mishawaka.
Over the years, Moore has compiled a roster of 1,550 members.
[And] when Mishawaka alumni can't get back here, the club often goes to them.
Jim Haughee was the organizer for the Lakeland event. He lost count of the people
attending, somewhere past 265, and said every available chair was filled.
Over in Texas, Jay "Pete" Stebbins said the 51 people attending included one
gate crasher from Washington High School.
The entertainment included eight clog dancers who brought the crowd to its feet by
clogging to the Mishawaka fight song.
"People at the recreation center here stopped over to watch," Stebbins said.
"They can't believe you can get people together like this for a school 1,600 miles
away."
The club started in December 1995 when an old friend came back to town for a funeral,
Moore said. They decided to get some old teammates together at Squad's.
The stories told that day by 13 old friends were so great, Moore said, that they decided
to get together again and more often, and to invite more people.
They soon were filling all the 110 chairs at Squad's, so the group moved to the Knights of
Columbus Hall. It wasn't long before the 300 or so chairs there were filled, as well.
The FOP lodge gives the club more room to grow. Moore wouldn't be surprised if that
building fills, too.
"We put out a three-page newsletter every month, and we try to make sure there's a
good program," he said. "We keep people informed."
Another attraction of the group is that it recognizes the fact that school friendships
aren't confined to the classroom.
"You might have a reunion for the Class of 1950, but most of the people there had a
lot of friends from '48 and '52," he said.
Yet another factor, Moore said, is that Mishawaka is a very special place. "It's a
city of one (public) high school, so we all know each other," he said. "And, for
the most part, people from Mishawaka are proud of Mishawaka and loyal to Mishawaka."
You don't have to be a Mishawaka High School alumnus to belong, although Moore said 99
percent of the members are. Others might include spouses, former teachers or
administrators, or close friends of alumni.
For information, call Moore at 574-259-1640.
Monday, September 28, 1998
Thunder and showers unable to dampen spirits
What was planned to be a summer picnic at Rose Park for the second annual Mishawaka Alumni
group ended up moving inside to the Mishawaka Knights of Columbus Hall due to the
inclement weather.
Three hundred forty alumni and guests gathered for an afternoon of fun and a replay of old
times. Unlike specific class reunions, this Mishawaka High School Alumni group is composed
of all classes who attended the school.
The group meets the first Wednesday of each month. A monthly newsletter is mailed to more
than 400 alumni in 21 states, keeping people informed of what's new with their old
classmates.
There is no membership or dues, and it is open to anyone interested in keeping up with the
"good old times."
Recognized for being the oldest alumni in attendance was the Honorable Mayor Margaret
Prickett who graduated in 1926 and also was Mishawaka's first female cheerleader.
Mayor Robert Beutter, class of '53, welcomed all the alumni gathered, thanked them for
their support and contributions to the city over the past years, maintaining Mishawaka as
a "great" place to live, and expressed much hope for the future with continuing
growth.
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