Robert Kaske, who went by Bob, was born on June 1, 1921 in
Cincinnati, Ohio. His parents were Herman C. Kaske, a postal clerk with the
United States Postal Service, and Ann Rose Kaske ( Laake). Robert Kaske attended St. Martin's, a Catholic elementary school, and later the boys prep school
Elder High School, where he received
straight As across four years of English, Latin, and religion, and missed only a single day of school. While there he worked on the school newspaper and the yearbook, won the school's Latin contest, and played baseball; he graduated from the modern English course in 1938. In a yearbook filled with humorous projected jobs for the graduates, such as "dog-catcher" and "pretzel-twister", Kaske was an exception: "Robert Kaske, Editor." After graduating from high school, Kaske matriculated at
Xavier University, where he studied the
liberal arts. Kaske was a four-year member of the Heidelberg Club, which described itself as intended "to further interest in the language, culture, history and transitions of the Germanic peoples". In his
sophomore year Kaske began a three-year stint with the
Xavier University News, writing the column "Quid Ergo?" Taken from
Seneca, the Latin name of the column meant "So what?" Kaske described his topics as "touching on literature, politics, philosophy, economics, history, school affairs, slapstick, slapstick and slapstick", and involving "a schoolboy telling the world what is wrong with it". Also as a sophomore, Kaske joined
The Athenaeum and the Mermaid Tavern, an undergraduate literary paper and literary club, respectively. He became editor in chief of the former his
senior year, and "Host" of the latter. Kaske still spoke fondly of the Mermaid Tavern, where students presented their literary works and discussed those of the masters, in his later years. As a
junior, a year in which he was inducted into the
Jesuit academic honorary fraternity
Alpha Sigma Nu, he joined the Masque Society, a theatrical group; he played Peter Dolan in a school production of ''
Father Malachy's Miracle that year, and as a senior appeared in another play, Whispering in the Dark''. Between his junior and senior years, Kaske spent much of the summer writing radio scripts. Also as a senior Kaske cofounded the Philosophy Club, a society for students interested in philosophical research, and joined The Traditionists, a literary club which that year devoted their meetings to reading
Dante's
Inferno. He placed sixth or seventh in an intercollegiate writing contest the same year. Kaske graduated
magna cum laude with a
Bachelor of Arts on June 3, 1942.
World War II Kaske had joined the
Reserve Officers' Training Corps in his first semester at Xavier, and even before his graduation was ordered to active service. He was commissioned a
second lieutenant in the
Army's
field artillery on May 25, 1942, and ordered to report to
Fort Thomas for a physical examination and assignment, with a
furlough to account for his June commencement. Speaking to Kaske and 24 others, the commencement speaker,
Archbishop John T. McNicholas, stated "[m]ay I assure the Second Lieutenants of this graduating class that the
Archdiocese of Cincinnati is proud of them. It is happy to know that Xavier University is not only teaching theoretical patriotism, but that it is actually serving our country in the greatest crisis in its history." Kaske served as a platoon leader and company commander with the 819th
Tank Destroyer Battalion, taking him to ports in the United States,
Hawaii (including
Black Sand Beach), the
Palau Islands (
Peleliu and
Angaur), and the
Mariana Islands (
Guam and
Saipan). During a leave at the end of 1943, while stationed at
Fort Hood, he served as a best man at a wedding in
Cleburne, Texas, took out his own marriage license a week later, and married in January. His wife was Mildred Mae Reinerman, a 21-year-old bookkeeper. But the leave was short and in March 1944 Kaske's battalion departed California aboard the , headed for Hawaii. By 1945, Kaske was in Peleliu, where the 819th searched for remaining Japanese soldiers, defended the airstrip, and shelled Japanese-held islands. Kaske was discharged from the Army on June 1, 1946, having risen to the rank of
first lieutenant.
Graduate studies As a student at Xavier, Kaske had anticipated a business career, possibly in advertising. That changed while filling time at the end of the war on a coral island in the Pacific, when he read a story about two professors engrossed in conversation from dusk to dawn; as the sun rose, one professor regretfully said he needed to prepare for class, and the other replied that he had been so absorbed he forgot he was not in his own house. Entranced by the prospect of such engaging intellectual conversations and aided by the tuition benefits afforded veterans by the
G.I. Bill, Kaske set out for an academic life. After talking it over with Father Paul Sweeney, a professor of English at Xavier and founder and patron of the Mermaid Tavern, Kaske entered the English literature program at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC) in 1946. As at Xavier, Kaske wrote for a student paper,
Factotum, including poems, and at least one short story: "Sergeant Hinchey's Homecoming", about a veteran regaling an unsuspecting church group with ribald tales from service in Hawaii, Angaur, Texas, and
Kwajalein. Under the direction of
Hardin Craig, Kaske wrote his
Master's thesis on
George Chapman's tragedies, receiving his degree in 1947. If not for Craig's departure to the
University of Missouri, wrote the medieval scholar (and former Kaske student)
Emerson Brown Jr., Kaske might have become a
Renaissance scholar. Instead, under George Coffman's direction, he wrote his
Ph.D. dissertation on the
Late Medieval poem
Piers Plowman and graduated in 1950. == Career ==