Cyril spent several years in the C.O.T.C ., earning a commission in the Reserve Army . In his Junior year he served as Vice-President of the A. A. A. Following graduation he moved to Ottawa and spent two years in medical school. He married Irene Kennedy who worked with the Civil Service in Ottawa. After he left medical school he joined the Foreign Affairs Department and worked as a service officer in India. He decided to leave Foreign Affairs and moved to the United States, taking a job with Sinclair Oil in New Jersey . While working for Sinclair Oil he traveled extensively throughout the United States. He joined another oil company and made his home in , Pennsylvania . He came home to Prince Edward Island every summer to visit his family. In Cyril was active in St. Anthony 's Parish until he died of a heart attack on June 13* 1981 His sister, Mrs. Rita Monaghan , describes her brother as a very straightforward person who never talked badly of anyone. "He was without guile and he was generous and kind to his family and friends. He loved to talk to people and he told us of one occasion where he ran into Mickey Rooney, the actor, in a hotel in Philadelphia. They chatted for a while and Mr. Rooney said he had never seen much of Philadelphia, whereupon Cyril said he had a car outside and he would take him on a tour. He enjoyed showing the historic city to Mickey Rooney." A few days after Cyril died a letter appeared in the Charlottetown Guardian which spoke of Cyril(Bun) Callaghan's contribution to the spirit of St. Dunstan's as exemplified by his wholehearted efforts on the football field. A brief excerpt from this letter follows: ......"No matter how rough or tough the opposition played, the harder Cyril exerted himself and urged others toward the same efforts He could always be relied upon to play a steady courageous game and never allowed personal considerations to hinder his best efforts .....Memories are still fresh thirty-four years later, of a young, sensitive Cyril (Bun) Callaghan with adhesive on his ankles and elsewhere, with elastic knee bandages, hurting all over physically, with a heart as wide as he was long, continually giving one hundred percent on the rugby field for St Dunstan's Such performance typified the spirit of St Dunstan's students in those days." James E Ayers