They included Arturo Frondizi (president 1958-1962), Ricardo (English professor) and Silvio (Marxist theorist, politician, and lawyer, assassinated in 1974).
For academic year 1943–1944, he interrupted his teaching there to take advantage of a scholarship to pursue postgraduate studies at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, where he met Roy Wood Sellars and Dewitt Parker.
[citation needed] Frondizi was imprisoned [date missing], after which he accepted an invitation to teach at the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas for two academic years.
He founded the School of Public Health, supported a Department of Vocational Guidance, and extended the scholarship system to students and graduates.
[1][2] Frondizi died aged 72 on 23 February 1983 at a hospital in Waco, Texas, of a heart attack, while teaching at Baylor.