Cos An
A
oyolon
Vol.4£—No. 2
LOYOLA UNIVERSITY OF LOS ANGELES
October 3, I960
GOVERNOR G. MENNEN WILLIAMS
MUSIC SERIES
TO BEGIN
Rev, Joseph R. Caldwell, S.J.,
Coordinator of Music, announces
the* new Loyola Music Series for
1960-61. The Series will feature a
monthly program designed to con¬
tribute to the cultural education
and enjoyment of the Loyola fam¬
ily. Program listings are as fol¬
lows:
October 18, 1960 — John Lee in
“Words and Music.”
November 22, 1960 — The Im¬
maculate Heart Trio featuring Sis¬
ters Dennis, Anthony and Mark,
all members of a single family,
who were a professional trio be¬
fore joining the religious order.
December 11, 1960 — Loyola Uni¬
versity Glee Club, featuring high¬
lights of the 1960 tpur.
January 19, 1961 — Theodore
ХШ-
man, Ph.D. and Concert Pianist.
Book Donation .
Valued— $1 000
The College of Engineering has
received a shipment of books from
an anonymous donor valued at
$1,000, according to an announce
ment by Daniel
Ё.
Whelan, Jr.
Dean of the College.
THIS CONTRIBUTION consists
of works particularly needed to
supplement the engineering library
and resulted from a list of titles
submitted to the donor.
Among the books that were do
nated are: “Analysis of Electrical
Circuits,” “Theory of Alternating
Current Machinery,” “H eat and
Mass Transfer,” “Power Capaci¬
tors,” “Microwave Measurements, ,J
“Foundations of Information The¬
ory,” “Magnetic Amplifier Engi
neering,” “Alternating Current Ma
chines,” and “Engineering Mechan¬
ics Parts I and II.”
Open House Sun.
The Loy6la campus will once more play host to the fam¬
ilies and friends of its students in the annual open house.
This occasion provides an excellent opportunity for the visi¬
tors to become acquainted with
both the school and some of the
faculty.
FOR THE convenience of those
who wish to attend there will be
a 12 o’clock Mass in the Chapel.
After which begin the afternoon’s
activities.
Included in the program for the
day is a tour of the campus and
its buildings, followed by an in¬
formal get-together with the fac¬
ulty.
ALSO INCLUDED in the agenda
for the afternoon is a formal pro¬
gram to be held on the Regents
Terrace. The theme for this occa¬
sion is “As I See Loyola.” Enter¬
tainment will be provided by the
Glee Club.
The snack bar in the Terrace
Room will be conveniently open
from 12:30 to 3:30 p.m. and din¬
ner is to be served from 4:30 to
6 p.m.
Williams
Backs JFK
Governor G. Mennen Williams
of Michigan, campaigning through
California this week for the elec¬
tion of Senator Kennedy, told the
Loyola University Student Body
last week that “if ‘experience’ is
to be the test of who should be
the next president, then my choice
is Senator John F. Kennedy.”
THE MICHIGAN Governor point¬
ed out that while still a student at
Harvard, Senator Kennedy was
writing a thesis on England’s lack
of preparedness before WorldAVar
II because of putting a balanced
budget before a balanced defense.
The thesis was later published as
a successful book, Why England
Slept.
The Vice President makes a
big point of having traveled the
globe — but the White House is
more than a travel bureau. In any
event Senator Kennedy has visited
some forty countries on five dif¬
ferent continents, and some he
has visited several times. What’s
more, Senator Kennedy has dis¬
cussed world affairs with the lead¬
ers of the principal countries of
the world.
“WHILE THE President has
been unable to come up with one
instance of a major decision in
which Mr. Nixon has participated,
Senator Kennedy has been serving
on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee acting as chairman of
the Subcommittee on African Af¬
fairs and daily participating in the
business of policy-formulation.
“It was Senator Kennedy who,
after visiting Poland, came back
and introduced an amendment to
the Battle Act to provide aid for
the people living in Gomulka’s Po¬
land. It was Senator Kennedy who
boldly brought the question of
self-determination for the Alger¬
ians to the attention of the Ameri¬
can people in a never-to-be forgot¬
ten speech on the floor of the
United States Senate. Senator
Kennedy also introduced a pro¬
posal in the Senate for a Peace
Agency which has been belatedly
copied in a watered-down version
by the Eisenhower-Nixon Admin¬
istration.
“THE WISDOM and experience
of the Democratic Party’s candi¬
date are on display in his challeng¬
ing book, A Strategy for Peace,
(Continued on Page 3)
Commie Buster
Speaks Oct. 7
Top FBI Communism expert William S. Sullivan will
speak this Friday at 11 on “Communistic Challenges to Col¬
lege students,” at a convocation of four Catholic colleges
here. * Two thousand are expected to attend.
SULLIVAN ATTENDED Ameri-p : • — —
can University in Washington and
Clark C o liege. He studied at
George Washington Graduate
School and Boston College Grad¬
uate School. Sullivan received a
BA and a MA in the field of
Education. He was a teacher be¬
fore he went into the Internal
Revenue Service.
In the FBI for 19 years, he
has had confidential assignments
all over the world. Now he is in
charge of FBI research and analy
sis relating to Communist subver
sion, intelligence, and espionage.
MR. SULLIVAN is an excellent
speaker and has spoken at many
colleges and military schools. In¬
cluded in these are Virginia Law
School, University of Wisconsin,
Siena College, Institute of Lan¬
guage and Linguistics, George¬
town, Vassar, Princeton, Yale,
Washington, William and Mary,
Northwestern, and New York.
Among the military posts he has
lectured at arp the Army War
College, the Communications and
General Staff College, the Naval
War College, West Point, Anap-
olis, Air Force Academy, Fort
Knox, Fort BenHar, Fort Devons,
and Fort Lee. He has spoken
before the Reserve Officers Asso
ciation and the Department of
State. He is a member of the
Washington Committee of the In¬
stitute for American Defense. His
talk was spurred by the San Fran¬
cisco student demonstrations.
'Sick' Says
Fr. Ciklic
“Sick humor” is motivated by
feelings of inferiority, repressed
hatred and unfulfilled wishes. So
says the Rev. Peter Ciklic, chair¬
man of the department of pschol-
ogy in a campus interview last
night.
FATHER CIKLIC described a
healthy sense of humor as “charac¬
teristic of a normal personality,
since it is well known that mental¬
ly disordered pepple have no sense
Org/ Board
Head Picked
OPEN HOUSE — 1959
Dave Fortune, Dave Roberti, and
Bill Grimes were named to head
the Organizations Board for the
coming year, serving as Pres., Vice-
Pres., and Sec.-Treas., respectively.
STUDENT L EG I SLATORS,
chosen to represent the organiza¬
tions board, were Rich Thesing,
Pat Shreve, and John Farrell.
The pre-vote questioning, by the
Bo^rd members, of the prospective
legislature representatives en¬
dorsed the following policies:
I. Full support for the ASLU
Pres, on all projects which are in
the best interest of the student
body and the organizations. (2) Dil¬
igent opposition to fiscal irrespon¬
sibility and, esp. at the present
time, unneeded or illegal tax meas¬
ures. (3) Implementation of effect
five organizational operation. (4)
Cementing promotional ties be¬
tween the Organizations Board, the
Administration, and the Alumni .
THE BOARD also revealed at
this time that regular monthly
meetings will be held and that
there will be the usual announce¬
ments as to date, place and time
I of the meetings.
FATHER CIKLIC
of humor.” He also characterized it
as expressing an appreciative orien¬
tation towards people, objects, and
events in a person’s environment,
and accompanied by a “pleasant
feeling.” But sick humor, he de¬
clared, expresses none of these
things— “merely tension.”
“Sick humor, no less than horror
movies,” asserted] Fr. Ciklic, “are
expressions of anxiety in an age of
anxiety. “Sick jokes,” he said, are
not humor because there is nothing
delightful, pleasant or joyful in
them. However, they permit to a
shy, insecure person with a feeling
of inferiority, the ability to express
repressed aggressions or sexual
fantasies in a manner that is ac¬
ceptable to a sick society. At other
times, sick humor expresses fears
and serves as a defense against the5
threats of reality — age, unemploy¬
ment, the opposite sex, or the 11-
bomb.”
/
i
(Continued on Page 3) *
Inside
Homecoming Letter,
Page 4
Honor Rolls,
Page 8
Nixon ys. Kennedy,
Page 5