300 View Belle
Presents
Fifty-one girls, from the five local Catholic Woman's Colleges were formally installed
as Loyola Belles at their third annual installation held on February 25 in St. Roberts
Auditorium. Three hundred persons, including parents, guests, and the girls' escorts
attended the function which was under direction of Steve Nordeck, Belles Chairman.
Miss Dorothy Provine of TV's "Roaring 20's" fame, was tke recipient of the Public
Service Award at tke third annual Loyola Belles Installation. Here she is seen being
Congratulated by Rev. Alfred Kilp, S.J., moderator of the Belles and Stephen Slings-
by, co-moderator of the Belles. Tke latter was given an Appreciation Award for his
past services to the organization.
Men-Women Leaders
Meet at LU Confab
Loyola's ASLU will host the five Catholic Women's
Colleges at a leadership conference here on Sat., March 10.
Arriving at Loyola will be the major executive officers of
the girls' colleges as well as their social chairmen and so¬
rority representatives. On hand to meet these delegates will
be Loyola’s ASLU officers headed^ - - - - - -
by Tony Coelho, conference chair¬
man, and Bill Herreras, co-chair^
man.
The forthcoming conference will
be the first of its type that Loyola
has sponsored. In the past leader¬
ship conferences have been much
larger and included most of the
other colleges in the area. This
conference i s restricted to the
“Catholic Community” and will
deal with problems faced by the
girl’s colleges and Loyola.
Six Into One
The organizer of the coming con¬
ference, Tony Coelho, stated that
Tony Coelho
the purpose of the conference and
underlying theme will be the pro¬
motion of “One big university with
six colleges.” In explanation the
student leader said, ‘T would like
to see it when a student would feel
as at home on one campus as on
another.”
Want Suggestions
The program will commence at
9 with a welcoming from Fr. Kelp
followed by similar addresses from
Dennis Riley and Tony Coelho.
Two discussion periods are sched¬
uled at which the delegates will
have an opportunity to discuss
such problems as drinking, the
role of the newspaper, student
apathy, and promotion of social
events. It is hoped by the planners
of the conference that a few use¬
ful recommendations will be ar¬
rived at by the student leaders.
Following the workshops the
group will have lunch and then
attend Mass. At 1 o’clock the con¬
ference will re-assemble in St.
Robert’s Hall for a general session
at which the results of the work¬
shops will be presented and dis¬
cussed by the student officers. The
conference will close at 3:45 with
benediction and the distribution
of a booklet containing the results
of the conference to the partici¬
pants.
Richard Carpenter
Engineers Get
Steady Dean
Father Clyde Werts, S.J., Acting
Dean of the College of Engineer¬
ing, has announced that the college
will be under the supervision of a
new dean starting in June of this
year. Dr. Richard C. Kolf, Ph.D.,
from Marquette University will
succeed Fr. Werts at the termina¬
tion of this semester.
Fr* Werts “Acting Dean*
When Dr. Whelan retired in
June of 1961, after serving 11 years
as dean of engineering, Fr. Werts
accepted the position as acting
dean until a permanent dean could
be procured. Now that Dr. Kolf is
coming to Loyola, Fr. Werts will
resume teaching Electrical En¬
gineering.
Loyola Welcomes
Renowned Pianist
Richard Carpenter, noted concert pianist and member
of the music faculty of Columbia University, will perform
for the student body on Friday, March 23, at 11 a.m. in St.
Robert's Auditorium.
A highlight in the student body free lecture series, Mr.
vBrain' Speaks
In Pereira Hall
The Engineering Department is
keeping up with the changing
times with the addition of a digital
computer located opposite rooms
51 and 52 in Pereira Hall.
Info Fed
The electronic brain is a digital
computer (operating on the binary
base) and is valued at over $100,-
000. It has an 8,000, 8 character
magnetic drum memory unit, which
means that it can store 8,000 num¬
bers of 8 digits each. The computer
is operated on information fed into
it by an electric typewriter and
paper punched tape for basic in¬
put and output; and by IBM cards
for auxiliary input and output. It
is capable of 60,000 additions per
minute, adding numbers up to 5
billion. The computer also uses a
hexidecimal system, using a base
number 16.
Personal Research
Installed in the fall semester of
1961, the eectronic brain has been
used primarily for instruction in
computer logic, design, and pro¬
gramming. However, it is hoped
that it will eventually be used by
faculty members and students for
personal research projects.
Carpenter comes to Loyola with
the praise and recommendation of
music-lovers the world over. He
has given regular programs over
the British Broadcasting Corpora¬
tion and Rome Radio, and it was
only through the fine efforts ot
Fr. Caldwell, Music Co-ordinator,
that Mr. Carpenter’s lecture and
recital could be arranged it this
time.
Critics Acclaim
Mr. Carpenter is currently on
tour having appeared at Purdue
University, the University of
Bridgeport, Xavier University and
many others. His magnificent per¬
formance at Sacramento was notic¬
ed by national critics.
The artist’s fame is widely
spread in Europe and England be¬
cause of his many performances on
radio and in person during World
War'll. During the War, he made
a five month tour of the European
theatre giving over 200 concerts
to the American Fifth and British
Eighth Army Units.
Mr. Carpenter’s program will
probably include works by Chopin,
Beethoven*-* Liszt and Gershwin.
j
Recruitment Schedule . Pg. 2
Senor Mouse . . Pg. 3
Max Shulman . Pg. 3
Sports . . . Pg.4