. U. DEBAT
Team Hopefu I of Placing High
Among The Nations Top Debaters
In April of 1962, Loyola was one of the four schools on the West Coast sending
teams to compete at the West Point National Debate Tournament. We were decisively
defeated and were eliminated in the preliminary rounds.
For the second consecutive year Loyola will attend the West Point Tournament. Our
chances of bettering last year’s record, or perhaps winning the tournament that4 Gen.
Maxwell Taylor, former Comman-^" - - ~ ” ~
der of West Point, calls “the
DARRYL HICKMAN/ William Fitzgerald, and Bob Hayes
bring Loyola Alumni complete victory on the Alumni Fun
television show.
ALUMNI RETIRE UNBEATEN
ON TELEVISION QUIZ SHOW
Loyola’s alumni team has done it again. By holding a
Notre Dame team down to a tie score on the Alumni Fun
television program of last Sunday, April 7, they made Loy¬
ola the only university in the show’s history to be retired
undefeated, thus doubling Loyola’s previous winnings in the
game, for a “jackpot” of $10,400. f - — —
This brings to a total of $12,-
000 the money won for the Alum¬
ni Fund by Darryl Hickman (’54),
star of movies and television; Dr.
William Fitzgerald, (’48) , Direc¬
tor of the California Museqm of
Science and Industry, and Pro¬
fessor of Political Science at
Loyola; Robert Hayes (’41), Vice-
President of the Equitable Assur¬
ance Society; and Bob Denver,
U. S. Steel, and one of the fam¬
ous “Four Horsemen” of Notre
Dame; William Pfaff, magazine
editor; and Joseph McDade, U. S.
Representative from Pennsylvan¬
ia.
PROGRAM PLAN
Alumni Fun, hosted, by John
McCaffery, and aired nationwide
lover the ABC network from 4:30
C51), Maynard Krebs of the Do- to 5:30 pm p}ts prominent alum_
bie Gillis show, who subbed for n; (earns against each other in a
Darryl Hickman on the last two quick.fire duel of wits, the pro-
rounds of Alumni Fund.
IRISH TEAM
The intrepid trio faced a No¬
tre Dame team consisting of Har¬
ry Stuhldreher, Vice-President of
ceeds going to the alumni fund of
the winning team’s school. The
winner of each program is given
(Continued on Page 3)
IN LAST SUNDAY'S SHOW the Alumni team tied with
he Notre Dame Alumni, thereby retiring as the first un-
lefeated champions of the show.
World Series of Debates”— Excel¬
lent. Our representative is the
successful Shiffrin- Woods team.
Steve Shiffrin, a senior was oh last
year’s team -that went to West
Point. Tom Woods is a Junior
with a superior record in three
years of collegiate debate com¬
petition. The Debate Coach, Mr.
William Donnelly, an ex-Fordham
debater, describes the style of the
debaters as a combination
АИсё
in Wonderland — H. B. Barnum &
Baily— and the Sibyll raging in
her cave. In any case, they win,
and rather consistently.
DEBATE RECORD
Among their laurels, Barnum
Woods and Bailey Shiffrin count:
undefeated at the San Diego. State
Tourney; second at the Univ. of
Щ.Щ
at Santa Barbara Tourna¬
ment, an invitational attended by
the nations best teams; first, with
six wins and two losses, at the
Western States Championships
(over thirty-five schools attend¬
ing); first at the San Francisco
State Invitational, where Steve
Shiffrin received the Best Speak¬
er Award. The team was handed
rather significant defeats at the
Air Force Academy Invitational
(two wins and seven losses), and
the Southwest Pacific Champion¬
ships, where they dropped a pre¬
liminary round to the University
of California at Santa Barbara,
and the quarter-final round to
Brigham Young University.
QUALIFY
Steve and Tom bounced back
from the Pacific Championships
defeat/and during the weekend of
March 30, attended the West
Point Qualifier at San Francisco
State, went undefeated in the six
preliminary rounds, which auto¬
matically gave them first at the
tournament and a birth at West
Point National Championships in
April. The other West Cokst rep¬
resentatives are Southern Califor¬
nia. Brigham Young, and San
Diego State.
When Shiffrin and Woods reach
West Point in two weeks with
the Debate Coach, Mr. Donnelly,
and special assistant Paul Yak,
they will expect stiff competition
from Southern California, Brigham
Young, Southwest Missouri Uni¬
versity and other Eastern teams.
West Point — Loyola has returned!
TOM WOODS and Steve Shiffrin pose with some of their
many trophies, and prepare to attend the West Point Tour¬
nament.
Del Rey Players Present
Drama In Strub Iheatr
The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus, a colorful Eliza¬
bethan drama from the pen of Chritopher Marlowe, will of¬
ficially open the Strub Theatre on campus as the Del Rey
Players present their most ambitious staging in history. Be¬
ginning April 25 and running for six nights during the last
| week of April and the first week<§— — r— - ■ — - — -
of May, the play will utilize all of fjce Gf Auxiliary Enterprises in
I the excellent features of the stage | the Lair. Seating is very limited,
in the new Communication Arts
Center.
Seniors are reminded that
Monday, April IS, is the
deadline for filing an ap¬
plication for a degree to be
conferred in Jane, 1963.
THESPIANS
John Cser, perhaps the finest
amateur actor in the Los Angeles
area, stars as the proud Doctor
Faustus. His roll is Nephistoph-
eles as ably portrayed by Larry
Agriesti. Faustus manages to sell
his soul to Lucifer (Tom Woods,
appropriately) and lives in terror
as he awaits the moment of de¬
parture into the warmer climes of
Hades.
PAST PLAYS
In the past, the Del Rey Play¬
ers have presented, under the fine
direction of Warren P. Sherlock,
such outstanding plays as My
Three Angels, The Lark, and Ar¬
thur Miller’s classic “The Cru¬
cible.” This year’s effort will equal
the quality of the past produc¬
tions, and ensure the fame of Loy¬
ola’s Drama Department.
Plan now to see Dr. Faustus on
any one of six convenient dates.
Tickets are on sale in the. Uni¬
versity Bookstore, and at the Of-
so the Loyolan suggests students
should reserve their seats today.
biology society
sponsors doctor
On Monday, April 8, William
M. Ganong, M. D., will speak to
the faculty and students at 8:00
p.m. in the Strub Memorial The¬
ater of the Foley Communication
Arts Building. His subject is “The
Interrelations Between the En-
doetrine System and the Brain.”
Dr. Ganong is Associate Pro¬
fessor of Physiology at the Uni¬
versity of the California Medical
Center at San Francisco, where
he has taught since 1955. He re¬
ceived his M. D. at Harvard in
1949 and served as director of
surgery from 1953 to 1955.
Dr. Ganong has come to Loyola
as a Visiting Scientist under the
auspices of the American Psysio-
logical Society.