liil
рш&ш
,
тттшттт
мшш
нммш
Elves welcome St. Pat Dance
The brothers of Tau Kappa Ep¬
silon will host their Annual St. Pat’s
Dance this Friday, March 19. The
Pen and Quill Hotel and Restaurant
at 3501 N. Seiiplveda Boulevard,
Manhattan Beach, will provide the
backdrop for this year’s legeder-
main and frolics.
The dance will be held in the
Manhattan Ballroom starting at 9: 00
P.M. Two bars will serve up the
Juice of the Emerald Isles to
thirsty revelers. The sound of The
Twilighters will accompany obuts
on the dance floor.
The dance, held annually to honor
St. Patrick, our favorite engineer,
will be the social highlight of the
Lenten Season.
This year, as in the past, the
dance wori’t interfere with other
specifically St. Patrick’s Day festi¬
vities. But it is the confirmed be¬
lief of the brotherhood of TKE that
holiday spirits will in no way
slacken between Wednesday and
Friday night.
Pavlov’s dog watered its mouth
in a conditioned response no
stronger than the clink of glasses
for Loyola men.
Bids are on sale all week from
the lowest form of life, TKE
pledges, and the lowest form of
capitalism, the Bookstore.
los An
да
1
oyolan
VOL. 42— No. 16
LOYOLA UNIVERSITY OF LOS ANGELES
March 15, 1965
PROJECT 70' ENTERS SECOND PHASE
President Discloses Brian Fav Awarded ALPHA SIGMA NU TO
INITIATE 36 MEMBERS
Dr. Roy Harris to Be Inducted
As Honorary Society Member
Development Plans
Last week, in his report to the associated students of
Loyola University, Rev. Charles S. Casassa, S.J., President,
disclosed plans for Phase II of “Project ”70”. Although com¬
plete plans for Phase
И
were not
available, he assured the student
body that they would be informed
as soon as the completed plans
were drawn up.
The University officially comple¬
ted Phase I of its development pro¬
gram, “Project ’70,” on December
31, 1964. During the period of Phase
I, which began in 1961, gifts and
pledges to the University totaled
$6,200,000.
Phase I Successful
Some of the major goal of Phase
I of “Project ’70” were the erec¬
tion of a residence hall, a science
building, and a communication arts,
building. Rosecrans Hall, the resi¬
dence hall, was financed by a Gov¬
ernment Housing Loan of $765,000
which is not included in the total
of gifts and pledges. The total cost
of the Seaver Science Center, the
law building .and the Foley Com¬
munication Arts building was ap¬
proximately $4,500,000. The remain¬
ing $1,700,000 of the total gifts and
pledges was spent for current op-
eations, scholarship funds, general
endowment, and various minor
projects, such as the removal of the
historic Quonset huts. On the whole,
the major goals of Phase I of “Pro¬
ject ’70” were completed with
great success.
Possible Art Gallery
Phase II of “Project ’70,” which
began this year, will continue un¬
til 1970 as the name implies. While |
Phase I was mainly concerned!
with the erection of new buildings,
Phase II will seek to develop en¬
dowment funds for scholarships,
faculty development and improve¬
ment.
Brian Fay Awarded
Woodrow Wilson
the Woodrow Wilson National
Fellowship Foundation marked its
20th anniversary by announcing the
winners of $5 million in graduate
fellowships designed to recruit new
college teachers.. Loyola’s Brian
Fay was. one winner. This Achieve¬
ment entitles him to tuition and
Team of Waysman and O'Reilly
Bags Pacific Southwest Victory
Bill Waysman and Terry O’Reilly won the debate cham¬
pionship of the Pacific Southwest Collegiate Forensic As¬
sociation on March 5th and 6th. The debate tournament,
which was held at San Fernando Valley State College, at¬
tracted the finest debate teams
from Northern and Southern Cali¬
fornia as well as numerous out¬
standing teams from Nevada,
Utah, and Michigan.
25 Colleges Compete
Waysman and O’Reilly won out
over teams representing twenty-
five colleges and universities in¬
cluding Stanford, U.S.C., UCLA,
Claremont, San Fernando Valley
State College, The University of
the Pacific, California State Col¬
leges (Los Angeles, Long Beach,
Fullerton), University of Califor¬
nia, Santa Barbara, University of
Redlands, Brigham Young Univer¬
sity, San Diego State College, and
the University of Nevada. In the
elimination rounds, Bill and Terry
defeated two teams from U.S.G.
and one team from the Univer¬
sity of Redlands. In the prelimi¬
naries, they had defeated two
teams from U.S.C., Claremont,
San Fernando Valley State Col¬
lege, UCLA, and Pepperdine.
In addition to Waysman and
O’Reilly’s first place award, Loyo¬
la’s two top lower division teams
made an outstanding showing in
the junior division of the tourna¬
ment. Jeff Bachmann and Vince
McGraw won third place in junior
division and George Sheridan and
Eric Hansen won fourth place.
Sheridan and Hansen were the
only team in the tourney to win all
six of their preliminary rounds
of debate; Bachmann and McGraw!
dropped only one prelim round. |
mu
BRIAN FAY
fees at graduate school of his
choice, plus $1,800 for living ex¬
penses. Alex Hahn, Paul Kistel and
Mike Ornstein received honorable
mention.
Initiation into Alpha Sigma Nu, national Jesuit College
and University Honoh Society, will be held on Monday eve¬
ning, April 5. This initiation celebrates the Golden Jubilee
of the founding of this honor fraternity, and also the Silver
Jubilee of its establishment on the Loyola Campus. In 1915
Father John A. Danihy, S.J. found¬
ed Alpha Sigma Nu at Marquette
University, where it subsequently
spread to twenty-five of the twenty-
eight Jesuit colleges and universi¬
ties throughout the United States.
In this the fraternity’s fiftieth year
it is about to expand into an Inter¬
national Organization, with plans
in some depth, as well as breadth
and profundity in the intellectual
life generally. This requirement en¬
joys a primacy arising from the
primarily intellectual purposes of
higher education itself. Undergrad¬
uate candidates are selected by the
local chapter in co-operation with
to embrace Jesuit institutions of the Deans and the President of the
Higher Learning in Canada, and in University. Four percent of the
ELEVEN STUDENTS
TOP HONOR ROLLS
WITH PERFECT 4.0
Two hundred sixty-seven students
at Loyola University of Los An¬
geles have attained the Dean’s
Honor Roll for the fall semester.
Rev. Terrence L. Mahan, S.J.,
dean of the College of Arts arid
Sciences, has named the follow¬
ing students with a 4.0 point aver¬
age: David Ralston (Biology), Mi¬
chael Newton (Economics), Mi¬
chael Rose and Jack Hailey (Eng¬
lish), Alexander Connolly, Michael
Cullen and Alexander Hahn (Math¬
ematics), Michael Ornstein (Phys¬
ics) and Thomas F. Eck III (Po¬
litical Science) Also on the Honor
Roll with a 4.0 point average are
Craig Sullivan of the College of
Engineering and Robert Mulcahy,
(College of Business Administra¬
tion).
other parts of the world.
Alpha Sigma Nu was founded
to honor those students who have
distinguished themselves in schol¬
arship, loyalty, and service. The
qualification of scholarship means
a notably above-average and pro¬
ven competence in higher studies,
Junior and Senior class are eligi¬
ble for selection. The graduate di¬
vision presents candidates from
each major offering a degree pro¬
gram, and distinguished graduate
students from each of the colleges
are also selected.
(Continued on Page 3)
Dr. DeLargey to Lecture:
Tradition of Ireland’
St. Patrick’s Season will see Ireland’s leading folk¬
lore research scholar lecture at Loyola University. On March
18 at 8 p.m. in St. Robert’s Auditorium Dr. James H. De¬
largey (Gaelic alias Seamus O’Duilearga) will present a lec¬
ture entitled “The Tradition of Ireland”. Dr. Delargey is the
founder of the Irish Folklore Corn-
Editor of the Journal of
mission
Folklore of Ireland Society, the
editor of several Irish folklore col¬
lections, and of The Finnish Folk¬
lore Communications.
In 1946, The British Academy
published The Gaelic Storytel¬
ler. This master storyteller is a
fellow or member of the Royal
Irish Academy, the Norwegian
Academy, Gustav Adolf Academy,
the Royal Anthropological Insti-
tute, the British Folklore Society,
the American Folklore Society, and
others, He has been decorated with
the Order of the North Star (King
of Sweden) and the Order of the!
Falcon (President of Iceland) and
holds honorary degrees from many
universities in Ireland, Wales, Scot¬
land, Iceland, and Canada. He was
the erudite one who led Walt Dis¬
ney to the treasure trove of the
wee people who appeared in his
(Continued on Page 3)
REQUIESCANT IN PACE
Your prayers are requested
for the repose of the soul of
Fred Smith’s mother.
Your prayers are requested
for the repose of the soul of
Gerald Zelko’s mother.