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AMIGOS ANONYMOUS AGAIN
ASSEMBLE IN AUDITORIUM
“The most important event of my life, one that has in¬
fluenced all of my interests, all my choices, and undoubtedly
all of my future, took place la$t summer when I spent two
months working in a village in central Mexico with the
Amigos Anonymous program.” So writes one of this year’s
Loyola students.
Carl S. Coler>
Career Counselor
To Appear Here
On Friday, * December 11, Mr.
Car] S. Coler, Career Counselor for
the American Institute for Foreign
Trade will be on campus.
Since one in four of American
business and industrial enter¬
prises will actively be engaged in
foreign trade in the next ten years,
those considering working overseas
are urged to acquaint themselves!
with the opportunities presented for
an adequate preparation for the
career at the Institute.
3 Fields
Their curriculum emphasizes
three main fields: languages most
wanted by companies, area studies,
and world^rade and- banking. The
training is rigorous, with three to
five hours a day on language study
alone. The balance of time is di-
Fr. Robert Drinan to
Lecture on Education
The Ledesma Lecture, sponsored by the Department of
Education of Loyola University, will be held this Wednesday,
December 9 in Strub Memorial Theatre. Main speaker of
the event will be the Reverend Robert F. Drinan, S.J.,
M.A., LL.B., LL.M., and S.T.L. Commencing at 8 p.m., the
lecture will be attended by invited guests who will listen
to Father Drinan lecture on “Will $ - - — - - — -
*
ч -ЬДЗ
bssw."’- f
и л
••
ED CARDENAS of Loyola seen holding a board while someone
else does the work. The building is reported to be progressing and
is half-way completed at the present time.
That was last year’s project. Next [and in the foyer for private discus- 1
summer’s expedition gets officially sions with interested students,
off the ground Thursday, Dec. 10, (Thus you might ask Ed Cardenas
at 7 p.m. in Strub auditorium.
Last year saw only 10 students
from the Southland among the 120
West Coast members of Amigos
about his presence as translator,
counselor and assistant coach at
the emergency birth of Juan Fitz¬
gerald Kennedy Gonzales, while!
Anonymous, living and working Pepe Bergin manned the mobile
with Mexican families in central
Mexico, 2000 miles from here. It
was a pilot project, restricted
mainly to Loyola students.
This year Loyola men will be
working with fellows from local
Newman Clubs, with girls from the
Catholic Education Survive Until
1984?”
Ed. Society
The Ledesma Lecture is an an¬
nual lecture sponsored by the Loy¬
ola University Education Depart¬
ment and held at Loyola for the
purpose of imparting analysis and
various interpretations on contro¬
versial issues of the day by in¬
formed experts of those issues
They are named in 'honor of Rev¬
erend James Ledesma, S.J. (1519-
1575) who firts codified Jesuit ed¬
ucation in 1562 which led to the
authoring later in 1599 of the Ration
Studiorum, a fundamental charter
outlining the goals and methods of
Jesuit education, goals and meth¬
ods which are still evident even to
ttoday.
Father Drinan has long been a
notable figure in American legal
I matters. He is presently Professor
[of Criminal Law, Family Law,
| Jurisprudence and Church - State
Relations at the Boston College
School of Law of which he is the
iDean. Father Drinan is also a re¬
spected member of the Bar of Mas¬
sachusetts, the District of Colum¬
bia and the United States Supreme
Court. He has written extensively.
His book Religion, the Courts and
Public Policy published in 1963 has
increased his national fame and
his many articles published in such
periodicals as the Harvard Law
Review, the Georgetown Law Re¬
view, Commonweal and America
have shown that he possesses a
great mastery over his fields of
law. He is also the Vice-President
of the Massachusetts Bar Associa¬
tion; the Chairman of the Commit¬
tee for Massachusetts to the United
States Commission on Civil Rights;
a member of the nine-man Council
of the Section on Family Law of
the American Bar Association; and
a member of the national execu¬
tive Committee of the American
Judicature Society.
Religious and Lay
Invited to hear Father Drinan
speak are both religious and lay
professors of Loyola and neighbor¬
ing institutions (and their wives);
(Continued on Page 2)
AUTHOR CAMUS SUBJECT OF
CLEYMAET LECTURE DEC. 9th
electric generator!)
Father Hilsdale (“Padre Pablo”),
project coordiator for the South¬
land, says that he is both happy
and alarmed by the great number
of qualified students who have
already put in their names for this
three affiliated colleges and withjcorohig summer. And he has no
nurses from Saint Vincent’s. Stu- idea how many more will show up
dents from all these groups will be at Thursday’s meeting. He is happy
represented at Thursday’s meeting.
All are invited-— that is all who are
really serious about wanting to
work with Amigos Anonymous this
coming summer.
Slides, Discussion and
Commitment
The evening will begin with color
slides of the projects (building, edu¬
cation, public health, drainage,
sports, etc.) along with comment
by the Loyola team. There will be
a brief period of questions from the
floor, then the assembled Amigos-
because of the good that will be
done to both “Gringos” and Mexi¬
cans; but he is alarmed at all the
work for next semester in prelimi¬
nary education, logistics, and open¬
ing up of new projects to accom¬
modate the added personnel.
“Only those should come to the
meeting,” he says, “who are think¬
ing really seriously about the proj¬
ect; who feel they have a reason¬
able chance of arranging a loan
for tuition or somehow not having
to work during the summer; and
no-longer-Anonymous will station who think theV can ^rsuade their
themselves around the auditorium 1 (Continued on Page 2)
CARL
COLER
vided between the other two fields,
each taught by men with a mini¬
mum of ten years experience as
executives in foreign lands.
Record Excellent
The placement record is excel¬
lent. In 1964, 92 per cent of the
January class and 86 per cent of
the May class were placed before
graduation. Salaries are generally
higher than those of individuals
with graduate training.
Mr. Coler has been highly sue
cessful in his career, hiring 9,000
engineers for Westinghouse Elec¬
tric Co., as a director for The So
ciety for Advancement of Manage
ment, and on numerous assign
ments for the U. S. Government.
Dr. R. O. Cleymaet, chairman of
the Loyola Modern Languages
Dept., will deliver a brief lecture
on the works of the French author
Albert Camus this Wednesday Dec.
9. The lecture, under the auspices
of the Loyola English Society, will
be held in Seaver 200 at 12:10 and
is open to the public.
Albert Camus is regarded as one
of the leading figures in the mod¬
em philosophical movement of
‘existentialism’ (Though he himself
publicly disowned the label.) A
member of the French underground
during World War II, Camus wrote
regularly for the underground
newspaper Combat. His post-war
efforts won him the Nobel Prize for
Literature in 1957. A tragic auto
wreck cut short Camus’ promising
career in 1960. He was a youthful
47.
Camus is probably best known in
Appointments may be arranged America for his novels The Plague
through the Placement Office on and The Stranger, his plays Cali-
campus. Igula and State of Seige, and his
highly influential essays on ‘the
absurd’ most notably The Myth of
Sisyphus.
Dr. Cleymaet plans • a general
overview of Camus’ works with an
eye towards a balanced evaluation
and interpretation of the author’s
place in modern literary and phil¬
osophical development. Particular
attention will be paid to such works
as The Fall in which Dr. Cleymaet
detects a note of ambivalence and
self-questioning. He feels the per¬
spective provided by the four years
since Camus’ death afford an excel¬
lent opportunity for such a critical
investigation.
REQUIESCAT IN PACE
Your prayers are requested
for the repose of the soul of
the father of Robert and Thomas
Keese, former students here at
Loyola.