24
MONTREAL. AUTUMN 1963 VOL. VII. NO. 3

MONTREAL. AUTUMN 1963 VOL. VII. NO. 3 - Concordia University€¦ · EDWARD F. LENNON, '32 . Councillor DONALD J. NEWTON, '40 Councillor Very Rev. PATRICK G. MALONE, S.J. Rector Rev

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    3

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • MONTREAL. AUTUMN 1963 VOL. VII. NO. 3

  • 35mm

    COLOUR SLIDES

    OF LOYOLA COLLEGE

    CAMPUS AND AREA.

    The Alumni Association and the c o 11 e g e are preparing to produce an up-to-date story of Loyola Co 11 e g e through this medium.

    We believe many people have taken 35mm colour slide pictures which would be most helpful to us in this project.

    Would you please lend or donate slides you have taken of Loyola over the past years. We will be sure to return them if you so desire.

    October 19th, Saturday -

    'AT HOME' On campus day program and dinner-dance at Ritz-Carlton Hotel in evening. (See page l O for details)

    November 1, 2, 3, Friday to Sunday -

    Closed RETREAT at Monreso.

    November 15th, Friday -

    OYSTER PARTY.

    CLASS REUNIONS

    Closs '38, '41, and '53 will be holding stag parties on Friday, October 18th and attending 'At Home' day functions on campus and the dinner-dance Saturday evening, the 19th .

    .. .the best-tasting

    _ filter cigarette

  • LOYOLA ALU MN I ASSOCIATION

    HARRY J. HEMENS, Q.C., '32 President

    DONALD W. McNAUGHTON, '49 1st Vice-President

    ROSS W. HUTCHINGS, '45 2nd Vice-President

    J. DONALD TOBIN, '36 3rd Vice-President

    ARCHIBALD J. MacDONALD, Q.C., '26 Honorary Secretary

    Maj. Gen. FRANK J. FLEURY, CBE, ED, CD, '34 Honorary Treasurer

    KENNETH F. CASSIDY, '56 Councillor

    PAUL GALLAGHER, '50 Councillor

    EDWARD F. LENNON, '32 . Councillor

    DONALD J. NEWTON, '40 Councillor

    Very Rev. PATRICK G. MALONE, S.J. Rector

    Rev. THOMAS M. -MOYLAN, S.J. Moderator

    ROBERT J. BRODRICK, M.D., '43 Past President

    PA TRICK J. KENNIFF, '6'1 SAC Representative

    Mrs. DOROTHY McGEE Executive Secretary

    PHOTO ON COVER :

    Father Noll turns first sod for Loyola's new Vanier Library while Professor John Buell '50, Librarian E. Trowsdale, Father Rector and a few staff mem-bers look on.

    CONTENTS Vol. VII No. 3

    Page

    2

    3

    4

    5

    6

    8

    9

    Editorial : The Articulate In College

    Who's Afraid of Moby Dick?

    10

    12

    13

    14

    15

    17

    New Professors

    Golf Tournament

    Travel Overseas

    lnsignus Ductu Et Rebus Gestis

    Profile

    Loyola 'At Home'

    Insured for Charity

    New Appointments

    Fifty Years In Review

    Time Out

    The Lookout

    20 Alumni Bursary Winners

    EDITORIAL BOARD

    Leo MocGillivray .. . ........... ... .... ... ... ... .. ...... ..... ............................... ..... . Edi tar

    Mrs . Dorothy McGee .. ... .... .. ... .... .. ...... ............•..... .... ... ... ... .. Managing Editor

    Larry Boyle, '57 ....... .. .. ...... .............. ......... ........ ..... ..... Advertising Manager

    Phil Content '63 ... ........... .............. .... ..... ........... ...... .. ....... . layout Manag~r

    Maj. Norman Dann '40 ........ .. ............. .. ... ... ... .. .. ... ................ ... .

    Donald W, McNaughton '49

    Dr. Robert J . Brodrick '43

    Address: 7141 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal 28, P.Q.

    PRINTED BY LA TRIBUNE INC., SHERBROOKE, P.Q .

    Chairman

    LOYOLA ALUMNUS • LOYOLA COLLEGE • MONTREAL 28, CANADA

    Auth,:rized a, sKond c•ass mail by the Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for poyment of postage in cash. - POSTAGE PAID AT MONTREAL

    -1-

  • Editorial

    ·THIS ~EW academic rear, like ~ny other, is no e.t· ceptwn. It has left us pondenn-g a few problem.~

    with somewhat more attention than we have git-en them in the past, and the one that has hit us particular/')' hard this year is the problem of articulateness or more aptly of the inarticulate and the frightened.

    The reason why we bring this problem up is that it has haunted the English Catholic community in Montreal, and Canadians as a whole, ever since the')' grew up neither here nor there, below the border or across the Atlantic, in their way of expression. We have often appeared complacent because we lacked the collec-tive force of personality to present our case, and stupid because we didn't know how to say what we thought.

    It is easy, of cour'se, to find people or institutions lo blame for our plight. We could blame our politicians

    The editorial for this issue has been guest written by a Loyola alumnus whose close contact with colleges, teachers and students well equips him to make these sound observa-tions.

    for misrepresenting us. But they are only part of our ,community and a reflection of ourselves. To blame our colleges and universities is perhaps getting closer to the truth, if only that we expect these institutions to be self-perfecting.

    We might stop and ponder this business of collec-tive self-perfection for a while. It belongs in a university because if a student doesn't experience it there or at least begin the process while he is in college, the chan-ces are high that he will remain mute, wet and un-moving, another graduate who somehow had the ability lo get a degree but la.eked the force and the articulation to show that he had ever learned anything at all. We

    2

    da not here run down the "quiet" personality, but even among the less frantic institutions of our society there is ample room for the display of independence and creat-ive thought that makes those institutions dynamic.

    Moreover it has always seemed in a university that students lose the fear of their own intellectual shadows not by ones, twos or by threes, but by groups, in the classroom or in extracurricular activities. They learn in group mental combat and self -expression how to stand by their convictions. Providing their convictions are sound, the universities should do everything to en-courage them. It is here, possibly, that the universities of this country are open to blame.

    In the past few years there has been a tremendozts movement towards political consciousness among students which might have existed earlier with more of jicial university encouragement. The impetus has been from the political parties. There has also been an awakening of interest by students in the meaning of a university and particularly its relation to the business and indus-trial worl:l. Here again the universities themselves have been vague. If some changes have come they have often been due to the pressure on universities of the student's position vis ci vis his job outside, and not to the far-sightedness of educators.

    The ideal is naturally impossible. There will never be a university everyone of whose graduates will be the model of articulation and justifiable self -confidence. On the other hand there is no reason why many university graduates across Canada should be as slow as they are at making an impact on their own fortunes, unless they only learn enough English to write exam-inations and leave the detail of what they represent too obscure to be seen. There is such a thing as luck but a country with as high a proportion of graduates in its population as Canada should be a bit more obvious in knowing its own mind.

    In meeting this problem we can look to the univers-ity for a solution without hesitation. It requires no finan-cial campaign, no mass building program, no brealc-through in science or thought. Only a more vital attitude by professors and st1tdents to what they discuss and how they judge its value.

  • WHO'S AFRAID OF MOBY DICK?

    THE OXBRIDGE CRISIS by TONY RASPA '55

    CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND - Higher education in Britain is at a cross-roads in its history. On the one hand there is a long, worthy estaLlished system of university education centred in Oxford and Cam-bridge which is resisting change. On the other hand there is. the need in the country for a broader, more comprehensive system which will grant professors and graduates of other universities the same attention that "Oxbridge" receives. The struggle is intense, the battle-lines are not clear, and the result is un-certain.

    There have been long soul-searching articles in the newspapers and periodicals examining the pro-blems which face British universities. In the univer-sities themselves professors have advocated radical changes, none of whkh has yet become a big enough reality for it to count. What is at stake is not only the development of education but a change that will broaden the scope, the type and the faci lities of education beyond the fringe of the "Oxbridge" axis.

    Until recent years Oxford and Cambridge shared the spotlight in British university life. With 700 years of tradition each behind them, it seemed that they need have no rival because they filled what-ever educational requirements Britain had and filled them well. So it seemed. But the present struggle has developed out of a change in society itself, as writers and educationists have been quick to point out. The social hierarchy of Britain has "Oxbridge" at the top, and to change the system of education is to change the hierarchy as well. One cannot be done without the other.

    The British mind has, not without reason, found it difficult to dissociate perfection from Cambridge and Oxford. These universities have produced New-ton, Milton, Huxley and William Pitt. In fact, they seem to have produced everyone of note in British achievement in the last 400 years. Moreover, in a country where not too long ago education was syn-onymous with the nobility and upper classes, to go to Oxford or Cambridge is still the pinnacle of social (cum academic) achievement. And Cambridge and Oxford are hampered by all the socia l paraphernalia, still, for which a rapidly changing world has no time. They lack, for instance, a course in business administration, which is looked down upon as menial; disinteres ted students must study classics and go out with poor "thirds" into commercial posts.

    In a way there seems to be no place for the practical in Cambridge. The life here is entire unto itself; it would wither at least a little bit if it stopped being the best rose in the English garden. Even the thought of chance creates its blind spots. It is a

    TONY RASPA, B.A. Loyola '55, B.Ed., M.A. McGill, has attended Cambridge University in England for the past year as a research student in English.

    Prior to this Cambridge stint, Tony was with the English Department at Loyola and on the Editorial Staff of The Montreal Star.

    psycho!ogical impossibility for some Cambridge dons, for instance, to accept that any university in the world, with the possible exception of Oxford, could give as good an education as theirs. They pride them-selves on rejecting students from American univers-iti es, and consider Harvard and Yale doctorates in-finitely inferior to theirs." Yet there is nothing quite as insular as an "Oxbridge" education. It starts a student off on a specialized subject in freshman year, and he never sees anything else for the rest of his degree. In addi tion, the subject matter itself is res-tricted, at least in the humanities, and it is this restriction which provoked history students at Cam-bridge to ask for a wider range of subjects, with less concentration on English history. In English literature many graduate students think that "Moby Dick" is a pleasant fish story, never having read it, thus dismissing what may turn out to be the "Aeneid" of Am~rica, and they know even less about the great-est of Engl ish playwrights in this century, Eugene O'Neill. Both O'Neill and Melville are American~.

    On the credit side for Cambridge the slate is imposing enough. The town and university have a sense of continuity and achievement inspiring to both scientist and artsman. Some of the university buildings, put up by the Tudor monarchs or built by the clergy in the Middle Ages, are breath-taking or quaint in their beauty. Within their walls holding the records of past scholarly achievements, the acad-emic finds his place easily enough. If the scene is colored by activities that make Sodom and Gomor-rah look pale, or by academic squabbles that reduce men to the level of children, it seems beside the point.

    The problem sums itself up in this: it is simply not in the trad ition of Cambridge and Oxford to be interfered with. They are by history intitutes for the shy scholar and the crack-pot don, not univers-· ities which are an integral part of society, feeding and being fed by it, receiving students liberally ancl sending them out ready to handle worthy but not distin ctive jobs in a highly specialized society.

    Continued on Page 9

    -3-

  • Ner2) Professors Reinsure Expansion and Maturity of Courses

    In departments which are the mainstay for imparting Catholic education, several striking additions have been made which just might possibly indicate a move towards a secular dissemination of religion. The complete details of additions in the Theology and Philosophy depart-ments, and in others, are given below.

    NEW PROFESSORS REINSURE, ETC

    Some 31 full-time professors have been added to the college staff and four others, formely part-time members, have returned on a full-time basis for the academic year under way. Taking into account ten professors who have resigned or left on leave of absence, this brings the active faculty membership to 108, including 18 part-time professors.

    NEW POST CRE.A TED

    The leading addition to th~ staff is that of Mr. George Jo_Iy, a. Loyola graduate (B.A. '38) who also holds engu~eermg degrees ~rom McGill University. !'fr. Joly will become Assooation Dean of Engineer-i~g, a. new post at .Loyola which will give the En-~me~rmg. Faculty ~ quasi-independent status. One of his mam tasks wi~l be to expand the engineering-program to a full five-year course leading to a B. Eng. degree.

    Mr. Joly is a Counsellor for the Corporation of Professional Engineers and a Counsellor for the En-gineering at McGill, which he has held since 1956 to come to Loyola. '

    Biggest department will be that of Modern Languages, . responsible for the new program in French, wluch features a specially equipped lan-guage laboratory to facilitate oral instruction and practice. Rev. A. J. Nelson, S.J. (Loyola Class of '32) returns to Loyola after a leave of absence for grad-uate studies overseas.

    . Also joining the department are Mr. John Mack-n ss and Mr. Leonard W. Sugden. l\fr. A. S. Michalski has been appointed Acting Chairman of the depart-Jnent.

    -4-

    THEOLOGY EXPANDS

    The Theology Department, continuing a depar-ture initiated two years ago, has expanded its options to include courses specifically directed to non-Catho-lic students. Three laymen join the staff: Dr. Cath-leen Going, who obtained her Ph.D. from Notre Dame's St. Mary's College; Mr. Charles McGrath; and Mr. Arthur C. Dechene, Jr., a Woodrow fellow from Catholic University.

    The History Department has added Mr. R. T. Coolidge, from Oxford, Mr. A. M. J. Hyatt, Duke University, Mr. J. F. McGovern, a Woodrow Wilson fellow at the University of Wisconsin, and Mr. R. F. Ruigh, from Harvard University. Mr. Ruigh has received a Fullbright Scholarship, a Coolidge Fellow-ship, a Woodrow Wilson travelling fellowship, and is a Phi Beta Kappa. Dr. F. G. W. Adams has been appointed Department Chairman.

    Dr. Richard Barton, who earned his doctorate from McGill last year, Dr. S. Saantham, from Queen's University, and Mr. S. Morris from McGill, have joined the department of Physics. Dr. Shafiq A. Alvi, author of several articles on labour problems, has come to Loyola as Assistant Professor of Economics are Rev. Ryan. S.J., from Harvard, and Mr. Alex G. Vicas, from Princeton University.

    ALLLAY DEPARTMENT

    The Mathematics Department has added Mr. Eugene Batiuk, a Loyola graduate (B.Sc. '59), Mr. D. Bonyun, a Canada Council scholar from McGill, and Mr. Triloki Srivastave, Dr. Dreux de Netten-court, a Fullbright scholar and recipient of a Ph.D. from McGill this spring, has joined the Biology Department. Dr. Mark Doughty has come to the Chemistry Department from the University of Lon-don.

    The Philosophy Department has added Mr. Richard Becka, Mr. Fred Maguire, a Canada Council scholar from the University of Montreal, Mr. John D. Morgan from the University of South-ern California and Mr. John T . Rooney, a Wood-row Wilson fellow from Harvard. With the depar-ture of Rev. Horatio Phelan, S.J. (Loyola Class of '25), this leaves the department staffed entirely by laymen. Mr. John Doyle (Loyola B.A. '42) has been named Department Chairman.

    Other additions to the faculty inqlude Mr. Ronald Coyte and Mr. Michael Little in Political Science, Mr. John M. Keyes in English, and Mr. John E. Lempkowski, a Woodrow Wilson fellow from the University of Chicago, and Mr. Daniel C. Scavone, in the Classics Department.

  • Left to right : Chairman, Larry Boyle; low gross winner Jack Shau-gh nessy; low net winner Dr. Bob Broddck.

    GOLF TOURNAMENT (?) 1963

    The second Thursday in September has become the traditional date for Loyola's annual golf tour-nament. This year plans progressed well and the weatherman blessed the city with beautiful weather all week - until THE day - then it rained and blew. According to the weather report the following day, if it had been snow instead of rain, we would have had a 25-inch snowfall. ·well .. . thank heaven for small mercies.

    ,,ve were feeling most discouraged as we waded between the office and the car loading the prizes donated by our kind friends and wondering if there would be enough of a turnout at the dinner to make it possible to use them as door prizes, as we couldn't expect the ninety-odd scheduled goHers to play. We arrived at the Belle Vue Club to find a few men having lunch and awaiting a break in the weather. The break never came but eventually thirty undaunt-ables· decided this might be their opportunity to wrest the low gross title away from defending cham-pion Father Jack Hilton, who was on hand determin-ed not to be dethroned without a struggle.

    The wind swept across the grounds in savage bursts causing golfballs to take the craziest detours if you were unfortunate enough to have mistimed your shot. Every beginner had an opportunity to look like a pro while good golfers had no assurance that their shot would go in the direction they in-tended. o Hollywood writer in his wildest imagin-ings could have dream up sights and situations as abounded that afternoon. It is unfortunate that we didn't have a camera on hand to record the hilarious happenings. Everyone except those attired in com-plete head-to-toe rainwear, were thoroughly drenched

    5

    before they got to the first tee so that keeping

  • TRAVEL ALUMNI AND FAMILIES FLY OVERSEAS IN MAY

    Above : Motoring in Connemara. Below : Roso Castle in Killarney.

    Have you been wishing to tour England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales ... We have made arrangements to give alumni and their fami lies an opportunity to make such a trip at a very special price ... $190.00 per person.

    The flight leaves Montreal for London on Tuesday evening, May 26th by TCA jet and returns to Montreal on or about June 1·3th.

    ,,ve can only accommodate one plane load of people and with approximately 2,000 alumni within Montreal and vicinity, these seats will soon be taken up. We hope you will be among those taking advantage of these special rates.

    We will draw up a program to fit the interests of various groups as soon as we receive the necessary information on the following questionnaire. Please fill it in and return it immediately. We will reply to you by mail once full costs have been established. Cost example:

    Those choosing a full tour of the above mentioned countries will be able to do so approximately $400.00. This inclurles sightseeing, meals and transportation (excluding flight fare).

    Others who wish to spend more time in fewer places will find their costs reduced accordingly. .

    People preferring to make their own plans will leave and meet the plane in London at a definite date and time.

    See, questionnaire on inside back cover. FILL IT AND SEND IT NOW I

    -7-

  • /11signus Ductu et Rebus LOYOLA MEDAL TO BE PRESENTED

    TO GOVERNOR-GENERAL VANIER

    The Loyola lVIedal consists of a s9lid gold dis~ suspended from a o·old bar bearing. the inscr i t ion, "Lo ola Medal". Inscribed on the border arounc t e 1sc are t e words, ·'INSIGN,0S 'DUCTl ET REBUS GESTIS", (For Outstanding Leadership and Achieve-ment). The center design bears the coat-of-arms of Loyola College. The recipient's name is inscribed on the reverse side.

    This Loyola Medal has been conceived as a tribute to out-standing leadership and achievement on the Canadian scene. It is sponsored by the Loyola Alumni Association, in collaboration with Loyola College, Montreal.

    The exacting criter ion for the awarding of the Loyola lVIeda l wi ll be that its recipient be "a man or a woman whose character, philosophy and contribution have enriched the heritage of Canada and humanity."

    Nominations for the Loyola Medal will be reviewed annually by a selection committee of which the president of the Alumni Associa tion and the rector of Loyola will be

    permanent members.

    Governor-General George P. Vanier, Class 1906, will be the first recipient of the Loyola Medal and will come to Loyola College on Saturday, October 19th, for the presentation . Details of the program for that day can be found on page 10.

    CAMPION BOOK SHOP LTD. (just West of Guy)

    Widest selection of Catholic Literature

    Religious Gifts - Greeting Cards

    Church Goods

    1624 St. Catherine West Montreal, P.Q.

    WE. 5-1138

    His Excellency was born in Montreal, Quebec on April 23, 1888. He graduated in Ar ts from Loyola College in 1906 and obtained his Law Degree from Laval Un iversity in 1911. In that same year, he was ca lled to the Bar of the Province of Quebec.

    At the outbreak of the First World ' "' ar in 191'1, the young lawyer joined the Royal 22nd Regiment for active service. He was a Lieutenant when the R egiment went to France as part of the Canadian Expeditionary Force.

    He served with distinction in the ba ttlefield and besides being Mentioned in Despatches, he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order, the Milit-ary Cross and a Bar to the Military Cross.

    In August, 1918, some ~hree months before the armistice, Major Vanier was seriously wounded at Cholsy.

    In 1921 and 1922, His Excellency served as Aide de Camp to Lord Byng of Vimy, who was then Governor General of Canada. He again served as Aide de Camp to Canada's Governor General from 1926 to 1928. During this period the Governor General was Viscount Willingdon.

    In 1928, His Excellency was loaned to the De-partment of External Affairs, serving as Canadian representative at the League of Nat10ns in Geneva until 1931.

    In 1935, he was Canadian Representative in Paris and in 1936, he again served his country a t the League q_f Nations, this time as Technical Advisor to the Canadian Delegation. That same year, he also represented his country at the coronation of King George VI.

    In 1943, he returned to England as Canadian Minister to the Allied Governments established in the United Kingdom. Following the liberation of France in 1944, he returned to Paris as Canadian Ambassador.

    He retired from his post as Ambassador to Fran-ce in 1953 a t the age of 65, following 25 years of continuous and distinguished service to his country.

    In 1959, he came out of retirement to accep t the culminating .. appointment of his career, that of , the Queen's representative in Canada.

    -8-

  • Continued from Page 3

    The situation has · its not humour-ous aspects on the whole of British learn-ing and research. From the point of view of research, it was shown · recently tha t 45 per cent of all Science grad-uates would like to go to America . The big ques tion is why they do no t want to stay a t home. America offers more money to research men but money is a re la ti ve thing in a cotmtry where breed-ing and background mea n more. From the point of view of the un iversities themselves, there are too few graduates wi ll ing to take jobs in the " new" ins. titutions beca use they will be looked tlown upon (it seems to them now) as second rate brains, which they arc not necessarily. From the point of view of the young Englishman h imself beginninr, h is educa tion, he will be hampered by an in fe riori ty complex a ll his life, from his first days as a freshman , if he docs not make it to Oxford or Cambridge.

    So fa r th e opinions and the evidence for the revita liza tion of the old and th e establishment of a new sys tem of edu c-ation have been conflicting. One Ox fo rd don, typical of the i;i.trcme conserva ti ves. rea cted' strongly against an increa se in the number of fellows at his college because there would be no place to h and-le them at tile sacrosanct high table where the dons eat. His concern in educ-ation was limited to the tradition of thr. high table. At the other end of the scale several prominent educationists have suggested that Cambridge and Ox-ford be turned into graduate centres alone, leaving the new and not-so-old universities to handle undergraduates.

    The discussion has permeated the whole of British thinking. Tests have been conducted to determine· what university graduates put in the best per. formances once they start working. In many cases the Oxbridge graduate has come out on top (fot instance the civil service), but these statistics have been ciiied into doubt as Jacking national objectivity (why conduct tests to deter-mine what university graduates work best in the first place), of the order of Britain's first tragic refusal to join the Common Market in 1956, and of charges by leading British newspapers that the U.S. doctored photographs to precipit-ate the Ci1ban crisis. In Cambridge it. self the desire for exclusiveness runs very deep. of a depth that one associates rather with feminine weakness than with masc.uline strength. But none of this on the national or local level can obscure the benefits inherent in the facilities at "Oxbridge," the laboratories, the libra-ries, the time to think and the leisure to re-construct thought to fit new facts . It is this which I have most enjoyed here on my leave of absence from Loyola, pouring over books three to four hun-dred years old, learning the value of the old world and getting a wider apprecia. tion of America.

    New Man at 2 Dale Avenue

    A_ N IMPORTANT event o f the past summer was ~he appoin t-ment of a new provincial superior of all English-speakin~

    Ca nadian J esuits - in the ·person of Rev. Angus J. MacDougall, S.J., Arts '40, rector of 'Campion College, Regina. Fa ther Mac-Dougall succeeds Rev. Gordon George, S.J., superior of the Upper Canada province since 1957.

    Fa ther MacDougall joined the Jesuit order the same year he graduated from Loyola where he attended High School as well. Post-graduate studies earned him master and cloctoral degree in classics at the University oi Toronto. Further study and research took him to Harvard University.

    As a scholastic, he attended Ignatius College in Guelph ,and Regis College, Toronto; the Jesuit theologate in Montreal; and Namur, Belgium.

    Brother of Rev. -Robert MacDougall, S.J., presently minister of the Jesuit community at Loyola, the .new provincial lectured at Ignatius College, Guelph, and St. Paul's College, of the University of ·Manitoba. He became rector of Campion in 1960.

    From the Review 1940 : "A scholarship in studies and a captaincy in the COTC place him above the rest of the boys. From the first days of his impersonations of 'Battlin O'Toole' to his present day imitations of the 'Angel', Gus has pantominerl his way to the funny-bones of everyone in the school. Moody at times, still life is interesting and colorful to Angus who manages to lift himself by his own bootstraps. The football team will miss Gus' forward-pass snaring, the Sociality will miss his exemplary conduct, the LCAA will miss his zealous support and the dramatic society will miss his gran

  • 'fhose who came to last year's Homecoming were you"ng (top left) and not so youn11 (middle left). Those who come this year may not quite feel up to dancing the limbo (top right), but then they can always supply the musical accompaniment (bottom right). All who have been away from Loyola will be anxious to see how the students' residence has progressed since this shot taken at the tim& of last year's Home-coming (bottom left).

  • LOYOLA "AT HOME" Have you ever felt like kicking yourself for

    having 'missed a certain function? Many alumni. regretted missing last year's event, so make plans now to join your fellow alumni at the 'At Home' on Saturday, October 19th. Bring your wife, your fiancee, your favourite date - bring your friends too. It promises to be a memorable event and we want you there.

    - PROGRAM -

    9.45 a.m. Loyola College will open its doors to welcome home her sons, their families and their friends. Students will be on hand to give guided tours to observe the new buildings and the many changes within the original buildings.

    11.30 a.m. Governor-General Vanier, Class '06, will be presented with the first 'Loyola Medal'. A new award which will be presented from time to time by Loyola College and the Loyola Alumni Associa-tion to an outstanding Canadian citizen.

    12.30 p.m. Pre-Football game Lunch will be avail-able on campus.

    2.00 p.m. Loyola Warriors vs Carleton University Ravens.

    This might be your last opportunity to see football on the old campus as building-plans call for moving the playing fields to ·the south side of Sherbrooke Street. Stands will be erected for the spectators.

    8.00 p.m. Dinner-dance in the lovely Ritz-Carlton ballroom with Peter Barry's orches"tra playing music throughout the evening.

    Many cocktail parties are being planned as friends rendezvous for the occasion. Notices of these

    -11

    will be appearing in the newspapers from time to time.

    Classes of 1938, 1941 and 1953 have reunion plans well under way for the same weekend. They will be holding stag parties on the Friday evening and will be present Saturday night at tables especially reserved to accommodate their individual classes. A large turnout of out-of-towners is indicated. These a:lebrations should add greatly . to the festive evening.

    Alumni coming from out-of-town wishing assistance with accommodation arrangements, should write to the Alumni Office giving as much detail as possible and every attempt will be made to help them.

    Accommodation at the dinner-dance is necessarily limited; therefore we urge you to reserve tickets and tables for your party through the Alumni Office or your class reunion chairman as soon as possible.

    Dress is optional (black tie preferred).

    Tickets $16.00 per couple.

    Clommittee :

    'At Home' Chairman 'I:.oyola Medal' Student Program Publicity

    Ladies Committee

    Door Prizes

    NOTE.: •

    Dr. Bob Brodrick' '43 Bill Brayley '45 Eric Maclean '64 Don McNaughton '49, Eleanor Brodrick (Bob's ,wife) Kay Shaughnessy (Ray's wife) Ralph Bourassa Jr. '35

    Maps showing the locations of the various buildings will be available when you arrive on campus Saturday morning.

  • KEEP IN TOUCH

    WITH THE

    UNDERGRADUATE

    ACTIVITIES OF YOUR

    ALMA MATER

    READ THE

    LOYOLA NEWS Yearly subscription rates

    4501 WEST BROADWAY

    $1.00 for 24 issues

    INVESTMENT

    DEALERS

    STOCK

    BROKERS

    MIDLAND-OSLER SECURITIES LIMITED

    129 St. James St. W.

    Montreal

    VI. 4-2633

    INSURED FDR CHARITY

    ·~1inmortality on the instalment pl(lll."

    For most people, especially those in modest circumstances, life in-surance offers a convenient, effi-cient, and practical method of guaranteeing any bequest one might desire to make. A small payment each year out of current income will provide a life in-surance gift of substantial size and, at death, the estate of the donor is not diminished for the rest of his family.

    Among other advantages :

    Life insurance face amount · is paid by contract, so the proceeds are not subject to the usual

    Your

    College

    Needs

    Your Help

    Many of Loyola College graduate feels a heavy debt of gratitude to his ' Alma Mater.

    I have been privileged to help several men . set up their plan for contributing to the Endowment Fund of Loyola College, by creating a per-manent endowment in his name, paid for in easy instalments, and with inter-esting tax-deductible features for the individual or corporations.

    .Please give me a call, and I will lie glad to tell you · more about the plan as it applies to you personally.

    D. Kenneth Hushion The Imperial Life

    2055 Peel St., Suite 601, ~!Jnlreal Office 866-1471 Res. 484-2493

    -12-

    shrinkage by probate fees or administrative costs.

    The bequest is incontestible by anyone.

    Payment of an insurance is made without delay, whereas a bequest by Will is sometimes not settled for many years.

    Life insurance is completely ~eparate from the rest of your estate, cannot be reduced be-cause of insufficient assets in estate, nor taken away by failure of the Will. Laws of descent and distribution have no effect on the bequest.

    Donor can start a gift during his Lifetime, secure in the know-ledge that his death will not interrupt its completion.

    Publicity is controlled by the donor. A gift not subject to probate or administration need not appear in published public records.

    A charity that owns a policy and is beneficiary has the benefit of increasing cash values avaii-able for emergencies, and ultim-ately of receiving the full pro-ceeds at death of donor.

    To date, approximately $80,000.00 has been pledged to Loyola College through the recently developed L o y o l a College Endowment Program. It is hoped that more and more alumni and friends of Loyola will choose this method of helping the college financially and creating a permanent endowment in their name.

  • JOHN STIRLING DORRANCE

    John Stirling Dorrance has been appointed b y Father Malone to the newly created position of Director of Development.

    He obtained his B.A. (English and Economics) and his M.A. (English) from Saint Patrick's College, Ottawa. He has also completed his credit require-ments towards a Ph.D. (English) at the University of Ottawa.

    Mr. Dorrance has held various positions with the Federal Government, among them, assistant to the Minister of National Health and Welfare. He has also served as Chairman of Public Committee, Manitoba Liberal Party ; General Manager of Win-nipeg Symphony Orchestra and free lance radio and television writer. He comes to Loyola College from St. Mary's University, H alifax, where he was assistant to the President and then Director of Development.

    ,rwo APOLOGIES

    EWART WILLIAMS

    Ewart Williams, has been appointed to the post

    pf Public Information Officer at Loyola College and

    will assist Mr. J. Stirling Dorrance in the Develop-ment Office.

    He is a Loyola graduate, B.A. '46 and two years

    later graduated from McGill with honours in

    Economics and Political Science. In 1952 he received

    his B.C.L. from McGill also.

    Mr. Williams' business experience includes work

    with trust companies, the Department of Finance

    of the Province of Quebec, and law firms in Montreal.

    WE APOLOGIZE for omitting, in the'summer edition, following the Annual .Meeting, the name of Tim Slattery, Q.C. '32, from the list of those who retired from the Association's Board of Directors.

    WE APOLOGIZE to R ev. Royden Thoms, Class '40, for publishing in our summer edition 1963, information which came · to us from another source and which we inadvertently misinterpreted. Father Thoms is Chaplain at Marymount High School and has been for some years.

    -13-

  • 0® )7@@][?0 D0u ffi@WD@W

    In the midst of the college's rapid march forward, one of its time-honored student publications will this year take a nostalgic glance backward. The REVIEW, Loyola's yearpook, is fifty years old.

    To mark this golden anniversary the 1964 REVIEW will page through its forty-nine predecessors to present a chronicle of events large and small, momentous and ordinary, in a section devoted exclusively to highlighting Loyola's past.

    From modest beginnings in 1915

    the REVIEW has progressed to its modern 250-page format onst-ling with photographs, sum-marizing in one neatly-bound volume the Loyola College of that year. As a striking end to a half-century of publication and as a note of challenge to future year-book staffs, the REVIEW '64. will feature several sections in full colour; it is felt that this special issue warrants such an outstanding innovation.

    Mindful yet of Loyola's continu-ing march forward, the REVIEW '64 will close with a prophetic, yet thoughtful, look to the Loyola of the future.

    ALUMNI FUND

    FOR

    LOYOLA COLLEGE

    Have you sent YOUR 1963

    contribution?

    KEN CA5SIDY '56

    Chairman

    The REVIEW '64 is a book that no Loyolan, former or present, will want to be without. Be sure of your copy now. Reserve it at the Alumni office or at the offices of the Student Administrative Council.

    Century Eledric Company 834 Notre Dame Street West,

    Montreal

    Wholesale Electrical Supplies

    TEL. 866-3647

    -14 ·-

  • TIME OUT

    by REV. JOHN ENGLISH, S. J, Theology Dept., Loyola College

    To repair damage or injury we make atonement to another person. It is usually thought of in legal terms, as when we are fo rced by law to make good the damage

    we have done. But this is a rather cold, legalist notion,

    and though it is the usual one, it is not the only mean-

    ing. We can make atonement from a deep motive of

    love. An apology after an insult can be made to restore

    the friendship broken by the insult. That apology is an act of atonement because it once again make you AT-

    ONE with your friend. AT-ONE-MENT results. The

    best a!onement would be AT-ONE-MENT. To break up

    the word thus is to restore its original meaning.

    We mus~ be careful of thinking too legally when

    calling Christ's great act of suffering, dying and rising

    again an act of atonement. It was all done from deepest. love and it reszi:lted in the most important AT-ONE-MENT of all, love and friendship between Goel and man. Christ became man, lived, suf ferecl, died, rose again and ascended to the Father simply in order to make man once again AT-ONE with Goel. All the sacrifices recorded in the Old Testament were but foreshadow-ings and preparations Jor the one great sacrifice of Christ.

    Fortunately for us the holy Sacrifice of the Mass makes Christ's sacrifice present again to ·us. And it does so precisely in order that we might personally join Christ in o/fering it again and again to Our Father. It should be for us the act by which we make ourselves and our whole lives AT-ONE with God.

    CLIP AND MAIL

    ALL ALUMNI : PLEASE SEND US YOUR LATEST NEWS Your news note is needed. Further education, changes in occupation, marriages, births, any news of interest to fellow alumni. (Please Print)

    1 Name ..... .... .. .... .... ..... ... ... .. ......... .... .. .... .. .... ..... .... .... ... .... ....... Degree/Year

    Address .... .... ..... .... ....... ........... ...... ... .... ....... ....... .... ....... ............... .. ....... ..... .. ... ... .. ... ..... .... ... .... .......... ..... ... .. .... .. .. ........ .. .... .

    Occupation .. .... ........ ... ..... ............................. .... ...... ..... ... ... .. ... ..... .......... .................... ..................... ................... ... ... ....... .. .

    News item

    Please fill in this coupon and send it to The Loyola Alumnus, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal 28, Que-bec. In Montreal you may telephone HU nter 8-9551, local 241 .

    - 15 -

  • To the following alumni, their br!des and br_ides-to-be. we extend our very bes t wis~es for ha1?pmcss. We smce:ely ho~c 1hey wi ll keep in touch with our office as they settle into their new homes throughout the land.

    Lawrence J . Boyle '57 - marr ied Anne McDowall, August 1963

    Dennis Michael Burns '62 - married Beverley Ann Burns, June 29th , St. Edmund of Canterbury, Beaconsfield.

    Robert James Cussen '59 - of Loyola High School f_aculty, married Audrey Mae Clark , July 6th, St . Ignatm s.

    Gilles DesRuisseaux '61 - married Moniq-ue Magee, August 'fi3.

    Gerald Francis Dionne '56 - married Marie Claudette Leblanc. June 1963.

    Henry Edwards '61 - married Frances LaMontagne, August 31st, St. Ignatius.

    Jack Gadeyne '61 - married Marie Paradis, May 1963, St. John , Que.

    Kevin Francis Gore '63 - married Dawn Butler, August 24th , St. Ignatius.

    J. Robert Hall '55 - married Gisele Crete, August 3rd, Ascen. sion of Our Lord .

    Kevin Kiely '56 - married Catherine Ann Colthor!>e, August 17ih, Annunciation of Our Lady, T.M.R.

    Thomas Edward Kierans '61 - married Inta Frismanis, Augus t 3rd , St. Ignatius,

    Paul Charles McDonald '59 - married Pa tricia Kathleen Lloyd of Saint John, N .B., in June, St. Ignatius.

    John Mizgala '55 - married Catherine Claire Bourassa, Sc;)· tember 21st, Notre-Dame-des.Neiges Church.

    Robert Anthony McGee '52 - married Carole Anne Corbin, August .17th, St. Basil's Church, Ottawa.

    Dr. Raymond Moskaluk '55 - married Lyse Leroux , June 151h.

    SHIPPING LIMITED SHIPS AGENTS & BROKERS

    1010 Beaver Hall Hill

    UN 1-9971

    Richard Arnold Parker '61 - married Ruth Phaneuf of Toron-to, June 29th , Ascension of Our Lord.

    Gilbert Pinard '61 - married Andree Pouliot, August 17th, St. J oseph 's, T.M.R .

    Brian Vincent Potter '62 - married Penelooe Alici a Carol Marcotte of Preville, in June, St. Francis of Assisi Church, St. Lambert.

    Edward Ropeleski '58 - married Dolores Tubielewicz, August 1963, Our Lady of Czestochowa Church .

    Michael D'Arcy R yan '60 - married Hea ther Mary Kei1h , August 31st, Ascension of Our Lord.

    Terrence Charles Snvder '53 - married Margaret Rose Lang, Jul y 13th, s·t. Mary's Church, London, Ontario.

    Dr. James D. Sullivan '58 - married Janice B. Lane of Ot:awa, August 17th, St. Kev_in 's Church.

    Richard D. A. Tobin '57 - married Heather Leslie Case in August.

    John A. Woschitz, Jr. '57 - married Anne Marie Dussa ult, June 8th , St. Monica's.

    Peter Raspa '62 - married Lise Oraschuk, August 17th .

    John Hatton Poupart '53 - married Joan Helen MJrtin, September 28th.

    ENGAGED

    Dunstan P. (Chic) Chicanot '61 - engaged to Ida Giordano, December wedding.

    Brian P. Casey '60 - engaged to Gai l Tansey, October wedding_ Stanley Matulis '54 - engaged to Louise McHugh, fo rmely of

    Moncion , N .B., wedding December 28t h .

    J ames Rowen '55 - engaged to Ann Theresa McGinn , wedding October 26th.

    11Want the Best"

    Shop at

    QUEEN MARY PROVISIONS

    Finest Meats Fish Poultry

    Fruits & Vegetables

    FREE DELIVERY AND TELEPHONE SERVICE

    5310 Queen Mary Road Tel 481-2751

    -16-

  • LOOKOU1 1906

    Governor General George Vanier - made an honornry member of the Questers, the Commonwealth Youth Movement, in June. Presented with his membership before 23 members of the movement left on a travel program to Britain and Malta.

    1911 Judge Thomas Galligan - made a Knight of the Order of St. Gregory at the ecclesiastical investiture in Pembroke, Ontario, on March 31, 1963.

    1923 Louis P. Gelinas - appointed to the Senate by Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson; also appointed Director, National Drug & Chemical Co.

    1927 L. M. Moore - appointed Assistant Controller Trans-portation, Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada Limited. John McConomy - Returning Officer for Notre Dame de Grace by-election, Sept. 25th.

    1930 Fred F. Roland - in business again - Real Estate Broker, operating around Lake Memphremagog.

    1934 George Burman - Assistant News Editor of The Star - subject of article on 'desk men' in recent issue of the Star. Varied career in newspaper field; reporter and editor for Montreal and Quebec bureaux of The Canadian Press,; news editor of the Montreal edition of the Canadian Register; several years in the magazine field; does free lance articles and occasional book reviews for the Star's Entertainment section.

    1935 Eric W. Kierans - appointed Minister of Revenue in the Quebec Legislature; Liberal candidate in the provincial by-election in Notre Dame de Grace, September 25th. Daniel Griffin - appointed Principal, St. Madeline's School, Outremont. George E. Collins - barrister at Sudbury, Ontario, has been made Q.C.

    19.36 Rev. John Patrick Heffernan - ordained to the Holy Priesthood, "June 17th. Patrick L. Dussault - Canadian General Sales Manager with Service Plastics & Chemicals Corpora-tion.

    1938 The Hon. Pierre Sevigny, P.C. - appointed Chair-man, Board of Directors of Fischbach and Moore of Q~ebec, Ltd.; also appointed Director of the Windsor Hotel, Montreal. Was Deputy Speaker of House of Commons in last parliament and Associate Minister

    of National Defence in federal cabinet. Now in field of corporate affairs. George W. Joly - elected vice-president Newman Association of Montreal, Inc. Albert Rolland - President of the RCGA, co-signer of agreement to stage 1964 Open Golf Tournament at the St. Luc Club. A purse of $50,000 is involved.

    1939 Gordon F. Marriott - elected Director of The Lake-shore School for Retarded Children.

    1940 Paul F. Snell - appointed Manager, International Division, The Toronto-Dominion Bank, Toronto. Rev. Angus J. MacDougall - appointed Provincial Superior of all English-speaking Jesuits in Canada, by Very Rev. John B. Janssens, Superior General of the Jesuits, Rome.

    1941 Hon. Lucien Cardin - previously appointed Minister without portfolio, now Minister of Inland Revenue-in the Federal cabinet.

    1945 Rev. Maurus Macrae OSB - ordained to the Holy Priesthood, June 1st, in Vancouver, B.C. Father .Mac-rae practised law in Vancouver before entering the Seminary of Christ the King. W. G. Brayley, Pres. Johnson & Johnson Ltd. -named general vice-chairman of the 1963 campaig-n of the Federation of Catholic Charities, Inc. Rev. Richard Cronin SJ - celebrated with his parent5, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard T. Cronin, their 50th wedding anniversary in June. Father Cronin is at Fordham University, New York.

    1946 Paul Pare - appointed Vice-President Marketing, Imperial Tobacco Sales Co. Ewart Williams Public Information Officer at Loyola College.

    1947 Rev. Laurier Harvey SJ - ordained to the Holy Priesthood in the Catholic Church, Gayaganga, Kam-la Bajan, India, on March 24th. At present on faculty. of St. Mary's College, Kurseong, India. Jacques Marchessault, Attorney at Granby, Que. -appointed to Board of Directors, B. N. Robinson & Co., Ltd., assumes position of Secretary of the company.

    1948 James McGee - on teaching staff of R .M.C., St. John, Que.

    1949 Robert N. Boyle - was chairman of the annual foster parents' night of the Catholic ·welfare Bureau of the Federation of Catholic Charities, held in June.

    1950 Rev. Marc Gervais SJ - ordained to the Holy Priest-hood June 16th, at Regis College, Willowdale, Ontario, by The Most Reverend Philip F. Pocock, D.D. Keith English - appointed General Sales Manager, l\!IcFarlane Son & Hodgson (Ltd.)

    -17-

  • 1951 Edmund Monaghan, M.D. - graduated in surgery, McGill '63. Bob Bedard - won the Montreal Cup tennis title at the Mount Royal Tennis Club, in June.

    11952 William O'Malley Forbes-appointed Crown Attorney at Vancouver, B.C. Warren Allmand - elected secretary Newman Association of Montreal, Inc. .J. Vincent O'Donnell, Q.C. - elected chairman of the junior bar section of the Canadian Bar Associa tion, at the annual meeting in Ban££.

    1953 Jack Gillies - now with Ain & Zakuta Ltd., Contractors. Mr. John Peladeau SJ, of Regis College, Willowdale, has been g1vmg a summer course in Oral English to Jesuit novices, at St. J erome, Que. Dino Narizzano - in cast of "A Month in the Country" with Celeste Holme, playing in New York.

    1954 Rev. Arthur Tisdale SJ - ordained to the Holy Priesthood June 16th, a t Regis College, Willowdale, by The Most Rev. Philip F. Pocock, D.D. Stanley Matulis - now Metallurgist with United Aircraft at Longueuil, Que. Nicholas R. J. Gwyn - has transferred from the High Commissioner's Office in Accra, Ghana, to Ottawa.

    1955 Ray Bertrand - appointed Sales Manager with Laminated Structures Ltd. Rev. Michael Allan Stack - curate at St. Barbara's in LaSalle, has left for France to do further study in advanced catechetics a t L'Institute de Pastorale Catechetique de Strasbourg. Tony Raspa has returned from his studies a t Cambridge, England and wi ll attend Toronto University this year.

    1956 Daniel J. Sullivan - has joined the Chartered Trust Company in ~fontreal as a Trust Office and Branch Secretary. Pierre LaTraverse - appointed Executive Secretary of the Corporation of Real Estate Brokers of the Province of Quebec.

    1957 David Dyson - returned to Loyola High School Faculty. Michael Hawkins, S.J. - leaving for foreign missions at Darj-eeling, , vest Bengal, India. Missionary Departure Ceremony, September 29th at St. Ignatius Church.

    1959 Robert Amyot - appointed director of the firm of Bouchard & Co., Ltd., members of the Montreal and Canadian Stock Exchange. Shannon Grover - forme ly with the faculty of St. Francis Xavier Un iversity, Antigon ish, now with Ord, Wallington Co., Ltd., investment dealers, Westmount.

    1960 Francis Rooney, B.Ed. St. F. X. University - wi ll teach at Pius X School, not a t St. Lambert, as previously reported. John Bissonnette - has passed his 3rd year exams in Medicine at i\IcGill. Gerald P. Barry. Joseph Beaubien, Jr., Arthur B. Borgogelli, James A. O'Reilly - awarded degree Bachelor Civil Law, ·McGill '63.

    1961 Michael Bailey - working for General fotors, Oshawa, Ontario. Norman Cherbaka - working with Everest Watch Co. Chic Chicanot - teaching at Marymount High School. George Lynes - graduat ing from St. Joseph's Teachers' College this yea r. Richard Ryan - teaching at Chambly County R egional High School.

    - 18-

    HOTEL SAUREL

    SOREL, QUE.

    CLARKE FUNERAL HOME

    THIS is the ESSENCE

    of our Service

    Classic Dignity

    Homelike Atmosphere

    Expert Personal Service

    SS80 Sherbrooke St. West

    HUnter 1-0445

  • Brian Haley - working during summer with tile lay apostolate in Northern British Columbia.

    Brian · Get"ty - with General Mo-tors in Pointe Claire.

    Peter Larkin - awarded his MBA from Western University this year, now working with Clarkson Gor-don in Montreal.

    Henry Edwards resuming his medical training at University of Ottawa.

    Garry Fitzpatrick - to begin prac-tical medical training at Royal Victoria Hospital this fall.

    Carlos Osorio - to begin practical medical training at Queen Mary Veteran's Hospital this fall.

    Keith George with Traders Finance.

    Robert Skelly - studying law at McGill.

    Fred Mayers - teaching in La-chine. James Massie - doing post gradu-ate work. Brian Martin - has enteted Grand Seminary, MontreaJ. Bernard Murray - Asst. Mgr. Commercial Dept., Bell Tele-phone Co., Joliette, Que.

    PROFESSIONAL

    COLUMN

    NOTARIES

    Wickham, Wickham & Lussier NOTARIES

    627 Dorchester llvd. W. UN. 1-5419

    A. Patrick Wickham Arthur T. Wickham Robert lunier Records: Hector Decary

    Charles H. Wayland NOTARY

    Nace Ville Marie

    LAWYERS

    875-5250

    Slattery, Belanger & Fairbanks BARRISTERS AND SOllCITORS

    360 St. James Street West VI . 9-2"33

    T. P. Slattery, Q.C. Laurent E. Belanger, Q.C. E. Binney Fairbanks Jacques Valade W. Warren Allmand

    Broderick & McQuillan BARRISTERS AND SOLICITORS

    215 St. James Street West

    W. J, McQuillan, Q .C.

    AV. 8-0135

    George Broderick

    Norman Payne - doing social service work in Montreal. Bill Peacock - studying law at University of Ottawa. Michael Walker - at Ontario College of Education, Toronto. Robert Belanger - now with Sharpe Milne & Co. Michael Ferrie·- awarded MBA from Western U., working for Texaco, Montreal. Gordon James - awarded MBA from Western U ., working for AIC, Montreal. Michael B. Kelly - working with Canada Cement. Michael G. Kelly - on faculty of Loyola College. John MacMillan - B.Ed. St. Joseph's Teachers' College, teaching in St. Laurent. Richard Mathieu - returned to Montreal - with All Canada Radio and T.V. Edward Prowse, Daniel Sydor and Andrew Volpe - wrote final C.A. exams in .Tune. Shibly Abela - graduated from McGill in Elec. Engineering - employ-ed with Marconi in Research Dept., Montreal. Bernard Abela - graduate from McGill, Mechanical Engineering - em-ployed with Sperry Gyroscope in Ottawa. . .John Bush - employed for summer with Iron Ore Co. of Canada in Labrador. Has another year at U. of Toronto to obtain his B. of Civil Engineering. Ross Deegan - workjng in Calgary with Shell Oil for the summer. Attending McMaster University, Hamilton for Master's in Engineering Physics. Gilles DesRuisseaux - teaching high school . in Longueuil Felice Diamente - graduated from U. of Ottawa in Elec. Engineering, employed with Norther~ Electric in Montreal. Robert Fortin - Elec. Engineer, Larry Sheehan - Civil Engineer, Peters Mayers - Civil Engineer - instructors at Loyola's Survey School this spring after s.uccessfully, graduating from McGill. Bruce Lawson - working at Dosco for the summer, will enter final year of Mechanical Engineering at McGill this year. Robert Simmons - Customer Correspondent.with CIBA Pharmaceutials. Frank Berardinucci - teaching at Cardinal Newman H.S. Raymond Fitzsimons - teaching at Marymount H.S. John Flynn - teaching at Marymount H .S. Nester Kowalsky - with RCAF for the summer, enters 3rd year Medi-cine, McGill this fall. Richard Parker - employed in transistor research, Streetsville, Ontario. Stephen Whitty - worked as sleeping car conductor with C.P.R. during summer, will attend St. Joseph's Teachers' College this fall. Rill Pengelly - got his M. A. from the Institute of Medieval Studies, University of Toronto - will probably go on for Ph.D. .John Swiderski - studying for M.A. at Toronto University under Province of Ontario Fellowship. Garry Fitzpatrick - passed his 2nd year examinations in Medicine at McGill. Joseph F,. Gervay - got his M.Sc. in organic chemistry at University of British Columbia; working on antibiotics for Ph.D.

    1962 Derek Fewer and Eugene R"1>gala - passed 1st year examinations m Medicine at McGill. Winfield Hackett - on faculty of Rothesay Collegiate, Rothesay, New Brunswick. Edward Arthur Kirk - on faculty of Loyola High School.

    1963 Brian Slattery - winner of the English Speaking Union, Clara Capp Travel Scholarships, to include seven week travel and study trip to the United Kingdom this year, and attendance at a two-week course at the ESU Summer School at Somerville College, Oxford. Irving Narvey and Peter Howlett - attending McGill, Coach Bill Bewley thinks highly of them as prospective players on McGill football team. Peter Rousselle - now a volunteer teacher for two straight years in Jamaica, as part of CUSO's aid to underdeveloped countries programme.

    -19-

  • ALlUJMNI 183lUJIR

  • We ex tend our sincere sympathy to the following alumni and fa milies of alumni on their bereavement.

    BROWN Mrs. Charles J., at Montreal, July 1st, mother of Charles John Jr. '48,

    CAMIRAND FURLONG GRAZIANO Mc ifAHON

    MOONEY

    O'LEARY PORTEOUS

    RONEY SCANLAN SES IA CARTEN MARSHALL

    Rev. Donald A., SJ, '52, and Peter James '55. Charles A., at Montreal, August 11th, father of Lorne '47. i\frs. Pa tri ck, at Montreal, July 28th, mother of Michael '57. Mrs. Charles, at South Hull, Que., July 17th, aunt of James Graham '54. 1\Jargaret, as result of an accident, at Montreal, July 25th, wife of Dr. Roger E. NfcMahon '23. l\Iarcus F. , at Chomedy, June 26th, father of Marcus '61 and brother of Thomas '28. Frank 1\J., at St. John's, Newfoundland, September 9th, relative of Frank J. '48. 1\Jrs. Henry Miller, at Montreal, August 25th, mother of Daniel '44, Francis '45 and Joseph '38. Patrick Edward, at Montreal, July 13th, infant son of Joseph J. '48. J. Rene, at Montreal, August 8th, brother of Everett '21. l\Irs. Benedict, at Lachine, July 24th, mother of Major A. T. Sesia '33. Mrs. F. J., a t Montreal, September 21st, mother of Paul '42. i\Irs. Edith, wife of Dr. Robert M. Marshall '49, on September 25th, at Montreal.

    We are planning to run a charter next summer de parting l\fontreal May 26 'for London and returning from London on. or about June 13.

    In order that we may establish how many may be interested, we would ask you to complete and return the following:

    NAME --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    ADD RESS - --------------------------------------------------------------- ___ ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    NO. OF SEATS --------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    We shall also be arranging through BEL-AIR TRAVEL INC., a series of Tours for those members that are interested. Would you kindly indicate your preference:

    GROUP T OURS

    ENGLAND, SCOTLAND AND IRELAND

    FRAN CE, SWITZERLAND AND IT ALY -- ·------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    OTHER ---------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------- --------------------------------------

    INDEPENDENT ARRANGEMENTS

    Advise cities you would like to visit

    In order to qualify one must be a fully paid up m ember of the Alumni, for at least six months, their wives and dependant children.

    (Signed) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  • Reflecting your good taste ...

    riginal

    CANADA'S ORIGINAL

    CERTIFIED 8--YEAR--OLD CANADIAN WHISKY

    Schenley 0.F.C. is an excellent example of the

    distiller's skill . . . a premium Canadian whisky

    which has been slowly and carefully aged for

    eight full years.

    To give, to serve, to enjoy ... no Canadian whisky

    offers more pure quality, more superb taste, than

    8-year-old Schenley 0.F.C.

    "Distillers of Certified Aged Whiskies"

    TRY , THESE OTHER CANADIAN SCHENLEY QUALITY PRODUCTS:

    ORDER OF MERIT, AGED 15 YEARS • RESERVE, AGED 6 YEARS • GOLDEN WEDDING , AGED 5 YEARS

    LONDON DRY GIN • TROIKA VODKA • ANCIENT MARINER BLACK LABEL RUM • RON CARIOCA WHITE RUM LONG JOHN IMPORTED SCOTCH WHISKY • BEAU GESTE GENEVA GIN • OTARD COGNAC • GLAYVA SCOTCH LIQUEUR