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The LOYOLA MAROON No. 12 Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday, January 11, 1957 Vol. XXXIV Loyola Concert Band To Perform Sunday Set Hungarian Relief Fund Variety Show Unite Student Efforts For Cause On Feb. 1,3 A Variety Show for the Hungarian Relief Fund will be held Friday, February 1 and Sunday, February 3 at 8 p.m. in Holy Name School Auditorium, the Rev. Harold L. Cooper, S.J., faculty sponsor of the event, announced. "The show will be an all-student project, handled by the students and comprised of student talent with all proceeds being presented to the Hungarian Relief Campaign," Father Cooper, said. Co-sponsors of the show are the Rev. John A. Toomey, S.J., director of the Loyola Forum and the Rev. Homer R. Jolley, S.J, chairman of the department of chemistryChairman for the event are: Gladys Selva, organization; Joy Boes, production; Joan Gaulene, publicity; Gail Gritter, Noreen Faulds and Betty James, arrangment; Sue Burke, business manager; Barbara Williams, assistant business manager Entertainment chairmen of the various college* include: Jim Ford, dentUtry; Neomie Breland. pharmacy; Rochelle Bonner. art* and sciences; Betty Johnston, music and Joe Na»- tasi, business administration. Fourteen acts have already been scheduled to perform in the two night show. Singers include: John Salvaggio, Yvonne Mateau, Barbara Faulkner, Olga Seiferth, Jim Ford and Gerald Marshall. Others performing in the. show are: Carl Hellmers, trumpetist; Catherine Tonry and Teddy Sullivan, pianists; Olga Moreau, Sandra Luscy, Joy Boes and Rochelle Bonner, dancers; and the Mambo Kings, an instrumental combo. Members of Thespians dramatic society will present a dramatic reading of James Thurber's "The Macbeth Murder Mystery." Campus Capers will provide the music under the direction of Curtis Rome, music senior. Everyone is invited to attend the show. Price of admission is SO cents and tickets are on sale now. Tickets may be obtained from the Public Relations office and the bookstore. Tickets may also be obtained from members of any of the following organizations: The Loyola Maroon, International Relations Club, El Eds Club, Medical Technology Club, Secondary Education Club, Blue Key fraternity, Agramonte Pre-med Society, The Edward Douglass White Debate Society, Young Republican Club, Alpha Delta Gamma fraternity, Beggars fraternity, Sigma Alpha Kappa fraternity and the American Pharmaceutical Association. LSL and APO service organizations will provide ushers. Guy Bernard's 'Suite' To Highlight Program "Suite for Band", composed by Guy F. Bernard, chairman of the piano department, will be the feature presentation of the University Concert Band in their program Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in the Fieldhouse. The band concert will be the fifth event in the 1956-57 Concert Series, the Rev. Joseph B. Bassich, S.J., acting dean of the college of music, said. The 50 piece band will be under the direction of George A. Jansen. Two soloists will be featured, accompanied by the band, Director Jansen, said. Wanda Laris, pianist, will play "Warsaw Concerto" by Richard Addinsell and Robert Morgan, baritone player, performing "The Debutante" by Herbert Clarke. Other composition! to be presented in the first half of the program will be: "Chorale and Alleluia" by Howard Hanson, "Dedication" by Richard Strauss, "Trompette et Tambour" by Georges Bizet and "Toccata and Fugue" by J. S. Bach. Selections comprising the second half of the program include: "National Emblem March" by E. E. Bagley, "Alma Mater Suite" by Leroy Anderson, "Hillbilly" by Norton Gould and Selections from "Oklahoma" by Richard Rogers. "This is only the second performance of Mr. Bernard's Suite in New Orleans," Father Bassich said. It was previously presented in Baton Rouge by the Louisiana State University Concert Band under the direction of L. Bruce Jones on the occasion of the Louisiana State Music Educators' Convention in 1955. It has also been performed in Nashville, Tennessee by the Peabody Symphonic Band in 1956 under the direction of Dr. C. B. Hunt for the Southern Division of College Band Directors' National Association. Written as a tribute to the Loyola Band, Bernard's "Suite" consists of three contrasting movements: Legend, Chorale and March. According to Jansen, the Suite gives opportunity for short solos to nearly every kind of instrument in the band; it also combines instruments in unusual and pleasing groups or unites all of the instruments to create forceful and dramatic climaxes. Registration Jan. 24-26 Registration for the spring semester will be conducted January 24 through 26 in the Registrar's office, second floor Marquette Hall, Carmel V. Discon, Univeriity registrar, disclosed.Office hours are as follows: Monday—Friday 8 to 12 noon and 1 to 3 p.m., Saturday 8 to 11 a.m. January 28 is the official opening of the spring semester. Lectures and classes begin. February 8 is the latest date for registration or schedule adjustments.'Agamemnon' Next Offering By Thespians "Agamemnon," a Greek tragedy of retribution by Euripides, is scheduled as the next Thespian offering, Leo Zinser, director, announced. Cast and dates for the presentation are as yet unannounced. The play is the first of a triology which also includes "The Choephorae" and "The Suppliants" and which is concerned with the purging of the ancetral guilt of the house of Atreus, king of Argos. Because of the crime of Arteus in feeding his brother, Thyestes, with the flesh of his own children, fate has involved Agamemnon, the son of a king, in another crime, the sacrifice of his daughter, Iphigenia, in order to obtain favorable winds for the Greek expedition-to Troy. As vengeance upon her husband for the crime, Agamemnon's wife, Clytaemnestra, becomes the paramour of Aegestheus, son of Thyestes and plans to murder Agamemnon upon his return from Troy. "Critics generally agree that 'Agamemnon' has dramatic power, depth of religious insight and splendor of dection unequaled in Greek literature," Zinser said. "The situations of the play are exceptionally striking."A Chorus, consisting of elders of Argos, is of unusual importance, even to Greek drama which relies heavily on such construction. The odes abound in thought, are richly poetic in expression and significant in their references to divine retribution. Unusually, the Chorus plays a resolute part in the action. It denounces the crime of Clytaemnestra and the compliance of Aegistheus, new king, and prophesies that vengence will be taken by Agamemnon's absent son Orestes, thus pointing the way to the other two plays of the trilogy. Euripides wrote more than 88 such tragedies concerned with the fall of nobility. Hie plays, well received in his own fifth century 8.C., proved even more popular after his death. Pharmacy Students To Hear Address Dr. Darrell Gifford, manager of the technical sales division, American Sterilizer, Erie, Pa., will address pharmacy students Tuesday at 7 p.m. in B-304, Dean John F. McCloskey, of the college of Pharmacy, announced. The topic of Dr. Gifford's address will be "Why the Hospital Pharmacist should make Intravenous Solutions." The lecture is sponsored by the University's student branch of the American Pharmaceutical Association."SUITE FOR BAND," composed by Mr. Guy Bernard (left) chairman of the piano department in the college of music at Loyola University, will be the featured presentation at the University's Band Concert Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in the Fieldhouse. Members of the band discussing the composition with Mr. Bernard are STEVE GIARRATANO (center) and PAUL DOMINGUEZ (right). Final Exams Begin Wed. Final Examinations will be conducted from Wednesday through the following Wednesday, January 23. During this period all regular classes will be cancelled. In departmental examinations all sections of the courses will be scheduled at the hours indicated, even though the class does not meet regularly at that hour. A special list of rooms and proctors will be posted. All other examinations, time and date mentioned below, will be held in the room in which i the class usually meets and under the supervision of the regular professor.All final examinations will last for two hours. Departmental Examine tions scheduled for Wednesdar are: English 101, 102, 201 and Theology 311, 8:10 to 10 a.m. Other examinations on that same day are: 11:10 to 1 p.m., Biology 101, Journalism 206, Latin 201 and Political Science 305. From 2 to 3:50 p.m., Biology 107, 315, Chemistry 201, 301, Education 333, Journalism 201, French 303, Latin 103, Physics 307, 321, Physical Education 160 and Sociology 306. Thursday's examinations are: Departmental, 8:10 to 10 a.m. History 101, 201, Philosophy 302; and 2 p.m. to 3:50 p.m., Philosophy 201. Others on Thursday are: 11:10 a.m. to 11 p.m., History 351 and Political Science 101; 2 p.m. to 4:50 p.m., Biology 206, 301, Chemistry 303, Education 354, History 381 and Sociology 301. Examinations for Friday include: 8:10 to 10 p.m., Departmental, French 101, 201, German 101, 201, Spanish 101, 201, Theology 309; to to 3:50 p.m., Theology 105, 209. On that same day: 11:10 a.m. to 1 p.m., English 336, Physical Education 150, Political Science 301; 2 to 3:50 p.m., Education 351, History 365, Mathematics 305, 316, 320. Saturday examinations are: 8:10 to 10 a.m., Chemistry 101S, Physical Education 381S; 11:10 to 1 p.m., Physical Education 3895. Departmental e x a m i n a tions in Mathematics 102, 103, 105, 107, 109 and Philosophy 203 and 301, from 8:10 to 10 a.m. Other exams on this same day include: from 11:10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Chemistry 306, 313, Education 152 A&B, English 329, Expression 308 and Journalism 301. All Military Science course! and all Medical Technology courses will be conducted Monday January 21 from 2 to 3:50 p.m. On Tuesday January 22 there will be no Departmental Examinations. Other examinations on that day include: 8:10 to 10 a.m., Chemistry 101 A&B, 311, Expression 203, Mathematics 301, Physics 335, Physical Education 162, Spanish 341, Sociology 326; 11:10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Biology 201, 311, Expression 306; 2 p.m. to 3:50 p.m., Drawing 101, Education 352, History 321, Journalism 221, 223 and Physics 331. The final exam day, Wednesday, January 23, also has no Departmental Examinations. Final examinations for that day include: 8:10 to 10 a.m., Chemistry 309, Education 301, English 307, French 361, Physics 201, 301, 311, Sociology 101, Mathematics 303; from 11:10 a.m. to 1 p.m., Biology 103, Journalism 203, Mathematics 398, Physics 103, 211 and Physical Education 360. Other examinations on that same day from 2 p.m. to 3 :50 p.m. are: Journalism 242, 315 and Sociology 205. WORRY WORRY WORRY FILLS THE MINDS of struggling students as they cringe on the threshhold of advancing exams. Typical of Loyolant over the campus are (left to right) LESLIE FALGOUT, ARTHUR SIGUR and IVAN STONE, all pre-dentistry students wondering if they'll pull through. City Council Passes Motion On LU Parking A motion before the City Council to relieve the parking situation for both Loyola and Tulane Universities was unanimously passed by those present at the governing body's Dec. 20 meeting. The motion was presented by Glenn P. Clasen and seconded by Fred J. Cassibry. The motion read as follows: "Be it moved, that the Chief Administrative Office be requested to direct the Traffic Engineer and his Assistant to study the parking facilities of the campuses of Tulane and Loyola Universities and of the area of Audubon Park facing St. Charles Avenue, and recommend a parking plan to the Council whereby 300 additional parking sites can be provided for the students of said universities; one hundred to be provided by the City, one hundred by Tulane University, and one hundred by Loyola University, and tl.at representatives of the Park, the two universities and the Council meet and discuss the proposed plan. With only one absentee, the six councilmen present at the meeting voted unanimously yea on the motion.Previous to the City Council's consideration of the parking problem a petition asking for some type of action was circulated on the campus and then presented to the City officials. Zazulak, Frosh Darling Joanne Zazulak, A & S frosh, was elected Freshman Sweetheart during the recent campus election and will be formally presented at the Sophomore Cotillion on Jan. 23. The new freshman sweetheart is an 18 year-old native Orleanian and graduated as an honor student from Mt. Carmel Academy where she was voted the school's "Ideal Girlfriend." Some 302 freshmen cast their votes electing Zazulak over four other nominees, Bob Winn, frosh council president, said. The Semi Formal Cotillion it scheduled on Jan. 23, from 9 p.m. 'til 1 a.m. at the Tulane Room in the Jung Hotel. Lloyd Alexander's orchestra will provide the music and tickets are $3 a couple. Tickets may be purchased in the book store or from any member of the Student Council.During intermission the new Freshman Sweetheart will be pre-. sented a bouquet by last year's Freshman Sweetheart Millie Marshall, BA soph. The Cotillion is being handled by the freshman council acting directly under the Student Council. JOANNE ZAZULAK (See CONCERT, page 8) REMEMBER SOPH COTILLION JAN. 23 ATTEND BAND CONCERT SUNDAY
Object Description
| Title | Maroon |
| Masthead | The Maroon Vol. 34 No. 12 |
| Publisher | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Coverage | United States; Louisiana; New Orleans; |
| Date | 1957-01-11 |
| Type | Text |
| Source | Loyola University New Orleans Special Collections & Archives (http://library.loyno.edu/research/speccoll/) New Orleans, LA |
| Format | TIFF |
| Subject | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Rights | Digital rights are held by Loyola University New Orleans. Copyright is retained in accordance with U.S. copyright law. |
| Creator | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Relation-Is Part Of | http://www.louisianadigitallibrary.org/cdm/search/collection/LOYOLA_UMN |
| Language | en |
| Digitized By | BSLW |
| Digitized Date | 2012-2013 |
| Contact Information | For information or permission to use/publish, contact: mailto:archives@loyno.edu |
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