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The Loyola Maroon 40 th. Anniversary Vol. xxxx Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday, October 18, 1963 Ttie "Voioe of Loyola, sizioe 1923 No. 4 Court Voting Starts Monday Nominations for campus court will be held Oct. 21-22 at 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the quadrangle. The 12 nominees with the highest amount of points will compete for positions on the court on Oct. 28-29, at the same time as the preliminary elections. Nominees for the court must be unmarried coeds from either the sophomore, junior, or senior class. Only juniors and seniors are eligible for election as campus queen. A student may nominate six girls for the court. From these nominees, 12 with the most amount of points will be selected for the final election. Their pictures will be displayed in the quadrangle. This is the only form of campaigning that will be allowed. The nominees will be evaluated on a point system. Ten points will be given for the nominee placed first on the student's ballot, and so on until the fifth and sixth positions are tabulated. To cast a ballot, a student must present his or her identification card and hand in a completely filled ballot. Ballots only partially filled out will be be invalidated. Because of the point system, the student should list the six nominees in the order of preference. The campus court will be composed of a queen and six maids, one of whom will represent the evening division. They will reign over Homecoming Week, Blue Key Talent Nite, and various other university functions. NSA Policy Debate Deferred 3 Months Biebate on whether Loyola should rejoin the United es National Student Association was postponed 90 s by a unanimous vote of the Student Council at their regular meeting Tuesday. Scheduled for February, the debate will be the basis for Student Council policy concerning NSA. A reason for the postponement was to give participants sufficient time to prepare convincing arguments and gather full material on the nature of the student group, accused by some of being too radical. THE ADDITIONAL time would also give the student body time to do some investigating on their own. Students would have time to write for their own information and to discuss the situation among their fellow students. Nominations for judicial court justices will be held over until the next Council meeting to give members a chance to {investigate the qualifications of those suggested for office. Next week the student governing body will meet and vote on the five men suggested. They are Gerard McCurdy, BA senior; Hans Tischer, A&S senior; Eric Timmreck, A&S senior; Donald Smith, A&S junior; Henry Lambert, law junior. COUNCIL PRESIDENT Frank Wagar recommended McCurdy for chief justice for one year to be succeeded by Lambert. The rest will serve on the court for the duration of their term at the university. Campus court nominations will be held Oct. 21-22 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the quadrangle. The court will be selected by the student body at the same time on Oct. 28-29, announced Mike Wittman chairman of the elections committee.He also announced that nominations for freshman office will be scheduled for Nov. 19- 20 and elections will be held Nov. 25-26. "This will give the freshmen time to meet the winners of the preliminary election and decide on their class officers," he said. PRIOR TO the election a leadership forum will be held to acquaint those running for office with the requirements and duties of a student leader. Four lectures scheduled for the forum are the "General Philosophy of Leadership" given by the Rev. Thomas H. Clancy, S.J., instructor of history and political science; "Relation of Student Leaders to the University" by the Rev. William J. Junkin, S.J., dean of students; "Organization of the Student Council" by Frank Wagar, president of the student governing body; and "The Role of the Council Member" by Ed Carriere, Council member. "The forum will be open to all students interested in running for office and will be directed to the freshmen as a whole," said Carriere. Wagar announced that the university would enter the "International Turtle Race" for the benefit of the aid of follow pack Drills Started , , , See story page 6 Set Time For Pic Schedule Wolf Make an appointment today or next week to have your picture taken for the Wolf annual, that is if you want it in. All appointments must be made next week in order to have your class portrait included in the yearbook. APPOINTMENTS can be made all next week between 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. in the quardrangle. Students not on campus during this time may make appointments at the Wolf office (corner of Calhoun and Loyola streets) from 8 to 11 a.m. in the mornings and from 1 to 6 p.m. in the afternoons. Faculty members should also make appointments. Appointments for the faculty can be made by calling the Wolf at Extension 265 or 266. IT WILL be necessary for all faculty members to have their picture taken this year. Pictures from preceeding years will not be used since a new photographer will be doing the Wolf portraits. No appointments will be made over the phone for students. The photographer will be on campus the week of Oct. 28 and for three days the following week. Pictures will be taken in the student lounge, except on November 1. On this day the pictures will be taken in the lobby of the Men's Dorms. This is for the convenience of out-of-town stu dents. Appointments are being made to eliminate a line when the photographer is here and to save time for the students. Holla Speaks On Vatican II Mr. Christopher Hollis, noted British author and former member of Parliament, will deliver the first Philosophy club lecture Thursday in Marquette auditorium at 7:30 p.m. His topic will be "The Second Session of the Vatican II." His talk will be the first of five lectures sponsored by the Philosophy club. All lectures, with the exception of the Aquinas Day lecture, will be held in Marquette auditorium at 7:30 p.m. There will be no admission charge for the lectures.Mr. Hollis has attended the opening session of the Council and was present for its reconvention on Sept. 29. He is a member of the "Tablet and Punch" and has gained recognition abroad for his opinions on contemporary affairs. Mr. Hollis will begin a nationwide lecture tour with this lecture.His works include "Foreigners Aren't Fools," George Orwell," "Can Parliament Survive" and "Christianity and Economics." Patterson Speech Slated For Today Application of physical methods to the separation and identification of organic compounds, will be the topic of the second talk in the department of biological sciences, to be given by Dr. Robert C. Petterson, professor chemistry. The seminar will be held in room 304 of Bobet hall at 4 p.m. today. Dr. Petterson will speak on gas chromatography, infared spectroscopy, ultra-violet spectroscopy, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Talent Deadline Set For Monday Applications for participation in Blue Key Talent Nite must be turned in by Monday. Entry forms may be obtained at the Top Shop barber shop, the dean of students' office, music school or The Maroon office. Competition for Talent Night will be divided into three categories: individual, skit, and group competition. Auditions will be held Saturday, Oct. 26. Students are requested to return applications forms to Mr. Charles Myler, Room 100, Stalling* hall. $175 Loans For Coeds Now Available The National Secretaries association has initiated a student loan program for all eligible females enrolled in the administrative practices program at Loyola. Any student, in good scholastic standing, may apply for the loan which will provide $175 or one-fourth of the tuition, whichever is the greater. A check for $300 initiating the fund was presented to the Rev. A. B. Goodspeed, S.J., university treasurer, by Mrs. Louise Held, president of the New Orleans chapter. It will be kept at this amount by annual checks from the group until it is able to replenish itself from repayment of the one per cent interest bearing notes. The program, first of its kind in the New Orleans area, is intended to provide New Orleans with college-trained secretaries.All applications must be approved by a board of review. This board, who shall decide the recipients of the loans, will consist of the president of the chapter, the chairman of the scholarship committee, the immediate past president of the chapter, and a member from the administrative practices program at Loyola and the dean of women of the university.There is a great demand for college-trained secretaries and the program will help young ladies wishing to enter the business world in this field with their tuition, said Mrs. Annadawn Hopkins, education chairman for the chapter. 'La Boheme' Acts As Lab Arthur Knight and Walter Pharris, senior band students, will act as assistant conductors for the New Orleans Opera House Association's production of "La Boheme." Mr. George Jansen, director of Loyola's band, said that a small group of the band will appear on the program at municipal auditorium on October 24 and 26. Student stage assistants proved so successful last year that two students will serve in this capacity during the opera house season. This will serve as a laboratory for the students and provide experience in performing with a professional company. Loyola has furnished the opera company with stage musicians for the past 10 years, said Mr. Jansen. Many students who have performed in stage bands have graduated into the opera house orchestra. Little Colonel Helen Genovese, a bouncy, dark-haired beauty from Opelousas, has captured the hearts of the men of the ROTC and the cap of the battalion's 1963-64 Little Colonel. Helen succeeds Jenny Dell'Osso, who graduated last June with an education major. THE MED-TECH junior, who was selected in balloting Monday and Tuesday by battalion members, is a sister of Phi Phi Phi, social sorority. The stunning princess who graced last year's homecoming court now outranks any members of the cadet battalion. COMPANY SPONSORS will be elected at drill next Thursday. The coeds will be given honorary ranks equal to those of their unit commanders and will represent the companies at social functions or wherever that feminine touch is needed. The men selected Helen from a group of outstanding coeds: Vickie Curtis, med-tech junior; Cynthia Sliman, A&S senior; Cathy Valenti, BA senior and Carol Wagner, med-tech junior.Little Colonel Helen Genovese and the company sponsors will be formally presented at the annual military ball to be held sometime in the near future.HELEN SAID that she decided on Loyola for her education because she believes that it has one of the finest med tech programs in the nation. Helen herself has been a worthy addition to the department: she has a 3.48 overall average, is secretary of Alpha Delta Theta and a member of Beta Epsilon Upsilon, national med tech honor sororities. In June she will begin her internship at one of four hospitals connected with Loyola's med tech department. No emptyheaded-beauty-queen type she plans to specialize in hematology—the study of the blood. Helen Genovese Gets Post; Choose Sponsors Thursday ROTC Favorite . . . Helen Genovese, a vivacious brunette from Opelousas, captured the rank of Little Colonel this week and with it the hearts of the ROTC battalion. The med tech junior will represent the Loyola military unit at social functions and wherever her feminine grace is required. Year's First Exam Series Scheduled From Nov. 7-15 Mid-semester exams for the college of arts and sciences will begin Thursday, Nov. 7 and end Friday, Nov. 15, announced the Rev. Edward A. Doyle, S.J., dean of the college. All classes will be cancelled during this time. In the departmental examinations all sections of courses listed will take their tests at the hour indicated, even though the class does not meet at this time regularly. A list of rooms and proctors will be posted later. All other examinations will be held in the usual room with do not understand the schedule should consult their professors for the date, time, and place of the test. Thursday, November 7 3:00-3:50—Departmental Examination: All Military Science. Landmark Plaque . . . Pharmacy Dean Edward J. Ireland (center) accepts a landmark plaque from Dr. Glenn Son nedecker (left), director of the American InstituteInstitute of the History of Pharmacy, and Mr. George Grider, institute president, at ceremonies held last week. See story page 3. (See EXAMS, page 3) (See DEBATE, page 3)
Object Description
| Title | Maroon |
| Masthead | The Maroon Vol. 40 No. 4 |
| Publisher | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Coverage | United States; Louisiana; New Orleans; |
| Date | 1963-10-18 |
| 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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