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The Loyola Maroon 40 th. Anniversary Vol. XL Loyola University, New Orleans, La., Friday, April 24, 1964 Tlie Voice of Loyola since 1923 No. 20 Thousands Of Them... Curious students look over Loyola's newest addition—a genuine full space book store. Located on the main floor of the Donna center the "little library" will be a boon to students when start of the semester book buying time comes. Over 3500 faculty-suggested paper back books are expected to be housed. £ Beauty Shop, Bookstore In Center Danna center now houses tenants from the Dean of Students to "Carlo" the beauty operator. The beauty shop is now open and ready to cater to the beauty needs of campus coeds. The shop will be open for business every day from 8:00 till 5:00 except on Mondays when it will be closed, said the owner Mr. Carlo DiNapoli. On Thursdays it will be open until 6:30. THE REV. William J. Junkin, S.J., dean of students, and Miss Rosalie J Parrino, dean of women moved into their new offices on the second floor of the new center Tuesday. Their offices are on either side of a waitingreception room. Bookstore operation now continues with expanded facilities on the first floor after a very short interruption during the move to the center. PAVING OF the road around the center will be completed sometime next week according to the maintenance department. The delay was due to a crushed drain pipe under the road bed between Biever hall and the former ROTC arms room. The pipe helped to cause the flooding in that area. Due to the increase in telephone extensions with the opening of Danna center, many telephone extensions have been changed. New directory supplements are available in the dean of students office on the second floor of the center. Also the road alongside the old cafeteria needed packing down where it would take a load. Paving will start when it is sufficiently packed down. A NEW automatic switchboard is now operating in the basement of the center. More calls can be handled more efficiently on the new board than could be handled on the old one in Thomas hall. This was due to the old one being manually operated and thus more time consuming. A large amount of telephone numbers were changed in the switch over, but the majority are still the same. 12 Coeds Tapped For Cardinal Key Twelve members were informally tapped into Cardinal Key, national honor sorority, Thursday in the Student Center. They were chosen for outstanding performances in the fields of scholarship, leadership, character and participation in extra-curricular activities. The new members are: Mary Jo Butler, music sophomore; Lynda Casler, pharmacy junior; Elaine Engler, BA sophomore; Judith Gonzales, A&S junior; Catherine Jarboe, BA senior; Mary Ann Lemmon, law school senior; Dona Mac Donald, A&S sophomore; Marie Eliska Moore, A&S junior; Judy Smith, A&S junior; Jo Ann Soab, music sophomore; Suzanne Talbot, A&S senior; and Jeannette Villarubia, BA senior. Formal initiation will be held next week, when a resume of each girl's activities will be read before an audience consisting of her parents. The new members will also be introduced to alumnae at a champagne party preceeding the sorority's annual banquet on May 7. Cardinal Key was brought to Loyola in 1953 through the efforts of Dr. John Arnold, chairman of the department of medical technology, and at that time moderator of the university's chapter of Blue Key, national honor fraternity. Miss Rosalie Parrino, dean of women, is the sorority's present moderator. The coeds of Cardinal Key are to exemplify the cardinal virtues of prudence, justice, fortitude and temperance. Their campus activities include sponsorship of the freshman-senior coed Key-and-Seal ceremonv. Cardinal Key . . . Newly tapped for Cardinal Key national honor sorority, are bottom, left to right, Cathy Jarboe, Judy Gonzales, Marie Moore, Mary Jo Butler and Dona Mac Donald; top, Lynda Casler,Casler, Jo Ann Soab, Judy Smith, Jeanette Villarrubia, Mary Ann Vial Lemmon and Elaine Engler. South African Consul To Talk On Race Here South African Consul- General Vere G. Stock will lecture on "Contemporary South Africa" next Thursday nij?nt at 7 :30 in rooms B and C in Danna center.The lecture of Mr. Stock, sponsored by the Current Events committee of the Student Union, will deal mainly with the topic Apartheid, defined as strict racial segregation. AN ARTICLE on the topic in connection with South AfricaAfrica appeared recently in Time magazine. Mr. Stock will supply cultural, social, political and geo- Kraphic background for a better understanding of South Africa and how it came to be what it is today. A question and answer period will follow the lecture and a reception will be held afterward in the faculty dining room. Admission is free and all are welcome. Refreshments will be provided by the Hospitality committee. MR. STOCK'S assignment to the southern states came after the South African Government decided to establish a Consulate-General in New Orleans in recognition of the trade potential presented by the markets cf southern states ranging from New Mexico to South Carolina, which constitutes his area of jurisdiction. He was born in the province of the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, and was educated in St. John's College in Johannesburg. His legal studies at the University of The Witwatererand were interrupted by World War II after he obtained the preliminary Bachelor of Commerce degree. Mr. Stock returned to South Africa after an absenc* of five years and joined the Department of Foreign Affairs. VERE G. STOCK Smith New Assistant BA Dean Dr. G. Ralph Smith, has been named assistant dean of business administration college. Dr. Smith will continue to serve as associate professor of management, and director of the business administration graduate diivsion, in addition to his new duties. He served as general chairman of the recently completed university self-study. This study took a year and a half. Dr. Smith received his BS from Hamilton college, Clinton, N.Y. DR. G. RALPH SMITH Neil Heusel Wins Vote Neil Heusel defeated Tom Sartory in the first university-wide election for Student Council president, with a vote of 791 to 720 in Monday and Tuesday's runoff. More than 1500 students voted, an increase of about 50 to 60 over the primary total. ED CARRIERE, A & S junior running on the Sartory ticket, was declared Council vice-president by a Judicial Court decision which nullified the primary votes of the school of dentistry. The Court also declared the official primary totals as Heusel, 573; Holmes, 95; Sartory, 577; Carriere, 649, and Lake, 579. In the runoff Heusel picked up an additional seven votes in arts and sciences, and Sartory, an A&S sophomore, added 44 to his total for his largest train. A&S results showed Sartory with 428 votes to Heusel's 76. IN BA, where Heusel is a junior, he increased his total number of votes by four to 128, while Sartory increased his total number of votes by 23 to 100. Music college, which cast only 17 votes in the primary, gave Heusel an additional four votes, for a total of 11, and Sartory an additional 18—(riving him a total of 28. Pharmacy college added 17 to Heusel's total, giving him 57, while Sartory lost two votes for a total of 16. HEUSEL lost 14 votes in evening division, where Fred Lake, his vice-presidential candidate is from, giving him a total of 205, and Sartory gained 23 votes there giving him a total of 52. ONE OF the two professionalprofessional schools, law, gave Heusel his largest gain—so votes. There Sartory added a dozen votes, and the other professional school, dentistry, gave Heusel 37 fewer votes, and Sartory an additional eight. The law school totals are Heusel 164, and Sartory 27, while the school of dentistry totals are Heusel 150, and Sartory 25. A WEEK from Monday elections for presidents of the six colleges, schools, and evening division will start. Representatives will also be elected then. Tickets have already been formed and are soon to be announced, when all-out campaigning will start. The new process of having the Student Council president chosen by the student body at large was inaugurated to avoid confusion such as that in the past. In former years, the president was chosen from among the representatives of individual schools by the Student Council members themselves. Thus, the Student Council president had to hold two jobs. He had to represent his own school, and he had to act as chief of the Council. Court Rejects Heusel's Appeal After a sweaty nine hour session Sunday, the Judicial Court denied Neil Heusel's second plea to be declared uncontested winner of the Student Council presidency, and approved his runoff with Tom Sartory. Heusel received more votes in the first election than his two opponents put together, but an election committee disqualified those of the schools of dentistry and pharmacy. He appealed to the Judicial Court. PHARMACY votes were legal after all, decided the court, but balloting in the school of dentistry was invalid since it was not properly recorded because Steve Fennel, dent president, was electioneering while taking votes. With pharmacy included and dent votes subtracted, Sartory came out with four votes more than Heusel's 573. In the vice presidential recount, Ed Carriere won out over original victor Fred Lake, 559-576. HUESEL complained that the decision was not based on sound legal grounds. "The court said we were right," he held, "in saying no election code existed because none was promulgated, but despite this they contradicted themselves and said that the vote was irregular. If there was no code to follow, how could they declare that anything was irregular?" THE OFFICIAL decision said that the court did not consider the elections code as part of the case. But the elections committee had based their ruling on this 'code.' New vice-president-elect Ed Carriere pointed out that he and Sartory offered to let the runoff include v-p contender Fred Lake. Heusel and Lake refused. HUFFED Heusel, "We were right and acting on principle. Sartory should have thought of that before he appealed to the committee ... I think it was a terrible injustice to Mr. Lake. After the race, his winning votes were thrown out, making him the loser." All the fireworks had started after the vote-count following the first election. Heusel had 760, Sartory 594, and a third candidate, Bob Homes, 105, all schools included. Lake had 776 to Carriere's 676. SARTORY immediately asked that votes in the schools of dentistry and pharmacy be disqualified because their presidents had passed out ballots in class instead of setting up stationary voting places. He brought out that other schools were not allowed classroom voting. Heusel's first plea to the judicial court questioned the committee's authority to rule without Student Council approval. The court overruled him, pointing out that the "L" book says ihat the committee has the power to rule and regulate. Of the ten students on the committee and the court, all but two are in A&S. HEUSEL appealed again, on the grounds that the committee Birds-Eye 8a110t... Students in the school of arts and sciences crowd around the ballot box to cast their votes in the second Student Council election held last Monday and Tuesday. (See HEUSEL, page 2)
Object Description
| Title | Maroon |
| Masthead | The Maroon Vol. 40 No. 20 |
| Publisher | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Coverage | United States; Louisiana; New Orleans; |
| Date | 1964-04-24 |
| 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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