Maroon |
Previous | 1 of 12 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
Subset |
Loading content ...
loyola maroon February 2, 1973 Vol. XLIX No. 14 Memorial services held for slain cadet By VALERIE HAYNES It began precisely at 7:35 Tuesday evening inside a small gothic structured church with the sound of a flute-its soft religious melody sifted through the air. A young black man dressed in blue jeans stood at the bottom of the decorated altar blowing into the small silver instrument with the solemnness that depicted the occasion as the sacred statutes stared out at their visitors. Among the people waiting for services to begin at Holy Name church were blacks, whites, young and old. Some brave and some weak. There sat amoung them one who stood out. She was black, young, brave and beautiful, the center of attraction. Her name-Mrs. Alfred Ilarrell, wife of the slain police cadet, a Loyola University sophomore, who was killed on New Year's Eve night as he stood outside of police headquarters. All remained quiet. But before the music put its listeners into a trance, ten priests entered onto the altar from the rear door and bowed before the statue of Christ. There was one man amoung them who wore no religious attire. He too bowed before the statue. As they all turned to face their audience he was immediately recognized as Captain Clarence Giarrusso, Superintendent of the New Orleans Parish Police Department. He was surrounded by Loyola's president, the Very Rev. Michael Kennelly, S.J., Fr. I James Carter, S.J. and a host of other members of the university's religious faculty an d administration. Rev. John Burns, S.J., Dean of City College began by thanking the family, fellow police officers and the many members of Loyola University's student body and staff for joining in the honoring of young Harrell. After several bible readings by Captain Giarrusso and the chaplain for City College, the Rev. James Donnelly, the principle prayer was delivered by Fr. Kennelly. "This evening we are celebrating the memory of a man who had the great power that Jesus spoke of," said Fr. Kennelly. "A man who so loved his fellowman that he was willing and courageous enough to risk all for the benefit of our community." The service lasted about 15 minutes and at the conclusion Mrs. HarreU was led to the rear of the church by the group of priests along with Captain Giarrusso, as Leah Chase, a Loyola Music School student sang "1 Know That My Redeemer Liveth." It was announed at mass that Cadet Harrell's eight month old child will receive a full tuition scholarship from the university. The Very Rev. Michael Kennelly and concelebrants in ceremory for cadet Harrell Financial questions raised in Bulletin study By CHUCK BAUERLEIN MAROON ANALYSIS: Undergraduate Bulletin Part II The continuing story of absurdity, as told by the pages of the Undergraduate Bulletin, will focus on the many statements of financial fiasco this week. The subject of finances has long been a sore issue with Loyola students. At times 1 wonder why. Afterall, for a private school, $850 is not an outrageous fee to pay. Tulane students pay nearly $500 more per semester and 1 don't care what anybody II think a Southern undergraduate education here Dyola is every bit as good as undergraduate education at le. But upon reading the Bulletin it is easier to realize why Loyola students harbor gripes about the tight fistedness in uette Hall. 4,000 of Loyola's 5,000 students pay full tuition-we're ig $7 million now-then all Loyola faculty and nistrators would be averaging $14,000 a year. Okay, that's ;r. We can see where the money is going. It's also a :rvative estimate since most of the teaching Jesuites waive their salaries back to the school and I'm relatively sure there is not 517,000 in scholarship money, the equivalent of the other 1,000 student's tuition. The point is, where does the rest of Loyola's money go? Athletics is no longer a $200,000 debt. What happens to alumni contributions and government grants? I presume a reasonable response would be to look at the new Law School building and the Science Complex. What plans does Loyola have for building in the future? Life at Loyola would be so much less complicated for us measly peasants if it was all explained. Sigh. Turning to the Bulletin we find the first inconsistency on page 11, hot' suprisingly, the first paragraph in which money is mentioned. The book mentions that there is a non-refundable fee of Sl5 charged for each application and, if you are lucky enough to be accepted, there is a $100 deposit required. This deposit is not refundable but "credited to the student's account in the Office of Finance, and the amount is deducted from the expenses for the Fall semester. A student's final eligibility is contingent upon receipt of a satisfactory Medical Examination and BAUERLEIN continued on page 7 Tulane students invade Saga p. 3 Peace Mass Homily p. 5 Features: Dr. Vetter, sailing pgs. 8-9 Reviews: Don McLean's latest 10
Object Description
| Title | Maroon |
| Masthead | The Maroon Vol. 49 No. 14 |
| Publisher | Loyola University (New Orleans, La.) |
| Coverage | United States; Louisiana; New Orleans; |
| Date | 1973-02-02 |
| 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 |
| Rating |
Description
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Maroon
