Loyola Academy - Grad Prep Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1941

Page 1 of 132

 

Loyola Academy - Grad Prep Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online yearbook collection, 1941 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 132 of the 1941 volume:

,1 I! m r' 9 B 5: if E 6 Q -4 2 8 Y. 5 2 1 E. l 2 S . E 2 Z E 5 gf 5 5 .1 ff S ? 3: 3 E F Q '1 ,, a n 5-I 'E 5 u -Q ,x Y 5 if If g 0 E. , 9 5 2 2 za eg 2 if S E if 5 5 E 5 5 2 5 v i r 5 ? xl 3 Y: 3 z P 1 5 E 2 SQ 5 2 . A 5 . i Q 2 ' vi I' 2 in ,. 5 I 3' 3 - E z i aa 1' if 52 :5 . Q 9 r 2 L a A K 9 I 2. is A 2 1 3, 2. Z 3 'K -4 2 , 2 he Nineteen Hundred and Forty-One Grad Prep, pub- lished by the Senior Class of Loyola Academy 6525 Sheridan Road, Chicago, Illinois .... PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS THE 1941 COMPILED BY WILLIAM W. CUHRAN L.......L,w.,..4.,..A,.L........ Editor-in-Chief I SHELDON W. HAYES .............. Faculty and Senior Editor PAUL M. QUAY .........,................4L,................... Class Editor CLARE F. ACTON r...,............ ,........, A ctivities Editor WILLIAM J. HALLIGAN ......... ......rt........... S ports Editor RALPH H. NAGLEB ..,.........,......r,r.....r Photography Editor MATHIAS J. SCHNITZIUS ......r.......,... Business Manager LOUIS B. SNIDEH, S..I ....r.r...... ,rr..,A. F acuity Moderator U F oyola gcademy A Wllltll HEFUHE WE BEGIN As we, the graduates of 1941, prepare to meet the modern world, a world fraught with doubt, falsehood, and death for body and spirit, we wish to leave in this book a record of our efforts and accomplishments while we were preparing at Loyola for the struggle of life to follow. We do feel that we are prepared to meet the chal- lenge which the future throws down to us: we know that our training under the accumulated wisdom of four hundred years of Jesuit teach- ing has shown us the true way to courage and real happiness. That teaching has shown us how to follow Christ through life and to life. lesus Christ is not merely a Sunday friend to the students of Loyola. For four years He has drawn closer and closer to us. He is very close to us now as we leave Loyola, He will stay our closest friend in the future. This is what our school has done for us: it has strengthened our friendship with our Leader. This is what Christ will do for us: He will be with us when we step into an uncertain world so that with Him and through Him we. with other Catholic youths, may lead men aright. Ellmbach Wa!! THE DAWN UF fl NEW EH!-I THE LEADERS Page 9 St. Ignatius Loyola, filled with the idea of Christ's leader- ship over men, followed that leadership to sanctity and trained others to the same course of life. Today His disciples, the Jesuits, carry on St. Ignatius' ideals by teaching Catholic Youth to be leaders. THE EQUIPMENT Page 21 St. Ignatius Loyola met a challenging future with prayer. discipline, and love. Those who are trained to His way of life are organized in a campaign for Christ that will bring men back to the feet of their Creator. Loyola's organizations reflect this ideal. THE INSPIRATION Page 43 Athletics gain a higher meaning than mere physical conquest when, in the light of St. Ignatius' goal of edu- cation, one considers the endurance, courage, skill, cooperation, and leadership that work themselves into the character of our future men. THE YOUTH Page 61 Youth loves a hero, one on whom they may model their dream of courage and accomplishment. St. Ignatius pro- posed Christ as the Leader, and the vast army of His trainees joyfully and hopefully move into the future mindful of their Leader's words: "Without Me, you can do nothing." T is fitting and proper that we should acknowledge the debt of gratitude we owe to one who for two years has by his example shown us the path to true learning and virtue. So it is that we, the Class of 1941, respectfully dedicate this book of Loyola memories to Rev. John P. Downey, SJ. In the two years Father Downey has been with us, he has set for us the example of a true Catholic gentleman and scholar. He has shown us how we may achieve that distinction. For us he typifies the spirit of Jesuit training, a youthful man leading Youth to God and knowledge. .......,,--N... nf'-V. z,,,w ..:...., ,--. A-M, "L ---......-- A --.. xx ,,, v 1 1 . .v, I 1: :.' ,. 1 . L r 5 gn ,ji WIIIUW , ! . f in x ffl' '71 fjjffvi fs. A I ! 1 If If : I if?" X ig: 'gW ri S' -"-fs. 1. V .3 iv-Q -:-.-T"'-- i Wfffff l X ,X 7 w si m W .3 X I I. EAUEH5 UP L BABE HS REV. HB Prmcipci oi Loqokx RTF ORD Y. BBUCKE-Yi. Ecademy . 5.3. NXUEL K. XNXLSON. 5.3. Unweisitq cm BE-XI. SIX Resident oi Loyokx demy. Loy oXc1 Pxca d Page 14 REV. JOHN P. DOWNEY, S.J. Second year at Loyola. Instructor in religion. Assistant Principal and moderator of the Mothers' Club. REV. WALTER G. CORNELL, S.J. Twenty-first year at Loyola. Instructor in physics. REV. WILLIAM J. TOOMEY, S.J. Fifth year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin and religion. REV. LEONARD H. HOHMAN, S.J Tenth year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin and religion. REV. EDWARD C. MAGUIRE, S.J. Fourth year at Loyola. Instructor in religion. Moderator of the Senior Sodality. REV. WALTER O. CRANE, S.J. Fourth year at Loyola. Instructor in English and Latin. Director of the League of the Sacred Heart. REV. JOHN E. FLANAGAN, S.J. Sixth year at Loyola. Instructor in mathematics. REV. LESTER J. EVETT, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in religion. Student Counsellor and Moderator of the Junior Sodality. REV. JOHN E. MAHONEY, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin and Greek. REV. GERASIME M. LEGRIS, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin and religion. Moderator of the Fathers' Club and the Stamp Club. Page 15 Page 16 MR. LOUIS B. SNIDER, S.J. Third year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin, Greek, and English. Moderator of the Prep, the Grad Prep, and the Ambrosians. REV. DOUGLAS A. PEARL, S.J. Fourth year at Loyola. Instructor in religion. Faculty Supervisor of Buildings and Grounds. MR. HARRY A. STEWART, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in history. Moderator of the Senior Class. MR. PAUL A. WOELFL, S.J. Third year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin, Greek, and English. Moderator of the Acolytes and Assistant Moderator of the Junior Sodality. MB. JOHN H. REINKE, S.J. Second year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin, Greek, and English. Moderator of the Band and of the Prep Players. MR. STANLEY C. TILLMAN, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in English and history. Moderator of the Shutter Club. MR. ARTHUR E. LOVELEY, S.J. Second year at Loyola. Instructor in English and economics. Moderator of the Senior Debating Soci- ety and the Music Club. MR. ROBERT A. POLLAUF, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in English and history. Tennis Coach and Prefect of Intra- mural Sports. MR. JOHN J. WENZEL, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin, English, and Soci- ology. Moderator of the Readers and Writers Club and of Cisca. MR. CHARLES T. CONROY, S.J. First year at Loyola. Instructor in Latin and English. Moderator of the Junior Debating Society. Page 1 7 MR. WILLIAM A. YASTER Third year at Loyola. Instructor in French. MR. ROBERT E. CUMMINS Second year at Loyola. Instructor in Spanish, English. and history. Coach of Swimming and Light- weight Football. Page 18 MR. ALFRED E. SCHWIND, S..I. First year at Loyola. Instructor in mathematics. Golf Coach. MR. BERNARD W. ZIMMERMAN Fourteenth year at Loyola. Instructor in Spanish and mathe- matics. MR. OTTO J. RICHIARDI Twelfth year at Loyola. 5 Instructor in chemistry and mathe- matics. MR. CHARLES E. DUFFY Fourth year at Loyola. Instructor in history. Coach of Bantamweight Football MR. JOHN J. CONNELLY First year at Loyola. Instructor in mathematics. Basketball Coach. Assistant Coach of Football and Track. MR. GREGORY J. MANN Second year at Loyola. Instructor in mathematics. MR. BERNARD E. STRICKER Second year at Loyola. Band Director. MR. IRVIN H. KANE First year at Loyola. Assistant Band Director. MR. LEONARD D. SACHS Nineteenth year at Loyola. Coach of Football and Track. MR. GERALD HEFFERNAN Twelfth year at Loyola. Boxing Coach. Page 19 St. Ignatius Loyola Met a Challenging Future with Prayer, Discipline, Love ST. iGNAT1Us LoYoLA, through his early maturity, had been a man ofthe world. He had been numbered among the noble- men of a frivolous royal court. As a soldier, he had seen the license and misery of camp and campaign. He knew the spirit of the world through revealing contact with it. Thus, he was well qualified to guide those who, like our Graduates of 1941, though living in the world, would rise above its standards. It is signihcant that Ignatius, once he had decided to enlist in the service ofthe Kingdom of God, first strove to establish the supremacy of God in his own personality. So, long before he sought to influence others, Ignatius took up the arduous, prayerful work of forming his character after the model of jesus Christ. He aspired to challenge the spirit of the world only after years of self-discipline, aided by grace, had set his heart aflame with personal love for the Son of God. That work, that discipline, that love, crystallized into "The Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius," became a master-plan by which hundreds of thousands of Jesuits shaped their lives for sanctity and leadership, and a chart by which un- numbered others found their way through the anxieties, trials, and crises of this world to the peace which surpasses understanding. ff' S x l 1 X 'ilf'-Yrz-. :ffm f X' 1 'Way "' I ' 1 SL- gr! I 1 X XXXX P I -1,, 1- ,-,' 1 ,il -Af , XP' .- ' Q' gi- ii q XX - .gif f 1-4 -1- L. 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A - p -- ..iT..yiZ'?:A -1, -rf: Yyxxx lmuu Hfyrrlyy Equipment HIGH school days have been a splendid training ground for the Graduates of 1941 who, at the same time, face adult- hood and a changing world. They have received the best in preparatory education, not only measuring up to the stand- ards ofthe leading educational associations, but skillfully de- signed to train both the intellect and the will. In addition, they have had the opportunity to develop worthwhile lei- sure-time interests, to mingle with graciousness and ease among their fellow men, and to make practical application of the arts of speaking and writing. Most important, through their work in the Sodality and their attendance at Holy Mass and the Sacraments, they are well started on the task of molding their characters to the divine Ideal. It is with deep appreciation of these advantages that the Class of 1941 presents its zfgpzmgazfions ylrf Xzmflfb- X xg? if 15, , Q37 ll f sw ,s X xanax., 35,-I Standing: Mr. Stewart. S.J., Hayes, Hassel, Ryan. Downes. Sitting: Daly, Wagener. O'Connor. Leahy, O'Toole, Powers, and Schnitzius. STUDENTS LEARN The Student Council this year took over the duties formerly laid upon appointed commit- tees. It handled all arrangements for the .school's social functions, selected the design for class rings, provided for the disposition of dance funds, and took charge of various other school activities. The purpose of this organization of leaders is two-fold. In the "Preamble" of the consti- tution which was drawn up and ratified this year, the purpose of the Student Council was stated thus: "To facilitate the working out of the various problems that confront the classes during the year, and to promote and unify a spirit of cooperation among the Senior Class and throughout the Academy." More remote, perhaps, though not less im- portant an end of the Student Council is the sense of responsibility and self-government which it fosters not only in its members but in all the students of the Academy. From their participation in the Student Council, Loyola men are expected to learn the value of discipline and develop within themselves SELF SUVEHNMENT the capacity both to govern and be governed in later years. Because the Student Council is looked upon as a training grounds in leadership, this organization is not left entirely to itself to learn moderation through painful mis- takes. Mr. Harry A. Stewart, S.J., supervised all the work of the Council, helped draw up its constitution, suggested courses of action, and advised the men in all their affairs. Members were elected by the students, but eligibility was restricted to students who had maintained an average of eighty-five per cent in their studies the previous year. showed ability of leadership, and spoke well in public assemblies. Seniors in the Student Council this year were: Mathias Schnitzius, who, as president of the Senior Class, became ex officio chair- man of the Council: Sheldon Hayes: Jack Hassel: Mac Downes: and Bob O'Connor. Ted Powers, Bob O'Toole, and Tom Leahy represented the Junior Class: while Ned Daly and Ed Ryan cast their votes in the interest of the Sophomores. Page 25 SUDALITY IITIU In the Sodality annals will be written for the year 1940-1941: "A year of great interest in Catholic activities and sincere devotion to the Blessed Virgin." The Sodality is a spiritual organization de- signed by and for men to bring all closer to Jesus Christ through veneration of His Blessed Mother. As it existed this year at Loyola, this or- ganization served as another means of bring- ing Jesuit trained men to the side of their Leader. Mindful of that one purpose of be- coming more and more like their Leader. Loyolans took up various activities in the Sodality calculated to help them attain that purpose. Clubs were formed to fit into the Sodality design. At various times during the year Sodalists concerned themselves with serious inquiries into the Mass, the gospels, Catholic literature, the encyclicals, parliamentary law, Catholic economic principles, and the like. Several groups were formed to study these questions. Some were short-lived: oth- ers survived vigorously until the end of the school year. All served their purpose: to bring Loyola students into closer contact with their Leader so that they might learn to love Him and follow Him joyfully all their days. One of the factors that largely contributed to the success of the Sodality this year was the new program of meetings introduced at the beginning of the school year. Each Tues- day one class was sacrificed from the sched- ule and the hour devoted to the Sodality meeting. Thus no activity on the campus interfered with the Sodality, nor were stu- dents called upon to sacrifice the necessary recreation period during the noon hour. Proportional representation was the form of election that put Tom Munson into the chair of the prefect. Ed Leach became as- sistant prefect. Three representatives were elected from among the Juniors and three from the Sophomores to govern the Sodality as a board of directors. Frank Milligan, John Festle, and James Wetzel represented the Juniors: while Sophomores on the board were Bill Madden, John Powell, and Dick Ramos. With Bev. Edward C. Maguire, S.J.. as adviser, these men ably managed the business of the Sodality. SENIIIH Slllli-XLITY FHESHMEN FUR SUI! LITY Only Freshmen constituted the Junior Sodal- ity, according to a new division that was inaugurated this year. Rev. Lester J. Evett, S.J., was the moderator of this group with the assistance of Mr. Paul A. Woelfl, S.J. Those who faithfully attended the weekly meetings held in the chapel of the faculty building were formally inducted into the Sodality in December. During the course of the year two sets of officers were elected. At the first election Dick Murphy became prefect: Bill McCarty, assistant prefect: Cy Brennan, secretary: and Jack Maginot, treasurer. Fifteen Sodalists were chosen at the same time as a committee to take care of all plans for the year . Second semester elections determined the following officers: Carl Merschel, prefect: Dick Murphy, assistant prefect: Bill McCarty, secretary: and Cliff Kennedy, treasurer. First social function of the year was an amateur night on November l. Seventy-five members enjoyed themselves fully while Frank Cummings acted as Master of Cere- monies for the humorous, baffling, dramatic, and musical acts. When the applause had subsided, Dick Harrington and Jack Clinnin received gold Sodality pins as the most en- tertaining of the participants. Second prizes went to Peter Moore and Gene Slattery, magicians. Special devotions were carried on through- out the year. In October, eight F rosh pledged themselves daily to recite the rosary pri- vately before the shrine of Our Lady. In January a special novena of Masses and Communions was completed for success in the' semester examinations. Special devo- tions were also practiced during Lent. The Sodality's journalistic endeavor, the Sodalights, continued this year in its effec- tive way of binding the Junior Sodalists closer together. Mr. Paul A. Woelfl, S.J., was the moderator of this paper. Cy Brennan acted as editor. Staff members included Jack Maginot, Bob Sullivan, Gerald Vanden Branden, and Don Gregori. FHESHMAN SIIIJALISTS l l Standing: Mr. Loveley, S. J., Fitzgerald, Ward, Maloney, Milligan, Upton, Normoyle, Pendergast, Acton. Dwyer. Seated: McCourt, Sommer, Curran, Hayes, Murphy, Quay, Festle, Gibbons, Rosengren. M STEHS UF DEB TE To round out another most successful season of debating, Loyola, for the second succes- sive year, Won the high school debating championship of Jesuit schools in the Chi- cago Province. Sheldon Hayes and Clare Acton, affirma- tive, and Paul Quay and Ed Murphy, neg- ative, bore Loyola's standard in the Detroit tourney. Bill Curran was unable to go at the last minute because of sickness, so Shel- don Hayes, a negative debater throughout the season, after two days' preparation became an affirmative. The negative team Went undefeated through four rounds of argumentation and Won an exhibition debate the final evening. Thus they took the championship unde- feated. The negative team dropped one of its four tournament debates to St. Ignatius, Chicago, to tie for second place in the meet. Each man on both teams of Loyola was awarded a medal: while the school was presented with another championship cup. Clare Acton and Bill Curran represented Loyola in the Metropolitan Debate Union arguing affirmatively. The fiery oratory and flawless logic of Curran, combined with the cool deliberation and determination of Page 28 Acton, constituted the perfect team. The all- junior team of Neil Maloney and Frank Milli- gan provided more than a substitute as a second affirmative. These two men should prove a formidable team next year. The Academy's two teams of "no" men were of equal ability. Ed Murphy and Paul Quay relentlessly tore the arguments of opponents apart to gain them many a vic- tory in the Metropolitan League and to sweep the Detroit Tournament. The suave, gallant, and frequently humorous style of Sheldon Hayes, coupled with the enthusi-- astic oratory of Al Sommer, won decisions from Rogers Clark, St. Mel, and New Trier among others. All in all, the lads participated in 123 inter- scholastic debates this season with a record unparalleled in the history of Loyola. Besides. the climactic victory at Detroit, Loyola won twelve debates out of the eighteen Metro-- politan Debate Union contests in which the Academy participated. Mr. Arthur E. Loveley, SJ., moderator of this year's team, expressed his complete satisfaction with the cooperation of the boys, and received their heartfelt gratitude for his part in their success. FHUSH AND SUPH This season's Junior Debating Society got off to a good start when forty freshmen and sophomores answered the first call for ora- tors. Of these, only three were veterans of the previous year. After the most active season in the history of Junior Debating at Loyola, twenty-two members remained on the squad, sixteen of whom were freshmen of considerable promise for the future. Immediately after the first meeting, prac- tice intramural debates were scheduled among the men. All the questions of these debates hinged on some specific phase of the general topic which was to be used for inter- scholastic meets: "Resolved: That the Power of the Federal Government Should Be Increased." In the first practice session Carl Merschel and Jack Powell took the affirmative: while Dick Ramos and Joe Bredemann argued against an increase in the government's mili- tary power. Similar practices were held for several months. Usually an open forum fol- lowed such debates to allow the other mem- bers of the society to clarify their ideas. The next step in the preparation of these young orators was several practice skir- mishes with the Senior Debating Squad. Thus the frosh and sophs sharpened their wits for the struggles to come. S HAVE THEIR SAY Finally, the day of the first interscholastic debate dawned. Ed Langhenry and Martin Callaghan, affirmative, and Bill Sheehan and Tom Massion, negative, met two teams from St. Scholastica. A busy season followed, in which the Jun- ior Debaters met more than fifty teams from other schools. In their interscholastic sched- ule were freshmen and sophomores from St. Ignatius, St. George, St. Philip, St. Mel, New Trier, Lane Tech, St. Scholastica, Providence, Alvernia, and Marywood. As a fitting climax to the heaviest sched- uled season in their history, the Junior Debaters sponsored their Second Annual Junior Debate Tournament at Loyola on May 3. Each of the schools participating went through four rounds of debates during the course of the day. For his great achievement of giving the underclassmen the poise and ability to carry on argument with the best opposition, and for the careful planning and rigorous training through which he prepared his young ora- tors, Mr. Charles T. Conroy, S.J., deserves the deep gratitude of his charges and the whole of the Academy, for it is this funda- mental training in their early years that makes it possible for Loyolans to keep up the splendid tradition in debating and public speaking which they have set. Standing: Bolger, Merschel, Freeman, Abens, Ermatinger, Vestal, Langhenry, Hurley. Kennedy. Van Oppens, Sheehan, Mr. Conroy S,J. Seated: Holland, Bredemann, Massion, Ramos, Powell, Starrs, Hayes, Slattery, DiGilio. Absent: Vanden Branden, Callaghan. SHUTTEH CLUB Not content with catching their fellow stu- dents in candid poses, the Shutter Club this year branched out into new fields of pho- tography and captured a pictorial record of life as it is lived at Loyola. Plans were care- fully laid, actors trained, props set, flood lights focused: and when the shooting ceased Loyolans had a movie all their own. A Day at Loyola was conceived by the moderator of the Shutter Club, Mr. Stanley C. Tillman, S.J. Under his direction, Ralph Nagler and Bill Sieben, with the help of the other members of the organization, filmed every phase of life at Loyola from the time the cars begin to pull up the drive in the morning until the members of the Prep staff and the debaters leave for home in the eve- ning. Assembly, Mass, classes, lunch, labo- ratory work, senior lounge nonsense, and the various extra curricular activities-all are flashed on the screen in an hour's entertain- ment that recalls all the work and play of a day at L. A. This movie was the major activity of the year, commanding most of the club's time and efforts: but it was by no means the sole activity of the Shutter Club. There were con- Page 30 Standing: Sieben, McDermott, Abens, Sackley, Mr. Tillman. S.J., Cleary, Nagler, DiGilio, Sitting: Buechner, Witteried. Kelly. Minwegen. MAKES A MUVIE tests of various sorts for the members, field trips in the autumn and spring, illustrated lectures both by the moderator and by club members, and several showings of amateur motion pictures. In short, the Shutter Club made every effort to fully realize its primary purpose: to acquaint its members with the art of taking good pictures and to develop in the students a fundamental technical knowledge of photography. In a formal election, held at the begin- ning of the year, Ralph Nagler was elected president of the club: while Bill Sieben took over the combined offices of treasurer and secretary. No little of the success of this or- ganization is due these two men. During the course of the year the students of the Academy were invited by the club to attend moving pictures of Grand Canyon, Palm Springs, the Canadian Rockies, and wild animal life and fishing in Wisconsin. Several of these films were in color. Not least among the services rendered the school by the Shutter Club was the valuable assistance it gave in the preparation of this book. All of the informal shots and several of the group pictures are the work of club members. E!-ITHIILIE TRZIRITIUNS IN LITERATURE IIMRRIISIRNS To gain a fuller appreciation of our Catholic heritage in literature, a small group of sen- iors and juniors formed a club at the begin- ning of second semester to study early Christian Latin poetry. Taking their name, Ambrosians, from St. Ambrose, the father of Latin hymnody, these men met every Fri- day evening to discuss the hymns of the Church and study Christian Latin authors in their historical backgrounds. An effort was made to keep abreast of the liturgy as the Ambrosians pored over the sequences of the Mass, the poems of the breviary, and the traditional hymns of the Church for various seasons. St. Ambrose, Prudentius, St. Bernard of Cluny, Adam of St. Victor, Thomas of Celano, St. Thomas Aquinas-all yielded knowledge and pleas- ure to the Arnbrosians. REIIRERS and WRITERS Another group of literary Loyolans con- centrated on the modern phase of Catholic letters. The Readers and Writers not only enjoyed Catholic best sellers, but brought these books to the attention of the rest of the school. Greatest interest in Catholic writers was stimulated through a school-wide contest in which prizes were given to the students sub- mitting the best reviews of recent Catholic books. More than 150 books were reviewed. On the crest of Catholic-book enthusiasm stirred up by this contest, the Readers and Writers made a drive to start a library. Be- fore the end of the year, through a twenty- dollar donation by the Senior Class and the proceeds of a raffle, the Readers and Writers had a Catholic library of almost one hundred volumes. AMBROSIANS Standing: Kelly, Munson, Mur- phy, Rosengren, Hecht. Sit- ting: Sommer, Quay, Pender- qast, Mr. Snider, S.J., Festle. FitzGera1d, McDermott. READERS AND WRITERS Standing: DuShane, Hassett, Ryan, Kennedy. Sitting: Ward. Rosengren, McKendry, Wall. Surges, Neville, Mr. Wenzel, SJ IIATHIILIII YU TH SPEARS "Catholic Youth Speaks on the Role of Chris- tian Democratic Ideals in the New World Order." On this theme Catholic young peo- ple from the Chicago area last October built up the discussions that constituted the First Catholic Youth Congress. Every Catholic organization, high school, and college of the city was represented at the three day con- ferences. Loyola students numbered twenty- five delegates, but in the course of the Congress a large percentage of Loyolans attended the meetings. Purpose of the Congress was to give the Catholic Youth of Chicago a chance to dis- cuss their views on the pressing topics of the day. It was to be "a clearing house of ideas, expressing the views of Catholic Youth on: Government, Civil Liberties, Labor. and Peace." In convention Catholic youths could benefit from the opinions of their fellow students and formulate ideas that would make them useful and valuable citizens in the years to come. "A good foundation of Christian ideals for the rulers of tomorrow," was the motto of the Congress. In preparation for the Congress, Loyola's delegates convened in four distinct sectional groups at the Academy before attending the general assemblies. The results and prob- lems that came out of these sectional meet- ings formed the basis of the discussions at the Congress. Sheldon Hayes, Ed Murphy, Ed Leach, Bob Hassett, Joe Pendergast, and Jack Hassel represented Loyola at the Civil Liberties sec- tion of the Congress. Four Juniors, Jim Wet- zel, Neil Maloney, Jack Festle, and Gerald FitzGerald discussed the problems of Peace. Paul Quay, Bill Curran, Tom Munson, Jim Guerin, and Bob Henry were Loyola's repre- sentatives to the Labor section of the Con- gress. Roland Upton, Bob Nilles, Erwin Hasten, Ed Liphardt, Frank Gagen, Doug Wood, Dick McKinley, Al Sommer, and Harry Wellbank represented Loyola in the discussions on Government. Those who attended this convention prof- ited by their discussion, realizing more fully that when order and peace and concord re- turn to the nations, it will be through and according to the principles which God has laid down to govern men and not through man-made regulations based on force. Back Row: Quay. Wellbank, Pendergast, Curran, Leach, Sommer, Hayes. Front Row: Festle, Maloney, Wetzel, Guerin, Hickey, Murphy, PitzGera1d, Nilles, Liphardt. Top: Powell, McDermott, Wetzel, McCourt. Kennedy. O'Brien, Neville, Festle. Middle: DuShane, Wald, Sommer, Milligan, Murphy, Leach, FitzGerald, Hickey, Maloney. Bottom: Harrington, D. Hayes. Leahy, Quay, Mr. Wenzel, S.J., Wellbank, Pendergast. S. Hayes. IIATHULIII YIIUTH ETB Loyola's Ciscans, forty-five strong, gathered early in September to lay the plans for Loyola's participation in the city-wide organi- zation, the Chicago Inter-Student Catholic Action group, commonly called Cisca. The interest evinced at this first meeting did not flag throughout the year. At the first central meeting of Cisca, Frank Milligan opened the session with a prayer of his own composition, a petition for grace to teach unbelievers the beauties of the Catho- lic Faith. This prayer had been judged the best in a city-wide contest in which Jack Festle, another Loyola man, finished second. Loyola Academy was elected president of the Cisca Holy Hour Guild. Neil Maloney, the school's representative, filled the office by appointment. During the year Loyola Ciscans held their own meetings each week to discuss the topic for the following Saturday morning's discus- sion. These meetings prepared the delegates to take a more active part in the central meetings and also afforded an opportunity to profit from Cisca activities to those who could not attend the Saturday assemblies. It was at one of these local meetings that Loyola students determined to compile an anthology of original poems on the Mass. Loyola became the clearing house for North Side Catholic school poetic contributions. As the year progressed a new system of sectional meetings was introduced for the North Side members of Cisca. All Catholic high schools and colleges of the North Side were invited to gather on Wednesday of each week at some school to discuss the subject for the Saturday to come. Loyola's representatives played host to the group for the Apostolic meeting each month. The other sectional meetings were held at St. George. Alvernia, and Immaculata high schools. Loyola also played host to the forty-first general meeting which was held in the Loyola Community Theatre. Neil Maloney led the open forum on the topic: "How Can We Sell Catholic Action?" Mr. John J. Wenzel, S.J., acted as modera- tor. Through his expert guidance Loyola produced men well-versed in the study and discussion of Catholic topics. Page 33 Stminr Staff Standing: Editor Acton, Associate Editor Halligan, Feature Editor Hayes. Sitting: Associate Editor Curran, Sports Editor Wood, Literary Editor Quay. CHA EESI THEPHEP Several changes appeared in the Loyola Prep this year as a consequence of the guid- ing hand of an energetic staff of editors. Chief among these changes was the new makeup for the editorial page. All vestiges of the literary quarterly from which the newspaper sprang disappeared and gave place to a lighter page of humor, exchange. and gossip columns with a bi-weekly book review and editorial. But the students who are encouraged to write better through the incentive of publica- tion were not forgotten. Twice during the year a supplement appeared carrying liter- ary contributions. This arrangement proved more satisfactory to the students and gave the staff more freedom and experience in the makeup of the literary supplement. Clare Acton, editor-in-chief, proved him- self worthy to join that distinct body who have ruled the Prep since its beginning. Associates Bill Curran and Bill Halligan busied themselves with the news and sports sections while maintaining columns of their own. Doug Wood ran the sports page as up-to-the-minute as a daily. Sheldon Hayes as feature editor, handled at least one feature story an issue as well as the "Who's Who." Literary editor Paul Quay wrote the edi- torials and an occasional book review, be- sides editing the literary supplement. Tom Gorman and Don Normoyle scooped the world on Loyola gossip: while Pete Min- wegen's humor was repeated in school papers throughout the United States. In March a new staff took over the type- writers. Jack Festle succeeded Clare Acton. Bob O'Toole and Jim Wetzel became associ- ate editors. Gerald FitzGerald edited the news: while Hay McDermott took charge of the sports page. New literary editor was Dick Westerschulte. Bill Schaefer and Vinton Thompson now write the features. Mr. Louis B. Snider, SJ., concluded his third year as moderator of the Prep. Juniur Staff Standing: Wetzel, Rosengren. Sitting Festle, OToole. Schaefer, FitzGera1:l. Wester- schulte. Maloney, McDermott, Normoyle. Milligan. Page 34 -'nf' I Standing: Curran, Quay, Downes. Gagen, Schnitzius, Sommer, Leach, Munson, Pendergast, Gorman. Sitting: Acton, Hayes, Minwegen, Guerin, Normoyle, Wood, Halligan. GH!-lll PHEP'S N!-l'l'II1N-WIDE PLAN When the staff of the Grad Prep set to work early in March, they found that they were dealing with a publication entirely different from any in the history of the school. Through the untiring efforts of the moderator, Mr. Louis B. Snider, S.J., the 1941 Grad Prep already had a theme worked out and nearly completed. The staff of the yearbook found itself a part of a nation-wide plan. Fourteen Jesuit high schools from Boston to Seattle, and from Tampa to Milwaukee were participating in a common theme to commemorate the begin- ning of another century of Jesuit education. Through this cooperative plan, all member schools found it possible to meet the expense of the sixteen two-color pages marking the divisions of this book. Such a theme not only added color to the Grad Prep and afforded a unifying principle around which all the activities of Loyola could be introduced, but it emphasized the bond of unity that exists between all Jesuit schools throughout the nation. With the incentive of these division pages in their book, the Loyola staff buckled down to produce a Grad Prep worthy of the high tenor of its theme. In other words, the theme became a challenge to be met by the staff. How well they handled that challenge may best be seen in the result of their effort. Even the cover falls under the spell of that theme, for the golden seal of the Society of Jesus throwing out its rays is symbolic of the dawn of the Society's fifth century. Credit enough cannot be given Bill Curran, editor-in-chief, for the efficient way in which he marshalled his various staffs to meet the deadlines. Sheldon Hayes saw to the publi- cation of the data on the faculty members and the Senior Class. Underclassmen got their due through Paul Quay and his staff. Clare Acton controlled the staff that chron- icled Loyola's extra-curricular activities: while Bill Halligan put down the records of the athletic teams. The business of the book fell into the capa- ble hands of Matt Schnitzius. To Ralph Nagler the students are particularly indebted for the photographic work. These, and many more, are the men who worked on the 1941 Grad Prep. They have produced, they hope, a record of Loyola's spirit and substance, a glimpse of her method of molding character and developing men. Page 35 WUBKINE Fllll THEIR SUNS Rlnthnrs On the day when the laurels are distributed. surely the one for true loyalty and school spirit will be bestowed upon the deserving brow of the Mothers' Club. No Loyola insti- tution or activity has done more to create a closer contact between parents and teachers in the interest of the students. Not any en- deavor is undertaken at Loyola which does not receive the whole-hearted support of the Mothers' Club. This year featured a number of social, spir- itual, and educational events. In November the Junior and Senior mothers sponsored a dessert-bridge. A similar party was held in May under the auspices of the Freshman and Sophomore mothers. The Christmas party, an annual success, was shared with the University Mothers' Club. But the out- standing social, or rather, charitable event was the Scholarship party in April. The pro- ceeds from this will allow some lads a chance to stay at Loyola. The club also proved financially success- ful to the benefit of Loyola. Generous dona- tions of the Mothers' Club helped to defray the expense of the band uniforms and to redecorate the teachers' room and furnish it with leather and chromium furniture. The educational program of the meetings called for frequent lectures, both by recog- nized authorities in various fields of study and by members of the club itself. Popular each year with the mothers is Rev. John A. Kilian, S.J., the famous missionary who ad- dressed the club on his favorite subject. "India." Most of the credit for the success of this year rightly goes to the moderator, Bev. John P. Downey, S.J., and the president, Mrs. Edward H. Liphardt. Page 36 Fathers Under the energetic leadership of Rev. Gerasime M. Legris, S.J., moderator, and Mr. Thomas C. Keegan, president, the Loyola Academy Fathers' Club enjoyed a remark- ably successful year. Other officers of the year were Mr. James M. McNulty, vice-presi- dent: Mr. Daniel J. Howe, secretary: Mr. Earl P. Kelly, treasurer: Mr. Leonard H. Skoglund, financial secretary. Through the unity of their work, these officers were able to lead the club through a full program of athletic and social events. A well-organized campaign and wide- spread cooperation on the part of all its members succeeded in bringing a record- breaking crowd to the Loyola Loyalty Party last December. The entertainment, followed by an evening of dancing, stood out as the social high point of the year. Throughout the year many of the fathers gave vocational talks to the Seniors of the Academy, hoping to aid them in some way to determine what they might choose as their life's work. These talks covered such fields as engineering, medicine, law, and various businesses. Joint meetings were held by the Fathers' and Mothers' Clubs of the Academy. At these meetings there were guest speakers and entertainments to fill out a fine evening. Ir1 following its religious program, the Fathers' Club spent two days in prayer in the Madonna Della Strada Chapel. These Days of Recollection were held during the months of April and May. Many donations were made by the club to various school enterprises, and this year. as in the past, they donated eight hundred dollars to the Loyola Academy Scholarship Fund. To each and every member of the club. and especially to its moderator and presi- dent, is due a great honor, for they helped to make this the club's most successful year. U H P HE T5 HELP PATHEHS Officers of the Fathers' Club for the past year have been Mr. Thomas C. Keegan, president Cinsert belowl: Mr. J. M. McNulty, vice-presi- dent: Mr. E. P. Kelly, treasurer: Mr. L. H. Skoglund, financial secretary: and Mr. D. J. Howe, secretary. So satisfied with the work of these men were the fathers that they elected them to the same offices for the year 1941-1942. Chief contribution toward the Scholarship Fund made by the fathers is through the Loyola Loyalty Party each winter. In this evening of vaudeville entertainment and dancing, the fathers add substantially to the fund each year. MUTHEHS More than five hundred ladies attended the November Scholarship Party of which Mrs. G. J. Borgstrom and Mrs. Vinton F. Thompson were co-chairmen under the president of the Mothers' Club, Mrs. Edward H. Liphardt Cin- sert belowl. Another Scholarship Party on April 28 drew even a greater crowd. Mrs. Patrick J. Cummings and Mrs. C. Edward Dahlin were co-chairmen of this dessert-bridge. Through these parties a fund is built up to enable boys to continue at Loyola who would otherwise have to leave because of financial difficulties. Stamp llluh Standing: Talkin, Boesen. Hayes, Deegan, Milligan, Hickey, Tem- pleman, Maginot. Sitting: Rev. Legris, S.J., Hale, Elward, Weber, Lcmghenry. Music llluh Standing: Hassmer, Buckley, Mc- Dermott. Sitting: Mr. Loveley, S. J., Sommer, G a n tn e r , Quay, Acton. HUHBIE5 T LUYUL STAMP CLUB The Stamp Club, a new activity at Loyola this year, attracted great interest from Academy philatelists. At an early meeting Paul Elward was eleced president, Bob Stephan, vice president: and Jack Maginot, treasurer. In all the club listed twenty--five members with Rev. Gerasime M. Legris, S.J.. as its moderator. At the regular Thursday meetings the members bought, sold, and traded duplicate stamps from their collections. At the first exhibition sponsored by the club Walter Weber took first prize. Ed Lang- henry won second place, followed by Ralph Talkin in third position. Weber's prize col- lection was an exhibition of South American stamps entitled, "Our Southern Neighbors." Page 38 MUSIII CLUB The Loyola Music Club, under the direction of Mr. Arthur E. Loveley, SJ., continued its series in appreciation of the fine arts this year, as a division of the study clubs of the Senior Sodality. Unlike previous years, how- ever, it directed all its attention to classical and semi-classical music. In preceding sea- sons its studies had also included painting, sculpture, and architecture. Harry Wellbank was elected president of the club which listed ten members. The purpose of the club was the study and appreciation of fine music as composed by the old masters. Meetings were held every Tuesday after school. The members them- selves brought records and had them played before the whole group. THE BA D Under the direction of Mr. Earl Stricker and his assistant, Mr. Irvin Kane, the Loyola band made great progress this year. New uni- forms and a corps of twirlers placed the band among the finest looking in the city: while long hours of practice and unusual interest threatened to put it among the best sounding in Chicago. A system of merits and demerits was de- vised to determine the awarding of letters and pins on the basis of rehearsals attended. individual progress manifested in solo and ensemble work, and general cooperative- ness. This system stimulated interest on the part of the members and facilitated the man- agement of the band both for the director and the faculty moderator, Mr. John H. Reinke, S.J. MODERATOR Mr. John H. Reinke, S.J. DIRECTOR Mr. Earl E. Stricker ASSISTANT DIRECTOR Mr. Irvin H. Kane CLARINETS Richard Bopp Robert Creutz Frank Downes John Manley Stephen Boll John Condren I John Cristoph Albert Freitag John McNally Edward Rickard Byron Rouse Robert O'Toole Charles Saracco Richard Trefny Oliver Williams Dennis Cleary FLUTES DRESSES CORNETS Charles Kelly Robert Lamey George Moeri , Thomas Munson Edward Murphy Mathias Schnitzius OBOE Joseph Kiely FRENCH HORNS Francis Hecht John Reed BARITONES Robert Nilles John Reilly TROMBONES Charles DuShane James Fitzpatrick Charles Freeman Harold Keegan John Luby Harold Schnitzius DRUMS John Clinnin Gregory Gormaly William Hilts John Flynn Paul Weiler SAXOPHONES Philip Costello George Schnitzius William Templeman SOUSAPHONES Dennis Ermatinger John Hennessey William Schaefer TYMPANI Thomas Borgstrom DRUM MAJOR Sheldon Hayes TWIRLERS Edward Amberg John Breen John Forrestal Edmund Hughes Louis Lemond John Maloney Herbert Schmitz Donald LaVigne William McCarty "WHAT A LIFE" When this year's Prep Players put on the stage that three act, laugh-filled comedy, What a Life, they set a goal at which all future Academy actors may aim. Breaking precedent, they limited the cast to seniors. To take care of their large and eager audi- ence, they ran the play two evenings at the Loyola Community Theatre. Under the guidance of Director Bert G. Walker, the cast of twenty seniors shaped up to a point of near perfection to bring upon themselves the high praise of "the perfect cast." Mr. John H. Reinke, S.J., faculty moderator of the play, arranged the details of business and assisted Mr. Walker in the direction. Ned Brockman and Al Sommer, with the willing help of a large crew of seniors, set a record in sales of tickets after a sparkling publicity campaign. Jack Patterson, Roland Upton, Bob Solari, and Bob O'Connor cleared up all the diffi- culties behind stage. Among the highly-sung clramatis personae were: Henry Aldrich . . . the role that almost put Don Normoyle in the movies. Mr. Bradley . . . Paul Quay's naturalness as principal made many wonder. Mr. Wheeler . . . Tom Gorman raised the roof with his Horton expressions and Cantor- eye gazes. PREP PLAYERS Bill . . . as a student bearing his own name, Bill Fleming lived the part to win individual applause. Homer Pearson . . . Ed Leach seemed to be the only pal Henry ever had. Mr. Shea . . . Mac Downes played a con- vincing registrar. Mr. Nelson . . . Matt Schnitzius won sym- pathy as a kind-hearted assistant principal. George Bigelow . . . Chuck Krippes gave the play that little dash of villainy. Mr. Ferguson . . . Pete Minwegen played the detective and plot foiler. His Oxford 0100 never answered. Mr. Vecchitto . . . .Tack Forristal, the Irish- man who proved himself to be an Italian parent. Mr. Aldrich . . . Ray Kelly did a splendid job as Henry's father. As teachers, Tom Gibbons, the mean Mr. Patterson: Bill Curran, the unhappy Mr. Pike: Bill Halligan, Henry's English teacher: and Jack Patterson, the gymnasium teacher, paced the action of the play. Chuck . . . 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I. sumo AT me sm: AW-USTA ms new . 5 rmsr msuns DIMM s'm'u U' KILLED lu cj 9 G - LOUISIANA 74-4 x 'Kms ulsslou ms rznno vmmnzz Q Q nnnonucz rmsr nesunr suan cm: "V" W- sum an ru: mu cm. slum www NEW WORLD 'W-I usse , L 3 ' - - Y., A ' -f -1 .1 new omwus , N f J j J XJ A 7 , msn I - , ., W, K A V I wzsr mu nucn - . f - q , mum uv west rw ii 5 'S I HIHEETUH5 Athletics have always figured prominently in the education of the Loyola boy. In sports he finds relaxation, diversion, and a means of building his body physically so that he can, in after years, do better work. But per- haps the greatest benefit to be derived from the athletic program is the knowledge of teamwork that sports teach. Realization of the value of cooperation in a game can lead a man to see the necessity for unified action with his fellowmen in business and industry. On a spiritual plane, such recognition can, and does, lead to an appreciation of the brotherhood of man. Rev. Hartford F. Brucker, S.J., and Mr. John J. Connelly, with the able assistance of Mr. Robert A. Pollauf, S.J., handled the direction of the athletic program. To Mr. Connelly goes the greatest credit for the interest shown this year in intramural sports. Boxing, bowling, pool, track, all took a prominent place on the program with the BUXEH5 A lew shots oi boxing action that helped retain the State Box- ing Title for Loyola. Left: Bob Wagener, Loyola Welterweight, takes a bout from Cadet Busch of Morgan Park Military Acad- emy. Right: Bill Ronan, lighting at 160 pounds.loses a splh dech sion to Cadet Parchman. Loyola boxers wore light trunks. UF SPUHT5 usual basketball and indoor. Mr. Connelly also acted as line coach in the football sea- son, basketball coach, assistant track mentor, and invitation director of the National Cath- olic Basketball Tournament. Veteran of the athletic staff is Mr. Leonard D. Sachs who coached Heavyweight Football and track this year with the assistance of Mr. Connelly. Another veteran is Mr. Jerry Heffernan who coached his boxing team to its second consecutive Illinois Catholic State Cham- pionship. Mr. Robert E. Cummins coached Light- weight Football and swimming. Vinnie Gra- ham of L. U. and Mr. Robert A. Pollauf, S.J., handled the Bantarns and Flies on the bas- ketball floor. The latter also coached the tennis team. Mr. Alfred E. Schwind, S.J., and his golf team struck to get back the city title. Mr. Charles E. Duffy was in charge of Ban- tam Football. Page 47 FIGHTING IIIIEEEIILY. for a place in the sun on the South Side, Loyola's injury-stricken Heavyweight Foot- ball team found competition with such ma- chines as Leo, Mt. Carmel, and St. Rita much tougher than they had anticipated. Before the ill-fated season even began, Bob Wagener, who promised to be a permanent fixture at the right-half position in the L. A. lineup, fell victim to a broken ankle in a practice scrimmage. Shortly afterward, Tom Kohl's leg ailment forced him to the sidelines. In the course of the season few members of the squad failed to pay "Doc" Burke a business call. Tom Spencer, Rog Foehringer, Bill Madden, Charlie Mennes-all hit the trail to the doctor's office at some time or other. LARRY BROWN Loyola sophomore quarterback, takes the ball for a short gain through the St. Rita Mustangs while his team-mates prepare the way. Loyola lost, 12-6. before 3500 spectators. Page 48 RAY ELSTER Loyola junior fullback, plunges through the De La Salle line in the game at Loyola. November 3. The Meteorites held Loyola to a single score to take the game Z0-7. Against Senn in the season opener, little Rog Foehringer passed and ran L. A. to a 20-0 victory. Came St. George, a speedy eleven to outrun Loyola and win their third game in twelve years over us, 12-0. Mt. Carmel took our first league game. 19-0. Against St. Rita we broke into the league scoring column. After Tom Spencer had smashed the opposing line to pieces, Larry Brown crossed the goal. We dropped that one, 12-6. The next two games put Loyola in the South Section cellar. Joliet took one, 18-0, and Leo the other, 31-0. Chuck Krippes scored our second touchdown in the league against De La Salle on a tackle around play in our 20-7 defeat. Fenwick took the last game, 34-0. 1 ...M . if new , ,Ar S Top: O'Brien, Skoglund, Wagener, Graydon, D. Brown, Halligan, Dee. Middle: W. Spencer, McCormick, Rockel- mann, Koehl, Elster, Seeberg, Foehringer, Coach Sachs. Bottom: Sullivan, Krippes, Madden, Caparros, Garrity, M. Schnitzius, Moloney, Ring. Absent: E. Brown, L. Brown, Brockman, Kent, Kohl, Mennes, T. Spencer, and managers H. Schnitzius, Hennessey, and Hickey. BEAVER . . .TEAM For accurate kicking and passing, for fierce plunging and hard tackling, Loyola called on its star fullback, Tom Spencer. He won a place on the All-South-Section team. Charlie Mennes, another Veteran, played end and half-back as the "Man in the Iron Mask." Matt Schnitzius worked as the little steel man who backed up the line. Fighting by his side and literally in the center of action was big Joe Caparros. At the end of the six inches and 135 pounds. Ray Goodrich turned up near the end of the season as first string material. The second of the Browns, Dave, was the "small linesman" of the squad. Big Ray Elster, a good kicker and hard tackler, saw lots of action near the end of the season. Alternating at quarterback until a few broken ribs and a fractured wrist forced him to the sidelines, Jack Dee held his own with the bigger fellows. Jim Graydon line, Gene Brown snared passes S E H E Il U L E and George "Blitz" Koehl filled and did a good job dumping Loyola llyp 20 sem -,A..wpwq-w- 0 the Junior quota. CI1'1Cl blOCki1'1g. Cl'1l1Ck Krippes Loyola .... 0 St. George ..., 12 Sophomore Bi11Mqdde1-lofthe and Gene Rinq, the tWO lads 2 1g:f'Rc?:z'mel:i:Z long arms and legs stood out at who did most to popularize our Loyola Vw,- 0 Joke, pppr 18 the right half. Another Soph tackle-around play, cracked in Loyola .,.. 0 from their tackle positions. Loyola "'A 7 Loyola .... 0 Coach Sachs found an out- standing end in Ed. Garrity. Frank Kent and Bill Halligan alternated in the backfield. Ned Brockman and Jack Moloney provided the chatter in the sub line. All these Seniors have played their last game on the gridiron for Loyola. Leading the Junior contingent, little Rog Foehringer ran rings around opponents taller and heavier than his own five feet St. Leo ,,,........, 31 De La Salle 20 Fenwick ...... 34 in the starting backfield was the third of the brothers Brown, Larry. He called signals and blocked like a veteran. Tackle Bob Skoglund shows promise for the future along with the Sophomore center, Charlie O'Brien. These Sophomores will all be in the midst of things next season. Happy Harry Schnitzius and jolly Jack Hennessey did the dirty work around the locker room, "endurin' the howls and slingin' the towels." Page 49 Top Row: Halligan, Goode, O'Conne1l, Runge. E. Ryan. Dwyer, Welsh. Ashenden. Manager W. Murphy, Manager R. Murphy. Middle Row: McCue. Meyer. Gelderman, D. Ryan, Oberlin, McCarthy, Kiely, O'Laughlin, Thompson. Tarrant, Coach Cummins. Bottom Row: O'Neil, Ray, O'Malley, Sophie, Daly, LaVigne, Schnitzius, Farley, Bendix, Hand. Kelly. Absent: Doyle, Ramos. Smith. LIGHTS HAVE GBE!-lT SE!-l5IlN The Loyola Lightweight gridders have just completed one of the most successful seasons enjoyed by an Academy football squad in recent years. These Juniors boast a record of four victories and two defeats in the six games that they played. Mr. Robert E. Cummins took over the Lightweight reins this year and did a fine job directing a young, inexperienced group of hopefuls into a hard-driving eleven. His buoyant spirit bol- stered the team in many a SCH tough spot. In the season opener the Jim Loyola "" 13 Doyle-Graeme Smith passing Loyolo "t' 18 combination sparked the Lights Loyolo "" 7 to a well-earned 13-6 victory Loyolo "" 7 over the St. Ignatius eleven. Loyolo "" o Loyola .... 26 Jack Runge, full back and line backer, broke up the Ignatius power plays three times when they were within the Loyola ten-yard stripe. The Lights traveled to St. Mary's training school for their second tilt and met disaster at the shoulders and flying cleats of the St. Mary's squad, 31-18. .lim Doyle passed the way to victory in Page 50 St. Ignatius .... 6 St. Mary ...,.... 31 Mt. Carmel .... 6 St. George .... 0 Fenwick ...... 2 De La Salle .... 0 the closing minutes of the Mount Carmel game with the Lights trailing 6-0. Jim passed thirty-five yards to Tom O'Malley who raced to the twenty-five yard marker. Graeme Smith took Doyle's second pass and scored. A short pass in the flat zone, Doyle to Smith, won the game 7-6 as the whistle sounded. Tom O'Malley really turned on the steam against the St. George Dragons and led the Lights to a sparkling 7-0 victory V over their arch-enemies. Tom. an end converted to half back, intercepted a St. George pass and romped eighty-eight yards to a touchdown. Ed Ryan kicked the point. O'Malley also broke loose for fifty-five and thirty yards in this game. Loyola met defeat for a sec- ond time when Fenwick recov- ered a fumble behind the goal in the dark for a safety. This break of the game gave Fenwick a 2-0 edge over Loyola. Led by Tim Dwyer, the Lights trampled De La Salle to take a 26-0 victory. Ed Ryan's hard driving tore most of the holes in the enemy line. EIIULE BANTAM5 START FUR FIIIITBALI. FAME This season Coach Charles E. Duffy turned out a fighting team of Bantams that upheld the enviable record the Loyola midgets have maintained for the last seven years. "Corky" Caparros, the quarterback, called signals, passed, kicked, and carried the ball like the veteran he is. Burt Dolan proved on more than one occasion his worth as a shifty, hard-running half-back. Steve Seidel specialized in tackling viciously and throw- ing his opponents for a loss. Dennis Cleary was first scorer of the year. Pass-catching was his strong point. John McNulty backed up the line admirably on defense. Gene Cabanski foiled many attempts to crack through his tackle position. Roy Lang, hard- plunging fullback, was usually good for the final few yards to a first down. Jerry Petritz, a smart, fast end dropped from the squad early in the season with injuries. Jack Curry covered the ball in the middle of the line. Paul Boehme delighted in dumping oncom- ing interference. John Luby stood like a brick wall at his guard post. Ken Sophie ran low and fast to make consistent gains. Ed McGuinn in the line meant plenty of trouble for the opposition. Richard Morozowicz stop- ped opposing backs in their tracks. Little Tom Howe, a veteran on the field, returned to strengthen the Bantam wall. Tom Manley won the distinction of being the most im- proved man on the squad by the end of the season. Jack Maloney crashed through the enemy line like an army tank. Few oppos- ing backs passed around Bob Geis' end. Bob O'Brien delighted in smearing plays be- fore they started. Steve Erd was mighty tough at guard. Frank Hussian opened big holes for his teammates. Tom Landgren, manager, did the dirty work around the locker room with a smile that symbolized the spirit of this year's Bantams. When it came time to place kick, Dennis Scott was back: but the Bantams had a drop kick specialist in Bandlett Lawrence, the rangy Texan who promises well for future gridiron years. Coach Duffy has something to be proud of in this crop of Bantams. Though it was the coach's first year at this job and he had an altogether inexperienced team on his hands, he turned out a squad that knows its funda- mentals and can go on to greater football fame. Top: Hurley, Geis, Sophie, Luby, J. O'Brien, Cummings, Maloney, Manley, O'Donoghue, Boehme. Middle: Mr. Pollauf, S.J., Schmitz, Curry, Hussian, Gelderman, Scott, Lawrence. Heffernan, Windsor, Manager Landgren, Coach Duffy. Bottom: Morozowicz, Howe, McGuinn, Cleary, Dolan, Caparros, Cabanski, McNulty, Lang, R. O'Brien, Erd. Absent: Seidel, Petritz, Burns, Brennan, Mulvihill. Page 51 HEAVY CAEEH5 SEASUN SUMMARY Loyola Opponents 26 Lane Tech 29 St. George 27 St. Ignatius 22 Senn 46 Sullivan 28 St. Ignatius 41 St. Mel 35 St. Patrick 25 Joliet 34 Mt. Carmel 43 Marquette 40 Boys Town 43 Joliet 43 De Paul 29 St. Michael 27 Fenwick 26 Leo 32 Mt. Carmel 31 St. Rita 24 St. George 28 De La Salle 21 Joliet 28 Marmion 35 Fenwick 34 Leo 42 Mt. Carmel 39 St. Rita 34 De La Salle 912 Page 52 Top: Rothinq, Doyle. Smith, O'Brien, Dee. Bottom: Manager Gallery, Brown. Geraghty, Healy, Kemen. Mennes, and Coach Con- nelly. FINISH FINE SEASIIN Before actual league play was under way, Loyola's Heavyweight basketball team had Won seven of its twelve practice games. They had taken fourth place in the annual pre-season St. George Tournament and had uncovered three outstanding players in Captain Charlie Mennes, Charles "Lefty" Kemen, and Jack Dee. Then came competition in the South Section against such teams as Leo, Fenwick, Joliet, et al. We beat Joliet, our first league opponent, 43-37. Fenwick and Leo stepped in to deal the Ramblers two defeats before they regained their stride to beat Mt. Carmel by a 32-25 score. St. Rita scored a surprise upset by taking Loyola 36-31, but L. A. came back to drop De La Salle, 28-22, and finish off the first round with an average of .500. At the start of the second round, Joliet avenged its previous defeat by winning 33-21. Fenwick took a thriller, 36-35. Leo's perfect record suffered its first blemish when the Ramblers handed them their only league defeat of the year, 34-32. Mt. Carmel fell again before St. Rita took its second game from L. A., this time by one point, 40-39. De La Salle closed the season for Loyola by beating the Ramblers, 41-34. Captain Charlie Mennes leads our seniors "Lefty" Kemen, Joe Geraghty, "Moose" Healy, Gene Brown, and "Ace" Dreis. Returning next year will be Jack Dee, leading scorer of the season, Art O'Brien, Jim Doyle, Bud Rothing, and Graeme Smith. LIGHTS PLAY HARD SEASU As the first game of the Catholic League season rolled around, Loyola's luckless Lightweights had won three of their practice games. They had beaten St. George, 8 St. Ignatius, and Senn: while they fell before Sullivan, 26 Lane, and the same Ignatius team in a return game. 34 Three Seniors returned from last year's squad to 27 bolster the Lights' lineup. They were Ed Garrity, Tom 27 Spencer and Gene Ring. Juniors Don La Vigne, team 22 high scorer, Bob Halligan, Jim and Joe Kiely, and 27 Sophomore Burt Dolan were the other men who saw 19 regular action throughout the season. Rog Foehringer, 19 of football fame, combined all his talents on the bas- 24 ketball floor, as did Dave Brown. Joe Mclntyre settled 34 down to some good playing. Dan O'Donnell and Paul 20 Boehme, two up and coming Freshmen, showed excep- 26 tional promise for the future of basketball at Loyola. After dropping their first League game to Joliet, 37-27, 37 the Lights carne back to pin Fenwick down 34-23. This 29 turned out to be Loyola's only League victory since 25 Leo, Mt. Carmel, St. Rita, and De La Salle all walked 1.7 off with the laurels in their encounters with the Lights. 35 Individually the Lights had some very good players. 40 It was as a team they failed to click. Coach Connelly 39 believes that they will learn by their mistakes and -- come back a strong team next year. 577 SEI-lSIlN'S SIIIIHES Loyola Opponents Lane Tech St. George St. Ignatius Senn Sullivan St. Ignatius Joliet De Paul St. Patrick St. Michael Fenwick Leo Mt. Carmel St. Rita St. George De La Salle Joliet Fenwick Leo Mt. Carmel St. Rita De La Salle Back: Manager H o w a r d. Brown, Mclntyre, Boehme, Dolan, McDonnell, Jas. Kiely, Foehrinqer, H a 1 1 i g a n, Mc- Nulty. Front: Dillon, Ring, Spencer, Coach Connelly, Gar- rity, La Vigne, Jos. Kiely. BASKETBALL Ellll LITTLE MEN BANTAM5 The Bantams closed their season in a blaze of glory with a record of twelve victories in eighteen games chalked up in the score books. Of the six games lost, four were dropped by less than three points. Vinnie Graham, Loyola University cage star and Bantam mentor, whipped a fair squad of Sophomores and Freshmen cagers into a smooth, highly polished quintet that promises to go places in the Catholic League in years to come. Bill Seeberg was high scorer of the sea- son. He and John Gelderman often totaled enough points to lick their opponents by themselves. Captain Larry Brown, Ned Daly, and Walt McCue, the rangy center, always played heads-up ball. Dick O'Laughlin, John McNulty, Jack Curry, Harvey Reed, and Ed. Langhenry fthe last two, freshmenl still need more experience to make them finished players. Mr. Robert A. Pollauf, S.J., acted as moder- ator of the team and accompanied them on their trips. FLIE5 The 1941 edition of the Flyweight Basketball squad proved to be one of the pluckiest ever to grace the Academy hardwood. Though the midgets won only five of their twenty- one games, they put up a determined fight against more experienced players. The team suffered keenly from lack of suf- ficient practice and the necessity of playing almost all its games away from home. Had these obstacles been removed, the Flies would surely have won more than half their games. To Mr. Robert A. Pollauf, S.J., who trav- eled with the team and attempted to arrange their practices, goes much of the credit for the grim determination which characterized the team. Captain Joe Hein, Jules Compernol, Tom Morrisey, and Tom Troman carried most of the scoring honors of the squad. Ed Houlihan and Don Cuny look like sure bets for next year's Bantams. Corky Caparros, Bert Gast, Tom Landgren, and Jim Ashendon were con- stant threats to enemy defense. BANTAMS Top: McNulty, Reed, Man- ager Sullivan. O'Laughlin, Curry. Bottom: Langhenry. McCue, J. Gelderman, L. Brown, Seeberg, Mr. Pol- lauf, S.J. Absent: Hein. FLIES Top: T. Gelderman, Tro- man. Second Row: Gast. Compernol, Vanden Bran- den, Morrisey, First Row: Mr. Pollaui, S.J., Land- gren, Cleary, Cuny, Houli- han, Scott, Manager Magi- not. Kneeling: Ashenden. Absent: Daly, Dwyer, O'Donoghue. SEI-l5llN'5 STANDINGS HEAVYWEIGHT slzuulwu 1' B. F.T. FHM. P. Pts. Dee 7,,wvw,,.. ,,Y..,.,..... ,,w..., 9 5 41 43 40 231 Kemen .,.A... , . 7 7 44 21 65 198 Doyle YY,, .Y7.,,, 3 9 1 l 20 44 89 O'Brien YY,,Y,,,, v,,..w.. 3 4 17 23 51 85 Geraghty 11111 1111111. 3 6 12 13 36 84 Mennes 33331 33333333 1 7 22 33 41 56 Healy ..7,.,. ,A....A, l 9 14 15 20 52 E. Brown ww,,,,w ,.,w..,. 1 8 ll 14 38 47 Dreis ...,w,33. 33..5.33 1 4 10 7 29 38 Rothing .,7,, ,3.. 5 l 3 6 1 1 Smith ,,,. .A..333.3..3.......,,3,,. 1 0 3 9 2 LIBHTWEIHHT SEIIHINE ' B. F.T. F.M. P. Pts. La Vigne ..... ..,..,. 5 9 20 36 44 138 Garrity ..,... ....... 2 6 33 24 18 85 Halligan 2...... .2..... 3 0 21 23 38 81 Dolan ..,,.... .,,,,.. 2 4 14 21 44 62 Jim Kiely A3..A ...,... 2 2 9 13 23 53 Spencer ....... ....,.,. 1 4 15 18 30 43 Ring ............. .... ......1. 1 3 9 19 36 35 O'Donnell ....,,,, .,,, 9 7 9 18 25 Joe Kiely ..3.... .... 8 3 8 13 19 Mclntyre ....,,, .... 2 l 4 8 5 L. Brown ,,,,,.,... ..,, l 2 l 8 4 Foehringer ......, .,.. 0 4 7 26 4 McNulty ....... .,,. 2 U 5 2 4 Boehme oo... .... 2 0 0 1 4 Dillon .,,,,,, ,.,,31,,,, .A.A..,..3. l O 4 6 2 'B baskets, F.T. free throws, F.M. free throws missed, P. louls, Pts. total points in the season. Jack Dee, top scorer of the Heavies, receives the congratu- lations of Don La Vigne, high point man of the Lights. Dee set a new record at Loy- ola this season by ringing up 126 points in the twelve games of League competition. His record for the whole season was 231 points in twenty-eight games. La Vigne scored 138 points in twenty-two games. "Lefty" Kemen tips one in against Joliet for the Heaviesg While Dan O'Donnell of the Lights goes up into the air to take the ball from De La Salle. Kemen's sparkling play this year placed him second to Jack Dee in the scoring. In twenty-eight games of the season, "Lefty" scored 198 points. Page 55 SENIOR SQUAD Standing: Manager Solari, Coach Cummins. Sitting: Moloney, Ray, Colbertaldo, McDermott, Mul- vaney, Fenner, Costello, Madden. JUNIOR SQUAD Standing: Manager Solari, Petritz, Harrington, Crowe. Coach Cum- mins. Sitting: Callaghan, Griffin, Reed. Amberg, Lawrence, Wha- len, Powrie, Breen, Ryan. SWIIVIMEHS TAKE SEIIIJND PL!-HIE Enninr Squad Loyola's mermen ended a hard-fought and modestly successful season this year when they took second place in the Catholic League meet which was held in the Loyola swimming pool. Fenwick took top honors in the meet with fifty-four points. The North Side boys totaled twenty-five points. Leo's swimmers came in third with ten points to their credit: while St. Philip was content with fourth place earned on four points. Bill Ray, fulfilling every hope of his team- mates and keeping up a several-year Loyola tradition, won first place in the diving event. This first place in diving was the only first Loyola tcok in the meet. Two seniors, Jack Moloney and Bill Cos- tello, finished their swimming careers with Loyola in this meet. Coach Robert E. Cummins was in charge of the team this year. Page 56 Juniur Squad The Junior Swimming Team, composed of Freshmen and Sophomores, experienced ex- ceptional hard luck this season. However. since the real object of the Junior Team is to prepare stars for the Senior Squad, every- thing taken into consideration, the season was not as unsuccessful as might appear at first sight. Ted Amberg, swimming on the Senior Team in the Catholic League Meet, took sec- ond place in the diving event, defeating con- tenders from all other Chicago Catholic schools except Bill Ray of Loyola. Mr. Robert E. Cummins took over the duties of coach of the team this year. Bob Solari Worked faithfully throughout the year as manager of both teams. There is some promising material in the ranks of the Junior Team, which Mr. Cum- mins hopes to develop next year. THX-lllli ME Coach Leonard D. Sachs was greeted by many new faces when he called out the track men this season. As yet we cannot say how the season will go, but the vet- erans are ct strong bid for cham- pionships. Among the veterans there is Captain Bob Wagener, city cham- pion of the half-mile. Then there is Matt Schnitzius, distance runner. Tom Spencer and Charlie Krippes are putting the shot again. Spencer holds the city record in the Junior Shot Put. Bill Madden, sprinter and hurler, is back: and the Kiely twins, Joe and Jim, are high jump- ing and pole vaulting. For the Junior Team, the coach looks to John Wellbank in the half- mile and to Jack Runge in the shot put. George O'Brien turned up as a fine sprinter: while George Schnitzius and Phil Costello are good distance men. Tom Howe is Vaulting: Tom Leahy and Larry Mulvaney are handling the high jump. Joe Kiely goes over the bar for Tom Leahy's admiration. Charlie Krippes watches Tom Spencer put the shot. Matt Schnitzius leads the lield in a warm-up with Phil Cos- tello and Gene Cabanski close behind. Some of the younger set watch Matt Schnitzius limber up. Standing are Jim and Joe Kiely, Phil Costello, Tom Leahy, Bob Schniedwind, Gene Cabanski, John McNally, and John Wellbank. Bill Carna- han, Charles Saracco, Bart Heffernan, and George Schnit- zius are on the ground. Tom Howe floats through the air on his pole. X Jack Dee did the distances .git ff 1 Standing: Lemond, McCarthy, Hurley, Captain Downes, Gagen, Ronan, Sophie, Vestal, Errnatinger, Wagener, Rickard. Kneeling: Sullivan, Ashenden, Horan. Crilly, Kiely, Culhane, Wrenn, Born- hofen. Demonstrating: Craig and Coach Heffernan. CHA P5 AEAI The Loyola boxing squad, under the profes- sional guidance of Coach Jerry Heffernan. has once again merited the coveted title of the Illinois State Boxing Champions. In seven bouts this year the Loyola pugilists defeated Morgan Park Military Academy. 6-1: St. Bede Academy, 8-5: St. Philip High School, 7-35 Lewis Holy Name Institute, 6-lg and St. George High School, ll-l. There was also a draw with Holy Name Institute, 4-4. Only once in the last two years has the Loyola team suffered defeat. They fell on March 26 before the St. Philip team by a score of 7-3. Regular members of the squad were Cap- tain Mac Downes, Frank Gagen, Bill Crilly, Jim Kiely, Marty Horan, Ned Rickard, Bill Hurley, Jim Ashenden, Leo Wrenn, Ed Cul- hane, Harry Sullivan, and Louis Lemond. Captain Downes and Frank Gagen were the only seniors on the team. George Craig, for the past two years, has ably managed the boxers. This has also been his last year at Loyola. Page 58 In the early part of the season, injuries ac- counted for a gap in the team. Bob Wagener dislocated his shoulder in the Morgan Park bouts. Bill Tuohy broke his nose. These were the only two injuries suffered by the team in the whole season. The Academy boxers owe much of their success in the fistic world to the untiring efforts of their coach, Jerry Heffernan. Jerry, himself a great boxer at one time, teaches his boxers to win fights, and to win those fights the clean and hard way. The Loyola squad is rated for its ability to employ scien- tific boxing methods in the ring, and to exer- cise self control at all times. But Coach Heffernan also teaches his fighters the right way to lose. When a Loyola man is de- feated, Jerry makes sure that that man is the first to admit his defeat. Undoubtedly, Jerry Heffernan is one of the finest boxing instructors in the country, and we are indeed fortunate to have him at Loyola. MINIJH SPUHTS FLIIUHISH Gulf Until last season the Chicago Catholic League Golf Trophy had graced Loyo1a's trophy case for five consecutive years. Fen- wick broke that streak last spring to take the cup. This year, under the guidance of Mr. Alfred E. Schwind, S.J., coach, and Ed Garrity, cap- tain, the golfers hope to Wrest that title once again from Fenwick. From the thirty-five men who answered the call for try-outs, Mr. Schwind picked, in addition to Captain Garrity, Dick Seidel. Bob Geis, John Fenner, Ed O'Day, Dick Maginot, and several others. ln. Tennis Since the reorganization of tennis four years ago, Loyola has won three Catholic League championships and is well on its Way to a fourth. Replacing Mr. Paul S. Lietz, who had done so much for tennis at the Academy, was Mr. Robert A. Pollauf, S.J. Captain Jack Patter- son was out early in the season with illness: but two other Seniors, Dan Donovan and Bob Solari, made very fine showings. Backing them were newcomers Dick Westerschulte, Gerald FitzGerald, Howard Corman, Bob Starrs, and John Burns. Clare Acton was manager. ..... - h GCDLF Mr. Schwind. S.J.. Mag- inot. Seidel, O'Day. Owens. Captain Gar- rity, Fenner. TENNIS p MI. Pollauf s.J., Patter- l son, Donovan, Solari, Bums. Curry, Starrs, Feeley, David, FitzGer- ald, Westerschulte. Cor- man, Rose, O'Day. Q I W f f' ij, I Forth from esuit Schools, oining the Chivalry of Christ, the Ranks of Youth Emerge As OUR Graduates of 1941 go forth into higher education and the responsibilities of adult life, they are joined by columns of graduates from many other Jesuit schools. It is a trained, formidable army of youth, but its allegiance is to a Kingdom that is not of this world. Its members are joined in serried, marching ranks in the Mystical Body of Christ. Those ranks are indestructible. They have marched endlessly, following their Leader, waging His wars, winning hard victories, earning the one reward that satislies the heart of man. Individuals may fall by the wayg but the ranks march on and will march on through all human crises, tragedies, and triumphs. This army does not join the children of the world in their despairing search for a godlike man, it has no part in isms, panaceas, or utopias. Its greatest objective and its deepest joy are loyalty to its divine Leader and the benison of His love. As St. Ignatius began the work, which has lasted four centuries, in the grotto of Manresa, aloneg so, every Graduate of 1941, as a member of this prevailing spiritual army, knows his arena is the grotto of his own immortal soul. He knows that once he has attained, through grace, to an ardent love of the Son of God, "all these other things will be added." X .l 1 Y? fcafflxf YJ 'Q' 4: in f Q., .1 X 61:3- - six-iiiy ,Ig-l f l 4 lr -1 In I y 'l'll, , HH W "1. ,L ' ' ' 1' A ,W t,.,,l' it ! ff -wif' ? 61 -722'-124, ' if '- Q5 ,- ii FKQ 1 Q52 xv xg 'MN N ,N -1 ?f f' -' L 1, Zzyi Q1 f y. 'Q I V. LZ W ' 1 if f ra 1-fd? , , ,, 'naw QXX .,, 4 ggi: In Q, fs. 1 , , 'fi-fd' I, s X-Many G at gas? 9 J' ' ' . QA f,f,,1 zfgi, iff, lf! "if ,.2'Q?1'-'f3f'.f" 1, , , 1, gl 1' ,V 1 fm -' ffm., , ' ,H 4 EA I r ', f 1. 1 "ll' H A I "fi J '- ' ' H, 1, , mfg 1-fi,W mf lv 1, 1 F , GH. . 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S7 Q f 'J' , ,gn . 1, , .H ,T-f",1-f' M 3.991 ff, ,Af-4 W., .1-avg' v- -' nf" -1 J: fi" fi?- Z Q NME W, 'N X Jia "fm-. :Q-.f . 144444, X f, A ex--w.4,,4 5,415 fm W-F' XXX Xxx XX NA.N I MN -'iwxxxxxx 1 1 -1'5" -gg Youth THE future always belongs to youth, and youth is endowed with a charming, God-given enthusiasm for its heritage. Down the centuries, whether their dawn was brilliant with peace and promise or shrouded in threatening clouds and heavy gloom, the youth have always peered into the spreading light with brave, eager, searching eyes. The particular heritage of the Class of 1941 brings them face to face with a future menaced by forces alien to their tra- ditions and to their aspirations. For them, more than for most generations of youth, truly to live will be to contest and conquer. With a solemn though buoyant awareness of the rigors of the way that lies ahead, they whisper the prayer: "Lord, if Thou aft with us, who can be against us?" They dedicate themselves to the leadership of the Son of God, and march forth resolutely into a disorderly, dis- consolate world. It is in the spirit of this dedication that they present be M5565 ff f 1 5 x l 1 XV.--'5"Qyi5'?., X X 'ff " 29,5 1 .. I' Freshman Presidents Ed Langhenry, Lawrence Hayes, Cy Brennan, and Clifford Kennedy. THE FHESHMAN CLASS They Learn Hespnnsihility When the flurry and excitement of his gram- mar school graduation is over, after he has marched up that rosy aisle to accept the diploma from his pastor, a young, future high school "freshie" feels mighty important and mature. This feeling seems to open new vistas, for he is now material for higher train- ing. He is a graduate-of grammar school. There is no fear or apprehension in his heart, merely a confident realization that there is a race that must be run, that there is a goal that must be reached. He enters high school. That first day he wanders about the grounds dazedly. He marvels at the busi- nesslike registration, the perplexing effi- ciency, the dread struggle for books, the crush of terrified fellow-freshmen. He is filled with terror lest he misunderstand directions. Noxious Sophcmores, tired Jun- iors, and aloof Seniors worry him. The apprehensive Freshman wonders whether his father and mother realize what a prodigious step he is taking. Here he is to pass from childhood to youth. Do those parents actually remember the first day he rolled his trouser cuffs, bought that crazy hat, scribbled the names of his pals on his leather jacket, began to long for a jaloppy? For the Freshmen in the following pages. it was only a year ago that they went through their terrors, but by mid-year most of them had conquered their environment and had become first-stage Loyolans. Even some of these young men gave evidence of qualities of leadership. Through all the school's activities the Freshmen have had representatives. In their own branch of the Sodality, the Freshmen learned to connect all activity with their religion. United with the Sophcmores, Freshmen learned to express themselves in debates, to think clearly on their feet before an audience, and to argue intelligently. All the sports began in Freshman year so that the larger teams will get capable recruits in future years. Freshmen have always been an integral part of Loyola, and they develop in proportion to the realization they gain of their responsibilities. Page 65 FRESH AN Ward is one of the closest to the ground, yet he stays one of the highest in the class. Sullivan seems on his way to become another John L. Freitag coinbines music and stamps to get a lot of fun out of both. McKeon is the middle man in Loyola's absentee system. Bolger is a potential varsity debater. Barron the little man who is everywhere. DiGilio is a popular stroller in the corridors. Talkin never misses a word of the teacher or an exercise. Huart has secured the friendship of many and their scalps in ping-pong. O'Brien managed the I-M schedule for the class. Slattery makes the walls ring with sage remarks and clever rebuttals. O'Donnell is a student's student. Cerney is the living radio hero, mighty in athletics and studies. Gelderman is one of the lads who will take care of Loyola's future athletic reputation. Between laughs and cracks Trefny answers the questions. O'Neil clashes in true Loyola lightweight football tradition. Dowdle is the bruising blocker type, but he is as gentle as a lamb. "Yaller britches" is one nickname pinned to Finnin. Benbennick will burn the very cinders to dust, come a few more track meets. If only Hale could get his mind off those stamps, what a student he would be then! Luby rose from nothing to first trombone in the band his first year in music. Broeckl is called the "Thinker." Windsor holds more than his own on the trembling turf of the gridiron. Cleverly dried humor helps make Holland a smooth debater and a much-sought friend. Adding pounds to the goodfellowship in lA is Swenie. McElliott has solved many a tough algebra problem for himself and others. One of the select few to crash the Two Hundred Club in bowling is Schniedwind. Class honors and Weber are boon companions. One class president could not suffice for this class: so they elected Langhenry and Kennedy. Buckley has tasted the raisins of wrath dished out by almost every prof. Maloney merited a letter in the manly sport of football. Bowers presents a picture of perfect relaxation. Hegel shines in history. Clever argumentator is Constable. Sports dilettante is McNally. When he puts all his effort in one, look out for the star. Top: A. Ward. H. Sullivan. Freitag. McKeon, Bolger, Barron, DiGilio, Talkin, Huart, Jas. O'Brien. Slattery. Middle: D. J. O'Donnell, Cerney. T. Gelderman, Trefny, O'Neil, R. Dowdle, Finnin, J. Benbennick, Hale, J. Luby, Broeckl, Windsor. Bottom: Holland. Swenie, McElliott, Schniedwind. W. Weber, Langhenry, C. Kennedy, P. Buckley, J. Maloney, Bowers, Hegel, Constable. Absent: E. McNally. Page 66 Top: T. O'Donoghue, Barry, E. Romano, Scott, Vanden Branden, Cummings, Welby, Diederich. Middle: J. Cleary, R. Eisinger, T. Manley, Boesen, Eisler, D. Cleary. Crowe, Tromcm. Bottom: Merschel. J. McDonald, Plamondon, Compernol, D. Hines, W. J. Hurley, Hussian, Lawrence, Bowen. PHESHMA Generous O'Donoghue gives even his grades a chance. In defense of his Constitutional rights Barry will contest anyone in the school. Romano is a fellow who can lay his entire fortune on the line and have no fears of losing it. Scott's engaging grin doesn't seem to please his football opponents. Vanden Branden talks of his "jugs" as a baseball player would of his batting average. An expressive talker and an authority on bottles, jugs, etc. is Cummings. One of the hardest plugging men in the class is Welby. Diederich's keen, philosophical mind gave great promise, but God saw fit to take him away from us on April 30. Requiescat in pace. J. Cleary has the unusual ability to make anyone like him at first sight. Unassuming Eisinger commands the respect of his peers. Fourth down, eight to go. Does Manley kick? He does not. He carries the ball for a ten yard gain. That's bantam quarterback Manley. It was a long hard reach, but Boesen managed to pull down top honors. It really amazes Eisler's chums that one head can carry all he knows. D. Cleary is a fighter through and through, on the football field and basketball court, in the boxing ring and classroom. Crowe enjoys the Morse Code of his ham radio station more than the Code of Hammurabi. Troman, already a smooth player with the flyweight cagers, gives promise of making the Heavies in a year or two. Merschel's hair really doesn't bother him while he is laying low his opponents. The quiet, efficient manner of McDonald points to a future executive. With the imagination of the Immortal Bard, Plamondon transfers ordinary topics into masterly literary gems. Compernol is a whiz in his studies and on the hardwood. Hines is a living proof that energy has red hair. Hurley even at so early an age, is quite a man about town. Hussian is the Well-known originator of football jitterbugging. A soft Texan drawl proclaims the presence of Lawrence, just arrived from the state of one star. Bowen develops a puckish sense of humor while playing his favorite game of hockey. Page 67 Top: Conway, Templeman, Machrol, T. Weber, K. Sophie, Crowley, Moore, Gilligan, Morrisey, Deegan, T. McEvil1y. Middle: Clinnin, McCarty, Gormaly, Going, Ducey, Fallon, Driscoll, Rybski. S. Seidel, Bates J. Maginot. Bottom: Jos. Ahern, G. A. O'Brien, Donahue, Christoph, David, L. Hayes. Gibson, J. Reed, Ermatinger, Oberlin, Mohan. Absent: Chuckas. FHESHM N Tiny ton of dynamite, double trouble, and brilliant scholar . . . that's Conway. Templeman is a swinging sax man in the band. Machrol does better when he doesn't stop to think. Weber is considered the most loyal Sodalist in the room. From a long line of Sophies comes the boxer in lC. Alert Crowley is always on the qui Vive. Moore can with accuracy be called a practical prestidigitator. Gilligan keeps his eyes and ears open for humor in any- thing. When the starting signal blows, Morrisey stops his clowning and becomes a hard skillful worker in the cage game. Deegan has successfully established himself as a con- sistant honor man. McEvilly will be glad to demonstrate the correct way of reading aloud. Trap drums are Clinnin's bread, bed, and exercise. McCarty owns part share in an organi- zation called Melody Crew. No one knows what daylight saving time will do to Gorrnaly's schedule. Going denies it, but he does have a drawl. Ducey manages to have his home- work done every day . . . before three. Fallon is the pool champ of the room. Two or three broken bones haven't kept Driscoll from earning his reputation as "most jovial" in the room. Rybski can hold a brilliant conversation under cover of a Latin book. The football hero type is ,easily discerned in Seidel. Bates snares anything two feet off the ground in the outfield. Busy Maginot managed the basketball team and now is on the golf squad. Without any fuss Ahern easily gets first honors. O'Brien manages to hold a straight face at his own quips. Donahue has elected himself official class prankster. "Christy Christoph and His Band" will perhaps be a reality someday. Proof of Hayes' popularity was his election as class president. Gibson's manner is a sure winner of friends. His vast wind capacity enables Reed to play with the band and splash with the swimming team. Ermatinger is a most efficient combination of boxer and debater. Oberlin is a stalwart letter man. Mohan is the man who writes the tests on the board. Chuckas has made a place for himself in the L.A. band. Page 68 PHESHMAN Harrington is quite popular despite his singing. Sweet and his piano are a well-liked combina- tion. Bredemann is a Whistler in his own right and a real debater in anybody's league. They say that Burns has a little green book filled with "information." Hawks seems to have his eyes fixed on some kind of trophy, Latin perhaps. Under the guiding hand of Father Toomey, amor omnia vincit in lD. Thus Houlihan finds "love taps" easier to take than "jug raps." Williams doesn't get so many squeaks out of that clarinet. Witty McEvilly even amuses teachers with some of those famous remarks. Wallace is thorough in everything he does from performances in the swimming pool to the classroom. Pieces of leather moving like trip hammers are seen when Conway boxes. O'Donnell has no trouble in persuading his basketball to go through the hoop. Pauls croons his mournful way through sad algebra classes. Trim Gregori has that certain something that makes life easy among the fairer admirers. From the far corner of the room floats that humor of Ringling to spice a truly representative Loyola class. Diving, running, boxing, and the rest find favor with Hughes. Take a little Latin and little Tom Doody, and you have enough to talk about. High and low pitch on the clarinet mean nothing at all to Condren. Reed is a steady follower of bantam- weight basketball. Quinn amuses himself with a "ham" radio set. O'Brien's final sprint in the morning occasionally makes the second bell. The art of D'Artagnan is found in the foil of Roche. Cy Brennan capably holds the office of class president. Runge has his own way on the gridiron, and nobody cares to stop him. "Almost good enough is lousy" applies to Miller who is sad at ninety. Kilroy is the most unobstrusively efficient member of the class. Sullivan handles the La Conga or a basketball with the same facile grace. Patullo likes Latin just about as well as any student can. Top: R. Harrington, Sweet, Bredemann, K. Burns, Hawks, J. Houlihan, O. Williams, M. McEvil1y. Middle: Wallace, R. Conway, D. F. O'Donnell, Fauls, Gregori, Ringling, Hughes, Doody, Condren. Bottom: H. Reed, J. L. Quinn, F. O'Brien, Roche, Brennan, Runge, Miller, J. Kilroy, R. Sullivan, Patullo. Page 69 Top: Klein, Amberg, Croke, Clarke, G. Schnitzius, Collis, Forrestal, Boveri, Eichorst. Middle: Free- man. Massion, Breen, D. Heffernan, Whalen, Clohisy, Powrie. Cashion, Duda. Bottom: J. T. Quinn, Boehme. Wolfe, D. Ryan. Graham, Lemond. Sheehan, W. O'Brien, Mulvihill, Lane. FRESH AN Klein is a pal of everyone, teachers and fellows alike. Amberg is a diving coach's dream come true. Pool shark Croke has a long, long swim to school. Clarke puts his little heart into social work. Vibrant tones are coaxed from Schnitzius' saxaphone. Collis has somehow won fame as a lady-killer, from his boxing reputation no doubt. Look for Forrestal where you would think of finding nobody else, and you'll meet him. With his spaghetti and a few sports Boveri would be happy on a desert island. Eichorst is known as a friend who never fails. Freeman is noted for his craftily constructed debate case. Massion is the musician of this happy-go-lucky class. Breen consists of a Webster funabridgedl, a terrific back stroke, and plenty of red thatching. Heffernan can sink a basketball from any angle, almost. Whalen lives on that border line between a scholar and a nuisance. Clohisy says it in clear-toned cornet music. At a little more than a mile, Powrie is recognized by his chic chapeau. Cashion is aglow with personality: you know, that stuff that makes you smile. Duda is practicing for a contest with Adam Lazonga. What Quinn doesn't do and say in class he repeats five times outside the classroom sanctum. Boehme runs up a mean total every time he touches a basketball. Perhaps the fiery personality of Wolfe can be traced to his carrot top. Ryan is the titanic terror of swimming opponents and unwary vitamins. Graham claims to know a fellow with more lady friends than even he can handle. As evidence of the high opinion his class holds of him, Lemond was elected lA class president. Sheehan may Well be the white hope of the squared circle, but he will always be the same gentlemanly scholar that he is today. Track artist O'Brien seems to be capable of keeping up with anything. Tall, dark, and handsome Mulvihill won't give the fairer ones a chance. Fred Allen, .lack Benny, Pro- fessor Quiz, .lack Dempsey form one person in merry, capable Clem Lane. Page 70 THE SUPHU IIHE EL!-l55 The Freshman lirnws Up A milestone has been reached in a boy's education when he steps into his second year high school classroom. Now he is a one year's veteran of secondary education. There are no further mysteries to expect. His one lament is that the Freshmen are so small this year, poor, insignificant creatures in first year. He confides to an old grammar school chum, "I remember when I started to high school." He knows teachers. Perhaps an upper- classman recognizes him. He finds that he can grandly say, "Hello," to a youngster just up from the grade schools without im- pairing his dignity. His is the world, and he makes the most of it. Soon he finds that Latin is a Writhing ser- pent that has been slumbering for a year. The experience does' not worry him too much. He is a Sophomore, and that is com- pensation enough for unpleasant days. Greek and French and geometry bother him, but he will not admit it openly. He is learn- ing to bear his burdens patiently and to conceal his feelings like a man. To his delight he finds that the coaches remember him, and perhaps he makes a Suphnmure Presidents Tom Kohl, Edward Ryan, and Francis Cushing. team or two. Then comes the monogram. At home and in his neighborhood his little emblazoned chest nearly bursts with pride, for he is still a boy there: but at school he wears his letter with a mien' that shows he merely gained the honor and distinction which he had long deserved. His social life expands. Big talk and nervous apprehension struggle for domi- nance in his party life. He must be "smooth", he must appear sophisticated. After all, he is a Sophomore now. Still, under this shining veneer of the Sophomore, there is the heart of a noble lad. He is only struggling for recognition in a world that must accept him: even though the antics through which he goes to gain that recognition cause older lips to smile. Sophomore year is the year that most needs the curbing influence of Jesuit edu- cation. If the boy is to be a leader of his fellowmen in after years, he must be led aright when he himself is most needy of guidance. This year's Sophomores at Loyola have been an exceptional lot. They go on in their education for leadership already bear- ing the stamp of Jesuit character training. Page 71 Top: Landgren, Jurney, Dunn, Larney, Allie, Morozowicz, G. A. O'Brien, Sanders, Clifford, Mc- Cormick. Middle: Howe. Gast, Adamson, J. Eisinger, Hyland, Horan, Colnon, R. Spellman, Ash- enden, Weiler. Bottom: Daly, Ray, Boll, L. Brown, Starrs, J. Gelderman, G. P. Sullivan, O'Laughlin, F. O'Connell, Maher. Absent: O'Donoqhue. SUPHIJ UHE ll Landgren manages to get good grades despite his playfulness. Forrest Jurney's strange nickname is "Si1va Iter." Dunn owns a half interest in the Jurney-Dunn record player. Larney is such a whiz at geometry that he has invested in a sliderule. Stephen Allie is the youngest member of the class, but gives the older fellows a hard run for the honor roll. See Morozo- wicz's match box collection and die. O'Brien is frequently puzzled by his own questions. Sanders lies awake at night figuring out trick pool shots. Clifford absorbs prodigious amounts of culture in the library. Aeronautics means a lot more to McCormick than does Latin. Howe is indispensable, particularly during examinations. Casanova had nothing on Gast. "Flash" Adamson's shirts and ties would make a court jester jealous. "Do it now and do it well," is Eisinger's motto. Just mention Shirley to Hyland. Leather lugger Horan is a bright star on the L.A. boxing horizon. "Crunch, crunch." Termites? No, it's Colnon eating his way through class. Spellman seems to spend three hours on Spanish alone. The only time Ashenden disturbs his hair is when he is in the ring making life miserable for somebody else. Weiler plans to be another Gene Krupa, only better. Silent, stalwart Daly is a rare combination of athlete and scholar. Ray could dive into a bath tub from a shower rod with championship form. Boll toots a mean clarinet: just ask the neighbors. Brown has a different letter for every day of the week. Starrs is a fine debater, modest and brilliant scholar, and a mighty popular member of his class. Gelderman is more at home on the gridiron than anywhere else in the world. Sullivan thinks that it's easier to sell automobiles than Latin books. Public speaking and sign language are O'Laughlin's specialties. Well, anyway, O'Connell has a light heart. Maher spends more energy in a test than the whole boxing team in a tough meet. The ten-pins strike O'Donoghue's fancy, but they get struck right back. Page 72 SUPHIJ HBE B High spirits, good humor, and an unrivaled generosity mark 2B. Snake-hipped Conroy gets around on the intramural girdiron. They set the clock when Spencer arrives with split-second punctuality at the portals of a nearby academy. Already VanDerBosch cuts a national figure on the ice. Ramos is the inspiration of the 2B mission-minded. Pugnacious little Buckley stands ever ready to defend his literary views. Welcome in any group, "Corky" Caparros is athlete from his grinning eyes to his educated toe. Powell holds ct considerable amount of TNT in his capable fists. Wolf is affectionately known in his class as a real "Brain Buster." Bantamweight basketball was mightily aided by Cuny. Houlihan excels at reading Shylock's lines with a rare Irish brogue. Thundering bowling pins and geometry teachers enliven the day for Abens. The chummy type is Reilly who loves his chum so much that he holds him beyond his "L" stop. Hobbs excels all in his ability to alibi. Stamps, model airplanes, etc., are all included in the manifold hobbies of Gardini. No section of athletics seems to daunt Van Oppens, but he coasts even easier through the academic side of life. The mile run and French are sufficient to keep Rice occupied. A friend described unassuming Hayes as good test insurance. Rush has never caused anyone pain. What was that definition of Newman's gentleman? Rouse lives for the Prep, and the paper gains through his sacrifices. Ample and affable Hickey carried water to thirsty footballers and harried teachers with long-track questions. Madden is a superior athlete but still one of the gang and an honor man to boot. Seeberg is a coach's dream in the well populated cage game. Greek and Latin rest easily on the mind of Greenwold. To a dance manager de luxe add a debonair socialite and you have Murphy. Colbertaldo cuts through the green waters of the L. A. pool like a hot knife through butter. Cold shutters click up and down Camera Clubman Kelly's spine. Stolid O'Malley is one of the strongest supports of 2B. Top: C. Conroy, R. Spencer. E. VanDerBosch, Ramos, B. Buckley, R. Caparros. Powell. Middle: Wolf, Cuny, E. Houlihan, Abens, R. Reilly, Hobbs, Gardini, Van Oppens, Rush. Bottom: D. Hayes, Rouse, J. Hickey, Madden, Seeberg, Greenwold, W. Murphy, Colbertaldo. Absent: W. Kelly. D. O'Malley. Page 73 SIIPHU UHE II If Bornhofen continues to gather friends at his present rate he won't know what to do with them all. Pelczar still maintains that he is not weighed down at all by his chest full of medals. Neville is the official information bureau of his class. Culhane is one of the most effective boxers ever to hit Loyola. A staunch representative of the Emerald Isle is O'Brien. Handball and hamburgers are the joys of Geis' life. Siegler is the well-known manager of the L. A. track team. Goebel snares those elusive honors very easily. Sackley shares the enjoyment of his food but not the food itself. Wrenn is a smooth, hardworking cog in the boxing machine. The Lightweight Basketball team wouldn't be the same without Dolan. Stephan's bowling rides on a par with his marks. If the Loyola line gave last year it was because Skoglund was not in there. Hein was selected as captain of the intramural basketball team. Perhaps it is his Conga facility that makes Feeley a fine tennis player. Ryan helps put across a radio show. The 440 is a breeze when run by VanDerBosch. The danger in Gould's looks in the ring is surpassed only by the danger in his fists. Dahlin is the sparkling peppery light of the class. C. O'Brien is a deadly shot with a .22. Heffernan has everything but the brogue. McNulty was a smiling terror on the Bantamweight Basketball team. Wall has merely to laugh, and the whole room laughs with him. Kohl was a raging fury in the L. A. line this year until he broke his ankle. Ahern lays a valid claim to being the room's champion handball player. Curry is only slightly rabid about airplanes. Fenner can't imagine why he got only ninety- eight in that last exam. Denten sports what is commonly known as a "Crout Cut." Mulvaney occasionally splashes in the pool long enough to win a race or two. Callaghan is a most appreciative audience to any kind of joke no matter how funny it isn't. "Buy your bid from Murphy," is the usual line when dance time rolls around. Top: Bornhofen, Pelczar, Neville, Culhane, R. O'Brien, Geis, Siegler, Goebel, Sackley. Middle: . Wrenn, Dolan, Stephan, Skoglund, Hein, Feeley, T. Ryan: R. VanDerBosch. Gould, Dahlin. Bottom: C. O'Brien, B. Heffernan, J. McNulty, Wall, Kohl, J. Ahern, J. Curry, Jos. Fenner, W. Denten. Absent: Mulvaney, Callaghan. Murphy. Page 74 Top: Alonzi. T. McDonald. Schlag, R. Surges, Farley, W. Surges. Benz, Marulli. Middle: Condon. Bopp, Vestal. M. Harrington. Kearney, Zangerle. Erd, McGuinn. Bottom: Cabanski, Green J. O'Connor. Owens. Corboy, F. Cushing, McCue, J. Barr, J. Wellbank. Absent: J. O'Brien. SIJPHUMUHE ll Alonzi always seems to have the good of the other fellow at heart. McDonald has found the high schools of the suburbs very attractive. Schlag will tell you who the French scholar in this class is . . . it's Schlag. R. Surges envies Maximilian his Charlotte. Farley can do more for a passage of Latin than Caesar could. W. Surges' excellent marks bear witness to his constant application. Benz knows well the meaning of the word "cosmopolite." The shortest distance between two points is that between Marulli and the door at 3:00 o'clock. Condon has won the admiration of his fellow students for the quite way he takes every- thing. Bopp's quiet sincerity has helped much in amassing the grades he has. Vestal is a very avid partaker of those rare and volatile spirits . . . school spirit. Harrington has trouble finding time for French, Latin, and Cisca. Kearney's clothes aren't really loud: you just imagine that you hear them. Zangerle was the life and hope of the intra-mural basketball team. Erd is the class representative on the gridiron, and from all reports he is a mighty good representative. No one can tell whether McGuinn is more devoted to his studies or to athletics. It is difficult to see the streak that is Cabanski until he decides to stop running. Green would most probably deny that he is "smooth,". but his comrades at school think that they know better. O'Connor has six feet twe are talking about his heightl and ten times as many friends. Owens thinks that there is no joy like that inspired by the dextrose in a chocolate bar. Corboy may not have the old-fashioned line: but when he talks to the little ones, the effect is the same. Cushing doesn't say much Cwhich may be to his creditli but when he talks, he knows whereof he speaks. McCue is admirably suited for exploring the stratosphere in which his head and shoulders wander. Fiery Barr plays such a hot game of basketball that he burns up the opponents. Wellbank will be able to outrun any bill-collector for at least the first six-sixty. O'Brien showed talent in the class skit for the school movie. Page 75 SUI-'HU UHE E Carbone has such a timely stock of information that he cannot stump himself with his own questions. When he wishes to relax after a hard day at school, Hassmer goes to the gym for a restful game of handball. To the intense delight of his professors, Higgins completes everything he starts. Riley can give a wonderful account of himself when it comes to a battle of wits with anyone. It would be worth a trip to Havana to see Hicks sway to the sultry rhythm of La Conga. Williams would appreciate some suggestion on how to escape graciously from his large following of female admirers. Nietschmann stoutly maintains that he would be the last one in the school to board the interlinear. Kapusnik can absorb more in a semi-conscious state that most wide awake Juniors. Desks are apparently insolvable puzzles to Paton. McNulty shows a shrewd business ability to his wary classmates. No hot air for Witteried, who is heart and soul for the great out doors. R. E. Meyer is a real honest- to-goodness platter bug. O'Hara is about the only one who enjoys himself when the win- dows are open. There are no plots to take away Harasek's well-earned title of Spanish King of the room. To use a common idiom for a change, Hanna is a "gun." Schmitz has the very deuce of a time removing his troublesome rubbers before class. Ryan has no reason to fear for his future success at football. When one watches Curry walk leisurely down the hall, one wonders where the lightning is that makes him such a flashy basketeer. For some un- accountable reason McCaffrey has been dubbed "Dude." Osborne's biggest moments are when the honor ribbons are being awarded. Although Benbennick has no flowing hair, he still remains an artist at heart. Dick Meyer has a tremendous capacity for work and food. Top: Carbone, Hassmer, Higgins, Riley. Hicks, N. Williams. Middle: Nietschmann, Kapusnik, Paton, R. McNulty, Witteried, R. E. Meyer, O'Hara. Bottom: Harasek, Hanna, Schmitz, E. Ryan, H. Curry. McCaffrey, Osborne. Absent: C. Benbennick, R. F. Meyer. Page 76 Junior Presidents Thomas Leahy. Robert O'Too1e, and Edward Powers. THE .IU IUH CLASS They Start tn Lead Loyola has every reason to believe that the high standards set by so many graduating classes will be nobly upheld by this year's Juniors. If the character of the class as a whole is as fine as that of individual mem- bers in that class, Loyola need have no fear that its reputation for developing the whole man will suffer. There are numerous examples of boys who are threatening to remove from their pedestals the traditional "greats" of the Academy. In sports the future appears bright. Two fine football players, Bog Foehringer and Jack Dee, should bring L. A. to the notice of the city. Two long desired goals may be won by the cagers. The Catholic League Championship and the National Tournament are not merely dreams with Art O'Brien, Jim Doyle, Jack Dee, and Don LaVigne on the floor. For the boxers a third straight title is in prospect. The way should be cleared by the fists of Bill Hurley, Ned Rickard, and Jim Kiely. The Loyola Prep is already running smoothly under the Junior editor-in-chief, John Festle. Gerald FitzGerald, Jim Wetzel, Bay McDermott, and Dick Westerschulte are assurance enough that the same efficiency of the staff will continue throughout the year. Through long hours of patient coaching and willing cooperation on the part of the students, Loyola has established itself as a stronghold of debating skill. The clear logic and sincere presentation of such men as Neil Maloney, Tom Ward, Frank Milligan, John Festle, James McCourt, and Eric Rosengren will go a long way to maintain the strength of that position. Likewise the band, the Sodality, the vari- ous clubs, the Christmas drive, and all other traditional activities of Loyola will be carried on by the spirited Junior class. These are the external manifestations of a splendid class, but it is the class that lives up to the ideals of the school all the time that is the immortal class. Self sacrifice on the part of the members of a class deter- mines in the end whether that class will live. The ideals of Loyola are the ideals of St. Ignatius whose spirit gives Loyola life. The Junior class has come far in acquiring that spirit of St. Ignatius: so they can rightly look forward to immortality. Their work is Ad Maiorem Dei Gloriam. Page 77 A Top: Westerschulte, Festle, Wetzel, McDermott, Reed, Jos. Kiely, Schaefer, Jas. Kiely, Lynch, Corman. Gronau. Middle: Dwyer, R. Maginot, Latter, Walker, R. Halligan. K. Manley, Thompson. Steggert. Milligan. N. Maloney. LaVigne. Bottom: Hanses. Holmes, FitzGeraId, V. Cushing. P. Weber. O'Toole, J. Kelly, Doyle. Elward. Hecht, Herweg. UNIUH I-l The Literary Editor of the school paper is capable and witty Westerschulte. Steady labor of several years gained for Festle the post of head pilot on the Prep. Wetzel can tell you all about points and picas in this class of newspaper men. McDermott has championship swimming form and championship editorial form in the sports department. Reed is by no means a draw- back to the scholastic record of this class. Dulcet tones are seldom coaxed from an oboe by an amateur, but anyone can testify to the sweetness of Joe Kiely's reed. Schaefer throws the beefiest tales of anyone in this room. Jim Kiely has vowed to appear on every informal shot in the school. Lynch graphically demonstrates his aversion to barber shops by shaving his head. One hundred yards are just so many seconds to the winged feet of Corman. Gronau is an enterprising young man with many, many ideas. Dwyer wields a wicked tennis racket and a clever basketball. People wonder what Maginot does with all his first honor ribbons. Between classes Latter shows real wrestling skill. Walker traffics in the wisdom of the ages at the book store. Halligan is the personification of the pep and spirit of the "pony" basketeers. Manley can rock a cradle or jam a gate four floors down with his clarinet. Thompson is a literary genius who keeps an entertaining smile. The lad who squeezes the sponge of gener- osity in 3A is mission collector Steggert. Milligan stands out in an outstanding class as a fine scholar, debater, Sodality officer, orator, and associate editor on the paper. Another loafer in this class is Neil Maloney who is president of Cisca's Holy Hour Guild, helps edit the Prep, debates, orates, and carries first honors. LaVigne is a fast, smooth Working cog in the Light- weight Basketball machinery. Latin and Greek must give way under the studious attack of Hanses. Dignity and Holmes get on well together. Another newspaper man and orator of forceful style is FitzGerald. Math and cameras divide Cushing's interest. Weber just could not subsist Without his quart of milk for lunch. The cheerful president of 3A is companionable O'Toole. Cameras and what develop from them form the hobby of Kelly. Doyle is a classy player on the varsity basketball team. Elward is the energetic president of the Stamp Club. Hecht is the solo French horn artist in the Academy band. The Bar-B-Q expert of the class is Herweg: his specialty is Hot Feet. Page 78 UNIIJH B Dillon has acquired a sparkling reputation for skilful handling of the basketball. P. O'Brien calmly takes care of his extra-curricular activities. The "zip" of a tennis ball throws Burns into athletic ecstasies. Ambassador Kennedy holds the class diplomatic situation well in hand. There is just one hundred and eighteen pounds too much of Rickard according to his boxing opponents. McNulty is more forceful with his quiet mien than his more riotous companions with all their noise. Foehringer is the varsity football team's magnificent molecule. J. O'Brien is the soul of determination. Barrettsmith bears a slight resemblance to the Sphinx. Buechner is an exceptional shutter bug in the camera club. Graydon is a determined plugger in the classroom and on the gridiron. Rosengren is contributing more than his share to the school's scholastic reputation. Steel-lipped Moeri supplies twenty per cent of the band's volume. Barr still hasn't found the tack hidden in his desk. The class is whipped to a dizzy pace by the pounding drums of Carnahan. McKinley's dramatically resonant voice leads him far in the field of speaking. Keegan embodies the polite strength of the class. Howard has a sharp wit and his friends frequently feel the point. Goodrich finds a place in his life for the weightiest problems and the newest jokes. Many unhappy basketball opponents were left in Rothing's wake as he shot down the floor. Leahy is the popular helmsman of the 3B ship of state and one of its most prominent representatives in the extra-curricular activities of the school. Buttimer shows a surprising ability to get along with his grades. Lamey deserves a magna cum laude for his work in the band. The future holds no hope for those debating opponents opposing McCourt. Saracco blows sweetly into his clarinet, and it comes out just as sweet as it went in. McNally is one of the strongest of the band's supports. Hurley will do even more efficient work next year on the L.A. boxing team. "Adolph" .lagor is not related in any way to his mustachioed namesake. A. O'Brien is one of the finest centers L.A. has seen in many years. If silent men are strong, Waldo has the strength of giants. Some day Rockelman may not be smiling. That day will be exceptional. Top: Dillon, P. O'Brien, J. Burns, J. Kennedy, Rickard, T. McNulty, Foehringer, Jos. O'Brien. Middle: Barrettsmith, Buechner, Graydon. Rosengren, Moeri, R. Barr, Carnahan, McKinley. Bottom: Keegan, Howard, Goodrich, Rothing. T. Leahy. Buttimer. Lamey, McCourt. Absent: Saracco, J. McNally. W. G. Hurley, Jagor, A. O'Brien, Waldo, Hockelman. Page 79 Top: Tunk, Tarrant, Hassett, Dee, Wheatley, Dolin, Baumer, McIntyre, H. Sophie. Middle: Gieselman, McCarthy, Bendix, McGarry, Elster, Rose, T. O'Malley, T. Ward, Gannon, Hand, Griffin. Bottom: Adam, P, Costello, Creutz, Best, Powers, W. Spencer, Koehl, Roman, Goode, McKendry. UNIUH ll "Trig is a snap," quoth Tunk as he asked his sister to help him with the log of .0OOO306785l03. Even Tarrant's fast, slippery game of basketball does not seem to be able to stop his char- acteristic chuckles. Hassett has the intention of becoming an authority on literary culture. Dee slipped high scoring honors in his pocket while playing on the basketball team, after a fine season on the varsity football squad. Wheatley took over the job of scientific genius of the class. Intramural captain Dolin has kept the team fighting for first place. A radial type engine may not mean much to the average person, but this is only a part of the air- plane hobby of Baumer. Mclntyre is another versatile athlete . . . boxer, basketball and football player. Sophie's actions in the swimming pool speak louder than any words can. Gieselman lines up countless appointments in many places, and the peculiar part of it is he keeps them all. Popping leather mittens describe McCarthy in the boxing bouts. Bendix should not be consulted . . . he wants to know too. The magnetism of his personality has drawn a host of friends to McGarry while at Loyola. Elster is a grinding, driving full- back who recognizes the value of team work. Some say that Bose is almost a daily com- muter to Lake Forest. The melodious whistle of O'Malley can always be heard . . . always. Ward is a fine debater, and his steady hard work on the books has placed him permanently on the honor roll. Just a glance at Gannon will give a reason for his great popularity. Hand is strong support to any man's basketball team. Latin is the top rung of Griffin's ladder of successful studies. Class businessman Adam used a piece of wood, a few alphabetical noodles, shellac, glue, and a pin to start his fortune. Who will deny that Costello has "sax appeal"? Creutz is a caper-cutter in class and a rug-cutter outside. Best probably runs the most efficient stable in the class. Class prexy Powers may truly be called a gentleman and a scholar. To say the least, Spencer has, and keeps, his own opinions. Koehl's musical laugh sets the pace in 3C. Muscular Roman causes that dreamy look to come into a coach's eye. Goode manages to maintain his good sense of humor in fair weather and out. McKendry's prides are his stamps and maps. Page 80 UNIUH ll This class may be more familiarly known as 3A'. The only distinction between this class and its mother room is that, when the English class of 3A was divided because of its size, this part was put in one room and 3A proper was put in another. The only other distinction is the distinct individuality of each member of this room. Roeder has discovered the secret of exerting himself strenuously without mussing his hair. Henry says many things with his expressive silence. There is depth to a fellow like Brown, and in a little while the world will see it. Crilly is probably one of the best boxers ever to matriculate at this leather-conscious Academy. Sullivan was only prevented from making the team by his size. Reilly is a baritone "booper" in the Loyola band and a personality peddler in his own right. Romano is the agile, bruising type of football star. A swoop and a swish and Foley skies off in graceful descent. If Seidel is as successful in his future pursuits as he is in his studies and golfing gambols, he will do very well. Good-natured Spellmctn only stops laughing when it would hurt someone e1se's feelings. To see or hear O'Connell in his mimic act is to see a master at work. Smith seized the class presidency by an overwhelming majority. DuShane can literally make his trombone cry. Lang gives off Cicero's orations with a flourish that even the master himself might envy. With this class we finish the underclasses. The story of the individuals as they appear in these short lines is, of course, incomplete.. Through three years these boys have studied, played, had their troubles and their joys. Fixing the proximate goal of their senior year before them, they have done every day's work with the prospect of one day passing from underclassmen to Seniors and thence out into the world prepared to take their places leading men, themselves following the Leader Whose guidance they have learned to love at Loyola. Top: Roeder, Henry, D. Brown. Crilly, Geo. D. Sullivan, J. Reilly, H. Romano. Bottom: Foley, R. Seidel W. Spellman, J. O'Connell, Smith, DuShane, Lang. Page 81 I N M E M U H I A M WILLIAM G DIEDERICH Requ escat 1n Pace A First -Year Loyolan i . THE SENIUH EI. SS Mrs AND nuns MAC DOWNES Vice-President The last bell has tolled farewell, and the Seniors have taken their leaves. Soul, mind, and body, they are truly tempered by the Jesuit master-process of education as they confidently march forth to meet the chal- lenge of tomorrow. Perhaps, long years after that challenge is met, and tomorrow is passed, the bell may toll again, at midnight, and the memory of the Class of '41 may haunt the Academy's campus and halls. Deep in a tiny, smoke-hung chamber, editor Clare Acton will once more click off copy for the Prep. Short, fleet Bob Wagener will skirt the cinder circuit to gain more half- mile championships. Up in a classroom, the amazing Paul Quay will translate his way to another second place in the Interscholastic Latin Contest. And in a palely-illuminated ring, Captain Mac Downes will scientifically canvas an- other victim. From the rostrum will come the friendly yet ruthless rebuttals of Ed Murphy, one of Loyola's Tri-State Jesuit Debate Tourney title- holders. Across the springy turf of the grid- MATT SCHNITZIUS Senior Class President I w 1 BOB O'CONNOR Treasurer and Secretary iron, Tom Spencer will thunder like an uncontrollable vengeance. That firebrand, Bill Curran, will lend his literary genius to the editorship of another precedent-surpassing Grad Prep: while Charlie Kemen and Joe Geraghty flash and pass flawlessly down the hardwood with Loyola's bucket-brigadiers. Sheldon Hayes, class magician, will mix the black arts with debating to present most startling lessons on the dangers of increased Federal power: while Jack Moloney will cruise the water-lanes as one of the fastest paddlers in the city. Dynamic Bill Halligan's voice will again claim victory in the annual Oratorical Con- test, and Don Normoyle will once more caper through his riotous characterization of Henry Aldrich in "What a Life." Of a class of such scholars as Al Sommer and of such athletes as Charlie Mennes, the officers had to be men of honors and sports. Such men were Matt Schnitzius, Mac Downes, and Bob O'Connor. Page 83 C F Acton J. W. Bebber N. W. Benedict E L Brown J. R. Caparros W. A. Carroll CLARE F. ACTON First Honors 1, 2, 3. 4: Debating 2, 3, 4: Prep 2, 3, 4, editor-in-chief 4: Grad Prep 4. activities editor: Cisca 4: Dramatics 4: Sodal- ity 1, 2, 3, 4: Junior Activity Plaque 3. JOHN W. BEBBER First Honors 4, Second Honors 3: Class Officer: vice president 2, secretary l, 3: Acolytes 2: Sodality 4. NEIL W. BENEDICT Entered Loyola Academy in the autumn of 1940 from Evanston High School, Evanston. THOMAS J. BORGSTROM Second Honors 4: Band l, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 1, 2, 4. EDWARD J. BROCKMAN Grad Prep 4: Dance Committee 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Dramatics 4: Prom Com- Paqe 84 T. J. Borgstrom E. J. Brockman F. P. Coari K. A. Cook mittee 4: Sodality 3, 4: Football 3, 4: Track 3, 4: Tennis 4. EUGENE L. BROWN Class Honors l, First Honors 2, Second Honors 3, 4: Acolytes 1, 2, 3: Sodality 1: Football 4: Basketball 3, 4: Swimming l. JOSEPH R. CAPARROS Sodality 3, 4: Football 2, 3, 4: Basketball 3. WILLIAM A. CARROLL Entered Loyola Academy in the autumn of 1940 from Quigley Preparatory Seminary, Chicago. FRANCIS P. COARI Debating 3: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. KENNETH A. COOK, JR. Shutter 3: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 1, 4. J. WILLIAM COSTELLO, JR. Band 1, 2: Sodality 3, 4: Swimming 3, 4: Track 3, 4. GEORGE A. CRAIG Second Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 3, 4: Boxing 1, 2, manager 3, 4. WILLIAM W. CURRAN Class Honors 1, 2, First Honors 3, 4: Class Officer: president 3, vice president 4: De- bating l, 2, 3, 4: Prep 2, 3, 4, associate editor 4: Grad Prep. 4, editor-in-chief: Dramatics 4: Dance Committee 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 3, 4: Track 2: Boxing 2: Rostrum Award Plaque 3: Junior Activity Plaque 3: Cincinnati Debate Charn- pionship 3: Book Review Contest, first place 4. ARTHUR J. DENTEN First Honors 1, 2, Second Honors 3, 4: Class Officer: secretary 3: Prep 2, 3: Sodality 2, 3, 4: Football 2. HENRY A. DIRKSEN, JR. Debating 3. DANIEL L. DONOVAN, JR. Second Honors 3: Debating 2: Dramatics 3: Sodality 4: Tennis 3, 4. JOHN A. DOWDLE ' Class Officer: vice president 2, 4: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. THOMAS P. DOWDLE, JR. Class Officer: vice president 1, secretary 2: Cisca 3, 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 1, 2: Swimming l, 2: Track 1, 2: Boxing 4. FRANK M. DOWNES Class Officer: president 4: Senior Class Vice President: Student Council 4: Prep 3, 4, news editor 4: Grad Prep 4: Dramatics 3, 4: Band l, 2, 3, 4: Dance Committee 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 4: Football 1: Track 1, 2: Boxing 2, 3, 4, captain 4. ROBERT J. DREIS First Honors 1: Basketball 3, 4. J. W. Costello G. A. Craig W. W. Curran A. J. Denten H. A Dirksen D. L. Donovan J. A. Dowdle T. P. Dowdle F. M. Downes R J Dreis Page 85 J. J. Enright W. G. Erdmann W. K. Essman J. W. Fitzpatrick W. C. Fleming W. J. Foley JOHN J. ENRIGHT Sodality 4. WILLIAM G. ERDMANN Acolytes 2, 3: Sodality 3, 4: Football 3: Basketball 1. WILLIAM K. ESSMAN Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Boxing 1, 2, 3. JOHN V. FAHEY Acolytes 2, 3, 4: Sodality 1. 2, 3, 4. JOHN C. FENNER First Honors 1, 4, Second Honors 2, 3: Sodality 2, 3, 4: Swimming 3. JAMES W. FITZPATRICK First Honors 1, Second Honors 3, 4: Aco- lytes 1, 2, 3: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. Page 86 J. V. Fahey J. C. Fenner J. J. Forristal F. J. Gagen WILLIAM C. FLEMING Dramatics 4. WILLIAM J. FOLEY Entered Loyola Academy in the autumn of 1940 from Quigley Preparatory Seminary, Chicago. Sodality 4. JOHN J. FORRISTAL First Honors 1, Second Honors 2: Dramat- ics 4: Sodality 1, 2. FRANK J. GAGEN, JR. Second Honors 1, 2, 3: Prep 2, 3, 4: Grad Prep 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 3: Boxing 1, 2, 4, middleweight intramural champion 4. ROBERT E. GALLERY Second Honors 2: Class Officer: president 4: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Basketball 3, 4, manager 3, 4. ROBERT J. GANTNER Sodality 3, 4: Music Club 4: Shutter Club 3: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Commit- tee 4. EDWARD R. GARRITY Dance Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 2, 3, 4: Basketball 2, 3, 4, co-captain 4: Golf 3, 4, captain 4. JOHN T. GECAN Sodality 1, 4. JOSEPH C. GERAGHTY First Honors 2: Second Honors l, 3: Class Officer: secretary 3: Dance Committee 4: Grad Prep 4: Sodality 4: Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4. THOMAS H. GIBBONS, JR. Debating 2, 3, 4: Dramatics 4. THOMAS W. GORMAN Entered Loyola Academy in the autumn of 1940 from St. George High School, Evanston. Prep 4, columnist: Grad Prep 4: Dramatics 4: Dance Committee 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 4. GEORGE R. GRACE Entered Loyola Academy in the autumn of 1940 from St. George High School, Evanston. Dance Committee 4: Sodality 4. JAMES W. GUERIN Prep 3, 4: Grad Prep 4: Acolytes 2, 3: Cisca 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Sodality 4: Music Club 2, 3, 4. DONALD M. HACK Dance Committee 4: Sodality 3, 4: Football 1, 2, 3: Basketball 2, 3: Track 2, 3. R. E. Gallery R. J. Gantner E. R. Garrity J. T. Gecan J. C Geraghty T. H. Gibbons T. W. Gorman G. R. Grace J. W. Guerin D. M Hack Page 87 W J Halligan J. P. Hartnett D. J. Hassel S W Hayes M. J. Healy J. R. Hennessey WILLIAM J. HALLIGAN, JR. First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: vice president 3, secretary 2, 4: Prep 2, 3, 4, associ- ate editor 4: Grad Prep 4, sports editor: Dra- matics 3, 4: Oratorical Contest, first place 42 Sodality l, 2, 3, 4: Football 1, 2: Basketball 1: Swimming 2, 3. JOSEPH P. HARTNETT First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 4. DAVID J. HASSEL First Honors l, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: presi- dent 3, vice president 4, secretary 1, 2: Stu- dent Council 4: Cisca 4: Prom Committee 42 Sodality 4. ERWIN J. HASTEN First Honors l, 2, Second Honors 3: Cath- olic Youth Congress 4: Sodality 4: Basket- ball 2. JAMES C. HAYES Second Honors 1: Class Officer: vice presi- dent 2, secretary 1: Prom Committee 4: Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. Page 88 E. J. Hasten J. C. Hayes L. S. Hickey W. P. Hilts SHELDON W. HAYES First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: presi- dent 4: Student Council 4: Debating 1, 2, 3 ,4, president 4: Prep 2, 3, 4, feature editor 4: Grad Prep 4, faculty and senior editor: Cisca 4: Shutter Club l: Band 2, 3, 4, drum major: Oratorical Contest, first place 3: Dance Com- mittee 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality l, 2, 3, 4. MAURICE J. HEALY First Honors 4, Second Honors 1, 2, 3: Class Officer: secretary Z, 3, 4: Football 2: Basket- ball 3, 4. JOHN R. HENNESSEY Second Honors 1: Band 1, 2, 4: Prom Com- mittee 4: Sodality l, 2, 4. LAWRENCE S. HICKEY First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Prep 3: Cisca 2, 3, 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Sodality l, 2, 3, 4: Music Club 3: Readers and Writers Club 4. WILLIAM P. HILTS Class Officer: secretary 1: Band 1, 2, 3, 4, Sodality 1, 2, 4: Football 2. RICHARD J. HINES Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 1. CHARLES R. KELLY First Honors 3, 4, Second Honors 1, 2: Dra- matics 4: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 2, 4: Music Club 4. CHARLES B. KEMEN, JR. First Honors 3, 4: Sodality 4: Football 3: Basketball 3, 4, captain 3. FRANCIS J. KENT Sodality 1, 4: Football 1, 3, 4: Basketball 1, 2: Track 1: Boxing 3: Tennis 4. EDWARD P. KILROY First Honors 3, Second Honors 2, 4: Sodal- ity 3, 4: Readers and Writers Club 4. R. J. Hines C. R. Kelly R. K. King L. R. Koczur RICHARD K. KING Grad Prep 4: Sodality 3, 4: Readers and Writers Club 4: Football 1, 3. LESTER R. KOCZUR First Honors 1: Class Officer: secretary 1: Sodality 4. CHARLES J. KRIPPES First Honors 1, Second Honors 2, 3: Dra- matics 4: Acolytes 1: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Cisca 4: Music Club 4: Football 3, 4: Swimming 2, 3: Track 3, 4. HERBERT W. LAMBRECHTS, JR. First Honors 4, Second Honors 1, 2, 3: Acolytes 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 4: Basketball 1. JOHN V. LA MOTTE First Honors 2, 3, Second Honors 1: Sodal- ity 1, 2: Football 2: Basketball 1, 2. C. B. Kemen F. J. Kent E. P Kilroy C. J. Krippes H. W. Lambrechts J. V La Motte Page 89 E L Leach R. J. Leahy E. W. Liphardt E F McDonnell W. H. McGurn J. M. McNulty EDMUN D L. LEACH Second Honors 3, 4: Grad Prep 4: Dramat- ics 4: Cisca 4: Dance Committee 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodal- ity 3, 4, vice president 4: Football 3. RICHARD J. LEAHY Cisca 4: Band 3, 4: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 3, 4: Football 3, 4: Basketball 4: Track 4: Tennis 3. 4: Golf 4. EDWARD W. LIPHARDT Second Honors l: Debating 3, 4: Cisca 4: Shutter 3: Dance Committee 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4. WILLIAM J. LUBY, JR. First Honors 4, Second Honors 1, 2, 3: Class Officer: secretary 3. THOMAS J. McDONALD Second Honors l, 3: Sodality 2. Page 90 W. J. Luby T. J. McDonald B. L. Mackey C. J. Mennes ENEAS F. MCDONNELL Second Honors 1, 2: Prep 2: Acolytes l, 2, 3, 4: Cisca 2, 3, 4: Shutter 3: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Readers and Writers Club 4. WILLIAM H. McGURN Class Honors 1, First Honors 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: vice president 1: Band 2: Sodality 4: Football 2. JAMES M. MCNULTY First Honors l, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: presi- dent l, 2: Prep 3: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. BERNARD L. MACKEY Acolytes 1: Sodality l, 2, 3, 4: Basketball l. CHARLES J. MENN ES Class Officer: vice president l, 2: Acolytes l, 2, 3, 4: Dance Committee 4: Prom Com- mittee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 1, 2, 3, 4: Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4, captain 4: Track 1, 2, 3, 4. PETER A. MINWEGEN First Honors 4, Second Honors l, 2, 3: Class Officer: secretary 1, 4: Prep 3, 4, columnist 4: Grad Prep 4: Dramatics 4: Shutter 1, 4: Sodal- ity 1, 2, 4: Basketball 1, 2, 3. JOHN F. MOLONEY Dramatics 3: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 12 Swimming 1, 2, 3, 4, captain 4: Junior Breast- stroke Champion, "Times Meet" 2. ROBERT F. MORAN Class Honors 3: Sodality 3, 4: Readers and Writers Club 4. THOMAS N. MUN SON Class Honors 3, First Honors 1, 2, 4: Class Officer: secretary 1: Debating 1: Acolytes 1, 2, 4: Grad Prep 4: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4, prefect 4: Ambrosians 4: Basketball 1, 2. EDWARD J. MURPHY First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: presi- dent 1, vice president 3: Debating 2, 3, 47 Prep 3: Grad Prep 4: Cisca 2, 3, 4: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Com- mittee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3. 4: Arnbrosians 4: Detroit Debate Championship 4: Football 2. RALPH H. NAGLER First Honors 2, Second Honors 1, 3, 4: Prep 4: Grad Prep 4, photographic editor: Shutter 3, 4, president 4: Sodality 2, 3, 4: Music Club 4. LEONARD R. NEMEC First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Shutter 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT G. NILLES First Honors 1, 2, 3, Second Honors 4: Class Officer: president 2, secretary 3: Acolytes 1, 2: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Sodality 4. DONALD J. NORMOYLE Second Honors 1, 3: Debating 3, 4: Prep 3, 4, columnist 4: Grad Prep 4: Dramatics 3, 4: Oratorical Contest, first place 1: Dance Committee 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Track 2, 3. DANIEL J. O'CONNELL Second Honors 3: Sodality 1, 2, 4. P. A. Minwegen J. F. Moloney R. F. Moran T. N. Munson E. J Murphy R. H. Nagler L. R. Nemec R. G. Nilles D. J. Normoyle D. J O Connell Page 91 R E O Connor W. E. O'Day J. D. Patterson J. S. Pendergast P. M. Quay W M Quinn E. F. Ring W. P. Ronan F. A. Sasso H. M. Schnitzius ROBERT E. O'CONNOR First Honors 1, 2, 3, Second Honors 4: Class Officer: president 4, vice president 3, secre- tary 1, 2: Senior Class Treasurer: Student Council 4: Dance Committee 4: Prom Com- mittee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 2, 3: Basketball 1. W. EDWARD O'DAY Second Honors 1, 3: Sodality 1, 2: Basket- ball 1. JOHN D. PATTERSON First Honors 2, Second Honors 1: Dramatics 3, 4: Acolytes 1, 2: Band 1: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 2: Tennis 3, 4. JOSEPH S. PENDERGAST Class Honors 1, First Honors 2, 3, 4: De- bating 3, 4: Prep 3: Grad Prep 4: Acolytes 1, 2, 3, 4: Cisca 1, 2, 4: Catholic Youth Con- gress 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4, secretary 2: Am- brosians 4: Promoter of the League of the Sacred Heart 4. PAUL M. QUAY Class Honors 2, 3, 4, First Honors 1: De- Page 92 bating 1, 2, 3, 4: Prep 2, 3, 4, literary editor 4: Grad Prep 4, underclass editor: Dramatics 4: Acolytes l, 2, 3, 4: Cisca 3, 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Music Club 2, 3, 4: Ambrosians 4: Inter- scholastic Latin Contest, second place 42 Detroit Debate Championship 4. WILLIAM M. QUINN Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4. EUGENE F. RING Second Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: secretary 1, 4: Band 1, 2: Sodality 2, 3, 4: Football 3, 4: Basketball 2, 3, 4. WILLIAM P. RONAN, JB. Dramatics 3: Shutter 1: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 1: Basketball l, 2: Boxing 4: Golf 3, 4. FRANCIS A. SASSO Dramatics 4: Acolytes l, 2, 3: Sodality 2, 3: Football 2. HAROLD M. SCHNITZIUS Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Dance Committee 4: Sodal- ity 3, 4: Football 3, 4, manager 3, 4: Track 1. MATHIAS J. SCHNITZIUS, JR. Class Honors 2, 3, First Honors 4: Class Officer: president 1, 2, 3, 4: Senior Class President: Student Council Chairman: De- bating 2: Grad Prep 4, advertising manager: Dramatics 4: Band 1, 2, 3, 4: Dance Commit- tee 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 2, 3, 4: Football 1, 2, 3, 4: Track 1, 2, 3, 4: Junior City Track Meet V4 mile first place 2. PAUL A. SCHROEDER First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 3: Track 1, 2. NORBERT A. SHEPANEK Second Honors 2, 4: Sodality 2, 4: Boxing. manager 1, 2. WILLIAM R. SIEBEN First Honors 1, 2, 4, Second Honors 3: Shut- ter 1, 3, 4, secretary and treasurer 4: Sodal- ity 4. ROBERT J. SOLARI Class Honors 2, 4, First Honors 1, 3: Class Officer: vice president 4, secretary 2, 3: De- bating 1, 2: Dramatics 3, 4: Prom Committee 4: Cisca 1, 2: Swimming 3, manager 4: Box- ing 2. ALPHONSE A. SOMMER, JR. Entered Loyola Academy in the autumn of 1940 from the University of Detroit High School, Detroit, Michigan. Class Honors 4: Debating 4: Prep 4: Grad Prep 4: Dramatics 4: Cisca 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 4: Ambrosians 4: Music Club 4. ROBERT H. SOPHIE Dramatics 3: Football, captain 3: Basket- ball 2. HARRY R. SPELLBRINK Second Honors 1, 3: Sodality 1, 2, 3. THOMAS J. SPENCER Class Officer: president 1, 2, 3: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 1, 2, 3, 4, captain 4: Basket- ball 3, 4 co-captain 4: Track 1, 2, 3, 4: Junior Shot Put Record Holder 2. WARREN G. SULLIVAN First Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Sodality 2, 4. M. J. Schnitzius P. A. Schroeder N. A. Shepanek W. R. Sieben R. J Solari A. A. Sommer R. H. Sophie H. R. Spellbrink T. J. Spencer W. G Sullivan Page 93 P E Sweeney R. L. Szatkowski R. E. Szatkowski R C Upton R. R. Wagener B. J. Warchol PHILIP E. SWEENEY First Honors 4, Second Honors 1, 2, 3: Sodality 4. RICHARD L. SZATKOWSKI Second Honors 1, 2, 3, 4. ROBERT E. SZATKOWSKI Second Honors l, 2, 3, 4: Shutter 2, 3. VICTOR J. TARIO Second Honors 1, 2: Class Officer: vice president 1, 2, 3: Acolytes 1, 2, 3, 4: Dance Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football l, 2: Basketball 2, 3. M. J AY TURNER Second Honors 4: Cisca 1: Shutter 1: Sodal- ity l, 2, 3, 4: Track 1, 3. ROLAND C. UPTON ' Second Honors 3: Debating 1, 2, 3, 4: Dra- matics 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Sodal- ity 2, 3: Track 4. Page 94 V. J. Tario M. J. Turner H. L. Wellbank D. R. Wood ROBERT R. WAGENER Second Honors 3: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Football 1, 2, 3, 4: Track 1, 2, 3, 4, captain 4: Boxing 4: Swimming 2. BERNARD J. WARCHOL Sodality 3, 4: Track l, 2, 3, 4. HARRY L. WELLBANK Second Honors 1, 2, 3, 4: Class Officer: vice president 2: Acolytes 2, 3: Cisca 3, 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Sodality 1, 2, 4: Music Club 3, 4, president 4. DOUGLAS R. WOOD Second Honors 3, 4: Prep 2, 3. 4, sports editor 4: Grad Prep 4: Acolytes l, 2, 4: Dance Committee 4: Catholic Youth Congress 4: Prom Committee 4: Sodality 1, 2, 3, 4: Foot- ball 3: Swimming l. HE IEW Early in the morning the boys come in and read the bulletins to see what's new for the day. Jack Vestal and Bill Surges leave the chapel as Mr. Pollauf. S. J., looks on. Joe Kiely lays down a big one with a mouth lull of air for bal- last. Don LaVigne cmd Jim Kiely enjoy the camera man. Bill Ray demonstrates the form that took the Catholic League div- ing championship of the city. Bob Wagener takes up the baton and a lap or two on the indoor track. Matt Schnitzius is the other IUDHGI. Ed Sackley shows the boys how he manages to get out at nights. Bill Denten. Bob Stephan, and Bill Nietschmann are Ed's skepti- cal pupils. Page 96 SENIUH IJIHEIITUHY Acton, Clare F. Bebber, John W. Benedict, Neil W. Borgstrom, Thomas J. Brockman, Edward J. Brown, Eugene L. Caparros, Joseph R. Carroll, William A. Coari, Francis P. Cook, Kenneth A. Jr. Costello, J. William Jr. Craig, George A. Curran, William W. Denten, Arthur J. Dirksen, Henry A. Donovan, Daniel L. Jr. Dowdle, John A. Dowdle, Thomas P. Jr. Downes, Francis M. Dreis, Robert J. Enright, John J. Erdmann, William G. Essman, William K. Fahey, John V. Fenner, John C. Fitzpatrick, James W. Fleming, William C. Foley, William J. Forristal, John J. 1034 Sheridan Road 4907 Roscoe Street 2904 Colfax Street 1 2100 Estes Avenue 467 Jackson Avenue 2 6708 Glenwood Avenue Highway 173 3 5813 N. Fairfield Avenue 435 Oakdale Avenue 7357 N. Hoyne Avenue 605 Sixth Street 4 1033 Loyola Avenue 6340 Sheridan Road 2914 Logan Boulevard 4720 Drexel Boulevard 7120 Coles Avenue 6736 Oglesby Avenue 920 Cullom Avenue 6240 N. Rockwell Street 6227 N. Rockwell Street 5510 Sheridan Road 1123 Asbury Avenuel 6727 Merrill Avenue 6332 N. Rockwell Street 710 Junior Terrace 4229 N. Wolcott Avenue 70 E. Cedar Street 5515 Hirsch Street 6310 N. Mozart Avenue SENIUH Gagen, Frank J. Jr. Gallery, Robert E. Gantner, Robert J. Garrity, Edward R. Gecan, John T. Geraghty, Joseph C. Gibbons, Thomas H. Jr. Gorman, Thomas W. Grace, George R. Guerin, James W. Hack, Donald M. Halligan, William J. Jr Hartnett, Joseph P. Hassel, David J. Hasten, Erwin J. Hayes, James C. Hayes, Sheldon W. Healy, Maurice J. Hennessey, John R. Hickey, Lawrence S. Hilts, William P. Hines, Hichard J. Kelly, Charles R. Kemen, Charles B. Jr. Kent, Francis J. Kilroy, Edward P. King, Richard K. Koczur, Lester R. Krippes, Charles J. HIHEETUHY ir 1148 1128 9 6433 6340 523 5521 6520 6533 4538 442 1046 3625 2621 4436 1770 2322 7840 1415 5555 601 5322 1452 1325 4822 6115 1329 6630 1112 North Shore Avenue Columbia Avenue Logan Terrace 5 N. Washtenaw Avenue N. Clark Street Stratford Place Cornell Avenue N. Talman Avenue N. Campbell Avenue Lawn Avenue G Wellington Avenue Loyola Avenue Lakewood Avenue Greenleaf Avenue N. Paulina Street Highland Avenue Farwell Avenue Constance Avenue Gregory Street Sheridan Road Independence Boulevard Lakewood Avenue Cullom Avenue Albion Avenue Ellis Avenue N. Campbell Avenue Pratt Boulevard N. Artesian Avenue Sheridan Road 4 Pg7 Page 98 SENIIJH IJIHEIITUHY if W Lambrechts, Herbert LaMotte, John V. Leach, Edmund L. Leahy, Richard J. Liphardt, Edward W. Luby, William J. Jr. McDonald, Thomas J. McDonnell, Eneas F. McGurn, William H. McNulty, James M. Mackey, Bernard L. Mennes, Charles J. Minwegen, Peter A. Moloney, John F. Moran, Robert F. Munson, Thomas N. Murphy, Edward J. Nagler, Ralph H. Nemec, Leonard R. Nilles, Robert G. Normoyle, Donald J. O'Conne1l, Daniel J. O'Connor, Robert E. O'Day, W. Edward Patterson, John D. P-endergast, Joseph S. Quay, Paul M. I 1103 North Shore Avenue 6623 Minerva Avenue 1 Logan Terrace 5 6157 Sheridan Road 6650 N. Damen Avenue 6136 N. Kilpatrick Avenue 6604 N. Fairfield Avenue 6743 Newgard Avenue 3707 W. Fifth Avenue 1053 Columbia Avenue 6626 6383 5940 7324 6308 6447 1519 2120 5221 7314 1348 6251 6420 6418 1061 6511 6648 Glenwood Avenue Sheridan Road N. Fairfield Avenue Yates Avenue N. Richmond Street Wayne Avenue Rosemont Avenue Eastwood Avenue Berteau Avenue Ridge Avenue Hood Avenue N. Fairfield Avenue N. Sacramento Avenue Magnolia Avenue Sheridan Road N. Ashland Avenue N. Ashland Avenue SENIIIH IJIHEETUHY Quinn, William M. Ring, Eugene F. Ronan, William P. Jr. Sasso, Francis A. Schnitzius, Harold M. Schnitzius, Mathias J. 6241 7823 N. Oakley Street Euclid Avenue Bradley Road 1 7310 6620 6620 N. Hamilton Avenue N. Talman Avenue N. Talman Avenue Schroeder, Paul A. 1224 Columbia Avenue Shepanek, Norbert A. 7244 Greenleaf Avenue Sieben, William R. 600 S. Crescent Avenue 8 Solari, Robert J. 5018 Woodlawn Avenue Sommer, Alphonse A., Jr. 823 Forest Avenue 1 Sophie, Robert H. 2500 N. Maplewood Avenue Spellbrink, Harry R. 5941 N. Kilbourn Avenue Spencer, Thomas J. 3855 N. Lowell Avenue Sullivan, Warren G. 837 E. 49th Street Sweeney, Philip E. 6417 N. Mozart Street Szatkowski, Richard L. 6551 N. Nordica Avenue 9 Szatkowski, Robert E. 6551 N. Nordica Avenue 9 Tario, Victor J. 1437 Albion Avenue Turner, M. Jay 518 Forest Avenue 4 Upton, Roland C. 1636 Columbia Avenue Wagener, Robert R. 5536 N. Artesian Avenue Warchol, Bernard J. 3551 W. Diversey Avenue Wellbank, Harry L. 1430 Jarvis Avenue Wood, Douglas R. 1238 Albion Avenue 1Evunsion, Illinois 4Wilme'Kie, Ill' ois 7Liberiyville, Illinois 2GlenCoe, Illinois 5GoIf,Il1i ' SP k R'dg Ill' ' mchmond. Illinoi Gwemm Sp g 111 Nl 111 Pg 99 PATHUN5 Very Reverend Samuel K. Wilson, S.J. Mr. and Mrs. John Donahue Reverend Hartford F. Brucker, S.J. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel L. Donovan Reverend John P. Downey, S.J. Mr. and Mrs. M. T. Doody Mr. and Mrs. Clare S. Acton Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Dowdle Mr. and Mrs. N. W. Benedict Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Downes Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Craig Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Doyle Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Borgstrom Miss Charlotte Finley Dunne Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Bredemann Mr. and Mrs. William Erdmann Mr. and Mrs. B. N. Brockman Mr. and Mrs. John Fahey Dr. and Mrs. John P. Burke Mr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Fenner Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Caparros Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Fleming Mr. and Mrs Kenneth A. Cook Mr. and Mrs. A. Forristal Mr. and Mrs. Harry Corman Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Gagen Mr. and Mrs. John W. Costello Mrs. Robert E. Gallery Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Croke Mr. and Mrs. John J. Garrity Mr. and Mrs. Russel D. Curran Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Geis Mrs. Harry J. Curry Mr. and Mrs. Godfrey J. Gelderman Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Denten Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Geraghty Page 100 PATHIJNS Mr. and Mrs. James J. Gilligan Mrs. Edith Henri La Motte Mr. R. F. Going Mr. and Mrs. C. Latter Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Goodich Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Leach Mr. and Mrs. Vincent J. Green Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Liphardt Mr. and Mrs. James Guerin William J. Luby, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Hassel Mr and Mrs. M. F. McCarty Judge and Mrs. E. J. Hasten Dr. and Mrs. R. A. McDermott Mrs. Grace Healy Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. McDonald Mr. and Mrs. Edwin G. Hickey Mr. and Mrs. E. F. McDonnell Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Hickey Judge and Mrs. Joseph H. McGarry Mr. and Mrs. M. V. Kearney Mr. E. B. McGuinn U Alderman and Mrs. Frank Keenan Mr. and Mrs. M. S. McGurn Mr. Charles L. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. J. M. McNulty Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Kent Mr. and Mrs. William H. Madden Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Koczur Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Maginot Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Kohl Mr. and Mrs. Martin W. Maloney Mr. and Mrs. William Krippes Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Minton Mr. and Mrs. H. Lambrechts Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Minwegen Page 101 PATHUN5 Mrs. M. D. Moloney Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Schnitzius Mr. and Mrs. Walter F Mulvihill Mr. and Mrs. William F. Schroeder Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Munson William R. Sieben Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Sommer Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Nagler Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Spellbrink Mr. and Mrs. Bruno Nemec Mr. and Mrs. George D. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Nilles Mr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Sullivan Mr. Richard M. O'Brien Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Sweeney Mr. and Mrs. D. J. O'Connell Mr and Mrs. William Templeman Mr. and Mrs. H. M. O'Connor Mr. and Mrs. M. Jay Turner Mrs. Charles D. Pendergast Mr. and Mrs. Christopher S. Upton Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Quay Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Warchol Mr. and Mrs. William M. Quinn Mr. and Mrs. Arch Ward Mr. and Mrs. William F. Ray Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wellbank Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Ring Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Wetzel Mr. John Pierre Roche Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus A. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Ryan Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Wolfe Page 102 Friends of the Class of 1941 who by their ADVERTISING made possible this issue of THE GRAD PREP oIn1nn1 - 1:11:11-ll-nu-uuxuu I I 1..1,.1.,1,,...,. ....m.1m,1 -,101 .-gq1n.1..1..1...-,.i 1 I Steaming ahead of other classes and upholding the honor I of Loyola for all to see is I : 1 Loyola to Ad Astra I T the Core Per Aspera I IN Roc s1GNo VINCES : This scintillating class wishes the Seniors I success in the future. MFT 3 1iTT1 7 1 uc!-u 1 1 -nnhlilllli-llvhlillt-ll1Illlll iTilTYl1TT ilill-"T ofa-un 11111111 1111-111-11- 11-11 1 1111111 u 1 1 I I I T THE ADVANCEMENT CLUB OF ZA I I I I I I MR. PAUL A. WOELFL, S.J., Teacher BOB STARRS. President NED DALY, Secretary and Treasurer i Sefqeanfdffifms LARRY BROWN, vice President I THE BROWN BOMBERS I I Tom Landgren Hank Adamson Ned Daly Jim Ashenden I Bill Ray Bill O'Donoqhue Marty Horan Dick Hyland I Bob Starrs Howie Boll Larry Brown Jack Eisinger i Jim Jumey Frank McCormick George O'Brien Paul Weiler T John Colnon Bill Dunn Frank O'Connell Steve Allie I Paul Clifford Bert Gast John Gelderman .lohn Larney I Bob S ellman George Sullivan Joe Sanders Jim Maher 3 P I I niq....,g1 1111111 11111-1111111111 u u1uu1an1un 1111 nu1nn-aux ,!..-,.. -.-- ......- .- - ------------ u.-u----- ----- - - - - I I . ' Best of Luck to the Senior Class from Two C I I Bob Skoglund, Vice President Tom Kohl. President Larry Mulvaney. Treasurer I Marty Callaghan Eddy Sackley Dick Murphy Bob Geis I Bill Feeley Jack Bornhoien Bill Denten RUY PQICZUY i 'rom Goebel Ed cmhqne Phil Gould Joe Hem 5 Brian Neville Joe Fenner .Tack Curry Burt I-lefleman I k Ah G S, 1 B D 1 Bob OBrien i Jac ern eorge reg er ert o an Jack McNulty 3 Bob Stephan Leo Wrenn .Tack Dahlm Jerry petmz I Charlie O'Brien Bob Wall Dick Van Der Bosch Tom Ryan I .i.....-...-..-..-..-..-......- -..-......-..-.. ------ ..-...-..-...-..-..-.... - -..-..-...- -.. 4. Page 104 4, .---. .... ......... .......--- - . . -..-4. ' I THE LOYOLA ACADEMY FATHERS' CLUB wishes Tl-IE CLASS of l94l all success for the future Thomas C. Keegan, President Daniel J. Howe, Secretary James M. McNulty, Vice-President Earl P. Kelly, Treasurer Leonard H. Skoglund, Financial Secretary I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I of - ,- -.. -....-......-.. -................-.. ..-..-up Page 105 1...-I 4. -..........................- - - -..-...-...............-..-..... - - - - - - - .. - - -, - ,, ,,,,i, ll 5 I I A 'A' Steam and Domestic Stoker Coals HIGH GRADE FUEL OIL Sewer Pipe, Cement. Sand. Gravel. Etc. All Phones Kll.dare 0234 46I8-40 Belmont Ave. Compliments of LA SALLE HOTEL La Salle and Madison --.1..1n1...1u.-q--11.11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1.41-l..g41..1g.1.. age 106' gfu1uu-nn-nn1nn-u1u-111:-uni-u-un-nn-nu1nu-un-unxuu-nu-nn1uu1u--nn-un1un1n '!' l l 1 I l l l l l l 4' 4. .-..-....... -.--- ..-...-..-...-..-.. --------- - - - -..-..-....4. I---1..,g Compliments of The HALLICRAFTERS, Inc 2611 So. Indiana Ave. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS .1..1..1p,1..1n .- 1 1.q1qq1.,1..1pg1nu1 1 1 .. 1 1 1 1 1 ... 1 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 4' 1 1 --an-nts Pg 107 olnn1un1 o!u1nn1uu-u --111111111---11---1- 1 1 11 1 - 1 1 Oli I .5 ..-...- I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I COMPLIMENTS OF PREMIER LITHO CO. 1855 N. HALSTED STREET CHICAGO, ILLINOIS ORIGINATORS AND DESIGNERS LABEL LITHOGRAPHERS MARVELTONE PROCESS HLLIRIUN HUIII IVIIUHIGHII HVI. HI HURUII SUPERIOR 4200 Halian Room 0 23rd Floor for Social Funcfions John P. Harding, Pres. Mathew J. Hickey, Jr., Vice-Pres. John Bissell, Sec .i.-..-...... ..... - -- .....-- ---- ----- ----- - - -1- Pcrge 108 DANIEL RYAN GRANT F. BRABON RYAN and BRABON INSURANCE EXCHANGE INSURANCE SINCE 1915 PHONE WABASH 0173 o Makes Certain the Uncertain 11: g.-01...-n...u..,,-.nu.-,,, THE R. K. LEBLOND MACHINE TOOL CO. 20 North Wacker Drive CHICAGO, ILLINOIS u.-nu1uu1nu?.u1uu1nu1nui 1..1nqipgig-..n..n1uu1nninniuniuu1uu-gl-.u COMPLIMENTS OF GORDON PHOTOGRAPHY Official Photographer to the CLASS OF 1941 i, and to the GRAD PREP nu--nn--an-.uu1uu1nn1un1u1.u1uu-.unln lnxuni ninu1u.1-q.-ll-.1411i.11111-.-1..1...1....-111111111 This label is significant of practical and scientific laboratory research. For over 30 years our products have been identified with the finest results produced in letterpress and lithographic printing. Kohl 8: Madden Printing Ink Company Jefferson Street at Grenshaw Chicago, Illinois Harrison 7445 New York City, New York 636 Eleventh Avenue Circle 6-1340 Service Branches: Detroit, Michigan Buffalo, New York COLOR -Motive Power of the Printed Word I I 'lv I ---------- ----------- ---------- - .ln Pg 111 'I' I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1g.1g4,1..1pg1p1 1.11. I HOWARD TAILORS FURRIERS 6 CLEANERS I I H S Remodeling 0 Relining 0 Repairing I I WE CALL AND DELIVER I I 2404 LUN1' AVENUE Phone Sheldruke 8143 i BEN. DROBNY 050110 -1----------- ll-ll1I I-nu1...1.-1---u1-I1I-1--1---n1n1n1n-uu-uu- ?lillTlli T TllTllilUTlUTUlTUllUlT l lllillif I-1IIuvII3II1IliII1lit-UI?lllThl1lll7lllllTllTllTllT I S H E L L Prompt Pick-up and Delivery Service E AT Established Over 15 Years I 5500 Sheridan Road PEERLEE? sf-EQEANERS 7 qsheridqn ncaa ui Caialpal ' ' i Sunnyside "WORK YOU WILL ADMIREH I EDW. F. AHLENFELD. Mqr. 6722 SHERIDAN ROAD. CHICAGO. ILL. E 24-noun sEnvxcE Telephone Rogers Park zssa .g.,-.. ..-- ...-..-..-...-...-.......- -. .....-..-. .-.... - -...-.......-.-.... -..-..-...-.- -..- 4..-.. ------------- ..-..-.. ,,...,, ..-. .--..-... - ...- I I I '-1 N 1 E M A N N' S I PETER MONDANE ICE CREAM SHOP I FAMOUS 1-'on I 325 South La Salle Street Giant Malted Milks I 6624 sr-IERIDAN 5 I-'I Ambassador 9260 I aiuinn 11v11v1111111 ll1ll1l+ -.10 11111 111111111 I ui aiu:un1 1 1nu1nu:ln-un-un-un-un-ual 1 1ll1lI1u +,i,, i1111 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1u1u- I I 1 KIESEL Bnos. I I Meat Market and Fancy Grocery I Compliments of a Friend I 4870 LINCOLN AVENUE I I Phones: Longbeach 9264-9265 I ofu1n-11--nn 1111111---- nn--u--up Qu...--I 1111----- ---- H l-w- Page 112 CONGRATULATIONS TO '7!w 01644 of 7941 LOYQLA .ACADEMY MOTHERS' CLUB MRS. EDWARD H. LIPHARDT, President A FRIEND T Q Chicago's Master Florist I i Geor1 eWieni!oeber FLORIST 41 SOUTH WABASH AVENUE 52 EAST MONROE STREET I 28 NORTH MICHIGAN AVENUE 5 Telephone RANdo1ph 3700 C H I C A G O , I L L I N O I S -i- cfsuinniln-nn 1:1- un-m1115111-1:1 - 1un1uu-nn-nn-I--up-nn-n -11111:11111 - I1 i 1 5 BOWERS8eNESSEL Q PHARMACY PHONE ROGERS PARK 0104 M. F. BOWERS, R. Ph. R. M. NESSEL. R. Ph. i 1263 LOYOLA AVENUE 0 CORNER LAKEWOOD 0 CHICAGO ! 4.-....-....-..-..-..-..-....-....-..-......-.. --.- .....i.-.-...-.........-....-...-...-....-i.. - -.-....-..-...-...- -... MOIST PIANO COMPANY. . ssos BROADWAY i EDGewa1er 36 26 5 GRANDS We carry a large stock of new and used qrands and i SPINETS spinets in such well known makes as: STEINWAY, i TUNING MASON ci HAMLIN, CI-IICKERING, KNABE, BALDWIN, i REPAIRING BRAMBACH, etc., at very reasonable prices. ! T m s i I d e s i r e d i vin-H1111-11" 1111111111111'1-111-1 11111'11 '- 1' ?!u1nn:un-un1nn1ln- min 1111111 111i1111111 ll lllml-fl-ll1'1l1'I"'-""-' 1 1111 33182 liegrggrfgxe INSTRUMESERIJEPAIRING 1 I A NATIONAL BLUE PRINT CO. Q Blue Prints 0 Phoiostais 0 Drawing Material 2 Surveying Instrumenis T Union S+a+ion Building T F- JOHN CUSHING 5I7 Wesi Adams Si. i Presideni' Ci1iCag0 .g.-.........-....-..............-..,..... ..,- - - - .. - - - .. - - - .. - .. - .. -....-..........-....-...-...-......:.i-.. Page 114 .1pg1..1p.1.p1.q1g.1..1 1 1 1 1 1.11I.1..1..1..1..1..1..1..1..1..1u-1.1111 1 1 -- 1 1 1 11. l1..1.,1.,1,.-.. --1.1.-1..1..1.l1ql1..1.1 1 1 1 1 1 1.,1l...-l.1..1..-.ll-.I111111.-......g1..1..1 1.- cnmlmrnfms nr HUH. HDD IVIRS. UJILLIHIH H. HUUJHI1 O!!!-In 11:11 ln:uu1ul:nu1u-1--un: 1 -lu-uu1un!o o?n:uu--:uiun1uu1nu1un1uu1uu-uu1nn1un1uu-nu1un- cfs I . I I I f JN: I I We have available a selection of 3 11 3 1 1 1 1 BONDS I IEW tw I I of I ,h ffgagttlll I I Catholic 1 'I IN 11' 1 1 - - 5 H ,ZW -H 3 i Institutions Interest 3 to 3Vz'X: I Maturities 3 to 12 Years I I I Descriptive circulars mailed on request 1 at f - 1 1 - . I Finest in Chicago. 56 Years of Per- Th M D i fect Service. Modern Equipment. os' C onald 6' Co' Spacious. Air-conditioned. Parking. 11 Soug1HIig1iig Street One of the Oldest Houses I Specializing in Bonds of I Catholic Institutions I Established 1914 -i'f----------------------'-----------H-------1----i -i-1---- - ----------------------- - -nw- 'ft""""""""""""""' """"" I I I I I Compliments of I I I 1 WILL C. ESSIVIAN 8: CO. I I I ACCOUNTANTS I I I zo W. JACKSON BLVD. I I I I +1llillill1llTllill1llillil llll illiill lTTTlT Ili!!-illlllTllillTllillllliilTulllillilllllilllllii Page 116 n-p-1u1..1..1 111.111.1- .1 1 1 1..1n1..1n1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Bart O'Toole Fuzzy Festle Sliclzer Schaefer Happy Halligan Fiesch Sfeggerf Nemo Maloney Durl Doyle Lippy LaVigne 1 1 1 1 1 11111-nn-1-uu1 1 1 1- 1 1 1 1 1:11:11-gg. COMPLIMENTS OF 3A Grumpy Gronau Sexy Manley Muscles McDermoft Kibiizer Kiely Siesta Holmes Shorf-Stride Weber Gabler Kiely Pu'ce Reed 1.1 1..1..1..1..1 1 1 1 1- 1 1 1 1 Phone STAte 5684 ..1..1l.1 1 1 1 1 1 Mikey Maginoi Bobby Hechi Our Boy FitzGerald Fink Lynch Wheezy Walker Howie Corman Hollywood Hanses Camera Cushing Mushmouth Milligan Flash Thompson Shortfellow Westerschulfe Wresiler Kelly Penis Leiter Bully Elwarcl Dipper Dwyer Weenie Wetzel -----..---..-..1. -.. - 111111111 1111111 I -11.-sfo CLASS RINGS CLASS PINS CLASS RIBBONS --,111 1 1:1 1 1:1 1:1 1 i:l1..1g. JULIA A. NOLAN 6 N. Michigan Avenue Chicago -11.1.11.11.1-1.11.1-l1q.1q.1g.1n1gl1g I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 'I' 1,111u1n1151-11..11.11.1.11I.1..1.-15.1111111111111-.1..1..--..1..1..1..1..1. 'E' LOUIS FRATINI FRANK KARTHEISER NORTH TOWN RECREATION CENTER BOWLING 0 BILLIARDS Telephone Sheldrake 10452 2519 DEVON AVENUE INecrr Westeml ' CHICAGO 1.-1qq1n1qp1I-.l1n1qp1qq1..1g.1n1q.1ll1..1g p1l.1n-.qq1ql1ll-n1gq1ql1.. 1.l1q.1l.1ll1qp1l.1gl1l.1pp1.+ Page 117 -.gg-.11.11.41..1..1..1n1..1.q1..1..1..1.1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11.--..1..1..1..1..1 Free Parking Air Conditioned ALLEGRETTFS GRILL STEAKS - CHICKEN - SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI HOME MADE ITALIAN GREEN NOODLES Southeast Corner of Wells and Kinzie Streets PHONE DELAWARE 4343 Merchandise Mart Opposite Us Open Sundays and Holidays 1..1-an11I1..11p1.I1.111.1.1-.q1-..1,.1q.1..1I 1 .1 1.'1..1..1..1.p1..1 1 1 11.111.14.-4 -............ ....-..-..-............................-......!. .l..........................- .-..........- I I I I I I I I I I I I GRAEME H. SMITH I I ESTATE ANALYST and INSURANCE COUNSELLOH . I I I 208 South La Salle Street, Suite 876 I i CHICAGO. ILLINOIS I I I I I I I I Ph I State 9700-9705 - I I I I 1-11. 1111 ul1uu-nl-uu1ul:lu1u:1ll-ll--un-:nie gig age 118 FROM A FRIEND -11.1.--l.1..1.,...g.1q.1g.1g.1g.1g ,--p.1..1..1..1n1..1.... ' 'MONT-CLARK DRUGS DEPEND REET RAY LANCASTER MOTORS I Sales and S rth Western Avenue at Log Phone: Armitage 6200 1..1...-I. ....1lI.-I.15.1.I1.111.1..11.lamina...up1.n1u:--nn1.n1uu1nn1n.-I ..1...-1.11.1111ui-.1I.1..1pg...11.1gg.-ni-110.-.ll1.l1..1I.1Il.-.qi-...pllllilg-gllilg FINE BLDG lIPTOWN FEDERAL LIJAN AND SAVINGS ASSUCIATIUN ------------------H ------- ---------I 1--------- - - - - - - - - - - -a- I I I I I I I I I I A Compliments of I I I I I I Curran and Cain, Inc. Gamfilmmzu of I I Realtors, Property Managers I J. B. T. . I I I ses I I I I v I I I I I I I I 4- -1-I 11.11.-uni-.1 1 ... ... 1.'1..1.p1.l1.. age 120 --inn-.ln1pn-.pg-.gg1gq1n PATNA MISSION S T A M P M A R T I APPROVALS ON REQUEST LOW PRICES F or the support of the Jesuits in India l WEST BADEN COLLEGE West Baden Springs. Indiana 11111111 1 1 inniuninnlqnlnuinni 1 1nu1nn1ql1q.1ql1.q1..1g.1.l... .-.'-,'.- 1. 1.,,1..1..1..1 1 1 1 1 1.11 ... .. ... ,gl-.-.nl-.n-n.-ull... .- .. ... 1 -. 1 1 AUTIJEHAPHS TH!-l Ii YIJ Page 122 Perhaps the most pleasant page to write of all those in this yearbook is this one, for it recalls all the kindnesses and aids so generously offered by so many people. To thank all those who helped in preparing our theme would be to recall the names of men from every section of the United States. We thank them all. Mr. Fred Montiegel of the Pontiac Engraving and Electro- typing Company necessarily comes in for the lion's share of thanks. He not only was instrumental in bringing our theme to realization, but he gave us excellent advice in the laying out of the rest of our book. Mr. William Niehaus of the Fred Klein Company advised us well in the selection of a type and in the solution of the inevitable printing difficulties that will arise. Again Mr. Sidney Gordon turned out his highly satisfactory photographs of the Seniors and all the activities of the school. Mr. Harold Beckett, representing the Kingsport Press Inc.. was especially helpful in preparing a new cover to fit the theme of this year's book. To all these men, and especially to our Patrons and Adver- tisers, without whose material assistance all other work would have been useless, we, the staff of the 1941 Grad Prep, sincerely say, "Thank you." ll THE Since the theme of this Grad Prep is something entirely original and previ- ously untried, the staff wishes to take this opportunity of giving a brief history of the project. Last summer, at a convention of Jesuit high school principals at West Baden, Indiana, it was suggested that the various Jesuit high schools prepare a group of division pages for their annuals that would show the unity of the Jesuit educational system in this country. All the schools would cooperate in the preparation of these pages, and all would use them in their yearbooks. Mr. Louis B. Snider, S.J., moderator of the Grad Prep, knowing that such a plan had long been the dream of Mr. Fred Montiegel of the Pontiac Engrav- ing Company, proposed the idea to him. Enthusiastic from the beginning, Mr. Montiegel imparted his enthusiasm to his employers and to Mr. Fred Collins who undertook to work out a theme in words and pictures. Soon these three had enlisted Mr. Frank Cheeseman into their cause as illustrator of the theme. Mr. Snider, with the aid of members of the Historical Institute of Loyola University and the Provincials of the six Jesuit provinces of the United States. compiled the necessary data for the theme pictures. Rev. Martin I. Carrabine, S.J., and Mr. Snider acted as advisers in the preparation of the theme copy. The whole project enjoyed the enthusiastic support of Bev. Julian L. Maline, S.J., prefect of studies in the Chicago Province. When all the obstacles had been overcome, fourteen schools, besides Loyola, were prepared to use the theme. These schools are: St. Xavier, Cin- cinnati, Ohio: Boston College High School, Boston, Mass.: St. Peter's Prep, Jersey City, N. J.: Creighton, Omaha, Neb.: St. Ignatius, Chicago, Ill.: St. Joseph's Prep, Philadelphia, Pa.: St. Louis University High School, St. Louis, Mo.: Seattle Prep, Seattle, Wash.: Marquette, Milwaukee, Wis.: St. Ignatius, Cleveland, Ohio: Loyola School, New York City, N. Y.: Canisius, Buffalo, N. Y.: Jesuit, Tampa, Fla.: and St. John, Shreveport, La. It is the hope of those who have worked out this project that the present theme will be but the first in a long series, and that, as interest in this idea spreads, more schools will participate and still better work be done. 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