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Page 15 text:
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1919 MONTREAL, CANADA | Iénuaola College Review | No. 5 Address: all communications to LOYOLA COLLEGE RE VIEW, Sherbrooke Street W. Terms: One Dollar the Copy, Paper Bound. A Subscription for Five Years: Five Dollars, the Paper-bound Edition All subscriptions will be gratefully received, Editor-in-Chief— JOHN WOLFE, ’19. Assistant Editors— CHARLES PHELAN, ’19. ROBERT ANGLIF, ’20. GERALD BRAY, ’22. Business Manager— WILFRID NOONAN, ’19. Assistant Managers— FERNARD TERROUX. ’21. HENRY SMEATON, ’21. JAMES HEBERT, ’22. Circulation Manager— TOM DAY, ’23. Assistant Manager— LORENZO KELLY, ’23. Editorial The first event that we feel called to record, in a year of stirring events, is the removal of the Rev. Fr. Filion from our midst to assume the work of Provincial of the Order. We can congratulate Very Rev. Fr. Filion on this great honour, though we found his stay with us far too short. This was but his second sojourn at Loyola and like his first scarcely reached a year, but it was difficult to crowd into two years such an amount of work as fell to his lot nor such a display of energy as must needs be his, so exacting was he in its fulfilment. Those whose fortune it was to work with him or to fall under his control will remember both his unflagging zeal and his considerateness of others. Though it be
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Page 16 text:
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14 LOYOLA COLLEGE REVIEW to our loss, still he will be able to exercise these same qualities in larger fields and the blessings that God showered on his work as long as he was with us, we hope He will continue to shower on bigger undertakings. Rev. Father Hingston was recalled from the battlefield, to take the place of Rev. Father Filion as Rector and to take part ina campaign of another kind less dangerous but possibly not less arduous. To him was entrusted the task of rescuing the College from a position of serious financial embar- rassment. The recent “Drive” proves the success of that undertaking. But what augers well for the College is the fact that Father Hingston, both as professor and prefect has had experience of almost every phase of College life. He knows Loyola as few others know it and claims personal acquaintance with most of those who passed through here. Hence all old boys who visit Loyola will be sure of meeting at least one old friend. The recent drive has proved one thing that there is a big future for Loyola. We think that the future is in safe keeping. We desire to offer our heartiest congratula- tions to Rev. Father Walter S. Gaynor on his elevation to the holy priesthood. He is but one more added to the forty that Loyola has given to the Catholic priesthood. Father Gaynor worked long and zealously at the old Loyola and has a host of friends in the city. Always very energetic he devoted himself heart and soul to the formation of the youngest boys in the school. It is not idle to say that in the crowning years of the classical course we misplace sometimes the merit of the success, but the boys whose good fortune it was to get under way with Father Gaynor, have never forgotten to attribute a part, at least, of their merit to their early formation. On leaving Loyola, Mr. Gaynor, as he then was, went direct to the English College, Valladolid, Spain, to study theology. He returned to England to be ordained priest on Christmas Eve, at Plymouth. He is now doing parish work in that diocese. It is giv- ing away no secrets to say that Father Gaynor has a very warm corner in his heart for Canada and that he looks upon Loyola as his second home. This feeling of affec- ` tionate remembrance is fully reciprocated. Few masters have made warmer and truer friends than Father Gaynor. In colleges conducted by members of the Society of Jesus, there must necessarily occur many changes, from year to year, in the administrative and teaching staff. This year has been no exception. Scarcely had the scholastic term ended when Father J. Milway Filion, last year's professor of phil- osophy and rector was named Provincial of the Society of Jesus in Canada and Father Hingston, lately returned from service over- seas, was appointed to the position thus vacated. Father John F. Cox, professor of Humanities and Rhetoric has been transferred to the mission field, and Mr. Demetrius Zema, S.J., last year's teacher of First Gram- mar, is now professor of History at Holy Cross College, Worcester. Messrs. F. J. McDonald, S.J. and P. J. McLellan, S.J., have begun their theology at the Immaculate Conception College, Montreal and Messrs. Breslin and Kennedy, S.J. are pursuing their philosophical studies at the same institution. Mr. F. S. Smith, S.J., went to the English Novitiate, at Guelph, as professor of Latin and Greek. The new men on the Loyola Staff are Father Daignault, former rector of the Immaculate Conception College, who is spiritual father, Father A. J. Primeau, who has been named bursar and parish priest; Father de la Peza, professor of philosophy. Messrs. J. Keating, S.J., W. Bryan, S.J., J. Holland, S.J., J. Howitt, S.J., from the Im- maculate Conception College, Messrs. J. Fallon, S.J.; J. Marchand, S.J. and J. Dalton, S.J. from Guelph and Mr. Robitaille, S.J. from Sault au Recollet. We desire to express on behalf of all our deep gratitude to Professors Shea for his con- tinued interest and devotion to our orchestra and choral classes, and to Serg.-Major McClements, instructor of our C. O. T. C. and Cadet Corps for the part he has taken in the physical training of our boys. Owing to unusual circumstances the annual retreat was given this year in January, instead of at the beginning of the first term. The
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