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Page 25 text:
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IX € OLA COLLEGE REVIEW rrr O38C Ol We take this opportunity of welcoming back to Loyola two former students, Dr. Neil Feeney and Mr. Paul Casey. Dr. Feeney graduated here with honours in 1922, did brilliantly in medicine at McGill, and then went to the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital, Boston, for research. Dur- ing the past year he has been lecturing in biology at Loyola. Mr. Casey graduated with the Class of '24, was constantly outstanding among the law students of his year at McGill, and after passing his bar examination spent some time at post- graduate work in Europe. At present a member of the firm, Atwater, Beauregard, and Phillimore, he lectures here on Fundamental Law. Alumni Professors The article on the Alumni, formerly a regular feature of the Review, has been finally superseded by an independent and mote satisfactory publication, The Loyola The Loyola Alumnus. This 1s the official organ of the Loyola Alumni Association Ренеа and meets an obvious need in a manner more direct and efficient than is possible in the Review. Not only was it becoming more difficult, year by year, for us to avoid sins of omission, but the increasing numbers of the Alumni were rendering a yearly article of some four or five pages more and more inadequate. An entirely different form of treatment was, therefore, desiderated; and when the L'27 widened its horizon to become The Loyolan, a further change was soon effected making it The Loyola Alumnus. To the editor, Mr. D. Frank Macdonald, to the chairman of the publication committee, Mr. Kenneth McArdle, as well as to the anonymous committee itself, great credit is due. The neat format, exact typography, and ar gare d the succinct тийш of a great deal of matter are qualities noticed by all who saw the issue. ith our modest acquaintance with the work of publication, we cannot but reflect that the art of finding time and the virtue of giving it, both inevitably learned by students who get out the Review in the hours between class and study, were exten- sively bunc in preparing the Alumnus for the press. We venture to repeat an appeal made by the editor. The constant changes of address, so common in our mobile age and on our unsettled continent, make even accuracy in the Directory difficult, and completeness well-nigh impossible. The only solution is for each one ever connected with Loyola to write to the Secretary of the Loyola Alumni Association, Loyola College, Montreal, and give what information he can about former students. The individual effort required is not oppressive, the advantage derived remarkably great; every answer to the request promises more answers, and so on in geometrical progression. A few pleasant words in the Alumnus about the future of the College remind us of the possible future of the Alumnus itself. It is not up to us to speculate upon even- tual lines of development and expansion, but at least we may say that it is not without precedent for an Alumni publication to become a fine magazine or a pro- minent periodical. To judge from beginnings, utility and interest dominate in the editor's policy. This alone is an initial guarantee of progress, and with the co- operation and widening interest that are due to come, the wish at the end of Father Rector's message, Vivat! Floreat! Crescat! may be turned into a prediction. Tr
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Page 24 text:
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LOYOLA COLLEGE REVIEW . ————————TM 7————————————————v— with thousands of vixi e letters from men in every class and station. This would prove triumphantly that there is great work to be done by broadcasting. We are grateful to Father Coughlin not only for his stirring and effective sermons, but also for establishing so conclusively the apostolic value of the radio. We look forward eagerly to the time when Canada will have its Catholic Hours to meet specifically Canadian needs. When a fallen aeroplane robbed football of its foremost coach, a nation's criticism of College athletics was hushed that an unquestioned tribute of admiration жш А might be voiced and echoed оп our continent. The brave old phrase, ute Rockne about Waterloo and the playing fields of Eton, remains the pro- verbial recognition of the value and high virtue of games. But if the proverb smacks of England, the hero of the principle was at South Bend. In ‘93 Knute Rockne came with his parents from Norway. He attended Notre Dame University and won honour in the lecture halls as well as on the gridiron. In 1918 he took charge of football at his Alma Mater, and in the thirteen subsequent seasons his teams played one hundred and five games, drew five, lost twelve, and won eighty-eight. He chose his men and inspired them; the strategy of his training and the tactics he taught his quarters brought team after team to victory. But as has been well said, if Rockne led his teams to fame, the robust Catholicity of the teams led Rockne to the faith. The sight of his athletes going in a body to Mass and Holy Communion while on their extensive tours, roused the curiosity and fired the imagination of the great inspirer. When the wreckage on the Kansas farm was cleared away, Rockne's beads were found, plucked from his hand, lying amidst the debris. It is with admiration of his ability and regret for his loss, that we express in his regard the last, the sad- dest, but the greatest wish: Requiescat in pace. From Knute Rockne we naturally turn to his personal acquaintance and sincere admirer, Mr. Frank Shaughnessy. This year, as in previous years, it has been Mv. Fiend Biase Loyola’s good fortune to have Mr. Shaughnessy as Bene ER cu. d honorary coach, and anyone who knows Loyola also knows what Mr. Shaughnessy means to our College Football teams. His name has passed into the traditions of the school and around it has formed a body of stories that are almost a saga. To recount them would require more of Homeric fire than we may lay claim to possess, while the baldness of print would seem a profanation of the eap due to wholesome enthusiasms. But our esteem is a very minor part of his fame. For four years, he played for Notre Dame University—a record that was crowned by his being captain in his last year. He has coached Washington State, Lee University, Clemson, and McGill, besides being more than once called to help coach Harvard and Princeton. In rcp Baseball, he has Pare for Washington and Philadelphia, managed Providence and Syracuse, and coached Detroit. It is generally agreed that he is the greatest coach in Canada and out- standing among all on the continent; we are proud of our opportunity to mention him in our Review and to thank him for the whole-hearted interest that he has taken in Loyola teams. SE
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