Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1950

Page 32 of 132

 

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 32 of 132
Page 32 of 132



Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 31
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Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 33
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Page 32 text:

H 134 d 4 am simt as UHR STARN a 2 „чанти а”. XUN eee. IT Ge - Ия Va. DAN PES RI | tv m E A 2 7 рия, TU 1. undi 2 и 2 E ` Ф KÉ? + It is in the inspiring grace and delicacy of the College Chapel constructed in 1932 that the spirit of Loyola is embodied. If any one building on the campus combines the finest features of Tudor and early Renaissance type of English Gothic architecture, the Chapel does, and more. It is a tribute to the spirituality that has marked Loyola's physical growth in the past fifty-four years. The Chapel's spire reaching heavenward is an acknowledgment and an affirmation of the age old maxim “Not by bread alone does man live. From the broad sweeping front steps of the Chapel, Loyola students look upward to the stained glass windows, the panels of which enshrine the heroic efforts of the Canadian Jesuit Martyrs. It is this exemplar of spirit that Loyola cherishes. Christianity, its culture and its principles captured and enshrined in Art. Within the Chapel where the H oly Sacrifice of the Mass is celebrated daily, the Loyola students in their worship of God have found the solace and the balm for the trials that beset their way in life. With the construction of the Chapel and the modern Auditorium beneath it, the Loyola Dramatic Society at long last had a place in which to present its productions. The first attempt at Dramatics was in 1908 when The Striped Sweater” was presented in a rented hall. The Monument National in the following year saw the College thespians presenting the King's Secret on its stage. In the succeeding years Loyola actors continued to use borrowed theatres. In 1919 Gilbert Sullivan's Pinafore , was staged at the Monument National. The Merchant of Venice was given at the Princess theatre in 1927, It Pays to Advertise and The Bat” at Victoria Hall in 1931 and 1932 respectively. A war play Journey's Епа” marked the initiation of the new Auditorium in 1934, and from 1937 on there was an unbroken succession of plays presented annually on the Loyola stage. The Dramatic Society has won many new friends for Loyola. Its members have ventured far afield and their sweeping successes in the Inter-Varsity Drama Festivals of 1949 and 1950 have further added to their already high reputation. The Montreal critics in their reviews of recent pre- sentations are unanimous in the decision that Loyola students have always, despite their lack of years, been able to bring out the character of the personages portrayed in the yearly plays. The presentations of the Dramatic Society have been greatly enhanced by the Loyola Orchestra, since it first emerged in the 1919 performance of Pinafore . The Orchestra has fulfilled its role with continued excellence and the majority of the social events of the College have found its members on hand to add to the proceedings with their extensive repertoire. (continued on page 65) As

Page 31 text:

Properly speaking our physical progress сап be measured in terms of the buildings that now stand on Loyola's campus. In 1921 the present Administration Building was but three stories high; it was completed with an additional two stories and the Tower in 1927. His Excellency the Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec, Hon. Narcisse Perodeau, officiated at the opening of the Stadium on January 12th, 1924. The construction of both these buildings are indicative of academic and athletic progress in Loyola's history. In 1922 Loyola entered the Inter-University Debating League. In the first four years of competition Loyola ranked as a finalist, winning the Beatty Trophy, emblematic of League championship, for the first time in 1926. It is to the credit of her students and faculty that in twenty-eight years of League competition her Debaters have been finalists eighteen times, and have won the Beatty Trophy in nine of these encounters. Sportsmanship has always been characteristic of Loyola students. Athletics have always played a major role in student acti- vities, and the successes of the College teams in football have spread Loyola's renown. The first major accomplishment was the winning of the Dominion Junior Intercollegiate Football championship in 1922. To accommodate the ever increasing attendance at Loyola football games the grandstand was built in 1926. Within two years the College had added another laurel to her athletic prowess. The 1928 team won the Dominion Intercollegiate Intermediate Football Championship. It is this football tradition that inspired the post-war teams of '46 and '47 to win the Intermediate title for Loyola. Now in 1950 Loyola embarks on a new football venture. For the first time in her history, the College's team will play an entire season of American rule football. The Warriors will venture far from the campus to carry on the will to win and the spirit of sportsmanship that has characterized her athletes in the past. May their endeavours be worthy of the Loyola tradition. The diversity of the students' interest in sport has been exemplified in the many teams past and present that have been active on the campus. Hockey, lacrosse, skiing, snowshoeing, basketball, boxing—all have produced a thletes that have contributed to Loyola's renown in the field of sport.



Page 33 text:

From left to right, starting with upper left corner: First Row E. AMOs (Science) W. BARRY (Arts) R. BEDARD (Arts) D. BELLAMY (Science) P. BOURASSA (Science) C. BRABANT (Science) Second Row R. BRAULT (Arts D. Britt (Science) J. BURBA (Science) A. CARPINI (Science) L. CASSIDY (Arts) H. CLOUTIER (Science) Third Row S. COHEN (Arts) T. CONNOLLY (Arts) E. CosTANZO (Science) J. L. DAuMais (Arts) P. DvsoN (Arts) J. ETHIER (Arts) Fourth Row А. GALARDO (Arts) R. GARDNER (Arts) С. GAUVIN (Science) G. GILBERT (Arts) С. E, GRIFFIN (Science) J. Guy (Arts) Fifth Row E. HowARD (Arts) T. HUDSON (Science) К. КЕНОЕ (Science) W. LECLERC (Science) R. LEONARD (Arts) Р. LEVASSEUR (Science) Sixth Row К. MacDouGa tt (Arts) B. MADIGAN (Arts) F. MaGuIRE (Science) С. МССЕЕ (Science) C. McIlroy (Science) P. MITCHELL (Arts) Seventh Row E. MONAGHAN (Arts) G. MORGAN (Arts) Е. MURPHY (Arts) J. Paquin (Science) H. PETTAPIECE (Science) D. Рпом (Science) Eighth Row T. POPIEL (Science) P. RENAUD (Arts) G. SHERIDAN (Science) Н. TALBOT (Arts) B. TIFFIN (Arts) L. TOUPIN (Science) Missing: A. CAPPELLI (Arts) W. Cowan (Science) L. FISCHER (Science) H. KELLY (Science) M. KRAML (Science) А. LAVERTY (Science) C. Момоок (Science) T. O'FARRELL (Science) D. PATTERSON (Arts) Z. SOSNKOWSKI (Science) Nintb Row R. WICKHAM (Arts) I. YACHNIN (Science) А. ZAMBON (Science)

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