Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1961

Page 6 of 164

 

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 6 of 164
Page 6 of 164



Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 5
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Page 6 text:

The College Offers 1. Honour Arts courses in English, History and Economics leading to the degree of Honour B.A. 2. General Arts courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Arts, with special modi- fications to meet pre-Medical and pre-Dental requirements. 3. Honour Science courses in Chemistry, Physics and Mathematics leading to the degree of Honour B.Sc. 4. General Science courses with continuation subjects in Physics, Chemistry, or Mathematics, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science. These courses can be so arranged as to fulfil all pre-Medical requirements. 5. Engineering courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science and eligibility to enter the Fourth Year of their chosen branch of Engineering at McGill University 6. Commerce courses leading to the degree of Bachelor of Commerce with majors in Accounting and Economics. RELIGION Religion is an essential part of life at Loyola as it is in life in general. Students are required to fulfil their religious obligations regularly, and to make annually a spiritual retreat of three days. The Sodality of Our Lady is an organization of students for their Spiritual and Apostolic development within the college sphere. Religion is also an integral part of the curriculum. Being definite and certain like any other truth, it can be taught, and is taught at Loyola. PHILOSOPHY Without sound philosophy there is neither intellectual security nor intellectual maturity. Scholastic Philosophy, the wisdom of the ages, is sound, mature and in- telligible. It does no violence to Faith, to Science, or to Common Sense. Every candi- date for any degree at Loyola must complete successtully a series of courses in Scholastic Philosophy. C.O.T.C. U.N.T.D. U.R.T.P. CAMPUS and STAGE

Page 5 text:

EDITORIAL 1961 A ROAD STRETCHES OUT... from the past, which becomes obscurer R EVI EV with each step forward... towards the future, broad in its scope. A SIGN-POST stands at the road-side, silently blaring forth its imperative message to all jour- neyers: “STOP”. LOYOLA COLLEGE is the road; the student, the (weary) walker. The road is an ever-broadening one, laid across a land of prospects. THE SENIOR STUDENT, accustomed to the stately, stable image of the old Loyola, will remem- ber 1961 for the agitated presence of that new science-building — transgressor! Freddy Fresh- man will be able to think how the new vitality of his college life seemed characterized by the building, a promise of things to come — transfuser! And in between, caught in the midst of old and new, the Sophomores and Juniors will remember 1961 for the very feeling of change itself — transition! AND ALL WILL REMEMBER 1961 for that blatant stop-sign, the delay of recognition of Loyola as a university. Years hence, when Loyola University is an accepted pair of words, the once- student’s memory will ring up faint echoes of past emotion at the terms “Bill 111”, “Premier Lesage’, “L’Université dit non aux Jésuites”. THIS WAS THE “STOP”, or rather the “arrétez”, of 1961. But it is an ever-present and ubiqui- tous command, in a thousand other forms in the same year and in every successive year. It is nothing but Challenge, the guardian angel of Progress, and it always lies between the present and the prospects. IN READING or re-reading the following record of Loyola-1961, you are asked not to dwell on it merely as past glory, for nothing is a surer opium to aistort things out ot all proportion. But reconsider what were the prospects and challenges at the time — and you will be trans- ported into that rich experience of reliving ... Reliving what? Why, the present, of course. Ad Ltt



Page 7 text:

Loyola College Review 1961 MONTREAL, CANADA No. 47 Editor-in-Chief TABLE OF CONTENTS Putt CONTENT Managing Editor thet RosBerRT BOUCHER Dedication : Editorial Graduates Editor RON Parag The College Offers Undergraduates Editor Faculty Marvin LAMoUREUx Class of ’61 News Editors Undergraduates MicHaAEL HOLpRINET Pat KENNIFF Arts Society Sports Editor Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society Ken DesRocHEs Commerce Society Faculty Editor Science Students’ Association ALEX ZBIKOWSKI EIC and CIC Photography Sodality Frank O’Hara Britt LEEcE WALLy CZERWIONKA MIcHAEL NITUCH Eric Brooks Staff Dick APPIGNANESI ; : EGBERT ARCHIBALD Chinese Society JOHN ARPIN Boarders’ Society Jim BAY Debating Bos BENTLEY Dave BRYDEN PETER CASEY GEORGE CIRKOVIC FRED DUBEE REVIEW Gitt Dunn DEREK FEWER Amphora Steve HarroLD Loyola-Marianopolis Bowling League Norm JANELLE Murray Kane MicHarEt G. KELLY Sean KELLY Nestor KowALsky All-Activity Awards Dick KUGELMAN Carnival Neri LALIBERTE Freshman Week RoBerT LANGLAIS NeiL Lavoie Birt Manpzia Football Dick MatTTHIEU Hockey Don McDovuca.i Basketball TERRY MILLER Mark Murrxy GeorcE Ne Norm Payne CARSON RAPPELL Brian RAWLINGS Fi MIke REGAN Curling Harry RENAUD IAC STEVE RETFALVI Football JACQUES ST. PIERRE Dave SAnps Martin SHERWOOD JoHN SuRA PavuL Watt CHARLES WILLETT Mark WLEKENSKI Model PETER ROUSSELLE Handbook Volleyball Skiing Bowling Faculty Advisor ae Rev. Geratp MacGuican Advertising

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