Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) - Class of 1968 Page 1 of 252
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OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT Dear Graduate of 1968: It is with pride and pleasure that I congratulate you on the successful completion of your undergraduate course at Loyola. These last few years have been a time of growth for Loyola, hence, a time of risk, decisions, uncertainties and achievements. They have been a time of visible growth, for all to see: but they have also been, in a more significant way, a time for the Loyola fami ly to grow in mind, personality, and purpose. In all this period, students have made a constructive and notable contribution to Loyola's growth. Something that has already begun is not yet fully understood either in itself or in its possible implications. I refer to the debate (perhaps struggle is a better word) over POWER: student power, faculty participation in governance, establishment, the rights of taxpayers. Here is an issue, though it may not go to the heart of the matter, which consumes much psychic energy uni- versally in the campus world. And here is an issue that will continue to do so until we arrive at a more human and responsible understanding of power. Your going from campus will not free you from fathoming the meaning of power and its uses in human society. These years, I repeat, have been a time of growth for Loyola. If they have alerted you to the issues facing contemporary society, and whetted your eagerness to contribute a truly human answer to some of those issues, then they have been a time of growth for you personally. I hope that among your riches you can count a readiness to do everything that is to be done with respect for the truth, with freedom of spirit, in spite of obstacles within and without, in the teeth of selfishness, sloth, cowardice, popular opinion, and with confidence. Once again, my congratulations and best wishes. You will have your own specific tasks, but you will, I trust, find the zeal and wisdom to create, as you can, peace, justice and brotherhood among men. God bless you. Yours sincerely, mean COLLEGE, 141 SHERBROOKE STREET WEST, MONTREAL 28. The amber light zones. Mark Slade aia fh hed EIU Ht . adueie cp whi vide HH PH ! “a Sy HS A Dd ene Sa lia, alan Simei — —! ee ae, eet ome ee, Samm neat - photographers harvey botting jack burdyl helene darisse klaus fuchs cathy mcisaac roland negue louise patry bob presner editor pierre sarrazin diane simoneau 5 an OF STUDENTS | ADMINIS TR zmez™O ZS Fr. G. McDonough Mr. |. Shearer REGISTRAR STUDENT COUNSELLOR Mr. J. Noonan 16 Fr. J. O'Neill A TIO N | | DEAN OF WOMEN =+ NN Pp zmeeznmO ZPemo Mr. G. Uhlein Miss Ann MacDonald DEAN OF STUDIES FRESHMAN DIRECTOR Fr. C. B. O'Keefe 17 Mr. W. Cozens oqo — 1 OO r= co Mr. D. Brown and Mrs. E. Preston. Mr. J. Lempkowski (chairman) and Mrs. B. Wardy. POLITICAL SCIENCE Mr. H. Habib, SEATED (chairman). STANDING: Mr. R. Coyte, Miss A. Mac- Donald, Mr. P. Dai, Mr. J. Moore. aoe ie SEATED: Dr. J. P. Doyle. STANDING, BACK ROW: Mr. E. Miss D. Park, Mr. C. Grey, Mr. E. Joss, Mr. G. Beretta, Milne, Mr. E. Egan, Mr. V. J. McNamara, Dr. R. C. Mr. J. G. McGraw, Mr. H. H. Lau. Hinners, Dr. J. Morgan, Dr. A. S. Kawczak, MIDDLE ROW: Ce ee — — STANDING: Dr. F. G. W. Adams (chairman), Mr. R. T. Coolidge. SEATED: Mr. Dotson, Dr. D. J. O'Brien, Mrs. A. Levesque-Stein, Mr. W. Hubbard, Mr. J. T. Copp, Mr. C. Schlacks. 5 OO —= Sern sc STANDING: Dr. T. Nogrady, Dr. D. McElcheran, Dr. M. Doughty, Dr. K. Ekler. SITTING: Miss M. Baldwin, Fr. A. Graham, Chairman, Miss H. Wilson, Dr. R. H. Zienius. PHYSICS ‘ a me wg, POT yan WI ate Dr. C. E. Eappen, Chairman; Mr. J. Shin, Mr. Kevin Ford, Dr. N. de Takacsy, Dr. S. Santhanam, Dr. Lone, S.J. SITTING: Mr. P. Kawaja, Mr. J. R. Hanrahan, Chairman. STANDING: Mr. L. J. Boyle, Mr. H. B. Ripstein. SITTING: Mr. R. L. McGraw, Chairman, Mr. L. M. Bessner. STANDING: Mr. H. J. Dauderis, Mr. D. F. MacDonald. MATHEMATICS Mr. A. J. Prillo, Chairman. 21 SITTING: Mr. F. Sawyer, Fr. C. H. Henkey, Chairman, Mr. Apczynski. STANDING: Rabbi D. Hartman, Fr. Sloan, Fr. D. Kennedy, Fr. B. Somfai, Mr. J. Collins, Mr. A. Webster, Mr. J. Hofbeck, Fr. W. Bedard, Mr. P. Jones, Fr. G. O'Brien, S.J. THEOLOGY =D roa = oo SITTING: Dr. J. Kane, Former Chairman. STANDING: Mr. J. Tascone, Chairman, Mr. L. Menard, Mr. J. Bender. i ot -Beslest oe - e tae 5 0 D E R i L A A G U A a: E ) STANDING: Mr. S. J. Kubina, Mr. D. Kaufman, Mr. C. Goldman, Mr. J. A. Krantzberg, Fr. H. Wardell, S.J. SITTING: Mr. S. A. Neilson, Mr. G. W. Joly, Chairman, Mr. K. |. Krakow. CHAIRMAN: Mr. A. E. Lauzier (top right hand corner) along with a cast of thousands. SITTING: Fr. S. Drummond, Chairman, Mr. K. S. Dhindsa. STANDING: Fr. R. T. Cronin. Paco era 9 OE BOO — BOR SH Oma Mr. J. T. Jenkins, Dr. D. J. McDougall, Chairman, and Dr. F. Chown. R. Wareham, A. Raspa. Dr. A. Newell, Dr. A. Hooper (chairman), Dr. S. Russell, Dr. M. Blanar, Mrs. K. Waters, S. Kelly, Dr. A. Raff, Miss J. Anderson. E C 0 N 0 M C § SITTING: Mrs. B. Wright, Mr. S. A. Alvi (chairman), Mr. F. J. Hayes. STANDING: Mr. |. J. Masse, Mr. J. M. Dauvergne, Mr. B. Brody, Mr. D. S. Herskowitz, Mr. C. S. Papadantonakis. 4 OooaDa 2ZOo— 4 BPO — BO ZZwOC Mr. R. Dolinsky (Technical Supervisor), Charles Gagnon, Pat Paris (Secretary), Don Clarke, Mrs. Gail Valaskakis, Fr. M. Gervais, Dr. M. Malik, Dr. John Buell. SEATED: Fr. John O'Brien, Chairman. Do ro tao- = vu STANDING: Mr. J. H. Bauer, Dr. H. W. Ladd, Dr. V. Maheux, Chairman. SITTING: Mrs. Greenblat. MISSING: Dr. J. Lavery. F, R. A. This year's F.R.A. committee chairmen. . | . t UA — : | E cdl x It is late September and the scene is set. One thousand Freshmen prepare to descend on the Loyola campus. And there to greet them are the happy healthy hard-working men and women of the Freshmen Reception Association, who have been at it all summer waiting for this, the big moment. At zero hour, they sally forth from the office, smiling and clapping one another on the shoulder. Off to registration. Hooray, hooray, we are going to make money today. Day after day, the cheerful faces flooded the campus. At the Car Wash, at the Sock Hop, at the Variety Show and the Fashion Show, at the Freshette Tea and at the crown- ing event, the Freshman Fling. Yes sir, and now that it's all over, and the Freshmen are safely indoctrinated into the ways and means of Loyola, FRA can relax for another year. The sun sets on a job well done. a 4 Res 7 § 4 | é, oe : % : z: i = The Godot Quartet-+-1 were one of the many acts seen at the Tuesday and Wednesday night performances of the variety show. VARIETY SHOW reshette Queen Susan Szuba mss me Doma a social event at which freshettes get their first taste of Loyola's weakest brew and their first look at Loyola's finest— upperclassmen Father President delivers his annual address of welcome to the new Freshette class, as Bob Phillips, Chairman of the Freshman Reception Association; Rosemary Sullivan, Women’s Association TEA representative; and Father McDonough, Dean of Students looks on. Loyola upperclassmen sizing up this year's crop. Two sugars,please’’ Susan Szuba. And she only found out she was a princess. Wait till she learns she's the Freshette Queen! Would you believe, surprise? Girls Does this show the true picture of our Or will this endless line go on to endure... the hardships... REGISTRATION DAY 31 AND NOT SO BIG ONES THE BUNNIES CAME THE FROSH CAME AND EXPERIENCED 33 THE WET SIDE FOLLOW THE ARROW Zmeztom7ns The “Island City Six’ joined ‘Bartholomew + 3 in providing the musical entertainment at Place Bonaventure. Dean Scherer does the honours, crowning Freshette Queen Susan Szuba, as the princesses and co-chairman Ross Hast- ings look on. AND THAT EVENING THE WET WET WET SIDE QZ ARTS GRADUATES Fr. G. J. MacGuigan, Associate Dean of Arts Dear Arts Graduates: Graduation is not just a day, not just a ceremony lasting a few short hours, but a period of crucial transition; and all transitions are ambiguous. What happens? Is something born? Does something die? Or both? “Were we led all that way for Birth or Death?’ Both, | think. But they have this in common: Con- tinuity after crisis. You have demonstrated that you are capable of sustained intellectual development. But before you will have any opportunity to make an intellectual contribution, speculative or practical, to mankind you will have to fight for survival in a world much larger, more complex and baffling than the university. The habits of initiative, courage and perseverance you acquired while mastering your studies will be at first more important than your knowledge and intellectual skills. And, first and last, other attainments, recognized only on the horizon of any curriculum, will always be more important: love, delicacy of apper- ceptiveness, and true values. “May your love continue to grow richer and richer yet, through fulness of knowledge and delicacy of apperceptiveness, so that you may learn to prize the true values.’ (Paul to the Philippians) G Ay hangin Congratulations, and may God bless you. 37 MARILYN ACHESON: ENGLISH: “Time is too slow for those who wait, too swift for those who fear, too long for those who grieve, too short for those who rejoice; but for those who love, time is not.” ACTIVITIES: |.A.S.3; Lord Acton Society 3; Social Works 3; Varsity Hockey 4. HUGH ADAMS: HISTORY. BARRY THOMAS APPLEBEE: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘He who thinks he has done enough has done nothing” ACTIVITIES: Economics Society 3-4, Social Works Committee 3 FRANK AUGUSTIN JR. ARMAND BAGORDO: HISTORY: ‘| believe that happiness is the goal of humanity, and | cherish a higher idea of the Divine Being than those pious folk who suppose that man was created only to suffer. ACTIVITIES: L.H.S.A. 1-4 BRYAN S. BARBIERI: HONOURS ECONOMICS: “If a man has a talent and cannot use it, he has failed. If he has a talent and uses only half of it, he has partly failed. If he has a talent and learns somehow to use the whole of it, he has gloriously succeeded, and has a satisfaction and a triumph few men ever know. ’ Thomas Wolfe. ACTIVITIES: Economics Honours Society 2-4; L M Bowling League 1-4; football, golf, basketball. MICHAEL DAVID BARRETT: ECONOMICS: “Beware of those who fall at your feet, they may be reaching for the corner of the rug.” ACTIVITIES: R.A.C. 1; Homecoming 3; Carnival 4; Sigma Delta Phi; football, hockey, basketball 1-4. PASQUALE BAVOTA: HISTORY. ‘Life only teaches man what he is.'' Goethe ACTIVITIES: L.1.S. 2-3; L.H.S.A. 3-4; basketball; J.V. Football. HELGA BAYER: SOCIOLOGY. ‘‘When you know a thing, to hold that you know it; and when you do not know a thing, to allow that you do not know it, this is knowledge.'’ Confucius. ACTIVITIES: Sociology Club 2-4; S.A.M. 1; Folk Music 1; Social Works 1. MARIO JOSEPH BAZZOCCHI: ECONOMICS. ‘'If little labour, little are our gaines; man’s fortunes are according to his paines.’’ Robert Herrich. ACTIVITIES: L.I.S. 2-3; Investment Club 1; intramural hockey; football; basketball; volleyball. NORMAN BEAUFILS: ECONOMICS. “To have everything, is to have no reason to live.” JOHN R. BERNARDIN: SOCIOLOGY. “. . . to be taken with a grain of sodium chloride.’ Dr. J. Kane ACTIVITIES: Loyola Archery Club, manager 3; advisor, 4. AGNES IONA BLACKMON: HISTORY. “If everyone in the world was fatter, people would live closer together.” ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 2-3; Drama Club 2; West Ind ian Society 2-4; L.H.S.A. 2-4. GLEN BLOUIN: COMMUNICATION ARTS. “There's something happening here, but you don't know what it is, do you Mr. Jones?” Bob Dylan. ACTIVITIES: Arts Assembly 3; NEWS Sports ed. 4; varsity b-ball manager 2-3; j.v. b-ball 1, 2; 1.A.C. b-ball commissioner 2-3; intramural football, b-ball, volleyball 1-4. ARTHUR GERARD BLUM: ENGLISH. ‘Success is seeing your best friend fail.” Lenny Bruce. ACTIVITIES: Carnival 3; Social Work Club 2; Intramural hockey 1. LASZLO S. BOESZOERMENY: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. “In nature is the preservation of mankind.”’ ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. HANIA BOLASZEWSKA: MODERN LANGUAGES, | were but little happy if | could say much.”’ Shakespeare ACTIVITIES: W.U.S.C. 1; Sodality 1-2; Loyola Polish Society 2-4; Psychology Club 4. MARGARET BONAR: ENGLISH. ‘'For all experience is an art where through gleams that untrodden world whose margin fades, forever and ever as | go.’ ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta Sorority 3-4; Liberal Club 3. JYLLIAN BONNEY: ENGLISH. ‘The great man is he who in the midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of solitude.’’ Emerson MAURIZIO BOTTEGA: ECONOMICS. ‘Education begins a gentleman, conversation completes him.” ACTIVITIES: L.1.S. 3 DAVID BRADY: HONORS ECONOMICS. ‘The affirmation of one’s own life, happiness, growth, freedom is rooted in one’s capacity to love.’’ Erich Fromm ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma 2-4; A.1.E.S.E.C.; S.A.M.; Economics Society. MICHAEL BERNARD BRADY: ECONOMICS. ‘Life is not a bowl of cherries; it's a bowl of raisins. Raisin kids and raisin money. ACTIVITIES: Carnival 4; Intramurals 1-4 JACK E. BROWN. MILES BUCKMAN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Our society and standard of living are the worst forms of human habitation imaginable;—except for all the other forms in existence.” ACTIVITIES: Loyola Investment Club (chairman) 2-3; C.A.B. 2-3; Loyola Debating Society J. BURDYL. SHARON LOUISE BUSH: HISTORY. ‘'I grew up to be the kind of kid my mother wouldn't let me play with.” ACTIVITIES: L.H.S.A. 1-3; Liberal Club 1-2; West Indian Society 3. ROBERT BUTLER: HISTORY. ' ‘tis better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open one's mouth and remove all doubt.'' Shakespeare ACTIVITIES: L.H.S.A. 2-4; B. of Directors 4; F.R.A. 3-4; News 4; Varsity b-ball 3; J.V. Football 3 VALERIE E. BURNS: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘In politics as on the sickbed, people toss from one side to the other, thinking they will be more comfortable.’’ Goethe ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta 2-4 (sec. 3, treas. 4); F.R.A. 2; Liberal Club 2; B-ball; hockey 3. CLARK WILFRED CADA: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘In the lexion of youth which fate reserves for a bright manhood, there is no such word as—Fail.’’ Lord Lytton. ACTIVITIES: Carnival 3-4; Sno-Ball Chairman 4; Homecoming 4; Varsity Swimming; Intramural Football 3; Hockey 3-4; Swimming 3-4. ROBERT ANTHONY CALDERISI: HONOURS HISTORY. “Jamais on ne peut oublier ceux qui souffrent; la nature humaine 4 cet égard, vaut mieux qu'on ne croit. ’ Mme. de Staél. ACTIVITIES: L.H.S.A. 4 (President); Lord Acton Society 2-3 (Vice-President); Liberal Club 2-4 (Policy Chairman); |.A.S. 1-4; Loyola News 3-4; Philosophy Club 4; Social Works Committee 4; CUSO 4. STEPHEN JAMES CALLARY: HISTORY: ‘‘It's been... . . ACTIVITIES: Varsity Football 2-3; Theta Sigma 2-4 (V.P. 3, Affiliation 4) Carnival Chairman 4. MICHAEL JOHN CAPORICCI: HISTORY: “Of all sad words of tongue or pen, The saddest are these: ‘It might have been!’ '' John Greenleaf Whittier ACTIVITIES: Intramural Hockey 1; Lord Acton Society 2-3; LHSA 4. DOREEN CARBRAY: SOCIOLOGY. ANNA CARIGNAN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘The past is consumed in the present and the present is living only because it brings forth the future.’ James Joyce ACTIVITIES: Cheerleading 1-2; Phi Delta Sorority 2-4. BRIAN EMMETT CARLEY: ECONOMICS. ‘To be a man is to feel that through one’s own con- tribution, one helps to build the world.’’ Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. ACTIVITIES: |.A.C. 2; S.A.M. 2; Varsity Hockey Manager 3; Intramural Hockey, Football, Basketball 1-4. WILLIAM CASEY: COMMUNICATION ARTS. DENIS R. CHARBONNEAU: ECONOMICS. ‘Avance au large dans la joie, la-bas un grand Destin t'attend.”’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Football 1-2; S.A.M. 1; Varsity Hockey Manager 3, F.RA. 3; KENNETH CHEVRIER: BIO-CHEMISTRY. Who needs quotes? John Ibid Joe Anon Amous ACTIVITIES: Folk Singing Society 2; Pre-Med Pre-Dent 2-4; Arts Society 2-4. ANNA CICCOTOSTO: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Life is eternal; and life is immortal; and death is only a horizon; and a horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight.’’ Rossiter Worthington Raymond. ACTIVITIES: Italian Society Secretary 2 4; LASA Secretary 4; PMPD 2-4; FRA 2; Psychology Club. DESMOND ROBERT CLARK: POLITICAL SCIENCE: Not failure, but low aim, is crime. D. W. COLSON: SOCIOLOGY. WAYNE K. COMMEFORD: ENGLISH. ‘Defeat lies imminent only if accepted.’ ACTIVITIES: Varsity Football 3-4; Intramural Athletics 1-4; PMPD 1-3; Debating 1; Social Works Committee 2-3. JOHN MACDONALD CONNOLY: POLITICAL SCIENCE. “All that is necessary for the triumph of evil in the world is for good men to stand by and do nothing.’’ Edmund Burke ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 2; PSSA 2-4; RAC3 (Chairman); Board of Directors 4; Committee on Academic Standing 4; Residence Proctor 4; CUSO 4. C. J. COOKE: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. MICHAEL COOKE: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ’. . . and away we go.” Jackie Gleason. ACTIVITIES: FRA Chairman; Faculty Presidents’ Dance, Chairman; Loyola News, Managing Editor; CAB, Director; Board of Directors; Drama Club, Stage Manager Publicity; Engineering Society; Science Students Association; Geology Club; Arts Society. ROBERT BRIAN CORBETT: ECONOMICS. . . . It's all part of the rich pageantry of Life.'’ Wise Old Man ACTIVITIES: J.V. Football 2; Varsity Football, 3; Intramural Basketball, Football, Volleyball, 2-4. BARRY JOSEPH CORMIER: ENGLISH. “To thy own self be true and't must follow, as the night the day, and thou canst not then be false to man.’ Shakespeare CATHERINE GAIL COSGROVE: SOCIOLOGY. ''Know thyself.” ACTIVITIES: Social Works Committee 2-4; Sociology Club 2-4. ERIC COSGROVE: COMMUNICATION ARTS. “If you don't stand for something, you'll fall for anything.” ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma 1-4; RAC 2; Sodality 1-2; PSSA 4; Comm. Arts Guild 4 (President). ROBERT WILLIAM COSMAN: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘‘Love is the only satisfactory answer to the problem of human existence. Erich Fromm ACTIVITIES: Maroon and White 3-4; Liberal Club 2 (V-P); RAC 3; Inter-Varsity Conference Committee 3 (Chairman); Public Relations 3 (Director); Sigma Delta Phi 2-4; Lower House 3; Loyola Athletic Assembly 3 (Chairman); CUS Conference Delegate 2; Joint-Administration Faculty-Student Committee 3 (Chairman); RAC Proctor 3-4; Board of Publications 3-4 (Chairman 4); Football; Squash; Cross-country skiing. KATHY L. COUGLIN: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘Quel enfant pauvre, eleve dans la poussiere des routes ne leur a confie ses reves? Elles les portent lentement, majestueusement, vers on ne sait quelles mers inconnues, O grands fleuves de lumieres et d’ombres qui portez la reve des pauvres!'’ Bernados. ACTIVITIES: Drama 2-4; L.A.S.A. 2; Student Center 4; Board of Publications 4. ROBERT G. COULL: PSYCHOLOGY: ‘‘Liberty is not merely a privilege to be conferred; it is a habit to be acquired.'' David Lloyd George ACTIVITIES: L.A.S.A. 1; P.M.P.D. 2; Psychology Club 3-4; Liberal Club 3; Varsity Football; Judo Club 4; Intramural hockey 2-3. HUGH CRAIGEN: SOCIOLOGY. MARY KATHRYN CRAWFORD: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting’’ Wm. Wordsworth ACTIVITIES: U.M.U.N. 1; Phi Delta 2-4; pres. 4; Homecoming 2; Sociology Club; sec. 4; Psych. Club; Social Works; Arts Assembly, 3; Cheerleading 1-2; Intramural Basketball. MARGARET CUDDIHY. ANTHONY CUGLIANDRO: FRENCH POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘le reel et l'irreel sont, en effect, le rejouis de pouvoir me perdre dans |'un et me retrover dans |'autre! ACTIVITIES: Loyola News 2( photo editor); L.I.S. 2-4; Loyola Italo-Canadian Society 4 (Pres.) MICHAEL J. CULLEN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. Idjacation is something a man has to fight for an’ pull out iv’ its hole be th’ hair iv its head. That's th’ reason it’s so precious. (E. P. Dunne, ‘Mr. Carnegie's Gift'’) ACTIVITIES: Varsity Hockey 1-3; Intramural Football; Basketball; Hockey; Swimming; Volleyball; Badminton; 1-4. JOSEPH CURZI: ECONOMICS. ‘Some men stumble on the truth, but they just pick themselves up and hurry on again. ’ Churchill ACTIVITIES: L.1.S.2; Intramural Boxing 3-4. MICHAEL HARROLD DALY: HISTORY. ‘The farther backward you can look, the farther forward you are likely to see.’’ Churchill ACTIVITIES: Wrestling, 3-4. FERNANDO D’ARCO: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Why take life so seriously, you'll never get out of it alive.” ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4; Campus Creditistes 1-2; L.I.S. 2-3. RICHARD DAWSON: SOCIOLOGY. ‘The possessing of riches means even greater agony than the acquisition of riches.’’ Seneca ACTIVITIES: Varsity Hockey 1-4; B.V.T. 1-4. PIER PAOLO DEL GRANDE. MARCELLO DELLA SERRA: POITICAL SCIENCE. MASSIMILIANO GIUSEPPE DELLA ZAZZERA: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Nemo me impune lacessit’’ ACTIVITIES: Italian Society 2-4 (President 3); Pre-med Pre-dent Society 2-4 (Vice-President 3). JOHN BERNARD DELORME: SOCIOLOGY. ‘'‘I've developed a new philosophy. Now | only dread one day at a time.’ Schultz ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 2-3; F.R.A. 2; Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity 3-4; Sociology Club 2-4. ARMANDO D’ERRICO: FRENCH. ‘The woods are lovely, dark and deep. But | have promises to keep, And miles to go before | sleep, And miles to go before | sleep.’’ Frost ACTIVITIES: Band 1-2; L.I.S. 2-3; Broomball 3-4; Socuum 4 (Pres.) A. DERY. MICHAEL VICTOR DETTMERS: ECONOMICS. ‘'‘We Know what we are, but Know not what we may be.'’ Shakespeare ACTIVITIES: Loyola Choral Society; Intramural Hockey 1-4. J. PHILIP DEWITT: ECONOMICS. ‘This out of all will remain—they have lived and have tossed: so much of the game will be gain, thou the gold of the dice has been lost.'’ Jack London ACTIVITIES: L.A.S.A.; Investment Club; J.V. Football. MICHAEL ARTHUR DIORIO: BIO-CHEM. The test of our progress is not whether we add more to abundance of those who have much, it is whether we provide enough for those who have too little. ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4; Drama Club 1; Social Works Committee 2-3; F.R.A. 4, |.B.P. 4. ANTHONY DI SALVO. EDWARD DIZAZZO: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘Man suffers from an appalling ignorance of his own human nature; each of us then must dedicate ourselves to the human dilemma.'' Wm. Golding ACTIVITIES: L.A.S.A. 1-4; Amphora 2; Psychology Club 2-4 (Founder 2, Pres. 4); Radio Loyola 3-4 (Programming director); Sociology Club 3-4; A.I.E.S.E.C. 4; Broomball 3-4. JEFFREY IAN DREBEN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ACTIVITIES: P.S.S.A. 4(V.P.); Liberal Club 3 (Policy chairman); Karate Club 4; Debating Club 4. BARBARA DRESSLER: FRENCH. ‘Et je boirai encore s'il me plait l’univers’’ Apollinaire ACTIVITIES: Review 1; Phi Delta Sorority 2; Modern dancing 3-4. DAVID DUBEAU: ENGLISH. ‘‘A minute's success pays the failure of years.’ Robert Browning ACTIVITIES: Intramural football; basketball; hockey; volleyball; swimming; skiing 1-4. PATRICIA DUDAR. ALFRED P. DUFFY: HISTORY. MICHAEL JOSEPH FARRELL: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. “| cried because | had no shoes; then | saw a man who had no feet.”’ ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med. 3-4. JOSE L. FERNANDEZ: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Great men are measured by the sincerity and the rectitude of their actions.'’ Sir Winston Churchill ACTIVITIES: Foreign Students Association 1-2; |.A.S. 1-4; R.A.C. Cultural Committee Co-chairman 3; Latin American Society Pres. 2-3; P.S.S.A. 4 (Pres.); R.A.C. Chief Proctor 4; Sigma Delta Phi 2-4. PAULINE FITZGERALD: HISTORY. All ignorance toboggans into know and trudges up to ignorance again: and if spring should spoil the game, what then? ACTIVITIES: Folk Music Society 1; Drama 2-4; Campus Liberals 2-4; L.H.S.A. 2-4 (Sec.-Treas. 4); F.R.A. 2-3; Student Center Committee 3; Review 4; CUSO 4. GERALD FRANCIS FLAHERTY: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘Care to our coffin adds a nail, no doubt, and every grin so merry draws one out.’’ John Wolcot ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 3-4 (V.P. 4); P.S.S.A. 3-4; L.A.S.A. 3-4; Intramural judo, weight-lifting; Hockey; broomball; Skiing. BRIAN LAWRENCE FOLEY: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘‘Society is now one polished horde? Made up of two mighty tribes, the Bores and the Bored.’’ Byron L ACTIVITIES: Radio Loyola 1, 2, 3; Theta Sigma founder; President 2, 3, Interfrat. Council Pres. 4; Comm-Arts Guild, Vice-Pres. 4; Cinema '67; Cinema '68; Godome Seminar. PAUL FORTUGNO: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Virtuous and vicious every man must be, Few in the extreme, but all in the degree.’’ A. Pope ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club, 3, 4; Political Science Student Association (social comm. chairman) ANDRE FREDETTE. NOEL ANDREW GALLAGHER: HONOURS ENGLISH. ‘But | have promises to keep And miles to go before | sleep.'’ Robert Frost ACTIVITIES: Liberal Arts Club, 1, 2, 3; International Affairs Club, 1, 2; Bowling, 1, 2; Touch Football, 1, 2; Intramural Hockey, 1, 2 PATRICK GIBAULT: BIO-CHEMISTRY. Fais ce que dois Advienne que pourra. ACTIVITIES: 1st Stanislas col; N.D.P. Club 2, 3, 4; PMPD 2, 3, 4; L.I.S. 3; C.I.C. 4; Parachute Club 3; Vice-Pres. 4; Bowling 3. LINDA GIBBONS: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘It is the chiefest point of happiness that a man is willing to be what he is.’’ Erasmus ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta Sorority, 3, 4; Phi Delta Sorority Pledge Educator, 4; Secretary of Arts Society, 2; Comm. Arts Guild, 3, 4; Intramural basketball hockey, 2, 3; Cinema 66-68, 2,3, 4; Loyola Combined Appeal, 1; Western Film Festival 4. MARY GLEESON: COMM. ARTS. ‘Don't part with your illusions, when they are gone you may still exist, but you have ceased to live. ’ Mark Twain ACTIVITIES: Radio Loyola, 2, 3; Modern Dance, 2, 3; Carnival Princess, 2; Cinema 67; Drama, 3; Comm. Arts Guild, 4; Women's Association, 3, 4; Western Festival, 4; Cinema 68, 4. PETER A. GLOBENSKY: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘. . . A man does what he must in spite of personal consequences—in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures—and that is the basis of all human morality.’’ J.F.K. Profiles In Courage ACTIVITIES: J. F. K. Campaign 1; |.A.S. (V.P. 2) (Pres. 3); SUNAC Reg. Director 2; A.I.R.C. (V.P. 3); TKE 3-4; CUSO 4; U.M.U.N. 1-2; P.S.S.A, 2-3. WALTER GODZISZ: ECONOMICS. ‘A great deal of what we see in others is the reflection of what we are.” ACTIVITIES: Loyola News 2 ; Radio Loyola 2; Investment Club, 3; Intramural Boxing, 3, 4. LEIGH GRASSBY: PSYCHOLOGY. What man with all his ingenuity has failed to accomplish, woman has achieved with a hairpin. ACTIVITIES: Social works, 1, 2, 3, Lambda Pi Epsilon, 2, 3, Vice-Pres. 4, Faculty Ed. of Review 68, Psychology Club, 2, 3, 4, Skiing, 2, 3, basketball, 1, 2, intramural basketball, 4, swimming, 2. RICHARD GRAY: SOCIOLOGY. It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today, and the reality of tomorrow. L. T. ACTIVITIES: Social Works, 1, 2, 3, Chairman 3,F.R.A.2, Carnival, 1, Cuso, Co-Chairman, 4, WUSC, 1, 2, Sociology Club, Vice-Pres. 4, Kappi Chi Chapter of Tau Kappa Epsilon, 2, 3, 4. CHARLES GRIFFIN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. Not the cross, but the light. ACTIVITIES: Varsity Swimming, 1, 2, 3, Intramural Hockey, Football, Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Theta Sigma Frat. 2,3, 4, B.V.T. 1, 2, 3, 4. MICHAEL GRIFFIN: ECONOMICS. RICHARD GRIFFITHS: CLASSICS. '‘A man who never goes out on a limb may preserve the safety of his position, but he will never rise above it.'’ Anonymous. ACTIVITIES: L.M.S.A. Board of directors, 4, P.S.S.A. 4, S.A.M. 4, News 2. JAMES GROULX: COMMUNICATION ARTS. By appreciation we make excellence in others our own property. Voltaire. ACTIVITIES: F.R.A. 2, 3, 4, Folk Music, 1, 2, 3,4, Comm. Arts Guild, 3, 4, Varsity Swimming, 1 Social works, 1, 3, Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity, 2, 3, 4. , THOMAS ALBERT GUAY: PSYCHOLOGY. These are the times that try men’s souls. ACTIVITIES: Swimming, 1, 2, Theta Sigma 2, 3, 4, Founding Brother, Vice-Pres. '65, Rush Chairman '67, Psychology Club, 2, 3. MICHAEL GUINARD: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Life is a nightmarish dream where ‘what you are’ is always in pursuit of ‘what you want to be’ but ‘what you want to be’ is always one step ahead of ‘what you are’.’’ Cosmo. ACTIVITIES: Intramural Hockey, 1, 2, Broomball, 4, PRC 3, Delta Epsilon Rho, 3, 4. ROMAN GUT: BIO-CHEMISTRY. ‘There is nothing that fails like success.'’ G. K. Chesterton. ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med. Dent. Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, Loyola Ukrainian Society, 1, 2, 3, Vice-Pres, 4, Phi Lambda Rho 2, 3, Secrefary, 4, Ukrainian Canadian University Students’ Union, 3, 4, V-P. MARY HANYCZ: HISTORY. Were | to live again, it should be as | have already lived; | neither deplore the past, nor dread what is to come. ACTIVITIES: L.H.S.A., Ukrainian Club 1-3 (Sec.). DAVID R. HEDGECOE: SOCIOLOGY. The happiest of men are those who gave themselves up to die and lived again to live life as a gift rather than a job to be done. ACTIVITIES: Varsity Hockey 1-3. ROBERT JOHN HERROLD: SOCIOLOGY. Jealousy is the most hideously withering evil: it finds a rose-tree and leaves a stick. ACTIVITIES: Social Works Club 2-3, Sociology Club 2-4, Intramural Football, Hockey, Basketball. JAMES WILLIAM HNATCHUCK: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘Happiness is the only good. The time to be happy is now, The place to be happy is here, The way to be happy is to make others so.’' R. Ingersoll. ACTIVITIES: S.A.C. budget committee 4, Graduate Employment Annual 4, L M Bowling, S.A.M. 2-3, Philosophy Club 3, Economics Society 2-4, Lower House 3, Student Economic Rep. 3, F.R.A. 2-3, Intramural boxing 3. BRIAN HENRY HOOBIN: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘“‘The time you have to do something, is the time it will take you to do it.” ACTIVITIES: Intramural hockey, football, basketball 1-4, golf 1, bowling 1. HAROLD ROSS HORWOOD: COMMUNICATION ARTS. “It takes two to make a day; God and you.” ACTIVITIES: Social Works Committee 1-2, Comm. Arts Guild 3-4. JAMES WILLIAM JOHNSON JR.: ECONOMICS. ACTIVITIES: Economics Society 3-4, Inter. Students Assoc. 1-2. PETER E. JOHNSON: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘'God is the measure of all things, but it is only through self-development that finite things can imitate as it were the fullness of the Divine Actuality. ’ (Prothagoras) ACTIVITIES: Ski team (1-4, cap. 2, sec-treas. 3), Swim team 2, intramural hockey 1-4, football 2-4, volleyball 2-4, golf 3, P.S.S.A. 1-4 DINO JULIANO: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘When you know me, you don't understand me. When you understand me, you don't me. We become enemies. | lose, but. ACTIVITIES: Soccer 3-4, Broomball 3. AGNES E. KAGUAH: SOCIOLOGY. ‘My achievements of these four years of toil are to be dedicated to the youth of my race, the vanguard of the new Africa so that we may be masters of our own destiny. ACTIVITIES: Africa Club Treasurer 1. KENNETH WILLIAM KAIDAS: ECONOMICS. ‘'Bravely, faithfully, perhaps successfully.” ACTIVITIES: Classics Club 2, Economics Society 3-4, Investment Club 4. BOGDAN SZCZEPAN KARASEK: PHILOSOPHY. ‘The Masses, their stench nauseates me.” ACTIVITIES: Philosophy club 2-3 (Pres.) 4, Honours Economics society 2-3, Liberal Party 4. WALTER MICHAEL KARWATSKY: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Woe to the man whose heart has not learned while young to hope, to love—and to put its trust in life.'' Joseph Conrad. ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4, Liberal club 4, Phi Lambda Rho 2-4, Ukrainian Society 3-4, Arts Society 1-4. YVONNE KASPERS: SOCIOLOGY. ‘‘Be a warm and glowing lamp in the chamber if you are not to be a star in the sky. ACTIVITIES: |.A.S. 1-2, F.R.A. 1, Drama 1, Modern Dance 2-3, Loyola News 1, L.A.S.A. 4, Sociology Club 3-4, Instructor for the Sociology Dept. DANIEL JAMES KENNEDY: HONOURS HISTORY. ‘‘As luck would have it, Providence was on my side.'' Samuel Butler. ACTIVITIES: Liberal club 1-3, |.A.S. 1-2, L M Bowling 1-2, Football 1-3 PATRICK KEOUGH. JOSEPH F. KOLANO: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘| am human in that | make mistakes; mad in that | admit them. ACTIVITIES: Psychology club 3-4, Arts Society 3-4, Liberal club 3, 1.A.S. 2, Radio Loyola 2, Broomball 3-4. PATRICIA KOSTIUK. CYNTHIA-ANNE KOWAL: COMMUNICATION ARTS: ‘This strange disease of modern life, With its sick hurry, its dividend aims .. . ’ Matthew Arnold ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta Sorority 2-3; European Society (Vice-pres.) 3-4; Cinema ‘66; Cinema ‘67; Cinema '68; Communication Arts Guild 3-4; Western Film Festival; Ukrainian Society 2-4; Modern Dance 2-3 MARIAN STANLEY KRASKA: BIO-CHEM. ‘Victory is but an illusion of philosophers and fools. ACTIVITIES: Pre-med Pre-dent Society 2-4; Phi Lambda Rho 3. JOE KRAWCZYK. DAVID MICHAEL KUFTA: ECONOMICS. ‘To be what you are, and to become what you are ‘capable of becoming is the one aim of life.’’ Robert Louis Stevenson ACTIVITIES: SAM 2; Varsity J.V. Basketball, Manager 3; IAC 4; Intramural Hockey, Basketball, Football, Broomball 2-4. PETER LEONARD KYULULE: HONOURS HISTORY. ‘‘Ukimtaka pweza, mtekenye’’ Swahili proverb. ACTIVITIES: Africa Club (President) 4; CUSO 2-4; Loyola History Students’ Association 3-4; Debating Society 2. JOSEPH LALLA: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘To found or to govern states is the labor in which the human hero shows himself most godlike, and a life of political service is the crown of human blessedness .. .'' Aristotle ACTIVITIES: Loyola Arts Association (Pres.) 4; PSSA 3; Loyola Model Parliament 2; Italian Society 1. CHEUKMAN LAM: PSYCHOLOGY. ' Faith is the force of life’’ Tolstoy ACTIVITIES: Chinese Student Assoc. 1-4, Psychology Club 3-4 J. C. LAPIERRE. ELIZABETH LARKIN: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘‘Life is less than nothing without love, And | have found my love, So life begin! ACTIVITIES: Lambda Pi Epsilon 3-4; Psychology Club 3; Arts Society 3; Homecoming '67; Women’s Intercollegiate Ice Hockey 3-4; Intramural Field Hockey 3; Badminton 3-4; Basketball 4; Women's Athletic Council 3-4 (President 4). FRANK T. LAZZARA: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Be not like a stream that brawls, Loud and shallow waterfalls, But in quiet self-control, Link together soul and soul.'’ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. ACTIVITIES: Italian Society 1-2; Pre-med Pre-dent Society 2-4; Phi Lambdd Rho 2-4; Psychology Club 4. MICHAEL THOMAS LEBLANC: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘What another would have done as well as you, do not do it. What another would have said as well as you, do not say it; written as well, do not write it. Be faithful to that which exists nowhere but in yourself—and thus make yourself indispensable. ’ Andre Gide. ACTIVITIES: Pre-med Pre-dent Society 2-4; Phi Lambda Rho 3-4. MIKE LECOUR: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘‘When you've seen beyond yourself Then you may find, peace of mind, is waiting there And the time will come when you see we're all one, and life flows on within you and without you. Harrison. ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma 1-4; Varsity Hockey 2-4; Intramural Hockey, Football, Broomball. RON LECOUTEUR: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘When you find your true friends in time of need— love them.” ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 1; Loyola News 2-3 (Photo Ed. 2); Arts Society 1; WUSC 2; Folk Music Club 2; Loyola Band 2; Cinema '67; Communication Arts Guild 3-4; Western Film Festival 4; Cinema ‘68; Film Producer; Car Rally; Carnival (Promotion), 4. ILONA MARIE LENARD: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘The most beautiful thing in life is that our souls remain hovering over the places where we once enjoyed ourselves.’’ Kahlil Gibran. ACTIVITIES: Social Works Committee 1; Loyola News 1; Radio Loyola 2; FRA 2 (Chairman, Princess Committee); Lambda Pi Epsilon 2-4 (President); LMAA Secretary 3-4; Psychology Club 4; Homecoming 4; Varsity Swimming 4. MICHELE-MARIE LEROUX: PRE-MED. ‘The longest journey is the journey inwards.’ Dag Ham merskjold. ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 1-2, 1.A.S. 1-2, P.M.P.D. '' 2-4 (Sec. 3) WINSTON ANTHONY LEWIS: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Dig water boy dig, for perseverence will make you conquer.” ACTIVITIES: SAM 1; Foreign Students Association 2-3; West Indian Society 2-4 (President 4); Philosophy Club 1-3; PSSA 2-3; Liberal Club 3. MAXINE LOBEL: HONOURS ENGLISH. ‘‘Ask not for whom the bell tolls —it tolls for thee’ John Donne. ACTIVITIES: Treasure Van 1-2; Blood Drive 1-3; Women's Association 1-3; Intramural Field Hockey, Skiing. MICHAEL LOMBARDI: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘If you lose, put a winning touch into your losing smile.” ACTIVITIES: Varsity Soccer 2-4; Indoor Soccer Tournament 3-4; Intramural Broomball 3-4; Psychology Club 3-4. RUTH LUKAWESKI: PSYCHOLOGY. MICHAEL DANIEL LUNDY: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Say what you mean, mean what you say. ACTIVITIES: TKE social president 2-4; FRA 2, vice-chairman 3; Central Advertising Bureau, co-director 2; Arts society 1, 2, president 3. ALEXANDER JOSEPH LUPINSKI: ENGLISH. “To be or not to be: that is the question. (William Shakespeare) But what is the answer?’ A. M. MACAULAY. LINDA MacINTYRE: HONOURS ENGLISH. ‘‘Life, my dear friends, is rather like a sardine can, with all of us looking for the key .. . ' Beyond the Fringe. ACTIVITIES: Drama 1-4, secretary 3, vice-president 4; Folk Music 1-3; Senate 3-4. IAN ANGLIN MACKAY: COMMUNICATION ARTS. “Do you know Carter, that | can actually write my name in the dust on the table? Faith, Mum, that’s more than | can do. Sure, there's nothing like education, after all. ’ Punch ACTIVITIES: Chairman, Homecoming ‘66, Committee on Student Life, 4; Board of Publications 4; Loyola News 3, Sigma Delta Phi fraternity 2-4, executive 3; Residence senate 3; Varsity hockey 2. DONNA KATHERINE MacNEIL: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Give us courage, and the quiet mind.’ COLIN ROSS MacPHERSON: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Il n'y a qu'une erreur et qu'un malheur au monde, c'est de ne pas savoir assez aimer.'’ George Bernanos. ACTIVITIES: Intramural football 1-3, hockey 1, 2, 4, golf 3, 4; U.M.U.N. (IAS) 1; PSSA vice- president 3; LASA executive 4. B. J. MAGUIRE: HISTORY. E. MALONEY. ROBERT J. MARKOWSKI: POITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Success is to work faithfully eight hours a day so you may eventually get to be a boss and work 12 hours a day.’ Robert Frost. ACTIVITIES: Jazz society 2-3; J.V. football 3; intramural football 2; S.I.M.S. 4. NORMA MARTINELLO: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it, than to consume wealth without producing it.'’ George Bernard Shaw ACTIVITIES: IAS 3-4; Psychology Club 3-4; AIESEC 4. NINO MASSIA: ‘'He lives well who hides best.’ Descartres. JAMES A. McCANN: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Many the wonders, but nothing walks stranger than man.” Sophocles ACTIVITIES: Intramural basketball 1; volleyball, 1; hockey and football 1-4; Review 2; FRA 4; Directory 4; manager of JV hockey Braves 3; manager of Varsity hockey 4. ROBERT McDONAUGH: ECONOMICS. wi. = K. McDONOUGH. GERALD McGRATH: ECONOMICS. Great minds are very near to madness. Fogarty. ACTIVITIES: Varsity Hockey 1-4, Intramural Football 1-3. MAUREEN McGRATH: HONOURS ENGLISH. ‘‘Man is worthy.” ACTIVITIES: CIASP 2-3. DION McGUIRE: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country.’ John F. Kennedy. ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 1-2; Carnival 1, 2, 4; J.V. Football 2; Varsity football 3; LMAA publicity chairman 2, 3; Sports manager 1-3; Loyola News 4; LMAA executive secretary 4; IAC vice-president 4; intramural hockey, football and basketball 1-4; varsity hockey 4. RONALD W. McINTOSH: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘When the morning's freshness has been re- placed by the weariness of midday, when the leg muscles quiver under the strain, the climb seems endless, and, suddenly, nothing will go quite as you wish—it is then that they must not hesitate.’’ Dag Hammarskjold ACTIVITIES: intramural football 3, basketball 1; Phi Lambda Rho; Pre-med, Pre-dent society 1-4. THOMAS GREGOR McMAHON: COMMUNICATION ARTS. “‘Only by interpreting the world in a new way shall we understand the world and be put in the position to take the first real step to changing it. ACTIVITIES: intramural hockey, football 1, 2, 4; varsity football 1; JV football 2; intramural swimming 1-2; News 2-4; photo dept. 2-4; Carnival committee 2-4; Communication Arts Guild 3-4; Pre-med pre-dent 2-3; Amphora 1-3. FRANK McNALLY. RONALD LEE McNAUGHTON: HISTORY. ‘‘Life is a garment; when it is dirty, we must brush it; when it is ragged, it must be patched; but we keep it as long as we can.'’ Honoré de Balzac ACTIVITIES: intramural football and hockey; LHSA 2-4 PATRICK MICHAUD. DONALD MICHELIN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘'It is one thing to show a man that he is in error, and another to put him in possession of the truth.’ Locke ACTIVITIES: intramural hockey 1-4. FRANK ERNEST MIHIC: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘When tools are laid to rest, and all's been said and done . . . pick up your own—but quickly! For there’s yet another battle to be won.'' F. E. M. ACTIVITIES: skiing; judo. ROCCO MONTESANO: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘The difficult can be done immediately, the impos- sible takes a little longer.” ACTIVITIES: bowling 1-3; Italian society 1-4; Pre-med pre-dental society 2-4; Liberal club 4. PETER L. MORRISSETTE: ECONOMICS. ‘“‘Success is not ‘having it made’ but rather ‘getting it made’.”’ ACTIVITIES: Sigma Delta Phi fraternity 2-4; ski club 1-4; intramural football and hockey 1-2. MONNA JOY MOSKOVITCH: COMMUNICATION ARTS. “Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror. ’ Kahlil Gibran ACTIVITIES: Loyola Combined Appeal 1-2; Treasure Van 1-2; Blood Drive 1-4; Cinema 66, 67, 68, 2-4; Carnival 1, 4; Comm. Arts Guild 3-4; Western Film Festival 4. IRENE MOTYKA: PSYCHOLOGY: ‘‘But love strikes one hour—love, Those never loved, Who say that they loved once. ACTIVITIES: Ukrainian Club; Psychology club; IAS HARALD RICHARD MUELLER: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘We have no more right to consume happi- ness without producing it than to consume wealth without prdoucing it.'' George Bernard Shaw ACTIVITIES: News managing editor 1-2; varsity skiing 2; Student Centre committee 3; Sigma Delta Phi fraternity 2-4, secretary 3; SAC secretary 4; pre-med pre-dental society 2-4. LILLIAN MURPHY: FRENCH. ‘And let the years | have been lent bring me not fame, but sweet content.” ACTIVITIES: Arts society 2; Liberal club 2; L M bowling 2; Lambda Pi Epsilon Sorority 2; AISEC 3; Ski Club 2-4. LYNNE MURRAY: CLASSICS. ‘‘Just a kind a word, a greeting or a smile; sweep all pride away and forgive; for | shall not pass this way again. ACTIVITIES: Radio Loyola 2; Student Centre Committee 2; Judo 2; gymnastics 3-4; hockey 3; Lambda Pi Epsilon sorority 2-4, vice-president 3; intramural basketball 4; W.A.C. vice-presi- dent 4. JOHN JERIMIAH MVOYI: HONOURS HISTORY. ‘'l am not bitter about my imprisonment... my cause was just.’’ Jomo Kenyatta. ACTIVITIES: Africa club 3-4; History association 3-4; student senate 3; vice-chairman LMSA deputy returning officer 4. WALTER MYHAL: ECONOMICS. ‘Economy is the art of making the most of life. The love of economy is the root of all virtue. George Bernard Shaw ACTIVITIES: CUS: SAM; AISEC; Student Centre committee; Arts society; Folk Music society; Invest- ment Club; Ukrainian Society. PATRICIA ELLEN NEVILLE: PHILOSOPHY. ‘Happiness is a warm puppy.'’ Charlie Brown ACTIVITIES: Liberal club 1-4; secretary-treasurer 2-3; Debating 1, secretary-treasurer 2; Loyola News 1-2; Phliosophy club 3, secretary 4; FRA 2-3; Lower House 2; IAS 1; L M Bowling 1. RICHARD NEWMAN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘The world is but a pail of beer and men are but different size straws. ACTIVITIES: Varsity football 1; intramural hockey 1-4; class sports manager 1-4. BRIAN O'CONNELL: SOCIOLOGY. ‘What is now proved was once only imagined. ’ Blake ACTIVITIES: Sociology Club president 3-4; vice-president 2; Social Works Committee 4. ANN ODERMATT: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘'Nothing is waste that makes a memory. ACTIVITIES: Social Works committee 1; Psychology Club 3-4; Lambda Pi Epsilon sorority 2-4; Review 4; varsity swimming 2-4; intramural hockey 3; basketball 3. ROBERT O'REILLY: COMMUNICATIONS ARTS. ‘Coward take mine Coward's hand. ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma fraternity 2-4; Radio Loyola 1; Cinema '67, '68; Comm. Arts Guild 3-4. RENZO ORSI: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘Where are the swans? And the swans have left. And the ravens? And the ravens have remained.' ’ Tsvetaeva ACTIVITIES: Italian society; JV soccer 1-4; PSSA 2-4; Conservative Club 2-3; Intramural broom- ball 3; Arts society 2-4; film festival committee, chairman 4. CHARLES S. OXLEY: ECONOMICS. ‘‘No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself, and another to the multitude, without finally getting bewildered as to which may be true. Hawthorne. ACTIVITIES: Varsity football 1-4; L M Bowling League 3-4; Loyola Varsity club 3-4; intra- mural hockey, backetball, volleyball, broomball. THOMAS PAINTER: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Success can only be achieved through perseverance and hard work. ANDREA PARADIS, COMMUNICATION ARTS: ‘‘All | want is one break which is not my neck. Sebastian Dangerfield. ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta 2-3; Communication Arts Guild 3-4. ANDRE PAYETTE: HONOURS FRENCH. ‘'L'empire de |'homme est intérieur.'’ Saint Exupéry. BARBARA ANNE PAYNE: ENGLISH. ‘There are oceans and oceans; but always seaweed.”’ ACTIVITIES: Lambda Pi Epsilon Sorority 2-4; Judo 2-3. THOMAS ANTHONY PELLEGRINO: ECONOMICS. ‘'| have found that one big vice in a man is apt to keep out a great many smaller ones. ’ Francis Bret Harte. ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 1-2; Jazz Club 2; Campus Creditistes 2; Junior Varsity Football 3; Intramural Football 1; Intramural Hockey 2. BERNARD PENEE: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘‘Love relationships should not be based on the premise that I'll love you if you love me.’’ The Harrad Experiment. ACTIVITIES: Maroon White Society 3-4, Pres. 4; Economics Society 2-4, Pres. 4; News 4; Review 4; FRA 4; Social Works Committee 3; Investment Club 3; Varsity Football 1-3. IVAN PEREIRA, POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Experience is a comb that nature gives us when we are bald. ’ Mao Tse Tung. ROBERT PERIN: HONOURS HISTORY. ‘‘Independence? That's middle class blasphemy. We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth.'' G. B. Shaw. ACTIVITIES: Debating 1; I.A.S. 3; L.H.S.A. 2-4; Liberal Club 1-4, Pres. 4; CUSO 4. PAUL WILFRED PERREAULT: BIOLOGY CHEMISTRY. ‘'To live with you, is to live with time, love, and Christ. Toada. ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med Society 1-3; Intramural Hockey 1-3. MICHAEL L. PHELAN: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘If we open a quarrel between the past and the present, we shall find that we have lost the future. s ACTIVITIES: |.A.S. 1-2; UMUN 1-2; Radio Loyola 1; UNTD 1-4; Theta Sigma 2-3; Liberal Club 4; Intramural Football, Hockey. ROBERT PHILLIPS: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘Blessed is the man who, having nothing to say, abstains from giving in words evidence of the fact.'’ George Eliot. ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 3; Folk Society 2; College Band 2; FRA 3-4, chairman 4; Carnival 4; Arts Assembly 3; Intramural Bowling 2, Football 2, Hockey 2-4. PETER PILON PHILIP PLOPLIS: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘‘We do not what we ought, what we ought not we do and lean upon the thought that chance will bring us through.’ Matthew Arnold. ACTIVITIES: Psychology Club 3-4. SUSAN E. QUART: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘The woods are lovely, dark and deep, but | have promises to keep, and miles to go before | sleep.’ Robert Frost. ACTIVITIES: Review 1; Phi Delta Sorority 2-4; PSSA 2-4; Carnival 4; Drama Club 1. BRIAN P. QUINN: HISTORY. ‘‘Love and desire are the spirit's wings to great things.'' Goff ACTIVITIES: LHSA; Intramural Football 1-4, Basketball 1-2, Bowling 1-3, Hockey 1-2, Volley- ball 1. KATHLEEN MARY RADIGAN: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘'To thine own self be true and it must follow, as the night the day, thou canst not then be false to any man.'' Shakespeake. ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta 2-4; Review 1; Sociology Club 3-4; Skiing 2-3. DAVID RAIZENNE: ENGLISH. ‘The roots of education are bitter, but the fruit is sweet. LYNNE ANNE RAPPELL: ENGLISH. ‘The woods are lovely, dark and deep, but | have promises to keep and miles to go before | sleep.’ Robert Frost. ACTIVITIES: Choral Society 4; LASA 4; AISEC 4; PSSA 4. VICTOR RIGA: MATHEMATICS. ‘‘We know the sound of two hands clapping but what's the sound of one hand clapping. ACTIVITIES: Boxing Club; Loyola Bowling League; Italian Society. MARGARETE RIPPLE: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘Don't waste time looking at your hill — climb it.” ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 1-2; West Indian Society 3. LOUIS ALFRED ROBAYO: ECONOMICS. ‘They only babble who practice not reflection. | shall think; and thought is silence. Sheridan. ACTIVITIES: Latin American Society 2; Econonmics Society 3-4; Investment Club 3-4. PIERRE ROBITAILLE: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Promulgating your esoteric cogitations or articulating your superficial philosophical observations, sedulously avoid all propensity to platitudinous ponderosity.”’ ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4; Sigma Delta Phi 3-4; Intramural Hockey; Football; Volleyball; Basket- ball; Bowling; Curling. R. T. ROULEAU ROBERT ROUSSEAU: ENGLISH. ‘To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men — that is genius!'’ Ralph Waldo Emerson. ACTIVITIES: Folk Society; Ski Club JAMES F. R. ROUTH: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘‘Any society ...needs a responsible force on the right. ' Richard Goodwin. ACTIVITIES: Jazz Society 2-3; WUSC 2-3; Communication Arts Guild 3-4; (Co-ordinator) 3; Review 2-3; (Graduate Editor 3); Board of Publications, Managing Assistant 4; Curling 1-2. JAMES PATRICK ROWAN: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ''A strong will, a settled purpose, an in- vincible determination, can accomplish almost anything; and in this lies the distinction between great men and little men. ’ Fuller ACTIVITIES: Liberal Club 1; WUSC 1-2; Loyola News 2; Cinema ‘67 Chairman 3; Western Film Festival Chairman 4; Communication Arts Guild 3-4, President 4; Board of Publications 4. EGIDIO SANTORI: MODERN LANGUAGES. ‘'Social but clandestine. ACTIVITIES: Intramural broomball 3-4; L.I.S. LINDA SAUNORIS: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together. ’ Shakespeare. ACTIVITIES. Drama 1-3, F.R.A. 2-3, Comm. Arts Guild 3-4. Directory 2. LAWRENCE MICHAEL SCANLAN: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘The moment the little boy is con- cerned with which is a jay and which is a sparrow he can no longer see the birds or hear them sing.'' Eric Berne. ACTIVITIES: Jazz club 1; Liberal club 1; social works 2; L M bowling 1-4; intramural football. MIMI SCHOENHERR: BARTOLOMEO OHN SELLITO: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘... think of the number of years left in your life after you achieve your goal...and keep plugging . . . that's the only way to succeed.” ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4, L.I.S. 3-4, Liberal club 4, C.I.C. 1. LINDSAY SHERRIFFS; ECONOMICS. ‘Democracy is the recurrent suspicion that more than half the people are right more than half the time.'’ _E. B. White. ACTIVITIES: Varsity football 2. JOHN SHESKO: . JEAN-ANNE SIBBALD: ENGLISH. ‘‘The force that through the green fuse drives the flower, drives my green age.” ACTIVITIES: Drama 1-4; Cheerleading 2. MARIE SIEMIENSKA: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘What's it all about, Alfie?” ACTIVITIES: W.U.S.C.; Polish club 2-3; Communication Arts Guild 3-4; Volleyball 4; Swimming 4. STEVE SIGMOND: PSYCHOLOGY. “And | hope that you die And your death will come soon And I'll follow your casket On a pale afternoon.'’ Dylan ACTIVITIES: Psychology Club 4; Conservative Club 2; P.M.P.D. 2; I.A.S. 1-2. NICHOLAS G. SIKORSKI: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Life is just a bowl of Cerises.”’ ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4; Arts Society 2; Carnival 3; Phi Lambda Rho fraternity. JOHN DOUGLAS SKELTON: HISTORY. “To accomplish great things we must not only act but also dream, not only plan but also believe. Anatole France. ACTIVITIES: Loyola History Students Association 2-4; Liberal Club 2; Archery Club 3-4. KLAUS P. SLADECZEK: PHILOSOPHY. ‘‘Never underestimate the power of a woman, one changed my life.” ACTIVITIES: President, Philosophy Club 4. WAYNE SMITH: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘The intellect of man is forced to choose perfection of the life, or the work. ’ ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. BERTRAM A. SOMERS: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘Liberty of the individual to think his own thoughts. ACTIVITIES: F.R.A. 3-4; Honours Economics Society 3-4; Bowling League 1-4. SUSAN STANFORD: SOCIOLOGY. ‘To dream the impossible dream To fight the unbeatable foe To bear the unbearable sorrow To reach the unreachable star. This is my quest to follow that star. ACTIVITIES: Drama 2-4; Carnival 1; Folk Music Society 1; Social Works Committee 2; Homecoming Parade Chairman 2; Sociology Club 3 (Exec. 4); Cheerleading 3; Varsity Hockey 3; Gymnastics 3-4; Phi Delta Sorority 2-4 (President 3). BARRY STERNTHAL: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond; cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education.'’ Mark Twain. ACTIVITIES; J.V. Football 2; Varsity Football 3-4; Weight Lifting 3, P.M.P.D. RICHARD THOMAS STILLWELL JR.: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Even the mighty oak was once a nut like me.” ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4; Social Works Committee 4; Phi Lambda Rho Fraternity. BIAGIO STORELLI: HONOURS HISTORY. ‘‘College-bred men should be agitators, to tear a question open and riddle it with light and to educate the moral sense of the masses.'' Wendell Phillips. ACTIVITIES: Loyola History Students Association 1-4; Italian Society 2-4; Liberal Club 2-4. GERALD STUMP: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Life is my quotation.” ACTIVITIES: P.M.P.D. 2-4; J.V. Football 2; Phi Lambda Rho Fraternity. EZIO SUBISSATI: ECONOMICS. “You can lead a horse to water, but you can't grow moss on a stone.’ Ed Norton. ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 3; Boxing 3-4. PATRICIA SULLIVAN: ENGLISH. ‘‘O wad some Pow'r th giftie gie us To see oursels as others see us!’ Robert Burns. ’ ACTIVITIES: Women's Association Secretary 4; Political Science Club; Volleyball. JOHN ROBERT SUTTON: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘The man who attracts luck carries with him the magnet of preparation. ACTIVITIES: Varisity Football 1-4; P.M.P.D. 2-4; Sigma Delta Phi. KARYNA ANN SWINARSKA: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘‘Laugh and the world laughs with you, cry and you cry alone. ACTIVITIES: Progressive Conservatives 2 (Secretary-Treasurer 3); Psychology Club Vice-President 3-4; I.A.S. 3; 1.U.C.C. 3. FRANZ JOSEPH SZABO: HONOURS HISTORY: ‘Among my many faults | also have this one, a persistent belief that my friends who know me, really do know me. ’ Mozart ACTIVITIES: Loyola History Students Association 1-2 (Secretary-Treasurer 3; Editor Association Journal 4); Arts Society 3; Debating Society 1; Model Parliament 1-2; 1.U.C.C. 3. PATRICIA HELEN TALARICO: SOCIOLOGY. ‘‘Spring is a new beginning. ’ Joan Walsh Augland. ACTIVITIES: Phi Delta Sorority 2-4 (V.P. 4); Sociology Club 3-4 (V.P. 4, Treas. 4). PHILIP EDWARD TAYLOR: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘Some people are silent because they have nothing to say; others are silent biding their time. ACTIVITIES: Intramural swimming, curling, skiing, A.|.E.S.E.C. 2; Band 1; Theta Sigma. ELAINE TOLMATCH: COMMUNICATION ARTS. ‘'lf the doors of perception were cleansed every- thing will appear to man as it is, infinite. ACTIVITIES: Modern Dance 2; Figure Skating 3; Liberal Club 4. WALTER SCOTT TOMENSON: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘We have gone by brooks, love, we have gone by rivers, and now by oceans, love, we will not fail. ’ ACTIVITIES: Residence proctor 3-4; L.C.S.A. 1-2, |.A.S. 1, (executive secretary 2); Sigma Delta Phi 2-4; I.F.C. 3-4; P.S.S.A. 2; Honours Economics Society 3-4; Maroon and White 3-4; Vice- Chairman Homecoming '66; A.I.S.E.C. 3-4; S.A.M. 2. ROBERT VALLERAND: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘'You give but little when you give of your pos- sessions; it is when you give of yourself that you truly give. ACTIVITIES: F.R.A. 2; L.A.S.A. 1-4; P.M.P.D. 2-4; Carnival 4; Theta Sigma 2-4; |.A.C.; Swimming commissioner 2; Varsity Swimming 1-4 (Manager 2, Capt. 3-4); Warriors Ski Club 2-4; L.M.A.A. Lower House 2-4; Intramurals 1-4. JILL VINCELLI: ENGLISH. STEPHEN WATERS: HISTORY. ‘'Don't be too quick to understand me. ' Gide. ACTIVITIES: L.C.S.A; Investment Club 1; Liberal Club 1-2; L.A.S.A. 2. CATHARINE MARY WEST: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘'! cried because | had no shoes and then | saw a man who had no feet. ACTIVITIES: Psychology Club 2-4; Student Center Secretary-Treasurer 4. PATRICIA WHITE: ENGLISH. ‘‘Like a candy bar — sweet but half nuts. VALERIE WHITE: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘Welcome O life! | go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience.'’ James Joyce. ACTIVITIES: Psychology Club 3-4; L.A.S.A. 3-4; Lambda Pi Epsilon 3-4. ANNE WIELE: SOCIOLOGY. ‘‘The soul, Remembering how she felt, but what she felt Remem- bering not, retains an obscure sense Of possible sublimity.”’ ACTIVITIES: Social Works Club 1-2; Homecoming 2; Lambda Pi Epsilon 2-4. ROBERT CHARLES WILKINS: HONOURS HISTORY. ‘'Hence it is clear that men are not deterred by the Christian message from building up the world or impelled to neglect the welfare of their fellows. They are, rather, more stringently bound to do these very things. ’ Vat. Il. ACTIVITIES: Social Service Committee 1; Lower House P.R. 2; Lord Acton Society (sec.-treas. 2, pres. 3); Liberal Club 2-4; Student Senate 4. WAYNE WRIGHT: POLITICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘Le bonheur de I'homme n'est pas dans la liberté, mais dans l'acceptation d'un devoir.'’ André Gide. ACTIVITIES: Intramural Football; Hockey 1; PSSA 3. LOUISE YANNONE: ENGLISH ZINO ZARRELLI: HISTORY. ‘'| have overcome the bastion. ’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Broomball 3-4. 54 PUBLICATIONS The Board of Publications: (L-R) Valerie Bedard, Danny. Laberge, lan Mackay, Graham Nevin, Jim Routh, Bob Cosman (Chairman), Paula Desgroselliers. Responsibility of the press is one of those nebulous concepts that have come up for examination and re- evaluation on Canadian campuses in the last few years. It is no longer possible for college newspapers to be mere bulletin boards. Not now in this time when students are agitating for a new concept of their role in the uni- versity community. Not now. And as is the custom among journalists, it behooves the campus pressman to jump on the bandwagon to try to find some ‘angle’ from which to present the attitudes of the new movement and at the same time maintain the press as an organ of free speech. The result of this is a conflict. The editor sees that he must develop a responsible and leading press and at the same time must question his right to use his publica- tion to do this. Brainwashng is not good journalism. And now we come down to the Loyola NEWS. Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm. It is true that there is a beginning of some kind of awareness. And the clan concept of the staff is no more. There are masses who now tread their weary way to the offices of the NEWS and fight their way through the dust and smoke to “work ’. So maybe that resolves the conflict. Now that there are more people there is wider representation of ideas. So the possibility of leading in expression and yet main- taining a true view if what IS, exists. The NEWS this year has doubled its size. It has ac- cepted responsibility for dealing with issues. Whether or not the NEWS accomplished its aims of covering events and stirring up constructive controversy is a question that cannot be answered. But the attempt was made and it is a beginning. And what of the other publications that fill out the annual budget allotment? Amphora is dead. But in its place comes a new cul- tural mag. And we await with bated breath its approach in hopes that it will water the arid soil of creativity on this campus. Rumour persisteth that there will be in future a photography publication, chock full of photo essays, the epitome of visual art. A new expanded WORD appeared this year with more goodies for the Freshmen, and Arts too published its own handbook. OUR CIRCLE, which bombed this year but will doubtless improve. And there persists the Arts and Commerce news- letters. If nothing else, publications at Loyola are exten- sive. And as long as they persist there is hope of im- provement and of development of a strong multivocal culture supplement on this campus. —-actltiaianaestanoccc. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF MANAGING EDITOR NEWS EDITOR A Member of Canadian University Press Brian McKenna Editor-in-Chief Mike Cooke Bob Czerny Managing Editor Executive Editor Bernie Barrett Glen Blovin | Steve Rinfret News Editor Sports Editor Photo Editor EXECUTIVE EDITOR 56 SPORTS EDITOR BOB CZERNEY: EDITOR-IN-CHIEF SUE WHEATLEY: NEWS EDITOR KEVIN O’DONNELL: 57 KALEIDOSCOPE EDITOR MEIN KAMPUS TONY BURMAN AND BRIAN McKENNA COURSE EVALUATING ae IVAN VELAN AND MIKE KESSLER ARTS BRIAN GRAINGER HA FON Nr ay nway meditation 59 VARSITY FOOTBALL oS : : o4 ie ‘Ga 6 mS 2 3. 51 Se rN eee TOP ROW: Ed Nowakouski (trainer), Andy Malolepszy, Larry Farley, John Tackney, Mike Sylvia, Ron Pollard, Joe Manzoli, Jerry Lange, Peter Card, Terry Whelan. SECOND ROW: Bob Lincoln (head coach), Gary Whelan (manager), Al Newsome, Al Pongonis, Greg lodice, Greg Walsh, Dwayne Dudgeon, Bob Miele, Doug Martel, Mike Smith, John Courtney, Keo. Butler, Ed Kondos (coach), Ken Dixon (coach). FIRST ROW: Wayne Commeford, Charlie Oxley, Barry Sternthal, Jack Sutton, Hugh Adams, Claude Thomson, Doug Malliff, Domenic D'Erno, Rick Jones. LOYOLA LOYOLA LOYOLA LOYOLA LOYOLA LOYOLA LOYOLA BISHOPS 2 WATERLOO 28 MacDONALD 34 OTTAWA 21 U. of M. 16 CARLETON 12 R.M.C. 53 This year's edition of the football Warriors must, by necessity be a huge disappointment to the school and its diehard fans. Football had begun again to increase in popularity, until the Warriors came along. A poor schedule, Mother Nature's non-support, and a catastrophic team all led to the disillusionment with the football image. The school spirit necessary to promote a winning team could never be found. The team just couldn't generated to get the school behind them. At last year's final game, 500 stalwarts turned out, and all stayed to the end of the tilt. This year, when the final gun sounded on a 53-0 trouncing by R.M.C. there were more players milling around than fans. What happened? Well a combination of things; beginning with Expo tying up some of the players: then a very long pre-season camp which took its toll in injuries and played havoc with the weak at heart: and finally (and probably most killing) a lack of co-ordination between the players and coaches. Things became better within the team; but this was certainly not evidenced by the scores. The squad started off the season losing small — 2-1; but ended in a big way—53-0 to R.M.C. Losses were the signal all the way from September 30 right through to November 11 when it all ended. The season was typified by strong defensive play, except in two games: but lack of offense. Players like Charlie Oxley, John Tackney and Joe Martel all made out- standing contributions on defense; while fellows like Terry Whelan, Doug Maliff, and Claude Thomson proved them- selves time after time, going both ways. For next year we can only take a wait-and-see attitude. Many of this year’s Freshmen will be returning and most of them showed that they will have a lot to offer once they gain more experience. The coaching staff too, has seemingly changed after coming to realize the place of football in this college community. And of course there will be no Expo. So until next time—let's hope compulsory draft, doesn't reach the Loyola campus. Sa this was a year cE EN aA as site a) Bh vas of hardships : and defeats a hot potato Larry Farley makes good catch for sizeable gain however the dying spirit ” he Ao x e) je) = 5 3 je) £ O o fo) ake =} ° = ” o = 2 o ‘S o c 4 =) ° O d more planning is in the offing HOMECOMING ’67 LOYOLA'S HOMECOMING OCT., 19-21 oars __ JAN SYLVIA COMPLEX IN CONCERT 830 Dia SPORTS. t2g Co-chairman Ivan Velan and Chairman lan MacDonald. A moment of reflection; the vision of the new brings back the memories of the old. This most time-honoured and respected tradition brings the alumni back to their alma-mater. They see the new buildings. They see the new faces. This is not their Loyola. They walk through the old halls. They cheer at the football game. This is their Loyola. At the football game, at the variety show, and at the ball, the old join with the new in the same spirit, joy and en- thusiasm that makes the old the new one, in Loyola. This was Homecoming '67. The Homecoming princesses: Joan P inkus, Sandra Guadagni, Louise Stelmashuk, Jane Barry, and seated is queen Sue Berard. 68 mrmart Bm a wa THE WINNER, TKE The enthusiastic crowds came to see their team suffer a bitter defeat to Ottawa, 20-0. BPRPahOoHoon As the leaves fall so do the Warriors whether they be papier maches or stalwart footballers. vag 70 lan and Sylvia came to Loyola, and Loyola came to lan and Sylvia. From lan's opening song, ‘You Were On My Mind , the audience was captivated, and remained such until their closing encore song, ''Mr. Spoons. Even when the curtain was lowered and the lights went on lan and Sylvia were still there; and they will remain in the hearts of Loyola students for a long time to come. This spectacular event can only be considered as the stellar attraction of Homecoming '67. mAINEKS OB2AX BZraw Homecoming Queen Sue Berard 71 QA 2s 2S sam = ee Father O'Neil crowns this year's Queen. Mike Jalbert chats with Queen Sue Berard and her escort Dave Roche. ie Steve Michael's Orchestra and The Peace of Mind provided the musical entertainment at this year's ball. Back so soon, Father? christopher samuel patsy penelope mary lou anthony jacques herman nancy father love lulu judge bartholomew LOVEME ....2 DON MITCHELL ROMAN JARYMOWYCZ_ TED SIEMIENSKI ROSALIE SHEWCHUK ANIA LEWICKI PAUL MONTY BOB BOURASSA ROBERT WHITE TERRY CARTON ANACLETO PELLEGRINI LINDA MACINTYRE JIM STERLING aD LOVE MY DOG a play written in three acts by Patrick Conlon— a journey into the world of hippydom gone mad— presented with love. students are LUCIE BEAUCHEMIN, SOPHIE BUCKIEWIG, NIEL DEE, PAULA McKEOWN, ANN NOSEK, GREG POND, ANNA SMODLIBOWSKA, SUSAN STANFORD, TANIA STEC, KAY TANSEY. guards are JIM LAWLOR, RINA FRATICELLI, MARY MILES. avant garde MARCEL CARPENTER love leader's voice JAMES MACDONALD love leader's body GARY JOHNSON TS at the school the “deviants learn to love or else. some resist love... never learn... and for the act of hate, the wrong man ... 1S brought to trial “| accuse... 78 And then- No!” ‘no’ to the state of love 79 AFTERMATH The Critics panned it; the students avoided it. But this was something new an experiment of sorts. Anyhow, now it’s over. “This play had five days’’— the Loyola NEWS reported— “Period.” Curtain 80 Graduates TO THE GRADUATES OF 1968 You are fortunate to have graduated at a time when youth has been given ain unprecedented opportunity to seek out the better life existing today. Our society has developed new economic, religious and social stratas. An individual with your ability should not have too much difficulty finding your place in the sun. At times your generation is accused of fighting the establishment and not accepting traditions of the past. “Our youth now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authority, disrespect for older people. Children nowadays are tyrants. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble their food and tyrannize their teachers.” These lines were written by Socrates who lived in the Fifth Century B.C.E.! My feeling is that youth is basically not different today than it may have been in the past May | wish you happiness and success in all of your future endeavours. My hope is that you will continue to live in the light of the principles which Loyola has always displayed. Lawrence Bessner, Dean of Commerce 81 Commerce An ROBERT G. BARRE: ECONOMICS. GERALD EDGAR BEAUDRY: ACCOUNTING. ‘Nothing is impossible to a willing heart.”’ ACTIVITIES: Investment club 1-2; S.A.M. 1-3; Commerce Society 1-4. GILLES-ANDRE BRAULT: ECONOMICS. ‘Enlightening were my years at Loyola; struggle and confi- dence did it; | now declare that | shall be at the starting line where the rat race begins in May of 1968.” ACTIVITIES: Economic Society. MARCEL BRISEBOIS: BUSINESS. GUY P. BRUNELLE: ACCOUNTING. ‘'De peine et de misére, j'ai reussi’’ — Thank God it's over! ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 1-2; Sigma Delta Phi 1-4; Alumni Secretary 3; Student Directory 1. JOHN CHAMPOUX: ACCOUNTING. ‘If | owned Quebec and Hell, | would rent out Quebec and live in Hell. ’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Golf 1-3; Ski Club 1-3; Commerce Society 1-4. PAUL ANDRE CHRISTOPHE: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Le coeur sait des choses que la raison ne peut comp- rendre.” ACTIVITIES: Commerce Association 1 (secretary); Carnival 1-2; Parachute Club 3-4 (vice-pres., pres.); Parking Committee 4. GORDON BYRON CLARABUT: ECONOMICS. ‘'Be sure you're right — then go straight ahead. ACTIVITIES: Commerce Society 2-4; Economics Society 3-4; Class Rep. 3; Intramural bowling, golf. ROBERT K. CONWAY: ACCOUNTING. ‘'Personally | am always ready to learn, although | do not always like being taught.'’ Winston S. Churchill. ACTIVITIES: Public Relations Committee of S.A.C. 3. KEVIN COONEY: ACCOUNTING. ‘Nature gave men two ends — one to sit on and one to think with. Ever since then, man's success or failure has been dependent on the one he used most. George R. Kilpatrick. ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 1-3; Liberal Club 2; Social Works 1; Finance Committee 4; Graduate employ- ment Annual 4. ROBERT EDWIN DAHLGREN: ECONOMICS. ‘Don't sweat the small stuff.”’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Hockey 1-2; Delta Epsilon Rho; Lounge Manager 4; Public Relations Com- mittee 3 (chairman). PHILIP C. DALY: ECONOMICS. ‘The calibre of a man is to be found in his ability to meet disap- pointment and be enriched rather than embittered by it.”’ ACTIVITIES: Sigma Delta Phi 1-3 (founder, treas., vice-pres.) Homecoming Chairman 2; UMUN 2; Interfraternity Council 4 (treas.) Intramural Sports: Hockey 1-4; Football 1-2; Basketball 1-2; Skiing 2-4; Golf 2. LOUISE DIETSCHE: ACCOUNTING. ‘‘Life is a chronicle of friendships. Friends create the world anew each day. Without their loving care, courage would not suffice to keep hearts strong for life. Helen Keller. ACTIVITIES: Lambda Pi Epsilon 2-4; F.R.A. 3-4; Review 4; Photography 4 L.C.S.A. 2; Varsity Basketball 1, 2, 4. FRANK DI TOMASO: ACCOUNTING. “'Divide your time equally between women and books. ’ ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 2; Bowling 2-4; S.A .M. 3; Blood Drive 3; Intramural Sports 1-4. MICHAEL EDWARD DOYLE: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Faith in a holy cause is to a considerable extent a substitute for the lost faith in ourselves.’’ Eric Hoffer. ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 1; Economics Association 2-4; Philosophy Club 3-4; F.R.A. CLAUDE FILION: ACCOUNTING. ‘'L'erreur est de penser que la quantité d’expériences dépend des circonstances de notre vie quand elle ne dépend que de nous...c'est nous d’en étre cons- cients . .. ce qu'on croit vrai doit regler notre action. ’ Camus PETER FORAND: ECONOMICS. ‘‘You never know how lonesome it it ‘till you get to herdin’ cows’ The Old Wrangler. ACTIVITIES: Intramural Sports 1-4. ALLAN GLENNS: ACCOUNTING. '‘Never trust the advice of man in difficulties. One must learn by doing the thing. For though you think you know it. You have no certainty until you try.’ AESOP. GEORGE T. GORDON: ACCOUNTING. ANTOINE GOSSELIN: ACCOUNTING. ‘'ll faut donner avant de recevoir et batir avant d’habiter. ’ Antoine de Saint-Exupery.. KENNETH J. GREIBUS: ACCOUNTING. ‘'Some men are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them; ’ “‘I'm still waiting. ' DANIEL MICHAEL HEFFERNAN: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Then, gods to reverent youth grant purity, grant, gods, to quiet age, a peaceful end. ACTIVITIES: Varsity Hockey 1-4; Varsity Football 2-3; Maroon and White 3-4; L.M.S.A. 3 (sec.); Varsity Club 3 (pres.); Sigma Delta Phi 4 (pres.) KENNETH MARK HUGHES: ACCOUNTING. ‘'So little done, so much to do.’’ Cecil John Rhodes ACTIVITIES: Intramural Sports: Hockey 1-2; Football 1-3; Bowling 2-3. PAUL JOHN HUGHES: ECONOMICS. ‘'Knowledge is the only instrument of production that is not subject to diminishing returns. ’ J. M. Clark ACTIVITIES: Delegate at U.G.E.Q. Congress 2-4; Economics Honours Society 1-2; Intramural Hockey 1-3 WAYNE J. HUGHES: ECONOMICS. ‘'lf an economist becomes certain of the solution of any prob- lem, he can be equally certain his solution is wrong. ' H. A. Innis ACTIVITIES: P.R.C. 1-2; Theta Sigma 2-4; I.F.C.2 4 FRANK IORIO: ACCOUNTING. ‘‘Learning will be cast into the mire and trodden down under the hoofs of a swinish multitude. ’ Edmund Burke. ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 3; Italian Society 1-2; Liberal Club 2; Commerce Society 1-4. MICHAEL PETER KESSLER: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘If | ever contribute anything to this world it will be through standing on the shoulders of those who came before me. ’ ACTIVITIES: Co-Editor Commerce News 4; Chairman, Faculty Presidents’ Ball 4; Delta Epsilon Rho; Economics Society; Intramural Sports. RICHARD KING: ECONOMICS. ‘The mind of man cannot be limited to a single sentence. ’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Hockey; International Affairs Society; Delta Epsilon Rho (Treasurer) MAURICE KISSEL: ECONOMICS. ‘Read not to contradict and confute, nor to believe and take for granted, nor to find talk and discourse, but to weigh and consider.’ Francis Bacon. ACTIVITIES: Graduate Employment Annual (Editor-In-Chief) 3; S.A.M. 1-3 (Vice-President 3); Commerce News Photographer 3; Varsity Curling 2; Investment Club 1; Skiing, Golf. GERARD ARTHUR LABELLE: ACCOUNTING. ‘‘Little knowledge is a dangerous thing.” ACTIVITIES: Commerce Society; Junior Varsity Hockey 3-4; Intramural Football. DANIEL LACASSE: ACCOUNTING. ‘'Thy life is thine to make or mar; To flicker feebly or to soar, a star; It is with thee—the choice is thine. ’ Robert W. Service. ACTIVITIES: Lambda Pi Epsilon 3; Basketball 3; Commerce Society 1; F.R.A. 1. ANDRE LA FLECHE: ACCOUNTANT. ‘‘A good man is only as good as what he does; for future is ahead and man just behind it. ACTIVITIES: Accounting Club President 4; Winter Carnival 1-2 (Co-Chairman 2); Investment Club 1-2; S.A.M. 2-3; Finance Committee 3; U.G.E.Q. Conference for Commerce Students, Representa- tive 2. NORMAN EDWARD LAWRENCE: ACCOUNTING. ‘Do unto others, and run like hell. ACTIVITIES: S.A.C. Public Relations Committee 2-3; S.A.M. 1-4; L.C.S.A. 1-4; Investment Club 1. TERRENCE JOHN WILLIAM LODGE: ACCOUNTING. ‘'For life in general there is but one decree: youth is a blunder, manhood a struggle, old age a regret.’’ Disraeli. ACTIVITIES: Commerce Society 1-4; S.A.M. 1; L.M.A.A. 3-4; Varsity Golf 1-4; Sigma Delta Phi 1-4; Intramural Sports, Hockey, Golf, Football. STEPHEN VINCENT LUNNY: ACCOUNTING. ''To love her is a liberal education.'’ Sir Richard Steele. ACTIVITIES: Freshman Variety Show 1-2; Loyola Ski Team and Club (President); Intramural Sports— Hockey 1-4, Basketball 1, 3, 4, Football 2, Volleyball 4; Jr. Varsity Football RITCHIE DOUGLAS MACRAE: ACCOUNTING. ‘Non nobis solum’’ ACTIVITIES: Ski Club 1-2; Theta Sigma 2-4. DENNY MALONEY: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ''Never trust a naked bus driver.’ Schultz. ACTIVITIES: Commerce News (Sports Editor); Varsity Hockey; Jr. Varsity Hockey, Football; Intra- mural Sports— Football, Hockey, Basketball. PETER MICHAEL MALONEY: ECONOMICS. ‘The true measure of a man can only be taken by himself: there is no more knowledgeable, more concerned, more uplifting nor more devastating critic to be found.” ACTIVITIES: Chairman, Radio Loyola 2; Chairman, Student Leadership Conference; Member of Commerce Assembly; Member of Lower House 3 (Chairman); Chairman, C.U.S. Committee; Direc- tor, Quebec Region of C.U.S.; Member of Executive Council; President, Loyola of Montreal Student Association. MICHAEL MASSON: ACCOUNTING. ‘Words falsely spoken and never meant do often prove true by accident.” ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma; Intramural Football PATRICK JAMES MAYNE: ECONOMICS. ‘‘The broad-backed hippopotamus rests on his belly in the mud; although he seems so firm to us, he is merely flesh and blood.’ T. S. Eliot ACTIVITIES: Varsity Ski Team 1-2; Ski Club 2 (Treasurer). MURIEL McGUINTY: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘You get all for nothnig. Do not hesitate, when it is asked for, to give your all, which, in fact, is nothing, for all.’ D. Hammarskjold ACTIVITIES: Commerce Students Assoc. (Secretary-Executive Committee) PIERRE F. MINEAU: ACCOUNTING. ‘Never, for the sake of peace and quiet, deny your own experience or convictions.'’ D. Hammarskjold. ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 1; Lower House 3; Carnival Committee 2, 3; Intramural Hockey, Football 2-3. MICHAEL R. MINKOFF: ECONOMICS. ‘Success is a journey, not a destination.” ACTIVITIES: Homecoming 3-4; Carnival 2-3; Tau Kappa Epsilon 2-4 (President 4) RICHARD J. NEVILLE: ACCOUNTING. ‘Man is the architect of his future.” ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 2-4 (President 4, Vice-President); Theta Sigma 2-4; Commerce Students Association 3-4; Intramural Football, Hockey VINCENT NUCCI: ACCOUNTING. ‘‘Friends are necessary for the acquisition of truth.” ACTIVITIES: Social Work 1-2; Maroon and White Society 3-4 (Secretary-Treasurer); Hockey 1; Football 4. PAUL TERRENCE NUGENT: ACCOUNTING. ‘'Esse quam videri — To be rather than to seem. ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma (Corresponding Secretary 2, Alumni Chairman 3); Board of Directors 4; Commerce Luncheon Committee (Chairman); Varsity Sailing 2-4. GARY O'CONNOR: ACCOUNTING. ‘Premature old age is always the fruit of excesses.’’ Lesage ACTIVITIES: Jr. Varsity Hockey 2-3; Intramural Hockey, Football. PETER JOHN PAQUETTE: HONOURS ECONOMICS. ‘The highest duty of every man is to contribute, as best he can, to the most perfect human ideal, dictated by the principles of human dignity and evolution. JEAN-CHARLES PAQUIN: ACCOUNTING. ‘‘L'essentiel est invisible les yeux; on ne voit bien qu'avec le coeur.'’ Antoine De Saint Exuéry MICHAEL L. PASZTOR: ECONOMICS ACTIVITIES: National President, A.1.E.S.E.C., Canada; Varsity Soccer; Photo Editor Commerce News WAYNE TIMOTHY PILON: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Life is beautiful so long as it is consuming you. When it is rushing through you, destroying you, life is glorious.'’ D. H. Lawrence. ACTIVITIES: Intramural Hockey and Football 2-4. KEVIN GERALD PRENDERGAST: ECONOMICS. ‘‘| never worry about the future; it comes soon enough. ' Albert Schweitzer ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 1, 2; U.G.E.Q. Delegate 3; Lower House 1, 2; Intramural Sports: Football 1, 2, 3; Volleyball 1, 2; Golf 1, 2. ATTILIO ANTHONY PRINCIPE: ACCOUNTING. ‘'And when we lead we most are led.’ Byron ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma 2, 3, 4—Alumni Secretary 4. J. PATRICK REAGAN: ECONOMICS. ‘A far better being man would be if only the words ‘if only’ were struck from the language. ’ ACTIVITIES: Wrestling 3; Vice-President of Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity; Member of the Sodality. JOSEPH REPERTO: ACCOUNTING. ‘'It is the worst of madness to learn what has to be unlearnt. ’ Erasmus ACTIVITIES: S.A.M. 1; L.I.S. 1; Investment Club 2; Student Centre Committee 3; Graduation Com- mitee 4; Intramural Sports: Football, Hockey, Basketball, Tennis, Skiing. LARRY ROONEY: ACCOUNTING. ‘The best way out is always through.’’ Robert Frost ACTIVITIES: L.M.A.A. Treasurer 3; J.V. Football 2; Intramural Sports: Hockey 1-4, Swimming 1-2, Curling 1-2; Football 3-4, Basketball 2 BRIAN ROULEAU: ACCOUNTING. NICHOLAS SAUTCHOOK: ACCOUNTING. ‘‘They also serve who only stand and wait.’ John Milton ACTIVITIES: Football 2-4. DIRK J. SCHILLEBEECKY: ECONOMICS. BRIAN ROSS SLOAN: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Personal liberty is the paramount essential to human dignity and human happiness. ’ Buliver Lytton ACTIVITIES: Varsity Curling 1-4; Chairman of Loyola Curling Club 4; Investment Club 3; Intra- mural Sports; Hockey and Football 1-4. TERRENCE PAUL SHEWCHUK: ECONOMICS. ‘He who knows nothing, loves nothing. He who can do nothing, understands nothin g. He who understands nothing is worthless. But he who under- stands also loves, notices, sees...’ Paracelsus ACTIVITIES: Commerce Students Association: Luncheons Committee 2; Chairman of Freshman Orientation 3; Commerce Congress 3. CLAUDE A. SIMARD: ACCOUNTING. ‘'Good men are scarce.” ACTIVITIES: R.A.C. Council 2; Varsity Football 3; Intramural Sports. STEPHEN SIMS: ECONOMICS. ‘‘Come my friends, ‘tis not too late to seek a newer world... for my purpose holds to sail beyond the sunset... made weak by time and fate, but strong in will to strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. Tennyson ACTIVITIES: Students’ Association President 4; Internal Vice-President 3; Lower House 2; Board of Publications 2, 3; Review 1; Editor-in-Chief 2; Committee on Student Life 4; Banff Administra- tors’ Seminar delegate 2; Athletic Board 4; Commerce Awards Banquet Chairman 1; Commerce Assembly Rep. 1; S.A.M. 1; Directory 1; Varsity Curling 1-2; Director 3, 4; Intramural Sports: Football, Hockey, Basketball BARRY C. SMITH: ACCOUNTING. ‘There are two ways to get to the top of an oak tree—you can climb it or you can sit on an acorn.’ B. Frank Brown ACTIVITIES: L.M.A.A. Treasurer 3; Commerce Society; Intramural Sports: Hockey. = LORNE D. P. SMITH: ACCOUNTING. “The mark of an immature man is that he wants to die nobly for a cause, while the mark of the mature man is that he wants to live humbly for one.” ACTIVITIES: Loyola Commerce Society 1-4; S.A.M. 1-2; Carnival Committee 3; Ski Club; Invest- ment Club 1; Tau Kappa Epsilon Fraternity 3-4; Intramural Sports. NORMAN SUPERSTEIN: ACCOUNTING. ‘Man is nothing else but what he proposes, he exists only in so far as he realizes himself, he is therefore nothing else but the sum of his actions, nothing = else but what his life is.’’ J. P. Sartre ACTIVITIES: Commerce Society PIERRE TANGUAY: ECONOMICS. ‘The best things in life are free.” ACTIVITIES: R.A.C. 1,2; Sigma Delta Phi Fraternity 2,3; Carnival Committee; Intramural Sports: Football; Skiing IVAN CHARLES VELAN: ECONOMICS. ‘What counts is not the quantity of our goods, but the quality of our life. ’ John Kenneth Galbraith ACTIVITIES: Student Council; Winter Carnival Co-Chairman; Varsity Hockey (Mount Allison) Loyola Commerce News Co-Editor; Homecoming Co-Chairman; Graduation Chairman; Varsity Hockey (Loyola) RONALD A. VENNE: ECONOMICS (HONORS): ‘Grow old with me, the best is yet to come.” ACTIVITIES: Economics Society; Intermural Sports: Hockey 1,2,3; Football 2,3,4 RICHARD JACQUE WARREN: ECONOMICS. ‘'Les Affaires, c'est simple, c'est l'argent de autre.” Voltaire ACTIVITIES: Commerce Society 1-4; Economics Society 3,4; Investment Club 1,2; Model Parlia- ment 2; Ski Club 4 EDWARD ZBIERSKI: ECONOMICS. ‘Before | built a wall I'd ask to know what | was walling in or walling out, and to whom | was like to give offense.’’ Robert Frost ACTIVITIES: Swimming; Hunting; Soccer EDMUND M. J. ZDYB: ACCOUNTING. “Be Canadians and the future is yours.” Louis Fréchette ACTIVITIES: Secretary and Vice-President S.A.M. 1-3; President L. and M. Bowling League 2-4; Intermural Sports: Hockey 3; Basketball 2; Football 3 Science Graduates Dear Graduates, Success has been called a heady wine — probably thousands of years ago. Accomplishment brings to all men a feeling of well-being easily symbolized by wine. Men have always striven to succeed: and when they have done so, they have been glad. Your success merits our congratulations and well wishes. You are graduating from a faculty that is building up a proud tradition. Last year two Science gradu- ates won the coveted and remunerative Canadian government centennial schol- arships. But whether you are planning further academic study or a future in other fields, each of you has passed a merited milestone. Carry away with you a deep appreciation of the value of education. The President of the United States in his annual message on education to Congress called for dedication to a fifth freedom — freedom from ignorance. Take with you into your chosen career a dedication to truth which dispels ignorance and — with the help of grace — makes men giants. May God bless you, Nuaysias Sadan. I 89 SYLVIA SIRVART AGOPIAN: BIO-CHEM. “Strange how much you have to know before you know how little you know.” ACTIVITIES: CUS 1 (Sect.); Italian Society 1; Science Rep. to Women's Assoc. 2; Swimming 3; Pre-Med Pre-Dent 2-4 (Treas 4) F.R.A. 4 PAUL DUNCAN AITKEN: CHEMISTRY. ‘Community is an alibi for our failure for individual love. ’ Leonard Cohen ACTIVITIES: Maroon White 3-4; Student Center Committee 2-4; (Vice-Chairman 4); Chemical Institute of Canada 2-4 (Pres. 3); Science Students Assoc. (2-4, Sect. 4); F.R.A. 2-4; Intramural Football 1-4, Basketball 1, Hockey 1-4, Broomball 3-4; Carnival 4; Student Leadership Con- ference 3-4 EDMUND ANTOSZ: MATHEMATICS. ‘Don't waste too many stones on one bird. ACTIVITIES: Polish Society 2; Math Club 4; Investment Club PAUL A. ARCHAMBAULT: GEOTECHNICAL SCIENCE. “‘Why take life seriously? Nobody ever got out of it alive.” ACTIVITIES: Loyola News 2; Review 2; Geology Club 3 (Exec.); RAC rep. 3; RAC Executive 4; Residence Sports 1-4 QUINTO BACHETTI: CHEMISTRY. ‘To live, to err, to fall, to triumph, to recreate life out of life.’’ James Joyce ACTIVITIES: C.1.C.; Intramural Football, Basketball, Broomball ANNE BAILEY: BIO-CHEM. ‘| make myself laugh at everything, for fear of having to weep.” Pierre Augustin de Beaumarchais ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 3-4; Social Works Comm. 4. LIONEL Y. BOULANGER: PHYSICS. ‘‘O mon ame, n'aspire pas a la vie immortelle, mais épuise le champ du possible.'’ Pindare MICHAEL ERNEST BOURBONNAIS: PHYSICS. “'Unhappiness is not knowing what you want, and killing yourself to get it.” ACTIVITIES: Physics Club 2-4 (Treas. 4); Science Students Assoc. 2-4. JAMES E. BOYLE: MATHEMATICS. ‘‘Now |'m a member of the in crowd; in doubt, in debt, and in trouble. ACTIVITIES: E:1.C. 1-4; C.I.C. 1-3; Liberal Club 1-2; WUSC 1; Science Students Assoc. 4 (Adviser); Varsity Football, Intramural Football, Hockey, Volleyball, Broomball, Bowling. CORNELIUS A. BRENNAN: CHEMISTRY. “The height of human wisdom is to bring our tempers down to our circumstances and to make a calm within under the weight of the greatest storms without.’’ D. Defoe ACTIVITIES: C.I.C. 4; Karate; Intramural Hockey, Football. BERNARD BROOKS: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Three years of french in one.” S. Brooks ACTIVITIES: Pre-Medical Pre-Dental Society 2-4; Physics Society 3-4; Science Students of Quebec Conference Delegate 2; Intramural Sports 1-4. RONALD CALDERISI: BIO-CHEM. ‘‘Earth's the right place for love: | don't know where it's likely to go better. ’ Robert Frost ACTIVITIES: Folk Music Society 1; Science Students Assoc. 1; Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 2-4; Phi Lamdba Rho 3-4 (Treas. 4); Social Works Committee 3-4 (Chairman 4); Lord Acton Society 3; Psychology Club 4; Political Science Students Assoc. 4; Student Directory 4 TERENCE E. CAMPBELL: CHEMISTRY. “Hitch you wagon to a star.’ Emerson ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 3-4; Physics Society 4; Science Students Association 4 (Assemblyman); Varsity Volleyball 3; Intramural Hockey 1-4, Basketball 1-4, Football 1-4, Volleyball 1-4, Broomball 4. PAUL CARIGNAN: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘When you cannot find your peace in yourself, it is useless to look for it elsewhere.'’ La Rochefoucauld ACTIVITIES: Phi Lambda Rho 2-4 JAMES CHABOT: GEOTECHNICAL SCIENCE. ‘To be conscious that you are ignorant is a great step to knowledge.'’ Disraeli ACTIVITIES: Hockey 1-2; Broomball 4; Basketball 3; Geology Club; R.A.C. Senate. RAYNOR E. CHEN: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘The gem cannot be polished without friction, nor man perfected without trials.' ’ Chinese Proverb ACTIVITIES: Chinese Society 1-2; West Indian Society 3 (Pres.); C.I.C. 2; Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 2-4; Soccer, Table Tennis, Swimming. TERRENCE CHERRY: PHYSICS. ‘Double double, toil and trouble, good grief, another bubble. ’ Theme of a High Energy Physicist ACTIVITIES: Loyola News 1-2; Student Centre Committee 2; S.A.M. 1; F.R.A. 2-4; Loyola Physics 2-4; Tau Kappa Epsilon 2-4; Skiing. KENNETH R. CHIN: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘He who knows other men may be observant but, he who knows himself is intelligent. He who overcomes others may be strong but, he who over- comes himself is mighty.'’ Taoism ACTIVITIES: West Indian Society 1-4; Chinese Society; Foreign Students Assoc. 4 (Sec.-Treas.); S.A.M. 4; Varsity Soccer 2 NORMAN M. CHIN YOU: CHEMISTRY. ‘Do what you ought to do and become that which you ought to become. ACTIVITIES: West Indian Society 1-4; C.I.C. 2-4; Soccer; Varsity Tennis 3-4 NORMAND CHOUINARD: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘'Friends, God, and humanity only have a pro- found meaning when embedded in an ocean of love. ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 2-4; J. V. Hockey 2; Varsity Hockey 3-4; Intramural Hockey, Curling, Football, Basketball. ELLIOTT SAUL COHEN: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Even when you have attained to the station of the learned, do not exalt yourself over other men.'’ Rabbi Joseph Ben Joseph Nahmias ACTIVITIES: Phi Lambda Rho 2-4; Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 2-4 RONALD CONSTANTIN: CHEMISTRY. ''| cannot give you the formula for success, but I can give you the formula for failure, which is: Try to please everybody.” ACTIVITIES: C.C. 3-4; Intramural Football, Basketball, Hockey, Volleyball, Bowling 1-4, Broom- ball 3-4. RAYMOND PAUL COTE: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘'A great many people think they are thinking when when they are merely rearranging their prejudices.'’ William James ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 2-4; Maroon White 3-4; Intramural Hockey 1-4; Ski Club 2 CHRISTOPHER FREDERICK CRESSEY: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Brother Ass, the so-called act of living is really an act of the imagination.’ Lawrence Durrell ACTIVITIES: Folk Music Society 1-3; Loyola News 2, 4; Bridge Club 3; Chess Club 4 HORST JOHANN DANNER: CHEMISTRY. “Hey Sunshine! ! ” RICHARD DELFINO: PHYSICS. ‘Happiness is when you are content with yourself in relation to others. JOHN D’ERRICO JR.: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘To leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch, to know even one life has breathed easier because you lived... this is to have succeeded.'’ Emerson ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society. SALVATORE DIBIASIO: MATHEMATICS. °'A halo has only to slip a few inches to become a noose.” ACTIVITIES: Math. Club 2-4; Investment Club; Italian Society 2-3; Broomball. GIOVANNA DIBITETTO: HONORS CHEMISTRY. ‘| am the self which | will be, in the mode of not being it.'’ Jean-Paul Sartre ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 3-4 (Treas. 4); Pre-Med Pre-Dent Society 4; Basketball, Swimming. ROBERT DOMACHEVSKY: PHYSICS. ‘‘Who does not love wine, women, and song remains a fool his whole life long.”’ ACTIVITIES: Loyola Physics; Science Students Assn.; Intramural broomball. GEOFFREY ERIN FAGE: CHEMISTRY. ‘Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.” ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 3.4. GORDON ALAN FOREST: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. “Today is not only the product of yesterday, but also of tomorrow.” HUGH FREEMAN: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Love is really living; without it you ain't living, boy. You're just getting up each day and walking around . . . ’ lan Tyson and Sylvia Fricker ACTIVITIES: Chairman, Phi Lambda Rho Fraternity 3-4; Pre-Medical Pre-Dental Society 2, 3, 4; Social Works Committee 4; Psychology Club 4; Intramural Football, Hockey, and Basketball 3; Student Directory 4. RAYMOND GIAMPAOLA: MATHEMATICS. ‘The world is but a stage and we are all but actors playing our parts.” ACTIVITIES: Investment Club 3; Intramural Boxing 3-4; L.I.S. 2. DIANE GIRARD: PSYCHOLOGY. ° 'A metaphor of Spring and Youth and Morning. ’ Shelley ACTIVITIES: Cheerleading Co-captain 3; Varsity Basketball 1-3; Field Hockey 3; Ski Club 2-3; Pre-med Society 2-3; Vice President 3; F.R.A. 3; Lambda Pi Epsilon Sorority 2-4; Carnival Com- mittee 4. TED GLOGOWSKI: PHYSICS. ‘'To live without loving is not really to live.’ Moliére ACTIVITIES: Loyola Physics Society 2-4; Student Centre Committee 2-3; Phi Lambda Rho Fra- ternity 3-4; Liberal Club 4; Polish Society 3; Undergraduate Physics Conference 4 JOHN J. GOETTISHEIM: MATHEMATICS. ‘John must learn what Johnny hasn't.” ACTIVITIES: Varsity Basketball (captain) 1-4; Class Sports Manager 1-2; I.A.C. President 3; L.M.A.A. Vice-President 3; Sigma Delta Phi Fraternity; F.R.A. 2; Intramurals: Football, Volleyball Badminton, Ping Pong. LEO GOULET: GEOTECHNICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘The bigger they are, the harder they fall . . . so don't stand underneath when they do.” ACTIVITIES: Chairman R.A.C. Senate 4; Geology Club 1-4 (President 4); C.I.M. 4; Intramural Football, Basketball; Broomball. ARTHUR J. HAMMERSCHMIDT: MATHEMATICS. ‘‘Try splitting a breadcrumb in two with a sledge- hammer, or crushing a whole loaf of bread with a needle.” ACTIVITIES: Delta Epsilon Rho Fraternity; Folk-Music Society; Loyola Archery Club. MICHEL HERBERT: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Il peut y avoir de la honte a etre heureux seul.” Camus. ACTIVITIES: Sigma Delta Phi Fraternity 2-4; Maroon and White 3-4 (Vice President 4) Liberal Club 1-2; F.R.A. 3-4; Intramural Football, Hockey, Basketball, Bowling, Volleyball 1-4. DOMINIC KAU HUI: HONOURS CHEMISTRY. “Ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country. ’ John. F. Kennedy ACTIVITIES: Chinese Student Association 1-4; The Chemical Institute of Canada 1-4; Vice President of Internal Affairs 4; Canadian University Liberal Federation 4 JOHN STADLER HUNTER: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘'God helps those who help themselves.”’ ACTIVITIES: Swimming; Hockey; Football; Pre-Med Society 3. RAYMOND HUOT: GEOTECHNICAL SCIENCE. ''To strive, to seek, to attain and not to yield.’ Tennyson. ACTIVITIES: Residence Head Proctor; President Geology Club; R.A.C. Sports Chairman; Chairman Residence Awards Banquet; Intramural Hockey, Football. BARBARA ANN KARPINSKI: HONOURS CHEMISTRY. “Be early what, if you are not, you will, when it is too late, wish you had been.'’ Lord Chesterfield. ACTIVITIEES: C.1.C. 3-4, Chairman 4; P.M.P.D. 4; Latin American Society 3; Polish Society 2; S.S.A. Assembly 4; Fencing, Swimming. THERESE KAZAZIAN: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. “Une vie est une oeuvre d'art. Il n'y a pas de plus beau poéme que de vivre pleinement. Echouer méme est enviable, pour avoir tenté.'’ Georges Clemenceau. ACTIVITIES: Basketball Team 1-3; Sigma Phi Alpha Sorority 3-4; Pre-Medical and Pre-Dental Society 2-4. PATRICK KELLY: CHEMISTRY . ‘‘Help! Let me out, I’m trapped in this sheet of paper.’’ M. Nurse ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 3-4; Physics Society 4; Intramural Basketball, Hockey, Football, Broomball, Billiards, Golf, and Volleyball. JOHN J. KIRSTE: HONOURS CHEMISTRY. ‘Take it easy . . . It’s better to be late at the Golden Gate than to arrive in Hell on time.”’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Football 1-2; Soccer 1-3; Bowling 1-2; Debating Society 1-3; Drama Society 1-2; Carnival 1; L M Bowling League 1-4. SHELDON KOVENSKY: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Life is a struggle but not a warfare.” ACTIVITIES: Phi Lambda Rho Fraternity 2-4; C.I.C. 3-4. ANDREW M. KRUZYNSKI: PHYSICS. ARTHUR KUIPER: PHYSICS: ‘1% hu lp van uw kant is meer waard dan 100% meoelijden.”’ ACTIVITIES: Loyola Physics 1-4; Treasurer 3; U.N.T.O. 1-4; L.S.S.A. Vice President 4; Intra- mural Sports Broomball 3-4. ALLAN KUJAVSKY: CHEMISTRY. ‘People who wonder where the younger generation is headed would do well to consider where it came from.” RONALD LEEKS: HONOURS MATHEMATICS. ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. E.1.C. 1; Loyola Physics 3-4; President Loyola Mathematics 4. PETER ROSS LEGROS: CHEMISTRY. ‘Look to your left, look to your right. They will not be present when you graduate. ’ Father Tait, S.J. ACTIVITIES: Science Students’ Association 1-4; F.R.A. 3-4; C.I.C. 1-4; Review 2; Varsity Curling 2; Intramural Football 1-4. ERIC LEMBERG: CHEMISTRY. ‘People who value their privileges above their principles soon lose both.’’ Dwight D. Eisenhower. ACTIVITIES. C.1.C. 4; Chess Club; S.S.A.; Intramural Football, Broomball, Volleyball. LOUIS LONGO: PHYSICS. ‘'To love is to live.’ ACTIVITIES: Varsity Soccer 2-4; Intramural Broomball 3-4; Physics Club 2-4; L.I.S. 3-4 PAUL V. LYNAM: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. “Woe to the man whose heart has not learned while young to hope, to love, and to put its trust in life.’ Joseph Conrad. ACTIVITIES: Intramural Hockey 1-4; Basketball 1-4, Football 1-4, Volleyball 1-4; Bowling 1-4; Sigma Delta Phi 2-4; Pre-Medical Pre-Dental Society 2-4; Intramural Sports Manager 3-4. DOUGLAS MALLIFF: MATHEMATICS. ‘United we stand, divided we fall.’ ACTIVITIES: L.M.A.A. Publicity Manager 3; Varsity Football 3-4; Varsity Wrestling 2-4; Intra- mural Hockey, Basketball, Swimming. ENGENE McCAMBRIDGE: CHEMISTRY: ‘Neither do trees grow on money.’ ACTIVITIES: Intramural Basketball 1-2; Intramural Swimming 1-2; S.S.A. Representative 3; Intramural Hockey 3. BRIAN McPHEE: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. '. . . love, respect, humility, patience, and understand- ing.’ ALL. ACTIVITIES: Theta Sigma Fraternity 2-4; Secretary, Interfraternity Council 3-4. PIERRE MARIE BERNARD MICHEL: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Toutes les grandes personnes ont d'abord été des enfants. (Mais peu d’entre elles s'en souviennent)'’ Antoie de Saint-Exupery. ACTIVITIES: Pre-Med Society Chairman 3, President 4; R.A.C. Senator 3; Sigma Delta Phi Fra- ternity; Varsity Basketball 2-3; Judo 2-3; J.V. Basketball 1, Coach 4; Girls’ Basketball Coach 4; Intramural Football, Volleyball 1-4; Basketball 4; Hockey, Swimming 1. MICHAEL EDWARD MONK: CHEMISTRY. ‘The |Sness of things is well worth studying; but it is their WHYness that makes life worth living. ’ William Bube. ACTIVITIES: Science Students Association 2-3-4 (pres.); C.I.C. 2-3-4 (treas.); Bowling 1-4; Intra- mural Sports 1-4. GAIL MORAN: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘‘What does Apathy have that | haven’'t got?”’ ACTIVITIES Debating 1-2 (Vice-pres.) Carnival 1-2; Board of Directors 3; LMSA 2-3 (Vice-pres.); Leadership Program 4. FERNAND MORIN: GEOTECHNICAL. ‘The only lost cause is the one you give up.’ Ernest von Feuchtersleben. ACTIVITIES: Geology Club 1-4; Intramural Sports 1-4. EDWARD M. MULDOON: MATHEMATICS. ‘Isn't your life extremely flat when you've nothing whatever to grumble at.'’ Gilbert ACTIVITIEES: Math Club 3-4; Physics Club 3-4; Intramural Sports 2-4. NEIL MURPHY: MATHEMATICS. °'| should never have fully enjoyed something unless | have at least once laughed at it. ’ Jean-Paul Sartre. ACTIVITIES: Carnival 1-2; Drama 2; F.R.A. 1-2; Math Club 2-4; Tri-Faculty Ball Chairman 2; Intramural Sports 1-4; Sports Manager 1-2. CONO NERI: PHYSICS. ‘‘Look toward the future for the present has you past by. ’ ACTIVITIES: S.S.A. 2-4; Physics Club 3-4. MICHAEL NURSE: PHYSICS. ‘'They can conquer who believe they can. DONALD O’BRIEN: HONOURS PHYSICS. “When the going gets tough, the tough get going.’ Hamilton Tiger Cats. ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 1; Physics Club 2-4; Math Club 3-4; S.C.C. 2; West Indian Society 3; Intra- mural Skiing 1-4. BRIAN O’KEEFE: MATHEMATICS. ‘‘Eat, drink and feel merry, and tomorrow do the same.”’ ACTIVITIES: Math Club 2-4; Intramural Sports 1-4. FRANK ZBIGNIEW PACZOS: CHEMISTRY. ‘The amount of expertise varies in inverse proportion to the number of statements understood by the general public.’’ Time. © ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 3; Polish Society 2-3; Intramural Weightlifting. RICHARD PACZOS: CHEMISTRY. ‘The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven, what matter where, if | be still the same?’’ John Milton. ACTIVITIES: Folksinging 2-3; Weightlifting. DOMINIC PERRINO: PHYSICS. ‘‘How dull it is to pause to make an end to rest untarnished, not to shine in use. ’ Tennyson GORDON GAJADHAR PERSAD: HONOURS MATHEMATICS. ‘‘Let noble thoughts come to us from every side.’ Rigveda. ACTIVITIES: West Indian Society 2-4; Maroon and White 3-4; Math Club 4. GEORGE ROBERT POMOSKI: MATHEMATICS. “Even the sun goes down.” ACTIVITIE S: Math Club 1-4; S.S.A. 1-4; Intramural Sports. ISODORE POPOWYCH JR.: MATHEMATICS. ‘Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be; for withouut victory there is no survival. ’ Winston Churchill. ACTIVITIES: Math Club 4; Ukrainian Society 1 (vice-pres.) 2 (pres.) 3-4; URIP 1; ROTP 2 (sec.) 3 (pres.) 4. JEAN-ANDRE POTWOROWSKI: HONOURS CHEMISTRY. ‘| do not know what | may appear to the world, but to myself | seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than the ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay undiscovered before me.’ Sir Isaac Newton ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 1-4 (vice-pres.); Drama Society 1; Jazz Club 1; F.R.A. 2; Ski Club 2; TKE 2-4. JAMES REDMOND RUSK: CHEMISTRY. ‘Truth is sometimes stranger than fiction.”' ANNE RYAN: HONOURS CHEMISTRY. ‘We advocate education, not merely to make the man the better workman, but the workman the better man.'’ Lubbock ACTIVITIES: C.I.C. 1-2,3 (sec.), 4; Drama 1. OTTAVIO SCALZO: MATHEMATICS. ‘Yesterday is but a dream. And tomorrow is only a vision. But today well lived makes every yesterday a dream of happiness and every tomorrow a vision of hope. ACTIVITIES: Italian Society 1-3 (vice-pres. 3); Math Club 3-4 (vice-pres 4); Investment Club. STEPHEN SCHULTZ: CHEMISTRY. ‘There are no rules of architecture for a castle in the clouds.” ACTIVITIEES: C.1.C. 3-4; Intramural Sports. BRANCO SEMEC: GEOTECHNICAL SCIENCE. ‘Do you truly know, are you really sure? Hell, life is a period of doubt and decision.” ACTIVITIES: Geology Club 2-4; Broomball 4. KENNETH SILVER: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘| do not know what | may have appeared to the world: but to myself | seem to have been only like a boy playing on the sea-shore, and diverting myself in now and then finding a smoother pebble or a prettier shell than ordinary, whilst the great ocean of truth lay all undiscovered before me.’ Sir Isaac Newton. ACTIVITIES: PM-PD 2-4; Phi Lambda Rho 3-4; Directory 4. CHARLES G. SMITH: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Dreaming permits each and every one of us to be quietly and safely insane every night of our lives.’ Charles Fisher. MELVIN JOSEPH SMOLEY: PSYCHOLOGY. ‘To those who feel — life is a tragedy; To those who think—it's a comedy. ACTIVITIES: Phychology Club. ZOLTON SOMOGYI: MATHEMATICS. ‘'Puritanism is the nagging fear that someone, somewhere is having a good time.'’ H. L. Menken. ACTIVITIES: Judo. GIACINTO SPINA: CHEMISTRY. ‘‘If a stress is added to a system in equilibrium the system readjusts in order to minimize the stress.’’ Le Chatelier Principle. ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 2-4; News Photographer 3; Judo 2-3. LYNDA DIANE STONE: CHEMISTRY. “Man lives and exists in the present He extends himself into the past by his ability to forgive and He extends himself into the future by his ability to make and keep promises. ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 1-3; Lambda Pi Epsilon 4. BARBARA SURANYI: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘It is a mistake to look too far ahead. Only one link in the chain of destiny can be handled at a time. ’ Winston Churchill. ACTIVITIES: PM-PD 2-4; Amphora 2. PATRICK SUM SUM TANG: GEOTECHNICAL SCIENCE. ‘‘Keep on going and the chances are you will stumble on something. No one has found a mine sitting down.” ACTIVITIES: Chinese Students Association 1,2 (pres.) 3-4; C.I.C. 2-4; Geology Club 1-4; Delta Epsilon Rho 3-4; R.A.C. 3,4 (sec. 4). NORBERT F. TAUCHNER: PHYSICS. ‘Love is not to be wanted, but to give.” ACTIVITIES: Lower House 2; Drama Club 1; Soccer 2-3. CLAUDE EDWARD THOMSON: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘Be honest, and above all, be happy in your work. ‘This’ is the way to a full and satisfying life.’ Joseph Pueck. ACTIVITIES: PM-PD 2-4; Football 1-4; Wrestling 2; LMAA pres. 4; Intramural Sports 1-4; Theta Sigma Fraternity. ROBERT A. TITTLEY: CHEMISTRY. ‘Knowledge is proud that he has learned so much; Wisdom is humble that he knows no more. ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 2-3; Judo Club 2-3. GEORGE TRIGYLIDAS: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. ‘An unexamined life is not worth living.’’ Plato. ACTIVITIES: C.1.C. 2; PM-PD 2-4. DAVID K. TURNER: BIOLOGY-CHEMISTRY. “Competition in an environment of scarcity tends to produce inequality between the members of a society.” ACTIVITIES: PM-PD 2-4; Phi Lambda Rho 2,3 (pres.), 4; Intramural Sports 1-4. ANTHONY VAN LEEUWEN: MATHEMATICS. ‘Let a smile be your umbrella but don't get a mouthful of rain.” ACTIVITIES: Carnival 1; Math Club 4; Intramural Sports. ANGELO VENERUS: CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Life is analogous to a chemical reaction. The product is depen- dent on the reactant. (One gets out of life as much as he puts into it.)’ ACTIVITIES: Soccer 1-3,4 (captain 4). HENRY WALO: PHYSICS. ‘Man's life span depends upon his uprightness. He who goes on living without it escapes disaster only by good fortune.” ACTIVITIES: S.S.A. 2-4; Loyola Physics Club 2-4; Polish Society 2-3; Intramural Sports. PAUL F. WHALEN: CHEMISTRY. ‘‘No one can be perfectly free till all are free; no one can be perfectly moral till all are moral; no one can be perfectly happy till all are happy.’ Spencer. ACTIVITIES: Fencing 2 (captain); C.I.C. 3. RONALD PETER WHITTICK: MATHEMATICS. ‘The strength of the Pack is the Wolf and the strength of the Wolf is the Pack.’ ACTIVITIES: Math Club 3-4; Intramural Sports 2-4. JOSEPH WINKIEWICZ: CHEMISTRY. ‘‘Life is a theatre in which the worst people often have the best seats.” WILLIAM GLENN WRIGHT: PHYSICS. “Will miracles ever cease?” ACTIVITIES: Loyola Physics 2-4 (pres.); L M Bowling 2-4 (treas.); S.S.A. 3; E.I.C. 1-2; Intra- mural Sports 3-4. HENRY GEORGE ZEY: GEOLOGY. ‘He who sees things grow from the beginning will have the best view of them.’’ Aristotle. ACTIVITIES: Geology Club 2-4 (pres. 4); Broomball 4. Co- 97 a oO 100 Studies-The Campus Everything going quietly, into time. Relationships of newness, in their fragile age, one soft paw in front of the other. Early thoughts, of wind and hair borne on centuries of moments, and instants of years, clustered spinning, they are all going quietly into time. Like fears and expectations, unconsciously forgotten. Sound of thunderfuls, and hide your ears, by hours by days. One silence two silence, and there are great and enormous changes occurring within the backyards, of your dreams. Sundown to seagull, sundown to rush, so homeward speeding, terror on its wings, while a countless collection of different and serious lightbulbs, are having hysterics. October dancers— most blackly dancing, on the leaves. Grey starkness, ending in pinks and cold. But October's dancers leap high— and stretching, can justly by barely reaching, touch with grace, the secret depths of early frost and smoke all caught and (crystallized) by empty window sills and lonely parks, that echo dancers. This was a familiar scene at Loyola this year. Students flocked to hear their elected repre- sentatives address them on points of vital interest to all. “Democracy is a tradition that must be instilled in the mind starting from the earli- est possible moment.’’ These words were spoken by that object of undergraduate ad- ulation, John F. Kennedy, in an address to the graduating class of George Washington University. But this is Loyola, where democratic tradition is a long-extinct practice which perished ata time approximately concurrent with the passing of the dodo. Where else but at Loyola could a panel featuring such _ distinguished spokesman as Eric Kierans, attract the vast number of 17 people? Where else but at Loyola could the annual meeting of the new student corporation draw less than 20 peo- ple (the number includes a substantial press and photography gallery) in two sessions? This Loyola of Montreal, apathy reigns as king of the charnal house known to its intimates (all four of them) as Student Government. Which ranks as the second greatest public misnomer: the prize in this category goes to Adolph Hitler as the leader of the Social Democratic Party. This is Loyola where the surest way to catch up on sleep is to visit the Cave of the Winds popularly known as the Board of Directors, (or is that Bored of Directors?) where each year the Elsie-the-Borden-Cow award is granted to the member of the Board who manages to muster the finest sequence of nonsequitors and mush-mouth- discussion is where 105 ed pronouncements, and display the most advanced case of foot-in-mouth disease. Strange to say, this is easily the closest contest waged all year, with members of the Loyola NEWS (the only human beings who attend these functions) arguing hotly as to the relative merits of the various can- didates, of which there is no shortage. This is Loyola where meetings of the Board of Directors are as stylized as ponti- fical high masses, with each member in turn, running amok wtih points of personal privilege, and other nonsense. This is Loyola, the Vietnam of the West. This is Loyola, where students were so surprised at this year's prospect of a real live presidential election that, throwing cau- tion to the winds, more than two hundred students actually cast ballots, a dizzying prospect. This is Loyola politics, a world filled with intrigue worthy of the Byzantine Em- pire, and petty foolishness worthy of Ralph Cowan, Gilles Gregoire and other lumi- naries of the convoluted world of politics. This is Loyola, where the fastest way to lose an audience is to mention the latest inside gossip from that hotbed of ‘‘student activism the SAC offices. In fact, in an in- formal poll, three out of four students were unable to name its location being unaware of its very existence. This is Loyola... Isn'tit...? PRESIDEN GRAHAM NEVI KEVIN NEWTON GAIL MORAN ww We are SS Eee’ S—Gw Cw = Ow EE —Z wer we ake! @—Gow Baw Ow ze — CE la aE 6) = CE le CE RICK MAHONEY OA tat GC GE ba — 2 CE HARALD MEULLER wre CE PE CE! @— Cw OC. oe — Ow ze teve Sims BASKETBALL CHAMPS: From left to right Jane Sheasgreen, Madeleine Chabot, Maureen Newman, Isabel Brzozowska, Margie Barrett, Beverly Jones, Donna Malliff, Isabel Fournier, Pierre Michel (coach). Teams in a toss up Maureen Newman aims for a basket Our basketball Tommies versus the CFOX ''good guys” 108 Women's Basketball Champs Loyola's Varsity Basketball Tommies surprised everyone this year by walking off with the Montreal City League Championship. Their record in League games was a spotless one as they sent all comers down to defeat. This was the Tommies’ second year in the League, their first ever championship. And now they plan to move up. Next year they will enter competition in the Ottawa-Saint Lawrence League, while continuing to play in the Montreal association as well. A few of the Tommies deserve special recognition for their contributions towards the team's triumph this year. Isabel Brzozowska, named the team's Most Valuable Player, and Madeleine Chabot, Most Improved Player are two, and team captain Maureen Newman rounds out the list. Women's Varsity sports, it would seem, are no longer an anachronism. A The sights, the sounds .. . the silences. 109 BACK ROW: Suzanne Bergeron (Manager), Mike Cullen - Lal - 2 Lae a = 2 an 3 : $0 Ses 4 te oe te ie ee ; i % 7 Ai é bi ni (Coach), Lynne Broderick, Cathie Willie, Joan Weldon, Liz Larkin, Barbara Sims. FRONT ROW: Shirley Odjick, Tommy Macmillan, Nora Kelly, Cathy Cosman, Maureen Newman, Monica Romanowski, Diane Girard, Louise Ferri. ICE TOMMIES After their first full season on the blades, prospects for the Loyola Ice Tommies are en- couraging despite a disappointing record in play this year. A pretty girl is like a melody but our Ice Tommies looked more like a Ger- man Beer Garden band in the old used equip- ment which they were forced to wear. It was heart-rending to see these dainty girls being compelled to don uniforms that by comparison would make an arab’s armpit smell like Chanel No. 5. Despite this and many other impediments, they still managed to win almost 17% of their games — with the one victory coming in the form of a resounding 8-1 defeat hung on St. Joseph's Teachers College. Coach Mike Cullen has suggested that they demand opposing teams to be made to take a sex test before they play a game next year. Most improved players —and they did improve immensely during the year — on our bevy of beauties, was Louise Ferri with the most valuable player award going to Diane Girard. 110 “a little more casual than the but as serious as the russians in action TOP ROW: Mike Lombardi, Sal Montenaro, George Giacomini, Luigi Longo, Gerry Gentile, Joe Campana, Tony Lala. BOTTOM ROW: Saverio Longo, Don MacMahon, Angelo Venerus (captain), Tony Sciaseia, Mario Spina, Chris Blaise. (missing Alain Robitaille, Claudio Sandrin.) ell SOCCER CHAMPIONS Nine veterans, five rookies and Coach Betts were faced with the task of living up to last year's club. The opening two games with R.M.C. and Carleton both came out 1-1 ties and these were games that Loyola could and should have won for they outplayed R.M.C. and missed a penalty shot against Carleton. Then came C.M.R. and with it the Loyola scoring punch. Before the final whistle had blown Loyola had netted six without a reply. The game against Sir George, their toughest, in which they had to come back to tie two-all, must have put fire in the club; for in the next three games Loyola felled MacDonald, Bishops and Ottawa Gee-Gee's, 4-2, 9-0, and 7-0 respectively. Thus at the end of the season there was a three-way tie between Sir George, Loyola, and R.M.C. Sir George was out of the running having lost to R.M.C. The two finalists were now faced with a co-championship. Loyola challenged R.M.C., who refused the game. And so Loyola alone stood for the second year as champion. i tial eee e, ee Se aS yh eh. ew ae oo ‘ae oe ae é oe = BACK: Rick Barras, Clark Cada, Don Root, Pat Donvito, Louis Lussier, Ross Hastings, Tom Tutsch; FRONT: Bob Phillips, Gordon Black, Charlie Oxley, Peter Maher, Terry McQuillan; SEATED: Steve Callary (Chairman). This is the saga of Carnival ’68. It is a tale of the biggest party Loyola has ever seen, a party that cost in terms of the university’s finances, but returned more than its share in spirit, and in opening up new ideas and opportunities. The week's activities began with a performance by the Mitchell Trio, (Chad Mitchell minus Chad). Though poorly attended, the show went over well. And as the eventful week moved ahead, more activi- ties came. There was a fashion show, sponsored by Faini wools and by Boutique Baron, the biggest and best- attended ever at Loyola. There was Compu-Dance, which opened up a whole new concept in Carnival dating—by computer matches. And with three bands to break up any ice that might have clogged the computers... Well last reports were indicative of a success. Thursday, campus men pulled f air lasses in the college's first human dog-sled race. Round and round the track they ran, racing for the keg of rum Corby's offered as a prize for the winners. Costumed runners and _ in- dividually designed sleds lent color, and the ‘dogs’ them- selves lent humour. All in all a bright innovation. After the demise of the turtle race (cruelty to dumb turtles was charged by the S.P.C.A.) an electrical car race among members of the faculty was held in the Gym. 117 Now, have you ever seen a professor chase a model car across a room???? With this event Carnival '68 scored another vi ctory in fun-for-all. Beautiful weather heralded the advent of the traditional dru... (oops) day up north, Friday at Mont Habitant. Hardy Loyolans wended their way through a day of skiing, dancing, drinking, etc., and lived to attend the crowning event of Carnival... The Sno-Ball at the Town and Country. Bobby Gimby was there with his magic horn, bring- ing to Loyola what he had brought to the rest of Canada throughout the year .. . the spirit of Canada's Centennial. He blew the tune of Canada's unofficial national anthem and the 2000-odd students present paraded. And there were the Staccatos with the other side of the dancing for the evening. And if you found a spot on the crowded floor to groove in, you grooved to the best. There was so much in Carnival. The ice castle which saw the crowning of lovely Queen Cammie Warner, caught the sun every morning and every evening, and stood like a sentinel . . . the symbol of winter's last big fling. Yep. It was the biggest and the best yet. It was Carnival '68. Thanks to everybody that made it what it was. GREAT. CARNIVAL SPOT THE MITCHELL TRIO LIGHTS TALENT Ever seen a stoned elephant before??? The girl is the one on the left. . . Love is blue. AY C YW L P Lr YW R E S Happy Haller. Sick transit gloria mundi. Carnival sparkle. PARADE 10 THE COMPU-DANCE . If we knew his line, we'd have used it. i | Boy! This one must have really blown the computer! eee eee Get ready .. . Who ever heard of a turtle with four wheels? Get set . Go! !! Come on “GO”’ | said. TURTLE RACE ... with a difference Eat your hearts out! !!! Who says we're sissies? Would you believe he's ‘‘dog-tired ’ ??? ARAORAHAR! ! ! Good things come in pretty packages. But | don't drink ... RALLY eae “Harry, are you sure this is the right way to Miami?” ROMPERS Corvair at the Crossroads. Check-point Charlie. 124 Hey, look! They're piling the bodies in Bus 3! GREAT DAY = Orskied| . . . UP or didn't ski. (psst! It's a toboggan.) NORTH It was a beautiful, beautiful day. SNO Really Ma! These really ARE soda-pop bottles. joy Talk about blowing your own horn! laughter Hey, has anyone seen the floor recently? BALL Hurry up with the picture willya? We're all sitting on one chair. entertainment | could have danced all night. Queen Cammie Warner leads the royal waltz. and GA 3 WA 2 DAL os « P R I N C E S S E S Cammie Warner Left to right: Charlotte Bonadie, Kathy Nolan, Margaret Bateman, Maureen Flood, and Cammie Warner. S N O Q U E E N 129 ONE YEAR COMMERCE SOCIETY LOYOLA HISTORY STUDENTS’ ASSOCIATION Award Winner: Danny Heffernan Awarded to the student who has made the greatest contribution to the LMSA over a four year period. Award Winner: Steve Sims 130 AWARDS MAJOR COMMITTEE OF THE YEAR. | MINOR COMMITTEE OF THE YEAR ATHLETE OF THE YEAR GRADUATING AWARDS VARSITY HOCKEY cel TOP ROW: Jim McCann (manager), Gerry McGrath, Danny McCann, Bob Jastremski, lan MacDonald (Manager), Pete Morin, Bernie Austin, Brian MacGuire, Frank McNally. SECOND ROW: Dave Draper (coach), Dennis Maloney, Norm Chouinard, Steve Sanderson, Bill Doyle, John Donnelly, Danny Heffernan, Mike Lowe, Gersh Zalman. BOTTOM ROW: Mike Lecours, Art Thomas, Andy Molino, Roger Wilding, Brian Hughes, Rick Dawson, Mike Griffiths. march was the crowning glory By lan MacDonald It all began in the stifling heat of Mid-August, an unsea- sonal time for hockey, but it was nonetheless the beginning. There was Loyola's first ever full time hockey coach, new on the job, adjusting to his surroundings, gently testing the lines of his new authority. Meeting people, sizing up and being sized up was the first important element of his new position. And they all came to meet him, and they all were impressed. There was Loyola Warriors unsalaried, unofficial and highly volatile team advisor Gersh Zalman, a hard man with a natural gentleness, wit and intelligence under a cover of harsh and healthy profanity. The new man appraised him quickly, readily understood why the players leaned on him so heavily, saw the man's usefulness to himself, in spite of wide breaches in personality and style, the two men became hard and _ fast friends. And the young men he had inherited from Floyd Curry, came also, anxious that the new man be aware of their style on and off the ice; anxious that he be a man of easy relations and adaptability, for he would need to be both of these things if their relations were to be fruitful and the coming season success- ful; anxious that he get to know the quirks and shortcomings of every personality, that he be able to instill confidence and pro- vide leadership. They all told him the same thing, that he had been handed a great college hockey team, great on paper, great in bar-room seminars. He would have to provide the cement and the instinct to make great winners out of great losers. Just how great wasn't known to him, talk was terrific in August, and lasting impressions were made, but the cutting of hard ice in October was a different book at a different hour. There were difficulties to overcome at first. Dave Draper had been in the United States for five years, where athletics and hockey were run in a different style, where every coach could be a Vince Lombardi if he so chose to fashion himself, where young men were paid to chase a puck, and it was so different. On the first official team meeting in September where he saw how different were the attitudes, how set the players in their carefree ways, and he saw he would have to adjust and be flexible. He knew they must want to adjust a little themselves in order to see the wisdom of winning. That meeting was the first real challenge to his authority, many came late. The players were being deliberately provocative. One superstar insisted his doctor had advised him that beer was better for him than milk. Guffaws were everywhere, and Draper saw his authority being tested early. But he is a deceptive looking man, with boyish features, an engaging smile, a gentle voice, and an easy, loping gait. Seeing the early challenge he responded with an unseen rationale and toughness. ‘I see your point, ’ he told them, ‘you play for the fun of it, but winning can be fun, and | intend to show you. In order to win you have to make sacrifices. And | have no intention of being a loser. | hate losing and you better hate it too, or you won't stay very long.'’ That night he suspended two of his best hockey players indefinitely. They all got the message, he was to be the only bossman, he would give where necessary for the general wel- fare, but he was the boss. October brought training camp, and an opportunity to see at last who had what. And Dave Draper soon knew all the talk was true. It was a hell of a hockey team, and when it came to make the final cuts, he spent several sleepless nights, asking himself which man would best fit in where. November. And the season's opener in Ottawa when they scored at will, 18 times in 120 minutes of hockey. And four more easy wins. But in December, they met their archrivals from downtown, in the Montreal Forum, a team they were supposed to beat by five goals this year. They weren't ready. Ricky Dawson was on his honeymoon, Chris Hayes was on academic sabbatical and Michael Lowe had a case of unwilling knees. But even without these three, they should have won and Draper knew it, and knew some element was missing. It was a rough month, in Ottawa his twin brother was dying slowly and he was only 27, his wife was ill, and there was a post-Christmas journey to the Brown Tournament in Providence, when the weather screwed up the travel arrangements, and the Brown team tried to carve up his players. But he shrugged and grinned through it all and vowed, ‘'It will all work out in the end. And soon it did begin to break. January brought the Loyola Centennial Tournament and the making of a hockey team. War- riors drew the invincible Toronto Blues in the finals. ‘‘Not invincible’, Draper told them, ‘they lace their skates the same way we do’. And in that game they became a team, relying on each other to a man, skating like they could, and like no other team could, shooting the puck instead of setting up the big play, and backchecking. For there was, they knew, no other way to beat Toronto. And they nearly did, up two goals midway in the third period, they seemed to sense the proportions of what they were doing, and they tightened up for five minutes, long enough for Toronto to blink three lights. They gathered in the Maidenhead, across the street from the Forum, stunned by what they had almost done, knowing at last what they could do, sensing what the future might hold, and really understanding for the first time what Draper had meant by the greatness of winning. An exhausted Bill Doyle vowed a ‘next time’’, meaning the National Tournament, the one that really counted. ; And they rallied around the coach in an hour of personal crisis when his brother finally succumed to cancer. Many drove to Ottawa to attend the wake, and they sent the Draper family a message promising to win their championship for young Bruce Draper who had been so gallant and cheated death for so long. Now the ball rolled, together they played and partied, and helped each other out. And in February they brought home their thirteenth win from Kingston and it clinched their first pennant in nine years. Now they liked the number one feeling and they would not be denied any more. They finished the season 15-1, best in the country, better than 38 other schools. And March was the crowning glory. The OSL Championship, in their own rink, against archrival Sir George. Draper had been right, all the pieces fell into place. Dawson wanted to play, and no one could touch him in that frame of mind, Hayes was back and he was tough and scared the others, Peter Morin had added comic ability better than Steve Sanderson's, Andy Molino played the pipes and knew at last he was number one in the coach's book. Art Thomas had finally developed into the player he should have been a year before. And every other man was key. They func- tioned like a passionate computer, and poor Sir George went down at last, and Roger Wilding skated around the ice carrying an old tankard and the fans screamed ‘'WE'RE NUMBER ONE . And yes they were; and ''WE WANT TORONTO and so did the players. Draper paced the tiled floor in the catacombs deep in the Montreal Forum. His players needed him now. The OSL's they were ready for, but this was the Nationals against Toronto. Great coaches win great games and he won it in that dressing room. Because for the first time he was inspired. ‘'Listen, ’ he told them ‘people have been walking around the school all week, and when they met you they wish you good luck, but they don't really mean it, none of them think you have a prayer, they think it was a fluke you came so close to Toronto last time, well I'VE GOT NEWS FOR YOU, IT WAS A FLUKE WE LOST , and now he was pitching his words in capital letters, pivoting as he spoke, glaring wildly at every one, throwing out his hand like Jack Kennedy to make his points. ‘WE CAN BEAT THESE GUYS AND WE'RE GOING TO AND WE'RE GOING TO MAKE FOOLS OUT OF THOSE PHONIES WHO WISH YOU GOOD LUCK AND THEN SHUDDER FOR YOU. ' And he turned on the man he would make the focus of the emotions of his players on that night, massive Gersh Zalman was holding up the door, nodding in agreement to everything Dave was saying. Draper pointed to him. ‘‘THERE'S PEOPLE THAT CARE ABOUT YOU, GUYS. PEOPLE YOU OWE THIS GAME TO, PEOPLE LIKE THAT BIG JEW IN THE CORNER WHO'S SITTING IN THIS ROOM THAT DOESN'T OWE HIM SOMETHING? he was pivoting again singling players out, and his tone was soft and the place still except for the water running in the pipes. “What does that big Jew want around you Ricky Dawson, or you Bill Doyle, or you Andy Molino, or you Art Thomas, or you Roger Wilding, or any of you. And yet look what he’s done for you, LETS GO OUT AND WIN FOR THAT BIG JEW! LET'S BEAT TORONTO FOR HIM, LET'S PAY HIM BACK A LITTLE. There wos no way to lose. It look 13 minutes of overtime and a goal by Mike Griffin to break a scoreless tie, but there was no way they would lose. They lost the National final in the last 17 seconds because they had nothing left, physically or emotionally, they had given it all two nights before and they were spent. Draper had said it. ‘We beat Toronto, we beat the best, and as far as I’m concerned, that's when the season ended. The death of a jinx- and finally in from the cold te. . But tell that to Michael Lowe and his friends. They were not about to be beaten by anyone on this night. Toronto coach Tom Watt would later say “No one skated with us all year except the Russians, and no one out-skated us, but Loyola skated away from us .. . 134 ...@ berth against Univer- sity of Toronto, supposed- ly unbeatable, supposedly Number One in Canada... eee re tere aL Pe eeeeeeeercee A eeae tbagakie A hast ATage Aehdeaiiea Pee eet a eeres. wt Fea da Ti; ARTE EALALY SAMADD AL) PAT EAS URSAA! ‘fee eos 8 hs: we, That number one feeling, amply demonstrated and Art Thomas. Hayes had just scored the double indemnity insurance goal in Warriors 6-2 victory over long-time jinx Sir George. The win gave Loyola its first OSL championship in years... 135 . ... four more reasons why Toronto was not invincible . . . Athlete of the year Ricky Dawson (19) gets set to drop the puck to all-Canadian forward Chris Hayes. Dawson and Hayes together with Art Thomas formed a trio that Draper only half-jokingly referred to as ‘‘my Production Line...” ... While goalie Andy Molino stood the Blues on their collective ears, kicking out no less than 46 shots over 73 minutes and becoming the only goal- tender in Canada to shut out Toronto in recent memory. 136 ... But Molino got lots of help from the likes of... Bill Doyle, the all-Canadian defenceman who had vowed ‘‘next time’’ after the Centennial Tournament loss to Toronto, and was prominent in making that ‘next time’ come about. Norm Chouinard was spectacular on the blueline and big John Donnelly and Steve Sanderson made solid contributions. 137 ...and generally it was obvious to any spectator that second effort made the difference... ...here, Danny Heffernan pokes away at Toronto goalie John Wrig- ley's pads, as Captain Roger Wilding looks on hopefully . . . while below, Art Thomas comforts a stricken Chris Hayes, who refused to leave the game... 138 All eyes on the puck, defenceman Bill Doyle (left) and Steve Sander- son, desperately attempt to clear the crease, asa half- screened Andy Molino strains for a better view 139 Toronto’s starry de- fenceman and captain Peter Speyer hotfoots it after the puck with Ricky Dawson in cool pursuit... On the bench, a profile in leadership . . . ... LISTENING, while Ricky Dawson makes a point with Steve Sanderson. ... DAVE DRAPER PACING, contemplating a line change or whatever... ... EXHORTING. Draper has words with Mike Griffin before sending him out to centre a power play in overtime... 140 . And suddenly Griffin has the puck in the crease. IT’S IN! Griffin had taken a pass from Danny McCann (on ice in rear) and knocked it home. In the dressing room before overtime, Draper had told his players, ‘Shoot the puck. How many picture play goals have you seen in overtime?” Now, how do you top an act like that? 141 . You try but sometimes you can't . ... the Production Line. Thomas (10) and Dawson (19) greet Chris Hayes, after the latter scored a breakaway goal in the National Final. Bill Doyle moves in to add congratulations... 142 But much was frus- tration, that after- noon. Here, Alberta goalie makes a fine glove save off Michael Low. War- riors lost 5-4 in the last 17 seconds... . in retrospect, a marvelous season . . . . Summed up here by Dave Draper and team advisor Gersh Zalman who flank Captain Roger Wilding, who holds the tankard symbolic of Oslaa suprem- acy. Warriors league record of 15-1 plus two playoff wins was the best in Canada. 143 A Letter Dear, You asked me for my views on fraternities. In the following I hope to be able to present to you my feelings and at the same time, give you a better conception of the fraternal organization. One of the greatest assets of a college education, too frequently over- looked by both educators and students, is one’s association with fellow students. Education is more than the cultivation of the mind. It is the educa- tion of the whole self — the intellect, the emotions, the will, together with appreciations and values that give meaning to one’s life. Similarly, a college is more than a collection of buildings on a campus; laboratories, library or formal classroom instruction. In its ideal aspect, college is a fellowship of mature and immature scholars. It is a community of learning. The self is a social product. It does not develop in isolation; it is only in interaction with other persons and social groups that one becomes a person. Personality in its fullest dimension is the result of participation in social relationships. Tt is for this reason that one’s association with his fellow students is an incalculable asset in college education. The value of such association with professors has.long been understood. But it is doubtful whither one, during his college experience is aware of the educative value of his association with fellow students in the college community. And yet in retrospect this associa- tion is often and best long remembered as the most valuable phase of college experience. Above I have shown you the aims, or rather the ideal state of the college community. These are sometimes accomplished, but are constantly faced with obstacles. So, too is it with the fraternal organization. The purposes and the ideals of the fraternity are not such that they can be obtained by each brother or even each fraternity. The ideals of the fraternity, which each brother accepts at initiation, merely serves as guidelines in the formation of the ideal type of person each member aspires to be. Now the fraternity, as I see it, takes the casual association of the campus and organizes it consciously and intentionally as a venture in friendship so that what otherwise might be incidental may become highly productive in the education of the student. This the fraternity does in a number of ways, of which I shall indicate only a few. The fraternal organization provides a close association in a small sustained and sustaining social group. In a large group the individual tends to get lost in the multitude of general and somewhat vague relationships. Thus with the community reduced to a small homogeneous group, success or failure in the discernment and fulfillment of personal relationships are more open to observation and cultivation or correction than they could possibly be in a large, heterogeneous and impersonal group. In its ideal state the fraternal organization provides a disciplined association insofar as membership involves the acceptance of obligations and the commitment to ideals. This is, perhaps the bond that unites and differenti- ates members of fraternal organizations, in what could otherwise be, ANY social organization. Closely related to the disciplinary influence of the fraternity is the fact that in the group one is assigned or accepts a role. At its best the fraternity stands for an ideal which it seeks to embody in its members. It is a symbol of a type of thinking and of attitudes. In accepting membership one volun- tarily accepts the role for which the fraternity stand. The true fraternity man holds before him the picture of the sort of person he would like to become. This fact obviously lays a great responsibility upon the fraternity for cultivat- ing and communicating the highest ideals of the college and of the liberally educated man. Thus we can say that as member of the fraternal group, one is both limited and liberated. Limited in the sense that he has agreed to conform to the ideals of the group: liberated in the sense that he recognizes these ideals as his ideals and finds himself, among those who share his views, free to grow on that basis. Whatever is said, fraternities and sororities will continue to exist and flourish—to add to the campus—and to provoke discussion within, and about themselves. A Fraternity Brother VRE FRONT ROW: P. Boyd, P. Mulligan, D. Magil, S. Pallavicini. 2ND ROW: T. Moss, R. Vauthier, T. Stanford, B. Bourassa, OUR BARTENDER, T. Moynihan, R. Booth. 3RD ROW: B. Gardner, B. Dahlgren, R. King, B. Pessa, B. Elkin, G. Forgione, C. Chinappi, M. King, M. Riggio, A. Levesque, B. Donnelly, P. Pingitore, L. Cote. MISSING: J. Desjardins, S. Flynn, M. Guinard, M. Kessler, G. Lalonde, B. McCormick, B. Mercier, R. Ste. Marie, P. Tang. AW meu au FRONT ROW: A. Harper, L. Murray, L. Grassby, R. Lukaweski, I. Lenard, D. Girard, L. Dietsche, A. Odermatt, S. Hanley. 2ND ROW: L. Reynolds, L. Carmody, K. Kristof, M. Bourcier, C. DeBenedetti, C. Willie, T. Stec, C. Keough, M. Vallerand, C. McManus, J. Maguire, S. CoJvey, J. Barry, L. Costin. 3RD ROW: L. D’Entremont, L. McGuirk, A. Murphy, E. McManus, T. MacMillan, $. Acheson, L. Sullivan, P. Degrosellers, C. Lemoine, S$. Berard, M. Bourbeau. ®A P _ FRONT ROW: R, McIntosh, E. G. Rill, E. Cohen, D. Stilwell, D. Turner, B. Wilcock, F. T. Lazzara, R Calderisi, K. Silver. 2ND ROW: L. Farley, T. Glowgowski, M. LeBlanc, L. Lavery, J. Vary, P. Carignan, B. Raymond, S. Kovenski, H. Freeman. 3RD ROW: M. Dubreuil, W. Karwatsky, P. Daniele, P. MacDonald, N. Sikorski, R. Cut, G. Stump, P. Collins. FRONT ROW: V. Papalardo, E. Wright, B. Coughlin, |. Mackay, C. Burgess, B. Viens, D. Mulligan, D. Healy, B. Penny, B. Lilley. 2ND ROW: D. Roche, W. Tomenson, P. Lynam, T. O’Brien, D. Hennessy, B. Horgan, D. Humes, D. Frenette, P. Morrissette. 3RD ROW: J. Sutton, P. Donvito, M. O'Neill, M. Tomassin, D. Wakley, M. Hebert, P. Murray, J. White, B. Fisher, J. Fernandez. 4TH ROW: D. Russell, J. Tackney, B. Marcotte, J. Goettisheim, R. Mullins, P. Aitken, C. O’Brien, D. Dudgeon, B. Laberge, P. Daly. 5TH ROW: I. Masse, Dr. R. Brodrick, Fr. G. McDonough, A. Thomas, D. Heffernan, J. Kubacki, R. Sutton, H. Mueller, B. Smith, G. Johnson, A. O’Brien, J. Stevens, M. Barrett, L. Gascon. @ kK © Theta Sigma 92 TOP ROW: A. Jarreau, K. Higgins, D. Walton, P. Maher, G. Kempe. 2ND ROW: M. Dundass, J. Burdill, L. McCafferty, $. Callary, W. Hughes, T. Guay, D. Brady, B. O’Rielly, R. Neville, T. Braddock, T. Prin cipe. 3RD ROW: T. Whalen, A. Campbell, H. Craigen, B. Gallagher, L. Ferraris, B. Jastremski, G. Kenyon, M. Kindellan, R. Kinlough, M. Lecour, J. Logan. 4TH ROW: L. MacDonald, M. Masson, T. McQuillan, P. Rochefort, B. Rouleau, C. Thompson, J. Weber. MISSING: B. Foley, B. McPhee. Zeta BACK ROW: S. Jazzar, L. Dwyer, S. Caruso, A. Coonan, $. O'Connell, $. Ramkay, L. Burns, W. Smith, C. Hemens. MIDDLE: E. Sallai, J. Kelly, N. Leclerc, K. McGuire, M. Gorrie, E. Jones, L. Renaud, $. Danko, W. Bedard. FRONT: L. Ferri, E. Snable, T. McGuire, C. Ken, A. Cadieux, L. Rooney, T. Fedorak, L. McKay. LZTQ = a Papers THE SUPER FRAT MAN QueSTION.... Paat Two - AES Bernaap Weop ,THE MaAQNIFICENT Sap Year Honors ness STUDENT , S$TAPS MoMEN TARILY N THE QUAINT Vanier lLiaaae AND PRODUCES A MIRROR , MUMBLING MATTER-OF- FACTLY... UDDENLY... CUT OF THE STACKs —Like AN AVENSINA BIRD oV Prey Cor Stuka even) THE Bir-Heaaing Duper Fratran HEAPS OUT BURPINS Maur... Young (Noop — NoriciN TRE DEVELOPINA SITUATION AND HAVING STEeLED Himself FoR Jusr SUCH A CHALLENGE -ReacTs DECIsIVeELy Fe ss SUPER FRATMAN, BEINS OF THE MASSES IS STRUCK STILL AND CRUDE SOCIETY... [Loar Qjeren CALMLY HURLS AT SupeaFRar May CLEAN PIERCING ROPER THRusts OF WiT END INTELLECTUAHSM WHICH CUT HIM To SHREDS FND DRIVE FINALLY, PROCURING A QUILL PREQNANT WITH INVISIBLE INK HE ERADICATES Supeakaey “as BERRE THE ADCRINS PROLS TARIATE ... isvr HE OVINE? 5 THANK 30D WE HAVE A LORD ACTIN SocleTy To PRoTecT uS FROM THE y COARSSNESS OF THE Ivy S peasue BT.., The Mass Drip! Auggh! ! Anyone who is used to writing about events at Loyola has become con- ditioned to Knocking . . . That's with a capital K. It's an occupational hazard resulting from long association with apathy and the Caf. It is therefore a pleasure to write about this year's Blood Drive, but also a great difficulty, the words have got to be dusted off. For the second year in a row Loyola surpassed her objective, rather a nicety in a community which is constantly suffering from self-accusation for its short- comings. The nurses one recalls were astonished at the willingness with which the gapped generation bled a little for somebody else. The hardest part of all in this, is not-to-knock without becoming hokey. But we'll do it anyway. Congratulations everybody. Kindly be proud. | get the feeling they forgot the needle! Michelle Bourbeau, blood drive chairman, with the lucky donor's Honda prize. | made it! Augh, come on, I'm not scared. RN q 3 we Sponsored by the Inter 158 AT? oO pL - a — rational Affairs Society 159 O91 VARSITY BASKETBALL : es ao . Ne (sar ' i SIN : Bs o%%% y Pr wo, @. ws, “oD ‘) y Pao® = - a y j : . fi , ¢ , i t g ij 1, 8 % ? s x . —S J — .- oe sie : “ ae 7 é ine 3 ie TOP ROW: Head coach Doug Daigneault, Jack Contos, John McAuliffe, Gene Lawrence, John Williams, Larry Rozzi, Assistant Coach, Dom D'Ermo, Manager. BOTTOM ROW: Bob McDonough, Jim Ivy, John Goettisheim, Earl Lewis, Peter Phipps, Joe Zaganczyk. Keath “Into every life a little rain must fall,’ the old saying goes. For varsity basketball coach Doug Daigneault and the Warriors the watch-word is ‘‘man the boats! Gifted with a galaxy of stars from south of the border, and boasting a perfect 14-0 record in league play, the hoopsters still finished short of capturing league laurels. In the playoffs, the injury-ridden Warriors succumbed to an aroused Carleton squad, playing before their rabid fans. The final game saw the cagers hold a five point lead for much of the contest, but weaken in the stretch to finish on the short end of a 59-58 score. The Warrior's total was their lowest in any game dur- ing the season. All was not dark, however, for the Warriors. An ex- tensive recruiting drive saw outstanding ball-players wearing Loyola uniforms. At the corners, the Warrior's fielded rough, touch Jack Contos, and crowd-pleasing Earl ‘the pearl’ Lewis, a jumping jack and proficient scorer. Veteran Bob Mc- Donaugh backed up the duo, with swingman Joe Zagancyzk supplying fine moves when called upon. Lanky John Williams was call ed up from the J.V's mid- way through the year, and was impressive in his sub- stitute role. Large John McAuliffe at centre, was a first team all- star, and Warrior M.V.P., and the most consistent and dangerous scorer for the Warriors. Guards Peter Phipps and Jim Ivy displayed perfectly complimentary styles in running the Warrior's attack. Phipps is an offensive specialist with a deadly shot from outside, and great speed, while Ivy is a defensive genius, and the holler guy for the hoopsters. Team captain John Goettishiem, the Most Improved Player, in his final year, came up with his most out- standing campaign, after a slow start. Things look pretty hopeful in the Warrior wigwam for next year with only two players graduating and a suc- cessful season appears a certainty. for some the champagne will age another year. In an unusual pose, Freshman Athlete of the Year, Earl Lewis (in white, number 32) scram- bles to get off the floor. Lewis, Loyola's most exciting shooter and jump artist, has been known to look down into the basket to sink his shots, at right, displays more typical form. 162 163 Above, Lewis and Gene Lawrence (left) wait for a possible rebound, as Ravens fight it out for the honour of shooting: while right, it is Lawrence's turn for the Warriors, while Jack Contos waits for a rebound he hopes won't come. 164 165 Above, the star guard, Peter Phipps holds the ball away while he waits for an opening under the boards. At right Lawrence and Raven do a high-stepping dance in a perfect duet as Lewis, (rear) tries to cut in. Next year these 11 Freshmen won't be kids any more. Watch out for them. 166 167 170 Bill Schiebel, Bob Kuley, Pietro Lombardi ¥ LIBERALS Gerry Flaherty, Susan O'Farrell, Robert Perin 172 AWARDS lan MacDonald p ay Steve Hreha marEonxonm P. M. P. D. John Vary, Sylva Agopian, Pierre Michel, Brian Wilcock. NUE RES” “mwywPononnw ty Klaus Sladeczck OSANOXE Glenn Wright POLITICAL dl 5 4 C I E N C E Paul Laffin, Joné Fernandes, Geoffrey Dieben, Diane Samis. Winston Lewis, President and members 176 AN 177 = e Cathy West, Norman Martinello, Ed Dizzazo, Karyna Swinarska. Brian Piegon, George Lyn, David Grif- fiths, Allen Roberts. 181 President, Joe Lalla and members of the society. SrA o Brahm Elkin, President saa AS wY ITALIAN SOCIETY Pr Emmet Francour. The March This year was unique at Loyola for a number of rea- sons. First among these was the advent of a new con- sciousness of the meaning of University, and the mean- ing of Loyola in this context, by the students. For one , glorious week there rose and grew and organized this ' 3 beautiful thing commitment. Ps ‘= : To say that the reason it. grew was somewhat out of line with this glorified description we have given it may be justified. For the spark that set the machinery of ‘revolution’ in motion leaped from the proverbial pockets of the students. But perhaps some explanation is due the reader. Think back to March. News leaked out that the college was a classified number of millions in debt, that the government had forwarded no capital grants in the last four years, and showed no signs of doing so in the future; that per capita grants were grossly insufficient to deal with present expenditures: and that if something were not done soon Loyola would either close, or raise its already monumental tuition fees. It was this situation that prodded the students of Loyola Minto action. It is safe to say that never had they been so united behind a ‘cause’, never had they organ- fa . ized so well, never had they worked so hard. Petitions were brought to Montreal citizens, urging support for the student protest, and their chosen course of action, the march on Quebec. As the date of the march approached, all Loyola’s sons and the entire community she housed rallied to the ‘cause’. sPltins were laid for members of faculty, ad- e ministration alumni to join in the march. It seemed as though nothing could stop its procedure. But something did. The Quebec government came “ through wiPencoch financial aid to bail out the uni- a aad ae , eels |? Well that’s what they said. The gov- f : ernment promise in no way concerned per capita grants : for the university; nothing was said about a re-defin- tion of status that this would entail. Loyola was still in that a te limbo that is shed ytd bee ‘time when we s sis the last time.” At any rate thi into the news. CRISIS The Rally LOYOLA IS BANKRUPT WHAT WILL HAPPEN: 1 OPOVORN WHE CTOSE TOSTE DENIS ITT PAY son DEON WHAT WILL YOU Do? JOO PROTEST RATES CHAPEL STEIN FW OPESN MIEE TING TO DISC Ess. COURSE Ob VOTION 1 OC SMITE SE DTTORTEM TUESDAY MARCH 5, 1968 SAR Ma®ABWY in agreement about the action... . “WE MARCH 185 Father Gerard McDonough, Dean of Students. NAA SY NHAQ MARY 186 Graham Nevin, newly-elected Student Council President. we were willing... Now- WNABASNS HB The second shows their daring break-away into busy Sherbrooke Street. In the third, they begin their getaway toward... where else? Loyola. THE HOLD-UP This hold series of pictures was taken by a cleverly disguised Review reporter. The first shows the gang inside the Bank, ing staff at bay. FLASH It has been reported that three students of Loyola of Montreal, desperate about the financial situation of their beloved univer- sity, this morning held up a _ west-end branch of the City and District Bank. The students, dressed unobtrusively in typical college attire, using winter scarves as masks, entered the bank early this morn- ing, forcing employees to stand still, hands raised, while they went about their felon- ious business. The students, whose identity is un- known, have not been apprehended, as of printing deadline. No further details are known at present. 187 Graduation Everything about this occasion — the procession, gowns, roses, speeches, and the conferring of degrees—is part of an elaborate symbolic let's pretend.” —Northrop Frye Convocation address Gowned graduates proceed to the quadrangle. It is a sunny day, and Loyola is graduating a record number of Bachelors, in Arts, Science and Commerce. It is a fine day. One remembers fine days. co D2) on Pp “The statement that you have now finished your studies and are ready to go out into the world was al- ways a silly one. In 1968, a year of unprecedented student unrest, it is intoler- able.” 190 Dr. Northrop Frye, University of Toronto's contribution towards Loyola's finest-ever Convocation. Va Siena p é hme, € + Ss. Pad z St eS ae $ if 2 191 “But if there is more frank- ness and less hypocrisy, we do not need to pretend out of politeness, that students are more mature than they ought to be. | have known a great many mature students, and a depressing lot they are, with their Bridge and their Readers’ Digest and their general air of being now exactly what they will be in thirty years. Give me the immature student every time.” srece | baw | aomeeduel ee i be 2 ae GROLIER LIMITED THORNE, GUNN, HELL IWELL Editors and Publishers CHRISTENSON Americana Chartered Accountants The New Book of Knowledge Popular Science Encyclopedia “Canadiana” . Offices throughout Canada, Nassau and Freeport Grolier “Universal . in the Bahamas, Bridgetown, Barbados, represented Book of Art . in United States of America, Great Britain and other Lands and Peoples . countries throughout the world. — Montreal Partners — also available . J. P. Dawson, C.A. J. F. Lewis, C.A. A. Poissant, C.A. D. P. Aitkens, C.A. ; . e : Ds A, A. Galarneau, C.A. ‘The Min-Max ' Teaching Machine and course M J A. C. Shackell, C.A. . J. Garbacz, C.A. W. G. Hogg, C.A. E. G. Ward, C.A. P. Gauvreau, C.A. For free booklet or information, write to: Consultant: S. R. Sabler, C.A. Grolier Limited 2405 Duncan Road Suite 2604 Stock Exchange Tower Montreal 9, Que. 735-2521 800 Place Victoria, Montreal —— Phone 878-3011 DONALD INSPECTION ; Div. of J. 1. Donald Go. Lid, Compliments of INSPECTION AND TESTING Concrete and structural Steel inspection KK. soils investigation COLA COMPANY legal and insurance investigations 2203 Beaconsfield ’ en gees : Paes .. It’s The Taste That Counts! . Compliments of J. G. FITZPATRICK CONSTRUCTION LTD. Cylinder Gases Inc. 5135 De Maisonneuve Blvd. West, Montreal 28, Que. “EVERYTHING FOR WELDING” 2150 Hingston Ave. — 489-5777 196 kom BOMBARDIER Manufacturer of Ki-dog the Iight-tooted snowmoble CONGRATULATIONS THE CLASS OF 1968 197 Income Protection Professional Assn. Groupe MUTUAL OF OMAHA INSURANCE COMPANY Claude Bond 50 Place Cremazie room 1240 Tel: 384-3320 Scealtest The name for quality dairy products. 7470 St. Jacques O. 484-8401 SHIPPING LIMITED 410 St. Nicholas St 170 Bay St. MONTREAL — 844-4451 TORONTO — 368-1771 STEAMSHIP AGENTS MANAGING OPERATORS Lake and Deep Sea Chartering Brokers Cable Address: ‘‘BULKO Chartering Cable: “‘BULKCHART”’ 198 For Service on all RCA VICTOR Products RCA VICTOR Service Branch 5575 Royalmount Ave. 731-3831 ©, DISTRIBUTOR Tel. 731-8211 Ing COIN-OP LAUNDRY EQUIPMENT INC. Quebec Commercial Distributors 5775 VICTORIA AVE. SUITE 230 MONTREAL MARVIN LECKER H. HAIN 2 SYMBOLS... TOGETHER THEY STAND FOR MONTREAL'S FINEST HEATING SERVICE DOMESTIC . COMMERCIAL . INDUSTRIAL FUEL OIL . OIL BURNERS 24 HOUR SERVICE FARQUHAR ROBERTSON LIMITED 5250 Boulevard de Maisonneuve W. PHONE 481-0371 Montreal Trust 199: Compliments : caek MONTREAL NEWSDEALERS Se ee oe Eee SUPPLY CO. LTD. HU. 8-9537 — HU. 8-9538 WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS OF BOB LUNNY SPORTING GOODS LTD. PAPERBACK BOOKS SPECIAL DISCOUNTS ON BEST SERVICE IN TOWN SCHOOL ORDERS Suppliers to 9162 Boivin’ St, Lasalle, Que. a ass Batt Phone: 365-1070 and LOYOLA COLLEGE 5804 Cote St. Luc MONTREAL, QUE Compliments of There’s room at the to at the Commerce : ( K V F A.M. .F.M. You enjoy many varied career opportunities with the Commerce because of its dynamic growth pattern. As the bank moves ahead, you move ahead too. Ask for the free booklet “What's new in banking careers at your nearest branch or write to our Personnel Division, 25 King Street West, Toronto. This is the most approachable lion you've ever met... i Very fond of students. aA eee ROYAL BANK BANK OF COMMERCE 200 eNEWS Multi-Vo Ox e|| DAS MANUFACTURERS OF QUALITY SOUND ch AND COMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT MULTI-VOX LTD., 9967 St. Michel Blvd., r } COND- Claude Girard, President Montreal 39, P.Q. 321-3130 TIONS Woodhouse oe Ss CANADA'S LARGEST HOME FURNISHERS 7 915 ST. CATHERINE ST. E. Bhe Hazxctte (OPPOSITE MONTREAL PHARMACY) Convenient Berri-Demontigny Metro Exit MONTREAL'S FAVOURITE SPORTS PAPER io i 3913 WELLINGTON ST. Verdun 43 GREEN ST. St. Lambert 3956 ONTARIO ST. E. near Pie IX Blvd. 1180 LABELLE BLVD. Chomedy 10672 PIE IX BLVD. Montreal North 6346 ST. HUBERT ST. betw. Beaubien Bellechasse ive Stores in Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia youre in the Pepsi generation! PEPSI-COLA FUEL OIL - Oil Burners - Heating Equipment 24 hours service Jean-Paul Elie, general manager Tel.: 937-9171 925 Hibernia, Montreal 201 MONT SUTTON SUTTON, QUEBEC Vertical Drop 1500° Three locations in Place Ville Marie - 866-9771 Altitude from 1400 to 2900' 4 Double Chair lifts 1 T-Bar 18 miles of trails Snow Reports: Mtl 866-7718 — 866-7639 PEST CONTROL SPECIALISTS REGION SINCE 1917 THE SULLIVAN MINING GROUP Suite 1403 — 507 Place d'Armes, MONTREAL, Que. RENTALS Tony can serve you with the finest and latest styles in formal wear for all occasions DR. PIERRE BEAUCHEMIN, President MR. ANDRE BEAUCHEMIN, Eng., Executive Assistant to the President MR. LUCIEN C. BELIVEAU, Eng., General Manager ATTENTION STUDENTS SPECIAL PRICES SULLIVAN CONSOLIDATED MINES LIMITED EAST SULLIVAN MINES LIMITED SULLICO MINES LIMITED QUEBEC LITHIUM CORPORATION HASTINGS MINING DEVELOPMENT CO. LTD. SOLBEC COPPER MINES LTD. CUPRA MINES LTD. D'ESTRIE MINING COMPANY LTD. NIGADOO RIVER MINES LIMITED CHESTER MINES LIMITED POWER BLUE MARCON JACKETS AVAILABLE FORMAL WEAR AND TONY TAILORING 5520 SHERBROOKE ST. W. corner Girouard 488-8638 202 Shopping at EATON'S makes good sense when you consider why: Eatons's shops round the world for you. Eaton's buying power means low prices. Eaton's offers PLUS-VALUES such as free delivery, phone orders, credit accounts. Eaton's backs up this time-honoured guarantee: GOODS SATISFACTORY OR MONEY REFUNDED EATON'S Drafting Supplies Art Materials Slide Rules Ozalid White Printing Photo Copies COMPLIMENTS OF Hughes-Owens WILKINSON LINATEX CO. LTD. 2050 Mansfield St. 288-3698 8500 Decarie Boulevard 731-8571 203 CANADIAN LINEN SUPPLY COMPANY INC. A COMPLETE LINEN INDUSTRIAL RENTAL SERVICE 4375 Rouen St. 254-5315 DEBRO CONSTRUCTION @ division of Drew Brown Lim-ted p S PECIA LTI E S$ 5410 FERRIER STREET, MONTREAL 9 TELEPHONE 731-7811 AFFILIATED CUSTOM BROKERS CONSIDERING Personal Life Insurance — Personal Pension Plan Employee Welfare Plans — Employee Pensions (Montreal) Ltd. REQUIRE INFORMATION ON Estate Planning — Profit Sharing Plans Head Office: Business Partnership Insurance — Split Dollar Plans 450 rue St. Helen St., Montreal, P.Q. HAVE YOUR AGENT OR BROKER CONTACT P.O. Box 100 Place d’'Armes — Telephone 845-1211 — Branches — HUGH G. MacGREGOR’S AGENCY Montreal International Airport, Dorval, P.Q. CROWN LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Intermediate Terminals Suite 1150, West Wing, 550 Sherbrooke St. West, Montreal, P.Q. 288-7282 6378 Cote de Liesse Rd., Montreal, P.Q. Brokerage Consultant R. Leduc Montreal Truck Sufferance Warehouse Terminal, 7403 Newman Blvd., LaSalle, P.Q Quotation, Proposal, Planning Services a Peewee K. Yeates Mrs. A. Girard B. McLean Branch Secretary New Business Income Replacement Stanhope, Que. — Lacolle-Blackpool, Que. illi PLE D Phillipsburg, Que. — Rock Island, Que. SUCCESSFUL PEOPLE DO 204 COLOGNE 4 02. $4.75 Discerning men find luxurious pleasure in the subtle mascu- line scent of Jade East...worlds apart from the ordinary. 481-9621 J. E. (TED) FORREST Wilson's Sports Center SPECIAL STUDENTS DISCOUNT LIMITED FORREST LITHOGRAPHING 6536 Somerled Ave. (near Cavendish) Montreal 29, Que. 16 Ronald Drive, Montreal 28 488-9163 FRANK WILSON TEL. 849-8328 Guth Fen 3416 ParRK AVENUE MONTREAL WHERE SMART WOMEN SHOP 205 things 9 better th Coke communion Eero TRADE MARK REG. Head Office and Plant: SHERBROOKE Executive Offices: MONTREAL Offices in TORONTO and VANCOUVER Catt ela TRADE MARK REG Both Coca-Cola and Coke are registered trade marks Steam Generating, Fuel Beg Sid Reltiae which identify only the product of Coca-Cola Ltd. Equipment; Nuclear Components; Paper Mill Equipment; Pulverizers; Flash Drying Systems; Pressure Vessels. SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA CONGRATULATES THE CLASS OF This is a most im- portant time of life for you as you should NOW decide upon a safe, yet economical means to financially protect the ones who will count on you. It is our hope that you will recognize, along with hundreds of thousands of other Canadians, that Sun Life insurance deserves a special place in YOUR budget. 206 the mon planner A 4' 2° o True Savings Account helps you plan your way to the things you want — gives you a firm grip on what you have. 2 Bank of Montreal Canada's First Bank A low-cost True Chequing Account provides monthly account statements and free personalized cheques. Get your money planner wallet at Compliments of Monsanto ZIMMCOR COMPANY Tel. 622-7890 622-7891 RONALD T. O'KEEFE ® behind this symbol... modern miracles for Canadian Industry Manufacturers of a Complete Line of Architectural Aluminum Products , Consulting The Monsanto “M” — seen in an advertisement or label on a carton — is far more than merely a trade mark. It is a symbol for what are indeed “modern miracles” — the more than four hundred Monsanto chemicals and plastics which, everywhere across Canada, are helping manu- facturers to produce better products at lower cost. Civil Engineer ZIMMCOR COMPANY 313 Grande Cote, 2100 Remembrance Road LACHINE, QUE. Rosemere, Que. Monsanto CANADA LTD. Ramsay Bell Decor Divisions of Zimmcor Company 207 With the compliments of the I.A.C. Group of Companies Specialized financial and insurance services for Canadians and Canadian Business. INDUSTRIAL ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION LIMITED Merit Insurance Company Niagara Finance Company Limited Premier Property Limited The Sovereign Life Assurance Company of Canada L'HOTEL QUEEN'S STORE! EGNTREAU LTO. L'hétel spécialement équipé pour vos Banquets, Congrés Réception de Mariage, Diner d'affaires, ; Réunions de société. (4 minutes west of Decarie Blvd.) A travers les années, |'Hétel Queen's reste syno- YOUR CHEV-OLDS nyme d'excellente cuisine, service et courtoisie. DEALER Téléphoner simplement au 866-2531 SALES SERVICE PARTS OK USED CARS ELECTRONIC HIGHWAY FULLY AUTOMATIC CAR WASH Ogilvy s...for the new and the unusual EXIT 17 TRANS CANADA HIGHWAY « TEL.: 332-1673 La nouveauté et linédit chez Ogilvy 208 You can’t beat the taste of Player’s Filter TEA COMPANY, LIMITED bus economia ) y LOW PRICES EVERY DAY travel AT YOUR A P FOOD STORE sporting events picnics jem Qin ee : annual parties res) Compliments educationa! and Ao: 3) recreational tours also frequent daily express schedules The Standard Life Assurance Co. to Quebec City, Sherbrooke, Chicoutimi, Riviére-du-Loup, The Laurentians and iGire Branch many other points. charter THE GREAT ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC a 1550 De Maisonneuve Blvd., Montreal — 931-3851 1188 Dorchester Blvd. West, Montreal, PQ. CANADA'S FIRST — SINCE 1833 209 Compliments of GENERAL ADVERTISING INC. 2200 Victoria St. Lachine, Que. Compliments of PRICE WATERHOUSE 5 Place Ville Marie Montreal, Que. JOHN COLFORD CONTRACTING CO. LTD. 2025 Fortin Chomedey, P.Q. Compliments of DEBONAIRE LTD. 915 Labelle St. -Laval, Que. Compliments of SHORTALL ELECTRIC LIMITED 1015 St. Alexander Montreal, Que. 845-3509 MOISHE’S STEAK HOUSE 3961 St. Lawrence Blvd. Montreal, Que. 210 Compliments of MONTREAL CMI (1966) LTD. 7144 Cote des Neiges Montreal, Que. Compliments of CHARLES ROTH INC., 5767 Monkland Ave. Montreal, Que. Compliments of SKI BELLE NEIGE Route No. 11 Val Morin, Que. 861-6655 Compliments of ANGLO CANADIAN WINDOW CLEANING SERVICE 294 rue Lafleur Montreal, Que. DO 6-5281 Compliments of KEYLITHO LTD. 486 Lagauchetiere St. Montreal, Que. S.F.C.1. LTD. 800 Victoria Square, Suite 3527 Montreal, Que. Compliments of Compliments MIDTOWN MOTORS LTD. of (Geleliiteta - Pontiac - Buick = Acadian FOOD PRODUCTS LTD. 5555 St. Patrick St. Tel.: UN 6-9961 Montreal 1395 Dorchester St. W. Montreal, P.Q. Beaumont - Firebird CONSO OF CANADA LTD. Semen: ° 426 Guy Street Montreal, Que. LEIGH TEXTILES CANADA LTD. 280 Marien Ave. East Tel.: 721-8461 Montreal East, P.Q. Compliments Compliments of of C. M. CLINTON SON RICHLER STEEL CORP. 9150 Meilleur St. 10364 Balzac, Montreal, Que. Montreal Compliments Compliments of of WARREN ALLMAND LOCWELD FORGE PRODUCTS (1962) LTD. 8031 Avon Road 1545 Chabot St. Montreal West Cote St. Paul Compliments of Compliments of GRANT JOHNSTON CO. LTD. GAY TOGS LTD. Place Ville Marie . Suite 1734 2260 Parthenais Montreal Montreal eg Compliments Compliments ot of WESTMOUNT REALTIES 1367 Green Ave. Montreal D F VALVE CO. LTD. 1925 Bois Franc Montreal 211 KRUGER PULP AND PAPER LIMITED Archimedes had a bathtub Ben Franklin used a kite There are few things more sterile than knowledge for its own sake. Only knowledge put to work — knowledge in action — creates value. Curiosity prodding knowledge into new kinds of action: that's the essence of advance. Now how about you? Kruger Pulp and Paper Limited 3285 Bedford MONTREAL Fine Paper. Newsprint. Paperboard. Packaging. ta! signposts of progress @ BCN offers a complete range of all banking services you expect to find at a large modern bank like this. @ BCN has extended its banking hours to serve you even better. @ BCN has 344 branches, one of them not too far from you @ BCN carries on a continuous program of job training and refresher courses to place a highly skilled staff at your service @ BCN can serve you abroad also, through its subsidiary in Paris and correspondents throughout the world Banque [ 135] | “a | | l Canadienne Nationale Place d'Armes, Montréal 212 K. HOLLINGDRAKE Quebec Manager Office Building Division The Fairview Corporation Fairview Centres Canada Ltd. 845-8274 550 Sherbrooke St. W. Montreal 2, Que. The Sound of To-Day on “Daimor pants utp. 9250 Meilleur Street — Tele. 381-7681 Gen) Ga COLUMBIA ana EPIC DORVAL BUILDERS SUPPLIES LTD. R E CO Fy ) 5 Materiaux de Construction Building Materials 631-3585 555 O'Connell Dorval, P.Q. J. LUCIEN MELOCHE Canadian General Appraisal Co. E Compliments Fire Damage Claim Settlement 5 Expropriation - City Valuation Los Gpchelectes Res. Beloeil 467-2325 Off. 443 St. Francois-Xavier, Montreal CINQ-MARS DESMARAIS AV 8-410] 1980 Ouest, Sherbrooke — Suite 370 Tel. 845-6717. - Res. 744-6237 Telephone: 933-3631 - 3632 — Montreal 845-5985 A WISEMAN FURS INC. Manufacturers of Fine Furs and Skin Merchants Kane Fetterly Sne 1449 St. Alexander St., Room 213, Montreal funeral homes Compliments of 530 Decarie Blod. C. D. HOWE CO., LTD. 93 -530 4333 St. Catherine West Westmount foumerly Thomas Kane 213 COMPLIMENTS OF MacKINNON STRUCTURAL STEEL CO. LIMITED MONTREAL-SHERBROOKE Compliments With the Compliments of of the Monitor Publishing Co. Ltd. Marshall Equipment Co. Inc. 7005 Kildare Rd., 502 O'Connell, Montreal 29, Que. Dorval, P.Q. Compliments of CANADIAN A ALLIS-CHALMERS crop. TEL. 634-3451 Products Coronation 50L tian Blvd. boas Lachine spe abel ad 214 BEST WISHES FROM ANDREW HAMILTON C. L. A. Andrew Hamilton (Montreal) Limited Insurance Adjusters 407 McGill Street, Montreal Office: VI 2-7841 COMPLIMENTS OF FOODS LIMITED General Offices—Calgary, Canada 4670 Iberville St. Montreal 34, P.Q. Tel.: 524-3501 WILKINSON LINATEX CO. LTD. HOMMAGES 1968—Review LES PREVOYANTS DU CANADA COMPLIMENTS OF 801 est, Sherbrooke, Montreal GRANDMA MOLASSES LTD. JOHNS-MANVILLE ACOUSTICAL CEILINGS Completely engineered and installed by our company trained experts = z J. RONALD CORLETT Field Superintendent CONTINENTAL ASSURANCE CO. 489-5311 4999 St. Catherine St. W. : Ae ae. 1253 McGill College Ave. Suite 752 Montreal, Quebec CONSTRUCTION DEPT. CANADIAN Bus.: 866-4454 JOHNS-MANVILLE CO. LTD. 215 CLARKE FUNERAL HOME 5580 Sherbrooke West (at Marcil) Compliments of GENERAL BAKERIES LTD. THE HOME OF SERVICE JOHN CLARKE, Director HU. 1-0445 CHARLES DURANCEAU LIMITEE Tel. 486-9404 2 Hours Dry Cleaning Service 5 Hours Shirts Service STAR LITE CLEANERS AND SHIRT LAUNDERERS C. F. DAWSON co. LIMITED | 7411 Harley Ave., near Elmhurst Ave. MONTREAL, QUE. THREE RIVERS SHIPPING COMPANY LiMITED Ship Agents - Stevedoring Contractors Terminal Operators - Warehousing Grain Handlers 2120 Notre Dame Street Three Rivers, Que. CANADA Telex No. 018418 Tel.: 375-1632 The Good Things of Life... 4765S SO PURE...SO GOOD...SO WHOLESOME FOR EVERYONE , ‘come in a Birks Box CONGRATULATIONS TO THE CLASS OF ‘68 BEST WISHES TO OUR MANY FRIENDS AT LOYOLA BROWN RYAN LIMITED 218 W. F. WALSH LIMITED 56 PRINCE STREET, MONTREAL, CANADA Compliments of ANACHEMIA CHEMICALS LTD. 500 - 2nd AVE. VILLE ST. PIERRE 489-5711 Compliments of ASSOCIATED TEXTILES OF CANADA LIMITED 1120 SUN LIFE BUILDING Compliments of MENKES WEBB 931-1375 1800 Sherbrooke St. W., Montreal, Que. Compliments of LIGHTOLIER CANADA LIMITED MODULITE DIVISION Tel.: 636-0252 4935 Bourg St., St-Laurent, Montreal, P.Q. Compliments of PINATEL PIECE DYE WORKS 400 ONTARIO ST. W., MONTREAL, QUE. DORSAY (CANADA) LIMITED MANUFACTURERS OF Exclusive Lingerie Sleepwear TEL.: 381-8681 9320 ST. LAWRENCE BLVD., MTL. 11, P.Q. VILLEMAIRE FRERES BOOK BINDERS BOUND ACCOUNT BOOKS LOOSE LEAF DEVICES 672-2620 34 St. Helene St., St. Lambert, Quebec Tel. Val Morin - 322-2014 Direct Line - 866-2219 Tel. 637-2325 ES fp. f; Far Hills San ® RIOPEL AUTO INC. Pierre Robitaille Directeur Val-Morin Station, P.Q. RENE RIOPEL Gérant Général General Manager J. L. TAYLOR SONS 2125 Notre Dame, Lachine, Quebec Limited Tel. 671-7216 556 Victoria Ave. St. Lambert, P.Q. Compliments of +e ae The Park Lane Neckwear Co; 1279 Bernard Avenue West, Outremont 901 Bleury St., Montreal, P.Q. Montreal 8 compliments of LOUIS DONOLO INC. General Contractors 8320 St. Lawrence 220 IT’S TONY THE TAILOR ... FOR THAT “MAN ABOUT TOWN” LOOK Men! You'll like the way our sport jackets get around Just think how often you wear a sport jacket . . . traveling, business, pleasure . . . and to men who are really going places a _ fine quality jacket is a ‘‘must.’’ Come in and see the most wanted new fabrics, pat- terns and shades. Tony THE TAILOR LTD. 620 Notre Dame West Tel. 866-5491-2 Free Parking Compliments of Avmor 431-433 Ste-Héléne, Montréal 1, Québec, Canada — Téléphone 849-8074 Best Wishes For Continuing Success Compliments of @ Monitor Publishing Co. Ltd. VELAN ENGINEERING plier COMPANIES The Loyola News 221 HAROLD BERGMAN, B.Sc., O.D. Optometrist 488-6391 Suite 2 6525 Somerled Ave. Montreal 29, Que. Tel.: 731-9001 SHEA BROS. Specializing In Home Imp rovements, Roofing, Brick Work Basement Waterproofing, Cement Work 5949 McLynn Montreal City Painting 10734 Alfred St., Montreal North, Que. Compliments Of Systems Equipment Ltd. Canada's Most Versatile Manufacturer of ‘‘One Writing’’ Accounting Systems and Business Forms for Every Business. Career opportunities are im- mediately available in Toronto and Montreal for those with accounting knowledge, plus experience in data processing and marketing. 321-4989 DANIEL AMUSEMENT ENRG. Phonographs, Pin Game, Crane, etc. Prop.: D. Williams Rep.: R. Montminy Compliments of REICH BROTHERS LTD. 70 Rué de Bresoles, Montreal 1, P.Q. TEL.: 845-8826 MEN'S FORMAL ATTIRE axman’s 4605 PARK AVENUE, MONTREAL 223 875-5454 Brais, Campbell, Pepper Durand Advocates, Barristers Solicitors The Royal Bank of Canada Building 1 Place Ville Marie Montreal 2 CONSUMERS GLASS COMPANY LIMITED Manufacturers of Quality Glass Containers 258 - 2nd Avenue, Ville St. Pierre, P.Q. Tel. 489-9361 C. F. DAWSON CO. LIMITED Printers and Stationers 387-389 Notre Dame Street West Facing St. Helen Street Area Code 514, Telephone 849-1214 Montreal Compliments of DORVAL CLEANERS LAUNDERS LTD. 710 Lake Shore Rd. Dorval, Que. 631-3571 Compliments of FRANKLIN ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. 5595 St. Lawrence, Mtl., Que. 276-3781 Compliments of BLAKER HERNS % CO. WE 7-619] 1215 Greene Ave., Westmount 224 Compliments of PEAT MARWICK MITCHELL CO. 1155 Dorchester W., Mtl., Que. 866-2691 Compliments of BRISBANE BAIRD CO. 6470 St. James W. Mtl. 484-6544 T.M. Reg'd. Use Green Cross Products for your lawn, garden and home ) T.M. Reg'd. Compliments of Eastern Packagin eg Corp. 2177 Masson Montreal, P.Q. Hospitality. Walk through our door. In the midst of Montreal's hustle, the lobby is quiet. Soft carpets. High ceilings. Lights softly aglow. Elegance — but a friendly elegance... And your room. Spacious, comfortable. Like the rest of the Windsor. Restaurants? Choose the richly muralled La Loire, the gaiety of La Réserve or the panelled ease of The Lantern with its new exciting seafood bar. Everywhere the Windsor’s hospitality awaits you. ASU INDSOR Gul “SCHWARTZ DO: M-7220 AD. NO,: W-10-66 Prepared by Foster Advertising Limited, Montreal May 12th, 1966 COOK, PERRY, SEWELL COMPANY Chartered Accountants Specialists in Industrial Relations —§165 Sherbrooke West, Montreal, Quebec and Labour Contract Negotiations Phone 482-9155 Donald W. Cook, CA. | John L. Perry, C.A. Stephen W. Sewell, C.A. MLE Employers’ Advisers Ltd. LES CONSEILLERS PATRONAUX MLE LTEE All Types of Piling and Caissons Sheet Piling, Underpinning, Drilling Main Floor, 822 Sherbrooke St. East Franki Canada Limited Tel. 526-9491 187 Graham Blvd. Montreal 16, Que. 225 COMPAGNIE DE LA BAIE D'HUDSON GILTEX HOSIERY LTD. 550 Beaumont Ave., Montreal, Que. Tel.: 274-6563 Compliments of AL HORVATH INC. Brick Masonry Contractor Phone 334-8507 LES CARTONS DU QUEBEC LTEE QUEBEC CONTAINERS LIMITED 6200, Rue Notre Dame Ouest, Montreal 30, Que. 937-9402 Compliments of WARREN MENS WEAR LTD. 4884 Sherbrooke St. West Mtl. 6, Westmount, 484-3982 SERV Geers © Experienced Security Guards in Uniform SECURITY Investigations (Excepting Divorce) ° Burglar Fire Alarm Systems 350 NOTRE DAME WEST - TEL: 288-7231 738-9552 738-1911 5174 Gatineau NETTOYEURS COTE DES NEIGES CLEANERS Nettoyage, Pressage, Réparations Cleaning, Pressing, Alterations Pick-Up Delivery Fred Hunter — President Montreal, Que. QUA-LITY | c E 226 Avec les Compliments de: Gilles Longpre., President ENTREPRENEURS GENERAUX Longpre Construction inc. 3577 SOUVENIR — LAVAL — P.Q. NOS RESPECTUEUX HOMMAGES: 164 BOUL. DES LAURENTIDES PONT-VIAU, LAVAL, P.Q. TEL.: 667-9770 GOINEAU BOUSQUET CIE. LTEE. BOIS PORTES CHASSIS MATERIAUX DE CONSTRUCTION 227 Compliments of DOYLE MOTORS LIMITED CHEVROLET CORVAIR OLDSMOBILE 4501 Bannantyne Avenue Verdun, Quebec 769-4501 BOC = 2610 Ste-Adéle-en-haut, Québec 45 minutes North of Montreal via the Autoroute, Exit 28 861-2420 - Area Code 514 for reservations. Enquire about ski school lessons, ski week and family rates. Dorceta Power Corp. 1306 Bassin St., Montreal Tel.: 932-7121 Compliments of TRENMORE PRINTING LTD. 5743 Verdun Ave., Verdun, Que. Tel.: 767-5321 MACDONALD RAILWAY SUPPLIES LTD. 639 St. Remi St., Montreal, Que. Compliments of LIMOUSINE MURRAY HILL LTD. 229 Compliments of Belvedere Motel Inc. A home away from home L. G. Balfour Company Gatherings—Business Meetings Fully Licenced Restaurant of CANADA LTD. 118 Brock. Crescent 7250 Montreal-Toronto Highway Pt. Claire, P.Q. at St. James W. HU. 1-8121 Compliments of JOHN F. CUGGY CO. LTD. emvelopes eouciciod 1088 Manufactured in Montreal since 1874 Fresh and Frozen Wholesale Fruit and Vegetables CANADA ENVELOPE COMPANY 866-6926 TEL. 481-0231 731 Common St., Montreal, P.Q. 8205 MONTREAL-TORONTO BLVD. MONTREAL W., P.Q. RIDDELL, STEAD, GRAHAM HUTCHISON EASTERN DIE CASTING INC. McLINTOCK, MAIN LAFRENTZ CO. Manufacturers of Chartered Accountants Aluminum Electrical Fittings 630 Dorchester Blvd. West 866-7351 Die Casting Products Calgary, Corner Brook, Edmonton, Halifax, 748-7308 Hamilton, London, Montreal, New Westminster, 2020 Thimens, Montreal 9 Ottawa, Quebec, Regina, St. John’s, Toronto, Vancouver, Winnipeg Etablie Depuis 1935 LOCKWOOD SURVEY CORP. LTD. Tel. 376-4310 8375 Bougainville, Montreal 9, Que. Les Couvertures IDEALES Photographic Survey Inc. IDEAL Roofing (1966) Inc. 739-1724 Couvreurs Genereaux—General Roofers 7932-13E Avenue—Ville St-Michel, Montreal V. L. SAVAGE CO. INC. WILLIAM P. KEATING Advocate - Barrister - Solicitor 4606 St. Catherine St. W., Montreal 6, P.Q. 937-9234 Suite 1905 - 360 St. James St. W. Montreal Air Conditioning - Heating - Ventilating 849-1351 Refrigeration - Design - Installation Service 230 ESTABLISHED 1904 o FOR ALL YOUR TRUCKS NEEDS BIG OR SMALL SALES SERVICE 24 HOURS A DAY MARTIN KIELY CO. LTD. contact GENERAL MACHINISTS MANUFACTURERS OF MACHINERY TO INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER SPECIFICATIONS COMPANY Ascot Gas Water Heaters New and Used Laundry Machinery 7050 St. Jacques St. West 489-492] Paper and Metal Balers Telephone 937-8975 - 6-7 5615 St. Lawrence Blvd. 1161-1165 William Street, Montreal 3, P.Q. 273-3381 KINGS TRANSFER VAN LINES COMPLIMENTS OF DOMTAR PACKAGING 287 Eleanor St. - Phone 932-2957 LIMITED BUREAU - OFFICE 256-1677 CONVERTED PAPERS DIVISION United OF ini Supply ae aad TIRES - RECAPS - BATTERIES PNEUS - RECHAPPAGE - ACCUMULATEURS 4700 RUE ROUEN ST. E. MONTREAL 4 231 McMILLAN MARTYNOWICZ Consulting Engineers 5460 Patricia Ave. Montreal Antoni Martynowicz, Eng. Colin B. McMillan, Eng. 482-1632 Compliments of KAY MANUFACTURING LTD. Bias Bindings and Trimmings MONTREAL — TORONTO Compliments of CRELINISTEN INC. 775 Rue Du Marche Central Montreal 11, P.Q. Tel.: 381-4221 Manufacturers of Fabricant de LEADER Tricycles - Tricycles - Wagons - Voitures Scooters - Trottinettes - Rockers - Berceuses Sidewalk Bicycles - Bicyclettes de Trottoir VICTORIA PRECISION WORKS CO. LIMITED TEL.: (514) 524-1143 2901 ROUEN MONTREAL 24, P.Q. WELDING PRODUCTS LTD. MONTREAL LINDE DISTRIBUTOR Tel.: 932-3107 25 Seigneurs St., Montreal 6920, Rue St-Hubert St. — Montreal — 274-3563 P. P. LALONDE LTEE, LTD. sur on St-Hubert Paul Vezina, Gérant JOHN FETHERSTONHAUGH, Q.C. FETHERSTONHAUGH, KEATING DRODY 360 St. James St., West, Montreal 849-4222 PERKINS PAPER PRODUCTS LTD. Tel.: 688-1152 2345 Montée St. Aubin, Chomeday, Laval, Que. Compliments of WESTEEL-ROSCO LTD. Manufacturers, Steel Roof Deck, Culverts Office Toilet Partitions 4107 RICHELIEU ST. TEL. 933-8451: TEL. 935-7401 355 GUY STREET Chartered Accountants CAMPBELL, SHARP, NASH FIELD 715 Victoria Square Phone 845-7211 @ Offices Across Canada @ @ Associates in the United States, Great Britain, Europe, Middle East, Africa and Australia COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND ARCO AUTOMATIC RETAIL CO. LTD. A Division of Anthes Imperial Ltd. Complete food beverage service through automatic vending machines hot and cold self service buffets. 871 Montée de Liesse 331-6953 E xpecting Out-of-Town Visitors? Compliments of Let them be our guests. Art Woodwork Ltd. Out-of-town visitors appreciate the comfort and convenience of the Capri. We’re just min- utes from downtown, from the airport and anywhere else in Montreal via fast, direct traffie routes. Our accommodations and food mel ee and there is entertainment every night. f When visitors are expected — call us. We've 6040 Henri Bourassa St. E., a guest room just for them, Montreal For reservations call 739-2711 THE sk VOL HOTEL 6445 Decarie Boulevard 233 Congratulations Class of ‘68 Compliments of From your Photographers CORONET STUDIOS INC. 465 St. Johns St., Montreal 758 Sherbrooke Street West Robert Hampson Son Ltd. Near McGill College Ave. Tel. 844-7745 BEST WISHES FROM Oswald Drinkwater Graham Ltd. “EXPORT PLAIN or FILTER TIP CIGARETTES REGULAR AND KINGS 715 Victoria Square, Montreal Desjardins, Ducharme, Desjardins Cordeau Avocals 620 ouest, Boulevard Dorchester Montréal 2, P.Q. TELEPHONE: 878-9411 “Where the Goan Are” 22 ST. CATHERINE E. 866-6944 6627 ST-HUBERT 272-4665 289 ST.-GEORGES ET CENTRE D’ACHATS DANS ST-JEROME CANADIAN WHITE STAR PRODUCTS LIMITED Specialists in the manufacture of Electric Heating Equipment for Home and Industry 1240 LAURENTIEN BLVD., MONTREAL 9, CANADA TEL. 748-6134 J. S. ROBERTSON LTD. PRINTER'S ROLLERS ESTABLISHED 1892 175 LAGAUCHETIERE ST. W. MONTREAL PHONE: UNIVERSITY 6-075] Compliments of NORMAN WADE CO. LTD. A complete selection of drafting room equipment materials 76 Hymus Blvd. Tel: 697-6130 Pointe Claire, P.Q. Cuitestain LIMITEE Manufacture: ST-HYACINTHE, P.Q. PR. 4-7161 MONTREAL TEL. 866-2164 ASCENSEURS ET MONTE-CHARGE HYDRAULIQUES OU A CABLES With the Compliments of Vichy Celestins NATURAL ALKALINE MINERAL WATER L’eau qui fait... du Bien! LIBROS international INTERNATIONAL SHOE MACHINE CORP. OF CANADA, LTD. Tel: 389-3100 8750 PARK AVENUE (TANGUAY) MONTREAL B. A. SERVICE STATION Mariette Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, Que. Prop.: J. Bourbonnais 484-3902 Begin Your Career With The Best! start with... K-E Drawing materials - Reproduction materials Slide Rules - Surveying instruments Optical metrology - Photogrammetry Available at: YOUR UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE KEUFFEL ESSER OF CANADA, LIMITED 130 Montée de Liesse Montreal 9, P.Q. Morgan, Ostiguy Huden Ine. Agent de change 500 ouest, rue St Jacques Montréal 1 Tél. 842-423] Plow Watters (1966) Limited Printers and Lithographers 8650 Delmeade Road Town of Mount Royal, Quebec Telephone 735-1381 Manufacturers of Fabricant de TRICYCLES VOITURES TROTTINETTES BERCEUSES BICYCLETTES DE TROTTOIR TRICYCLES WAGONS SCOOTERS ROCKERS SIDEWALK BICYCLES LEADER Tel. 524-1143 Area Code 514 LIMITED 2901 Rouen, Montreal 24, P.Q. VICTORIA PRECISION WORKS CO. BREITMAN S Since 1924 Antiques Bought Sold CANADIANA OUR SPECIALTY Pine Furniture, Old Wood Carvings Canadian Prints, Objets D’Art Come In And Browse Around Suppliers To Leading Collectors Museums 1353 Greene 937-0275 Cristallericn du Val-Saint Lambert RADE MAR, OEpQsEE Suite 1104 1S5O MAISONNEUVE BLVD.WEST 931-3539 MONTREAL 25,P.Q. For a Grand Vacation in any season select Gray Rocks Inn St. Jovite-Mt. Tremblant P.O. Box 100, St. Jovite, P.Q. Tel. 861-0187 236 Courtesy of Courtoisie de Omer ACADIAN - BUICK - PONTIAC - VAUXHALL BEAUMONT - G.M.C. TRUCKS FIREBIRD Tel. 768-2551 5987 AVE. VERDUN VERDUN 19, P.Q. CHARLES DRUG STORE 96 WESTMINSTER N. Montreal West, 484-1126 ABOOSAMRA KOURI INC. Importateurs de Produits Alimentaires Importers of Quality Food Products DEPUIS 1892 SINCE 1892 625-1976 861-7171 1540 AVE DES PATRIOTES STE-ROSE. LAVAL. P.Q. N Al out ie) ME © Gon ERy, a = 0 EADERSHIP AROUND? Compl iments of Austin Sales Service 12225 Cote de Liesse 636-1812 Chateauguay Shoe Shop Savage Shoes for Entire Family HU 4-6383 5866 Sherbrooke West T ZFASHER ew PHONE FISHER FIRST 866-7867 1218 DRUMMOND ST. MONTREAL 25. ARCHITECT, DRAFTING AND INDUSTRIAL ARTISTS’ MATERIALS. TELEX 01-20768 REHSIF MTL THOMAS R. FISHER WILSON et LAFLEUR (limitee) LIBRAIRES - EDITEURS DROIT - MEDECINE LITTERATURE GENERALE TEL.: AV 8-7154-5 39 OUEST, RUE NOTRE-DAME MONTREAL J. J. Shea Limited General Contractors HU 1-6200 2180 Belgrave Av e. N.D.G. Montreal a Ns a ART LABORATORY FURNITURE LIMITED 894 Bioomfield Avenue, Montreal 8, Canada Tel. 274-3531 COMPLIMENTS OF Simpwon Fiddell Stead Partner 630 DORCHESTER BLVD. W. MONTREAL 878-9461 COMPLIMENTS OF A. F. Ritchie Company Limited MARINE INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY 1945 NOTRE DAME ST. W. MONTREAL, QUE. International Paints Canada Limited 6700 PARK AVENUE MONTREAL, P.Q. GILLES FOISY 271-4655 ARTHUR VINCENT Incorporée — Incorporated 1952 ARPENTAGE - LAND-SURVEYING Roch A. Vincent, |.C., Président, Architecte, A.-G., Solliciteur de Brevets d' Inventions C.E., Architect, Q.L.S., Patent-Attorney 35 Ouest, Rue Notre-Dame, Suite 101 Notre-Dame Street West, Montreal 1 842-6726 COMPLIMENTS OF Dean Witter International Inc. 630 DORCHESTER BLVD. WEST MONTREAL 2, QUE. 861 3461 COMPLIMENTS OF Dominion Ayers Limited 2057 MANSFIELD ST. MONTREAL, QUE. TELEPHONE: AV 8-8119 Compliments of WH) ‘==57 Forged Steel Valve Corporation Montreal 9, P.Q. 636-1660 4667 Hickmore 237 Victor 9-3185 BADGE SPECIALTY CO. LTD. LA COMPAGNIE DES INSIGNES 389 ST. PAUL WEST G. MAISONNEUVE MONTREAL 1 PHARMACIE DEQUIRE 6945 FIELDING AVE., N.D.G., P.Q. 489-9333 J. Feoger Flamerfelt B. Comm. €. L. ul. London Life Insurance Company 2990 Edifice C.1.L. Montréal, Québec Téléphone 866-8573 THE RUBIN CORPORATION LIMITED INDUSTRIAL DIVISION 1010 St. Catherine St. W., Montreal 2, P.Q. © 866-7345 MICHAEL G. WRIGHT Vice-President PLOMBERIE CHAUFFAGE LTEE PLUMBING HEATING LTD. 178 CARTIER AVENUE POINTE-CLAIRE, QUEBEC TEL. 697-2027 28 Davy - Ashmore Canada Limited 4795 St. Catherine Street West Montreal 6, Que. Designers and Builders of Plant for the Iron and Steel, Non-Ferrous Metals, Chemical and Petroleum Industries 238 Maron Holdings MARON HOLDINGS MANAGEMENT CORP. 4141 SHERBROOKE W., WESTMOUNT, QUE. 932-2922 ite apes gatehouse . a ine, Wholesalers of FISH, SEAFOOD, POULTRY AND GAME 1065 PAPINEAU AVE., MONTREAL, QUE. 527-154] Lbea) 10350 PELLETIER ST. Montreal North, Que. Tel.: 322-4324 There Is Something Fishy Going On At Joe's This Week! For seafood with a delicious difference may w e suggest our Gaspe salmon steak, jumbo shrimp platter or our enticing seafood platter. All are beautifully prepared and served, with nothing overlooked. Complete with tossed salad; choice of dressings; Idaho baked potato or golden french fried. If you have enjoyed our steaks, we are sure you will delight in our seafood dishes. One Location Only 1459 METCALFE ST. (near Burnside) 842-4638 American Express 3 Floors—450 Seats— Diners RENOLD CHAINS CANADA LIMITED Head Office: St. Laurent, Mtl. 9, Que. COAST TO COAST SERVICE FIRST NAME IN POWER TRANSMISSION FIRST NAME IN SERVICE 1455 Hymus Bivp. DORVAL, P.Q. TEL. 849-9386 “Custom Packaging Specialists @ a) “'Spécialistes ZF Empaquetage HUBERT WOKRINA UES EE Bt (Pak-Att Reg’) MORGAN'S PARKADE, 595 BURNSIDE STREET, MONTREAL 2, QUEBEC PALLETS - BOXES - WOOD SPECIALTIES 684-6220 BONTON CLEANERS R. N. Taylor Co., Limited DISPENSING CLEANING @® PRESSING @ REPAIRS OPTICIANS Delivery Service 935-2707 Y CONTACT LENSES 1119 ST. CATHERINE ST. W. 4161 St. Catherine St. W. Westmount A SPECIALTY (Near Peel) 849-7331 MONTREAL MeLean, Marler Common Jee M DOMINION M. I. LIMITED NOTARIES me Manufacturers of Industrial 620 Dorchester Boulevard West Montreal 2, P.Q. Electrical and Electronic Controls Telephone 866-9671 Fairview Centre, Pointe Claire MONTREAL PLANT PHONE 733-8228 (514) Telephone 697-2191 TORONTO PHONE 755-3397 (416) MERCK Mont Gabriel Lodge SHARP aeniae 39 MILES NORTH CANADA of Montreal via L | M IT F D Autoroute - Exit 27 Guaranteed Skiing on 16 well groomed slopes Snow making Equipment 1 Double Chair Lift 8 T-Bars Night Skiing on 5 Slopes Improved Fast Service Cafeteria All new Bar with Fireplace E. A. WHITEHEAD LTD. AE a ae. INSURANCE BROKERS ADVISORS Compliments of PLACE DU CANADA MONTREAL 3, QUE. SUITE 950 TEL.: 878-4331 239 Compliments de Laberage Laberage Notaries Place Ville Marie Rm. 3340 Montreal Norle Limited Beauport International Limited BEAUPORT NORMAN G. ASTROF President 400 ONTARIO STREET WEST MONTREAL — CANADA LEVINE JONAS CONSULTING ENGINEERS 6525 SOMERLED AVE. MONTREAL 29, QUE. SEYMOUR LEVINE Eng. MECHANICAL SECTION 489-8481 NEIL JONAS Eng. COTE, LE CLARE, LANGLOIS BOISVERT ASSOCIES. CONSULTANTS IN Electrical, Mechanical, Radio Communications, Broadcasting - Architectural Acoustics Engineering 1015 St. Alexandre St., Montreal, Que. Phone 878-3791 235 Dufferin St., Sherbrooke, Que. Phone 567-5279 ELECTRICAL SECTION 482-3510 Greetings from Jown of Hampstead 5569 Queen Mary Road, Hampstead, P.Q. Etude Légale Filion ot Robillard Notaires et C.C.S. 11,903 rue Ste-Gertrude Montréal-Nord Roland Filion, n.p. Pierre Robillard, n.p. 322-1960 HAYWARD STUDIOS, INC. Creative photography for advertising and industry © 2015 Mountain Street Montreal 250 PQ«o Telephone 849-1354. With Compliments of METROPOLE REFUSE DISPOSAL LTD. 222 RUE SAUVE OUEST TELEPHONE 384-0680 240 COMPLIMENTS CLARKSON, GORDON CO. Chartered Accountants 500 St. James St. West, Montreal, Quebec LEONARD F RUIT CO. LTD. Phone 288-8281 Halifax - Saint John - Quebec - Montreal - Ottawa - Toronto Hamilton - Kitchener - London - Windsor - Port Arthur = Fort William - Winnipeg - Regina - Calgary - Edmonton 768 St. Paul W. Vancouver - Victoria Montreal 866-401] THOMAS O'CONNELL LIMITED TOUCHE, ROSS, BAILEY SMART Chartered Accountants CONTRACTORS Royal B ank of Canada Building PLUMBING, HEATING and VENTILATION Place Ville Marie : Phone 861-8531 Halifax, Saint John, Quebec, Toronto, Hamilton, MONTREAL 3 London, Regina, Saskatoon, North Baitleford, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver, Ottawa Office: 932-2145 Winnipeg, Victoria 1169 Ottawa Street , Established 1895 Nassau, Bahamas, United States of America, Great Britain and other countries throughout the world JAS. A. KEARNS ASSOCIATES Jas. A. Kearns, Eng.-F. J. Kearns, Eng. WELDING ENGINEERS LIMITED 866-3656 55 PRINCESS STREET Engineering Design, Supervision, Reports, Etc. MONTREAL 3 Heating, Air Conditioning, Plumbing Electrical 4465 Sherbrooke St. W. - Tel.: 933-1153 ON oie eal Canada Shipping Ltd. 8525 AE Cae ee ROAD, Case Postale - P.O. Box 2700 Station C TOWN OF MOUNT ROYAL, Montreal 24, P.Q. MONTREAL, P.Q. Telephone 527-9653 LAURENTIAN pay cae wink LANDSCA PE LTD. e 4 P : Modern Cold Storage Repairs, Cleaning, Remodeling Design and Contracting Depts. HU 1-8820 - HU 8-6711 334-2220 5327 SHERBROOKE ST. WEST 89 LEBEAU ST., ST. LAURENT, QUE. MONTREAL 241 J. KR. Timmons Qo. MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE (ASSOCIATE) TORONTO STOCK EXCHANGE MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE THE INVESTMENT DEALERS ASSOCIATION OF CANADA 360 St. James Street West MONTREAL Melo Paper Converters 1435 BOIS FRANC ROAD ST. LAURENT, QUEBEC 748-6361 Compliments of INTRAFINA LTD. FINANCING FOREIGN TRADE 1 Place Ville Marie, MONTREAL Tel: 866-5719 Telex: 01-2870 J. E. MOREAU VICE-PRESIDENT GENERAL MANAGER QUEBEC PROPANE INC. 2253, BOUL. TASCHEREAU CITE JACQUES-CARTIER TELS: 679-2120 Pinkerton's Flowers GREENHOUSES ROSEMERE, QUE. 5127 SHERBROOKE ST. W. MONTREAL, QUE. HUNTER 1-0222 ARMSTRONG BEVERLEY ENGINEERING LTD. 6975 Jeanne Mance St. Montreal, P.Q. Tel: 272-8291 Manufacturers of ARMSTRONG Shock Absorbers STRONGARM Hydraulic Equipment WITH THE COMPLIMENTS OF CANADIAN WESTINGHOUSE COMPANY LIMITED 2125 - 23rd AVENUE, LACHINE, QUE. Compliments of Wabadey TIMITED Canadian and Kuropean Paintings - Drawings - Sculptures Waddington Galleries 1456 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal THOS. BAIN SON PLUMBING HEATING INSTALLATIONS REPAIRS 70 WESTMINSTER AVE. N. MONTREAL WEST JENKINS BROS. LIMITED HEAD OFFICE AND FACTORY LACHINE, QUEBEC Sales Offices Halifax - Toronto - Winnipeg - Edmonton - Vancouver ALCAN BUILDING PRODUCTS LIMITED SIDING DIVISION 1395 MAZURETTE STREET, MONTREAL 11, CANADA Tel.: 514 384-0490 HELANCA par C. J. GRENIER LTEE Une seule taille... La Votre PAGE, BEAUREGARD, DUCHESENE ¢ LAVERY, O'DONNELL RENAUD BARRISTERS SOLICITORS CLARK AYOCATS TANSEY, pEGRANDPRE, BERGERON, Tel. 845-9121 R. PAGE, C.R. J. DUCHESNE, C.R. BARRISTERS AND SOLICITORS J. GADBOIS, LL.B. J. M. LEVAC, LL.L. HAROLD A. TANSEY, Q.C. L. P. deGRANDPRE, Q.C. Ml BEAUREGARD, CR: A. BERGERON, Q.C. C. LAVERY, Q.C. G. Y. RENAUD. LLL. J. V. O'DONNELL E. L. CLARK f P. P. CARRIERE S. BOURDEAU M. DESMARAIS, LL.L. We MALGR G. TRUDEAU, LL.L R. BOYER G. WYLLIE F. MARTIN Telephone: 866-5546 phd i EDIFICE LES ARTISANS COUNSEL Bee 333 EST, RUE CRAIG E. C. MONK, Q.C. MONTREAL MONTREAL 18 243 wy EXCLUSIVE KNITTING Tel. 381-6253 9200 Meilleur Street Montreal 12, Que. Le Crazy Horse Saloon Licence compléte — STEAK HOUSE — SALON BAR — DANCE TOUS LES SOIRS — AIR CLIMATISE — Reconnu comme un des meilleurs — AMBIANCE DE DETENTE STEAK HOUSE 5408 Céte des Neiges Réservations: Tél. 735-1179 Montréal, P.Q. de Montréal. Banquets Réceptions Le rendez-vous le plus gotté de Céte des Neiges Réunions privées Repas d'hommes d'affaires servis le midi GORDON DEERY invited Fresh Frozen Wholesale Food Distributors 733 William Street, Montreal, P.Q. Tel.: 866 5371 Doherty Roadhouse MeCuaig Bros. Members Principal Canadian Stock Exchanges The Investment Dealers’ Association of Canada Suite 400, Place Victoria, Montreal 1, Quebec Telephone 878-2392 and 1420 Peel St., Montreal 2 - 849-9311 JOHN DAVIDSON SONS Painters Decorators Tel: 489-5376 2075 Madison Ave. Montreal 28, Que. KENDALL TRUDEL CO. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 1015 BEAVER HALL HILL MONTREAL 1, P.Q. Telephone 866-8563 Litter, Siblin, Stein, Levine Co. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS MONTREAL - OTTAWA - TORONTO 933-1112 @ MOTEL Caroler HOTEL Tel.: 488-9561 6951, rue St-Jacques Ouest MONTREAL 28, QUE. PHONE 514 697-3300 171 HYMUS BLVD. POINTE CLAIRE, QUE. TET wire AND CABLE A Division of ITT Canada Limited MONTCO COMPAGNIE MONTCO LTEE MONTCO COMPANY LTD. 9821, RUE LAUZANNE, MONTREAL NORD, QUE. — 322-8750 PERSONAL INSURANCE SERVICE Since 1886 ARTHUR BROWNING CO. REG’D 411 RECOLLETS ST TEL.: 842-7952 BERGER, TISDALL, CLARK AND LESLY, LTD. Montreal - Toronto - Ottawa National Public Counsel and Services VINCE LUNNY Vice-President MONTREAL In Montreal: 630 Dorchester Blvd. W. 861-5556 244 James D. Ford Co. 6575 SOMERLED ST. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS James D. Ford, C.A. Donald R. Lambton, C.A. WING NOUBLES LTD. MANUFACTURERS “Wing's CHINESE NOODLES 11 GRANGE AVE, TORONTO 861-5818 10909 COTE sT. MONTREAL ® BAN-LON TEXTRALIZED YARNS FOR GARMENTS AND FABRICS MANTEX LIMITED Manufacturers of Fine Specialty Yarns 201 ST. LOUIS ST. — SPUNIZE TEXTURED NYLON ST. JOHNS, QUEBEC SUPERLOFT STRETCH YARN PIERRE ove GUISE, Inc 2 G PIERRE oe GUISE ET ASSOCIES INGENIEURS-CONSEILS 10127, BOUL. SAINT-LAURENT, MONTREAL 12, TEL. 381-8656 Automated Receivables Systems Magnetic Ink Encoding Data Processing Key Punch Center Tana SHOE COSMETICS Keep all shoes beautiful In shoe stores only F. M. KRAUS ASSOCIATES CONSULTING ENGINEERS Civil, Structural, Foundation Engineering Special Structures 1255 Laird Boulevard Town of Mount Royal 731-2797 ALL YEAR ROUND RESORT LA SAPINIERE ‘VAL DAVID, P.Q. Via Autoroute or Rove 11 Luxurious Rooms with T.V. - Gourmet Specialties Exclusive Normandy Wine Cellar - Les Quat's Soleils Lounge - Reservation Montreal direct line: 866-8262 Orchestra Every Night Gat 1. Ualett President TRANSWORLD SHIPPING LTD. 620 ST. JAMES ST. W. MONTREAL, QUE. 845-2261 J. R. ELECTRIC CO. Pole line Hardware M.1.C.R. Systems Ltd. Regional Office: 500 St. Francois-Xavier Street Montreal 1, Que. Phone: 845-7448 10443 Pigeon St. Montreal-North, P.Q. Melo Supplice Ltd. WHOLESALERS Plumbing and Heating Supplies Hackett § Drummond ADVOCATES AND BARRISTERS 507 PLACE D'ARMES 481-5614 MONTREAL, CANADA 5510 St. James St. W. MONTREAL 28, QUE. 245 David Boulva architects 3 PLACE VILLE MARIE, MONTREAL 2 866-9854 Compliments of A. H. ROBINS COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED PHILIP M. MALOUF MINING ENGINEER 1155 DORCHESTER BLVD. WEST MONTREAL 2, P.Q. iit Lo Balfour COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED The Loyola Graduate Rings are by Balfour Montreal Sales Representative F. L. DEVLIN 481-0929__ Emblematic — Jewellery — Trophies — Ceramics College, School and Fraternity Insigna F. G. BELANGER R. CEDUS Qy Tel. 487-2233-4 Next Door Clark Funeral Home Fleurs pour toutes occasions Paniers a Fruits Flowers for all occasions Fruit Baskets Collins Funeral Home 5628 SHERBROOKE W. MONTREAL 28 Ca Chemcell Limited, 800 Dorchester Blvd. West, P.Q. Operating Divisions: Canadian Chemical Company, Canadian Celanese Company Chemicals - Fibres - Fabrics - Carpets Compliments of TEXACO Canada Limited Cc. C, LINDSAY, B:Se., Eng.,, @.L.S. R. J. LINDSAY, B.A., M.Eng., Q.L.S. W. J. COSGROVE, M.Eng. LINDSAY, COSGROVE ASSOCIATES Municipal Engineering, Sewerage and Sewage Disposal, Water Supply, Roads C. C. LINDSAY R. J. LINDSAY Quebec Land Surveyors 35 York Street HU 9-8251 Westmount, Montreal 6 Compliments of Bell Rinfret Company Ltd. Boilers Inc. 368 Notre Dame West Telephone: 844-2523 Montreal, Que elephone 5810 Turcot Place Suppliers to Cafeterias —- Camps — Colleges Institutions —— Schools — Snack Bars, etc. 935-1 144 Compliments of India Craft Co. 402 St. Catherine W. - 933-5854 hat do you mean no Grants? Canadian Copper Refiners Ltd. MONTREAL EAST, QUEBEC BOX 338 D’ARMES MONTREAL 1 Compliments of Frank A. Norman Ltd. 1255 Laird Blvd. T.M.R. Tel: RE 1-6817 247 LASALLE CANVAS ROPES INC. 105 Elmslie, Lasalle Compliments of CAMERA CRAFT REG'D. 4265 St. Catherine St. W., Montreal Manila, Sisal and Wire Ropes Tarpaulins, Canvas Goods, Repairs, Rentals Polyethylene, Leatherette Tents and Supplies 935-2348 Pat Matticks | Office: 366-2800 SHOPSY FOODS “QUEBEC” LTD. 790 Halpern Dorval 486-9896 248 Published by The Board of Publications, Loyola of Montreal Printed by Canadian Student Yearbooks Limited Editorial Staff editor-in-chief: allannah murphy events editor: jane rajca. organizations editor: brian mccormick. sports editor: bern pennee. graduates editor: morgul! the friendly drelb. co-ed editor: janet boire. special effects: bob presner, susan allnut, klaus fuchs. It just wouldn't be right to close off this book without saying some few words about the people who helped and hindered its production. There was a staff, put together some time between July and Join Day and reinforced when the troops fell in battle; they helped; which may have something to do with the fact that they all now occupy padded cells. Then there was the photo department, about which, in the spirit of Christian charity | shal! say nothing. lan Garden the advertising manager sold more ads in less time than even Superadman. Thanx. And special thanks and a couple of Review seals of approval go out to the Honeycomb Kid and all the Krispie Kritters, with the appro- priate oriental gestures of homage. Farewell all, allannah. SPARSE INDIGNATION a diatribe in which are condemned all those practices leading to the present mental condition of the editor. to wit does anybody remember what happened to the pic- tures of drama’s second production? or of the faculty societies? or of . . . a whole lotta things? as we sit in a haze of blue smoke trying to remember how we made it this far... where is page 11111? hmmm? and if you guess, you win the peoples of america award for significant incompetance in the face of overwhelming futility . so there! rumour hath it that the crispy critters are really corn flakes in disguise and after all what can you expect from a soggy cornflake. God bless tiny tim, many a curly hair hos wrinked out on me. blessed are those who keep the royal coffers for them postage stamps cost too much. to those who hold the power if life and obso- lescence we send a black mare changing directions in mid-stream. let them eat cake . and bad raisin pies. i leave with the words of a famous jumping bumping thumping stumper who once said “eschew obfuscation’. 249
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