Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL)

 - Class of 1973

Page 102 of 248

 

Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 102 of 248
Page 102 of 248



Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 101
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Page 102 text:

Debate Club S .ac . 5:12 4145 P ' '- f 1'9 sl' IOO The Loyola University Debate Society is the oldest academic organization at the University. Each year the debate club participates in intercollegiate debate tournaments sponsored by universities throughout the country. A topic is chosen and it is on this proposition that the debators will be asked to speak throughout that academic year. The topic for the l972-I973 season is that the federal government should provide a program of comprehensive medical care for all U.S. citizens. The debators must analyze. research. and formulate arguments both for and against this proposition. The purpose of intercollegiate debate is to teach individuals to analyze issues in greater detail. to organize their thoughts clearly and logically. to support them with documentation. and to com- municate these ideas in a rational and persuasive manner. It is basically an educational experience although it also gives individuals an op- portunity to travel to and meet students from other universities and an oppor- tunity to learn to work with other in- divuals as a team. It allows for creativity in formulating different approaches to issues. Debating also aids individuals in learning to think clearly under pressure and to become fluent and effective speakers. Members: Sue Barton. President: Tony DiVincenzo, Vince Follert, Marty Green. Joe Jirasek. Mike Jirasek. Michelle Jor- dan, Laurie Laurinjan. Mike Matson. Katie Newsham, Bill Piper. Ed Recke, Jeff Stroka. Ray Sullivan. Vicki Wells. Emile Lippe. Assistant Coach. Elaine Bruggemeier. Coach.

Page 101 text:

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Page 103 text:

The Chardin Anthropological Society ,: , I .,. 3 'I -:,1 ' Q 'iwgi xx The Chardin Anthropological Society was founded at Loyola in l965 as an academic and social organization with the purpose of increasing an interest in anthropology. The Society was named after Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, the Jesuit philosopher-palaeontologist who did much of the work on the famous Pek- ing man finds in China in the l93O's. The Society is open to all faculty and students at the University. both un- dergraduate and graduate. the only necessary requirement being an interest in anthropology. As an academic organization. the Society sponsors films of interest. lectures in seminar fashion by members of our faculty as well as by visiting professors. and occasional field trips to museums. institutes, and actual sites in the field. As a non- academic social organization the C.A.S. also has another function: it serves to integrate into one whole those with the common shared interest of anthropology. The C.A.S. does this through parties at Christmas and again at the end of the year, sales of goods on campus to earn revenue for the Society. and other frequent get-togethers in the museum on the second floor of Damen Hall. The museum Ca collection of bones. fossil casts. and artifactsj in Room 235 is also taken care of by the C.A.S. The dis- plays are regularly changed and repre- sent a unique contribution to the cultural and scientific environment of the University. This. then. is the C.A.S.: a viable organization on campus seeking academically and socially to further in- terest in the science of man, anthropology. Members: Barbara Plafcan, President: Clarita Boldt. Kathy Christon. Ellen Glickman, David Keene. Tom Keough. Madeline Keiling, Diana Marczuk. Konrad Nagatoshi. Sharon Ann Renkosiak. Marilyn Shulz. Joy Sperber. Tom Zimmerman. Fr. Francis X. Grollig. SJ. Moderator. lOl

Suggestions in the Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) collection:

Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1975 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1976 Edition, Page 1

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Loyola University Chicago - Loyolan Yearbook (Chicago, IL) online collection, 1977 Edition, Page 1

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