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Page 15 text:
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To Start New Unit at Loyola College (From The Baltimore Sun, June 1, 1924) ROUND for the $200,000 alumni building and gymnasium of Loyola College, Charles Street Avenue and Cold Spring Lane, will be broken June 12 in connection with the commencement exercises of the institution. The ceremony will mark the completion of a successful campaign for a building fund that was conducted under the direction of the Rev. Eugene DeL. McDonnell and Francis X. Milholland, president of the alumni association. Invitations to attend the ceremony have been sent to all contributors. The alumni building and gymnasium constitute the second unit in the building program of the new Loyola College at Evergreen. The first unit, the George C. Jenkins Science Hall, was completed last summer and was opened to college classes in December. This structure is said to be one of the most complete of its kind in the country. A library, lounge, smoking and billiard rooms, gymnasium and swimming pool will occupy the east section of the first floor and will have a spacious bay window overlooking the athletic grounds. West of the main entrance on the first floor will be the loungeroom, the largest room in the building, with frontage south and west. This room also will be used as an entertainment and lecture room, as well as for a meeting place for executives of the alumni association. The smoking and billiard rooms will be in the east section of the second floor. The gymnasium will house swimming pool, shower baths, locker rooms, hand- ball courts, team dressing rooms, trophy and college athletic committee rooms. The floor of the gymnasium will afford space sufficient for two basketball courts. An indoor running track, level with the second floor of the alumni building, also will be provided. This may be utilized as a gallery for spectators during the basketball season. In the new college group the Jesuit fathers plan to give Baltimore an institu- tion similar to Georgetown, Fordham and Holy Cross universities. Work on the new unit will be pushed under the supervision of the Rev. Joseph A. McEneany, president of the college; the Rev. Father McDonnell and the Rev. Joseph I. Ziegler, moderator of the alumni association. 11
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Page 14 text:
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Thec lumni Building and Gymnasium On June twelfth, ground will be broken for another unit in the new and greater Loyola. What more fitting occasion than this to say a few words of praise and gratitude to those who made this accomplishment possible? In existence since 1852, although at no time a large institution as the term is usually conceived, our College has an Alumni Body of some 5,000, of which a large number are active members of the Association, or easily accessible. It is to these that we turn when we need assistance or advice from more experienced minds, and they never fail to respond. When Loyola felt new life course through her veins at breathing the clear air of Evergreen for the first time, the Alumni Body was the first to rejoice that advantages such as they had never known were going to be the lot of future students. What could they do to help? Could they not give something to their Alma Mater as a lasting reminder of their love? The Alumni Memorial Building and Gymnasium was the outcome of thought upon the subject, and a mammoth drive was started to raise the necessary funds. Under the enthusiastic direction of Father Ziegler, Moderator of the Alumni Association, of F. X. Milhollana, the president, and of Father McDonnell, himself an old student of Loyola, the Alumni rallied to the occasion, and in a short time enough funds were obtained to warrant immediate starting of the work. Every stone that rises above another as the building nears completion, will be one more bond of fealty between College and past students, between past students and present ones, between all who ever have or ever will come under the benign influence of Loyola. One had but to attend the rallies which were held every week during the drive to realize that here was something new in the annals of Loyola. Old grads mingled with new grads and with undergraduates. A new spirit had entered into the whole body, a spirit of co-operation, destined, we are sure, to last as long as Loyola lasts, and to grow as she grows. One saw pledges of material assistance pouring in, not only from those who had been long in the field of commerce or profession, but from men who were scarce started on their career, yes and from those who were yet students of both high school and college. It is a well known fact that the success of any institution of learning depends in great measure upon this union, and with such union so apparently assured, there is no one who does not look to the future but with the greatest confidence. W. T. B. APPRECIATION The editors express their sincere appreciation and thanks to the following members of Sophomore Class for their valuable assistance in the publishing of this issue of The Green and Gray: to Joseph V. Abromaitis, for the clever cartoons of this year’s Senior Class; to Leland G. Frierson, for the attractive cover design; to J. Paul Coolahan and George E. Urban, for aid furnished the business management; also to Francis Ireton and John Spellissy, of Freshman Class, for helpful co-operation. 10
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Page 16 text:
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The History of a Year E shall begin our chronicle of 1923-24 by a narrative of the closing hours of 1922-23 — the 71st Annual Commencement, Tuesday, June 12. A platform was erected in front of the Garrett Mansion, so as to form a continuation of the portico of that building. A large audience gathered on the lawn, while on the platform besides members of the Alumni Association and the faculty, were Mr. George C. Jenkins, donor of the Science Building, Rev. Joseph A. McEneany, S. J., President of Loyola, his Excellency Albert C. Ritchie, Governor of Maryland, who addressed the graduates and his Grace Most Reverend Michael J. Curley, D. D., Archbishop of Baltimore, who presented the diplomas and other awards. Governor Ritchie in his address to the graduates advised them to enter public life and to run for political office. “You young men,” said His Excellency, “have had high ideals held before you throughout your high school and collegiate courses. Your training has fitted you for the taking up of affairs of public life. With such ideals and such training you are well prepared to help your fellow-men. You have been taught to be unselfish, to love your country and your state; you should prove that your educa- tion has not been in vain. “The country ' has a right to expect service from you and you have a right to render that service. Go forth, today, prepared to do all that you can do in the interests of country, state and city. Enter the public arena — enter it imbued with the desire to serve humanity. 12
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