Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY)

 - Class of 1947

Page 191 of 300

 

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 191 of 300
Page 191 of 300



Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 190
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Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 192
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Page 191 text:

T ■ after the term started, the Manhattan Col- lei e Phiyers with the co-operation of mod- erator-Professor Donald Carty and Mr. Little chose The Queen ' s Husband, a drawmg- room comedy by Robert Sherwood, as the play to be produced m May. Mr. Little, as director, immediately set about the selection of his cast. Sports talk around the campus no longer centered about the basketball team which had dominated the headlines for the past few months. George Eastment ' s track squad be- came the favorite of the Jasper sports- minded. February track meets at the Madison Square Garden brought out a goodly body of the Manhattan College student group. NFCCS Week at Manhattan m the middle of February was well received. A program explaining the workings of the National Federation of Catholic College Students was presented and an appreciation of its endeavors became more apparent than ever before. 187

Page 190 text:

r= =1? 5 iH li halt-w.iy mark in the school year was marked by that inevita- ble uneasiness and sobriety sit - nityint; that examination week was at hand. Activities were suspended as one and all settled down to an extra session with the bot)ks. Needless to say, the ma)ority proved their academic mettle by comini; throLigli tiie series of examin.itions without acquiring that dread iaikire. Many succeeded in acquiring tliat coveted 3. index to merit a place on the De.m ' s honor list. February was a cold and icy month. A ten- inch snowfall blanketed tlie Riverdale scene and Jack Frost ' s frigid blasts turned Jasper- ville into a winter wonderland. One (Jiiad- vdiigh editorialist was so inspired that lie devoted an inspired prose effort on the de- light of Winterset. The holy season of Lent was ushered in o February and DeLaS.ille Chapel became a daily visitation spot fiir both students aiul faculty. Lenten dexotions were encouraged and throughout the campus an atmosphere of Lenten sexerity and self-sacrifice pre- vailed. Many day students awoke aw hour earlier in the morning and made the trip to Manhattan in order to attend daily Mass at the college chapel. Others attended Mass at home before coming to class. F eryone seemed to be doini; his share to do as much as possible for Him who did so much for us. The untimely passing of Brother Richard, manager of the Manhattan College book- store, on February f7 shrouded the campus in a veil of sadness. Brother Richard died of a cerebral hemorrhage at St, Joseph ' s Hospital, ' onkers, five days after he was stricken. A Solemn High Mass was offered on February 11 in DeLaSalle Chapel for the repose of his soul. The Mass was well at- tended by both students and faculty. Upon commencement of the second term of the school year, the five barracks con- structed by the State of New York for stu- dent veterans at the college were ready for occupancy and the resident undergraduates who moved into these ex-G. L dwellings found them to be quite serviceable. A course in Play Production was intro- duced at the collcLre for the first time. Frede- rick Little of the Theater L epartment of Columbia Lhiiversity was appointed instruc- tor of this course on theater work. Shortly 186



Page 192 text:

COMMERCE CEUB FOUNDED in 1927, the Commerce Club is the official student organization of the School ot Business. Its aims are threefold: to unite the successive classes in the Business School; to foster a closer union among the faculty, graduates and undergraduates of the School and to maintain that union among the Alumni; to investigate and discuss oppor- tunities for guidance in a business career and to supplement the work of the classroom through discussu ns, lectures and forums. During the past year the Club and the School of Business celebrated their twen- tieth anniversary at Manhattan College and honored the Club ' s moderator and Dean of the School at a monster social and get-to- gether in Croke Park in December. In the Spring, the (Club ' s annual dance was re- inaugurated as large numbers of faculty, alumni and undergraduates gathered to mark one of the year ' s outstanding social events. The educational and social activities of the Club were climaxed by the regular Com- merce Club banquet at the end of the school year at which the newly elected officers of the Club were installed in their new offices. The officers who guided the club through the past year under the moderatorship of Dean James I. Fitzgerald were Charles J. Joyce, President; Stephen Ahmuty, Vice-President; |ohn Convy, Secretary, and Myles Ambrose, Treasurer. 188

Suggestions in the Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) collection:

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 161

1947, pg 161


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