Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY)

 - Class of 1947

Page 210 of 300

 

Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 210 of 300
Page 210 of 300



Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 209
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Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 211
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Page 210 text:

AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS THH Manhattan College Chapter of the Ameraan histitiite of Electrical Engineers IS the viiungcst professional groLip on the campus, since it was only in 19i() that the Chapter was granted a charter that recog- nized Manhattan ' s Electrical Engineering School nationally. Acti ities within the Chapter increased greatly last year after the stand-stiU of war- time, hut ,igain this year the A. L E. E. has been comparati ely inacti e on the campus because of the difficulty of holding meetings durini; ;,Lhool hours. Since no retiular time was .d lotted to extra-curricular acti ities dur- ing the school (.lay because of the n er- Lrowded conditions, CJiapter activities were .it a minimum while inter-collegiate work was emphasized. The ten metropolitan engineering colleges combined to pro ' ide a full year, with the Student Branch meeting on May 2 spon- sored by the Eastern District of the parent body climaxing the year ' s work. Twenty-four Manhattan Electrical Engi- neers represented the College at a conference sponsored by the Western Electric Company which included sessions at the downtown Western Union Auditorium as well as an in- spection trip through the Western Electric Plant in Kearny, New Jersey. An all-expense- paid w eek at the annual National Convention in June was the prize awarded to the metro- politan student presenting the best paper at the metropolitan session. With two-thirds of the lower classmen in the Entrineerint: School interested in E ec- trical Enirineerini:, the A. 1. E. E. looks for- ward to days when the new group will be amoni? the most active organizations on the campus. 206

Page 209 text:

II CIRCOLO DANTE ALIGHIERI 1L CIRCOLO DANTE ALIGHIERI, under the guidance of Brother Aurehan Thomas, is the official campus organization of students interested in the study of Itahan life, litera- ture and culture. The society attempts to pro- vide its members with the opportunity for additional social and cultural knowledge for a more rounded liberal education. The Dante Society, as it is commonly termed, was inaugurated on the Manhattan campus in 1936 and has ever since enjoyed an ever-increasing membership and popu- larity. This past year, with a large number of veterans in the group, has been one of rehabilitation and inno ation. One of the first organizations to get back on its feet at the beginning of the school year, the Dante Society was the first to sponsor a campus Tea Dance and thus re-institute this popular pre-war custom. Another radical departure from past activi- ties, but one that pro ' ed popular enough to instate it as an annual feature, was a gala musical festival in Smith Auditorium, which was attended by a great number of students and their guests. The College Chaplain, Father Albert C. M. Stefiens, prttvided an enlightening talk accompanying his ov,n film on Wartime Italy, which was taken while he served as an Army Chaplain in Italy dur- ing the war. A program of selected musical pieces by concert singers and pianists proved what President Thomas Liccardi termed a most gratifying achievement, and the out- standing event of the year. Assisting President Liccardi v ere Ignatius Scarpulla, Vice-President; Anthony Barbaro. Treasurer, and Carl Bartolotti, Secretary. 205



Page 211 text:

KORAN COMMITTEE AMONG the many periodicals published at Manhattan, the Koran enjoys the dis- tinction of being the only one that doubles as an article of clothing, for along with the cap and tie, the Koran is a must in what the well-dressed freshman will wear m Sep- tember. With the hope of rebuilding many of Man- hattan ' s cherished traditions to their rightful place on the campus, the Sophomore Class established a Koran Committee to prepare the incoming freshman class for the incidentals of hazing and freshman rules. Vincent Vi- tagliano was appointed a committee chair- man and his assistants were John Edell, Thomas Massar, William Rooney, and John Ryan. Although managed by this committee from the sophomore class, the proceeds of the sale of caps and Korans became the first install- ment in the treasury of the Class of ly ' iO. That the efforts of the committee were suc- cessful IS evidenced by the fact that over 400 caps and ties were sold, the largest number since the inception of the freshman-hazing program. 207

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

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Manhattan College - Manhattanite Yearbook (Riverdale, NY) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 115

1947, pg 115


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