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Page 182 text:
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N.F.CCS. invURING the past year the big task of - ' - the NFCCS was the conducting of the Student Rehef Campaign. The campaign, which resulted from a resolution introduced by the Manhattan delegation to last year ' s Congress at Toledo, netted $5,000 here at Manhattan and about $175,000 throughout the country. The money was used to send food, clothing, school supplies and medicine to college students in the war-torn lands of the world. The money was raised in several ways; by holding the world premiere of a movie and stage show in Hunter College Auditorium; by sponsoring a double-header basketball game with four colleges in the region; by raffling a mask which was donated by Mr. P. Fingesten; by raffling two automobiles; through gifts of various organizations on the campus; through direct contributions in mite boxes, and in other ways. Manhattan was host to the Pattern Insti- tute for a week last June. At that time the International Relations Clubs of many col- leges in the Federation met here to attend the sessions of the United Nations and to hear the most prominent Catholics in the field of international affairs. It was at the suggestion of the NFCCS that Sigma Beta Kappa sponsored the Holy Hour for the intention of a Christian victory in the Italian elections, and that Pen and Sword held the Pray for Russia May Day services. In October, John O ' Leary was named chairman of the Leadership Institute held at Cathedral High School. Leading Catholics in many fields were invited to speak. Out- lines of existing student organizations and a course in parliamentary law were also in- cluded. Other activities of the NFCCS are listed under Student Government Commission, Christian Doctrine Society, Labor-Manage- ment Commission, Missions and the Society for Interracial Justice. The ijtleg.ifci dining the k were Nick MiitlUr. Willi.im H.iriiiigloii .iitd jobi: O ' Lc.ir). 178
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Page 181 text:
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Sigma Beta Kappa ' T ' HE Sigma Beta Kappa fraternity pro- - tesses to be — and for that matter is — the only Catholic frat on the campus. This means that its reason for being is more than just social, although the social aspect is upper- most in importance. One may remember the pictures of Bill Harrington, m the New York Herald Trib- une, at the start of a starvation diet, to determine the food content of a European ration. In ten days he proved, at least to his own satisfaction and he hopes to many other people ' s, that the need for food in the war devastated countries cannot be overestimated. This small addition to the public store of knowledge may well mark a new trend in fraternities on the campus, whereupon the waistlines of the students will become less expansive, perhaps through the use of a smaller quantity of malt and hops. Harring- ton, by the way, was elected president of Sigma Beta Kappa for the school year 1948- 1949. On the lighter side, the fraternity is cred- ited with running one of the most interesting and successful tea dances of the past season in addition to its energetic campaign to pro- mote the Catholic way of life and thought through the media of public expression. 177
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Page 183 text:
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National Student Association ■ANHATTAN, quick to realize the im- - portance of this nation-wide student movement and to accept the challenge thrown out to Catholic youth to found such an organization on Christian principles and American ideals, sent N. F. C. C. S. dele- gates John J. O ' Leary and Bill Harrington to the Chicago Student Conference of De- cember 1946, where over 700 student repre- sentatives made known their desire for a nation-wide student organization. Fully aware of the time-consuming nature of the work that representatives to such an organization must perform, delegates for this entirely new student association were found, and on August 28, 1947, Albert Coakley, as the new Senior Delegate to the N. S. A. and Bill Harrington, whose past experience with this movement proved invaluable, went to the JS ' Iadison, Wisconsin convention that wrote the N. S. A. ' s constitution. Entitled to three voting delegates under the scale adopted at Madison, and now com- pletely stripped of any connection with the N. F. C. C. S. delegates, Albert Coakley, Bill iVIechmann, and C. Bernard McCartan, together with alternate delegate Joseph Nearon, became the Manhattan representa- tives to the N. S. A. hi addition to attending the almost weekly Commission or Assembly meetings of the New York Metropolitan Region, this group worked to orient the student body on the nature of N. S. A. and to keep them informed on its activities, through the medium of posters, circulars. Quadrangle articles, a rally and the presentation of the him, Campus Frontiers. Their worthwhile efforts combined with those of Brother Alban, their moderator, were rewarded when Manhattan became a formal member of the National Student As- sociation in February of this year. 179
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