Climactic Council Result: JACK LYNCH SS

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Climactic Council Result: JACK LYNCH SS e ' ) 1 FF Baseball Scouting Report! Killl! 1.^ How a neutral observer rates this year's Wild- cat baseball team. email DAN RENN RF Converted infielder . has fought way into VOL. 36 No. 22 VILLANOVA UNIVEI rLLANOVA, PA. MAY 18, 1961 1 I 1 1 starting line-up with stinging line drives and . I . hustle . likes to pull the ball . Junior • • • . good speed, good arm . bats and throws right. J Climactic Council Result: JACK LYNCH SS . strong Soph . terrific range either way Wall In; New Statutes Out arm, forms strong middle with Weigand and Baier by Henry James McAteer . bats left/ throws right . good potential as Tom Wall, former Vice-Chair- Vice President of Student Gov- fully cognizant of the responsi- batter, but still fooled too easily . could be great. -m-.^-^ ^ man of the Student Council, last ernment. bility I must bear, and will cer- Wednesday was elected to suc- Charlie Labus, junior class taiidy do all in my power to fuU ceed Rob DeLisa as Chairman resident C & F Representative. fill the expectations of the DON MELEGA 3B of the Council and President of was also a Candidate for the top CounciL" / ' - the Student Body. position. He was nominated by Privately, Wall confided that Key man in Cat's success . .never stops think- Wall, junior clas.s resident retiring Council Chairman Bob he felt "great!" His elation was ing . bats and throws right . hard to strike Arts representative, id.so served DeLL-^a and seconded by Jim t('mi)ered by the weight of the out . Junior, team comedian along with Platco as class president during his Stra/.'/ella, Council Executive problems confronting him. His . best big league prospect. ;; .sophonKu-e year, :.-... Vice President for Educational immediate difficulty will be pas- ^l. Wall had been nominated for Affairs. , ;*:; sage of legislation and organi- Al WEIGAND the Cnairmanship by Rill Deep Gratitude zation of the Blue Key, student Freind. Social Affairs Commit- Wall's immediate reaction to host group, as the ollicial con- Junior . bats and throws right . very good tee Chairman and a member of his election was one of deep ductor of freshman orientation. arm and smart receiver . take-charge guy, the Student Senate. The nomin- gratitude. "1 (extend my sincere Also, he is working to select never stops chatter . hits long ball, but infre- ation was seconded by John thanks to everyone who help(>d Otie Drayton upholds a fast ffrowinj; Penn Relay tradition in crossing the tape to win the the Executive Vice-Presidents, quently . Con be fooled, but has improved over Oljerlies, Council Executive me in my effort," he said. "1 am *•; (•ommittee Chairmen, and com- last year's .200 B.A. W' Mile Relay Championship of A merica, Villanova's seventh straight. (Photo by Rich Sloughton^ Tom Wall : Photo by .Mik'e pci^tore) mittee membership which will assist in expediting his Frank Budd Ties Mark ijiiiiiiiiiiii Relay Roundup Seniors' Dads Elated As him BILL PLATCO LF First Use of N^ew Mendel overall program for next year. in Triangular Meet (Cont'd on page 8) The "blue blazer" .. always good for a Hard Luck String Brokeri Wildcats Defeat Pirates laugh . one of three seniors on team . Villanova'.s Olympic .sprinter To Be Giving of Exams by Ed Lohr The filial .social activity of liid to private and parochial Class Elections See good arm, accurate . suffering from slump at Frank Rudd equaled the world , 1'he fullowing is the sclieihile for junior and senioi- examina- the senior elass as undergrad- schools. bat but is better hitter than has shown .... bats "ii record in the 100 yard da.sh la.st tions whieh are to beginMay 22. Students are reViut-sted to not(v Faces, New Names uatesv \ the annual .Senior . After the talk, the assembly New and throws from left side. track At 4:10 p.m. Saturday afternoon, on a wet chev\^ed-up tilt: eluinge of the to Saturday, flying over the dis- name of .Mendel Hall Tolentine Hall. The Father's Day, closed on a i>ar- adjourned to the Resident Cafe- vic- at Franklin Field, Philadelphia, Bob Raemore, who was ne\v Sc-ieriee l|tiil(!ing lu'ars t he rinnie\\leii(l('l Hall. In Leaders' Capacities tance in 0.3 seconds. Twenty ticulai"!.^' impre.s.sivc \\o\v. last teria in Dougherty Hall where JOE CRAMER' timized with the longest and mo.st heart-breaking hard luck riNAL K.XA.MI.NATIO.N SCHKDILi: I OK PROSIMX'TIX K , 1 . ii Sat u I'day M :). The : y ou g, the seniors and their fathers minutes later he r;in the fasti'st ay Ingenious iiinovat ions, vigor- Jl streak in many a year on the Main Line, snatched the Silver NK (iKADlATIOS .AM) OTIIKR STM)I-:NTS .NOT Kl^ talented Wildcat l)asel)all were .served a fillet migiion din- team ous exhoration, and ji taut air Captain, Senior . .. traditional Stanky, Hemus 220 in the country this year* a (Miin:i) '!() ATTIOM) CLASS AFTI<:R may HL VMW (ie.. Baton from teammate Frank Budd and doggedly held off ralli«'d jii-thp' eighth for two net, which drew bewildered of expectation characterized the • • • always hustling; makes up for defects ^ yp® brilliant 20.2 seconds. >li:>lJii:KS OF THK classics of HKH and 11M)2). of the Olympian FZarl Young to give Villanova a shocking upset vic- run.s to tie the game and then comments from many [xvlls at Alumni Hall a week ago with effort . bats and throws right . r / ^"i 100% All exaniinations will extend froinAljiy 22 27, 1001. C(;arh "Jumbo" Elliot claims tory over world record holder Abilene Christian College in toMay .scored a climatic i*un in the last senior I'esident students. Larry elass elections. 'y/^ 1^'^- ''"6 drive hitter, but can be fooled. in the annual .VII t'fioiMii rig rxanii nations vvi 11 begin at nine o'clock. .Afternoon to de- St-nior it was the fastest time ever run the SSO relay. of the ninth with two out Bathgate. Class Pres- Conducted under the au.spices • \aniiriat iotisvvill begin iitytvyo-thirty except where noted. feat their Seton Hall rivals ;^2. ident, delivered the clas.s wel- in the East at 100 yards and V\) to then, "it had been a lonffse'ason," sighed the be- of the senior class by co-chair- RICH mmiM 'r.':[^)\:\:-:;,y-::-'y:^^^-, ib AC-: A nnex Classroom Over 1000 fathers and their ViL come to the visiting fathers men of the Flections Committee oven more amazing it was the spectacled junior. "It all had started in Madison Square Gar- Noted Poet, ( 'F {'onunei'ce & Finance Hldg. htnfVVa sons attended the con- while co-chairman Jack Dona- of Student Council. Brian Scully .' hinged on the mile re- Speaker Surprise of club . known before as good first attempt thi.s season for the den—the ir4A Indoor Championship CHK Chemical Fngineerijig : gest. hue acted as the toastmaster. A ami John O'Connell. the entire field, no hit, has whacked ball at tremendous lay. I was running anchor and on one of the turns, Ron Green flashy junior, who placed fifth in John Crowe Ransom Kldg. short talk about the past four '\'\\v affair ran smoothly through the -^ (lay commenced at eleven early-season pace , • •Switch hitter, better from of ran wide and I slanted for the inside, but when the 100 meters at Rome, Manhattan •ji; ,I(»hn BaiTv Hall. years and the anticipated grad- - o'clock withMass in St. Mary's d ay.- .:;..;^ -.;,:;.>.. '•;.;;'/;. "'.'. .'^" '^\ ''•'-•'' Meft side-. .. .Soph. •/ in (juickly and L elbowed him to pro- To Lecture Tonight the he saw me he came back M Mendel Hall ( XeW Science uation was then given hy San Jose State star Dennis (Irotto beneath overcast skie.s. Throughout the day there was tect myself and was dis(iualified." :: Hidg. t her co-chairman, Dan Kelly. Johnson ha.s <lone O.IVfour times Fx^tendiiig its attempts. '.. to The Ilev. Joseph W. Kemme. a constant milling of candi- BAIER The g-uest speaker for the DAN Manhattan Ajifain bring well-known speakers, to VIL VaseyMatI OSA; the uhivt'J'sity's Vice- supporters this year but the best 220 was dates and their it out again at LIB 'Library luncheon. Villanova's recently- A week later Raemore and Manhattan had tlie \'illanova (>f Afliairs, i-ampus, the; Stii- Pi'esideht Student J 1 1 »o u 1 1 h e e n t ran ce t o t he Alum- . right . Soph bats and throws .has strong- l)all 20.5 by Steyo lijias of Occidental Tif Tolentine Hall ( Fortiier retired basket mentor. Al the Cleveland K. of C, Meet and this time after about one (lent Council Forum program was the celebrant. ni Hall gymnasium. Ju nior Tony est arm on team, almost always accurate . v. '/'':•'''; :.;'::' Hall) Severance, addressed the sen- (ruiif..)';.t;oiie|rt.: half of a lap of jostling, Artie Evans went down and both this evening will pi'esent John Mendel Batemaii develo|)ed ope of the good pivotman, teams well with Lynch . has Inmiediately proceeding the iors, nt first noting several ("I'owe liansom, the most not- Cour.se l)ay ^: Tinie F'lace tendency to be impatient at bat, but could develop the 'Cats and their rivals were tos.sed out of the race. most impressive ideas of the ;^> •>;;;,,' Very :^ Fast Track •Mass, the Rev. Johtt A. Klekotka, humorous anecdotes. In a ser- able, recognized .speaker lo ap- ACCT. i:)2 24 A^L M5,2(H)CF into excellent stickman.
Recommended publications
  • 2010-2012 Bulletin
    TABLE OF CONTENTS LETTER FROM SHMS RECTOR/PRESIDENT……………………………………..4 TELEPHONE DIRECTORY……………………………………………………………5 ACADEMIC CALENDAR………………………………………………………………6 ABOUT SHMS……………………………………………………………………………7 MISSION, VISION, AND INSTITUTIONAL GOALS .................................................................. 8 OVERVIEW OF SACRED HEART MAJOR SEMINARY ........................................................ 10 HISTORY......................................................................................................................... 11 ACCREDITATION............................................................................................................. 14 INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERSHIP ......................................................................................... 15 STUDENT RESOURCES .............................................................................................. 16 COMPUTER LAB ............................................................................................................. 17 ELECTRONIC CLASSROOM.............................................................................................. 17 LEARNING CENTER ........................................................................................................ 17 LIBRARY ........................................................................................................................ 17 LITURGY LAB ................................................................................................................ 18 SATELLITES...................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Online Versions of the Handouts Have Color Images & Hot Urls September
    Online versions of the Handouts have color images & hot urls September 6, 2016 (XXXIII:2) http://csac.buffalo.edu/goldenrodhandouts.html Sam Wood, A NIGHT AT THE OPERA (1935, 96 min) DIRECTED BY Sam Wood and Edmund Goulding (uncredited) WRITING BY George S. Kaufman (screenplay), Morrie Ryskind (screenplay), James Kevin McGuinness (from a story by), Buster Keaton (uncredited), Al Boasberg (additional dialogue), Bert Kalmar (draft, uncredited), George Oppenheimer (uncredited), Robert Pirosh (draft, uncredited), Harry Ruby (draft uncredited), George Seaton (draft uncredited) and Carey Wilson (uncredited) PRODUCED BY Irving Thalberg MUSIC Herbert Stothart CINEMATOGRAPHY Merritt B. Gerstad FILM EDITING William LeVanway ART DIRECTION Cedric Gibbons STUNTS Chuck Hamilton WHISTLE DOUBLE Enrico Ricardi CAST Groucho Marx…Otis B. Driftwood Chico Marx…Fiorello Marx Brothers, A Night at the Opera (1935) and A Day at the Harpo Marx…Tomasso Races (1937) that his career picked up again. Looking at the Kitty Carlisle…Rosa finished product, it is hard to reconcile the statement from Allan Jones…Ricardo Groucho Marx who found the director "rigid and humorless". Walter Woolf King…Lassparri Wood was vociferously right-wing in his personal views and this Sig Ruman… Gottlieb would not have sat well with the famous comedian. Wood Margaret Dumont…Mrs. Claypool directed 11 actors in Oscar-nominated performances: Robert Edward Keane…Captain Donat, Greer Garson, Martha Scott, Ginger Rogers, Charles Robert Emmett O'Connor…Henderson Coburn, Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright, Katina Paxinou, Akim Tamiroff, Ingrid Bergman and Flora Robson. Donat, Paxinou and SAM WOOD (b. July 10, 1883 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania—d. Rogers all won Oscars. Late in his life, he served as the President September 22, 1949, age 66, in Hollywood, Los Angeles, of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American California), after a two-year apprenticeship under Cecil B.
    [Show full text]
  • Reaping the "Colored Harvest": the Catholic Mission in the American South
    Loyola University Chicago Loyola eCommons Dissertations Theses and Dissertations 2013 Reaping the "Colored Harvest": The Catholic Mission in the American South Megan Stout Sibbel Loyola University Chicago Follow this and additional works at: https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Stout Sibbel, Megan, "Reaping the "Colored Harvest": The Catholic Mission in the American South" (2013). Dissertations. 547. https://ecommons.luc.edu/luc_diss/547 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at Loyola eCommons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Loyola eCommons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Copyright © 2013 Megan Stout Sibbel LOYOLA UNIVERSITY CHICAGO REAPING THE “COLORED HARVEST”: THE CATHOLIC MISSION IN THE AMERICAN SOUTH A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE GRADUATE SCHOOL IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY PROGRAM IN HISTORY BY MEGAN STOUT SIBBEL CHICAGO, ILLINOIS MAY 2013 Copyright by Megan Stout Sibbel, 2013 All rights reserved. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS It is a pleasure to thank the many individuals and institutions that supported me throughout the process of researching and writing this dissertation. My adviser, Timothy Gilfoyle, helped shape my project into a coherent, readable narrative. His alacrity in returning marked-up drafts with insightful comments and suggestions never failed to generate wonderment. Patricia Mooney-Melvin provided me with invaluable support throughout my academic career at Loyola. Her guidance has been instrumental along the path towards completion of my dissertation.
    [Show full text]
  • CATALOGX 87.Pdf
    E R T A N M E N T BIG NEWS, fRANIINSTBN, TIIE RDT•m VEIIIII (1831) BLACDAWK MOVESI \ Big news and good news for our many customers nationwide! Blackhawk Films, for years based in Davenport, Iowa is heading west to Hollywood. Effective September 18, 1987, Blackhawk Films moved its operations closer to the heart of the industry. The new facilities mean faster response and even more personal attention given to filling your orders. The most outstanding new feature that goes with the move is the extension of phone service to 24 hours a day, every day of the year. At Blackhawk Films, we keep trying to find new ways to retain our customers and give you the kind of service you deserve ... the best. You can see that effort most clearly in this catalog's selection of collectable entertainment. Just looking through our exclusive LANDMARKS IN ENTERTAINMENT Section gives you a taste of the kinds of special videocassettes we have to offer. Not just entertaining features, Blackhawk strives to select high-quality, important work that is valuable entertainment. Titles like the original FRANKENSTEIN, TOP HAT, DIRECTOR: James Whales PRODUCER: Carl Laemmle Jr. MAKE-UP: Jack Pierce CAST: Boris Ka.rfoff. Colin MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON, Clive, Mae Clarke, Edward Van Sloan, John Boles, Marilyn Harris and Dwight Frye SONS OF THE DESERT and the rest read like a roll call of the greatest films from For the first time in 50 years, this classic adaptation of Mary Shelly's novel can be seen the way its Hollywood's heyday.
    [Show full text]
  • January 1984)
    University of New Orleans ScholarWorks@UNO Wavelength Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies 1-1984 Wavelength (January 1984) Connie Atkinson University of New Orleans Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.uno.edu/wavelength Recommended Citation Wavelength (January 1984) 39 https://scholarworks.uno.edu/wavelength/39 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies at ScholarWorks@UNO. It has been accepted for inclusion in Wavelength by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UNO. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ORLEANS '84 World's Fair: 'The Most Exciting Plate In The World' Trash Movies As Art Movies Theatre Art& Music Rolling Listings With Shirley and Lee Thoroughly Modem Marsalis BULK RATE U.S. POSTAGE PAID ALEXANDRIA, LA PERMIT N0.88 utauelenglh ISSUE N0.39 • JANUARY 1984 ISSN 0741·2460 ''I 'm not sure, but I'm almost positive, that all music came from New Orleans. '' -Ernie K-Doe, 1979 Cover photo by Michael P. Smith t table of contents What a Year!!! Features -------• World's Fair by Bunny Matthews ............ 14 You're gonna need Wavelength in 1984 Shirley Goodman by Almost Slim . ........... 16 Naughty Marietta New Orleans knows how to party, but this by Don Lee Keith . .. .. .... .. 19 year, we're really going to show our Ellis Marsalis With all the thousands of events to by Yorke Corbin . 21 from, you're going to need us more Spirit World ever, so you won't miss one minute of the by rico .. .... ...... .. ... ... 23 fun. Departments----- January News .. ...... ... ......... 4 AND IF YOU SUBSCRIBE NOW, Golden Moments by Almost Slim .
    [Show full text]
  • Friars' Bookshelf 141 Est Living Son of Eight Children
    The Spirit of St. Dominic. By Humbert Clerissac, O.P. 177 pp. Burns, Oates, London. 6 s. Pressure of the French anti-clerical laws and the subsequent dis­ persion of religious communities in 1903 led Humbert Oerissac, O.P., to spend the next several years in England. In 1908 he con­ ducted a retreat for his English confreres at Hawkesyard and: these retreat conferences, originally delivered in English, were soon pub­ lished in French and in Italian. The manuscript for an English edi­ tion was completed but, due to the author's untimely death in 1914, was not published until recently when M. Jacques Maritain placed this manuscript at the disposal of Bernard Delany, O.P., Provincial of the English Dominicans, with the suggestion that it be revised and published. In a brief introductory sketch of Pere Oerissac, Father Delany observes that "the absorbing enthusiasm of his life was for the ideals of his Father, St. Dominic." This same consuming enthusiasm gen­ erates a unique charm and throbbing vitality which the printed word is powerless to restrain. The ideals of St. Dominic take definite shape as dynamic, living realities incorporated in the constitution of his Order and perpetuated in the life of its members. The message of Pere Oerissac is charged with the spirit of his Father and fired with love for his Order; his unquenchable desire is "to bring others to understand and love its luminous spirit, the eternal youth of its doctrinal tradition, its exquisite largemindedness, its sublime ideal­ ism." Yet his idealism is a practical idealism; through it runs a con­ sistent strain of sane optimism, a constantly recurring note of joyous conviction-the ideals of St.
    [Show full text]
  • For Give Flowers!
    ^•f.*.',/., .'•/ ; -••'.?'' •""'. ••'-.•.".'"''.:;':.; ",': '•.:''"'?'^v^^.^oVV!';:'''.;-.^'!''":'"•"'• ' •••• ' . r • . ' :••••..;:. v ••'••• ' •'"•• -' .'.•••.••• v:v:;*» O ...:' •:. • .-•'• : .-, :.-•••,••. ••-•, •' •V'WM •a- ^^ THE CRANFORD CITIZEN AMP »rr. in Community Church, Mrs- DorreU former menial hospital patients in grants of almost $10,000 for psy- is superintendent of the cradle roll the state, free hospital service chiatric clinic treatment service, Mrs. Dorrell department and a member of the At IWf-W«y Marie which has provided treatment foras well as broad progress in pre- First Aid Squad Commission' for Education and the GARWOOD ^- Work on re-six Union County citizens enabling ventive education and improved A Commission on Missions and placement.of tone chests in the them to return to useful lives inlegislation in the field of mental Ambulance Fund E V: 111 New Jobs Christian World Relations,. organ at Garwood Presbyterian their communities promptly, and health. KENILWORTH — Mrs. Edward Mrs. DorrelTs activities are not Church has progressed to a point Dorrell of 324 Coolidge drive, new limited to church work. She b al- which will permit use of the GARWOOD president of the Women's Society so program chairman for the Ken- orfcan for lister services, it was CRANFORD KENILWORTH for Christian Service of Commun- ilworth Parent-Teacher Associa- reported by the Rev. Eric S. Kenilworth Public Schools ity Methodist Church, has been ap- tion. Her daughter. June, is a stu- Toucher, pastor. Vol. UTO No. U. Cntcred at accond claia mall nutter at pointed recording secretary for the dent at McKinley School. CRANFORD, NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957 - tha Pott OWce at Crantord. N. J. 3 Sections, 24 Pagesr— 10c WSCS district office of the Newark Assisted by men of the church, Report Variety oi Activities Conference.
    [Show full text]
  • Seafarers' Services
    ~')uC.4TIO, ~ MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN. EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND TRUSTEES 200 I YEAR IN REVIEW i SEAMEN'S CHURCH INSTITUTE HELPS THE HEROES AT GROUND ZERO CENTER FOR MARITIME EDUCATION CENTER FOR SEAFARERS' SERVICES CENTER FOR SEAFARERS' RIGHTS THE WATER STREET GALLERY ~LOO UT Front CDtIn': E--o -.. (jTtJrn Ie/!) Ene K l.amvn. lit I' Exe(unw Volume 94. Number 2 Of/ICC {ITT !he CenlCT far MIITltnne Ed,/! IInm, The LJokDl41 Is puhli hed <ju.trterly. and /Jomiruck F<"ITaTO, Assisltlnl [Q !he Bwlding Manage at S( I' NY HeOOqlUlTleTs. prepar!! Copyright 2002. the amen' Church In. mute "I saft" helmel\ for reS04t uoorken at Ground Zero ew York New Jerse . All fight reserved. Ii-Z--===::==:===::=== ill S&i_=: MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIRMAN AND EX ECUTIVE DIRECTOR MESSAGE FROM THE CHAIR.MAN Any institution that is 168 years old and does not from time-ta-time reevaluate its mission, programs, staffing, financials, and future usefulness can inadvertently slip into a culture of simply accepting the status quo. At the Seamen's Church Institute, the status quo is not good enough. What we have successfully accomplished is satisfying, but our culture very much includes expanding programmatic successes. That is why an SCI committee underwent a comprehensive year-long Strategic Planning review. The Committee studied what our needs might be 10 years out It also attempted to evaluate the changing needs of those we serve during that same period. Not much stays exactly the same for 10 years . We focused on what can be expected to change, internally and externally, and how we should position the Institute to meet these changes.
    [Show full text]
  • FALL 2019 Honoring Academic Excellence Alumna Honored for Her Heart of Service Mrs
    A publication for alumni, parents, and friends of Father Gabriel Richard / Saint Thomas High School LegacieFalsl 2019 2018 – 2019 Annual Report contained within Graduation 2019 Celebrating 150 graduates in the 150th year From Our President Dear Friends and Alumni of St. Thomas/FGR, I’m grateful to be able to present to you the 2018-2019 Annual Report of Father Gabriel Richard High School (FGR) in this Fall Edition of Legacies. We are very proud of the advances we have made as a school community during this 150th anniversary year. In these pages you will find the achievements of our students and faculty and how we continue to make a difference in Ann Arbor, Southeast Michigan and, most importantly, in the lives of our young people. In one of its more poignant documents, the Vatican’s Congregation for Catholic Education stated: “From the first moment that a student sets foot in a Catholic school, he or she ought to have an impression of entering a new environment.” Nowhere is that more true than FGR as we commence the 2019-2020 academic year: new paint in the hallways, new display cases, a new statue of Fr. Gabriel Richard himself; a new strategic Board of Trustees (2018-2019) plan that will serve as a roadmap for the next five years; and, most importantly, teachers- Michael Coghlan ’83, Chair -both veteran and new--who are committed to an education that addresses the whole Patrick Hoban, Vice Chair person. It is a promise and a prayer that we commit ourselves to preparing our students Kathy Grisdela, Secretary for life in this world and, more importantly, for the life of the world to come.
    [Show full text]
  • MADONNA NOW the Magazine of Madonna University PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2011
    MADONNA NOW The Magazine of Madonna University PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2011 CELEBRATING 75 YEARS Diamond Anniversary celebration! It’s a Madonna Birthday Party! Madonna University Scholar-Am Classic to benefit student scholarships Bring your family to meet ours! Join us in celebrating 75 years! Friday, September 14, 2012 Western Golf & Country Club Save Saturday Sept. 22, 2012 Redford, Michigan for birthday cake and fun for all ages. See our new labs, tour our beautiful campus, Golf with a scholar, i.e. student-athlete, dean, play games and win prizes! Free! professor, administrator and raise funds for student scholarships! Visit www.madonna.edu/75years for party updates www.madonna.edu/golf • 734-432-5589 CELEBRATE OUR ANNIVERSARY MADONNA Buy a brick in the Path of the Madonna or MEMORIES get an anniversary Spirit Tassel SHARE A MEMORY, GET A GIFT! Bricks with your personal message are just $75 through Dec. 2012. Send your favorite Madonna memory to Spirit Tassels are only $20.12 Amy Perry in the alumni office at [email protected]. We will post memories on the anniversary website blog (madonna.edu/75years) and include them in an upcoming Madonna Now. Please indicate your choice of gift: an alumni t-shirt, two stadium seats, a stadium blanket or Call Amy Perry at 734-432-5762 a business card holder or order yours online today at www.madonna.edu We’ll get it right out to you! MADONNA UNIVERSITY 36600 Schoolcraft Road OF CONTENTS TABLE Livonia, MI 48150-1176 Admissions Office 734-432-5339 Advancement Office 8 734-432-5589 Alumni Office 734-432-5811 Main Number 734-432-5300 or 800-852-4951 [email protected] www.madonna.edu Editorial Staff The Madonna Now is published by 9 12 the Office of University Advancement Andrea Nodge ’84 vice president for advancement 2 Letter from the President Karen Sanborn 3 75th Anniversary director of marketing A year of celebration Jill N.
    [Show full text]
  • The Billboard 1918-10-12: Vol 30 Iss 41
    NOTICE TO READER: WImb jon nadins thU mao<lnr ptac* • le tump tax this noUrt. mail the BtcaalM. and It will be piao^ Is the bandt et our Mddlm or taikm dntinad to prnreed oter-ara* Me eraum'. Na addrtta—A. S. BURLEM>.V, P»tiiia«t«r General. Published .weekly at Cincinnati. O. Subscription, $3.00 per year. Entered as second-class mail matter, June 4, 1897, at Post Office, Cincinnati, under act of March 3, 1879. mv THE DOMINANT NOTE IN THEAmCAL JOURNALISM THIS ISSUE CONTAINS 26 PER CENT ADVERTISING AND 74 PER CENT READING MATTER I ‘‘The American People are with you.” —General Pershing to our soldiers. And General Pershing was right. The American People ARE “WITH” the boys over there. Their unanimity, solidarity, concurrence and agreement are wonderful. All classes have done nobly in the Fourth Liberty Loan drive, but one of them, showfolk, has been extra fine. Showfolk—and by showfolk we mean not only the actors, actresses, managers and agents, but the Chautauqua talent, the professional entertainers of all sorts, the platform speakers, and last but not least, THE SPLENDID FOUR-MINUTE MEN, who have labored valiantly in our movies and theaters side by side with the people thereof for so long now that they also belong— are 100% loyal. They have not only home the burdens of war as philosophically, accepted the draft as cheer¬ fully, paid their taxes as willingly, lent of their means to the government as eagerly and cut down on the use of food as uncomplainingly as have other classes, but they have given of their time and services so bountifully, so exuberantly and so lavishly that they have completely distanced all emulators.
    [Show full text]
  • The Catholic University of America A
    THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA A Church Apart: The Catholic Church in the Rural South, 1939-1990 A DISSERTATION Submitted to the Faculty of the Department of History School of Arts & Sciences Of The Catholic University of America In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree Doctor of Philosophy By Seth R. Smith Washington, D.C. 2016 A Church Apart: The Catholic Church in the Rural South, 1939-1990 Seth R. Smith, Ph.D. Director: Leslie Woodcock Tentler, Ph.D. This dissertation examines Catholicism in the rural South to answer three questions. The first is how did priests and lay Catholics engage in a pluralistic American society before and after Vatican II while drastically outnumbered? The second is what did it mean to be part of the universal Catholic Church while isolated geographically, socially, and institutionally? Finally, how do we balance the impact of major national and international events on the Catholicism in the rural South with the importance of local context? This dissertation seeks to answer these questions by examining the history of seven parishes – four pastored by Glenmary Home Missioners and three pastored by non-Glenmarians – in the rural South between 1939 and 1990. Throughout much of the twentieth century, Southern Catholics were regarded with suspicion by their neighbors without the protections offered by numbers or their own confessional institutions. Catholics in the rural South dealt with this in two ways. The first was by emphasizing their Southerness. Apart from their religious beliefs, they were virtually indistinguishable from their fellow Southerners, and their views on politics, economics, and race hewed much closer to their non-Catholic neighbors than their co-religionists in the North.
    [Show full text]