Loyola Alumnus

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Loyola Alumnus Loyola Alumnus MONTREAL, SUMMER 1967 • Vol. XI, No. I COMING EVENTS SEPTEMBER Golf Tournament Monday-18th Royal Montreal Golf Club Brian Gallery '57 - Chairman Ed Foley '57 - Assistant Chairman (Draw for Special Fund prizes) OCTOBER Homecoming Saturday-21st Dinner Dance at the new Chateau Champlain Hotel with Nat Raider Orchestra Graduation Classes ending in "2" and " 7" celebrating anniversary reunions. Contact the Alumni Office for assistance with addresses, correspondence and information. Chairman - JEAN PAUL CARDINAL, Q.C., '42 Assistant Chairman - LARRY DOHERTY, '48 NOVEMBER Oyster Party Watch for details in Fall edition DECEMBER Basketball Game Friday -15th Phys. Educ. Bldg. Gymnasium 6 :30 p.m. Hockey Game Phys. Educ. Bldg. Rink 8 :00 p.m. These games are alumni vs alumni, odd number years vs even number years. Alumni interested in playing in either game should register with the Alumni office. Following the hockey game there will be a get­ together in the gym. (mixed social event for alumni and wives, alumnae and husbands, or their special guests) In This Issue The Association •.. CHARLES A. PHELAN '48 Features ••• President WILLIAM H. WILSON Jr. '53 2. New Officers 1st Vi ce-President RONALD J. HORE '61 3. Hall of Fame 2nd Vice-President RONALD J. HEBERT '60 5. Superior-General 3rd Vice-President ARTHUR E. LAPRES '42 7. Convocation Honorary Secretary JOHN J. PEPPER '49 Honorary Treasurer DR. JOHN F. McMULLAN '53 • Councillor BRIAN O'N. GALLERY '57 Departments ••• Councillor ROBERT G. BEAUREGARD '60 13. The Lookout Councillor ROSS N. BRADY '64 14. Obituaries Councillor STEVEN SIMS '68 16. Weddings, Births S.A.C. President DONALD W. McNAUGHTON '49 Past President TERENCE E. O'NEILL '54 • Toronto Chapter President BERNARD H. McCALLUM '43 Editorial Board ••• Di rector of Alumni Affairs J. STIRLING DORRANCE Editor-in-chief Director of Development WALTER CHRISTOPHERSON VERY REV. PATRICK G. MALONE, S.J. Father President • REV. J. GERALD MATHIEU, S.J. '52 Father Moderator Business Manager MRS. DOROTHY McGEE Mrs. DOROTHY McGEE Executive Secretary • Advertising The Cover ..• FRED PHILIP '65 There were more than 30 women graduates at LOYOLA ALUMNUS • LOYOLA COLLEGE • MONTREAL 28, CANADA Loyola's 71st spring convocation, most of them Authorized as second class mail by the Post Office Department, pictured here with College President Very Rev. Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash. Patrick G. Malone, S.J. (See story Page 7). POSTAGE PAID AT MONTREAL - 1 - ALUMNI OFFICERS: Loyola Alumni Association officers are pictured above following the annual meeting. They are, left to right - seated: Art Lapres, Father Malone, Charlie Phelan, Bill Wilson, John Pepper; standing: Bernie Mccallum, Brian Gallery, Ron Hebert, Ross Brady, Father Mathieu, Ron Hore, Bob Beauregard, Steve Sims, Dorothy McGee, Don McNaughton. Alumni Affairs Progressing Charles A. Phelan, '48, was elect­ Councillor; Ross N. Brady '64, Retiring president Don McNaugh­ ed president of the Loyola Alumnus Councillor. ton told the meeting that the Association at the recent annual Steven Sims '68, S.A.C. President; past year had seen the association meeting held at the college. Donald W. McNaughton '49, Past achieve an even higher degree of success than had the previous Other officers are: William H. President; Terence E. O'Neill '54, season. Wilson Jr. '53, 1st Vice-President; Toronto Chapter President; Bernard Ronald J. Hore '61, 2nd Vice-Presi­ H. McCallum '43, Dir. of Alumni "More important, we took a fur­ dent; Ronald J. Hebert '60, 3rd Vice­ Affairs ; J. Stirling Dorrance, Dir. of ther large step ahead in the evolu­ President; Arthur E. Lapres '42, Development; Mrs. Dorothy McGee, tion of our association from a small Hon. Secretary; John J. Pepper '49, Exec. Secretary. college 'old boys' association to a Hon. Treasurer. Very Rev. Patrick G. Malone, mature and vibrant alumni organi­ Dr. John F. McMullan '53, Coun­ S.J., President, Loyola College; Rev. zation which more properly reflects cillor; Brian O'N. Gallery '57, Coun­ J. Gerald Mathieu, S.J., '52, Moder­ the new Loyola - the Loyola of cillor; Robert G. Beauregard '60, ator, Loyola Alumni Assn. (Continued on page 12) -2- Homecoming Ceremony 10 Voted to Sports Hall of Fame A member of the Canadian Sen­ PAUL HAYNES, quarterback of coach of several college baseball ate, the Mexican Ambassador to Loyola's 1928 Canadian intermedi­ teams, and member of the 1929 Canada, two former National Hock­ ate intercollegiate football cham­ M.A.A.A. Allan Cup Champions. He ey League stars and a distinguished pionship team, twice captain of the went on to star for a period of father-son combination are among senior hockey team, junior boxing 10 years in the National Hockey the first selections, 10 in all, voted champion of Montreal at 110 League with the Maroons, Boston into the newly-established Loyola pounds in 1924, organizer and Bruins and Canadiens. Sports Hall of Fame, the seven­ (Continued on page 4) man, press-television selection com­ mittee announced late in May. There were a total of 36 nomina­ tions made and the 10 elected fell either under the category of bring­ ing sport fame to Loyola during or/ and after their student years or in Father, Son Team Lauded the category of coaching with out­ standing results. The formal presen­ Writing in the Montreal Star, "Truly amazing, because when tations to be made at the October sports columnist Red Fisher con­ Shaughnessy delivered his brief golf 21 Loyola Alumni Homecoming gratulated those admitted into Lo­ lesson, he was imprisoned in a events will go to: yola's new sports shrine, and said hospital bed. Only a few weeks Senator Charles "Chubby" Power, their credentials are flawless. earlier, Frank Shaughnessy, aged '07; His Excellency Pedro R. Sui­ "Nothing is quite as exciting, 80, had his leg amputated. naga, '26; Paul Haynes, '30; Charles however, as the inclusion of a fath­ "The Shaughnessy name has been "Dinny" Dinsmore; Frank Shaugh­ er-son team among the first group a brilliant chapter in Loyola's rich of names. And no men are more nessy, Senior and Junior, '32; Robert history. There was Frank, the elder. "Bob" Bedard, '51; Dr. Robert J. worthy, it seems to me, than Frank There were his eight sons - all of Brodrick, '43; Bernie McCall um, '43; Shaughnessy Sr. and Frank, Jr.," them athletes and all educated at and the late Robert John "Jake" Fisher continued. Warren, '43; killed in action with "The elder Shaughnessy surely is Loyola. Among them was Frank, the R.C.A.F. in 1943. one of the grandest names ever as­ Jr., who joins his father in the first SENATOR POWER, the former sociated with sport on the North group enshrined in Loyola's hall of wartime Minister of National De­ American continent . .. amateur or honor. fence for Air, began his sporting professional. He was established as "His athletic qualities were for­ career at Loyola in 1899 and was an athlete of excellent skills only midable at Loyola and elsewhere. captain of the senior college hockey shortly after the turn of the cen­ Football, hockey, baseball and team for several years. tury, but the man's greatest contri­ track .. a captain on many teams. During his senior year, at Christ­ bution was as a builder and leader. He was a member of the United mas time, he was induced to play a "Where would minor league base­ States Olympic hockey team in game for the Quebec Bulldogs ball have been without the Shaugh­ 1936 - winner of a third-place against Ottawa in the National nessy playoff plan? bronze medal. This was young Hockey Association (forerunner of "Would the International Base­ Frank, the athlete, but surely his the N.H.L.) under an assumed ball League have been as prosper­ greatest contributions have come in name; it cost him his amateur ous as it was had not Shaughnessy the years after his active athletic status but brought pro offers which directed its operation for more than roles were ended. he rejected. He also starred in foot­ 21 years? He coached teams at "Three times, he has been Chef ball, bicycle racing and track. Loyola and at McGill University de Mission of Canadian Olympic MEXICAN AMBASSADOR SUI­ for more than two decades and teams and he fulfills similar respon­ NAGA made history as a drop­ made men out of boys. sibilities at Grenoble next year. He kicker at Loyola during his student "During his time, he was a dis­ has contributed wondrously on an days (1920-1926), scoring from mid­ tinguished leader of athletes and field while kicking with either foot he still is quick to teach a listener executive level to skiing and golf and starring on two junior inter­ at a time in his life when he can and has been a vice-president of collegiate Canadian championship look back on 80 summers. the Canadian Olympic Association teams. After Loyola, he made the "No, no, this is how you hit a since 1956. Mexican Olympic soccer team in golf ball," he was telling a visitor "He has given completely of his 1928, is a former president of the recently. "The weight down this time and of himself to the welfare Mexican Golf Association and a side of your body ... " of those who have followed him member of that country's Organiz­ "An amazing guy," the man who and that, it seems to me, is what a ing Committee for the 1968 Olym­ related the incident told me the Hall of Fame is all about. Or should pics there. other day. be." - 3 - 10 VOTED (Continued from page 3) DINNY DINSMORE, a star of the N.H.L. Montreal Maroons, was elected on a basis of his distinguish­ ed coaching with Loyola hockey and football teams over a 10-year period, 1930-1940.
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