The Hilltopper (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, December 11, 1964 Page: 4 of 8
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3
Foundation Honors Juarez
SEU Prof. Chosen from 410
13
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Mr. Joseph Juarez
GR 2-1814
NEW and USED PARTS
OPEN SUNDAYS
SOUTH
AUSTIN
heeewoeoomeevvemvvsegee
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KRAUSE
GENE HAGOOD
BARBER SHOP
8E3
i
1601 Guadalupe
Visit
Low Cost
Our New
New Car
Bank
Loans!
FEAIENVIIAGE
Home!
Se (av
GR 6-1600
DELIVERY SERVICE
912 Red River
CLOSED TUESDAYS
CONOCO
3a
Dialogue Conferences
Show Unity of Concepts
'Christ In Daily Lives'
Subject of 2nd Retreat
Service Station
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Bill Babowal, a junior biology
major from Menlo Park, Califor-
nia, commenting on the topic deal-
The cooperation for setting up
the dance was gratifying to Ped-
ro. He expressed thanks especial-
ly to Jim Sullivan, Steve Burns,
Dick McIntyre and Tom Frank
for acting as ushers; to Marty
Lewis and the Austin club for
supplying many of the decora-
tions; and to Tony Turk, John
Barajas, and Bernie Yun for help
with selling bids.
The new innovation of having
a semi-formal dance at this time
pleased the pocketbooks of all
who attended. The idea of having
this and one formal dance in the
Spring, both sponsored by SAC,
seems to have met with approval
all over the campus.
The presence of Brother Ray-
mond Fleck, CSC, president, and
several other of the faculty mem-
bers was appreciated by all who
attended.
Zill 1111111 p (
■■■■■■■
• SR6NEII
• FEI
•
• Name maha
MOOLI
esrumom
Reopotan
& Meat Data
Topper Photo—Pauer
Christmas revelers rock to the sound of the “Personalities” at
the “Blue Crystal” Christmas dance.
2336 SO. CONGRESS
HI 2-8003
-
Tower Lighting..
(Continued from Page 1)
menhoea.
MEXICAN FOOD TO TAKE OUT
Welcome
St Edward’s University
Car Owners
HI 2-3567
3600 SOUTH CONGRESS
500 East Avenue
GR 7-8744
■
H.E.B. CENTER
125 W. Oltorf— Back in Arcade
3 MASTER BARBERS
TO SERVE YOU
• A. D. Krause
• Monroe Euers
• Jack R. Burks
— FLATTOP SPECIALISTS —
mNnNNN
I
-
9
Holiday Greetings
and
Best Wishes
BANK OF AUSTIN
2501 SOUTH CONGRESS
,,1.
The discussions will be discon-
tinued until the Spring semester,
due to the Christmas holidays
and semester exams. Plans are
now being made for an agenda
that will encompass many topics
for discussion.
Under the Danforth foundation
grant, Mr. Juarez will go to Mex-
ico in either June or September,
1965, to do research in govern-
ment and ecclesiastical archives.
He will spend two months in
Mexico City and ten months in
Guadalajara. The research is in
preparation for a dissertation on
church-state relation in Guadala-
jara, from 1876 to 1911. The dis-
sertation will be submitted to the
University of Texas as part of
the requirements for a doctor of
philosophy degree, with major in
Latin-American history.
The Danforth announcement re-
ports that stipends are arranged
according to a candidate’s salary
and number of dependents, with
annual maximum grant of $6,000
plus tuition and fees.
Juarez is a native of Laredo,
Texas, where he graduated from
St. Augustine high school. He re-
ceived a BA degree from St. Ed-
ward’s university in 1957 and an
if
4.
-
a deeper awareness of God, to
provoke a sense of Christian com-
mitment and to intensify the com-
mitment of the Christian promises
made at Baptism.
504 East Avenue
"Blue Crystal Dance"
Real Sparkling Success
-4-
1«
TENMSTSNNNENT
I EL RANCHO I
| No. 1—1st & San Jacinto |
| GR 2-1814 I
I
# No. 2—510 Barton Sprgs.
| GR 2-7143 |
Wamssssssssssssssssssss!
—A
MMhanm__I A
The second Nova-Cor retreat
was held this week in San An-
tonio from Monday, December 7,
through Wednesday, December 9.
This is one of a series of unique
retreats held in conjunction with
Our Lady of the Lake college at
the Oblate retreat house in San
Antonio.
One of the main purposes of
the retreat, according to Father
Maurice Johnston, OP, director of
student affairs, is to give those
attending an experience in learn-
ing to live their daily lives as
Christians. In the informal at-
mosphere surrounding the retreat,
the participants will be able to
experience how to apply spiritual
values in normal daily activities.
This informal atmosphere is es-
tablished in several ways. After
each lecture, the students are di-
vided into small groups to discuss
the relevance and applications of
the points made in the lecture to
their daily lives. There are also
several work and recreation pe-
riods, during which they try to
learn through experience how to
apply what they have heard.
Father Johnston also said that
the retreat will seek to establish
SEU NEWS SERVICE—Joseph
R. Juarez, assistant professor of
history, is one of 56 faculty mem-
bers from colleges and universi-
ties across the country receiving
a Danforth foundation teacher
grant, Pressley C. McCoy, associ-
ate director of the foundation,
has announced.
The annual Christmas dance,
sponsored jointly by the sopho-
more class and SAC, was “quite
successful this year,” according to
Steve Pedro, SAC Social commit-
tee chairman. There were 103 bids
sold for the “Blue Crystal Christ-
mas” held at the Colonnade II
room of the Commodore Perry
hotel last Saturday, December 5.
The turnout was better than ex-
pected, even though the proximity
of the date to Thanksgiving and
the K of C-Illini club costume
dance found several people finan-
cially unable to attend. This situa-
tion will be corrected in the future
through better planning from
SAC.
The “Personalities,” who played
for the evening, enjoyed the op-
portunity to perform and said
that they would be happy to have
future contracts with SEU at re-
duced prices.
MA from the University of Texas
in 1959. He has done additional
graduate study at the University
of Texas under a Woodrow Wil-
son foundation grant.
* The Danforth foundation was
established in 1927 by the late
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Danforth
of St. Louis, Missouri, to strength-
en education through grants to
schools, colleges, universities, and
other educational agencies.
The Juarez family are members
of San Jose parish. Mr. Juarez
has been active in the parish as
choir director, cursillista, and
member of the program commit-
tee, PTA and CYO leadership.
He has membership in the His-
panic American Historical associ-
ation, Phi Alpha Theta honorary
history society, and Sigma Delta
Pi, Spanish honorary society. His
articles have been published in
Historia Mexicana, Hispanic
America, Ultreya, Historical Re-
view and the Americas.
TEXA.S SIZE DONUTS
ing with morality, said, “‘I found
the discussion most beneficial.
There isn’t much difference be-
tween our opinions.”
Gary Gadacz, junior accounting
major from South Bend, Indiana,
said of the discussion, “I was im-
pressed by the preparedness of
the well-educated Anglican speak-
er.”
At the last Nova-Cor retreat,
the participants “gradually and
unconsciously found (themselves)
actually becoming a family in all
phases: working, playing and
praying together.” The discussions
at this retreat covered such topics
as marriage, selflessness versus
selfishness, Christian love, the
sacrifice of Christ, our own sacri-
fice, and the realization of voca-
tions.
A
The men and women were
chosen from 410 nominations pro-
vided by the deans of accredited
senior colleges and universities
in the United States, the an-
nouncement added. Selection was
made on the basis of academic
ability, personal qualities promis-
ing success in teaching, and reli-
gious commitment and inquiry in
the candidate’s own faith.
affairs, stated that, “Though the
vote shows the positive spirit
present on the St. Edward’s cam-
pus this year, it also is disappoint-
ing in that so few actually took
enough interest to vote.” Of the
senior class, 42.6% voted; of the
juniors, 52.5% (the highest per-
centage); of the sophomores,
40.2% ; and of the freshmen, a
lowly 36.5%. This means that out
of all the freshmen on and off
campus, only 87 bothered to vote.
DALE’S AUTO PARTS
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By Tim Scullin
A student Anglican - Roman
Catholic dialogue was hosted by
St. Edward’s last Sunday, De-
cember 6. This program, initiated
by Bill Bare of the Canterbury
club, has met with considerable
success. There have been three
meetings to date, with more meet-
ings planned for the Spring se-
mester. Some of the topics dis-
cussed at past gatherings have
been: the Holy Eucharist, unity,
and the role of morality and its
relationship to our lives. In the
future, the topics will be centered
on Maryology, validity of Angli-
can orders, the possibility of a
unified church, and the criteria
for church membership.
Mike Quinn, sophomore, com-
mented: “The meetings have
been fruitful. They have helped
strengthen my own convictions,
and it has given me an opportu-
nity to see another Christian
community. I’m certainly looking
forward to future discussions.”
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to All of the
St. Edward’s University
Family
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The Hilltopper (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, December 11, 1964, newspaper, December 11, 1964; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1491839/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting St. Edward’s University.