st. viator college newspaper, 1935-11-26

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A cert ai n di gnity of n1: 1nnar·s Is nbl!ohrt ely nacau Ary to tnakG th o t11 0II l vo hu1blc c ll nr· e it her N!A!l actnb lc or ra· 11; paetad 1t1 th a Worl d .- Chc at or · fi e ld . VO. L. Llll. Jtintn rimt llO UJlBONNA.IS, .ILLINOl S T UE S O A Y, N OVE Mll l': Jt 26, I U aG Debaters Meet R ay Cavanagh Engineering A thletes Win Illinois Univ. El ected Head Club Advances In Bid For On Thursday of Ch ora l Clu b To S po tl igh t Party Succ ess Season's Openers Brighte n Championship Hopes Public Demands Incre ase Singner s' W ork Four Chicagoans Lead New Or ganization P r og ram Reveals Campus • Hidd en Talent W ith tllr ee hard - fo ught debat es Ray mond Cavanagh, '38, o( Chi- In order lo sec ure a medium for T he n ewly elecled pr esi de nt of the cago, was elected Pres ident or th e the a dv o.nce rn ent of their com mon Mon og r am Club in a f ew to their cr edit , the Viato r wr anglers Viator Choral Club last week. Pat - int er es ts, the pre- en gin ee ring s tu - words th e su ccess of the Athletic wi ll be pitted agai nst the Univ er- ric1< B imm er le, '39, of Chicago, was den ts of th e Co ll ege band ed th em- Nov el ty Part y when he toJd y ou r sity of I llinois he re on Thu rs d ay, nam ed Secret ary an d Don Mor gan, se lv es toge ther lase week in an En- re po rt f' d im medi P't tely aft er th e a ff a ir D ecember 12. The Rev. J ohn St ai- ' 39, of Chi cag o, was ch osen Treas- g ineer ::;) ' Cl nU. The rn ec ll ng Wa.!i last Mond ay, "I beli eve H was the fo r d, c. s. v. , coach, nnnoun ced yes - urer. ca ll ed by Dr. W il li am J. O'Donne ll , best par ty ev er held in the r ef ec - te rd ay .that the m en, Ri chard Cr aw- ley, 36; H aro ld B unt e, '39; aJ)d Ed - ward Bu tt gen, '37, who met Purdu e The cl ub or igi n a ll y org anized with- of th e Depa rtm ent of Ma thema tics, to r y". out offi cers, bu t i ts increa sed ac- u pon th e insistence se veral col- Th e gayly decor ated h a ll was fill - ti vity an d lts numerous pro s pective I lege men wh o hop e to make th e ed to capacity, and wh ether th e pa- cal led for club one of th e most acti ve organ- tron s we re more pleased w ith th e on th e same ques ti on before the tJve he ads. The o verwh elm mg su e- izati ons on th e campu s. . evening's ent ert ainmen t th an t he Thanl>:sgivin g recess, w ill agai n de- cess of the Club' s ini ti al ap- J Ste ph en Wenthe, '38, was named Monog ram C lub was sat isfi ed with fen d a system of state medi cine. pear anc e ear ly ln No ve mber pr esident of the Eng in ee rs; James th e proce ed s is un ce rt ai n. The Miss Margu eri te Sen esa c, , 38 , Aug- brou g ht it mu ch in de man d. Nagl e, '30, w as elect ed vice -presi- affa ir was the f irst of Its ki nd to In Kanl {akee de nt ; Ro be rt Do nne ll an , '39, se cr e- be by the lett er men, but ust Bl ack, '38, and Edward Bu ttgen, TbP or ganizat ion ent e rtain ed the I tar y; and Pa tri ck Bim me rl e, '39, thi s su ccess will probably caJl fo r '37, successf ul ly match ed wi t and Stu dy Club of St. P at ri ck' s Ch ur ch, treasure r. A ll or the o ff icers are an a nnu al party. argument wi th th e debaters of Kankal{ee, several weeks a go, a nd ft-om Chi cago. In cl uded on th e eve ni ng' s p rog ra m Oli ve t College w hen th e teams m et s ince that ti me has b een p re paring The c lub plan s to inaug ura te an was s ome of th e best talent on th e las t Monday at Oliv et. The de- fo r R Chri stm as ra di o br oadcast. ex tens ive program af ter th e ca mpus and in the vici nit y. Voca l bate was Viator's initi al discussion T he second of a seri es of moving m as holi days. Guest speakers w ill solos were of fe red by Miss Do ri .:::> pict ur es featu ring be asked to a ddress th e stude nt s c:.t Barne tt , ' 39, Ray mond Cav an tt gh , '38, Melodramas" w as off ered to th e s tu- bi-mont hly m ee ti n gs, and th e c lub Mi ss Oline Dan dur and , '39, J ohn d en t body before Thanksgivi n g. Peter members will tr avel to th e lead ing '37, Mi ss E li zabe th H art, of Brady, '39, delig htf ully ent e rt ai ned eng in ee ring pl ants in thi s sec ti on Kankak e e, and Mi ss J un e Uhl m, of the audien ce wi th s axophone s olos of the co un t ry in ord er to s tudy Kankakee. Paul Mar cott, ' 38, de- of thi s year' s Conf erence question, and the in t ri caci es of th e probl em were r eveal ed as th e wr anglers cl as h ed. Vi a tor def ended the n ega- ti ve of the propo si tion : "Reso l ved : That the power of the Sup reme Court to decl are acts of Congr ess unconstitu tional should be revoked". Continuing fo re nsi c r elati ons of long-s tanding, William Cr annell, '37, Ste phen Gould , '36, both Conferen ce men of l ast year , and Will iam Ca- hill , '39, one of the roos t promising of the fr eshman recrui ts , tr aveled to Urbana las t w eek to mee t t he University of Illinoi s. The Be rgin debate rs oppose d any attempt to introduCe uni versal st ate medi cal c ure, and Fa ther Stafford expressed hi mself pleased · wi th the Viator w ork . Although, it was l at er learn- ed fr om th e three de bate rs them- selves that the coac h had held other- wis e in privat e. "Hit an d R un Dri v er" En ds Lif e Of Mas cot In less than s ix ho urs aft er the a ppearance on the c ampu s of the l ast is sue of the VIAT ORIAN, whi ch carri ed a story of the ado pt ion he re of an Irish te rrior mascot , the d og, 'Viato r' was dead. It was rumored at s uppe r that night that he had "gone the way of a ll d ogs" whil e crossing the highway. du ring the e vening. These sh ows machine ry in opera tion s. lig htf ull y en te rt ai ned the guests w ith are proving effec ti ve &S an op por- En tertain Sch ool an inst ru me ntal number and Char- t unit y for the tir ed s tud en t to es- "T he E le ct ri cal Vo ice" , a talking- les Gilbert, '3 9, mast er of the cape the tedium of cons tan t s tud y, movi ng pi c tu re was spon s or ed h er e violin, scor ed a solo triumph . and, inciden t al ly, t he sh ows contri- by tbe clu b l as t Fri d ay nig ht. The b ute m aterial ly to th e coffers of th e Choral Cl ub . Viat or President On Sacred Radio Progr am Ac cording to one campu s com- ment ator, Viator is beginning to monopolize the a ir l anes of the Chi- cago broadcasting sta ti ons. show was op en to the entire st udent body, and the int ri cate m ec hanis m and oper ation of the te le phon e wer e expl ai ned on the sc reen. Th is show- ing was the f irst of a .s e ri es of su ch pi c tures. St ud ents Rev el At Tha n ksgiv in g Da nc e The Ve ry Rev. Dr. Edward V. Car di n R.! , c. s. v., ad ded to the The T hanksgiving Benefit Dan ce, gr owing , li st of Via tor men w ho ar e s ponsor ed by the Coll eg e Club on ap pearing on radio pr ogr ams when November 23, p roved t he ac me in he s poke on th e Mid- day Se rvi ce hil ar it y and inform alit y. Steph en prog ram of S ta tion w. G. N. l ast Goul d, '36, act ing pres ldent of th e S at u rday. The s ubj ect of Doct or I club, annou n ced ear ly thi s w ee k that Cardinal 's talk was ' 'Life". the affai r al so reached all financial Eve ry day th e pr ogram fe atures expect ations . on e of the ou tstanding clerg ymen of The mus ic, furni shed by a local th e midwest , and the mes sage of orch es tr a, of which Ke nneth W iser, each gues t speaker r eaches thous- '37, is leading trumpeteer, was de- ands of hom es . clared to be fir st class, and th e Fr. Cardinal H ears President gym was· deco r ated in s choo l colors for the even in g. S. V. C. Representative In Speech Contest Mi ss Mar y An t hony, ' 37, re pre- se nt ed St. Viator Coll ege in the Aft er Dinn er Speaking Cont es t al U rb£:.Da, I llino is, on No vember 22. Each college in the state was al- lowed one sp eak er, and all con test- an ts spoke on th e subj ec t " Edu - cation". Miss Anthony r eports that th e present tre nd in aft er dinner speaking is toward the humorous and e nt erta ining. All of the sp eak- ers tr eated the topic f or discussion in a light, amus ing ve in . T he winners re presented Weat on College, No r th Ce ntr al Coll eg e and Eureka Coll ege. On the same day , th e Rev. John StaffDi'd, C. S. V., act ed as chai rman of th e Forensic S ection of th e st at e m ee ting of th e illinois Associ ation of Teachers of Speech in U rbana . Faith In S anta Claus R es tored On December 9, Doc tor Cardinal was present at N ot re Dame U ni v er- si ty where he h eared an address by Franklin D. Roosevel t, Presi dent of the U ni t ed Stat es. The occasion Two s tudents witnessed . the fa tal was the celebration of the inde pe nd- a ccident, and re ported that a black, cn ce of the P hilippine Isl ands. powe rful lim osine had committed the To Wi nne rs Of Novelty Contest deed, and , wit hou t stopping, h ad sped off into t he fall ing darkness. The s tudents we re unabl e to as - certain the li cense number, and as yet the criminal is at lar ge. Th us clo se t he cur tains for an- o ther campus m ascot. They co me and they go. 'Vi ator' h ad succeeded l as t year's fa vori te, 'Big Foot', and a.J;J.other dog wil l probably soon fill the ir pl aces . Bradley- College Takes Honors In Fir st Br oa d cas ts As we go to press, the earl y bal- lo ti ng on the S t. Viator-University of Chi cago radio de bate is giving th e hom team a s li ght ed ge, and if tbe l ead continues , Chicago w ill be the third consecuti ve school to go down b efore the Viator debaters. Th e A camp us r es ident , t wo Chicago- T he Grand Dra wing took place last ans and an inbabi t ant of DesPi aines, Tu esday ni g ht at the At hl etic Nov- illino is, w ere su rpri s ed by the p re- elty Party before over two hundred mature arrive l of Santa Claus lt;.st week when they received checks anxious ti cket holde r s, who al l had An "'m In li re Is the r.n ly lu,.ttme "' "' rt h the tlncJ fnq ; li nd It Is nut to II " t vUnd , l l' t lan,h, t.ut In th " hea r t. I Uel t. - Robe rt Lc,. u /11; S1: eVenstm, 5 Ciscans Plan Greater Acti on At Convention Viat or Del egate Serves On General Commi ttee A group of Viator studen ts attend- ed the t we n ty-s ixth general meetin g of the Ci sca on November 28 at I mmac ul ate Hi gh School In Chi cago . Th e con vocation me t with a single pur pose in mind and h eart-- t hat of Catholk Actlon . Th e delega tlon from St. Viator was headed by th e R ev . Wllll am J. Cr ac kn ell, C. S. V., a nd t he R ev. M. P . Loughr an, C. S. V., moder - ato r an.... ass istan t m oder ator re- s pec tively. Inc luded in the g roup were Sec-re t ary Raymond Cav anagh, '38, who la ter se rved on the Re- so luti on Comm ittee ; Vice- Presi den t We eger Krauser, '38, Tr eas urer Don Mor gan, ' 39 ; William Cahill , '39, Richard P owers, '39, Robert Regan, '39, J ac k Mannon , '39, Ri chard Ron- an, ' 39, and E lmer Pepin, '39 , who j ourneyed fr om Mant eno. The presi- de nt , .Mi ss Mary Anthony, '37, w as un a ble to attend t he meeting. Following a n ew syst em, the high sc hoo l and co llege groups were s ep- ar ated and ea ch held i ts own dis cus- sions for the m orning ses si on. They asse mbled toget her in th e afternoon and re-dlscu ssed thelr morning pro- pos al s. Th e r esult of this innova- tion, e nabling t he dis c uss ing of all proposed r esoluti ons by the ent ire body, s eemed very su ccessful. The r esoluti ons centered around th e doctrine of tbe My sti cal Body of Christ as on e of th e bes t means f or the motiva tion of all Catholi c Ac tion. College and high school s tudents expr ess ed the m selves in fav- or of more em phasi s on the princi - pl es of marriage and social justi ce in the schools. The cult ivation and st udy of Catholi c authors, as Ches- te rton, Belloc, and Da wson, were widely disc uss ed and r eceived much fa vorable commen t. Fr. Hu tto n To Dires t Holy Na me Society The appointment of the Rev. P aui H utton, C. S. V., as moder ator of th e College Hol y Name Soci e ty was announced fr om tbe pr esiden t's of· fice last w eek. Father H ut t on su c- ceeds the Rev. Be rnard Mul vaney, C. S. V., whose duties as acting Dean of Studi es prevent his con tinu- ance as mode rat or. F ather Hu tton, w ho is a prefe ct in Roy Hall, is in an advantageous pos i lion for su ccessfull y fill ing his new pos t. Hi s close contact wi th t he college m en enabl es him to aid in instilling th e prin ci pl es of the society in to th e d ai ly lives of the s tude nt s. Th e St. Viator Holy Name Societ y w as reorganized last s prin g after several years of in ac ti vity . That su ch on or ganiza tion should have a place on ev ery Catholic c ampus was the convi ction of both the s tudent body and fac ulty, and th e cal l fo r Bradley will parti cipate in the Illinoi s-Iowa cage tou rnament at Bergin Debating Society u sed Rich- a rd Cr awley, ' 36, and Weeger Kr aus- er, '38, agains t th e Chi cago t eam. In the op enin g bro ad cast, V ia t or d efeated DeKa lb S tate T eachers' Col- fr om the St. Viator Athl etic Assoc- hopes of tak ing home th e " bacon". iation. Four checks in all t ot alling Mrs. Cl aren ce Ke nnedy, w if e of th e twenty doll ars went me rr ily on the Kankakee County Supe ri nt e nden t of w ay to n ot ify these l ucky pe rsons Sc hoo ls dr ew the lucky names. Mu cb that th ey h ad won th maj or pri z- h ilari ty w as cause d wh en Ray Tur es es of the Gr and At hleti c Novel ty claimed the fir st prize of ten do l- Drawing that the Mon ogram Club Jars in behalf of Miss Wetston e, hi s had s ponsor ed in connection w ith a friend , who w as un able to jo urney d rive to r aise sufflc ient f unds fo r all the way fr om DesPl aines for the purpose of attending th e great est me mb e rsh ip w as answered by every Monogram A wards. par ty of th e year. Catholi c man of Roy Hall. Rick Isl and during the Chri stm as vacation. Augus tana is promoting lege, and on the f ollow ing Saturday t his tourname nt w hi ch wi ll incl ude won over Northwes te rn Unive r sity . four Il linois and four I owa fi ves. An increasing number of ba llot s Bradley will e nt er the cont es t de- points to the growing popularity of pe nding upon s ix le ttermen: J ed the weekl y Radio Debate H our, and Beards ley, Don Mill er , Ch urch Kamp , the publi c app ro val of Viator de- Dal e Engl eho rn , Frank Meeske and ba ting tactics can be foun d in most Frank Finney. of th e audi en ce critici sms. The winners wer e: Miss H azelm ary W ets t one, D es - Plaines, Ill inois , $10. 00 Mr. J ohn Hilke r, r eslUen t stu- de nt . ..... .. $5.00 Miss Mary Lou ise Quinn , Chicago, lll inols $3.00 R evere nd E. ca.go, Ill inois . J. McCarthy, Chi- $2.00 Th e Reve r end Francis J . H a urber, C. S. V., a th le tic direc tor wishes to extend his appreciation and thanks throu gh the columns of th e VIATO R- IAN to friends, al umni , and th e student body for their sp lendid co- operation whi ch made the A thl eti c Dri ve an overwh elming success. Aug us ta na- Seven letter men ha ve re ported to Coach Almqui st. They ar e: Capt. H arry Mead, 6' 7" center, Gib Swa nson, Mer rill Anderson, and Matt Cze rwins ki, forward s; Eddi e Moe, Stan Zelno and Bu tc h Miller, g uards.

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The Viatorian - Vol. LIII, No. 5

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Page 1: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1935-11-26

A cert ai n di g n it y of n1:1nnar·s Is nbl!ohrte ly nacau Ary t o tnakG e.v~ n th o t11 0II l vo h u1b lc c ll n r · :~c t cr e it he r N!A!lactnb lc o r ra · 11; paet ad 1t1 th a World .- Chc at or · fi e ld .

VO.L. Llll.

mb~ Jtintnrimt llO UJlBONNA.IS , .ILLINOlS T UE S O A Y, N OVE Mlll':Jt 26, I UaG

Debaters Meet Ray Cavanagh Engineering Athletes Win Illinois Univ. E lected Head Club Advances In Bid For

On Thursday of Choral Clu b To Spotl ight Party Success Season 's Openers Brighten

Championship Hopes Public Demands Increase

Singner s' W ork Four Chicagoans Lead New

Or ganization Pr ogram Reveals Campus •

Hidden Talent

W ith tllree hard-foug h t debates Ray mond Cavanagh , '38, o ( Ch i- In order lo secure a medium f or T he newly e lecled presid ent of the cag o, was elec t ed Presid en t or th e t he a dvo.ncernen t of their com mon Monog ram Club ~umed in a f ew

to thei r c r edit, the Viator w rangler s Via tor Chor a l Club la s t week . Pat- inte res ts , t he pre-engin eeri ng s tu - wo rds the s uccess of th e A thl e ti c wi ll be pitted agains t the Univer- ric1< B imm er le, ' 39, of Ch ica g o, w a s den ts of the Coll ege banded th em - Novelty Party when h e toJd you r sity of I llinois her e on Thu rsday, na m ed Secr e t ary and Don Mo rgan, selves toge the r lase w eek in an E n- repor t f' d im m edi P't t e ly afte r th e affa ir D ecember 12. The R ev. J ohn S tai- '39, of Chi cag o, was chosen Treas- g ineer ::;) ' C l nU. T he rnec ll ng Wa.!i las t Monday, " I beli eve H was the for d, c . s. v. , coach , nnnounced yes- urer. ca lled by Dr. W il li a m J . O' Don ne ll , bes t pa r ty ever held in the r ef ec­

t erday .that the m en, Richa r d Cr aw­

ley, 36; H arold B unte, '39; aJ)d Ed­

ward Bu ttgen , '37, who met Purdu e

The club or igina ll y organ ized with- of the D epa rtm en t of Ma thematics, to r y". ou t officer s , bu t its inc r ea sed a c - upon the ins is tence o£ sever a l col- The g a y ly decora ted h a ll was fill ­tivity and lt s numer ous pros pective I lege men who hope to ma k e th e ed to capaci ty, and wh ether th e pa­e~gagements cal led for adn~inis tra- ~ club one of the mos t a c tive organ- trons wer e mor e p leased w ith the

on the same question befor e t he tJve heads. T he o verwhelm mg sue- izations on the campus. . evening's en tertainmen t th an the Thanl>:sgiving recess, w ill again de- cess of the Chor~l Club's ini ti al a p - J S tephen W en the, '38, was named Monogram Club was s a t isfi ed with fend a sys t em of s t a t e m edicine. pearance early ln November h as ~· presiden t of the Eng ineer s ; J a mes the proceeds is uncertain . The

Miss Margu eri t e Sen esac, ,38

, A ug - brought it much i n demand . Nag le, '30, w as elected vice-presi- affa ir was t he f irs t of Its ki nd to In Kanl{akee dent ; Robert Donnellan , '39, secre- be spon~ored by the lette r men, but

ust Black, '38, and Edward Bu ttgen, TbP organizat ion entertained the I tary; and P a trick Bim merl e, ' 39, this s uccess w i l l pr oba bly caJl fo r '37, successfully m a tched wi t and Study Club of St. P atri ck' s Church , treasurer . A ll or the off ice r s are an annua l party.

argument with the d eba ter s of Kankal{ee, several week s a go, a nd ft-om Chi cag o. Included on th e eveni ng' s p rogram Olive t College w hen the teams m et since that time has been p reparing The c lub p lans to inaug urate an was some of the bes t talen t on the last Monday a t Olivet. The d e- for R Chris t m as r adio broadcast. extensive program aft er the Chris~- camp us and in the vici nity. Voca l ba t e was Viator 's initial d iscussion T he second of a series of moving m as holidays. Gues t s peak er s w ill solos were offer ed by Miss Dori .:::>

p ic t ures featu r ing <~Yesterday's be ask ed to a ddress th e s t udents c:.t Barnett, '39, Ray mond Cavanttgh, '38, Melodramas" w as offered to the s tu- bi- monthly m eetings, and the c lub Miss Olin e Dandu rand, '39, J ohn dent body befor e Thanksgiving. P e te r member s w ill t r avel to the lead ing Her~y, '37, Miss E lizabeth H art, of Bra dy, '39, d elightfully entertained eng ineering p lants in thi s section Kankak ee, and Mis s J une Uhlm, of the a udience w i th saxophone solos of the country in order to s tudy Kankakee. P a ul Marcot t , '38, de-

of this y ear's Confer ence question,

and the int rica cies of the problem were r evealed as the w rang le r s clashed. Via tor defended the nega­tive of the proposi tion : "Resolved : That the power of the Supreme Court to declare acts of Congress unconstitu tional should be revoked".

Continuing for ensic r elations of long-s tanding, William Crannell , '37, Stephen Gould, '36, both Conference m en of last year, and Will iam Ca­hill , '39, one of the roost promising of the freshman recrui ts , t r aveled to Urbana last w eek to meet the University of Illinois . T he B ergin deba t ers opposed any attempt t o introduCe univer sa l state m edical cure, and F a ther Stafford expressed himself pleased · wi th t he Viator w ork. Althoug h , it was later learn­ed from the three debaters them­selves that the coach had held other-wise in private.

"Hit and R un Driver" Ends Life Of Mascot

In less than six hour s after the a ppearance on the campus of the last is sue of the VIAT ORIAN, which carried a story of the adoption her e of an Irish t errior mascot, the dog, 'Viator ' was dead . It was rumored at s upper that night that h e had "gon e th e way of a ll dogs" while cr ossing the h ighway.

d uring the evenin g . T hese s hows mach inery in opera tions . lightfully entertained the g uests w ith a r e proving effective &S an oppor - En tertain Sch ool an instrumental number and Char-t unity for the tired s tuden t to es- "The E lec trica l Voice" , a ta lking- les Gilbe r t, '39, master of the cape the t edium of constan t s tudy, moving pictur e was sponsored here violin, scored a s olo triumph . and, incident al ly , t he shows contri- by tbe club las t Friday n ig ht. Th e bute m aterial ly to the coffe r s of the Choral Club.

Viator President On Sacred Radio Program

A ccording to one campus com­men t ator, Viator is beginning to m onopolize the air lanes of the Chi­cago broadcasting s t a tions.

s how was open to the entire s t udent bod y , and the intricate m echanism and oper ation of the te lephon e were explained on the screen . This show ­ing was the f irs t of a .s eries of such pic tures .

Students Revel At Thanksgiving Dance

The Very Rev. Dr. Edward V. Car din R.!, c. s. v., a dded to the The Thanksgiving Benef it Dance, g r owing ,list of Via tor m en w ho are sponsor ed by the College Club on a ppearing on radio programs when November 23, p roved the a cme in he spoke on the Mid-day Service hil arity and informality . Stephen p r og ram of S tation w. G . N . last Gould, '36, a c t ing pres ldent of the Saturday. The s ubject of Doctor I club, announced ear ly this w eek that Cardinal's talk was ' 'Life". the affair also r eached all financial

Every day the p rogram features expectations. one of the ou tstanding cler g ymen of The mus ic, furni shed by a local the midwest, and the m essage of or chestra, of which K enneth W iser, each guest s peak er r eaches t hous- '37, is leading trumpeteer, was de-ands of hom es. clared to be first c lass, and the

Fr. Cardinal H ears Presiden t gym was· decorated in s chool colors for the even in g.

S. V. C. R epresentative In S peech Contest

Miss Mary An thony, '37, r epre­sented S t . Via tor College in th e Afte r Dinner Speaking Con t est a l U rb£:.Da, I llinois, on N ovember 22. Each colleg e in the state was al­lowed one speaker , and all con test­ants spok e on the subjec t "Edu ­cation". Miss Anthony r eports that the present t r end in afte r dinner speaking is toward the humorous and ente r ta ining . All of th e speak­er s treated the topic f or d iscussion in a light, amus ing ve in. The winners r epresented Weaton College, Nor th Central College and Eureka College.

On the same day, the R ev. J ohn StaffDi'd, C. S. V., a c ted as chairman of the Forens ic Section of the s t ate m eeting of the illinois Association of T eachers of Speech in U rbana.

Faith In Santa Claus Restored On December 9, Doctor Cardinal

was present at N otr e Dame U niver­si t y w her e he h eared an address by Franklin D . Roosevelt, Presid en t of the U nit ed S ta tes. The occasion

Two s tudents witnessed . the fa t al was the celebration of the independ­a ccident , and r eported that a black, cnce of the P hilippine Islands . powerful lim osine had committed the

To Winners Of Novelty Contest deed, and, without stopping , had s ped off into the fall ing darkness. The s tudents wer e unable to as­certain the license number, and as yet the criminal is at la rge.

Th us close the cu r tains for an­other campus m ascot. They come and they go. 'Viator' h ad s ucceeded last year's f a vori t e , 'B ig Foot', and a.J;J.other dog wil l probably soon fill the ir places.

Bradley-

College Takes Honors In First Broadcast s

As we go to press , the early bal­loting on the S t. Viator -U n iversity of Chicago r a dio debate is giving the hom team a slight edge, and if tb e lead continues, Chicago w ill be the third consecutive school to go down befor e the Viator deba te r s . The

A campus r esident, two Chicago- The Grand Dra wing took place last ans and an inbabit ant of DesPiaines, Tuesday nig ht a t the A t hletic N ov­illinois , w ere surprised by the p re- elty Party before over two hundred mature arrivel of Santa Cla us lt;.st week when they received checks anxious t icke t holder s, who al l had

An "' m In li re Is the r.n ly lu,.ttme "' "' rth th e tln cJ fnq ; li nd It Is nut to II" t vU nd , l l't r vrel~n lan,h, t.ut In th" hea r t. IUel t. - Robert Lc,. u /11; S1:eVenstm ,

NUMUEf~ 5

Ciscans Plan Greater Action

At Convention Viator Delegate Serves On

General Committee

A g roup of Viator studen ts attend­ed t he twen ty-six th gener a l meeting of t he Cisca on November 28 at I mmaculate Hi g h School In Chicago. The convocat ion met with a sin g le p u rpose in mind and heart--that of Catholk Actlon .

Th e de lega tlon fr om S t . Viator was headed by the Rev. Wllllam J. C racknell , C. S. V. , a nd the R ev. M. P . Loughran, C. S. V., moder­ato r an.... ass istan t m oder ator r e­s pecti vely . I nc luded in the g roup w er e Sec-re tary Raymond Ca vanagh, '38, who la ter served on the Re­solution Comm ittee ; Vice-President W eeger Kra user , '38, Treasurer Don Mor gan, '39 ; William Cahill , '39, Richard P ower s , '39, Robert Regan, '39, J ack Mannon, ' 39, Ri chard Ron­an, '39, and E lmer P epin, '39, who journeyed f rom Manteno. The presi­dent , .Miss Mary Anthony, '37, w as una ble to attend the m eeting.

Following a n ew sys t em, the high school and colleg e groups wer e sep­a rated and ea ch held its own discus­sions for the m orning session. They assembled together in the afternoon and r e-dlscussed thelr morning pro­posals . The r esult of this innova­t ion , enabling t he discussing of all p roposed r esolutions by the en t ire body, seemed ver y successful .

The r esolutions centered around th e doctrine of tb e Mystical Body of Christ as one of the best means for th e motivation of all Catholic Act ion. Colleg e and high school s tudents expressed them selves in f av ­or of mor e em phasis on the princi­ples of marriage and social justice in the schools. The cultivation and s tudy of Catholic authors, as Ches­terton, Belloc, and D a wson, were widely discussed and r eceived m uch fa vor a ble comment.

Fr. H utton To Direst Holy Name Society

The appointmen t of the Rev. P aui H utton, C. S . V., as moderator of the College Holy Name Socie ty was announced f r om tbe presiden t's of · fice last w eek. Father H ut ton suc­ceeds th e R ev . Bernard Mulvaney, C. S . V., whose duties as acting Dean of Studies prevent his con tinu ­ance as moder a tor.

F ather Hutton, w ho is a pr efec t in Roy H all , is in an advantageous posi lion for s uccessfully fill ing his new pos t. His close contact w i th the college m en enables him to aid in instilling the principles of the societ y in to the d aily lives of the s tudents.

The St. Viator H oly N a m e Society w as r eorganized last spring after sever a l year s of inactivity. Th a t such on organiza tion should have a place on ever y Catholic campus was the conviction of both the s tudent body and faculty, and the call for

Bradley will participate in the Illinois-Iowa cage tournament at

Bergin Debating Society used R ich­a rd Crawley, '36, and W eeger Kra us ­er , '38, agains t the Chicago team .

In the opening broadcast, V ia tor defeated DeK a lb S tate T eacher s' Col-

f rom the St . Viator Athlet ic Assoc- hopes of takin g hom e the "bacon" . iation . F our checks in all totallin g Mr s. Clarence K ennedy, w ife of the twenty dollars went merrily on the Kankakee County Superintendent of w ay to notify these lucky persons Schools drew t he lucky nam es . M ucb tha t they h ad won the · m a jor priz- h ilari ty w as caused w hen Ray T ures es of the Grand A t hletic Novelty claimed the first pr ize of t en dol­Drawing tha t th e Monogram Club Jars in behalf of Miss W etstone, his h ad s ponsored in connection w ith a friend , w ho w as una ble to journey d rive to r aise sufflcient funds fo r all the way f r om DesPlaines for the

purpose of a t tending the grea t est membership w as answered by every Monogram A wards. pa r ty of the yea r . Catholic man of Roy Hall.

R ick I sland during the Christm as vacation. Augustana i s promoting lege, and on the follow ing Saturday this tournament w hich will include won over Northwestern University. four Illinois and four Iowa fi ves. An increasing number of ba llots Bradley w ill enter the con t es t de- points to the growing popularity of pending upon six lettermen : J ed the weekly Radio Debate H our, and Beardsley, Don Miller , Church Kamp, the public a pp roval of Viator de­Dale Englehorn, Frank Mees ke and ba ting tactics can be foun d in most Frank Finney. of the audience criticism s .

The winner s were: Miss H azelm ary W etstone, D es-

Plaines, Ill inois, $10.00 Mr. J ohn Hilker , r eslUen t stu -

dent . . .... .. $5.00 Miss Mary Louise Quinn, Chicago,

lllinols $3.00 R ever end E .

ca.go, Ill inois . J . McCarthy , Ch i­

$2.00

The Reverend Francis J . H a urber, C. S . V., a thle tic direct or wishes t o extend his appreciat ion and thanks through the columns of the VIATO R­IAN to f r iends, a lumni, and the stud en t body for their splendid co­oper a tion which made the A thletic Dri ve an overwhelming s uccess.

A ug ustana-

Seven lettermen have r eported to Coach A lmquis t . They are: Cap t . H arry M ead, 6' 7" center, Gib Swanson , Mer rill Anderson, and Matt Czerwins ki, forwards ; Eddie Moe, Stan Zelno and Bu tch Miller , g uards.

Page 2: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1935-11-26

J?AO£ 1:WO

AtUne:! TM

O~Mr &f tM B:uk.etball k ,u<in on D~rn~r 12

VIATOR SPORTS S"'.lmp Tho.t~

J,. IJey• You v .u-.lty C•9en L~t ·• G.J .

Covers A ll A thletics

GREEN WAVE OF BOURBONNAIS - 1935 EDITION

Winning one, tying three and los ing four the r eco rd of the present "Fightin' Irish", while not as impressive as desired, showed an improvement over last year's. Pictured above are the members of the Viator squad, which under the direction of John Mc­Namara, was handicapped by injuries throughout the season and only won the homecoming tilt against Carbondale, a team that the Green Wave had never defected before.

R eading (left to right), back r ow: Tobin, Igoe, L enah an, Meyers, Monahan, Cullen, Sandquist and H erlihy. Fourth row: Mur-phy, Dore, Polla1<, Duff, Gibbons, Noonan, a nd Bimmerle. T h ird row: Hilke r , Ronan, Finneg2.D, Donnellan, Osenglewski, Rohins ky. Betourne, Palladino, Maste rson, Saia, Olsen, Mackin, and Cleays. Second row: Coach J ohn McNamara, Enders, Tures, O'Connor--, Co-captain Ray Roche, Bob Schumacher, Marik, Co-captain Frank Krauklis, Fahey, Blazevich , Bro. Edw. DesLauriers and Gene Donnelly, assistant coaches. F'ront row: Bill Schumacher, business manager, Schmidt, equipment manager, Guy Diggle, Etten, Stev­e ns, Burmeister, Straub, Fanning, Branand and Kalkowski , assistant managers.

'We'll Win at Least Half' ... Asserts Bask_etball Mentor

A mediocre basl<etball season is in the offing for the Irish quintet ac ­cording to Coach John McNamara, who is busily en ga.ged in the ar­duous tasl< of whipping a team int;)

Basketball Schedule Announced By Viator

Schumacher Stevens on All­Opponent Teams

Abe Rohinsky and Ray O'Connor Gain Berths On Second 11

Bob Schumacher and Johnnie Ste-

vcns, sophomores and varsity grid-

Missouri State Teachers' Tie Green Wave, 6 to 6

St. Benedict's Whip St. Viator 26 -0

shape for the first encounter that A lthough a f ew more games may ders were s ignally honored by the Scoring two touchdowns in the

will taJ<e place 011 Decembe r 12 ~n be added to this schedule the Board St. Norbert eleven last week when first quarter and two touchdowns h c in the last quarter, St. Benedict's

t e o1lege Gymnasium. J oliet Jun- of Athletic Control has given the • they were: named for the Green College of Atchison, Kansas, d e-

One far flung pass, caught amid the en circling a rms of three Mary­ville backs in the final period en­abled Viator's crippled grid forces to gain a 6-6 draw with the Northwest :Missouri Teachcr3 of Maryville, Mo., in an intersectional football game played on Bergin field Friday, Nov­ember 22. Tony Marik, who had booted 22 successive points after touchdowns, prior to Friday's con­test, never had a chance to add the winning point for the Maryville for­wards swarmed in on the bareheaded guard and smothered the kick be­fore it was hardly started and with it went the Green Wave's last chance for victory.

ior College, Green W ave opponent t

in the season's eyeopener, will be j Viatorian permission to print it. It I Knight's mythical all-opponent team. feated the G r een Wave gridders, 26

seeking revenge for U1eir only lost I is noticeable that the rnajority of the I Schumacher was pl&ced at the pivot to 0, on November 16 in an indoor game of last season. The Jolie t quin- games to be played are not only post while John Srevens was nam - game at the !24th Field Artillery tet will be composed of Ule sam e home games but also, with th t~ ed as the toughest guard the Nor- Armory in Chicago. men that the Viator five licked last toughest of the Little 19 colleges and bert gridiron machine meet all sea- l Some artful broken field running year. Universities. Twelve Conference son. by Weiffenbach for the Ravens seer-

Although the squad has eight games have been scheduled and it ed in the opening quarter, after monog ram men, Coach l\1cNamara is understood that Coach McNamara Abe Rohinsky, sophomore flash, five minutes of play. Weiffenbach is far from optimistic about the and Fathe r H a rbaue r, athletic dir- was p lace~ ~t ~ ~ft 'half on the sec. again scored in the first quarter on

current season's prospects. In ex ­plaining his lack of enthusiasm the basketball mentor pointed out that last year's team onJy won five games out of eighteen and this year's squad will be handicapped through the

ec tor, are trying to secure a home eleven. Insh ° Connor, fresh - a wide sweep around the Irish left a nd home contract with Illinois man tackle, earned the right tackle end from two yards out. Don Betourne, "a handsome, lithe

halfback" , counted the lone Irish touchdown in the last minutes of the game when h e took a 40 yard pass as he raced into the end zone. Bill Walsh, s ubbing for Abe Rohinsky tossed the pass.

Wesleyan University, outstanding berth on the 1\'orbert Mythical sec-

basketball quintet of the confer ence. ond team_. _ ______ _ In t h e final quarter Deutsch scor­

ed on a 35-yard pass f rom Ruberry. The fou rth touchdown was from 20 yards out by R uberry.

Coach McNam a ra has also s tated that he will endeavor to secu re a

iosses of "Streaky" Burke and Bill few more practice gaJues away from Knox, as well as Frank Straub's home. inability to r ound into shape for the / 1935-36 Basketba.Il Sch edule first few games, and the very evid- Dec. 12--Joliet Jr. College. (Home) ent fact that none of the men arc Dec. 16- No. Cot of Optometry sufficiently tall enough to com- (There ) mand the tip-off. Dee. 19-8t. Olaf, Niirut. (Home)

Frosh Promising Jan. 7- Valpariso U. (Therel

"At the present", remarked Coach J a n . 14-Ch a.rleston Teachers (Home) McNamara, "'i t looks as if three of Jan. 1&--Shurtleff C<> Uege (Borne) the lettermen wil.l form the nucleous Jan. 22-DeKalb U niversity (Home) of the team and that the newcom- Jan. 25- Nor mal University (There} ers will fight it out with the other Feb. 3- North Cen. College (There) veterans for Ule remaining two Feb. 8-DeKalb U niversity (Ho-me) berths. McElligott, Claeys and Feb. 10--Wheaton C<> Uege (Borne) Monohan seem to be the best of the Feb. 14- Normal University (Borne) new men but then it is too early Feb. 21--Carbonda.le U n.iv. (Home) in the season for me to say definite- Feb. 25-1'\Iacomb Teachers (Home) ly which freshmen s tand the best Feb. 28- Carthage College (There)

chance of earning those starting positions''.

"This hoy McElligott is the most

i){ar. 3-Va.lpariso U. (Home) Mar. 7- \Vheaton College (There )

finished freshman we have ever had. ""Jim" Dugan, '34, is now studying while Claeys and :Monahan both I law at Loyola University, Chicago;

while H erman Snow is doing likc>-(Continued on Page Six ) wise at Northwestern University.

Viator Threatened

Marik Heads Viator Monogram Club

St. Viator threatened to score in Twice earlier in the game the on-the first period, advancing to the rush of the Green Wave was halted

At a recent meeting of the var- Raven's 15-yard line. On fourth by a stubborn 1-laryville team on the si t y Monogram Club Tony Marik, down J oe Saia withdrew to the 26- !-foot line. Palumbo, center of the '37, a native of the land of the yard line fo r a place kick, but fail- Teachers' eleven, was the outstand-mule (Missouri , to you freshmen). ed. ing Missourian of the day. was e lected president to succeed The Green Wave had another S ummary Clarence Noonan,_ ' ~6, r etiring pr.esi- chance in the t hird quarter when St. Viator Pos. Maryville dent. The rem~mmg three off1ces 1 Bill Walsh, sophomore flash , inter - Fahe LE Zuckowski were won by Ch1cagoans: Ray Tures, cepted a pass and ran the ball 35 · Y varsity end for the past two sea- yards to the Raven's 20-yard line. I ~~~k- LT . Molitoris sons, being selected as vice-presi- Three plays failed and Frank Straub (c) .. LG Flander s dent, while F rank Krauklis, co- punted out of bounds on the St. Schumacher C. .. . P a lumbo captain of football, and Bill Schu- Benedict's 5-yard stripe. Stevens ..... RG .... . ....... Rouse macher, student manager of athle- Summary O'Connor . .. .. J;t T .... Clabaugh

tics, were the unanimous choice of St. Viator ( O) St. Benedict's (2 6) Tures . · ···· f<E Hicks the members for the offices of Saia ................ : .. QB .. Roudon treasurer and secr e tary respectively. Fahey L8 ........ Kurpiewski Walsh .... RH Gates

Marik LT Evans Rohlnsky ............ LH Bernau

'"Jim'' O'Connell, brother of Bar· Speaker LG Mermis Masterson ........ FB ............ Sorenson Schumacher C . ......... .......... Casey

aey who is at pr esent enrolled here. E.;Tten ......... RG Welsh came down to 'lee the Norbert-Viatl)r I O'Connor . R T Bushman game. "Jim" is a higll powered RE Deutsch salesman for a large tobacco con1 · _

1ur_e_s-:--·c-···_··_··_· ----:::---:----

pany in Chicago. (Continued on Page Six)

Houchdowns--Betourne, Roudon. ·

Officials- Referee: Fred Young, ( ill Wesleyan); umpire: B. Sutherland, (ill. Wesleyan); head lin.esman: J_ Travnecik (Armo~r) .

I

Page 3: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1935-11-26

'l' l iES O A )?, NOVI!:MllE tt 2!1, 1!13fi

I St. ViatorAII-Opponent Selection\

Tllla Vt i\'l'O IUi\N

Gasior's Switchmen Win 1-M Football Title Red W ine and Brown Bread

F''lt-st Tc~nn :St-cn nd Tea m Dear J . R. ; sln coeds are two rare t.ypca: the P lo;r c1· Co llege Po-t;. P ln.yor Cu ll.l' ~~0 I F oxen Stars I n 18 to 0 Rout of Th ere lt~ v. g- ro up or Hludtmls on coJJ egialc type and the dgar srnokw Duetsch St. Benedict HE Di clccr Vlllparaiso Midgets In Final Tilt the campu s w ho, I four, a re onliro!y er" . - YIATORlAN. Durling, I can \~' hal en F'enis Insti tute RT Mora.wsld Car bondale -- unuppreclo.led. Conscqu cnll y, I feel stand a man who murd ers hja grey Mil<etanic t. Norbert RR }.{oiloru s N W. Nlo. Teachcr::J Ua.slo r 's Switchm an, Lh e da rk- li m y duly Lo do a ll in my power to old rooth er, and who gam bles away Polum.bo NW. lvlo. Ten.cher s CH T roJta::l DeK~:li b ho rse of Lh e Intra-Mural footoall promote a. belter Llnd enslandjng of her JLfe aavlng,- although I should Howard DcKalb LG 1vlcnnis S t. Bened ict leo.g ue, co n lln uod Lh elr aw·pr ls ing their tru e worth . 1 refer to th os~ look at hirr1 very croaaly. But I Eaton :h.fcKendree LT P.v n.n s St. Benedict ser ies of upse t~:~ in Lh c lournam enl noble s pecim ens of youthfu l virtue draw th e tln e on cigar smokers! Af-J. La rsch McKendree LE Vansistlnc St. Norber t play and mn.naged to defeat Minnie 's and Am eri canism usuall y a llu ded lo ter a JJ , there are some things that Nori DcKalb QB Martin Sl. Benedict Midgets In the fin n! ro und and lhus a.s "the g ripers". just arc not being done. Cigar butts Wilson McKendree RH Trackus DeKalb earn lh e titl e of "I ntra-Mural Foot- To me il i !:l mo!:lt edifying lo see smell SO fou l, and what the beck Wiefl'enbach St. Benedict LH K a r r Valparaiso ball c hampions of S t. Viator Co l- these fin e young men taking s uch are you going to do when you want Neff S t. Benedict FB Keyes CarbondaJe lege" . T he score of the champion- an ac ti ve interest in campus affairs. a cigarette. ~ .1, my dear! *The above my thical a ll-opponent teams wct·c se lcclcd Vy u m ajority of ship m a tch was 18 to 0 in favor Th eir earnes t effor ts to improve ex-the varsi ty football players of this year 's Green W ave, Lhe Viator Coaches of the poyular " und er-dogs'' who h b .

1 t

and your spor ts edt tor Due to the number of voles certain oppon ents only last wee k ma naged to do lh c is tmg conditions ave ecn mam ·es T he Joke of lhe W eek-d f l d lh time and lim e again. Not once, "That was some blonde I saw you recetved tlley were JUdged too valuable to be left off an al l-star team impossible when tl1ey e ea e c but often I have heard th ese mis-

and so they were swttched frmn left to n ght bali, o r 1n to a pos ition F igh tin' Monks, 12 to 6, be ing the under s tood crusade rs advance plans with last night. Where did you find that the varsity men thought they wot.ld be capa ble of handling. I first team to sco re upon th e Berna- of r eform w h ich they th emselves, her?"

-===========~=:_:::=;-~:-:-:-J;;- - --------- ·-- --- l ditl es. in a U mod est y. declared far superior "Oh, 1 just opened my wallet , and ; Joe Spraflca, fo llowing in the The Switchm en scored th eir f lrst to the existing sys tem. I have there s he was!"

5 port Shorts

footsteps of his il lustrious CYO touchdown ear ly in the first quarter heard it said (Oh perish th e thought) stable-mate, Jimmie Chris ty, has when actin-captain, John Foxen in- that this g roup of s tudE: nts wish to A youngster from the vi llage who g iven up boxing and is now training ter cepted a :N"1 1dget piss and return- ous t those in charge of the various was walking across the campus one Don Morg-an Joe I<allwwskl, ed it 35 yards for th e score. Foxen activities. This is grossly fa lse. frosty rooming beheld steam rising another of the Chi cago CYO products then with the wind at his back I know f rom person a l experience out of the sewer in the road on the and captain of last year's team, a lso and wi t h the belj.J of his team-males, that, w hen called upon , "the grip- side of Roy HalL H e watched it in announced hi s retirement. Joe will who played m sp1nng ball the re- ers" a re perfeclly wilung t.O let rapt s il ence for a few moments, and

W1th the passm g of another foot- endeavoi to Impart some of his nng m a inder of the game, managed to others con t inue to do the work. then call ed to his companion, "Come ball season our attent10n now turns generalship to the newcomers keep the Midgets at bay wilh so me I have a lways held a s a brother on, H en ry, hell's busted loose and all naturally to the basketball court I Your columni st. s uggests th a t U10se marvelous punting. to "the gri ppe rs" those Honor Roll the smoke is coming out". Forty candidates r eported for prac- mteres t ed m havmg a pa rt of the Passes DeJ'ea.t ~UdgeL't Students who, afte r asking their less . tice and al ready th ey have been footba ll f ie ld flood ed for tce-skatmg I The second half was not well •un- inte lligent fellow student what grad- I Keeping smiling- J. R. pruned to a mere twen ty by Coach ktndly express you r destre to Fath- der way when Sandhube r tossed d es he r eceived recite their own en-McNarnara. Those men dropped er F J H arbau er , ou r athlettc ..... . - 35-yard pass to Tony Gavin . Gav- viable accomplishment. There is

from the varsity squad have been rector. ing caugh t the pass in the end zone magna.nlmity in the way these int~ organized into a "f3" t eam and a r e for the Switchmen's second score. e llectua l heavyweights are willing to to be coached by Brother Eddie "Lights Out" For Psy- T he try for extra point was wide. take the pains to explain in detail how DesLauriers. A schedule is being chology St udent Ed Dilge r, star bacl< of the Mid- sim ple their friend's courses really arranged for the R eserves by the gets was injured on the p lay and are, and how they earned A's in the newly appointed coach and his f resh - Atlanta, Ga., (ACP )- Charles Hud- was forced to l eave the game. same subjec ts without difficu lty. man manager, Bi ll Etten. son, Emory University student, spent Midway in t he final period the Most s incer ely yours,

Looking over the varsity squad we find that it is composed of one senior ( Frank Krauklis), three jun-iors, seven sophomores, and nine fresh IT! en . '!here a re eight letter­men. Bill Knox, a guard and "Streaky'' Burke, forward, were the only two lettermen of last year's team lost. Burke graduated while Bill Knox, considered by many ex­perts to be one of the best guards Viator has had in recent years, fai l-ed to return to college.

th ree days in a hypnotic trance rec- Switchmen cut lose with another Gi les Swashbucket. ently when the professo r who had passing attack that featured the ---inadver t ently hypnotized him was un- tossing of San- huber a nd the re- It is not necessary for any Viator able to bring him out of it. ceivi ng of Foxen . The cli max of man to read men's fashi ons--not

ProL W . c. Workman of Emory's this attack was reached when Foxen as long as we have Hank Wulffe in psychology department attempted to r eceived a 15-yard heave on the our midst. If I co uld borrow one hypnotize a s tudent for demons tra - 20-yard stripe and managed to cros.s of Hank's ensembles I wonder if 1 tion purposes during a lecture. H e the o-oal line for the final score. could qualify as a sheep in Wulffe was unsuccessful, and was about to Th e

0

try for the extra poin t was clothing. H enry , incidentally, docked give up when he noticed that Hud- block ed by Johnny Hilker. at Ha rvard and Alabama U. before son, watching, had gone into a rig id I n the closing minutes of the game· he came to port. trance. When he refused to re- the air was fi lled with Midget pass- ---spond to normal treatment. Prof. es in a desperate att empt to score. Of course you lmew th a t William ·workman prescribed exe rcise and Th e Switchmen had an excellent Shakespeare played half back for normal a ctivity, a nd for three days pass defense and easily defeated Notre Dame and H enry Wadsworth

Lettermen on the varsity squad Hudson was walked about the cam- s uch ''pitchers" as Vince Murphy Longfellow played end for No rth -include: : Don Betoume and "Wee pus, taken for riaes, to the movies. and Willis. The line play of Lar- western, but did you know that Willie" Dam.ler , centers; Johnnie Suddenly, on the third day, he kin and Kilbride was outs t anding as Frankens tein played g uard for Mar­

Burke, Frankie >:::~t.raub, and Tom blinked and asked what had happen- ! they repeatedly charged th rough anJ quette? I always had a hunch that Gibbons, forwards and Frank Krauk- ed. 1 hurried the passers. that guy would make a good foot-

lis, Geor ge Rogers, and Danny Blaze- I s tain the whi te snow with the blood I ball player. --vich, guards. Among the other vet- W Th t R ll I I er ans are lis ted : Bill Walsh, Dave ar r ea S eca of their wounded feet! We ask of "Men most frowned on by Wiscon-

1

Mark Twal.n's Prayer one who is the spirit of love and McGrath and Ed Dilger . who is the ever·faithful refuge and

Coach McNamar a has hopes that Thirty years ago Mark Twain, be- friend of a ll that are sore beset, TAYL OR TRANSFER, Co. In c. he may find another "Streaky'' Bur ke in ei ther Bill Walsh , Dave McGrath or Ed Dilger. All three of these sophomor es are small , ag­gressive and possessive of a shooting eye that ch aracterized "Streaky". According to Coach McNamara Bill \\' alsh is the neares t approach to being a second "Streak".

Freshmen who have made the var­sity squad a re: "Babe" Claeys, "R ed" McElligott, "Tiny" Monahan,' 'Swede" Olson, " S lim" Lenahan, Vince Mur­phy, Bill Watson, and ' 'Tip" Finne­gan. A ll of these men have great possibilities and the majority of them are over the six foo t m ar k. Many have great high school r ec­ords and there is every indication that a few of them wil l be handling the varsity berths at least a por tion of the time this season.

Odds and E nds-W e are looking forward to big

things from this boy Morgan in the 160 pound division. A freshman. Morgan bids fair to make a varsi ty position on the College boxing t eam

loved giant of American letters. and seek His aid with humble and . Insured Fre ight Forwarders w rote the "War Lord' s P rayer,'' contri t e hearts. Grant our prayer, Hauling Between w itl1 ins t ructions that it be publish- o Lord, and Thine shall be the KANKAKEE - CHICAGO

A nd All I nt ermedia t e Points ed only after his death . praise and honor and g lory, now Kanh:al<ee, Chicago, Joliet

.;I have told the whole truth in and ever. Amen" . tha t prayer" , he said, "and only dead men can te ll the truth in t h is world . It can be published after I

am dead''. Her e is his prayer:

Einbeck Studio

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St . Viator College

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Kankakee, Ill.

Phone 407

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\Vortb $12.50; Special $9.95 Coco Suede Leath er J:wkets

Knit Collar and Cuffs. $4.98 and $5.69

Capeskin or Grain Leather J ackets $5.98 and $7.98

Bair d-Swannell Tel 800 - Spor ting Goods Dept.

Hotel Kankakee Sidney H erbst, Manager

DINING ROOM MAGl\'lFICANT BALL ROOl\1

A hearty welcome awai ts the students and friends of St.

Viator College.

The CHICAGO

STORE Kankakee, IJlinois

OFFERS STUDENTS OF

ST. VIATOR COLLEGE FULL LINE OF

CLO'l'IDNG AT THE LOWEST PRICES

H is past records at Campion Academy, Wisconsin, and also his work in CYO circles are every in­dictation that he will help the pugs of Viator to many a match victory

" 0, Lord, our God, help us to tear thei r soldiers to b loody shreds with­ou t shells; help us to cover thei r smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot ic dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with t he groans of the wounded writhing in pa in; help u s to lay waste their bum ble homes with a hur ricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unvailing grief; help us to t urn t hem ou t roofless with their little children to wander unfriended thru wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst, sport of the sun flam es of summer and the icy winds of winter, broken in spirit worn with t r avel, imploring Thee for the refuge of the grave and denied it- for our sakes, who adore Thee, Lord , blast their hopes, blight thei r lives, protract their bitter p ilgrimage, make heavy their steps water t hei r way with their tears ~~~~~~~~~ ~~------------~

Page 4: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1935-11-26

PAOE FOUK

a!f1e liliatnrian Published bi-weekly throughout the year by the s tudents of

Viator College St.

Intercollegiate Campus JOSEPH PROKOPP-

Tl' ESD .-u · . x o n ;:.-'1BER 26, 19:1;;

Personalities tor) . about it boys. me

Purdue University found that stu- . . student, yes? EDITORIAL STAFF dents 'worries are 42 per cent due Of a most decidedly mausplclOU __ _

E<JJtor-in-Chlef Edward Buttgen, 37 to grades, 30 per cent due to fin- appearance, this tall. slender , cold EDWARD O'b.v RKE-Asaociate E<lJtor . . . ....... Joseph P..ondy, 37 ances, 15 per cent due to family eyed young man ~s one of the best I Of a most decidely auspicious ap~ Athletics Edltor .............................. ....................... .. ... William Schumacher, '37 1 affairs and 9 per cent aue to love j students at St. VIator College. He pearance, Edward v rtourke (sorn~-Sorority Edltor..... . ....................................................... Marguerite Senesac, '38 1 affairs.

1

, meri~ . this _praise because of his times pronounced O'Rooke) ls per-BUSINESS DEPARTMENT --- magruftcent wtelllgence and because haps the happiest man Lnis insti-

Buatness Manager.... . ....... Be rnard O'Connell1 '39 The Fordham mascot. a ram, rec - ~ of. the lopcal, diligent way ~e BJ>- tution ever saw. With a ruddy, Assistant Busi ness Manager .. . ............... . .. Patricia McLaughlin, '391 ently disgraced himself by m1stakmg plies this rntelligence. Joe 15 ab- I somewhat Laurcllan face, coal black f""l -r:uJatton Manager .... .. ............. .. ..... Bernard Benoit, '37 an elderly woman for a football spy I solutely reasonable and coldly log~- , hair and a grin that you just can' t AsaJstant Circulation Manager ...... . ................ .. ... Jack Wissing, '39 when she bent over to p1ck dande- cal even m hts Lighter moments. H e miss, Ed can make more friends in

OOLUM.NI T lions near the practice field. She Is faces no task that he does not ulll- flve m.mutes than anyone else in Cumpua Personalities ..... . .. ............... Dolph Guy, '38 now s tancllng. mately conquer, and finally under- I school. How does he do it? Well.

. .......... Patrick Bimmerle, :3397 Punsters at Manha~oLan produced stands completely. Math. is his you've got roe there. From all re-Sports Shorts Intercollegiate ....... Jobn Morris, f b .

1 particular brand of torture, but he por ts, though, you just llke hlm in-

J h Rob' '39 some gems o [ e n..rnencan anguage is also proficient in language and A lumni ..... STAFF" Witii·ERS..... .. . ... osep ID S, r ecentiy: Symmetry, a place where writing, as is testified by the fact stinctively, either that or e lse be

William Phelan. '36 Joseph Prokopp, '38 dead people are buried. Choleric, that he was one of the few to sneaks in the back door and is m d l f't th k lik 11 your heart before you know it.

Hazel Dionne, '37 ... Oline Dandurand, '39 ma e 0 1 e nee e a co ar. pass the l!:ngbsh Rhetoric Examin- Anyway, you like him and you can' t Dani el Murphy, '39 .... William Schroeder1 '39 Maneuver, a kind of fertilizer . ation twice last year. help i t. He hasn't a worry in the

A lessandro Alessandri, '37 Martyr, a mixture of sand and ce- What has he done ? Well, he has SPOI~TS REPORTERS ment. Sodden, to happen al l a t world that anyone knows of. H e is

Vincenl Murphy, '39 Robert Burmeister, ·~g

Subscription Rate $2.00 per annum. Address a ll correspondence referring either to advertising or subscription tJ

The Viatorian, Bourbonnai s , Illinois. E ntered as second class matter at the Post Offi ce of Bourbonnais, Illinois,

under the Act of March 3rd , 1~79.

ACME PRINTING CO. 121 SOUTH W ASffiNGTON AVE.

1935 Member 1936 -----145socialed Colleeiale Press----­

Distributor of

- - Colle5iate Die)est Madison, Wiscons in

CRITICISM

once. Ruminant, a small dress mate rial'.

piece of accomplished so many things that constantly la ughing, and chuckling, there is not room for them all here, no t vaguely and vacuously, but with but-he has been an Honor Roll a purpose. His fun is real , human

fe:~:~m0~h:he A~~~~~,:.~rb~~u l~ ~~~~e~: :,n,::e :~t:r~~alt:; f~e::ros.: not be out of place. issue of the VIATORIAN last year,

and likeable. Outside of being happy, Ed Is a

good football player, specializ ing in

Balm: A hobo, (youse is a balm)· inations he was one of Father s tudent, but it is feared that he is

I he twice passed the Rhetoric exam- defense \llOr k. He is olso a good

Door Knob: Something a revolv- Stafford,'s star radio debaters, and a defense man in that too. iog ~oor goes around ~ithout. he has contribu ted regularly to the However , it all comes back to one

I Onton: A f~y smellmg vegetable. VIA TORIAN thus far this year . I thing- namely, Ed's happiness. H e is Nertz: Assts tant to a doc tor. (~uy, this achieve~ent s~ou ld ce~ - the happiest man in school, and It Suicide: Always found in the g ut- ta1nly have been hs ted f1rst, - Ed1- is really a pleasure to know him.

ter. Acquire: A group of church sing-

ers Acme: To question, or to ·•arne" History Of St. Viator Co liege

a question.

Campus qu estions ol'tcn urisc wh ic h are mo t·e easi ly e , ·aded By Leo V. Nolan, C. S. V. and a small party of m en under the t h uu discussed. But t he st udent d e m onstrat io n at the last Co ll ege I The Loyola News says that Chev- IV.- The First White Settler leadership of Gurdon L . Hubbard

CJnb lll Cet in g IH·ou g hl f'o r· c ibly to attention a c haracte ri stic of our

student body whic h ca lls f o r· pause a od r eflec-tion . T o d isc uss

hc t·c t h e m e rits of th e qu esti o n cle butr;d at t he m eeting is no t ou r

in t e ntion, and to tak e issu e with ~ i t h e r p >uty is ha rd ly t h e Ju nct ion

Jf u student paper. But it b eco m es ob,·w n s to al l who s top to c o n­

" id cr t ha t our s tudents ha ve b ecome too ready in c riti c iz in g and too

rolets a re painted green so that Noel LeVasseur was born in a to the Kankakee country for this they can bide in the grass and rude log cabin at St. Michel d'Yan- purpose. In t he fall of 1820, after watch the Fords go by. aska, ..... anada, on Christmas night, an arduous journey by boat and on

1799. His parents were poor and foot, the small party set up their Herbert Hoover during his li fe illiterate and 1'10el's education was establishment on the site of the

has received 37 honorary degrees largely acquired in the primitive present town of Iroquois, at that from as many universities. (What country a round St. Michel. Ther e time and for many years afterwards foo ls these mortals be). he became proficient in wood-craft, called Bunkum. Hubbard and Le-

n egli gen t iu praising. which was to become his means of Va.ssuer conducted the Fur Com-C ri t icis m in itself is certainly not to b e conde m ned, and is ! Several ~reshmen at Palo Alto earning a livelihood in later life. pany's business in Illinois for more

often d esira bl e . Tnose tu e u , ;, It o h av~ fo und fa ult with ex is tin g I were pi cked up by the police and At the age of s ixteen, he entered than ten years. insti t u t ion s, wh o have r evealed d efects in curren t o rga ni zat ions, booked fo r petty thievery. They the service of one Rochebloue who In 1824, Hubbard married an In­have undoubted ly clon e much for the im prove me nt ot our c iviliz- h ad in their possession at the time had come to Canada from the Tili- dian princess, by name Watseka, ation. 1_1imcs a nd circumstances often d e mand a c hange. two switch engine type red lanterns nois country for the pur pose of se- with whom he lived until around

one life preserver from a foreign curing courageous, enterpris ing men 1832, when be sold his share of B ut to praise establish ed arrangements , t o su b m e r ge p e r sona l ship, one fireman's ca.p from l. ne to go into the West and trade with the trading post to LeVasseur and,

f ee lin gs in orde r tha t t h e g reatest good fo r th e g r eatest number Oakland Fire u epartment, and 16 the Indians. LeVasseur, in com- having secured an Indian divorce mi g h t prevai l, a n d to c o-op er ate with those who work for a g-ood red light bulbs and 10 yards of pany with the 80 men who Roche- from Watseka, went to Danvil le. eausc are c outribu t iou s of sen · ice whi c h likewise . c:ann ot go u n - one half-in ch rope. Cause: the fresh- bloue had gathered together , left I n 1832 LeVacceur and Hubbard

ies were engrossed in Hell Week Canada in May, 1817 and arrived were employed by the United r e wa rded. ~l'o encourage and c r eate Hew idea ls is a \\·ort!ty pur- ___

1

at John Jacob Astor's fur trading States commissioners as interpr_eters pose in life . When the freshmen at the Univer- post a t Mackinac in the summer of in the negotiation of the treaty of

\Vhy, then, must our ea rs b e c onstantl y bombarde d with sity of Manitoba, a t Winnipeg, Can- the same year. H ere Dochebloue Camp Tippecanoe, ratified January c t·iti c is m an d d iscontent 'I Can it be tru e t hat w e can find nothing ada, have their ball, they do it up I sold his rights to the men's services, 21, 1833. For his services, the gov­worthy of praise in a sc h ool as fine as o urs ~ Such a supposition right. This year's affair required five and LeVasseur and his companions ernment paid LeVa•Jseur $1800. H e jg as p r eposter ou s as it is ridi culous. ball rooms and five separat e or- became employees of the powerful was later appointed to remove the

chestras. Astor American Fur Company. Indians to their reservation at Coun-litany m en hav e d edica te d their li,·es to th e c reation of the

traditions ot sc h olarship. lead e r ship , cJrara cter , and senice whi c h

we, by virtue of suecessful matric ulation. casuall y accept as ou r

legacy. Il av c these meu liv ed in Ya iu . or have they g i \·c u u s ~t

school \\·hic h is "·orlh~· of a!l th e s•· n ·icc w e ca n poss i b l~ · giY e i t?

T h e ans\\'C'r is olnrions.

St. Viator is a great •choo l, but it w ill b e a g r·eater one wh en stu ckuts , past. present. and futu r e . disca rd their task of sea r ching

l'o1· t hings to c ritic ize in CaYo r of t he mo r e p leasant awl eas it\ r one

of prais ing.

LOOKING AT YOUR MARKS

An assignment at Utah State Col­lege required s tudents to bring in a report of the middle ages , one s tudent brought a review of "Life Begins at For ty''.

Life at the tradmg-post with its cil Bluffs, Iowa, in which work he drudgery and coarse f ood soon palled was engaged until 1836. on the eighteen-year-old adventurer . In 1835, LeVasseur bought the Entranced by the tales of friendly Frances LeVia reservation consist­Indians of a great river in the land ing of a section of land along the of the setting sun, LeVasseur and Kankakee river, west of Davis one companion left the services of Creek, where he established the

The great. g reat grandnephew of the American Fur Company. and be- settlement called "Little Canada". Paul Tulane ,founder of Tulane Uni- gan a perilous journey to the west- / LeVasseur also owned the land on versity, was found working his way ward. Following the western shore which St. Viator College now stands, through the very insti tution his un- of Lak_e Michigan to Green ~ay ~d ! and Mar sile Ha ll is erected on the cle endowed. ascendmg the Fox and W1sconsm site of LeVasseur's house which he

rivers, they eventually reached the 1 built in 1840. University life does not seen to be present site of Prairie-du-Chien , \ When Hubbard divorced the In-

'' \Vhat does he want as au answer ~~ - If yon arc on e of the peo- inclined to breed atheism, according w~ere th~y decided :o sp~nd the ; dian princess, watseka, LeVasseur pi e who ask themseh·es this question when taking an e:s:am, then to a survey conducted among 1,000 wmter With the Indtan tnbe en- married her, and of this union were you are undoub tedly one who may possibly r eceiv e fair marks, members of the 1935 graduating camped there. 1 born three children. He lived with but \\'hO \rill ju~t as CB t'tamly leav e col leg \.! \\'ith YCry lit t le true class at the University of Illinois. I When spring came, LeVasseur de- ~ her for a few years, and when he ku ow lcdg e. .\[t c r alii it is not a question of what the teac h er About 2 per cent professed no re- termined to return to Mackinas, but I left her he settled severa l thousand

ligion af ter having gone to college. I was detained by an Indian chief who dollars upon her . Some of the nu1.v \\'ant as a n ans,,·er but a c1unstion of ho\\' tutlc h .vOtl as a 1 · ed to have adopted h.im '~to '-- c aim . . ~

1 older villagers say that his sons

s tudent r ea lly l; no\Y. the tnbe. At the first opporturuty, l b Watseka occasionally returned to Each t ea c h er gives his class a recording of his acquired kuow- CISCA NOTICE LeVasseur and his companion maoe s~eal his horses and other movable

lctlgt'. Is a stud ent to be called a vict rola n eed le whic h grinds Ciscians, did you forget the their escape and succeeded in reach- property. In 1837 LeVasseur mar-out to th e best of its ability only one reco rd ? \\' h y not try to Holy Father on December ~. ing a temporary post established by ried Miss Ruth Bull of Danville.

6, and 7?. You can still make the A_merican Fur ~mpany on the Eight children were lx>rn of this m ake- :·our O\\'n r ecord. from the ori ginal sources - books. ex p e r - it up; it's worth the t ime and Fox n ver. ~m thls post ~ey r~- 1 marriage, bour boys and four girls, ie n eC'. intelligence? effort. turned to Mack mac whe_re they agam the youngest daughter marrying Dr.

Admitte d that it is nice take hom e all high marks, still ! secured employment Wlth the com- Monast, an early physician of the these can b e acquired along with t h e more important kno,dedgc of usca's Christmas Cards and pany. · College and a member of the faculty. which marks should onl.v be the extcmal cYidence . \\hat good phamphlets will be on sale in About the year 1820• the American Mrs. LeVasseur clled in 1860, and

I a few days. A true ~atholic I Fur Company, desiring to establish in 1861 Noel married for the third

will a ca rd of A's do ~·ou after c o ll ege if the information ts not sends Catholic g reetings. a trading post among the Pattawat-bchind th em to back th em up a nd make them worthwhile ! !...______________ tom.i lncllans, despatched LeVasseur --- (Continued on Page Six)

1: II

li ,,

Page 5: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1935-11-26

Speaker Names Factors In Japan's Rise

TH E

LIBRARY LOG The P.ev. James - A- Magner, Ph. ,

D., S. T . D., of Qu1gley Preparatory Fathe r Munsch has s tarted an Ill­

Seminary, threw a bomb shell at tens:tve drive to place as many American ideas of world superiority Shaw-Carnegie books as possible on when he addressed the International the library shelves this year. The Relations Club last month. Shaw-Carnegie list contains fourteen

''If Japan continues her present thousand titles and has been com­rise" , he declared, "the time is not plied on the r ecommendation of two far distant when she will be the hundred teachers, librarians and largest and most important country other advisers. The accrediting in the world. Already she is vie- agencies like to see a fair represen­ing with England for industrial sup- tation of these titles in all college remacy. The secret of this rise libraries. The services of an ex­lies in the secret of knowing how cellent book scout have been pro­to produce an equally high grade of cured to run down these titles for goods, (as compared with the pro- our library. duction of other countries), at a In a r ecent exchange of book3 lower sales price". with several book setlers the College

Despite popular disbelief, Doctor Library has been enriched by sev­Magner insisted, the J a.panese a.r~ eral valuable additions. not a hostile people. Their recent The Library has acquired two valu­aggressions were grounded upon able books: autographed copies of necessity. "The world", he saiu,' the Poems : 1914-1919 by Maurice ··na.~ closed its doors upon c.nese Baring and Saints and ussex by people". He pointed out that na- Sheila Kaye Smith. lions prohibit Japanese immigra- The sales of the Book Mart have tlon, that many foreign industries been falling off lately, but perhs,ps, refuse to sell to Japanese concerns, this is to be expected before the and to buy their manufactured pro- holidays. We would urge the stu­ducts. Because of these ci r cum- dents to look over the table of stances, Japan has been forced to splendid offers for there is an op- ~ seize, by force, sources of raw rna- portunity here of picking up some lerials and markets. classical and standard items at very

"A great Japanese plutocrat class", low prices.

THE Y IATORIJUO

He's' Tops

RAY TURES

ALUMNI NOTES

P AGE FIYE

1 Oxford Debaters Shine On American Platforms

I -His friends at St. Viator are hap- I (ACP )-A lv t of earnest )'Ollllg

py to hear that Dr. John Tracy American camp:>s debaters are haY­Ellis, of Washington, D. C., is re- ing sad e.xperiences meeting the covering from an operation which present Oxford and Cambridge teams he underwent several weeks ago. l \vhich are touring the country.

Ambrose Rascher , who began his 1 English debate tactics never seen1

collegiate career her e and later ; to change, but unfortunately their t ransferred to Indiana U. \vhere he American opponents never get ''ise. starred in football and \vrestling, 1 It is a common assertion that the has entered the professional wrest- I Oxford Union provides the best de­ling arena in Chic~o-o.

___ bate trainm.g m the world, although

The Rt. Rev. Msgr. William F. it seems to consist of an ability to K eef, of the class of 1 g06, visited charm the audience, to main[.ai.n on the campus recently. Msgr Keef complete non-chalance, to spin mer­who 1s located m Inclianapohs, bas ry tales. long been one of Vtator's most tl- 1 A1nenca.n students, on the other lustrwus sons. hand, bone up for \veeks, outline

I tbetr case concretely and spew forth

The College heard the 'i.n.s and facts and figures at a terrific rate outs" of Indiana football when Bill I-: _all of ~vhich the Englishmen w~ve Barrett, former Viator coach, stop- atnly astde as so much antusmg ped here several weeks ago. Bill rubbish. spent the season breaking in a green J We know of one case, however. football squad at Central Catholic I fhere the Britishers did not ig11ore High, Fort Wayne. statistics. In fact, they made trc-

1

--- mendously effective use of them and Ed Gallahue, '27, paid a shor t 1 won their debate hands down. One

visit here last week on his way to of their team arose to his feet and I Washington, D. c...: . Ed has been with a rather weary air said, " We working on AAA investigation in knew our opponents would simply California for the past two months. devastate al l of us with U1 eir s tatis-

tics. We have decided we can best he explaioed, "controls the destiny We cannot find an adjective that of the nation. The government wiH adequately describe a student has orga.nlzed a planned and stabal- who takes a book off the r eference iZed production which lends itself shelf and carries it to his room. to the control or the rich. And Permanent reference books s uch as where necessary, the government Encyclopeclias, Dictionaries, and grants su bsidities to manufacturers". Atlases, may not be taken frOm the

Ray Tures, r ecen tly elected vice- Father Harbauer is in receipt of answe r them with statistics of our president of the Monogram Club, a letter from Leland Koch, '27, with own, which we will now give you". has been a varsity end for the past a green back' enclosed for the Via - l Whereupon he unwound a long, long two seasons. Ray, a native of Chi- tor Novelty party. "Cookie" says t·oll of paper until it touched the

he is employed as a book-keeper by floor, then gath er ed it a ll up and cago, s pent his prep days at Campion Spaulding Council, Knights of Col- tossed it over the foo Uig hts! Academy in Wisconsin.

Reading Room. The mer e taking Doctor Magner pointed out that of such a book is not the point we

t.he Japansese as a people are in no wish to make, but ·- is rather the way Inferior to the rest of the world. selfish• motive behind it, the de-While lhey have always taken their Is f · th

Students Stag-es Hug-e Peace Rally

culture from t....nina, yet their pr.:>- priving of someone e e 0 usmg th: New York, \ .n..-....P)-College s tu-g rcss is a.'l great, and their stand- book, and the great danger of dents all over the country rallied

book being lost. We ask the co- last week to give the most impres-ards of literacy, mentality, esthetic operation of a ll students in keeping s ive peace demonstration in Amer­appreclation, and living in general these books on the shelves and under ican collegiate history. are equal to all of the leading na- no circumstances of taking them tiona. In this regard, the speaker out. Gathered in groups ranging from d lighted the a udlence with accounts Two more volumes of .1.ne At- one or two hundred to well into the of his own experiences among the !antic 'Monthly, volumes 23 and 24 thousands, the men and women w ho J apanese people. have been picked up. would be asked to bear the brunt of

He concluded by inslsllng that the Books are being bought for the thei r power to prevent arm ed con-

world Will a.ccompllsh more by sym- Biological, Philosophical and Ac- ~.~~! ~=~~e::r,;h~e:;i~~:~ ~:~r i~~ pathetic understanding for Japan counting departments. than by remal nmg hostile to her stay out of it if they cannot pre-

The folloWing new books have vent it. advancement.

WILL ROGERS SET DOWN TRUTH

ABO T DEGREES

been added to LDe library this week: The demonstrations were quiet, E~gland and the English by Price I free f rom violence or disturbance in

Collie r . most instances, although anti-pac i- ~ Hereditary genius by Francis Gal- fist groups did make thei r p resence

ton. felt on some campuses. Pamphlets A grammar of the Idiom of the ridiculing the demonstrators for

CACP) Now that .. . ,e brave deeds New Testament by G. B. Winer. I peace were distributed in some and words of Will Rogers are being Limitation of power of Supreme places, and counter-rallies were stag-

syst<•mnticLLlly unearthed for those 1 Court by J. E . Johnson. ed.

who loved the man. we might quote Firdausi in ex.ile and other poems I the quip of Will 's which ts the only I by E. w. Gosse. Today's Colleg-e Men one we remombc r : It came after he I Scientific management and labor Called Lost Generation had been g-ranted an honorary de- by R. F. Hoxie. {(""e at some college. Said the I ---comedian. "1 knew they gave college The Influence of sea power upon Minneapolis, Minn., ( ACP) - Had degre<>s for nearly every kind o f history 1660-l'lo3 by A. T. Mahon. it not been for federal ald given !~'DOran e, but r didn' t know they Art and the reformation by G. R. university students, many of them & """ any tor my kind. Coulton. I would now be a part of the "m1ss-

Oean Ackerman or the Columbia The Ubrary wishes to thank the ing generation" • say~ Dean Malcolm s<·hool ot journalism In quite se r- ~ Sisters of St. Patrick' s High School M. Willey of the Uruverslty of Min-lOU!\ v("ln ag-r('(". with \V111. at Momence, Illinois for donations nesota.

The Dean made hls report to the of books. 1 "Denied the . chance to enter col-pn> u.h.-ot of Columbia. the other I leges and uruversities, there are llay and declared th t college de- For the worki.ngest college student ~ousands upon thousands ot youths g-rr~ 111 a llilt"le, tdt~rlon for de- tn the world we nomlnate a certain LD this country, who, now doing termlnlng the !ltne of newl!paper junior at Miami University. This nothing, would normally have traln-m n I h• m de powerful attack man l carryiog 20 study hours a ed themselves fo r business, agricul-on the whole menca.n t'} tem of I week and audJting one course. To ture, and the professions - they

wl\.t'\.l.lng t:rt."'<i.il! to yone who can support himself he works 50 hours are the missing generation", Dean s1mp!y flit cerl&Ul quantltatt,·e re- 1 a month on the NYA, Is an assist- Willey explains. qu1 ,,0 ant 1l1 the physics department, grad- In the fact that federal ald has

per for the mathematics de- prevented a disasU'Ous increa_qe In the

company.

CUptd found a.nolber victim in Joe Turk.. who was united m matnmony

Dorothy Getza.nder, of K.an­""· on tb.; ftfth of the month

Patrt k Ch h. Kankakee-

ranks ol the m:issing generaUon", Dean Willey finds ample justl!lc­atlon for the program.

" Eddy" Harbauer, wbo Is In the I employment o! the Commonwealth Edi3on Company, Is now m Tried and lives at 1640 Roscoe Plaza, Chi-

o.

umbus, Peoria If any of you, in-

cidentally, know the whereabouts of office hours, B ill spends one Leo "Chicken" Fitzgerald, '28, tertainlng Bill, J r .

his time en-

drop a card to · o....:ook ie" and give 1 him the dope.

Bi ll Cassidy, w ho has been on a I a fou r months leave of absence, due J

sickness, is now back a t the job. 1

Bi ll is in the general office of the

1

: C. B. & Q. r a ilroad, Chicago. After I

D. J . O'LOUGHLIN, M. D.

EYE, EAR, NOSE & THROAT

602 City Natioual Bank Bldg.

Kankakee, Ill.

What l·s MORTEX?

Perfect

P'Teser vn.tl ve

Protection

Urtuld

Emul>llllod

A._'lphu.J t

A perfect protective coaUng Cor brushing, apro.ytng or trowolliog, being a high grade MeJ<lcan asphalt dlspersed as minute parUcles In water ror convenient handling. It Is applied cold. As the m ois ture evaporates, a black, flexible rubberllke film r emal.na which Is water­proof, acid, alkaltoe and tire resiBtant, and shuts out lntlltrnUona of alr.

MOTtex 6 does not crack or peel In coldest weather, nor bUster, sag nor run on hottest days nnd always remains elasUc. It La odor­less, tastele8s and nonln!lammable and can be sately used In conJlned places. It readily bonds to all clean surfaces, and also to damp aur­fa.ees, but should never be applied over du.oty, dlrty, g r eOJJy or oily surfaces or an Imperfect bond wtU r eou! L Use only on clean aur­!a.ees to obt.&l.n perfect a&Uet&eUon.

Used Cor DAMPPROOFING WALLS nnd F LOORS, PAJNTINO GALVANIZED ffiON, PROTECTING CLEAN ffiON AND STEllllL, ROOF REPAIRING and aa an ADHESIVE. It can he mixed with Portland Cement and drl"" ou t a soft gray color ror patchlng de­terloraUng concn>te.

For Sale at LoeAI Deal""'

J. W. Mort:ell Co. Kankakee, ill

I

Page 6: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1935-11-26

PAO& . TX

"We'll Win"-Two)

C'..ar lea':.:.O 1\'"""" U;.e ..m be r.a..moo·

7 oog1> _Row St. Benedict's-

TwelvP. ron!ere.oce g~ that will CoaU::.ued p l u.:.e Green WaTe · eteen a· ------------1\'&m~~t Ch.u!"'""n, Shu etf, DeKalb I Sal.a

v'!n~• 3Dd ru~g~~ ;tonna.l~ .:;orth traJ. 9/hea..tc.r.. Rohin.Uy """" tbAt wmbln""- • Ul u-,,,lT nat· CarboLdale, M.acc.mb and Carthage Walsh RH urw arlva.nt.o.g<> ot height gt•ea prom- I promlaee a aea.oon of thrtlls arul Betoume FB 1,.,. ()IN><> and Lenahan. twr, <An· worry for .,., only the fana bu Touc.bdowns Wei.!Ienbarh ,.. , b4V'1 a r_~ytaJn d~gree of tt.o.~ the coa.cb. Bestd~ these confe.r- Deut..sch, Ruberry.

!Lfl/J "'(!:'"""ive o.ntl may, remember r.nU! ga.mes lt wa.s learnoo that the Points after touchdowns Deu 9cll L6J<e F or t--l ""Y may, be<)r,mr regular Jte.rten lriab bucketeera wtll meet Valparalso L"< lettermen ha'-e reported to l')rlr>rc ll:l~ ""8110" 18 over' '. St. Olaf of Mmneaola, and one or (ZJ. placemenL Coach Ralph Jones for practice. They

In a~Jng of the !lrat ga.me and two of the mlnor colleg"" of thP Referee-Kearns. DePaul are Bill Emery, Bill Dalker. Clayton th• pr""pec~ of ll:le win and lou state. t;mpire- Travnlcek. De LaSalle. Cl:lru!tensen, Meh'lll Rou...., Jobbte p<>Tu·nt.age for the M!IJI()O Coach Me- WJth two weeks of practice gone Field Judge--Wyatt, MISsouri. El.serman and Evar Earson. Emery Nw-nar~< explained that be bad no In- by Coach McNamara and his as- Is e.-.pectoo to assume the star pos.t-lt·ntlon of trying for a record break· &!slant haven't sproutoo any gray Uon at Lake Forest this seMOn. lng team. He arJmlttcd quite cheer- hairs as yet and so perhaps the History Of--tully tha.t there would be nc Little gloomy atUtude which they profess J9 Championship this year and oald, Is alter all a favo rable omen. Me­with just a wee bit of opttmlslm, Namara's flnal outburst to the en­that I! an went wcJI th · team would quirlng reporter at least gave prom­

!Continued from Page Three)

ffiln o Wesleyan-

Six monogram winners !rom last year's outfit w!Jl don sults at Wes-

has further smiled "ll''D p ntat of 11 PI'Y ll'

Pbon...; l ain 3\U • L\la.ln 1S.6

II Work Oua.rant~

• LAFFLAl\IE'

SHOE «EP.\JR , 'E.ltv,CE

Work Called tor and Dellv~red

831 E . tn tlon St. • 768 S. lol.a "nt 1 'lUll win half of their games 1.se of a surprise awaiting Viator time. His third wife was Miss Ele- were a t that time a part nf this in-~ JtChf·duJcd" It. i& McNa.mara'e pur- tolJowers. "I've no Idea of what nore Franchere of Chicago. stitution .

P<>•" to develop a quintet that will the final conference team will be LeVasseur died ln 1879 at bls borne ~~~~~Co~n~t~ln~~u~ed ~N~ru~x~t~I~ss~u~ed~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ put he fear of lhe Irish In Lillie until after the first game but I do in Bourbonnais. The exact place of J9 foros. With !bat purpose ln have a hazy notion, call tt a hunch his burial is disputed. Some say be I mlnd, Cof« h McNamara Intends to 11 y0u wi ll , that some of those was buried in the vmage church­try Jllld uncover htB material In the f reshmen will be pushing the veter- yard, and later r emoved to the vil­IIN!l lew games or the season. I artS hard fo r a s tarting berth. Watch Jage cemetery near the Kankakee

"These first games w11l be only them!" river; wh l1e other say that he was pro.cllce "am s and as far as I'm I burled In the Catholic cemetery in I concem~'<l w ill only be a chance for I Flash !-Biochemist Hector Mor ti· 1 Kankakee. us lo develop fo r the bard confer - , me r told the Amer ican NeurologicA.l LeVasseur spent his declining year s I cncc schedule that begin.• with in the shadow of the old St. Viator Cho.rlcaton Teachers on J anuary 14. Association rccenlly that ou r skulls I College, whose existence he bad J a.lm to give al l th men on the 1 get denser as we g row older . And 1 largely made possible. His grand

1

ANDREWS INSURANCE AGENCY

I nsurance of A ll Kinds 107 EAST COURT STREET

KANKAKEE ILLINOIS

Phone 1938 squa.d n chance to t arnJ Uarizc tbem· l tbc cond.i tton is ten times as bad I childr en were educated there, and

aclvcs w1lb lhc rotating style ln the in women lban ln men. He must one son.~~F~re~d~en~·~c~k~Le~V~ass~~e~ur~,~a~t~-~~}J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~ early games Md just before the no t be married. tended the primary g r a des whlch

-

S un-curing Turkish leaf tobacco. The

tobacco is strung leaf by leaf and hung

on long racks like you see below.

0 19)1, liGGETT &! MYUS

TO&Ceo Co.

Turkish tobaccos aromatiC

used Chesterfield lll gtve

them a more pleasing aroma and taste

Every year we import thousands of pounds from Turkey and Greece

T HE lMPOR T D UTY alone is 35 cents a pound

- but T urkish tobacco is necessary to · a good

cigarette.

The right amount ofT urkish tobacco, blended

with our mild, ripe home-grown tobaccos helps

to give Chesterfields more aroma, helps to give

them a more pleasing taSte.

CHESTERFIELD-A BLEND OF MILD RI PE HO M E-GROWN A N D ARO M AT I C TURKISH TOBACCO S