St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

6
He who keeps back the tr ut h or withholds it frcm men, fr om m oti ves of expediency, Ia ei th er a coward or " criminal, or both.-Max Muller . m&r llfiatnrittn Ood be thanked for booka. Th ey are the volcea of tho distant o.nd the dead and make ua hel ra of th e IPirl tual li f e of aoea.-W. E. Chan - n ing. VOL. LITI. B OURBONNAIS, ILLINOIS FRIDAY, J ANUARY 17, 1936 NUMBER 6. MONOGRAM MEN HONORED AT BANQUET Critics Favor New Book By The Rev. Dr. Cardinal College President Writes Compeggio; Answers Need Historians of Reformation. of Cardinal Expressed By "Th e Ethics of Coll ective Bargain- ing" was th e su bj ect of a talk which the Ve ry Rev. J. W. R. Ma- guire. C. S. V. , Dean of th e De- Thi s present work is an a tt empt partment of Sociology here, deliver- to carry out th e wishes of Ehses, ed at the a nnu al convention of the Brady, and Merca t i, to cor rec t th e Catholi c Philo soph ical Association of false Impressions con cernin g Com- America. The meeting, which was pegglo , a.nd to arrive at a correct one of the most successful of its es tlmale or his influen ces on the kind ever heJd, convened in period of hlstory in which he lived. land , Ohio, the last of December. Coll ege Library to Pro rlt AJwnnus To OffJce Doctor Cardinal has annolmced The Rev. Dr. Charles A. H art , that lbc proceeds from the sale a Viator alumnus, now of the Cath- of the book v;111 be given to the olic University of America, was College Library. A copy of the elected Secretary-Treasurer of the book can be obtained fo r $2.50 by Association. Since graduation here, ·writing to the Very Rev. Dr. E. V. Doctor Hart has made an enviab le ardinal, C. S. V. record in th e philosophical world. Feature Panel Discussion On Debaters' Hour Rockford College Aids Broadcast Innovation In g ium, served his Order long and f aithfully, and the faculty and stu- dent body united on the occ asion of the Mass in paying tribute to and praying for th e sou l of a belov- ed cleri c. Quotation Book Lost The loss of a book, Elemen ts or l:'rinclp les of ExjYression by Curry, was reported here last week. The book, which contains quotations of prose and poetry, is probably of l.itUe value to anyone except th e owner, and he is especial ly anxious to regain possession of it. The finde r will please return the book to Prof esso r Maloney or to the Librarian. Evans, DeKa lb Mentor, Viator Guest Speaker Twenty Member s of Football Squad Admitted To Coveted Monogram Club; Speakers Praise Players. Viator Biol og ist At Science Conve ntion Whil e eac h of th e spe ak ers of the evening did his best to entcrta.i n and mad e after dinner jokes th e main topic of his short speech all Dr. William c. Van Deventer, inj ected br ief words of praise and h ead of the Departme nt of Biology encou rage ment tb the s quad mem- here, addressed th e Ameri can Assoc - bers. Th e follo wing arc quotes iat ion for the Ad vancement of Sci- from s peeches and were direc t ed to ence at it s co nv ention in St. Loui s, the men who will repr esent Viato r Missouri, on January 2. next fa ll upon the grid-iro n: Doctor Van Deventer, who pre- Lowell L awson, toas tmas ter and t d t t th A . pr esident of the al umn i had thi s sen e wo papers o e , atio n, chose fo r his topics two fie lds message from the Old Boys": of n atural science with which he is "Sincere cong ratulation s upon intima t ely acqualnted. Th ey were: football season. We alumni pnde "Studies On The Bio logy of th e ourselves on the fa. ct that a VIator Crayfish, Cambarus Propinquus' ', athlete Is always victorio us whether and "A Winter Bird Commu n ity In I he wins or loses because he Is a l- Wes tem New York" . (Con tinued on page 6)

description

The Viatorian - Vol. LIII, No. 6

Transcript of St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

Page 1: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

He who keeps back the t r ut h or w ithholds it frcm men, f r om m oti ves of exped iency, Ia

eith er a coward o r " criminal, or both.-Max Muller . m&r llfiatnrittn O od be thanked for booka.

They a r e the volcea o f tho distant o.nd the dead and make ua hel r a o f th e IPirl tual li fe o f P~•t aoea.-W. E . Chan­ning.

VOL. LITI. B OURBONNAIS, ILLINOIS FRIDAY, J ANUARY 17, 1936 NUMBER 6.

MONOGRAM MEN HONORED AT BANQUET Critics Favor New Book By The Rev. Dr. Cardinal

College President Writes Compeggio; Answers Need Historians of Reformation.

of Cardinal Expressed By

"The Ethics of Coll ective Bargain­ing" was the subject of a talk which the Very Rev. J . W . R. Ma­guire. C. S. V. , Dean of the De-

This present work is an a ttempt partment of Sociology here, deliver ­to carry out the wishes of Ehses , ed at the a nnua l convention of the Brady, and Mercati, to cor rec t the Catholic Philosophical Association of false Impressions concerning Com- America. The meeting, which was pegglo, a.nd to arrive at a correct one of the most successful of its estlmale or his influences on the kind ever heJd, convened in Cleve~

period of hlstory in which he lived. land, Ohio, the last of December .

College Library to Prorlt AJwnnus To OffJce

Doctor Cardinal has annolmced The Rev. Dr. Charles A. H art, that lbc proceeds from the sale a Viator alumnus, now of the Cath­of the book v;111 be given to the olic University of America, was re~

College Library. A copy of the elected Secretary-Treasurer of the book can be obtained fo r $2.50 by Association. Since graduation here, ·writing to the Very Rev. Dr. E. V. Doctor Hart has made an enviable

ardinal , C. S . V. record in the philosophical world.

Feature Panel Discussion On

Debaters' Hour Rockford College Aids

Broadcast Innovation In

g ium, served his Order long and faithfully, and the faculty and s tu ­dent body united on the occasion of the Mass in paying tribute to and praying for the soul of a belov­ed cleric.

Quotation Book Lost The loss of a book, E lem en ts or

l:'rinclples of ExjYression by Curry, was reported here last week. The book, which contains quotations of prose and poetry, is probably of l.itUe value to anyone except the owner, and he is especially anxious to regain possession of it. The finde r will please return the book to Professor Maloney or to the Librarian.

Evans, DeKalb Mentor, Viator Guest Speaker

Twenty Members of Football Squad Admitted To Coveted Monogram Club; Speakers Praise Players.

Viator Biologist At Science Convention

While each of the s peakers of the evening did his best to entcrta.in and made after dinner jokes the main topic of his shor t speech all

Dr. William c. Van Deventer , injected brief words of praise and head of the Department of Biology encouragem ent tb the squad mem­here, addressed the American Assoc - bers. The follo wing arc quotes iat ion for the Ad vancem ent of Sci- from speeches and were directed to ence at its convention in St. Louis, the men who will represent Viator Missouri, on January 2. next fall upon the grid-iro n :

Doctor Van Deventer, who pre- Lowell L awson, toas tmas te r and

t d t t th A . p r esident of the al umn i had this

sen e wo papers o e ssoct- ~ , ation, chose fo r his topics two fie lds message from the Old Boys": of natural science with which he is "Sincere congratulations upon y~ur intimately acqualnted. They were: football season. We alumni pnde "Studies On The Biology of the ourselves on the fa.ct that a VIator Crayfish, Cambarus Propinquus' ', athlete Is a lways victorious whether and "A Winter Bird Community In I he wins or loses because he Is a l-

W estem New York" . (Continued on page 6)

Page 2: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

.P.AGJl TWO

W A T C H

VI ATO R

T ""'KE

THE HATORLV>

VIATOR SPORTS FRIDAY. JA .. '>\.' ARY 17. 1936

CO'fE 0~ CA-GERS

PASS YO U R

SEMESTER OEKALO JMIU!>. AY

2Z Covers A ll A thletics E AMI ATIONS

Green Wave Swamp Eastern, 51-34 League Officials

Betourne Gathers ~ Award Conference

23 Points In First Meets at Session

League Victory Representatives of the Illinois In-

ter col1 eg iate conference at the an-

A rebuilt St. VIator quintet, em - nual winter meet of the Little 19 brac ing two freshmen, " Bud" Mono- m ember s awarded the minor sports

u.bn.n and "Red" McE!IIgotl, start ed m eets, elected officers and carri ed out the current conference campaig n on the usual bu siness. The pro­in the Coll ege gymnasium on Jan­uary 14 with a blaze of g reatness tb n l prcdlctH big lh ings. The Irish met and defeated one of Illinois EMtcm Teachers' bes t teams of recen t years In the Little 19 in­augura l by a 51 to 24 coun t. Don Betournc, ace of the past two sea­sons again proved tb e leading scor­er of the quintet with 9 baskets and five free throws for a total of 23 poi.ntH.

Close nt Start

ject ed discussion on the "freshman

ruJ c" did no t come to the f loor.

Minor sports meets were awarded

as fo llows: Indoor track and swtm­

ming, North Central , March 21 o r

28; wrestling, Wheaton College,

March 14; outdoor t rack a nd golf,

Illinois Stat e Normal College, May

22-23 ; tennis, Bradley University,

May 30. Regional tennis meets will

be held at Brad ley, North Central , The game started out with a ll the Carbonda le and Charleston . The

earmarl<s of being a close cont es t , VIator bouncing off to a 3 to o lead, swimm ing meet would have been whi cb marg in was quick ly erased , possi bly awarded to S t. Viator if and Charleston ass umed the lead, the Viator delegates had cared to 5 to 3, the onJy time during th e en- accept it. tire battle the Teachers beaded the

SHOWS CLASS I

DANNY BLAZEVIC H

Danny B lazevich, DeKalb you t h and sophomore star, is one of the sensational shot make rs whom Via-Officers Named

parade. Aside from being tied Representatives voting fo r new tor fans have taken to in a big way. twice in the early minutes and paced Blazevi ch is one of the most color-at another junc ture, th e Iris h of officers of the Confe rence elected the fuJ players to ever wear the Green Bourbonnais blazed the way through- follov.ring: V. F . Swain, Bradley, and White uniforms of the I ris h out. Of balance when under the president; E. w . P hill ips, DeKalb basketeers. basket during tlle early minutes of Univer si ty, vice-president; E. E. - ------ - - - - - - -­the gam e, Viator cager s found some difficulty in running up a scor e on Domm, North Central, secretary; and th e inva ders unti l tne last fiv e L . M. Cole, Mill ikin Univer s ity, minutes of the first half, when they t reasurer. w . T. Harmon, confer­surged down the floor and poured ence com.missioner and superintend­points tl:lrough the hoop to leave ent of St. Charles Home fo r Boys, the court at the midway mark on the long end of a 21 to 11 count. I was reappointed once again.

Al ter tb e half tne gan1c had few stirring moments, although several times early in th e per iod Char leston displayed numerous threatening ges­tures, al l of which failed because of the adroit shooting of Betourne and the marvelous guarding and de­fensive play 0.1 Rogers, Blazevich and McElligott. Coach McNamara sprinkled the f loor freely wi th r e­serves, u sing an even dozen, all of whom played au invaluable part in the triumph.

S UD1Jna r y FG FT PF PLH

The fi rst noLeworthy action under the new regime was the adopt ion of a proposal tha t organized foot­ball practice be permitted to open on September 10, instead of Septem­ber 15. Schools opening before September 10 w ill be permitted t o start footbal l drills coincident with general regis tration.

Joliet Jr. Licked by Irish, 41 to 39 In

S e a s o n Opener 5 23 Ovenvhelming various leads, one

0 2 of which was an 11 to 1 disad-0 0 vantage i.n the first half, St. Via-

St. Viator Beaten 42-27 In Tilt With

Optometry Cagers Northern Illinois College of Opto­

metry basketball team defeated the Green Wave ba.sketeer s on Decem­ber 16th, 42 to 27, on the George Williams' court. Ta king an early lead, the victors, playing a brand of balanced offensive and defensive ball , piled up a 23 to 12 score at the hal f, and raced through the sec­ond period to their decisive advan­tage.

Danny Blazevich, s te llar sopho­more guard, starred for the Irish garnering 6 buckets and a charity toss while Swanberg, center for the Optometry team, caged 4 bas­kets and a free throw to lead his team's scoring. It was the second game of the Iris h and their f irst loss of the current season.

Summary

Viator Schedules Illinois Wesleyan

Two Contests For

After almost five years of broken athletic relationship, St. Via tor Col­lege and TIIinois Wes leyan. t r adi­tional rivals of old , will once again pit athJetic teams. Th e b reach was headed through the conciliatory effo r ts of H ead Coach John McNam­a ra and the new Wes leyan Athletic Director , H arry Bell. Both mentors have finally convinced the athletic boards of the ir respective schools that by-gone misunderstandings should be forgotten and the r esul t is that Viator and Wesleyan will r esume a thletic r elations on January 24 when the Irish cagers invade Bloomington in an effor t to down the Titans. The r eturn basketball game will be played sometime in th e later part of April or t he early part of March.

Coach MeN amara also informed th e Viatorian reporter that Viator wi ll m eet W esleyan in football next season providing Viator can per­suade Northwest Missouri Teachers' to switch dates. Illinois Wesleyan, in case the change of dates can be arr anged, will be the Irish oppon­ent on October 2 or 3.

Viator Whips Valpo Quintet

In 26-22 Game Flashing moments of offens iv..::

brilliance and a sterling defc.nse throughout forty minutes of fur­i.ous basketball, the Irish cagers managed to eke out a hard earned 26 to 22 vic tory over the here-to­fore undefeated Valparaiso U niver­siy on the Uhlan's home court Jan­ua r·y the 7th.

Leading a seesaw game at half time by a 13 to 11 count, the Green Wave basketeers were forced to break a 22 to 22 tie in the last half minute of play to garner the victory. Th e s light margin of vic­tory for the Irish resulted from a lighting-like pass by Don Betourne to Monahan, sensational f reshman center, who made a dandy f ie ld goal that placed Viator in the lead with only seconds remaining to be p lay­ed . Danny Blazevicb helped to put the g ame on ice with another basket an instant later as the gun sounded.

l\'l onahan Stars

;'Bull ' Monahan, newest of the Irish cagers, completely dominated the scoring of the evening besides

The addi tion of ill inois W esleyan smothering Sauer , Valpo's giant cen­to the Green Wave' s curren t bas- ter a nd big threat. Monahan was ketball sched ule assures the Irish hig h point man of the game garner­of meeting all of the outstanding ing 6 buckets and a free throw Little 19 quinte ts of the season while his teammate and fe llow with the exception of the league freshman, "Red" McElligott, secured leading Mill ikin U niversity cagers. second high scoring honors with a The Irish w ill engage in 14 confer- total of 4 baskets from the field. ence games during this season. St. Viator displayed a defensive game Viator meets the following league which had Valpo bewildered. Valpo foes: Charleston, Shurtleff, DeKalb, pa sses were intercepted and knocked Normal, North Centra, Wheaton, down by the a lert playing of Mona­Carbondale, Macomb, Cathage, and han, McElligott, RogerH and Be­W esleyan. tourne. Offensively Valpo was able

Cagers Swamp Olaf In Second Win By

53 To 31 Count

to s top the h ighly touted scorers of the Green Wave but seemed unable to fathom the m ethods of the new stars. McElligott and Monahan. Betourne, Gibbons and Blazevi.ch , by means of c lever passing and un-

The Green Wave basketballers fin- erring ball handl ing combined with ished the pre-Chris tmas schedule on feints at the basket drew tbe Valpo December 19 by waging a lop- sid- defense out of position and then ed encounter with St. Olai College fed the ball to Monahan or Me-of Northfield, Minnesota. Betourne was the leading Light of the Irish p itching in 5 field goals and 4 free throws in the 53 to 31 rout.

s 1lJllJ1lar y

Elligott for bas ket s.

Sauer H e ld Down St. Viator Betourne, r. Claeys, f. Gibbons, f. Straub, f. Burke, f.

1

0 1

0

3 2 tor varsity won an overtime con- St. Via tor McElligott, f.

4 to 39, on Decem ber 12th . The score Lenahan, f.

FG FT 0 0

P F St. Viator FG FT PF

Sauer, Val,po's hig hly es t ee med giant cent er , a round whom the Figh ting Uhlan a ttack is centered, was kept in check by "Bull" Mona-

].1:onahan, c . Blazevi.ch, g. Walsh , g. McElligott, g. Rogers, g. Lenahan, g. Olson, g.

Totals Cht\r les t-on Curry, f . Spicer, f . Shaw, f. Holmes, f.

Brown, c. \-Varmuth. c. Austin, g. Cossins, g. Mahon. g, Tedrick, g . Crabtree, g. Louis, g.

Totals

0

1

0

O 0 flict f rom J oliet Junior College, 11

0 0

4

0 0

0

6 was tied at 37-37 at the end of Betourne, f.

1 regulation time, when Tezak made Gibbons, f.

6 good a fo ul toss in the last five seconds of p laying time. Viator had

2 been losing at the halfway mark 0 19 to 17.

Monahan, c. Damler, c. Rogers , g. Olson, g. Burke, g .

20 .n 12 51 FG FT PF Pts

Brumund caged a goal in the overtime, but George Rogers match­ed this with a beautiful long looper.

Blazevich, g.

4 10 The game a ppeared to be h eaded Totals

0 0 0 for anoU1er overtime when Frank N . illinois

Krauklis, only senior on the squad, Chmielinski, f. 1

0 0

0

0 0 0 0

4

3 2 set himself for a long sho t from Crane, f.

the sidelines that sailed nicely Herris, f.

0 through the hoop. Massey, f.

0 The game finished shortly af t er Swanberg, c.

0 Krauklis' herois basket. Don Be- Taylor, g. tourne, veteran of the past tthwoe Dantzic, g.

6 years, was the spearhead of

Totals

0 2

2 0 0

0 0 6

0 1

1 0 0 0 0

0 Betourne, f. 1 Burke, f. 2 Gibbons, f. 1 Dilger , f. 0 Lenahlin, f. 0 Murphy, f. 0 Claeys, c. 0 Monahan, c. 2 Blazevich, g. 3 Walsh, g.

McE lligott, g. 12 Rogers, g. FG FT PF Olson, g. ~ 0 1 W atson, g. 3 3 4 2 4 0 Totals 2 0 0 St. Olaf

17

1

0 0

8

0 Gilbertson, f . Nelson, f. Holmstrom, f. Storaalsi, c.

8 P eterson, c.

0 1

2

0 0

0 0

0 Viator attack annexing 15 points

0 for high scoring honors of the even-ing.

Referee: Jack Travnicek, Armour. Umpire: A. Hammersfabr, Chi-

Os tberg, c. Anderson, g . Ingvolstad, g. 6 19 24 (Continued on page 5} cage.

5 1

5 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 3

1 0

1 2

0 0 0 0

3 0 0

1 0

4 han, who proved to be the main 0 stumbling block in the path of the

Valparaiso quinte t. Monahan, not 1 only eluded "Whitey" to ring up 0 high scoring honors of the evening, 0 but in his spare moments when be

wasn' t shooting be made certain that Sauer didn ' t with the result that "Whitey" caged only two buck­ets and two fr ee throws, the lowest

4 scoring he has done in any game this season. K.arr and Roedel , the other Valpo tbreatH were also kep t

0 in submission only adding two bas­k ets apiece to their team's to tal.

19 15 18 FG FT PF

The Uhlans presented a formid­able zone defense which kept the

3 3 0 0

0

0

0 0 4 0

(Con tinued on

1 Lagergren, g. 2 Kirk eby, g . 3

Totals

page 5)

11 1

0 3

Referee: J . Trees, DeKalb. Umpire: J . ~k. Purdue.

0 0

0

15

Page 3: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

FRIDAY, J~~.::~Y~1:7~,~1:93:6:_ __________________________________ ~(C~on_Un_· _u~e~d--o_n __ P_a~g_e_s_u_· ~)-------------------------------------------------------P_A_G_E ___ T_EUt __ E_E_

VETERAN GUARDS St. Viator Reserves Lick Chebanse 35-14

Preliminary to the inaugural con­ference game with Charleston Teach­ers' on January 14, the St. Viator Reserves, under the direction of As­s istant Coach Edward DesLauriers, C. S. V. , whipped Chebanse town t eam in a 35 to 14 bO:ttle. Hilker, sophomore forward of the R eserves, starred for the Viatorians in their

I TheFORUMj Dear Editor:

The swimming season is upon us, and so far, three very hig h-g rad e teams have been scheduled to m eet St. Viator's aquatic group. We s hould be proud of the candidates who have volunteered their ability to r epresent the College in tank competition. In the first place, competitive swimming demands a great deal of t r aining. It tries a

first game With 13 points, while man's courage and proves to Wm Smith for Chebanse notched half that a quitter can not include him-

throug hou t the g ame. In the first half of th e g ame, the so-called " Fig htin' Irish" r a r ely had the ball in their possession, and when th"ey d id ha ve it. a ppear ed to have grave doubt in r egard to its proper dis­position.

Never in the course of the game <lid the Vlatorian contingent at­tempt to work a pivot play off the center from the vicinity of their own goal line. Whe ther this failure is d ue to lack of in te lligence on the part of the player s , or to a ggreSE­iveness on the part of the center is not immediately apparent. The w rt t e r s usp ects that both lack of a dozen markers. self in the sport. It takes courage

Summary to torture yourself in the early sea- intellingence and aggressiveness on FG FT PF PTS son work-out; and to ex.perience the the part of the players serve as a Reserves

Dore, f. Hart, f.

0 0 2 nausea that is brought on by the handicap to the coach. 1 2 9 additional training denials. A cow- This St. Viator t eam has the ma-

Sandquist, f . Brady, f.

4 0 O 0 0 ard or a quitter never makes the terial necessary to make it one of

0 0 0 g rade. It is twice as difficult for Viator~s greatest . It may be well 0 BOwer , f. Hilke r , f.

1

6 1 0 3 them to have to plunge themselves for that team to remember that 1 0 13 into water of an uncomfortable. de- "traditions make fighting men, but

Krauklis, c. Guy, c.

0 0 0 0 gree. It' s hard for them to keep fighting men first must make tradi-0 0

1 0 1 their mouths closed and not to com- tions".

GEORGE ROGERS Krauser, g. Hickson, g.

0 1 0 plain of these things. It is re- Viator teams laboring under tre-0 0 0 markably g enerous of a man to give mendous handicaps in the past have FRANK KRA U KLIS

George Rogers is playing his third Murph y , g. 0

Holding the distinct ion of being

the only senior upon the St. Viator basketball squad. .B~rank Krauklis, is a veteran letterman with three years experience. In the season opener with Joliet Junior College Krauklis loo.ped a long shot from the s ide of the court in the last few seconds of an overtime period to g ain a victory for the Irish.

year upon the varsity and is rated Foxen, g. by Coach McNamara to be one of Kilbride, g. the best 9efensive men in Little 19 Fahey, g.

0 0 1 0 that much. created t r aditions for men on her 2 5 Our St. Viator swimmers are de- hardwood courts to maintain. But

it, of course, requires great men to live up to great traditions. It de­mands the impossible of great men when they seek to add to enviable records. Pusillanimity and vacil­lation a ccomplish nothing.

2

0 0 0 0

cir cles. At the end of last year's w. Kilbride, g. 1 2

5 serving of recognition as m en and 0 rea l athletes. They deserve a great

deal more credit and r ecognition than we are commonly apt to g ive them. They are worthy of more encouragement than they have been given previously. I am extremely proud of them, not from the stand~

point of a coach for a winner, but

schedule, George was named "Hon-orary Captain" for the season of Totai 1934-35. An unusual honor to be Chebanse

~~~e:;~ u:.~~,.;e;o:;;o:;:~r:u~eutt ;;i~ ~:~;:: :.

cagoan.

------------------------------------------------

17 8 35

FG FT PF PTS 6

2

0

College Club Basketball League Holding Interest of Student Body

Braithwaite, f. Beck, c. 0

0

0 0 because I know that they are "real

FG FT PF

H amende, g. Wulffe, g. Cavanaugh, g.

Totai

0 1 men". That is the way in which 1 I hope the whole school will be 0 proud of them. If you a r e, you

- ------- can't Jose, because th at is the sort

1 0

0

5 4 9 14 of r epresentation of which any Referee: Marik, St. Louis. school can be proud . ' 'There's not U mpire: Oseinglewski, Kankakee. a quitter in a tank load". If you An Intra-mural basketball league, Nazis

sponsored by the College Club, and Lennan, f . under the direction of Brother Thorn- Braithwaite, f. as Ryan, I-M director, is vying with R . Schuinacher, c. the varsity cagers for recognition Gasior, g.

2 4

0 0 1 1 0 0 0

~ Wholesale Death swim- throw in with them; if you can't swim - boost them, it lends bouyancy. If you ever r ead an ad­vertisement: "St. Viator, a school fo r men" , believe it, because it's the real llicCoy. She has them.

these days. With seven games Minnehan, g . played the newly formed league has Rousseau, g. drawn tremendous crowds , every Lyons, g.

2

0 0

2

2 Made Possible Bro. Ed. DesLauriers.

evening and is r apidly becoming the talk of the campus. Each evening at 6:15 o'clock students flock to

T<;>tais Berkeley, Cal., (ACP) - Univer- Dear Editor:

11 2 11 s ity of California scientists have The exhibition of basketball pre-Midget..

the gym to see thrilling games that either feature closely battled tilts Hilker, f . or rough and tumble games that r e- Waldron, f.

FG ~ P~ ~~;:~:!:'!tth~~t-u~ f~:a~;n·s1 ef:~~ ::~~ ~[ ~~3~i:~:n~~l~e~~e:~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ea~e r~;a:.4 !~esso as d:;eer:~~ College was one of the sorries t spec-

suit in high scor es. Guy, c& League S tandings Marik, g.

2 0 t hat approach from any direction to tacles ever witnessed by this former

0 0 within 50 feet is unsafe. St. Viator student on the local court. Team W L PC. Tures, g.

Switc~en Nazis

2 0 l.OOO O'Rourke, g.

2 0 1.000 Gavin, g.

1 2

0 1

0 0

And this "former s tudent" has 0 The r ay is a powerful beam of watched St. Viator ba.sketeer s for 0 neutrons, the ul timate particles of

Aces Crooners Celtlcs

0 LOOO Barzantny, g. 1 .500 Fahey, g.

11 .500

0 atoms d iscovered four years ago by 0 English scientis ts.

The fi r st sizeable beam of these Midget.. Dodg6r8 Bernaditles

1 0 0 0

l .000 2 .000 2 .000 I

Total 10

Aces Trwnp Dogs

4 4 neutrons is produced in the heart of the field of an 80-ton magne t by

I a method discovered by Prof. E . 0 . The worthy Day Dodgers traveled

Celts i.ick Monxs all the way ou t to the campus for Captain Bob Ryan lead his Cel- thei r first game and left the bas­

tics to a thrilllng one point vic tory ketball court with their tails be-over the highly touted Bernadities tween their legs having absorbed a in the opening game of the College 28 to 23 defeat at the hands of the Club Basketball Leag u e. The fi n- recently organized Aces. al score w as 11 to 10. The Celts Aces held a halfway m argi n of 5 to 4. Hilker, f.

FG F'T PF 4 1 0

<Jellies FG FT PF Wills, f . 2 0 4

Bowers, f . 0 0 Hickson, f . 1 0 0 Wissing, f. 0 0 Hart, c. 3 1 3

Sandquist, c. 1 3 0 Neudecke r , g. 0 0 Regan, g. 1 0 0 F oxen , g. 3 0

Cahill , g. 0 0 0 Totais 13

T o tais

Bernndltl<>s Senesac, f. Klcm, f. Malo ney, c. Toomey, g . Naug hton, g. LaMontagne, g.

4 3 0 Dodgers FG FT

To tals

FG FT PF Clancy , f. 0 0 o Fields, f .

1

0

o 1 WuJJie, f. o o T iculka, c . 0 4 S mi th, g. 0 0 I G<>rman, g.

0 0 Total

1 3

2

9

5 0 5 (Continued on page 6)

0 0

5

a.zis Down Midge ts An evenly balanced team of Nazis

composed of Upperclassmen g ained the decision in a seesaw ba ttle with I the :Midgels in the second game of the current intra-mural tou.rnament. The final score was 24 to 22.

Liberty Laundry Yours for Service

7S Main S treet Bourbonnais, il l.

Eugene Benoit, Prop. PHO rE 247

PF 0

0

11

Lawrence of the University of Cali-fornia.

Involved, though at prese nt

(Continued on page 5)

Einbeck Studio

Photographer For

St. Viator College

143 N. Schuy ler Ave.

Kankakee, Ill.

Phone 407

HUFF & WOLF JEWELRY CO. 172 E . Court Street

A Good Place to Buy Your

J ewelry

un-

the past ten years . With the advantage of height at

the center position, the Viatorians should have controlled the ball

TAYLOR TRANSFER, Co. Inc. Insured Freigh t Forwarders

Hauling Between KANKAKEE - CHICAGO

A nd AJl Intermedia t e Poi nts Kankakee, Chicago, Joliet

For Health and

Better Quality

KANKAKEE BEVERAGE CO.

Me BROOMS

KANKAKEE'S

BEST KNOWN

R'ilSTAURANT

Schuy ler Ave., Nor th of Court

The ~Titer would like to witness a great deal of cohesion, combina­tion, and t eam-work in the Viator team. The Viator quintet unques­tionably has its share of brawn; if that brawn commences to think it will win decisively. (With the fac­tors favoring Viator in the above­m entioned game, the score should have been doubled by the so-called "Fightin' Irish".)

In conclusion, the writer would lik e to r emark merely that the St. Viator team is not "putting out". Tnd the t eam certainly has nol yet any " laurels" to live on.

Carl J. Lampe.

VANDERWATERS Young Men's Clothes

Furnishing's and Shoes

Mantle Radio Ugh ted Kilocycle Dial

Wort!• $12.50; Special $9.95 Coco S uede Leather J aek et..

Knlt Collar and Cnffs. $4.98 and $5.69

Capeskin or Grain Leather Jac k et.. $5.98 and $7 .98

Baird-Swannell Tel 800 - Sporting Goods Dept;

Hotel Kankakee Sidney Herbs t , Manager

DINING ROOM 1\fAGNIFICANT BALL ROOM

A h earty welcome awaits the studen ts and friends of S t .

VI ator Coll ege.

The CHICAGO

STORE Kankakee, lWnois

OFFERS S TUDEN T S OF

ST . VIATOR COLLEGE FULL LTh'E OF

CLOTIDNG AT THE LOWEST PRICE S

Page 4: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

Published bi-weekly throughout the year by the s tudents of SL Viator College

FRIDAY. J .-\1' AKI.' \1 , 19.16

Intercollegiate Red Wine and Brown Bread oCt

Ther e is actuaU one i r l student _Song hits seem to_ ~ a p retty I copy. Last fall ·when lhe Green

L. ds Coli y _g fru r barome ter for mdicating the Wa ,·e - our Fig hting Irish- played

at m ay eg e. L mdsay On - . . Ed d B tt 37 ta.ri b bT . t C:., econormc condltlon of this land of F erris Institute. they we re billed 113

wJar b uRogedn , 37

, 0' _ _ : ~~e., amf 1 ton tS

0 ,. com e mo r-e -o r- less plenty. When the the " Flying Frenchmen" . Shades of

L"DITORIAL STAFF M:dJtor-ln-Cb let ............ .. ABaoclate Edltor ... AU!letlca EdJ tor Sororlty Editor .

. .... ············ ··---·-····- .. ···· osep 0 y , , I a gvvu. wue o r som e man · The I depression was young and g loom t. Patrick ! ·····-···········--··················Willtam s _chumacher , ,37 othe rs , the survey r e vealed, would was the thlckes~ people were moan-

. .......................... Marguen te Senesac, 38 like to become t~~ers . nurses, ing things like ''Brother Can You " A police s urgeon in Philadelphia 'BUSfNESS DEPABTMENT I stenographer s, dletJtians. write rs. or I Spare A Dime" and that g loom sa ys one is sober if he is able to

Bus iness Manager Be rnard O'Connell , '39 interior decorators. · Assis tant Busi ncas Man ager . ................. .. ... P atricia McLaughlin , '39 --- tune that w ent - "Tired, Tired. say ·susie sat in the soup' ." -r t- ..... u lallon Manager .. Berna rd Benoit, '371 H ere a re so me of the answers iv- , Life's Got Me Down". By 1935 the Portland Oregonian .

. 39

b . 11 t d . g song writer found that he bad five Of course, Susie, your life is your Assis tant Circul ation Manager COLUMNISTS ........ J ack Wissi ng , en y )ourna sm s u ents m a re- cents and she had a nickle, 5 0 the own. and lf you want to go around

Cumpt.a Persona lities...... Dolph Guy '38 c~tnt tes t at Northwest ern Univer- cilizen.s sang "Love On A Dime". to places like PhUadelpbia. and sit

Sport" Shor ts ........ P t · k B ' 1 ' '39 1 9 1

y: If one wishes to use this as a basis in people's soup, it's all rigbt wilb ..... a n c 1m mer e. Addis Ababa, king of Riffs. Sir In ter coll egla.U: .. .-... J ohn i\llorris, '37 Anthony Eden , cap'tain of the strick· for prognostication, it would seem us. But what is lbe pubUc golng

J osepb Robins. '39 en liner Dixie. Nicholas Murray that that popular but slippery vaga- to think of good old St. VIator lf AJumnl

WiUlam P helan, '36 Hazel Dionn e, ' &7 .

Danlel Murphy, '39

Vincent Murphy, '39

Butler, governor of Oklahoma. J bond, prosperity, must be coming the seniors go about playing such J oseph Prokopp, '38 E dgar H oover, former president of round the mountain because the pranks ?

Oline Dandurand. '39 the United States and author of I only thing people are now worrying William Schroeder , ' 30 "Th e White House Gang.' ' about is wher e you blow in and A note to lhe student body from

Alessandro Alcssandri , '37 I where the mustc comes out. Giles Swashbucket concerulng the SPORTS REPOin'ERS · d. t

Rober t Burmeiste r , ' :)9 From Loyola of the South comes tm pen mg examma ions: lhis professor's brain child, three The English used by Canadian Students-

STA-""F WRITERS

Subscription Rate $2.00 per annu m. s tudents were given the problem, fathers who taught in a certain You've got a hard fight on your subscrip t ion to find the number of bricks, four in- boy's school in the United States hands. Some of those questions arc Address all correspondence referring either to advertis ing or

Th e Viatorian, Bourbonnais, IUinois. Entered as second class ma tter a t the Pos t Office of Bourbonnais , Illinois ,

under the Act of March 3rd, 1879.

ches square are necessary to make would, at times, provide their charg- going to be long and they're golng a s tone wall four f eet by four feet es with much merriment. It was to be tough. You've been in there by fo ur feet. At the conclusion of a custom in this particular schoo l every day since last September drill-

ACME PRINTING CO. an hour and a half, the students to meditate before dinner on some ing on the fundamentals; learning

121 SOUTH WASHINGTON AVE. gave up and asked the professor the r eligious topic. On a certain oc- how to answer these questions. In

---==== 1935 Mem ber 1936 answer. H e said. "None". "Why? " casion, one of the good fathers a - past quizzes some of you fell down, "Because it was a 'stone' wal l". rose before dinner and said, "Boys, but you know now what your mls~

Associated CoUee>iate Press--- - ­D istributor of A semetic gentleman was asked

today we will meditate on the devil: takes were. My advice to you to~ - What the devil is be, who the day is keep your beads. I think

--CoUe5iate Di6est what he did at a Ford banquet he devil is be, and where the devil eve ry one of you has the s tufl' it takes. Now fill your pens, grab an exam book and get in there and fight.

Madison, Wisconsin bad attended. He cryptically r e- is he"-plied: 'V-8".

THE CAMPUS BRIEF S . "It's a wise cork that knows its

Man y c ri ti cisms, favorabl e a ud a d\' e rse, ha,·e come to our I own pop", quotes the Quig ley "Can-cll itorial car, and we have a lways carefully eoos1dered C\" ery s ug- dle" and cont inues by telling the gestiou or co111pla. iu t . \Vh eo, the refore, th e following communi- story about the rising author and ca lion reached our desk, we made no cxecption. the sweet young thing. Author:

llad w e fe l t th at th e auth or or authors of t h e le tte r we r e alon e "This is the plot of my story: a iu lhc opinion expressed, we would ha ve 1nadc uo mention of it Midnight scene. Two burglars creep

Journalists with fertile immagin­ations sometimes tum out strange

Shut Valve On Political Machine

-Giles Swashbucket. Tbat is all. - J . R.

Newspaper advertisements offering

$10 for a footba ll ticket, a ride to

the Yale game for a number of un·

dergraduates, "for their company", and an ad asking for an orange and s tealthily toward the house. They

h e r e but w e have been to ld fro m time t o time that a par t of th e climb a wall, force open the window. stud en t body con cm·s with th e m in t h e se ntim ent. Our comm ents , enter the room! The clock strikes th en , arc direc t ed , not m er e ly in answ er to this parti cular critique , one . . "She (breathless ly): "Which

Princeton, N. J., _ (ACP) _ black guinea pig constituted

Ephraim E. Di Kabble, Princeton build-up.

the

but in explan ation to a ll who ' ' huugel' fo r· a scanda l column ' '. f one?"

D ear Editor I " W · 1 S ' 1 1. I I . I . I I Harvard University will be 300

1i 1 eptem JC I' eam e you t· ClltO rs up anc wJt 1 1t Ca ln f' t lC years old in 1936, it is the oldest

freshman who furnished a nine-days' A New York evening newspaper

mystery to students and townspeo- unwitting ly helped the hoax along ple here, has oeen unmasked. by carrying an intemew with Di

eli mination or the best-know n column of yes t e r -y ears, the " Campus college in the United States. "Di Kahble" is five members of Kahble, but the plot fe ll through

the class of '39 who had the no- when student suspicion was aroused lion that by giving their "man' by an advertisement in the Daily

The person who thinks a question a big enough build-up, they could Princetonian asking fo r old razor has only two s ides never listened to elect him t reasurer of the freshman blades "for melting purposes".

Bri efs". 'Why did you br eak th e tradition ? " Dis regard yout· petty obj ec tion s- gi ve u s a g ood " Bt·i e fs' '

w-riter- give each individual stud ent ;1 t: hHrH: t' lo !ta,·e his nam e in t h e sc hoo l ( 1) papet·. Th en las l bul n ot kasl , cr ea te e n thus iasm and get eve ry campus prowl er lu r0n d t Itt> Vi at vrian wit.h somr: eagerness.

those ordinary college dorm discus- class, to the confusion of the uni-

" \Ve want so m ething w it h action.

sion.

The learned Descartes once re· marked, "J e pense, done je suis" ( I

versity authorities. -~ President is Active _w_a_s _t_o--:-be--:-k-,-is-s-ed-=--an--:-d- th_e_n---,-da- u-:-b-ed A s City Club Speaker on the microsopic s lide for exam-

Anonymous " . think, therefore I am). As we look a bout us, we are amazed at the

The communication smacks of th e humorous afte r w e r ead number who aren't. the r efe t· euce to om " p etty obj ec tions " , aucl tlte.u proceed to r ead t he author 's argum ents in favor of a '' Briefs · ' co lumn . (1 ) " Give From Loyola, they summarize the each individual student a chance to have ltis name iu the school rise of American civilization,

ination.

From Western Md. College paper : "In grading students on their

knowledge, in rating them on their personalities, and in criticizing them

Since adding the publication of a book to his already long list of achievements, the Very Rev. Dr. Edward V. Cardinal, C. S. V., has been much in demand as an in­formal lecturer. On January 15,

( 1) paper ". \Ve are t o infe r , t h en , tha t t h e a'·er age coll eg e man 1929 ' Marathon dancers.

longs to see in print hi s name linked w it h that of th e g irl whom h e ~:;~: T;;:e 1'~~t7e~sgolf. es corted t o 1l sch ool dance ; t ha t t h e a ve rage colleg e man y earns to 1933: Jig Saw Puzzles. have hroa deHst to the campus and alumni th e fact t hat h e was 1934: Hog-calling contests.

for their mannerisms, the instructors he addressed the Kankakee Women's at various colleges have long had Club on tbe practical topic, "An tbe upper band. The table bas American Looks At Tbe Map Of turned, however, and recently a class Europe".

ol.Jscn cd whil e cu min g o ut o f on e or t lte local t a ,·erns? \Y e ar e t o 1935: "Scratch out the top of over 100 students in elementary "Scandals In History" was the

name psychology, had the opportunity t o College President's subject at an submit criticism of their profs. Fol~ enthusiastic meeting of the Kan­lowing are some of the most fre- kakee Study Club. The Very Rev.

beli ev e that th e st ud ent looks ea g e rly fo r ward to mail in g to his and send a dime" .

parent s the t op.v oi' th e paper which d escrib es his pa rti cipation in pri.-at e off-campus r e ve ls? The thirs t f or publi c ity, t he u , has

rca c·hcd th e poin t wh er e a man desires· his name in prin t, r egard­less of the circum ::::tances under whi ch it appears '? No, we are for ced to d ec lan' our f aith in th e collegian, and to maintain that men a r e cont ent to keep pr ivate affairs pri,· a t c, and to trust in achi c n ·m cnt a nd publi c action f o t· publi c not ic e . As t o th e qu estion mar k after t he word (' school 1 in th e correspondence, we have been unable to fath om lhc ·' subtility " of t h e author's m eaning.

A biology professor at the Uni- quently ci ted criticisms with the J. W. R. Maguire, C. S. v., is versity of California announced that number of times each was mention- director of the club, which was or­all the boys and girls in his class ed: ganized this winter and which is would participate in a test to de· Rambling of lectures, 76; twisting proving eminently popular among t ermine whether microbes are ex- mouth into odd shapes, 63; pulling the people of the city. Father changed in kissing. On the day of ears, nose or lips, 45; use of pet Cardinal also addressed the Holy the test attendance was 100 per expressions, 39; using sarcasm, 29; Name Society of St. Rose Chruch on cent. Each s tudent was handed a wise cracking, 26 ; riding students, January 14_ sterilized pad by the prof which 14.

( 2) :\'ext . we a r c told to " c r eate en t husi asm a nd get ever y But w e we r e soon made to discard any expectations by th e almost Cl:llll JHI S prowl er to read the Via.torian with som e eagerness " . Again -univers a l complaint among the students, " I don :t have time ", or w e ask . a r e coll ege m e n made "enthus iastic" by r eading sca ndal ? " 1 ca n ·t wri te" . H a d s ev eral columnists b een found , we might hav e

Can the s tudent wi t h more than tw elve y ears of academi c training ha d " something with action". b <•hi n d h im be made " ea g e r " on ly by t h e a u t ic ipa t iou of r eadin g H o w enr, d espite our " p etty objections" to a "Campus Briefs ",

s k <'l <· IH•s of brawl s . dinn er-engagem ents aud e v ening par t ies! If we do n ot lose sight o f the f a ct that the VIATORIAN is a s tudent sn l' h lw th e l' IIS<' . an d \\'e dou bt i t . schools have fa iled , and h aYe p u blicati on , th a t i t is m er e ly our office to print that which college fail ed miserably. S candal may satisfy the m entality of the " man m en d es ire to r ead. In consid eration of which, we are willing to

on lhe stree t ". but unt il p roved othennse . "·e "ill hold college m e n op e u t h ese columns t o a " Briefs " writer if the student body so a b o,·.:- t h e m ob. d esir es, and i f a columnist offers his services . 'vVe are unable to

( 3) An d f ina lly. w e w ould consider the d emand, " Give us a I f in d t hat columnist. But until students g enerally a sk for scandal , good "Briefs " wri ter " . W e will f rankly admit h e r e that at one w e will continue in our beli ef that college men are most i nterested

tim e w e h a d pla nued senral columns of a light, commentary n a ture. in viri le comment than in f eminine gossip.

Physic Lab Housed In New Quarters, The Physics Iabratory "came into

its own" last week when it was moved into the newly-decorated Day Student Lounge. The change was made as the result of the growing number of physics students, and the n ew quarters were selected be­cause of the lighting fac!Hties and efficient possibilities.

Page 5: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

l'U I!l VlA'.rOIUAN l'AOJ!l FIV,g FRIDAY, .JANUARY 17, 1080

~--~=========~~~---Comlllunism Costs ALUMNI I New Fields Open

By c learing our abolves or <lupll­cu.tes the LJ tra ry J:w" IX: en able to offe r th e atudcnta goo<l book• u.t rea.sonuble prices. New valu es wlll be offer ed fro m llm c to time. Watch the notice• on th e Ll brary door for

Human Suffering: NOTES Second Semester THE

LIBRARY LOG U. of I. Professor Father Thomas Meehan, assis t ant The Inauguration at the l:I Cmcater tlll e~:t uncJ prices.

at St. Angelia's Church, Chicago, of courses which bavc been absent As the N ew Year b eg ins wo Se veral of our s landard books "Communism As 1 Found It In and the author of the booldet, T ho f rom the clrrlculum was announced pause to r ef l c t on how we can have been r e bound. Th ey have been

Cn thoUc Boghwlngs of Ch lcu.go, was this week by the Rev. Bernard Mul- improve our habits. May we aug - p laced on the N ew Book Shelves Ru.ssia" was the s ubject of a talk given here last month by Doctor A. Sarkissan, instructor at U1e State University before the International Relations Club.

scheduled to g ive a lecture on the vaney, c. s. v., ac ting-Dean of gest that each s tud ent a llot at least for th e convi ence of s tudents. early church his tory of Ch icago at S tudies. The c lass schedu le wi ll a n hour to profitabl e reading in New Books the January m eeting of the Ho ly undergo a marl<ed change In Feb- the Library during the second half lmperlal Pa.l.a.ces by Arnold Ben-Name Cathedral Conve rts' League ruary, but the co urses lis ted be low of the scholast ic year. The bene- ne tt.

" I was for the communistic ex­perimen t", he prefaced his discus­sion, "but when I ended my studies in Russia I was against it in any form because I failed to see any­thing there which will make human life better ."

in the Assembly H a ll. include only those which we re not f its derived from r eading good books Tblngs That Have lnter etited Me offered here last year. are not immediate ly a pparent, but by Arnold Benn ett .

Francis 'Buster' Brocltmnn of K enrick Seminary paid us a s hor t visit on his way baclt to the sem­inary. 'Bus' · is in his last year of theology and expects to be or-

The lecturer decla red that the dained June 6.

average traveler in the Soviet Re-public does not see the poverty and W edding bells: Fran!< Haggarty, misery of the proletariat. The Rus- H. S. '24, was united in marriage sion officials, by s tric t censorship, to ntliss Marian Cecile Grupe of he explained, keep human suffering Chicago in St. Mary of the Lake behind closed doors, which a r e never Church , Chicago, on January 8. opened for foreign views. About two hundred re latives of the

Doctor Sarkissan admitted that bride and bridegroom attended the Russia has made great advances in reception and breakfast at the agriculture, commer ce, and industry, Edgewater Beach H otel. One of But he insisted that these strides the- guests present at the wedding forward have been made a.t the cost was Mayor Bernard F . Dickman of of human life. H e estimated that St. Louis. Frank and his bride over 500,000,000 c itizens have died left fo r California on thei r honey­of starvation and undernourishment moon, and will be bacl< in Chicago since the inauguration of the first about F ebruary first. Five Year Plan.

Father Capoano, a theologian here in '16 and '17, is now s uper ior of an Oratory in Summ it, New J er sey. After he left her e , he studied at the Catholic University of America . L a te r F ather Capoano and a Father P aul organized the Fathers of the

Three non-laboratory courses have J they are manifold, and make th em- Contempor a ry Drama. of Russia been added to the Biology d epart- selves felt eventually. by Leo Wiener. ment. Dr. William C. VanDevente r W e a lso wish to take this oc- What B i.rd is That ? by F . M. wi ll instruct in Public H ea l th, two ca sion to express our g ratif ication Chapman. hou rs; Phys iography, three hours , no over the splendid manner in which ::M.ark Tvlal n by Paine. prerequisite; H er edity, two hou rs , the students have made use of the Riceyman Steps by Arnold Ben-Senior college pre requis ites : Biolog y Library this year. The cooperation nett. 11 or Sociology 48 or 53. they have g i veu and the courtesy Tho Embryology of tb.e Plg by

Classes in Statistics have been they have shown have been g r eatly B. M. Patten. appreciated. However, it is urged P la n t Ecology by W. B. McDoug-added to the Econom ic department.

Three hours c r edit will be gran ted. Professor John J . McNamara w ill

that they r ef r ain from tak ing R e- a ll . ser ve Books to their rooms. Books

conduct the classes. are placed on res erve by teachers Art of Poetry, under Professor fo r use by the entire class . In

M ichael Maloney, has been made a taking a reserve book to his room prerequisite for Eng lis h majors. The .a s tudent deprives a fellow student dean announces that the course will of the opportunity of us ing it.

be c redited with two hours of work. I Father Munsch has donned his

CISCA NOTICE

moleskin h~p boots and encircled

I with a belt of cartridges has gone gunning for big game- the Diction­ary of National Biography and the Fourteenth Edition of the Brittan-

The Technique of t he Novel by C. H. Grabo.

T he Gra.mma.r of the Arts by C. J. Holmes.

Anlmal Ecology by A . S. Pearse.

ALUMNUS HEADS CHARITY DANCE

Thomas Kelly, '35, president of the College Club here las t year, is chairman of a charity dance to be

ica - but h e also has a fowling held on the evening of January 24 piece and small shot for lesser gar e. in Chicago.

ANDREWS

H e said that schools have been improved there and illiteracy abol­ished, but the living conditions of the laborer unimproved and w retch­ed. He added "The r eason that might account fo r this condition is_ that the Russian is kept ignorant of the outside world; he is unaware that he is living in a dark world".

Cisca urges the s tudent body

to mal<e the Catholic Unity

Octave which began January 18 and ends on January 25. The spiri t ua l benefits to be gained a r e great, and every Catholic will apprecia te the op-

Attonment When he bad been I portumty to gam them. Wlth t hem four years, he satled for Italy, and there )Omed the Orator->ans H e was sent back to Amer- WHOLESALE-

INSURANCE AGENCY

Insurance of All Kinds JOLIET JR. - ica to found their first house on

(Continued from page 2) this continent .

~.; . Viator Betourne, f. Gibbons, f. Burke, f. Monahan, c. Damler , c. Rogers, g. Blazevich, g. Krauklis, g. ,

Summary FG FT PF

The following alumni of Washing­ton, D . C., visi t ed their Alma Mater during the Christmas vacation: Ed. Gallahue, Robert and Allen Nolan, 5 3

3 2 0 0 2

1

2

0 0

2

0

4 and Burke Monahan. 2 3 During Father O'Mahoney's r ecen t 0 2

tri,p Ea.st, he met the fo llowing al-umni : J ames Cronin, of Ever ett,

0 Mass. Jim is manager of the First

15 11 16 FG FT PF

(Continued from page 3)

predictable, are .possibi li ties fo r the fields of medicine, chemistry and general industry. The neutrons, s treaming in all directions f rom the big magnet, are not stopped by a n y known type of shield, not even by lead. They pass through the yard­thick coils of the big magnet as if it w~re so much paper, and nothing will perceptibly slow them down ex­cept water.

To experiment in safe ty the Cali-Totals

Joliet Jr. Jones, f . Brumund, f. P a tterson, f. Comerford, f. Manthey, c. T ezal<, g. Tessiator e, g. A rgyle, g.

1 2 4

National stores in Everett, and wish­es to be remembered to all his old friends at Viator, especially to Fath­er Galvin ; Charlie Shea, of Medford, in fornia physicists have set up a re-

mote control panel 50 feet distant Mass. Charlie is now teaching Medford High School; James Doughtery and Joseph Judge Washington, D. C.

5 1 4 1 0 3 0 1 3 1 0

L. from the magnet, with a tank of of water forming a three-foot thick

barrier.

; ~ ;I VIATOR-VALPO-As easily controlled as an electric

light, the beam is produced by a 12,000 volt current, "stepped up" to 4,500,000-volt beam of neutrons.

0 o 0 ' (Continued from page 2)

Totals 15 R ef er ee: J . Kus inski, Illinois. Umpire; Trees, DeKalb.

17 Irish at a distance from the hoop, but failed to s top s udden bursts of speed which enabled them to break through s ufficiently to assure a vic­tory.

Admissions Director . In Auto Mishap

PHONE 283

Star Cleaners

Richard Doyle, '35, director of admissions here, was forced over an eight foot embankment in Chicago, while returning to the College on the evening of January 9. Doyle, al­though knocked unconscious, suffer­ed no ill effects and assumed his daily duties upon his return to the College.

The accident occurred w hen Doyle attempted to a void two s peeding machines. Crowded over to the side of the road, his car skidded on the icy pavement and swung into the water f illed ditch.

Fr. Munsch Speaks on Mid - Day Program

The WGN radio public heard the message of the Rev. F. E. Munsch, C. S. V., on December 26 when he spoke on the Mid-day Service Pro­gram of that station.

Assis tant Coaches , Gene Donnelly and Brother Eddi-e DesLauriers guided the t eam in the absence of Coach MeN amara, who has been confined to his home in DeKalb on

Cleaning, Pressing, IU>palring 257 S. Schuyler A venue

Kankal<ee, Til. L. A. Beauvais, Prop.

account of illness.

Summary I D. J . O'LOUGHLIN, I FG FT PF M.D.

1 1 2 EYE, EAR, NOSE & THROAT

0 0 1 602 City National Bank llldg.

O 0 O Kankal<ee, Til.

Monahan, c. 6 1 2 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

St. Viator Betourne, f. Gibbons, f . Burke, f .

Blazevich, g. 1 0 3 ~

Roger s, g. 0 0 0 McElligott, g. 4 0 0

Tota.Is Valparalao Ruehr, f . Karr, f. Roedel , f. Sauer , c. Baran, g. J ohnson, g. Fierke, g .

Toatl

. 12 2 8 FG FT PF

2 2

1 0 1

9

0 0 0 0

2 0 0

4

0 3 1 0 0

Phones Maln 8128 - Maln 1826

All W ork Guaranteed

• LAFFLAME'S

SHOE REPAIR SERVICE

Work Called for and Delivered

SS7 E. Station S t. - 768 S. Malo

107 EAST COURT STREET

KANKAKEE ILLINOIS

Phone 1983

What Is MORTEX?

Perfect

Preservative

Protection

Uquld

Emulsllled

Asphalt

A perfect protective coating for brushing, spraying or trowelllng, being a high grade Mexican aspheJt dispersed as minute particles 1n water for convenient handling. It ls applied cold. As the moisture evaporates, a black, flexible rubberlike fUm remains which is water­proof, acid, alkaline and fire resistant, and s huts out lnf!ltrations of alr.

Mortex 5 does not crack or peel in coldest weather , nor blister, sag nor run on hottest days and always remains elastic. It is odor· Jess, tasteless and nonlnflammRble and can be safely used in confined places. It rea.d!ly bonds to all c lean surfaces, and also to damp sur­faces, bu t should never be applied over dusty, dirty, greasy or o!ly surfaces or an imperfect bond will. r esult. Use only on clean sur­faces to obtaln perfect satisfaction.

Used for DAMPPROOFING WALLS and FLOORS, PAINTING GALVANIZED ffiON, PROTECTING CLEAN ffiON AND STEEL, ROOF REPAIRING and as an ADHESIVE. It can be mixed with Portland C'\ment and dries out a soft gray color for patching de­teriorating concret e.

For Sale at Local Dealers

J. W. Mori:ell Co. Kankakee, Ill

Page 6: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1936-01-17

EVANS, DeKALB-reonun uw from pa.ge 1 )

ways a troe Vlatorian wblle playing tbe game. We don't mea.sure suc­cesH In wins and !oases but rather upon the manner In wblcb you win or lose. That to us Old Grads means mor e than anything else In the wor ld. Continue to be true Vla torfana and w e wil l be with you always - wtn or lose".

Coach J ohn McNamara: "It has been a pleasur e to work wi th you, atnce you gave me such splendid co­operation . lnjurles sap ped our s trength as a team and tho tough oppos iUon did th e r es t. Your morale and squad spirit w er e gr eat and I do believe and hope It will carry over to next year. I thank you tor your confidence In me and as­s ure you that next fall w e will do better".

Co-captain Frank KraukllB: "To the mem bera or the 1936 squad ; Work hard, co-operate with the coach , don't play as a one man team, If you have tough luck , Lake lt on the cbln and come back grin­ning! Good luck and bes t wishes tor a victorious season".

Co-captain Ray Roche : "We tried

but the breaks were a.gal.nst us. basket gathering spree and led the Crooners I'm sorry I won't be here to play Switchmen to an o verwhelming "ic · Braithwaite, ! . a.galn. Carry on!" tory ove r Cavanaugh's would-be has- Krauser, !.

Father O'Mahoney, provincial : ke tball talenL Leading 17 to 6 at Normile. c. " Sportsmanship Is synonymous with bal! time, the railroad boys had no Marik g . Vlatorianablp. Remember that al- l Lrouble running up a 36 to 15 vic- Maldron. g . waya, as you have done tn the past, tory. and we won't worry about the win witchmen and lost column". Dore, f.

Frank Rainey, '08: "H er e is the O'Connell, !. meaaa.ge the Old Timer s asked m e Murphy, c. to deliver to you young fellows: Ma.gdecki, g . 'Play lik e hell ! work like hell ! and Morgan, g. give hell to your opponen ts and the O' Conner , g . scor e wiU Lake care of itsel! !' " Fanntng, g .

FG 6 1 5 2

2 1 0

FT PF Totals 0 0 Bemadltles 0 2 Toomey, f. 0 0 Nelson , f. 2

0 0 0

Rannahan, !. 0 Maloney, c. 0 Senesac, g . 0 Klem , g.

Totals

FG F1' 0 0 1

PF 0 0 0

FRID3Y.

Ceitlcs Regan. f.

Sandquist. ! . Wls.slng, !.

FG Fl' PF 0 0 • 1 0 0 0 0 3

0 0

2

3 0 O'Connor , c. 0

1 Bader, g .

----- Fanning, g .

1

0 1

0 0 0

0 z

11 1 FG FT

0 1 3 0

10

1

0 0 1

0

0 Totals 3 0 PF

1 O Naz.ls Top Day Dog>o;. ll1- l1

11

0 The Day Dogers displayed a fine

0 brand o! basketball to lead at the

0 half way mark. 8 to 6, bu t

0 Nazis spurted in the second and gained their second league

1 tory by a 27 to 17 counL

the half vi -

The other speakers alJ expressed their confidence 1n Coach McNamara and the squad. The Very Rever end E . V. Cardinal , president of th e College c losed the banquet wl th a prayer for the r epose of tbe soul of John Stanford, Vlator athle te, who me t his death a year ago in an automobile accident in Connet­lcuL

Totals

Crooners,

Normile, f . Krauser, f . Trant, c . Doyle, g. Lannan, g .

17 4

FG FI' PF

0 1

' az.ls FG FI' PF Switchmen Bury Celt;, , 35-6 I Waldron , ! . 0 0 0

The fl oor of the gymnasium was Hilker, f. o 1 given Its weekly mop p ing last Sat- Guy, c . 2 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

COLLEGE CLUB-(Continued f rom page 3)

Totals

urdc.y when the -=>wi tchmen m et the Fahey, g . 1 Cellics . Dan Murphy was the O' Rourke, g . 0 high mopper ringing up 11 points Tures, g .

----- on 5 buckets and a crutch.

2

0 1

0

Switchmen FG F1' PF Totals Dore, f.

Croont"TS Nip Monks, 23-22 O' Connell, f . 3 0 5

Day Dodgers 1 Smlth, f.

The Berna.diUes suffered their sec- D. Murphy, f. ond heart-breaking defeat at the Wills, c.

0 Fields, f.

Switchmen Swamp Croone rs S6-15 hands of the Crooners . Klem and Bimmerle, g. 2

1 0 0 0

0 Tlculka, c. 0 Clancy, g .

Danny Murphy and "Slim" Dore, Norm il e were leading • cor er s of Magdecki, g . two enterprising freshmen who evi .! their respec tive teams g arnering 8 dently hate "Crooners", w ent on a points apiece . Totals

Normile, g .

16 Totals

3 2

1 0 2

0 0 2

11 3 3 FG FI' PF

1

8

0 1 0 0 0

0 2

3 0 0

@ l936. l..tGGETT .S.: MYD..S Toa.,y:co Co.