Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 66, No. 03

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Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 66, No. 03 #-<3 THE NOTRE DAME SCHOLASTIC 15 CTS- A COPY OCTOBER 7 $3.00 THE YEAR 1932 •r'^ " mm>m «=t. -.-••V,-, ^y M THE FALL OF m CONSTANTINOPLE "Nature in the Raw"—as por- trayed by Tfiomas Wehb... in­ spired by the savage slaughter of 5000 Christian defenders— ^ at the hands of the vengeful, barbaric horde of 250,000 :|^ men under the ruthless lAohammed II—1453! 'Mi —and raw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes They are »o^ present in Luckies these fine tobaccos, after ... the mildest cigarette proper aging and mellowing, you ever smoked are then given the benefit of E buy the finest, the very that Lucky Strike purifying Wfinest tobaccos in all the process, described by the world—but that does not words—"It's toasted". That's explain why folks every­ why folks in every city, town where regard Lucky Strike as and hamlet say diat Luckies the mildest cigarette. The fact are such mild cigarettes. is, we never overlook the truth that "Nature in the "irs toasted** Raw is Seldom Mild"—so Tint package off mild Luckies "If a man wriu a better book, preach a better, sermon, or make a better muae-trap than his neighbor, tho he bmU bis bomsein the iMods, the vnHdvnllmah a beaten path to bis Jour.''--VMSa'^ Doa not ifajs c^Uia die woriA-wide acoepttnce aad i^ptoval <rf Ijgi^y Stcike? October 7, 1932 Om Asl< Jimmy . CANDIES The South Shore Line is happy to an­ . and Salted Nuts nounce that James H. McGrath will be its student representative at Notre Dame this Fresh Every Da^ from year. our South Bend J^itchen. Drop around to No. 1, Morrissey Hall, and V ask him about our service between South THRIFT SPECIAL . 50c lb. Bend and Chicago and intermediate points. FAMILY ASSORTMENT 60c lb. FRUITS AND NUTS . 70c lb. V Trains hetiveen Chicago and South Bend ''Every Hour on the Hour." Special Atlention to Mailing [Open Evenings and Sundays V CHICAGO SOUTH SHORE Mrs. Thompson's Candy Shop, Inc. AND SOUTH BEND RAILROAD Phone 4-5491 In the Oliver Hotel O. A. CLARK^S Kuehn— RESTAURANT SHOES 104-106 North Michigan Street Styled Right Priced Right South Bend's Oldest and Most Reliable Eating House In today's language, Kuehn shoes are a buy. Kuehn qual­ ity from heel to toe; rightly styled, finely made. Yes—at Catering to their new low prices they are NOTRE DAME MEN certainly unusual values. Priced at for over thirty years §3.00, §4.00, $5.00, $6.50, $8.00 A few higher. Master Fitted Complete Dinner 35c to 50c For a Real Man's Meal IWLIJ FOOTW^AR\\\ c/ \^^^v\\on Drop in Any Time. 120 South Michigan Street Tivo The Scholdstic Meet the Heads of Notre Dame's Publications! EDMUND STEPHAN ARTHUR SANDUSKY "Scholastic" "Dome" REV. L BROUGHAL, CS.C- Chairman of the Board of Publications JOSEPH M'CABE CHARLES SHEEDY "Juggler" bcnp October 7, 1932 Three THE SCHOLASTIC is pub­ Entered as second-class lished iveek'y at the Vn'vers- matter at Notre Dame, In­ ity of Notre Dame. Manu­ The Notre Dame Scholastic diana. Acceptance for mail­ scripts may be addressed to ing at special rate of postage. THE SCHOLASTIC, PubU- Disce QuMsi Semper Victurus Vive Quasi Cras Moriturus Section 1103, October 3,1917, cations Oficc, Main Building. authorized June 25, 1013. FOUNDED 1867 EDMUND A. STEPHAN Editor-in-Chief JAMES S. KEARNS Managing Editor Associate Editors Department Editors Features Staff F. GRANGER WEIL JOHN PICK JOHN PICK The Week RAY WATERS Fectures Editor WALTER JOHNSON WILLIAM DREUX ROGER McGOVERN College Parade LOUIS HRUBY HARRY BURCHELL LLOYD TESKE ROGER BEHINE Music and Drama WILLIAM KENNEDY BRYAN DEGNAN NciDS staff RICHARD PREZEBEL Stair Artist EDWARD J. O'BRIEN MITCHELL TACKLEY Ne^us Editor ROY SCHOLZ Assistant News Editor Sports Staff Business Staff MICHAEL WIEDL ROBERT DILLON LESLIE BADDATZ Sports Edilor JQHN F. STOECKLEY. .. .Graduate Manager JOHN McELLIGOTT WILLIAM FLYNN JOSEPH KURTH RAYMOND J. NABER.. .C«rn.fatmn Ma«a<;er Desk Editors PAUL HOST EDWARD VAN HUISSELING R, j. FltZSUmOiiS .. AdveHisin-g Manager BERNARD COUSINO WALTER KENNEDY FRED MacBETH GEORGE BELTING HARRY McGOWAN JOSEPH SIMON PATRICK CORCORAN JOHN CONLEY JAMES PICK j_ ALBERT SMITH VOLUME LXVI. OCTOBER 7, 1932 NuMB^ai 3 Interhall grid season opens with six games this SUMMARY Sunday 23 NEWS "Splinters From the Press Box" picks more scores: Toward which political party will Notre Dame swing? Notre Dame 34, Haskell 0 26 Read rules of THE SCHOLASTIC'S presidential poll 5 Opening games in past years have produced wins, Sophs select music of Jimmy Garrigan for their losses, hard-fought games for Irish 27 annual frolic; Additional plans announced 5 ^^ Student body cheers heard in peppiest of pep meet­ ings held in gym last night. 7 COMING EVENTS Hilaire Belloc's proposed visit to Notre Dame in­ FRIDAY, Oct. 7—SCHOLASTIC staff meetings: Editorial definitely postponed 8 board. Publications Office, 6:30 p. m.; News, Sports, Tune in on WSBT at 8:30 o'clock tonight and hear Features, and Group II of candidates, Room 222 of Notre Dame's Glee Club in their first concert 12 Main Building, 7:00 p. m.; Symphony orchestra rehear­ sal. Music Hall, 6:45 p. m.; Meeting of Patricians Club, University bandsters to include Navy and Pittsburgh 7:45 p. m.. Law Building; Glee Club concert over football trips in itinerary 14 WSBT, South Bend, at 8:30 p. m. FEATURES SATURDAY, Oct. 8—Football game, Notre Dame vs. His "Brownson Hall" background stamps Jim Gerend Haskell Institute, Notre Dame stadium, 2:00 p. m.; as notorious in this week's "Man About" S Movie, Jackie Cooper and Chic Sale in "When a Fellow Current Literature evaluated as to its worthiness Needs a Friend," Washington Hall, 6:35 p. m., and and shortcomings; John Pick 9 8:15 p. m. Month of October launches Chicago and New York SUNDAY, Oct. 9—Masses, Sacred Heart Church, 6:00, theater season; Beime 10 7:00, 8:00, 9:00 a. m.; S. A. C. meeting. Library, 10:30 a. m. Grudges openly discussed in THE SCHOLASTIC communication column - 11 MONDAY, Oct. 10—^Drake game football tickets, seniors, 3:00 to 5:00 p. m.; Stadium; K. of C. meeting, council Test tubes, flasks, and bugs brought to light from chambers, 7:30 p. m. the depths of Science Hall.: 17 TUESDAY, Oct. 11—^Meeting of Press Club in Journalism Introducing Charlie Jaskwhich 24 room of Library, 7:30 p. m.; Drake football game SPORTS tickets, juniors, 3:00 to 5:00 p. m.. Stadium. Notre Dame opens 44th grid season against WEDNESDAY, Oct. 12—Drake game football tickets, Haskell tomorrow ; 20 sophomores, 3:00 to 5:00 p. m.. Stadium; Wranglers Favorites advance in fall tennis meet 21 meeting, Law Building, 6:30 p. m.; Dead line for SCHO­ Varsity squad in shape for opening game; story LASTIC poll, 9:00 p. m. by Joe Kurth 22 THURSDAY, Oct. 13—Founders' Day; no classes; Drake Twenty tough games listed for Keoganites this game football tickets, freshmen, 3:00 to 5:00 p. m.. Sta­ winter; schedule released 23 dium; Spectators meeting. Law Building, 8:00 p. m. Four The Scholastic THE WEEK T X HE QUADRANGLE, that long green plot cURIOSIT Y number two: (Setting: same as from Main Building to Postoffice, was the set­ above; Time: Late one afternoon; Characters: ting for several occurrences, unusual to say the South Bend High School students) Monday a least. score of explorers, brilliantly sweatered, chew­ Supposedly filled with lions, tigers, elephants, ing their Juicy Fruit with gusto, lingered from and other standard members of a menagerie, tree to tree reading scientific classifications and Saturday night reverberated with yells, shouts, hesitatingly plucking twig specimens for their hoots, ululations, bombinations, outcries, voci­ botany classes. The chap with the butterfly net ferations and an assorted hubbub rolling back —the one with the glasses — went back with and forth from Science Hall to Sorin. What two beetles, a grub and three worms. caused the miniature circus? The movies. Tarzan, hero of American youth, impelled a V thousand students, crouching behind shrubbery, to roar at their prey, to jump out and all but eat the very grass. In the city to the south those who went to LAS T week six burly men, muscles bulging bed at a reasonable hour—about eight-thirty, through blue shirtsleeves, lifted a battered after the first show—rose in their nightcaps and brown piano to Dillon's third floor. Cautiously locked their doors for fear that the campus they rolled it down the waxed corridor to a jungle would advance upon them. If the flood student's room. Later mysterious airs—and light on Washington Hall could have been airs can be strange on a creaking ($15 deliv­ turned around, we're sure so-called college men ered) upright—disturbed history reports and could have been seen swinging from limb to Latin translations. Result: two nails driven limb, from Pinus Greenus, to Cedarus Highus. through the key cover. Replied the indignant 'Tis said Brownsonites, in their nightmares, student, "Others have their violins, clarinets, hung single handed from the pipe trellises oboes, and picolos, why can't I have my piano? above their beds. We met a fev\^ fevered enthus­ iasts in the starlight at St. Joseph lake appar­ V ently on the lookout for a drove of crocodiles. (Memo to proper department: Do crocodiles go in droves?) Only "Quack! Quack! Quack!" OW THAT the world series is finished echoed to them.
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