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4-19-1950 1950 Brown and Gold Vol 34 No 12 April 19, 1950

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Recommended Citation "1950 Brown and Gold Vol 34 No 12 April 19, 1950" (1950). Brown and Gold. 270. https://epublications.regis.edu/brownandgold/270

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Archives and Special Collections at ePublications at Regis University. It has been accepted for inclusion in Brown and Gold by an authorized administrator of ePublications at Regis University. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ~XXXIV, No. 12 April 19, 1950 (;iiege Annual Requires Job Prospects For Regis Graduate Is Selected Support Of All Students June Graduates New Provincial Of Jesuits The students of Regis College are proud of the RANGER Growing Dimmer The Very Rev. Daniel H. Conway, S.J., a graduate of Regis their yearbook, and pardonably so. The NSPA, of the Universit; With about 500,000 college stu­ College, Denver, has been appointed Provincial of the Missouri dents graduating this year-the oUfinnesota Scho~l o.f Journalism, has rated the 1949 RANGER province of the Society of Jesus, the Very Rev. John B. Janssens, largest number in our country's S.J., General of the society, announced April 9. He is the first as First Class. This IS the Oscar of the yearbook field, and a history-the job outlook for the prize that is coveted by yearbook staffs throughout the country. new college graduates is generally Regis graduate so honored. Father Conway replaces the Very The RANGER of la-st year was, without question, the best ever. good. It is not, however as good Rev. Joseph P. Zuercher, S.J., Provincial for the past six and as in 1947 and 1948. · a half years. 1950 brings a new RANGER, and new problems. The men The outlook is clouded by three Father Conway entered the old behind your yearbook wish you could step inside the office and factors: the large number of grad­ Sacred Heart academy (now Regis see the activity that pulsates there. uates who will be seeking jobs; high school) in 1905. He was grad­ The staff is determined to better Ch • a moderate increase in the total uated in 1907 and entered Sacred the achievement of 1949, and with em1sts Stage Informal number of unemployed persons; Heart college (now Regis college). the support of the students, cam- and . the filling of war-created He received an A.B. degree. pus clubs, .and Alu~ni, they can Dance at Coronado Club shortages of college gradutes in His first important post. was and are gomg to do JUst that. some specialized fields ~ by the dean of men at St. Louis Univer­ sity, St. Louis, during the year New Annual Will Be Larger That sulphurous smelling group large graduating classes of 1948 and 1949. 1931. In that year he was ap­ The RANGER will be of young intellectuals who call 1950 Country's Economy Stro11g pointed president of Rockhurst larger in size and will con~ain themselves the Chern Club sue­ Basically, the economy of the . college in Kansas City, a post he more pictures than any prev10us ceeded in pulling off a very snappy country is strong and there is a · held until 1941, when he became undertaking. The cover is to be affair last Saturday night. The general concensus that production rector of the Jesuit School of The­ ology in St. Marys, Kans. In 1946 gold with brown trim and the size occasion was their annual dance and employment will remain high 9x12 Instead of Slf.Jxll. The total during 1950. However, the big when the new Jesuit tertianship number of pages will be expanded which took place this year at the problem facing· the economy is opened in Decatur, Father Conway from 140 to 176. Coronado Club. Regis was present that of constantly providing more became its first rector and in­ in force and everyone appeared to goods and services and utilizing structor of tertians, a position he An appeal from the RANGER relinquishes to go to St. Louis to office to all Clubs to secure ads be having the proverbial good time. fully a labor force that is growing at the rate of 600,000 to 700,000 make his headquarters at 4511 W. for the new yearbook went un­ The Variety Club was on hand for Pine boulevard. heeded by many of the campus workers a year. Even if employ­ groups. The Alpha Delta Gamma entertainment during the intermis- ment continues during 1950 at Rev. Daniel H. Conway, S.J. As Provincial of the Missouri about the same level as last year, province, Father Conway will be fraternity set $1,500.00 as a ~oal sion and conducted the funny busi­ superior of 1,078 priests, scholas­ for itself, and as of now has ness capably, featuring slapstick as it is expected to do, unemploy­ ment will increase and jobs will tics, and brothers working in a · reached over $700.00 of that goal. by Tony and Wally and the sweet Frs. Mattione, Kruger territory comprising the states of be harder to find. Gene Daly and Bill Reedy, co- melodies of the Barber Shop Four. Graduates seeking information Missouri, Oklahoma, K an s as ,­ chairmen -of the Alpha Delt Ad Return From Trips Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, Wis­ Perhaps the most resotinding suc­ on expanding industrles or sections COmmittee have urged each mem­ Beware triple-cutters! The Dean consin, and Minnesota. Included of the country need to remember ber to solicit at least $50.00 each. cess of all, however, was the Chern is back. Rev. Louis G. Mattione, in the jurisdiction are the Indian this basic fact: most of the jobs This is indeed a challenge to be Club's far famed Qualitative Anal- S.J., returned yesterday after a missions of North Dakota, South met by several of the larger Regis taken by this year's college gradu­ lengthy trip to the sunny climes Dakota, Wyoming, and the · for­ ysis Machine. This astounding in­ ates will be, as usual, those which clubs. of Louisiana. Fr. Mattione at­ eign missions of British Honduras vention, which looked ~ though it have been vacated by other work­ tended the Deans' Convention in Still Time Left and Yoro, Honduras. had just been dragged from Dr. ers. Deaths and retirements at New Orleans. The new-Provincial is 57 years There is still time left for Frankenstein's cellar, was the cen­ the top of the occupational ladder Rev. Charles K. Kruger, S.J., old and was born in Durango, Colo. create the largest number of open­ getting out and doing a little ter of interest most of the evening. spoke on the "Seven Last Words," After graduation from Regis col­ "It ain't what you got, it's how you ings at the bottom. It follows while conducting Tre Ore services hustling for your school and your lege, he studied law· for two years· use it," was the by-word. Several that most of the openings will at St. Louis University, St. yearbook. May 1 is the deadline in Creighton University, Omaha,­ sweet young things were detected occur in the large industries and Louis, Missouri. Fr. Kruger's ser­ for ads. Andy Martelon, editor of Neb., before entering the ·society' molding away temporarily in dark the· areas where there are now the mon was also broadcast by a St. the RANGER pointed out that, of Jesus in Florissant in 1914; He corners after flunking the test. In · heaviest concentrations of em­ Louis radio station. was ordained June 16·, 1926; in St.­ "unless the RANGER receives con­ ployment. siderably more advertising than it general, however, everybody. was Francis Xavier's Church, St; Louis, happy. The refreshments were To emphasize that most job op­ by , Archbishop,- later Cardinal, has to date, it will be necessary to portunities occur as a result of Farm Union Secretary charge $2.00 per book for this above average, and . the music sup­ John Joseph Glennon. turnover is not to belittle the num­ . Father Conway received · his year's annual." Why not stop in plied by Hugh Avis and his orches­ tra was not too loud. The Chem­ ber that arise through expansion. Addresses Delta Sigs master's de·gree at St. Louis Uni-· the RANGER office and pick up Growing markets, technological ists had synthesized one more An informative speech by the versity in 1921. · a copy of the advertising rates ? (Continued on Page 6) solid hit. secretary of the National Farmers' While attending Regis College, This is your chance to really help. Union high-lighted the April 3rd Father Conway was pitcher on the Delta Sigma meeting. baseball team and quarterback on Mr. Tony DeChant, secretary_of the football team. His baseball the third largest farm organiza­ career was highlighted by several Alumni Associ11tion Formed By ADG tion in the United States, spoke wins over Colorado University. on cooperatives and the opportuni­ The appointment by Fr. Con­ The Alpha Delta Gamma Fra­ ties they offer to young men. way to this position makes the ternity has successfully carried out Pointing out that a co-op should third major post held by Regis its major project for this year, the never attempt to enter a field that graduates. Fr. James Naughton, formation of an Alumni Associa­ is being capably provided for at '31, is Secretary to the General of tion for Regis. The first general a reasonable cost, Mr. DeChant the Jesuit Order; Fr. Paul Reinert, meeting of the Alumni was held explained the nature of a coopera­ '27, is the present rector of St. on March 30. In preparing for this tive enterprise and described its Louis U. meeting, the members of the fra­ method of operation. Showing how ternity published and mailed the profits of a cooperative revert three issues of an Alumni paper to to local residents in proportion NSA to Meet at Greeley to their patronage, he explained 500 former students. Integrating A delegation of Regis students these various lists into a workable how co-ops are the answer to some of the nation's problems, especially headed by Chairman John Grove, mailing list was another big job. will attend the regional conven­ A letter was sent to each Alumnus in rural America. Mr. DeChant, a graduate of St. tion of the National Students As- · asking for a verification of his ad­ sociation at Colorado State Col­ dress. The fraternity now has the Benedict's College, Acheson, Kan­ sas, also emphasized the faot that lege, Greeley, Colorado, on April names and addresses of about 600 21, 22, 23. The main business to be Alumni, the first list of this type cooperatives are strongly advo­ cated in Pope Pius XI's encyclical, transacted will be the election of to be compiled in many years. "Quadragesima Anno," and that regional officers. Alumni Meeting Held co-ops in Nova Scotia recently re­ Other members of the NSA At the Alumni meeting, officers ceived a papal award. In speak­ group will include: Chuck Sillstrop, for 1950 were elected and plans ing of the Farmer's Union, Mr. John Spradley, Jim Murphy, Ed OUtlined for the program the or­ DeChant explained how its basic Schaded, and Wally Sheehan. fmternity members working to ganization will follow in the com­ b are a group o f A ,D , G • tenets are also tenets of Chris­ ing year. In the discussion, all Pictured a ove wnnl Left to right they are: Jim Rauch, Bill tianity, and, in fact, follow di­ ~e men expressed an optimistic complete the list of JAIV Cr:we Jerry Monty, Rudy Perko, Tom Crotty, rectly in line with Catholic teach­ Student Loans Due VIew as to the future of the Alum­ Reedy, Jack Curran, • • ' ing. ni and the project to be under­ All students having unpaid Stu­ and Bob Druding. Because farm organizations and taken by their organization. Some cooperatives comprise a field that dent Council Loans at Semester Examinations time will not be eli­ Of the suggestions made were: to organized, the Alpha Delts will is too often overlooked by college ~ctively support the Regis Athlet­ to the Alma. Mater. men, M·r. DeChant described the gible to take their tests. Only six memb ers and · continue to publish the monthly more weeks- remain before this IC .Pl'ogram; help graduates to ob­ dire need for new blood in coopera­ Refreshments were served ,follow- Alumni paper, organize similar time comes. Why inconvenience tain Positions in business; send ing the showing of movies between tives. Cooperatives offer excellent new. students to Regis, and place associations among Alumni in oth­ opportunities for young men, es­ the school? Students, start paying Re~ students in Catholic Grad­ Regis and Santa Clara. The next . er citie~, complete its mailing lists, pecially in the organization and these loans. In case you didn't realize another pertinent fact, in­ uate Schools. . g of the Alumni is sched- . and work with the Denver Alumni promotion fields, in addition to meet 1n terest is accumulating. b :Fr. McCarthy spoke to the mem­ uled for late in April. to carry out their objectives. managerial positions. Aers and stressed the value of an Now that the Alumni hasc' been lurnni Association, both to its April19, 195o PAGE TWO THE BROWN AND GOLD Strange Names Not Always Parents Fault Judge Men Carefully By ED LINDENMEYEB that fewer people would med. By DICK McCABE die with it." REGIS COLLEGE The other day, something .started One of man's greatest ~nd _most These in my estimation are som Denver 11, Colorado human faults is that of JUdging a of the wisest words ever written : me thinking. (Please, no laugh­ 0 ter.) A few minutes previously, I person by his ~utw~rd actions or thought by a mere mortal. Ponder EDITOR IN CHIEF...... John Gleason had heard someone being paged. idiosyncrasies m hiS manner of over them and you Will see th MANAGING EDITOR...... , ...... ,.. Edward Seller Egbert was the first name; I speech. There are some t~?ughts depth of meaning which they con~ NEWS EDITOR Con Curran never did get the rest of it; after and expressions that are better vey. You cannot judge a man by Assistants-Dan Kelleher, Edward Seiler, Ernest Salazar, Dan Ma­ all, names like that are not pos­ left unsaid" and those that. are of his outward actions; they do not honey, John Mahoney sible of further damage. a derogatory nature concermng ~n­ always express his inner feeling other person should head the list. MAKE-UP EDITORS...... Peter Schnorbach, James Curran Well, as I said, I started to and ideas. Man is a very compU~ This is no new fad ·that has sprung Assistants-Phil Adler, Edward Lindenmeyer think; more, I began to wonder, cated mechanism made up of anJ. up in the last few years soon t~. be malities and a supernatural soul BUSINESS MANAGER...... Edmond Schaded to shudder, to be stupified. I stood positively aghast at the im­ replaced by something new ~~;s Ji~­ and eveny man is by virtue of ~ CIRCULATION MANAGERS...... Kenneth Keller, Clyde Thomas terbuging" or the long skirt; It soul intrinsically different. Man is James Grant plications of it all. Why, oh why, did poor Egbert have to be bur­ has been destroying the charac~ers not a mass produced product which SPORTS EDITOR...... Michael McGreevy dened with a name like that? of millions of decent people. sm~e must be perfect or else he is Assistants-William Barrett, John Jeurink, John Schutte, John Hett, the beginning of time, and .It Will Fourteen hours later, I came thrown on a junk pile to be recast· not .cease, universally that IS, but FEATURE WRITERS-Arthur Gaines, Don St. John, Alfred Lam­ gasping up from depths of un­ he is an individual who has his 0~ brecht, John McWilliams, Richard McCabe, and Robert Pattridge. fathomable profundity and Eure­ each individual can by thoughtfu~­ ideas, actions, and personal peculi· CARTOONIST...... Richard Connor ka! I had found it! It's simple, ness and a sense of decency on his arities and no matter how imper. see. Egbert's parents had wanted part' keep from speaking mali­ feet we may think him we must Published by the students of Regis College and Issued by-weekly during ciously against another, for once respect him as a creature of God. the school year. Subscription rates $1 per year. a girl; when he came instead, they decided to get even. Have defamatory words slip by the guar­ It must be borne in mind that Entered as third class matter at the Post Office, Denver, Colo. dians of thought they grow as a Member of the Associated Collegiate Press, the Catholic School Press Asso­ you ever felt sorry for a Cuthbert, words once spoken can never­ ciation, the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Press Association and the Associa­ or a Roscoe, a Mortimer, or Van­ snowball rolling down a · hill to never be recalled, and that mau. tion of Catholic Schools Press Relations. Represented for national advertising eventually burst in the face of the by the National Advertising Service, Inc., college publishers representatives, 420 dermeer? Well don't. Anyone who cious words once spoken have a Madison Ave., New York. would play such a low trick upon innocent subje'Ct. The impact of habit of growing worse as they their own mother as being born malicious words is more deadly pass from person to person. We the wrong sex has no claim for than a mortal blow; it can not have no right to discredit even one Is Harmony Lacking? your sympathies. He is nothing harm a person physically, but it of our fellow men, and if we do Or but a cad, a veritable schnook. can destroy him mentally if he is have some unsavory knowledge ,I, Dear P.J.A., Looking at it from the unfortu­ not intrinsically sound and sure of concerning a person we should lock We feel that by your recent editorial in the Brown and Gold, you nate innocent's viewpoint, how­ himself; at times even the strong it up inside ourselves and try to did a grave injustice, not only to a particular portion of the student ever, there is sound basis for a fall. forget it because by releasing it body of Regis College, but to the school in general. In proving this point, fourth theory of psychology here. Michel Montaigne in his essay we damage his good name. Man by we shall enumerate not only our personal views, but also those of others, I knew a doctor who delivered "Of the Inconsistency of Our Ac­ his nature is subject tq imperfec· all of which are seasoned with considerably more awareness of existing a baby in an auto; the kid's lov­ tions" writes concerning this flaw tions and instead of being criticized conditions, and those in the past, than displayed in your editorial (and ing parents named him Otto in in our make·-up: for the wrong he does he should we write this not to you personally but to anyone who is fool-hardy memoriam. Let's look at this ob­ ". . . It is not a matter for a be praised for the good he does. enough to assign a certain malady which the school has, to a paricular jectively, men! How far could you calm mind to judge us simply we· don't want anyone to spread group, either boarder or day student). go dragging "Otto" behind you. by our outward actions; we tales concerning us, whether they Irrevelant of the fact that we are predominantly day students it The nation of China and the must sound the inside and see be true or false; think twice be· seems rather presumptuous that you would take it upon yourself not state of Maine are not too in­ what springs set us in motion. fore speaking and then speak of only to attack an abuse which actually is rather dormant, but also to timately related, but in one de­ But since this is a high and others only as you would want assign to it specific causes, e.g. the "day students regard the boarders tail they both show some un­ hazardous undertaking, I wish them to speak of you. as merely 9ne large clique." usually clear thinking inhabitants. We can hardly weather such an insult, however, without becoming In China, a baby is given a name rather vehement if only for the following reasons: First, you have failed at birth which endures for but entirely to take into consideration the fact that Regis lacks the physical 7 years, until the child is old facilities which would ordinarily hold the "day dogs" on the campus, enough to pick a name for him­ and the fact that because of pre-established contacts, the day students self. If a boy fs named Wan Long, do not have the interest in Loretto open houses and the like that the he can do something about it in boarders quite naturally have. If and when Regis can offer a Student China. And in Maine (that en­ Union or similar recreation center, you will find that the day students lightened state) there is a law will have something to hold them, and will show a great deal more stating that any name distasteful 9;udzam 9~ II]Juz (}WW: (Jj ]Juz ?11.a1hJz II interest in the school. Even you will have to realize that the day students to the bearer may be changed by stop in at Howdy's just a11 often for the number of times that they pass mail for a half a dollar. With the by as do the boarders. A Student Union would be no different. other half, he may start suit (/J.rlpich ~ (Jj }JIJZJl Will and tJ1tkA · Look just as far as the rules for Carroll Hall (and we found out · against his parents. A delightful By BOB BURNS troubles, his illicit lover, who was what we were talking about before we made the statement) and you place, Maine, must go there some­ not a Catholic, taunted him as to Francis Bacon has wisely stated: will find that day students are not allowed to enter the rooms in the time. his sinful life. She would remind Hall without the explicit permission of the floor prefect; the day students "Some books are to be tasted, him that, were he really a believer eat, it is true, in the same cafeteria as the boarders, but since they take others to be swallowed, and some in his faith, he would not con· their lunch, they do not eat at the same end. These things, then, are Mother Augustina, O.S.B. few to. be chewed and digested. tinue to sin. He realized that she the fault not of the day students as such, not the fault of the boarders, ... Reading maketh a full man." spoke the truth, but the inability but rather the afore-mentioned inadequacy of facilities. Named Abbess Of St. Mr. Bacon should have been given to reconcile himself to that truth And you would have the commuters take part in the dances! Any a prize for such a true and ap­ made his repentance impossible. all-school dances which have been held in the past, are composed not plicable statement; it should be He eventually confesses his sln8, only of couples made up of boarder fellows and their dates, as you Walburga' s Convent used as a criterion for the judg­ but upon being reminded of the would have us believe, but also of the day students and their girls. Why The last issue of the Brown & ment of books. The application of avoidance of occasions, he real· don't you oheck with some of the chairmen of various committees for Gold carried a feature story on a his quotation to modern novels is izs that he cannot give up his evil these dances (and we'll assure you right now that the above is true of talk given the students by Mother an interesting and profitable pro­ ways. All the tilne he is aware of tbe Coronation Ball), and then come forward with your otherwise M. August!na, a Benedictine nun cedure. The principles which he the sting of conscience; the a priori statement. from South Boulder. Since that stated are very true in the case knowledge that he is deliberately Class officers are composed of eleven boarders and eight day stu­ time Mother Augustina has been of Graham Greene's The Heart of living in sin wages a conti_nu~ dents. Clubs, on the other hand, are led by forty day students and elected Lady Abbess of historic St. the Matter, a book which is filled battle in his soul. His free WilliS twenty-one boarders. According to the Brown and Gold masthead, the Walburga's abbey at Eichstaett, with significant thought. Here, being refused the chance to make paper staff lists sixteen resident students and f~urtee~ "day hops;" while . Bavaria. Lady Abbess Augustina, without doubt, is one of the most the correct decision; as a result, the Ranger carries eleven Denverites and only siX residents. And yet !ou who came to the U. S. from Ger­ powerful and thorough character Scobie is tortured from morning say that the day students have no voice in the various college orgamza­ many in 1934 and is now an Amer­ analyses of our modern times. Its 'til night. At one time Sco~ie tions. Hardly so, it seems to us! ican citizen, succeeds Lady Abbess real significance of values gives a makes a sacreligious commuruon And then the dormant I.R.C., Math Club, and N.S.A. which are in M. Benedicta von Spiegel, who reader an excellent opportunity to in order to maintain human re· their "deep sieep" because "they have had little, if any, day student died Feb. 17. do some serious thinking along spect. He realizes the gravity and support." The Math Club is guided by four officers, all of whom are day spiritual lines. The unforgettable consequences of his act, but once First American So Honored students and we defy you to find a club which holds more regular character, Major Scobie, is a man again free will is employed to de· meeting~. Speak to. Mr. Howerton, and you will see that this club has · This is the most unusual honor who fights an unescapable truth liberately contradict the truth in accomplished much-Math Club 'Scholarship Fund, instructive lectures, that ever came to an American in a spiritual crisis, directs his his heart. nun. The abbey over which she will and the like. · free will away from the guiding Scobie's suicide is the direct re· The I.R.C. is led by four day stu~ents and one boarder, and we can preside is the burial place of St. principles of Catholicism, and fi­ suit of his refusal of grace. hardly forget the raffle of two Notre Dame-Southern California game Walburga, English-born Benedic­ nally takes his own life in despair. tickets and train fares given away by this club earlier in the year. And tine Abbess born about 710, who Through constant conflict be~we~ The basic tenet of his plight leaves his knowledge of good and hiS d just a.Sk Mr. Van Valkenburg of the grief involved in sending six men had the distinction of being super­ one concrete thought with us: "It liberate continuance in sin, the to the regional conference at Logan, Utah, last fall, and of the election ior of not only nuns but monks, is easy to save one's soul." Scobie major sees no possible solution of one of these members as a delegate from the Rocky Mountain Region each sex in its own abbey. Her e~· I because of a false concept of val~ cept suicide. In the very act It: to the national convention held at Ann Arbor, Michigan. And what of body was taken to Eichstaett about ues, forced himself away from the. self there is a . sense of wrong, the other meetings and conferences held by the club. Meetin~s, _ it _is true,_ 870, and since 893 oil has flowed f saving grace of confession. Re­ Scobie wants to return to God, are not held formally as are the Math Club's, but the benefit gamed by at intervals from her relics. There pentance demanded that he give but his sense of guilt the members interested in this group is nevertheless great. oversha~~ws 1: is no natural explanation for this up an adulterous relationship, the right reason. His last agomzwg ' Then if these two moderators have not satiated your appetite for phenomenon, and many cures have very thing which was torturing truth, approach Fr. Faherty and ask for some of the activities words contain the name of God­ m~rely been effected through use of the his fearful conscience; yet, he pre­ The reader is left ·to decide wheth· I which the N.S.A.-led by three boarders and two day students-have oil and intercession of the saint. 1 ferred mental anguish to peace er or no Scobie in a final second, carried on throu~hout the year: Not headline news, it is true, but one Mother M. Augustina, 50 years of mind and soul. It is easy to ' ·uon of the most vital aids rendered to the school as a whole by any group. made a perfect act of contr1 , ·. old, has exerted a tremendous in­ see, if we study Scobie's reason­ Free will dangerous if · used m· And the other clubs are no different. fluence on all who know her. Her ing, what a powerful weapon we · correctly,' was the major's. down· These figures, then, are not given to cause any friction what~o­ striking personality, brilliant in­ have in the faculty of the free ever, but are purported to reveal the true condition of balance whiCh fall. , tellect, and deep spirituality made will. With this power we · can "Reading maketh a full man. her the logical choice for the post exis~s. reach great heights, but we can The fullnes.s _£onsists· m· truthtai Yours very truly, of Lady Abbess. She may yet real­ also, as Scobie did, turn our back ANDY MARTELON Profitable values are fundamen ize her dream of a gigantic Bene­ o~ truth. Ironically enough, Sco­ characters of good literature; w~ President (not of the Regis Day Students, dictine convent rising from the bie was aware of the gravity of 0 but) of the Regis College Student Body. find such values in The Heart plains of Colorado in the· shadow his refusal of grace; he knew all the Matter· we find such values CHARLES SILLSTROP of the Rocky Mountains, where'· along that his actions were not inherent in Scobie-even though he JERRY MONTY the South Boulder site was bought in accordance with. his basic be­ goes . against them. "So~e . f~~ JIM McNALLY when it was feared the Nazis liefs. Nevertheless, his knowledge_ . (are) to be che~ed an~ d1~est~ ~ JACK TOOHEY would drive the order oqt of Ger­ Waf! not e_nough to straighten out Graham Greene's · stirnng nove . BOB KELLY many. incorrect thinking. T() add ·to hi.~ · a choice morsel. . . THE BROWN AND GOLD PAGET Easter Sunday In R~trospect

ClothesMakeTheDay? Liturgical Dates Set Gateway T0 Christ By H. By EDWIN OONNELL L. HUGGINS By EDWARD A. SEILER e is nothing more inspiring T~e proper time for the cele- Ther ee the family "en masse," bratron of Easter has caused much In o~der to break a log jam, a lumberJack must find the key log. starting out to In the second century th~n t~:-decked, con~roversy. this is found the stream gailY . h Mass Easter Sunday a dispute arose on this point be­ U~less Will remain ch<}lted, despite the the ~~g The family isn't consid- tween the Eastern and Western successive blasting of the future M~rnillt~is Mass as th~ ordinary churches. The great body of lumber. erillg bligation, but Its one of Ea~?tern Christians c e 1 e b rat e d sunda~, o ecial" days. This is a Easter on the Jewish Passover To a person who would under­ those d ;pfor :Mother. Besides the the . fourteenth day of the first stand the character of Christ Easter is the key. If the hard nal chores, she pries all JeWish lll()nth or moon thinking Resur~ ~- rection and the prior sufferings convebn 10 d stubbornly into their of Christ as the tru~ Paschal Mr roo Lamb. The Western churches cele- of Jesus are not understood, the Easter finery. brated Easter on the Sunday after stream of life will be choked with Upon approaching Holy ~~me the fourteenth day, declaring it ~he driftwood of doubt and skeptic­ thedral even father consi ers was the commemoration of the Ism. The Incarnation of the Ga unusual appearance. . Arm in resurrection of .Jesus. In 325 A D Bless.e? ,Virgin, the Nativity, the hiS this family steps mto the the Council of Nicaea declared th~ CrucifiXIon are all meaningless • a.l"l\ of the Easter parade. The W~stern churches were correct. unless bound by the final triumph One Man's Palace of Easter. ;~:~st of bo~nets is dadzzlingd This declaration only decided that Jazz vs. the Classics Standing upon a ladder angled against J,!other's creation, homema e an futuz:e Easters would be held on . Day after day, accounts appear By DAN MAHONEY the house, brilliant, as any, sha~s h~r Sunday, the question of the month m the newspapers of man's fight Perched as a bird about to take the to conquer disease and their hope "Gentlemen, although this course smug but observing eyes. ,ss~re ' or date was left untouched. The has been dedicated to true beauty, wing, · family swings across hose proper astronomical cycle for cal­ to eventually conquer death. Are He covers the weather-beaten boards in we as powerful as the Son of God ? to the appreciation of classical ::spicuous areas within th_e sh~~- culating the OC{!Urrence of the music, I have been persuaded even strokes, ow of the great doorshwitfh . e Easter moon was not determined· Can we ever conquer the mortal While the wind whispers the coming of 1 end of man? against my better judgment to de­ dignitY and glory of t .e ami Y by the Council of Nicaea. vote a period to the style of music Spring Despite the daily dynamiting manifested as God meant.It. The time of Easter, being the termed jazz or as the French crit­ In short, gusty croaks. of our inert souls by God's grace, Within this group the n~nportax;t most important of all the movable ics call it, 'Le Jazz Hot','' Gaucho­ we will never be able to overcome Brush and bucket combine with his things are also held in mmd. This feasts of the Christian Church de­ shirted college boys squirmed in the destiny of our bodie·s. Rather hand coloring white daY is the greatest on earth and termines all others. It was' de­ their seats as Mr. Channing an. than hope for prolonged life on The house that has stood the long in heaven. Easter Sunday, the an- bated, at the time of the introduc- nounced the subject. This promised earth our thoughts should be cen­ attack of Winter's Grief. ·versary of the grandest of tion of the Gregorian calendar, to be the first interesting class in tered on understanding the dual Paint running in rivulets with m·racles. More than nineteen hun- whether Easter should continue to a course which had had little !Ill • personality of Jesus Christ. Dy­ contra~inses of a gnome dred years ago, on a day JUS t l'kI. e b e mova b le, or a fixed Sunday, aft- meaning and less appeal to most ing as man, He arose as God. The Seeping into the palace that a man this, the people of Judea were ~t- er March 21st, should be adapted. of them. calls home. nesses to the climax of t~e s~blm~e It was deference to ancient cus­ Church Triumphant is the theme of Easter. "This -jazz . . . the very word ir­ E. A. SEILER. life of Christ. After HIS histo~tc tom that led ecclesiastical author­ ritates . ·.. is the product of Afri­ passion, Christ rested to anse ities to adhere to reckoning by the Contemplation is good for the can natives who migrated to the from death and free all souls. In lll()On. soul but it should have its prac­ cheaper districts of Southern Salty Survey Made tical aspect as well. When we recognition of this, Easter has be- An imaginary moon regulates America. Although a definite part By PAUL PFARR come the foundation of the Christ- the time of Easter. The mean have considered Easter in all of of American music, it has no ar­ its ramifications, we are bound to Every time I browse through the lan religion. moon of the astronomers has noth- tistic or cultural value. ,It is cari­ library I find that .difficulties be­ It seems that the -entire world, ing to do with the time of Easter, impart that knowledge to others. cature, exaggerated. distorted, vul­ This action doesn't mean harangu­ set me on every turn. There are in one way or the other, celebrates nor does the actual moon. An gar, and hysterical. . . ." And so ing persons of other faiths as this those titles which are plain and this great feast-day. All the imaginary moon, whose periods systematically the instructor an­ writer has mistakenly done but to uninviting; challenging; adven­ pomp and ceremony of Easter is are so contrived that the new alyzed and condemned the struc­ impart a true appreciation to turous; famous and long popular; fundamentally an offering to the (calendar) moon always follows ture and value of "Le Jazz Hot" Catholics and non-Catholics alike and all of them hold some strange Risen King. Our typical family the real new moon (sometimes by until every Bix Biederbecke, Sid­ fascination for a reader with an of the true meaning of Easter. ney Bechet, and Louis Armstrong realizes the significance of Easter. two, or even three, days), does Let us consider the stream of life open mind. The choice is always They and we should be conscious regulate Easter. ' The effect of this fan in the audience was exploding. hard to make, but that may ex­ as a time of purification which Finally, ... "Yes, Mr. Haines?" of Christ's triumph and our finery is that the fourteenth of the cal­ will enable us to be dressed in plain how I happened to pick up should have been donned as a re- endar moon-which had from the "Maybe jazz isn't the most cul­ Captain Horatio Hornblower. Un­ our best clothes when Christ shall tural music ever written, but have flection of His glory. times of Jewish law been consid- call us for the Final Judgment. able to choose between Sholem ered the "full lll()on" for ecclesias- you ever heard feeling like that in Asch and Evelyn Waugh, I took tical purposes-falls generally on classical music." a stab in the dark and came up the fifteenth or sixteenth of the "George Marvo." with C. S. Forester. The choice I On Land, Sea, Or Bus! real moon, and thus after the real Along~--__, "Jazz 'is the only really Amer­ so luckily made turned up a new full moon, which is generally on ican music. Everybody condemns friend for me. Horatio Q., that By BOB PATI'RIDGE . the fourteenth or fifteenth day. it because it was played in 'speak­ heroic, long-suffering, hypercrit­ The bulging shoulders of the Adoption of the Gregorian · cal­ I THE CORRIDORS easies' and cheap dance-halls." ical sea·dog has proved most en­ Marine spilled over into the bag­ endar changed the date of Easter. "Mr. Ryan." joyable. gage racks as his ribboned uni­ The Greek church, which did not "I think that another reason no­ Perhaps it is because I like the form topped by a crew cut filled accept the Gregorian calendar, We didn't expect to be around body likes jazz is because it's sea that this friendship has the aisle of the Greyhound bus. therefore usually celebrates East­ after the last edition, but "ain't played by Negroes. White people grown; maybe the roar of guns, Scanning the seats with a sharp­ er on a different day from the heared" lately that we wasn't don't want to admit the Negroes the orderly commands, and the shooters eye he hit towards a va­ Western church. wanted so here goes .. have any talent. It caught on in sight of armed Men o' War with cant chair marked: "Reserved" at One object in arranging the cal­ Ed Lindenmeyer had his teacher France because they didn't care sails full · bearing down on each the rear of the bus. /A pert pack­ endar moon schedule was that here for the holidays. She was whether the band is black or other for that moment of impact age of pulchritude sat in the ad­ Easter might never fall on the quite the chick and looked (to us white." have captured my imagination. joining seat blocking the bulky same day as the Jewish Passover. anyway) that Ed would be able to Another hand said, "I think Whatever it may be, I know that Corpsman's way. However, Easter··and the Jewish "take care of her." even the classical writers are us­ to enjoy C. S. Forester and his ing jazz themes for some of their "Honey, Js that seat taken?" Passover were celebrated on the ? ? ? Who is going· out with .character means to lose oneself works, today." completely in the spell that is qUizzed the hashmarked Marine. same day in 1805, 1825, 1923, and Chestnut?? "I am very sorry, it is saved for 1927. Not until 1981, on April 17, This praise from some of the woven. Many times I have stopped Heard teil that Paul Pfarr is al­ "brains" of the class irritated some my father," soothed the blond will the Passover and Easter again reading and looked around myself most · engaged. Even heard it's a and pleased others, but only one bundle with eye easy features. be celebrated simultaneously. almost expecting to see a headless woman with real blood. ventured to defend the instructor. As the battle-wise vet advanced seaman at my feet, and the wreck­ --+-- Jim Grant had a gorgeous date "I agree with Mr. Channing, jazz to the seat he fired, "Move over age of battle all around me. Or. "B's" the other night. ·She hailed from is. vvlgar. It is played too rapidly, when Hornblower sits in his prison daughter!" (With apologies to Kilmer's "Trees") C.W.C. and we hear "again" that rhythm is ignored, melody is cell and pens his letters of misery ----+-- f wonder if I shall ever see he is "in love." copied, and very badly, from the and loneliness, I feel myself; A thing as lovely as a "B". The new cars around the campus great masters. Why I hear that trappeji and helpless, sharing his Hay Rack Ride Planned A "B" that lets me sleep at night . belong to Jim Abts, Buck Druding, many of the bands don't even use confinement. To read these stories And gives my folks such keen deltg~t, and J. V. Crowe. Just thought we'd musical scores. Socially, it is an without abandoning myself to the On Saturday, April 22, the big­ A "B" that shuns the Dean's kfack _llst let you know who would be "So attempt at mass hysteria, a sym­ author's whims is like sleeping gest and best of all old fashioned And spares me Fate's reboundmg hst. nice to come with." pathetic relief of tension.... without being rested, or ·eating hay rack rides is on the social A "13" that lets me in Med school, We should have nominated Mike "Hold on there, boys." All heads without betng filled. agenda, courtesy of Delta Sigma. Or play a guiltless game of pool. McGreevey the "best driver." We turned to the back of the hall Forester, when he wrote his where old Bunk stood leaning on According to word received from 'D's" are made by fools like me, also wish to retract "Most beau­ stories, l!.ad in mind a novel that his broom. Bunk was the college's would not only appeal to the lover President J. A. O'Donnell, only a tiful female" as Dave Doyle doesn't But only a Prof can make a "B". colored janitor, whom the ·boys of adventure, but also to the char­ howling blizzard can blitz the gala -A. FRESHMAN. fit that anymore. "She" and Mike had an accident and so they just said had come West because of acter analyst, and to the romancer. affair. The moonlit excursion will some lung trouble. "If 'Sugar Roll' He paints a man beset by advers­ ---+'T~ ruined our "Barneys." hit the road at 8:30 P.M., with and the Zenith Superior Brass ity, conflict, severe sense of loy-· five rubber-tired wagons (nothin' Nebraskans on the Move Who's shoes are in Con Curran's Band could hear what you "long alty, and plagued by inner recrim­ but class, eh!) leaving Mississippi room? I don't believe that they be·­ hairs" have to say about jazz, inations. He puts this man against Stables at frequent intervals, until With the recent symptoms of long to Helen. they'd give up. You don't think a background of hard, rough sea• an comers are satisfied. After a springtime, the well-reste? Ne­ "Students going home for East­ jazz; you feel it. Carnegie Hall men, and further complicates his turbUlent time in the rack, those braskans ventured from hib~rn~­ er" was the sign used by Tom Kav­ don't play it, Jimmy Dorsey don't life with the life of a beautiful able to dig themselves out of the tion to make plans for a piCniC anaugh and Ron Gibbs to get home. play it, and neither does Duke noblewoman. To follow with For­ straw will proceed to the patio hike to be held in the latter or They defied "Reader's Digest" by Ellington. It ain't played right in ester the life of Horatio Q. Horn­ for dancing, and perhaps a bit of middle part of April. showing that it still can be done. Chicago, St. Looey, or Harlem. blower is to thrill to experiences home-spun entertainment. Accord­ All Cornhuskers, their dates, Good afternoon to Father Elmer They stomp it correct in good ole and episodes which are lost for­ lllg to plan, the Delta Bigs will and guests, will venture into "them Trame, S.J. New Orleans. It's sad and it•s ever in the years before us. 1f ProVide refreshments, supplement­ thar hills" to make a full day af­ "Frank Buck" Hayden spent the sweet and it's blue, but mostly it's Ing the food the girls will bring. Mardi Gras, they pleases High fair of what is expected to be t~e holidays at "Wild Bill" McWilliams hot. Jazz is all brass, and them Never fear if you have yet to Society and Piety Street. But all • greatest success of' the club thiS home. It seems that when Jim ar­ horns tells about the bayous and be approached by a Delta Sigma of it comes from right here and rived, a band met him, he shot swamps and plantations, they lllember to purchase a ticket ($1.50 year. d J 0 h wails the story of Moses, them not here," he concluded, passing a Larry McWilliams an . n beer cans out of the air on a large black gnarled finger from the left Per couple) for this all-school Locke are refreshments chairmen, . trumpets play a hot and synco-­ hill, and what else we don't know. side of his shirt to his grey temple. c~assic. You will be. Transporta­ J'm Curran and Jim Grant were That only goes to prove· that any­ pated funeral march, they tells b?n will be provided for those (Much of the above material I · ted transportation agents, thing can happen in Nebraska and about them luscious Mississl:ppi Wtthout rides to Mississippi Sta­ appom D ·s was taken from Shining Trumpets, and Jim Sherman and Don a':'I who knows, anything can happen river-boats, they marches up and bles. (If worse comes to worse­ A History of Jazz by Rudi Blesh.) were picked as attendance chair- ALONG THE CORRIDORS. down North Rampart Street . on the Weather being inclement-your llloney will be refunded.) men. PAGE FOUR THE BROWN AND GOLD Apri119, 1950 Ranger Ciolfers Qualify; Open Links Campaign With Buffs and Tigers * By J.D.

Altenbern No. 1 Man Hogan Shines at Boulder With the inaugural of the 1950 major baseball season, every fore­ caster invokes the ancient right of predicting the final standings of the On April 4 a treacherous wind Last Friday the Regis College brought havoc to the mashie golf team opened the 1950 season American and National Leagues. Though this columnist hasn't had the opportunity (or, I might add, swingers who played qualifying at Boulder, Colorado where they the time and chips) to visit the sites and witness the rounds for the Varsity golf squad finished a close second in a three By JERRY Grapefruit League contests, he prognosticates that Marse Joe Mc­ at Lakewood Country Club. A size­ way match. Colorado University, Carthy's apparently luckless Red Sox will meet the fleet-footed Dodgers able turnout greeted Mr. Edward Colorado College, and Regis were The final frames were marked Ozwald, S.J., coach of the Re·gis the participating squads. last week in the Brown League, in the next October. "links hitters," and when the final The Rangers were edged out by which has been hitting the hard­ scores were tallied, Jim Altenbern Colorado U. by a narrow 5lh point wood these many weeks at Cen­ Hold your hat, Sotillo. The will nose out your beloved had shown his ability with the margin, while they outscored C.C. tennial. After the slide rules cooled Yankees, because of their sound mound staff headed by Newhouser, sticks by capturing medalist hon­ by 1llh markers. C.U. led the pa­ off the little mathematicians gave Houttemann and Trucks. Unless Joe Page can save about twoscore ors with a sparkling one-over rade with 25%, while the boys us some interesting results, among ball games the Indians and Athletics will press hard for third place, par 73. from the "Crest" posted 20 to the them a three-way tie for the sec­ with Cleveland probably getting the nod because of Bob Lemon's right Another Illinois product, George 8lh points earned by C.C.'s Tigers. ond spot. hand slants and the prodigious pokes from the bat of Luke Easter. The Schori~. looked like Slammin' Dan Hogan of Regis, was the Top honors go to Fr. Houser, White Sox, Browns, and Senators should round out the seoond division, • Sammy Snead in touring the Lake­ day's medalist, as he whipped Mr. Van Valkenburg, and Dr. Hol­ in that order. wood layout in 79 strokes. Close ~round the 6600 yard Boulder leran with their record of 22 wins Senior Circuit on his heels was soph Dan Hogan Country Club course with a par against 5 set-backs. Team 1, (Bill With the added punch of Willard Marshall and Sid Gordon, the who tallied an 80, while Captain 71. Jim Altenbern supplied the sec­ Haggerty, Buck Druding, and Braves should edge out the St. Louis Cards fot the runner-up spot in Ed Connell skidded to an 84. Matt ond half of the one-two punch by Vince O'Brien), and Nick Palizzi, the . The Philadelphia Phils, looking toward 1951 with a Ward whipped around the subur­ adding a 35-38 for a 73 score. Ho­ Tony Petrillo, and Neil Heinen, team whose members average 23 years old, could finish in the number ban course in 86 strokes. J. J. gan notched 5%, while Altenbern members of the No. 3 crew as well three spot again, but will probably have to be content with fourth. Straub and Ron Gibbs each carded gernered 6 points for the Ranger as Team 4 (Paul Villano, Ted Leo Durocher·s Giants wil:V head the second four, but will receive 89's, which ne·cessitated a match cause. George Schorie was also in Chiono, and John Shannon). cre­ a scare from Cincinnati's surprising Reds, who burned up the pre-season play-off. Jake became the sixth the 70's, while Phil Ward, Jack ated a gnarled knot out of the sec­ leagues down South. Unless Pittsburgh, whose lone luminary seems to man to qualify for the intercol­ Straub, and Ed Connell finished in ond spot. Giving close competition be Ralph Kiner, can receive better pitching support, they may have legiate golf team by edging the the low 80's. were some newcomers to the col­ difficulty keeping Frankie Frisch's Cubs in the cellar. I: man from Springfield, 3 and 2. A return match with C.U. at umn, Jake Straub, Dick McCabe All Star Aggregation I Heavy class committments have Lakewood Country Club, Regis' and Bill Maguire. Bob Dunnebecke's champions placed four men on the All-Tourna­ home course, has been scheduled forced lett~rmen Don Powers, Individual laurels in the league ment basketball team. Besides Dunnebecke, Bob Burns, Chuck Silstrop, for Tuesday, April 18. were earned J:>y Fr. Houser, the and George Minot earned the honor rating. Father McKenney and Mr. outstanding faculty bowler, who Shannahan represented the faculty, while the remainder of the Tourney school tournament champ, and rolled the ball high league average standouts, picked by the Student Council Directors, were Jim Altenbern, 'tiftUITRfNTALS Dick Petry, to refrain from par­ of 180.1. Bill Hagerty and Nick Tom Bogus, Dave McMahon, and Matt Ward. ticipating in early season play, but Palizzi also sparkled; Bill took the The Champs will be the recipients of miniatur~ gold basketballs it is the hope of the other scuffers high student average of 166.1, as well as a plaque, to adorn the walls of the Student Council Office. #., that this staunch duo will qualify while Nick knocked out the all­ Diamond Quips ·Cll!l and be ready for some of the later league high game of 233 and the Since Sports Editor ( ? j Mike McGreevey was more or less incapaci­ 1611 GUNA"M PL. TA.87CJ4 matches. high individual series of 581. tated by an automobile mishap, and also because the opener with Thursday's Gold League finished Mines was played several hours after the B & G went to press yesterday its firing after this issue's dead­ morning, very little baseball info could be set in type for this issue. lin~. so look for those results in At this date Coach Larry Varnell's starting infield will include the WHEREVER YOU ARE IT ISN'T FAR the next B. & G. able Jack Baxter at first, Paul Villano at second sack, Captain Bob + Burns, in his fourth season at short, and Jim Malone, whom this writer erroneously listed as a possible catcher or flychaser, at third base. TO Patrolling the outer gardens will be the veteran Jerry Coursey, Vince Bryce Heffley O'Brien, transfer from St. Francis (Brooklyn), and either George Minot or Len Capra. Minot, who just got the O.K. from his doctor to be a member of the '50 Ranger "nine", is expected to take a regular turn on ''Denver's Most Progressive" Wins Hoop Awards the mound. Teek Aliota has been handling the backstopping chores with his Bryce Heffley, Regis college usual vigol';-- Heading the pitching staff is ".Spike" Berney, who has center, who this year shattered exhibited good control and a variety of slants. Jim Stromsoe has shown three previous all-time high marks a lot of promise in early workouts, while ••Red" Lange, bothered by a CASCADE LAUNDRY in the cage sport at Rangerland, sore arm, has, by his own admission, shown a blazing fast ball and basked in a little national fame scatter-arm diredion. Coursey has been one of the few consistent hitters last week when his name appeared I thus far, and weak hitting may hinder the effectiveness of the Rangers on the rosters of two mythical in the first several ball games. & DRY CLEANERS all-star teams. Rack and Stack The cage squad at Le Moyne "AT THESE OFFICES SAVE 10% ON college, Syracuse, N. Y., complet­ Messrs. Heinen and Altenbern have retired from the indoor sports 11 ing its second season of inter­ scene in favor of the fairways of Willis Case, Park Hill C. C., etc. The ($$ CASH & CARRY collegiat~ play, selected from all new proprietors of the Carroll Hall Emporium of Pool are Roland in his eyes) Martines, Ron Gibbs, and Dick McDermott, who hope that 1847..:49 Market Street- Phone TAbor 6379 the opponents it had faced the five top players. The blond Regis enough of you die-hard snooker players will show their loyalty to keep 1749 Tremont Place - 425 E. 17th Avenue center was one of the five chosen. them in business during these "outdoor" days. For Rollo's sake, at least 618 E. 16th Avenue- 608 14th Street Heffley, who scored 475 points go down and purchase a sack of peanuts or a pack of butts occasionally. 604 E. 13th during the season of 33 game·s, had one of his better nights against tion of 20 stars from all parts of season and had more than 800 Le Moyne, racking up 12 buckets the nation~ • CAMPUS PICKUP: MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS players'in action. Butler or Zirkel and five free throws for a 29- In the article, BUtler, probably saw 35 of the·se teams in person point total. • DELIVERIES ON THURSDAYS AND SATURDAYS crean of Catholic press sports writ­ and talked with coaches, players, In a recent issue of the Brook­ lyn Tablet, Catholic weekly news­ ers bec~use of his long association and sports writers who had seen Regis Representative-DAN LADEN paper, Jack Butler and Don Zirgel with all sports and his intimate most of the others. of the sports staff selected an All· acquaintance with most of the "6f the 20 players we have Catholic All-American basketball country's leading coaches, points singled out," Butler and Zirkel "Your Patronage Appreciated" team. Bryce Heffley was awarded out that 79 Catholic· colleges and wrote, "we saw 15 in collegiate honorable mention in this aggrega- universities played basketball this play. The other five (these in­ clude Heffley) earned their berths on their records and on the trib· utes of opposing coaches and play­ All Late Model Used Cars Guaranteed 5000 Miles ers." OUR DOWN-PAYMENT ON ALL USED CARS LOWEST IN CITY OF DENVER · Current Varsity • COME IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF TODAY • Sports (o/entlor

TUESDAY, APRIL 18 Baseball-Mines at Regis Golf-C.U. at Regis (Lakewood) THURSDAY, APRIL 21 Golf~C.C.. at Colorado Springs Tennis-Mines at Golden FRIDAY, APRIL 22 . Basebaii-C.U. at Boulder · . Golf--C.U. at Regis (Lakewood) WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27 . Golf-U. of Denver at D.U. THURSDAY, APRIL 28 Basebaii-U. of Denver ot D.U. Tennis-C.C. at Regis (City • Pork) Golf-Mines at Golden FRIDAY, APRIL 29 Basebaii-U. of Denver at Regis (Bear's Stadium) . Tennis-Mines at Regis (City Pork) MONDAY, MAY 2 . Baseball-Mines at Golden, I wanted to b -: Hil Th' Rood but pronto. e somewhere else, BY THE HOBO The view is worth 't WilL '1/tJ.u_ !J.oiiL JJuL . g sweet Spring! Books are The canyon Wall I • though . of bare red stons are s~r~ ;kirtS are shorter. Skies C~>Inposed dustie 'wiJlg bluer, other pastures five or six other c~i shadmg into Convert Conscious Collegians? are ~owing greener, ~d ~oung By ART STABTI..E and rected and organized by students You Too Can Help are , fancies are growmg m all ~~2e00sh;:;t ~~i~1a:~sr~ J!~:t~~ " JERRY BEKKER . lllens k th' bridge can be · rom the themselves. The faculty had done ·ons r,a.st wee , IS young . I never realized how much my their share by speaking of these All this is the unusual. Yes, but direc t1 • rampart of th seen the southern , fancY Jured him down the e snow-capped San faith meant to me until I had to things often. It took independent are Catholic young: people any dif­ ~sto canon City and the Royal g~~ de Christo range a real! - defend it." ferent than the hundreds that can mficent outlook 'c . Y mag- student participation to put them JW" of the Arkansas River, with b . d . rossmg the ~he Communist . stronghold of into practice. (Continued on Page 6) :rg:vernight stop in Colorado .n ge, one drives through a sec Umon Square in New York City is bon of Temple National Forest - an orator's paradise·. Strong-wind­ ingS SP~e Royal Gorge, ~s s~en f~om a road that must have been p~; ed soapboxers pound out their Red uto bridge crossmg 1t, is JUSt ter~ed after an elevator, and th - propaganda until they are crimson­ the ~ the most overwhelming on mto Canon City. us faced. Some people stop to listen; SWIGERT BROS. s~~ of scenery in the state of Going north again towards Den­ others pass by with a shrug of the OPTOMETRISTS shoulders and the appellation ~rado. In fact, it is one of the ~er we stopped off for the night Devoted exclusively to the examining of eyes and fitting of glasses. iiJlpressive sights in the m. Colorado Springs, a quaint little "Quack." No attempt is made t~ I mos t h le country. y es-s-s-Ire-e-e. v 1 11 a g e constructed physically stop these speakers; no one an­ 1550 California St. KEystone 7651 ~~ ! (And I know. I've been mentally, and socially around th~ swers them back. e.round, I have: You can see an Bro~dmoor Hotel and the wealthy But, someone has tried to do tourist. something about it. The Campaign­ wfuJlot of things between those traia n wheels.) An yway, 1·t• s some- The Broadmoor is a unique Colo­ ers for Christ the King, a lay thing worth going the 100-odd rado. institution. summer and win­ apostolate for nien and women, miles from Denver to see. The ter . It. plays the shepherd to the armed with copies of the Papal shortest route from Denver to the socialite sheep, a kind of glorified encyclicals and other leaflets in­ Gorge, which lies about 10 miles ~ports-happy Brown Palace. Built vaded Union Square at the 1949 trom canon City, would be down m the distinctive Colorado Moorish May Day Parade. A few incidents u. s. highway 85-87 to Colorado s~yle, it's a watering place for the occurred during the distribution Springs, then over Colorado 115 nch and a mouth-watering place Work that day which changed the to Canon City. If you wish to for such as you and I. The only lives of the majority of the group. reallY make an excursion, and sport missing from the Broadmoor Three Communists Youth leaders traverse a lot of superb mountain line-up is wild boar hunting and cornered two of the girl Campaign­ scenery, go down U. S. route 286 they might have that by next'sum­ ers, and tore up their leaflets, call­ to Fairplay and Salida, then east mer. It's a lovely place, though, ing them "fascists." After this, one along the Arkansas River to the and should be seen, if only as a of the girls remarked, "I never realized how much my faith me·ant Gorge on route 1)0. future reference for what to do ""' Structural Spectacle with your second million. A few to me until I had to defend it." The bridge crossing the Royal miles due west of the Springs is Youth's Want to Work OPERA and SPORT Gorge is a suspension affair, and located the world-famous Garden A boy who was a member of the very delicately suspended too. of the Gods. Possibly because a group that day testified that he They claim it is the highest sus­ busy, four . lane highway, littered felt like he had been idle all his GI~ASSES 7.95 life. "I look back on years of pension bridge in the whole wide with hot-dog stands, bisects tne emptiness. There is so much work Plus Fed. Tax world. After contracting a se­ park, I felt a little let down. Pos­ to do out here. Why didn't they vere case of acrophobia from just sibly too, I had absorbed too much Enjoy the races, the ball games, the operas tell us this at school. When do we walking across it, I agree. It's of the chamber of commerce build­ ond concerts from a 60% closer view! Here go out again ? " at last is a pair of field glasses with the a long, long 1,153 feet from the up for the place. The huge wind­ same fine focus and adjustment • • . with eroded rocks are indeed of weird Today, the two girls who were bridge to the river, and when the molested by the Commie women the same 2 Y2 power lens • •• with the same wind started the bridge swaying beauty, but I prefer my natural 800-1,000 foot range of glasses costing wonders to be out of sight of tall are in convents. Another is at many times more. Black with chrome trim. up and down as well as sideways, Maryknoll just finishing her novi­ chimneys and out of earshot . of 1 ¥.J x 3 Y2-in. Fits in leather carrying case. tiate. The· rest of the original May racing motors. Colorado can do Cameras-Street Floor Day group are still actively en­ much better by the curious tourist. gaged in the work of the Cam­ Laundromat Well, don't say you weren't told, • boys. See America First. See the paigners. That May Day proved that there Half-Hour Laundry World (Courtesy \J. S. Navy) but ef}£fnllf}liY~OOJJ5 R. E. ROBBINS, Mgr. are some convert conscious Catho­ 6/J. above all, see Colorado. There's a lics. The mistaken notion that the "JII'IHre Dmvw Shops with Conji

Howard's Sandwich Shop Every Day a 5Sc Plate Coffee - Sandwiches to Take Out $1.25 up T-BONE STEAK DIHNER-90c Here, in the Textile Department of North Carolina State College, there Drop In today and see our new collection of is always a friendly crowd of stu­ Arrow basque and gaucho knits. They're The Annual perfect for golf, tennis, and beach wea~­ dents. And, as in colleges every­ casual, colorful and comfortable. Your choice REGIS where, ice-cold Coca·Cola helps of stripes, aolld color• or whltel make these get-to-gethers so~e­ BAZAAR thing to remember. With the college will be held on crowd at North Carolina State as . Thursday - Friday with every crowd- Coke belongs. Saturday - Sunday .Ask for it tf!ither way ... both MAY 4,,5, trade-marks mean the same th~ng. BOTILED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA·COLA COMPAiof' BY STORE • 6 2 1- SIX TEE R lH 6 and 7 DENVER COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. © 1950, 'Fhe Coca·Cda Compdny FOR ARROW UNIVERSITY STYLES April 19, 1950 PAGE SIX THE BROWN AND GOLD Job Outlook JUST JESTING Fire In Ad Building Squelched; (Continued from Page 1) "Tough luck," said the egg in the improvements, and the develop­ monastery. Prepsters Voice Disappointment ment of new industries and addi­ "Out of the frying pan into the to confine the fire to the room tional services all create job open­ friar." The greater half of Regis College and all of Regis Prep was on the but the prompt action of the· me~ ings for inexperienced workers brink of destruction Wednesday near-by saved the building. Total with the proper training. Breathes there a man with soul morning, April 12, when a fire damage was estimated at near $500 Jobs Increase in West so dead, who never hath turned his broke out in one of the wash dollars. head and said, "Hummm, not bad!" rooms on the fourth floor of the Ad Denver firemen at the scene Employment in certain parts of Dear Lone: Building. Due to the quick action stated that had the flame remained the country is growing more rap­ Yes, I received your letters and of several workers, a major dis­ unche·cked another five minutes Two can live as cheaply as one, idly than in others in the long­ if I had been an educated man I aster was averted. the building would certainly bee~ run. This is true on the West probably would have answered if one doesn't eat. lost. both of them. I have tried for years A cigarette flippantly tossed Coast, the South Atlantic region into a paper .receptacle was the A comical note was added as the to become a somewhat mediocre screaming white fire trucks turned and Texas. However, the supply cause of the conflageration. The sort of fellow about writing, but up the main drive and headed to­ I of workers in some of these areas all to no avail. Words fail me, and fire was first sighted by one of the The Editor's Dilemma early morning workers, who in ward the Ad Building. It was -the West Coast for example­ so does my typewriter at times. shortly before nine and high school J However you may freel fee . . . turn ran for a fire extinguisher. has increased more rapidly than Getting out a publication is fun, Father Krieger, S.J., phoned the students were just coming across fee freel ... darn it! See what I but it's no picnic. the campus to attend their classes. job opportunities. Moreover, in me..an? . . . you may feel fre·e to Denver Fire Department, but the rural areas of the country gen­ If we print jokes, people say we blaze was out when they arrived. When the destination of the trucks continue your lovely and engaging are silly. was seen, loud shouts of jubilation erally the need for workers, in pasttime if you ·can muster up the In the space of only a few mo­ some of the professional fields is If we don't, they say we are too ments, the blaze expanded, scorch­ arose, books were dropped, and a courage and material often enough serious. greater than in cities. ing the walls, and breaking a sky mad dash began. Words could l to get a letter up here on the res­ For many college graduates of If we clip things from other light high overhead. The thick never describe their feelings on ervation every two weeks. I do publications, we are too lazy learning that the fire was out. the class of 1950, the fact that like to read! to write them ourselves. plaster walls and tile floor served American industry is in a period As a matter of fact I'm becom­ If we don't, we are too fond of of intense competition for markets ing a rather well read man, and it's our own stuff. will be the major reason for suc­ not the blazing sun we get on the If we don't print contributions, cess in finding employment. In­ reservation either. I'm reading a we don't appreciate true LIFE IS SHORT COLLEGIANS!!! dustry respond~ · to competition by lot about the world situation. For genius. Why not devote it to God as a pushing advertising and sales ef­ instance I'm reading where this If we do print them, the page is FRANCISCAN TEACHING BROTHER? forts and by cutting production guy Ruark is talking all about the filled with junk. IN THE CLASSROOM-ON THE BALL FIELD costs, streamlining operations, re­ youth in Asia and all the marcy Now, like· as not, someone will IN CLUB ACTIVITIE$-AT CAMP placing obsolete equipment, and killink they're having over there, say we swiped this from some CHRIST and YOUTH need YOU! redesigning products and plants. but I'm afraid I don't quite agree other publication-we did. Write BROTHER LINUS, O.S.F. 41 Butler St., Brooklyn 2, N. Y. These activities provide opportuni­ with him. I admit it's not so real -The Inland Printer. ties for p_rofessionally trained good to have the little kids in any workers and for young and vigor­ country ruiming around and mercy ous people with sales ability or killing everyone, but after all, ol' imagination in the advertising pal, why should we be concerned field. with youth in Asia, let's· take care · Some Prospects Excellent of the youth in America first. EVERY DAY THOUSANDS General observations about con­ How's that for real observation, ," ) ditions in the job market tend to huh? hide widely varying situations. And another point I don't see Prospects are excellent in some eye to eye with is that one· about occupations, industries, and areas. all the women in our fair country ARE PROVING CHESTERFIELDS In others, where wartime and post­ having to gird themselves with all war shortages have now been kinds of armor to make themselves filled, many graduates will find it more attractive. That's a lotta difficult to get jobs. bunk. . . . too many of them don't In teaching, for example, there put enough armor on themselves. SMOKE is at once an acute shortage of Then again I guess its six of one personnel in the elementary and half a dozen of the_ other, or schools and a growing oversupply was that what Ruark was trying at the high school level. For the to point out? current school year, only one ele­ Gee, Lone, I wish I had the time mentary teacher was trained for and energy to write you a nicer every three who were needed. On letter, but I haven't had much The Aroma. the other hand, four times as many practice at writing or talking. students completed training for. Even when I had that job with Tells You, •• high school teaching as were re­ you' o.n the radio they never gave quired. me much of a script. A few ughs We tobacco farmers. know that Stiff Competition Seen here and there was all I ever man­ Other professional fields in aged. I'll have to say adios here when tobaccos smell milder they which stiff competition for jobs ol' pal. Take care of yourself. is expected in the next few years Stuff n' things, smoke milder. That's how smokers include: law, journalism, and per­ TONTO sonnel work. In engineering, the P.S. Enclosed you will find that can . know that the mild, ripe to· number of graduates will exceed five dollars you asked to borrow the number of openings in the and several stamps. Under sepa­ baccos Chesterfield buys from me early 1950's; after the next 4 or 5 rate cover I am sending you a years, the employment situation squaw to lick the stamps. Please and hundreds of other farmers for new graduates is likely to im­ return her when you have finished, prove in this rapidly growing pro­ armor and all. will taste better, smoke cooler ~nd fession. In chemistry, competition will be keen during the next few much milder. years among persons without Convert Collegians graduate training; the outlo'ok is (Continued fro~ Page 5) That's why I've smoked better for those with graduate be seen at the meeting of the degrees. Young Communist League? Are they any less red-blooded than the Chesterfield for 15 years. There will probably also be an Protestant group known as the oversupply of business administra­ "Youth for Christ"? No! But the (SIGNEa__M tion graduates. A surJJ!us of new #.19~ ri/. difference is that they, strangely graduates has already developed in enough, have found the· need for ~rr~ v:.~~~c . the field of accounting. aggressive apostolic youth action. Liberal arts graduates with work In speaking in Catholic schools, experience or specialized training a good speaker can outline the will find it easier to get jobs than need by statistics, tear--jerking in­ those with only a general under­ cidents, and literature. Still the re­ graduate education. sponse of the· entire student body Prospects for new entrants are is negligible. Surely most schools and enioy more good in health service occupaJtions. preach the necessity for convert There is a current shortage of consciousness. But the fact re­ smoking pleasure nurses, and demand for nursing mains that Catholic students as a service will probably continue to group have not answered the chal­ thalli any other rise. In medicine and dentistry lenge! those able to enter and complete As the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Fulton J. cigarette can training will have good opportuni­ Sheen has said in commenting on ties; however, competition is very the convert consciousness of such keen for admission to professional groups as the Communists, Evan­ schools. in pharmacy the supply gelical Protestants and Jehovah of 'new graduates has almost Witnesses, "They have the heat caught up with the demand; the and we have the light." How sad profession ma_y be over-crowded in to think that most of us leave it the long-run if enrollments in under a bushel basket. pharmacy colleges continue at preseht high levels. Good oppor­ tunities are expected also for other occupational groups important in THE BEST health service, such as veterinari­ JACK'S--­ ans, medical X-Ray technicians, CIGARETTE FOR medical laboratory technicians, CONOCO SERVICE COME IN AND GET Y.OU TO SMOK£ dental hygienists, physical thera­ YOUR FREE GREASE JOB CARD plsts,., ®c-upational therapists, and 4900 Lowell GRand 9474 dietitliuis:-' -