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1956-12-14

Xavier University Newswire

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This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Xavier Student Newspapers at Exhibit. It has been accepted for inclusion in All Xavier Student Newspapers by an authorized administrator of Exhibit. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Xavier University Library . DEC 141956

Free Hungary Issue XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS A Weekly Newspaper By Students From, The Evanston, Doiv1itoivn And Milford Campuses

VOLUME XLI CINCINNATI, OHIO, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 NO. 10 Councilwoman Dolbey Addresses Human Rights Rally S1>eecb, ~lass, Rosary To11 Campus Observance By Bill Poole 1.'!/.H.:YARCRSZJU, As a part of the Human ··:st:cri§~·clJNKR~ Rights Day observance held last Monday, Dorothy N. Dal­ \r·i·rT·.· .. '· •, ...... \ · .. ' :· -szr.rnut-1 .. ,. . .. bey, member of Cincinnati's ..• .. , . ·. :.·. City Council, addressed the student body at 1:30 p.m. in the

,~, Library Building. She congratu­ ---~··1·.· lated Xavier for showing enthusi­ . astic interest in observing Human ·I Rights Day, which she hoped ~-·} ' . ~ ... l would be "a forerunner of an annual nationai Human Rights Day observance in high schools, colleges, homes, and families." Moral Force Mrs. Dolbey, whose talk at Xavier was arranged by The Post, explaiUP.d the value of a moral force in forming world opinion and how the United Na­ tions can pro.vide that force. "Even those nations which deny the existence of God try to jus-• tify their position in terms of moral principles before t h e world," she declared. Explaining the important part religion has played in the for­ mation of the U.N., the council­ woman said that "the success of the U.N. is due to those who be­ lieve in God. When you love God, you love your fellow men." She Four students are seen as they leave Bellarmine Chapel on Mrs. Dorothy N. Dolbey, member of City Council; is pictured as pointed out that all three major Buman Rights Day. They are wearing black armbands bearing the she addresses a group of students. Hungarian-language placards faiths demanded the inclusion of inscription, "Free Hungary." Cincinnati Post Photo appear in the background. -Marsh Photo basic moral principles in the U.N. · charter. More than seven times in the charter, mention is Santa Clara 'Prof Hungarian Wr.ites Of Soviet Horrors; made of respect for human rights. Traces Events In Rosary Mrs. Dolbey felt that in the Besieged Hungary complicated Anglo-French and Students Revolt Against Red Masters Suez Canal situatior, there is a (On Nov. 7, 1956, the stu- (The following letter was written in the last days of "little black, ·a little white" on dents of the University of October in Budapest by a Hungarian student. A foreigner Fr. O'Connor Joins both sides. In contrast she pointed Santa Clara began a Triduum brought it to Vienna and mailed it from there to the United out that Soviet Russia cannot possibly justify its attack on the · of Masses for the suffering States. It appeared in Magyar Hirado, semi-monthly Hun­ Relief Committee people of Hungary. students of Hungary. At the garian-language newspaper. The letter was read at .the Human Soliciting Funds- Immediately following. Mrs. closing of the Triduum, the stu- Rights Day rally by Bill Sena, Dolbey's address, students gath­ dents presented a petition to junior class president. -Ed.) and now they put their knowl­ The Very Rev. Paul L. O'Con­ ered hi Bellarmine Chapel for the Charles Gubser, Congressman of "The revolution started spon­ edge into practice. With Molotov­ nor, S.J., president, has been recitation of the rosary and Ben­ the ·10th California Congressional taneously and with such a power cocktails they attacked the tanks appointed to the local Red Cross ediction. In the morning a Re­ District. The main speaker at of which we are hardly able to and some of them burned out committee sponsoring the Nation­ quiem Mass was celebrated by these ceremonies was Professor find an example in history. It is two or three tanks and killed the al Red Cross emergency relief Rev. Patrick H. Ratterman, S.J., Frederick Wilh0 lmsen of the difficult to tell who can be cred­ Russian soldiers who were trying fund of $5,000,000 for the Hun­ dean of men, for the dead free­ university. The text of his speech ited with the glory of the start to escape from thP flames. garian people. The goal of the dom-fighters .. Part of this Mass follows.-Ed.) ' of this freedom-fight. Maybe This fight surpassed the heroic Cincinnati area is $48,438. was included in a recording We are gathered here this those children did it, whose lines pages of our history. Never was This opportunity for Cincin­ broadcast to Hungary over the morning to protest SoviPt aggres- gave the first mass of dead. Or our nation more united, than in nati Area residents to help facilities of the Voice· of Amer­ sion in Hungary; We meet, I the workers did, who were fight­ these days. We do not know what begins as reports from Vienna ica. The Blessed Sacrament was trust, not in the spirit of hate. ing from the first minutes. Or tomorrow will bring, but if fight­ show 85,000 refugees have crossed exposed from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 The enormity of the crime com- the boys of the Army Officers ing starts again, that will !Pad to the Austrian border thus far in p.m. mitted by the Russian Army in Training School, named after the exstripation of our nation. a mounting stream with the Hungary cannot be measurPd in George Kilian, ·started it. They Here nobody will give up, but International Red Cross in Bud- Armbands human terms. . were fighting against the Rus- everybody will fight until the apest conducting a feeding pro- Three student council mem- This crime staggers the reason sian tanks for a whole week. Or last drop of his blood, men, worn- gram scheduled to reach 200,000 bers, Jerry Lynn, Jerry Vonder­ and leaves it limp with incom- the members of the Writers As­ . end and children all the same persons daily by the end of the meulen, and Bill Sena, junior prehension. It is as though men sociation should be credited, be­ way. They will not bP. able. to be year. To date the American class president, composed the had surrendered their humanity, cause they criticized first the stopped by promises or threats. National Red Cross has appropi- committee in charge of the "Free had created a vacuum in their government and postulated the They will be satisfied only by ated more than $300,000 from Hungary" program. They dis­ souls-a vacuum which was filled right to free thinking and speak­ freedom. For this, no sacrifice is funds on hand to initiate various tributed 750 black armbands dis­ by forces from another world and ing. Nobody knows. They all were big anymore. Red Cross relief measures. ' tinctive feature of the ca:npus from an order of things so mon- united on the first day, facing Austria helped us with every At Camp Kilmer, N.J., the day of mourning for the victims strous that it simply Is not eom- death without hesitation. · means. Those who have seen the Red Cross is assisting the Army of Soviet oppression. mensurate to the hate of man. The Army behaved very well. collecting places of the Red Cross, in caring for Hungarian refugees This crime in truth eries out, in Their Communist drill was over· could not help weeping while re­ arriving in the United States. · the words of Pope Pius XU, "to come by the national spirit and telling what happened. They have Red Cross volunteers are oper­ Students In Exile God for vengeance." they knew where their place seen the most noble manifesta- ating the Canteen at the recep­ Correspondenee with a Hun­ Not ten days ago, the Hun- was. Some of the units joined the (Continued on Page 3) tion building, serving as inter­ garian student in exile can be garian people had done what no rebels at onee, and gave them preters, providing comfort arti­ had by writing to the followlns one had conceived possiblP: they weapons. Their barracks stood cles, running a clothing center address: Cathollca Foederatlo Stu­ had risen in the streets-stu- empty, ·while they were fighting Merry Cliristmas ! . to provide warm apparel, and dentlum, Hungarians In Exile, c/o dents, workers, peasants, old united with the freedom fighters This issue of The News marks answering countless telephone M. Ladislad de Marothy, 18 Rue men, children, Catholics, Pro- for the sacred eause, Its last appearance for 1956. calls from Amel'icans interested des Joyeuses Entrees, Louvlan, testants, Jews-and had wrested Believe it or not, it is a fact From the entire editorial, news, in helping. Belgium. control from the Russian Army that boys and girls of 12 to 14 and sports staff, we wish you all The Junior Red C1·oss is pack­ The use of 25 cent airmail in the teeth of mechanized op- years old, . were fighting on the • merry, blessed, profitable, AND aging toys for the childrPn of stamps, available at any post. position in the heart . of Buda- . streets of the capital. . In the safe Christmas and New Year. refugees coming to the United office, Is recommended. (Continued on Pase 8) school they learned how to fl1ht States. PAGE TWO XAVIER UNIVERSITY ~EWS, FRIDAY, DECEMiER 14, 1956 Bravo! ast week-end the fruit of four months of intensive practice Music Stand L unfolded before a delighted audience when the Xavier By Joe ltlcC,,,.,l&J University Masque Society presented "The Solid Gold Cadil­ DOWN FRONT lac," which proved to be a rollicking comedy. The cast of 18 Though it is very late, the presented a polished performance worthy of any off-Broadway Xavier Anniversary Concert theatrical group. And the stage crew manipulated four dif­ cannot be allowed to go un­ ferent scenes swif.tly and quietly. By Tom JlcA.uli/Je The audiences saw and enjoyed in several hours what the mentioned here. Such a fine Masquers rehearsed week after week until perfect. For tl~eir display of talent should be tireless efforts in bringing the best of the theater to Xavier, much more common, and it is the Masque Society-now in its 32nd year-deserves not only "The Solid Gold Cadillac" of Howard Teichmann and hoped that another 125 years· will the highest commendation of ·the student body, but also George S. Kaufman rolled splendidly into South Hall last not be required to once morP. en· enthusiastic support of its future productions. weekend for a three day stay, even though it did Jeave with tice the full compliment of the CSO to our campus. _chips on the paint job_ and serious doubt as to whom was Peter Paul Loyanich played Intoxication driving it. not a perfect Grieg, but he is cer­ The Masque Society, after an - Bis portrayal of the not so hon­ tainly the master of a very warm "Drink, drink, and be merry," advises the Student Prince to orable Clifford Snell was to my the students of old Heidelberg. His advice found its almost complete turnover in act­ piano, with a style and attack ing personnel two years ago, is mind the best ebaracterlzatlon in both instantaneous and sure. HP way to American campuses in the twenties and students have the whole production. Jim Wiggs, been getting merrier as the years pass. just starting to come alive again. is a talented musician of the first Last year's productions ranked Tom Stadtmiller, and Br la n rate. The philosophic studies Mr. Finally, collegiates apparently are absolutely hysterical with Mexican War Bonds and Bremner all added in varying with merriment if the survey conducted by the Gilbert Youth Lciyanich is presently following the Okefinokee land rush as one degrees to the production. can well be an aid and a com­ Research Co. presents an accurate picture of current drinking One of the best laughs of the trends among American undergraduates. of the greatest swindles ever per­ plement to his musical profes­ petrated on ·western man. This whole evening came from Pat sion. According to Eugene Gilbert, president, "researchers, year things were different. Gilligan's pseudo-dramatic reci­ Fr. Reinke is indeed .a prophet visiting 10 campuses in nine states, found that only one out Probably most of the credit tation of "Sparticus to the Gladi­ of Gershwin. Bis feelinr and In­ of 10 college boys does not drink at all and only one out of and blame for this year's limited ators." The rest of his perfor­ terpretation. caused concert jan eight does not drink hard liquor. Among the girls,. only one success was due to Jane Davoran mance was spotty, going from devotees to glow. Profealonal out of five does not drink at all and one out of two does not who played the scatter-brained good to not so good. One thing stature belonrs to Fr. R.elnke, drink hard liquor. l\lrs. Laura Partridge. She did a I'll have to admit is that he prob­ despite the lack of that noncba· Furthermore, "cocktails and soft drinks spiked with liquor pretty~good job. She was one of ably has the loudest voice in the lant finesse that only repeated - were clowned 'of.ten' by about 35 per cent of the boys and less the production's few instances_ Masque Society. He'd be great public appearances can brinr to than 20 per cent of the girls, with the spiked soft drink having (and lucky for her) of non type­ in "Moby ·Dick." a musician. It can be said that a slight edge in popularity." casting. The play's narrator Jerry Simon our Jesuit's piano surpasses that. The surveyors reported that "only 12.7 per cent of the The role of the scatter-brained left me cold. Joan Lambers, who of Oscar Levant. Indeed, Mr. Le­ boys, but 47.l of the girls never drink straight whiskey. As woman defeating her intellectual played the oh-so-nice Miss L'Ar­ vant could do well to approach for beer, 9.4 per cent of the boys and 21.1 per cent of the girls superiors by womanly intuition . riere had just the opposite effPct. Gershwin the Reinke way.· said they never drank it, but 56.5 per cent of the boys and 38.8 and just pure luck is such a com­ Joyce Kindt, Frank Hamel, Janet • • • per cent of the girls said they drank it 'of.ten.'" mon comedy device today that I Ruhl and all the other numer­ The impeccable Mr. Nat King A survey of ten colleges could hardly be called exhaustive, think it is grossly unfair to criti­ aries left me somewhere in the Cole, the unequaled peddler of but yet it is an indication of a lamentable situation which is cize an actress for not turning in middle. Dick Fox and Jo Furio song, has come to the medium of magnified .throughout the nation. Many young men and women an A-1 performance. Miss Dav­ turned in excellent little vig- television. The complete lack of of college age consider sobriety and temperance something oran had her hands full trying nettes. activity that goes into his per­ held over from Puritanism. And the collegiate that stead­ to put life and humor into a I congratulate the stage crew forming is a relaxing treat. fastedly refuses alcoholic consumption faces the possibility of character that was stereotyped who had the job of changing sets Nat, prior to entry into TV, social ostracism in the "smart" circles. All of which manifests and perhaps not well written. for fourteen separate scenes. This had said that any suc'h attempts the "tendency to conform" among college students. Her performance of this dif­ they did smoothly and quietly. of his on a permanent -show Alcohol is said to be our fourth greatest national public ficult role was capable, very All of the staff from production would consist on'ly of "singing health problem. Excessive use of alcohol is a major psychiatric capable. At times she had to manager, stage manager, and all and playing the piano." Thus, he problem. Social drinking can, and often does, lead to chronic carry the play, which in turn the way down to assistant pulley cannot help but be the perfect alcoholism, usually when the victim uses it as a "crutch" to carried her some of the time. All greaser (Charles Mazza) deserve entertainment success he has al­ help one over the strain of inter-personal relations. Contrary in all, though, I think she was praise and thanks. ways been. Nat King Cole in his to prevailing opinions, "a good time can be had by all" without the production's salvation. And lest you forget who has easy-going manner has no equal. reaching the elusive point of intoxication. !Uiss Davoran was supported made all this possible-Mr. John • • • by a battery of type-cast comed­ G. Maupin is next in line for a All too often someone comes ians. The best of these was Jim prize. He has done a good job. forward trying to show conflict­ Congratulations Dusablon, who undoubtedly is I hope that he and the Masque a directly opposed force-be­ he Human Rights Day held on campus last Monday was a one of the best comic actors I Society do an · even better one tween the good classics and the pronounced success. The entire program, though it should have ever seen here at Xavier. next semester. good jazz. They state it in the Thave been given more student support, was boldly conceived form of a theorem: "The popu­ and executed. The idea for this day of prayer and protest larity of jazz rises and falls in moved from the embryonic stage almost immediately after inverse proportion to the rise and Ed Sajewski, Council president, read a letter from The Cin­ fall in the popu'larity of the clas­ cinnati Post suggesting an observance of Human Rights Day. sics." We say no. Arise Mr. Shaefer The Council-appointed committee, consisting of Jerry and all of your Ilk and look at Lynn, Jerry Vandermeulen, and Bill Sena, junior class presi­ a re-sifting of the facts. Music, dent, developed the proposals rapidly. They issued publicity, really a psychological phenom­ arranged for the Mass,. rosary, arm-bands, and rally speaker, enon (ask Fr. Reinke), ls quickly and handled the countless details associated with any program. appreciated by man when be al­ But their thorough job was all the more remarkable consider­ BY lows It to penetrate bis feelings. ing the brief duration of time within which the plans for the cTOHN P. l-IAL E. Y It is bard to believe that the un­ Day For Hungary had to be completed. biased receptor can refuse the As a result of a well-timed follow-up on a suggestion, pleasure of one music form while Xavier was able to join in the mounting tide of protest against accaptlng all the other bas to the enslavement of a free people. If but one complacent soul Comment One-Auld Lang Syne. With 1956 standing at offer. were jolted into the realization of the sacrifice of the Hun­ the door a very old and grey man, and with 1957 a very yo~ng To concretize; we ask . . . is it garians, then the Human Rights Day can be counted a success. and almost nude figure awaiting entrance, I would like to go natural that a person who appre­ ciates fully an ad-lib improvisa­ back twelve months and hit some of the high points of '56. tion of a jazz artist cannot like­ XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS Ah yes, 1956 was a great year. It was in this year that a wise find good in symphonic c . young foot soldier from Kansas theme variations, which are the 0 made good, for the second time, As old '56 passes on and 1957 improvisation of a musician cap­ ..~"'""¥~~'#'. - t.~ l\lember · and entered the nation's highest opens a twelve month stand, there tured in pen and ink to be re­ ,_...... - ~ ... J.,ull College Newspaper Ass'n. position . . . Closer to home, the are many things to look forward IH~ Associated Collegiate Press played again? . The classics are - =. Xavier Musketeers took the UC to. The students of Marquette feeling captured on paper-jazz · i ~ The Catholic School Press Ass'n. Bearcats and thP goalposts half University are hoping that they is feeling right out of the horn. ~.~ ;,,.-;,, -~ Intercollegiate College Press way to Cleveland, in true Mus­ will once again be able to carry The core 'of the conflict lies in 4'/, A p I.f.·~ Ohio College Newspaper Ass'n. keteer fashion . . . It was Xav­ on the old institution of good· a problem of social prejudice B ier's 125th birthday, and over night kissing • • • Ned Wulk Is Published weekly during the school year except during vacation periods by Xavier which overshadow the emotions University, Hamllton County, Evanston, Cincinnati, Ohio. fl.SO per year. 3,500 people stood and the Cin­ hoping that the elderly gent with and evidently esthetic under­ Entered as second class matter October 4, 1946 at the Post Office at the Jong white beard will leave Cincinnati, Ohio under the Aet of March 3, '18'1'9. cinnati Symphony played Beetho­ standing also. The classics are ven's "Happy Birthday" ... five Jim Boothes and five Corny EDITOR-IN-CHIEF...... Bob l••••e, '51 interpretation-jazz is spontane­ MANAGING EDITOR ...... 8111 Poole, 'Ill In a more serious vein, a round Freemans in his stocking, and ous improvisation plus interpre­ BUSINESS MANAGER...... 1111 B•re.. m, '17 while he's around, Mick Connolly ASSOCIATE EDITORS ...... John Van Flandera, '117, Joe lllcCarlllJ' '87 of applause is In order for those tation. Where is the musical con­ COLUMNISTS...... Tom MeAalllfe, '87, Joe llleCHlllJ'' 157 who worked so bard to put on wouldn't be adverse to having a BEPORTERS ...... Wayne Fehr, '119, Andy Gu1chwan, •1111, Ralph Borae' •111, flict? Indeed, a close, attentive Jhn Santangelo, '57, Jerry Turner, •:m, Fred Schllmm, 'G7, Joe l\'eller, '60, \'Ince one of the finest Nov. 20'1 ever, few Bertoias and Junkers for the study of the classical is a foun­ Martin, '00, Tom )lcDonough, 'GO, Gerry Moss, '00, Charles Wright, 'GO, Conrad coming season. • • Don"kowskl. '58 and a special pat on the back to dation to jazz. IPORTS EDITOR...... Mel Brenaaa, '87 · Rev. Patrick J. Ratterman, S.J••• IPORTS WRITERS ...... Florlan Sokolow1kl, '117, Dom Glordano, '1111, Bab Comment Two-Curtain Time. The easy-rolng jazz fol'JJIJI are Novak, '119, Bob Queenan, '5!>, Tom Queenan, 'GO, Don Penton, 'Ill Oordoa Craw• Even England kept up its an­ I have been given to understand ford, '60, Ed Adami, '00, Larry Brya1, '60 a complement to l&he elauloal. CJaCULATION...... Pred lelallmm, '8' nual tradition by extending its that beginning next semoster the Whether realized or not, both de­ CARTOONISTS ...... Joha Vaa Flandern, '57, JerrJ' Tllrner, •119 hand to the U.S., not to shake it, EVENING COLLEGE EDITOR ...... Kathy Stumph Dorm Council will sponsor some pend on each other. Tbe qm­ EC REPORTERS ...... ; ...... Nnncy Lee Brazel, Charlotte Koors, Joni Lambers, but to ask for more· money ... first-run movies for the benefit phony fan and the ja11 fan can Nancy Woodall and, of course, it was the year of the students. They will be co­ be one and the same. However, (Tiie Yle•• and opinion• esprened bJ' varleao featar1 wrlter1, eel•-lm, and editorial wrltere do no& neeeHarlly espre11 1111 olflclal opinion et Ula XaYI.. for the Rock and Roll craze and ordinated with the basketball the fence of lrnorance ltaUt !tr UnlHHltJ' admlnl1tralloa. lllatter1 of offlelal natare atpearla1 la The Jll'aw1 wW for a young boy from Tennessee schedule and wlll be shown each .... d11lpatat.» the prejudiced must be dllman· - f'ACl7LT'I' MODSRATOR...... Br, ftama1 WHk way to make good; you know, weekend. So keep an eye peeled tied before mu1lc can be lo•ed BDITOIUAL ADVlllR...... a ....,. A. O.rru, 1.1. Joe McCarthy's friend. for further notice. for what It ta. XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 PAGE THREE B.iology Department Receives Electroencephalography ·Grant Young Scientist Aided -Sodality ·Seeks To NO SCHOOL SPIRIT? Faculty Sociality By Rasbob Foundation By Ron Wilke Aid With Donations Puhlisbes F 01·1un, Xavier University has received Downtown Institute a grant of $2000 from_ the Rasbob l\'Ie111hers Write Foundation for Catholic Activi­ The Xavier University Sodal­ ity last Sunday helped to make The Xavier Faculty Sodality ties, Inc., Wilmington, Del., for was started here three years ago. continued research in electro- the Alumni Communion break­ fast the success that it was. The aims of the Sodality are to Several dozen members of the unite the lay teachers in devel­ Senior and Probation Sodalities oping Christian gentlemen of W!'!re on hand to wait on tables their students through their for the crowd of hungry alumni. Mr. Lloyd Byrne, chairman of teaching in the classroom. the Alumni Breakfast, expressed Th~ Sodality publishes a bi­ the alumni's gratitude for the monthly publication called The Sodality's service. Forum. In it each member writes During the past week, the a paragraph on a certain idea Sodality also received a visit from Rev. Martin I. Carrabine, which pertains to the teaching S.J., Regional Director of Sodal­ apostolate. It also contains sum­ ity for the Chicago Province of maries of articles appearing in the Society of Jesus. Catholic periodicals. These deal Today the Sodality is con­ with current problems in connec­ cludirig its annual Christmas tion with the social order. Clothing Drive for the poor of The Faculty Sodality joined Cincinnati. The clothing and forces with the student Sodality money collected in the drive in the annual Christmas clothing will be given to Santa Maria drive, books for Rev. Joseph, Institute in downtown Cincin­ Scharf" S.J., in India, and a Com­ munion Breakfast last Nov. 25. Rev. Joseph J, Peters nati for distribution. Anyone still wishing to contribute to encephalography and "brain the drive can put his contribu­ waves," it was announced Wed- tion in one of the boxes which Baumring's Pharmacy nesday, Nov. 28, 1956, by uni- are in all the dorms and in The Drug Store Closest To versity officials. South Hall. Xavier Uni'!ersit11 The grant .provides fellow- The Sodality has received an 3618 Montgomer1 aoa. ships during the summer months appeal from Sister M a r t i n a MEirose 1-3708 for promising young scientists Marie, the director of -Santa Jubilant "Brockman boys" live whose financial needs might Maria Institute, for the help of It up after a recent Xavier hoop otherwise· entail less scholarly X.U. day-hops with cars. She victory. The · joy - makers are occupations. These young men · needs men to wrap and distribute drinking an unidentified (?) bev­ will participate in basic research gift packages to people in her erage. Who said there's no spirits dealing with the electrical ac- area downtown. Men with cars 1)~~ ·~ ... and take a look \~ 'Bk at Xavier? tivi~y of the nervous system of are also needed to take elderly amphibians during induced sei- . people to church on Christmas al the smart new collars zures. The object of this research Day. Xavier day-hops who . are To Give And ••• is the exposing some of the interested in helping in this fundamental ;biological causes work can contact Sister Martina Not To Co1tnt Cost on our new Shirts. We've collars which underlie convulsive dis- Marie at one of these telephone The Cincinnati Chapter, Na­ , orders. numbers: CH 1-5412 or PA tional Association of Cost Ac­ designed to flatter the features Rev. Joseph J. Peters, S.J., 1-3641. countants will hold its annual chairman of the biology depart­ program termed "Cooperation of a man ~ho looks ment, and Dr. Alphonse R. Help Defend Oitr with 'Educational Institutions­ Vonderahe, associate professor of Xavier University Student In­ exactly like YOU! neuroanatomy at the University NFCCS Title, Please struction Program. The program of Cincinnati, initated this proj- · will take place on Jan. 7. Students still have time to © ect of ·basic research and scien­ prepare to speak to defend Speaking on cost accounting tific training six years ago. They Xavier's hold on the Ohio-Ken­ will be Mr. Vernon C. Hoffman, have been assisted in this· work tucky NFCCS Forensic Champ­ secretary of the Queen City Mahley & Carew by a series of grants from the ionship against Bellarmine Col­ Forging Co. Mr. William L. Department of Health, Educa­ lege (who promise to be at Fuetterer, plant auditor of Ditto TWO FINE STORES tion, and Welfare of the federal least as threatening as their Inc., also will speak on cost Carew Tower • Western Hills Plaza government. basketball team), Villa Madonna, accounting. XMAS STORE HOURS-Carew Tower Store: Monday, Wednesday, Fr. Peters is known throughout Our Lady of Cincinnati, and Mr. Jack F. Meyerhoff, C.P.A. Thursday. 9:30 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Rest of Week 9:30 to 5:30 p.m. the world for his research, studies, Mount·St. Joseph. and manager for Arthur Ander­ Western Hills Plaza: Monday, Thursday, Friday. 10:00 a.m. to and experiments in this field. Students who wish more in­ son and Co., will talk on audit­ 9:00 p.m. Rest of Week 10:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. formation or would like to reg­ ing. Taxation will be discussed ister ahead of time should con­ by Mr. Donald L. Alexander, Thanks, tact Mike Dzik, Cottage 1509, C.P.A. · and partner in Rouse, Everyone call RE 1-4140, or leave their Rankin and Co. names with Ed Menes, 212 Elet. On behalf of the Executive Committee of the 125th Anni­ 'THE SHIRT versary Observance, Mr. George , Naughty, Naughty C. Selzer, Chairman has asked Cost of the eseapade following LAUNDRY The News to announce the the XU-UC game at Nippert Sta­ following: "I wish to extend our 3616 Montgomery Road sincere thanks and appreciation dium last .October bas been an­ EVANSTON to the organizations and individ­ nounced. Xavier bas received a blll total­ A Few Blocks North uals who participated in activities Of The Dorms or sponsored programs to com­ ing $177 to cover the expense of memorate the 125th anniversary replacing the goal post torn down Bachelor Service of Xavier University." In the excitement of "1ctory. Fluff Dry Bundles Student Council wlll assume SANTA CLAUS ANALYZED Members of the Executive 4 BOUR 9ERVICE Committee are Rev. StP,ley C. the expeme. Why oh why does Santa go, Tillman, S.J.; Rev. Patrick H. "Ho-Ho, Ho-Ho, Ho-Ho, Ho!" Ratterman, S.J.; Dr. Joseph F. Is it just because he's jolly? Link, executive secretary; Dr. I believe he's oft' his trolley. i __ Raymond F. McCoy; Dr. Charles ••• Gifts for everyone on earth F. Wheeler; Mr. George C. NOW THE FAMOUS GONDOLA SANDWICH Breed hysteria-not mirth. Selzer, chairman; and Mr. Ed­ AS MINYIONID IN ..... Noltlttt ...... All" If you had his job to do ward P. VonderHaar. Bet you'd shake like jelly too! m Wll'I PIZZI PIEi POS-rr A ,,._r You•il R•-m"-r O\llNnuff MOIAL1 End your gift problems before they start. Give CHICO'S @li\IPE?IJ CAIUl'.11' OUT UA\llC:S Chesterfield in the carton that glows for real-to all ~N ...... :..:.,.1.7111.M ...... the happy folk who smoke for real! Buy lots-to ITALIAN AND AMERICAN C~ •... ~~::':. ;ti I.fl •HROOM8,•••••••• l.M J ... CHOVIU...... 1.71 do lots for your ..,,JI.Ill.lllll!l!lllllll!!I• l'OOD 0 Christmas list. ,. m~ ~h\Jtit:::: cl: l:JI IO.mblnal... I Minutes l'rom XaYler Cliw.1'• ...... ,,._,_...... • •helou•h-C:...Tenn- Slllokeforn•I••• .., ._.,.. ._.__ Hiil •. llllOke ChHterfleld I lat llON'fGOME&Y aD. OllDlll av ...ON&, IB 1·93111 ~ l::\.Der • P.M. 'TH I o\.M, (One Blolk,.,,...... Boa&b ... of Dua) ~~u:s.:...... ,

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PAGE FOUR XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 .MUSKETEERS VICTORIOUS THE BENCHWARMER OVER KNIGHTS, BADGERS Higli Game Recol'd Eclipsed Agairist 811,.irig Hill; bucketed four straight baskets in Xavier Cornes From Beliirid To Wlii11 Bellal"lnirie less than a minute and a hall and By Ed Adnms jubilantly sped to a 37-32 lead. The Xavier Musketeers continued among the unbeaten, Not to be outdone, "X" countered with 15 consecutive tallies of but not before Bellarmine threw a real scare into the Muskies. their own to grab a 47-37 advan­ The game proved quite a surprise as only nights before, X tage. Gradually, they gained downed Spring Hill, 111-61 to run their game average to 99.5. much needed ground and sur­ The "X" point total established a new Blue and White prisingly finished 15 points .1p, single game high, eclipsing the 73-58. record of 110 points. Not once did .Joe Viviano netted a jump shot A quartet of the· Musketeers the outclassed visitors rule the with two seconds remaining, set­ managed double figures, Jimmy scoreboard and excepting the 8-8 tling the half time clock at an Boothe with 24, Joe Viviano with Every year around this time, sports editors sit down at unimpressive 32-29. their typewriters and make out a Christmas list for the men standstill at 15:44 in the opening a timely 13·, Corny Freeman and · who furnish them copy during the year. This writer is no half, Spring Hill was unable to Bellarmine returned to the sec­ Franny Stahl with 12. Xavier's exception to the rule. My list reads something like this-To keep abreast of the Musket1~ers. ond half wars more fired-up than field goal percentage 30.1 was by Ned Wulk-Another trip to the NIT, but this time, a trophy By halftimP the Muskies had in the first half. The Knights far the season's lowest. to bring back ,to the Queen City ... To Captain Jimmy Boothe rolled to a 24-point edge, 55-31. -All-American recogni1tion to the best small man in collegiate Although they had played a loose, CHRISTMAS GREETINGS FROM basketball ... To the Xavier basketball squad-Both the NIT unimaginative game in the early and the Queen City Invitational championships ... To "Mick'' minutes, the Blue and White had XAVIER NEWS SPORTS STAFF Connolly-A couple of big players to give the Muskies . their snapped back and functioned like first undefeated season since 1951 ... To Steve Junker-Two a charm. Their 48.8 first half per­ great games in the East-West and the Senior Bowls, making centage (20 of 41 field goal at­ fools of the writers who could only see fit to place the All­ tempts) attests firmly to this. Midwest end on .the second team Little All-American squad ... Sophs Start To Roger Bertma-A chance to play pro ball after ending a Coach Wulk, molding his soph­ great collegiate ~areer ... To Captain-elect Bob Young-An omores in the h!;!at of battle, even greater semor year and a chance to follow in this year's opened the second half w~!h his captain's foot steps ... To Athletic Director Al Stephens­ second string, Dentinger, Tomlin, More fans to watch Xavier athletes perform, enabling the Courchaine, Viviano and Puthoff. Musketeers to go big-time ... To Don Ruberg-Winning sea­ The s o p h dominated lineup sons in both Frosh basketball and 'Varsity baseball with a sprung alive with 8 straight possible invitation to play in the NCAA baseball tourney ... points, to a 32-point lead. The re­ To Bob Massma~-A really big tennis season including a win mainder of the half was a frantic_ over the perennial powerhouse Bearcats ... To Cornie Free­ march to the hundred mark. man-A chance to make certain local writers eat the so-called Once that goal was attained, the "poor man's Oscar Robertson" monicker they have given him second stringers battled to smash ... To Bob Coates-Continued fine publicity of Xavier ath­ the 110 point record. letics with a couple more Bowl appearances by our athletes ... In the matter of scoring, six To Ray Baldwin-More jelly sales during the holidays and Musketeers broke double figures, t~en in th; spring, a 'Yinning seas~n in golf ... To golf captain Boothe with his high of 17, Free­ Tim Conhffe-Medahsts honors m the Ohio intercollegiate man 14, Viviano 13, while Tar­ match ... To the Xavier Swimming team-A win over Miami taron, CourchainP and Stein ·had of Florida whose only win last season was over these same 12. Musketeers ... To the Xavier Bowling team-A couple of 200 More than one Muskie fan, averagers who will bring the University of Detroit Invitational wending his way out of the Field­ trophy back to the Queen City campus ... To all the students house last Sunday evening, was of Xavier-More A's, less D's and F's, and a wish for a happy tempted to wipe the mythical vacation from the sports staff. · sweat from his brow and uttPr a huge sigh of relief. The score may not have indicated it, but Phillips Paces '57 Freshmen matters had been just too close. A Bellarmine College quintet that no one previously knew ex­ As Ruberg~ Men Notch Third isted, up and scared the pants off the Musketeers, battling them in Led by Charlie Phillips, the him was Phillips with 13, Tom the manner of a Dayton or a Xavier freshmen have compiled Mulherin 12, and Bill Midden­ a 3-0 record, their latest win dorf, Ricky Jannot, and Mike Southern Methodist. "X" had coming last Sunday night in a Theis·8. won 73-58 .but, whew, was it hard-fought 79-76 win over a The next o p p o n e n t was close. good Miller Appliances team Wright-Patterson AFB, and the Finally Score from Dayton 0. freshmen behind Phillip's 19 One minute and 57 seconds elapsed before the MusketePrs J. Pmd Sheedy* Was An Ugly Duckling Till This years' yearlings when points and Gundrum's 16, hurdled ,. . compared to last years' unde­ them by 30, 79-49. The price of charged out in .front, 2-0, on a Wildl'oot ,Cl'eam-Oil Gave Him Confidence feated (15-0) frosh were not this victory came high as highly fielder by John Albrinck. By 7:55 given much chance of duplicat­ rated guard Ducky Castelle they had advanced the margin to ing that record, but so far, they received a shoulder injury and 19-12, on the strength of a four have done everything asked of will be out until January. Start­ point binge by Franny Stahl. The them. They have been working ing forward Bill Middendorf entire first half was scarred by as a team soundly and as Coach also was knocked out of action loose Xavier passing, a defect Ruberg pointed out, it is pretty with a sprained ankle. which hurt most in the fading difficult for boys, who were for The freshmen's first real test moments of the game. Painstak­ the most part, the stars of their came 1 a s t Sunday as they ingly, the Knights chiseled down teams in high school, to come squeaked past Jim Miller Ap­ the "X" lead and at 1:36 were in and begin playing as a well­ pliances 79-76, although the down by merely a point, 28-27. knit unit. verdict wasn't decided until the Baskets were exchanged before The frosh made Coach Ru­ last 20 seconds on a brace of berg's debut a winning one Gundrum notched 18. R i c h free throws by scrappy Al Piontek, X's leading rebounder, opening night Dec. 1 by routing Gundrum. Charlie Phillips again Gundrum tabbing 16. Following also turned in a fine perform­ paced X with 25 points while ance, collecting 11 pts.

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XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 PAGE FIVE Rough Holidays Await Muskies Roundballers Meet Tigers, Hilltoppers At Home; Cornell's "big red" waiting for SMU, Queen City Invitational Highlight Road Trip them, they will have the dubious By Bob Queenan honor of meeting the "Griffins" .. While the Musketeer fans are enjoying their Christmas of Cansius. Cansius will un­ vaca•tion and even before vacation begins, Xavier's "Blue Bas­ doubtedly be anxious to regain the championship crown which ketball Battalion" will face perhaps the toughest part of their they lost to Xavier last year. season as they play six games, four of them on the road. Sparked by All-American candi­ The ·Muskies open a two game schedule which will take date, Hank Nowak, one of the them deep into the West with two Cansius men to make last the Shockers of Witcliita. Coach team the Musketeers will see years All-QCIT team, the Grif­ Ralph Miller's team will be this season. For the convenience fins will have a well stocked attempting to improve their of Xavier fans, both Wichita bag of tricks ready for all three record as well. as their place, and S.M.U. will be broadcast of the visiting teams. Xavier 4th, in the Missouri Valley con­ locally over station WKRC with fans, thanks to the invention of ference. He will have veterans the Wichita game beginning at TV, will be able to follow the Joe Stevens (6-0), Don. Wood­ 9: 30 Cincinnati timt!, and the progress of the Muskies as they worth ( 6-3) , Garry Mann ( 6-3) , S.M.U. game beginning at 9:00 try, we hope successfully, to Calvin Schwartzkopf (6-1), Herb Cincinnati time. Both of these defend their championship. Fans Coin (6-7), and sophomore games will be broadcast by may watch the Muskies in action Everett Wessell (6-9) and Sy sportscaster Ed Kennedy, who over station WCPO-TV. Rosdeitcher (6-2), back to help broadcasts all Xavier's games. After the tournament's end on him with· this job. According to Following these two games, Dec. 29, coach Wulk and his m·any of the pre-season polls, the Muskies return home to face charges, who will no doubt be the Schockers figure to be pretty th Tigers of Georgetown, Ken­ wea1·y, retw·n, not to find a tough opposition for the Muske­ tucky. In the series between breather, but the always fierce teers. these two colleges, Xavier has Western Kentucky. Towel toss­ After their encounter with the won 11 while losing none. The ing Eddie Diddle and his po\ver Wichita, the Muskies travel to Muskies figure to make it twelve laden crew of Back, Lawson, the land of tall tales, pretty straight. Holland, Clark, Case, Crosth­ girls, oil, cattle, and some tall Just as most people are settling waite, and Bob Daniels will be ball clubs, Texas, where they down to their Christmas .dinner, plenty tough. will meet the Mustangs of the Muskies will be practicing Southern Methodist University. for the Queen City Invitational The Mustangs, led by six-foot Tournament. As many Xavier IM Basketball Begins nine inch Jim Krebs, a player rooters know, Coach Wulk's The roundball tournaments are who has been placed on quite a charges are returning to this on! On Dec. 3, the first few games f e w pre-season All-America tournament as the defending got underway. In all, there are teams, are currently rated among champions and hope to keep that twenty-nine teams which play the top teams in the nation. By championship crown here at Slated to oppose the Musketeers nexfWednesdaiiiight are t ese every week. all the percentages, the Mus­ Xavier. This year, in order to five Georgetown players. Standing left to right are Bob Cohen, T. R. The results of the first few tangs figure to fir ish even higher speed things up, the field has Newman, and Gordon Montgomery. Kneeling ar~ Jack Williams, and games are as follows: The Hoos­ than they did last year when been cut to four teams. The Johnny Lykins. iers over Volunteers 43-34, Crew they went all the way to the tourney begins Thurs. Dec. 27, win in the series, so the Muskies Cornell or Cansius. Cornell, the Cuts 47-X Hawks 35, and the semi-finals of the NCAA Tour­ with Xavier meeting one of the will be seeking their first win lesser of the two evils, is a team Goody Hallers 42-Vets Club 41. nament before they were defeated perrenial toughies from the Big over the Gophers. Since gradua­ heavily laden with sophomores. On Tuesday, Hustlers 78-Wolver­ by Bill Russell and the San Fran­ 10, Minnesota, at 7: 45. Host tion took only three men of last They have only three men re­ ines 60, DH Gorks 2-Tigers 0 (for­ cisco Dons. Canisius meets Cornell in the years seventeen man squad, the turning from last year's team, feit),7 Crowns romped over Bears The Mustangs, who besides evening's finale. Gophers figure to be plenty and have been hit rather severely 71-49. On Wednesday, Little Krebs have three other veterans In past history, Xavier and tough~ If Xavier defeats Minne­ by the loss of top rebounder and Hoyas 75-LH Mob 63, Church back from that first five of Minnesota have clashed twice on sota in the opener, they can look shooter Irv Roberson. Keys 53-Rodents 40, Gophers 34- last, will probably be the best the hardwood. Xavier has yet to forward to one of two evils, If the Muskies don't find Engineers 31 . •

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WINSTON'•A&.EM, H, ~ Switch to WINSTON Americas ~-selling, best-tasting filter cigaratte 1 • PAGE SIX XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 St. Stephen-stood as a shield of the Sacred Crown of St. Ste­ Hungarian liberty, promises of Croivn Symbol Of Freedom against the threat from the East, phen. Hungarian independence, a p • in those days the Mohammedan Here Is no ordinal')' crown. peared everywhere in the streets (Continued from Page 1) most of the land. Yet they carry hordes who came riding in one Given the land by Pope Sylves­ of Budapest. Children carried pest. The rebels controlled at on; just yesterday a new pocket the same small mounts that ter in the year 1000, It was later tommy guns and crosses in their , least ten of the 25 departments of resistance broke out in the brought the Hungarians to the built up by a headband encrusted hands, the Crown of St. Stephen composing their nation; they had south. West centuries before. with sapphires and enamel in their hearts. Let us think on opened thP frontier to Austria; They have been fighting since The Hungarian mission to our plaques on which are carved the this Crown, we who protest thil! they had forced upon the Na­ before they were Christians, since common Christian civilization saints. On its top is a globe morning and who appeal to the tionalist Communist regime of the days when they came riding has been for a 1000 years some­ capped by a cross and beneath President for action in the United Premier Nagy amazing conces­ into the Danube valley through thing unique. The Magyars were is the fig1,1re of the Saviour re­ Nations. sions; they had freed the Prince the Carpathian mountains from a people raised to the dignity of posing: He is surrounded by the We must, as the apostle John Primate, Joseph Cardinal Minds­ Central Asia in the dusk of the a kingdom by Rome itself. Their sun, the moon, and. two trees. writes, "harden ounelves In zenty, and had returned him to ninth century. And as with all kings were the Apostolic Kings. Below are the apostles. hope." Remember that the Cross Budapest . in captured Russian the great mig1ations, the first Their rights and liberties-and Until 1945 all Hungarian Courts always bends; as Chesterton tanks; they had guarded his resi­ Hungarians-members of the Old they knew the meaning of liberty issued their . verdicts "In the wrote of the early Church, "the dence . with machine guns and Turkish race-followed the sink­ 700 years and more before we In name of Sacred H u n g a r i a n heavenly chariot flies thunderlns there were those who even dared ing sun toward the West, sensing America wrote our Declaration Crown." The Crown signified" through the ares •· • • the wild hope that he would form the in some dumb manner that their of Independence - their rights Hungary's Christian destiny; it truth reeling but erect." next governm1mt. future lay in the Lands of the and liberties, I say, stood In a guaranteed the 100 year consti­ The Cross reels today in Hun­ The Hungarian rebels seemed Evening. unique relation to God Himself. tution under which the Magyars gary. But reeling it stands. And to be sweeping everything before That they were' hurried on by They were not conferred by the governed themselves. like all crosses, it stands arms them. The Hungarian Army, the Finger of Providence can be king who was himself but the Not ten days ago the image of outstretched.....,. crying for your darling of ;the Soviet satellite doubted by no one who sees his­ instrument of the nation; they the ancient Crown: symbol of help and mine. Ho1y God, grant armies -heavily indoctrinated, tory in the light of the Incarna­ were vested rather in the Holy privileged, babied - h ad come tion. Their first King, Stephen, Crown that had .been bestowed over almost to a man to the half received the Crown from Pope on the whole people by the Vicar Two Mighty Good Men To Know armed rebels. The ancient Hun­ Sylvester II who cried out in of Christ. In the halls of Parlia­ 20 Years Experience garian colors were broken out in wonder before the splendid and ment they spoke the common the wind over the old House of barbaric Hungarian envoys-"! language of Christendom, Latin, MUFFLERS BRAKES Parliament. And people went am but apostolic, but thy master until less than a 100 years ago. CAR-LIFE RELINED wild with their new bought free­ who sent thee here is, in truth, No one understands, really GUARANTEE $17.50 dom: an old man put up a cross the apostle of Christ Himself." A understands, the role of this 1000 AND UP on a wayside chapel, a cross light of Faith in the center of year kingdom, this nation who - INSTALLED FREE pulled down yea1·s ago by Soviet paganism, Hungary poured out tested its rulers as late as 1916 in troopers, a cross he had hidden its blood through the long Middle a garment woven by the wife of M U F F L E R M A N - THE - B RA K E M A N all that time mider his peasant's Ages and even beyond. That land St. Stephen 900 years before, no 3858 Montgomery Rd. (Norwood) ME 1-6832 tunic. of Hungary-or, more accurately, one really knows this people who The effigy of Stalin and the the Lands of the Holy Crown of does not understand the meaning Dual Exhaust Systems - Sold Installed icons of the whole Soviet hagi­ ography were toppled into the streets and in their place men raised the venerable banner of , I '\ I/ St. Stephen. It had been a hard fought -~::...... battle and it was won by 14 year ~, old girls with tommy guns-by that child who died in the streP.ts, her blood in her mouth, begging her mother's forgiveness, plead­ ing that she too was a Hungarian and could have done nothing but fight. It was the resurrection of a nation. Everyone said it was fan­ WHAT IS A ROBOT'S SMILU tastic. Our political scientists, WHAT IS WATER OVER THE DAMt almost to a man, declared rebel­ lion against the industrialized WHAT II AGllY WHO IJIVEI tlA:' might of a modern state impos­ sible. There is hardly a political_ OF ttJ&IUEI FOR CHRllTMAI. analyst in America who has not (SEE PARAGRAPH BELOW )Oillli.._~..... y: been saying for years that rev­ olution behind the Iron Curtain not only could not succeed, but that it could not even get under­ 'l'in Grin Sluice Juice way. What they forgot was the BARRY PLOTNICK. FRANCH TYSON. U. O.P VIRGINIA heroism of a Christian people. COLUMllA What they forgot was that the Faith is not of this world. There WHAT IS A PERUVIAN CIRCUS ACTt are no graves for those of us who A PLEASANT PRESENT like cartons of Luckies can make are of the Christian West; or­ a dolly jolly or a pappy hawy. And they're just the better yet-graves exist solely that we might climb out of them. things to cheer up a glum chum or a gloomy roomie. Ami Hungary, alone and unaided, So the guy who gives loads of Luckies, of course, is a rolled back the tombstone of his­ Proper Shopper. He appreciates Luckies' better taste­ tory. Probably it was all of these, the taste of mild, good-tasting toba<:co that's TOASTED but it was something more. This Llama Drama to taste even better-and he knows others appreeiate act of Russian Soviet treason was PIANCll IANDIH, it, too. How 'bout you? Give loads of Luckies yourself! "IT'S brilliant, magnificent: it was in­ TIXAI ITATI COLLlll ro• WOlllN • spirecl-by hell itself. Today there is a band of TOASTED" WHAT IS A LOUD·MOUTHED WHAT IS A HUNTER'S DUCK DECOYt WHAT CAUSES HASICKNESSI corpses, a Soviet rosary, span­ IASEBALL FAN t to taste ning the bridge ·between Buda and Pest. The frantic calls for better I help from clandestinP. radios have ceased. The voice of Hungary is silenced. Its youth, fighting tanks with pistols and rifles, is either dead or in hiding throughout ~Ill Ill III Ill 11111111111111111111111111111111 !! Ocean Malian Bleacher Creature Falle Dralle - - SHIRLEY WALL. DAVID LIAS. CLARK PHIPPIN. --- . Nnu - SOUTHIRN ILLINOIS U, OF MARYLAND TRINITY COLLIH =- liff = =- -= = 5 WHAT ARE A GOLFER'S CHILDRENt -: ENGLAND :- STUDENTS I MAKE $25 -= = 9}/!? Do you like to shirk work? Here's some easy money­ = HAT -= ~ start Stickling! We'll pay $25 for every Stickll!I' we = -= print-and for hundreds more that never get used. - - Sticklers are simple riddles with two-word rhyming answers. Both worda - - must have the same number of syUablB8. (Don't do drawings.) Se'nd :- MANUFACTURING -5 your Sticklers with your name, addreae, oollep and cJus to Happy-Joe­ - - Luck.y, Box 67A, Mount Vernon, N. Y. i- COMPANY -i -111"""'"'°'" - - Daddy's Caddie• - - DONALD lllYIR, - - SOUTH DAKOTA SfAfl != 118 East Sixth Street a= Luckies Taste Better, - - CLEANER, FRESHER, i Cincinnati, Ohio I SMOOTHllR I eA. T.C.. PRODUCT OF ~ ~ ~~ AllSRICA'I LSADING MANVFACTV•&• or CIGAR&TT&I j 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111i - .

XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 PAGE SEVEN

'1J1 ALL KNOW THE GREAT CHRISTMAS, go on giving for a lifetime without exhausting the Yf ~e season of chiming bells and twinkling vast reserves of our own spirit. trees, of carols and tradition ... a time when the Creating little Christmases for others is the best spirit is illumined again by ageless love. way to keep alive this season of kindness and warmth But we also know many other Christmases, the and beauty. For the first great Christmas was a gift little ones which we create or which others create of the spirit that has left us forever indebted. Only for us throughout the year. These are without chimes with our little Christmases can we hope to acknowl­ or carols. For the little Christmases are the times edge that gift. when the heart opens in.kindness, in generosity, in understanding. )lour friends and neighbors at the Perhaps one of the finest things about the great Christmas is that it reveals us to ourselves. We see Evendale 'Plant of General Electric wish Hou again what great stores of. kindness, sympathy and a ver9 OOerr9 Christmas and generosity we have within us. We know that we can a 1Capp9 'l'lew 'Year PAGE EIGHT XAVIER UNIVERSITY NEWS, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1956 Hungary's Future Uncertai11, Bocklage Writes Varsity Debater Captures Top (Continued from Page 1) today. We do not know what For "A111erica" tion of human sympathy and will happen tomorrow. But we William H. Bocklage, Xavier Award At Regional Meet compassion. When the truck-line know that we still exist and that news bureau director, and his Dick Mennen, a Xavier var- Tyro Farouks, Harry Blair arrived at the collecting place, we have a God. In this God we wife Jeanne have had an article sity debater, won the ·best and Joe Bien were guests last the people gave not only the pre­ trust and in His arms do we put· published in the Dec. 1 edition debater certificate at the Tau weekend at College of St. Mary pared parcels, but men and wom­ our soul when we die. Our elders of America, the National Catho­ Kappa Alpha Regional Speech of the Woods, Ind. en took off their overcoats and will not put down the rosary lic Weekly Review. The authors, Meet last weekend. At the Nationwide tournaments in shoes and gave them, too. And from now on. They are praying both members of Sacred Heart Northwestern University Tourn- the Philopedian prospectus in­ they went home without a coat without cease, asking the Al­ parish, Bellevue, Ky., discuss ament in Chicago, where teams elude th e iRocky Mountain mighty for freedom to our coun­ successful ways to' hold a parish and barefooted. were required to debate ,both Tourney at U. of Denver;· Tulane Convoys arrived from Ger­ try. And we are praying for Advent program. They cite as an sides, Wayne Fehr, Joe Bien, U. Tournament in New Orleans; many with food, clothing, med­ everybody who sympathizes with example a program held in their Lloyd Lill, and Dick Mennen Brooklyn U. Tourney in New icines and bandages. These wore us, who helped us, or will help own padsh school hall last year. pulled Xavier into the upper York City; and Georgetown's collected from every part of the us in the future. "Designed to appeal to all division of the 36 school field. Cherry Blossom Tournament in world. We badly needed every­ We know that the powerful members of the family, the party This week the novice debaters Washington D.C. thing, because the misery is un­ men of this world will not help provided in succession a quiz M es s r s. Concannon, Albertz, All these tournaments are utterable. We ask you, tell the us, but we have confidence in contest, a performance by a Jansen, and Muench will journey strickly invitational and reflect Red Cross that we need every­ the solidarity of the human race priest-magician, Advent hymns to the University of Illinois. the solid prestige that Moderator thing because we have ?othi1:g. and in the fulfillment of the by a choral group, a visit from The novices will debate again Rev. Vincent Horrigan, S.J., St. Nicholas, and a baked turkey Every piece of used clothing w~ll eternal truth. Our resurrection here on January 6 during the president !"rank Hamel,. and be received with joy and will will come and even if we will dinner. A large display table Ohio-Kentucky NFCCS Speech the Xavier varsity debate squad covered with materials relating help the needy. die before it arrives, maybe our Festival. have built. to the home observance of Advent We send word to the American children and grandchildren will enjoy freedom again. Our con­ and Christmas customs occupied newspapers: if we can have new, a prominent position in the school Home ••• free elections, please seml here fidence is in the mercy of God For Meals at who knows what we are doing. hall where the party w~s held 11 your communists and those on the Sunday after the feast For Lunches at Work or School • •• whoa are pink, and they w1·n see Maybe he will have mercy on us, seeing how happy we are now, of St. Nicholas, Dec. 6." with their own eyes the result The authors provide a com­ of that election. They will be when after more than ten years we feel again that we are men. prehensive list of appropriate surprised. But we will not . be•. materials for the Advent season Who on earth wants communism Are you able understand -~~----- to such as books, calenders for here? They will be able to see what it means to us to dare to children, wreaths, candles, and HOMOGENIZED MILK QUALITY v CHEKD the miserable buts of the peas· speak freely again? To have a others. The names and addresses ants and workers, which are ~be peaceful night in which the secret of the firms which sell these (with Vitamin D) ICE CREAM result of the 12 years of Russian police are not knocking at our items are provided. occupation and work. . door, giving the sign that we In addition to his public rela­ They can't be beat as Healthful Food My next neighbor has 5 chil­ have to say farewell to our be­ tions position with Xavier, Mr. dren and is regarded as someone loved... We know what the day­ and Refreshing Dessert I At your Favorite Bocklage is a free-lance journa­ Food Store! For Home Delivery call CHerry having a good job. In spite of break of a new life looks like. list. that his salary is not enough to This is the first day when we are 1-5880, or ask your French-Bauer driverl give a slice of bread to his chil­ not weeping over terrible visions, great sacrifices. We hope that 'j141:4- • I BETTER DAIRY PRODUCTS SINCE 1 ~2 dren that they cculd bring with. because we see the sun of free­ our sacrifices were not in vain. '~I "lteo1ta.nomoretousethebestr• themselves to the school to have dom rising. Great things require God bless you. Pray for us." a lunch. As we hear, some of you a~e I saying: why did we start this • •: revolution, why did we not rest in peace? The love of our country is not pondering and the desp.erat~on over· the fate of our nation in­ spires us to deeds. I do not want to use rhetorics _hem, but I tell them: let them try to imag~ne themselves in our shoes and live our lives, not only for a few moments, but for decades and bearing the endless series of our sufferings. The misery is bottom­ less, the future is hopeless, the prospect is the worst, the unsym­ pathetic Russians became hated. We are exasperated because of the mean work of the communist secret police. This creates a con­ tinuous uncertainty and fear so that we are unable to plan for tomorrow, because nobody knows whether we will live for another day or not. In the factories there is an un­ human work-system. The norm is set too high, and in spite of that, only those who are acknowl­ edged, who can surpass the no:m· Because of the lack of dwelling places there is a crowd in every lfJu get het~er looking in a '57 Chevrolet I home, which does not give you privacy any more. Everything that you buy is cheap and worth­ There's a whole new outlook behind the wheel-a less, so you can not use it. In bigger view of the roacl over that sassy hood. And the schools there are compulsory isn't that new instrnment panel a honey! lectures of the Russian language. Ir the courts they condemn in­ Look· through that '57 Chev­ nocent men, they torture them, rolet windshield and you see execute them, hang them. how its new, deeper design gives you better, safer vision. The sorrow grows day by day in the families which are de­ Glance down-just a bit­ stroyed by the Communists. And and your eyes rest on the sweetest instrument panel a now you bear and see the new - -/ car ever had. atrocities of the Russian Army lUSA and all of your terrible memories '57 CHEVROLET Then, take the wheel and are revived. Helpless women and you'll find the going's even children are mowed down by •270·h.p. high-performance better than the looking! engine also available ot (Horsepower ranges up to Russian m a c h i n e guns and extra cosl. 245.) * Come in and see. Sweet, smoot/1 and sassy! The Bui Air Convertible with Bady by fisher. crushed by huge tanks. This pic­ ture flames high the hatred in ---·------· ...... ______.. ______...... ______everybody and this enables you to fight even against tanks! This Only Jra11cl1iscd Clwvmlct dealers P:thf)Htf display this famous trademark paulon becomes stronger than desperation. The highest degree of our love of country and the inextinguishable longing for free­ dom minimizes the danger of See Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer death and you prefer to dies, than to live a slave life. This despise of death made possible for us to survive until • •