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Xavier University Exhibit

All Xavier Student Newspapers Xavier Student Newspapers

1937-01-14

Xavier University Newswire

Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio)

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Recommended Citation Xavier University (Cincinnati, Ohio), "Xavier University Newswire" (1937). All Xavier Student Newspapers. 1620. https://www.exhibit.xavier.edu/student_newspaper/1620

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]. TO SERVE TO SPREAD THE STUDENTS THE XAVERIAN NEWS THE SPIRIT .. OF XAVIER Official Newspaper Of Xavier University OF XAVIER

VOL'QME XXII. CINCINNATI, OHIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937 NO. 11 PROM ORCHESTRA ANNOUNCED . .. Debate Squ.ad I Three Well Known Debate Manage1· Fourteen Xavier Cadets Bands Now Being Con· Is Elected .t-\.t ....______.. sidered By Prom Com· Philopedian Second Lieutenants 1nittee. TWO OTHER BANDS Manager Raymond J. Fourteen cadets enroHed in the at Campion College, PrJ TT. • •t Great Lakes Exposition. fix maximum hours and mini- resi en V niversi y Childs and his Hotel Roosevelt mum wages." · orchestra have long been favor- The Verkamp Debate, to be (Continued on Page 3) held this season as a climax to the Varsity schedule instead of on A colorful career in religion Director of Education classes mortalized the Y..QUng George c·······························-·················..... ··~ the November date thiat usually and education was brought to a from 1924 to 1931. Kister by making him a leading ••• The opened the Vairsity's intercolleg­ close Friday night with the death President character in his books for boys iate competition, will probably of the Rev. George R. Kister, S. "Tom Playfair," "Harry Dee," be waged cm the same minimum J., former Dean and President of On the death of the Rev. Hu­ and "Percy Wynn," thinly dis­ WEEK wage question. Xavier University. bert F. Brockman, S. J., in Feb­ guised under the name of At Xavier ••• Timely Topic Father Kister died in St. Louis ruary, 1931, Father Kister be­ "George Keenan." came acting President of Xavier ...... Last year the popular debate of an illness that. forced him to Father Kister was born in St. retire from active service in 1932. University until the permanent Charles, Mo., on December 20, ONIGHT! Concert given by . topic was: "Resolved, That Con­ appointment of Rev. Hugo F. the Xavier University Clef gress be given the power to over­ He was 71. 1865. After receiving his college T The former Xavier adminis­ Sloctemyer. S. J., to the position training at St. Mary College, he Club at Pammount Theatre. Bas­ ride by a twa-thirds majority in April of that year. vote decisi<>ns of the Supreme trator was' one of the most pop­ entered the Society of Jesus at ketball game: Musketeers versus Court declaring acts of Congress ular members of the J·esuit order . Father Kister was educated at Florissant, Mo., on August 11; Ohio University at Athens. To­ ooconstitui'ional." The question in which he served for 52 years. St. Mary College,·. St. Mary's 1884. morrow: Sodality meets immedi­ was the source of many interest­ He was well known in Cincin­ Easas where his boyhood days He began his teaching career ately aft er junior-sophomore ing debates because of its time­ nati and beloved by many mem­ are still very much of a popular at Marquette University, Mil­ mass. Saturday: double-header be1·s of the -Xavier University legend. He was the best liked waukee, Wisconsin, where he was at fieldhouse: Xavier versus But­ liness. ler; Akron versus. University of Since this year's question alumni body who knew him as boy in the school and his unusual stationed from -1891 to 1896. Af­ treats of a topic that .is of cur" moderator of the Alumni Asso­ personality and manly qualities ter ordination, 1899, he went to KentucK:y. Monday: Meeting of ciation from 1918 to 1931, as caught the attention of his pro­ the Junior Prom Committee. rent interest to Americans, it is St. Ignatius College, CJlicago, as also e:icpected ta be a popular Dean of the College of Liberal fessors.. One of these, the late Tuesday: Semester examinations (Continued on Page 3) topic for debates. Arts from 1918 fo 1924, and as Rev. Francis J. Finn, S. J., im- begin. .PAGE TWO THE XAVERIAN NEWS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937 Xavier Booltlovers To Hold Annual Social --- ..

Complete Committees "It cannot be that they, Chris­ Fascist dictators, the world will Are Announced By tians, followers of Christ, whom be the poorer." Sy1npathy Shown Madrid Communists blaspheme and out­ Following closely upon the l\'lrs. Charles J. Dono· rage, are giving consciously aid meeting of the sympathizers with van, Chair1nan. and comfort to the avowed ene­ the Madrid Government who Government Is Denounced mies of the Christian church." were said to have collected $5.00 Observers of the Spanish situa­ was a letter from Archbishop tion, that the Loyalist meeting John T. McNicholas in which the ALMS BALLROOM Xavier Professor Criti· cow operating in our own coun­ emphasized locally last week, Presbyterian minister who was IS SELECTED try? Whether in Spain or in pointed to Father Kane's letter chairman of the meeting was at- cizes Four Spaniards Russia or in these United States, as an answer to charges made in tacked. , it is the sanie destructive force, an editorial that appeared in a Approached by a local news­ Reservations Point To -- In Letter To Local Pa· destructive of everything we Cincinnati paper Sunday. paper reporter, the minister re­ love and cherish as Americans. fused to comment, accounts said. per. Has not The Times-Star more in The editorial which declared Possible Overflowing that Italy and Germany were common with France than with Three prominent movie stars Caballero? Is it not true of every aiding the opponents of the Ma­ Crowcl At Event Janu· A meeting that accounts said drid government with 30.000 men are alumni of Jesuit universities. loyal American, irrespective of Pat O'Brien is a graduate of was called by Spanish Loyalist creed or political opinion? and that "there are virtually no ary 22nd. sympathizers last week to raise Russian infantrymen in Spain," Marquette, Bing Crosby studied a fund to carry on their present Minister Presides said further: at Gonzaga, Spokane, Wash., and fight in Spain was attacked by "The saddest point of all, to my Walter Connolly is from Xavier. .Complete committees for the Upholds Spanish Youths annual Card and Lotto Party to the Rev. Terence T. Kane, S. J., mind, is to note in your accou.rit professor of philosophy at Xa­ of the meeting that it had re- "In the light of such facts, the Rev. Raphael C. McCarthy, S. be sponsored by the Booklovers vier, Monday in a letter address ceived the indorsement of the eloquent pleas of the four young J., who had been professor of Association for the benefit of the ed to the editor of The Times­ Federation of Churches and the Spaniards who came to Cincin­ philosophy at St. Louis, was ap­ Xavier University Library on the Star. Interdenominational Ministers' nati Friday gain new meaning. pointed to succeed Rev. William evening of January 22nd, at the "It is distressing and disquiet­ Alliance, and that a minister of They brought few facts. Only M. Magee, S. J., as president of Hotel Alms Ballroom, were an­ ing under the circumstances to a Christian Church presided as enough to refute the sundry ru­ Marquette University recently. nounced T h u r s d a y by Mrs. see the prominence, even serious chairman. mors that have injured their Charles J. Donovan, chairman. attention, given by your paper in Mrs. Catherine A. McGrath will its Saturday edition to the Span­ in ·~~e t~=n~~~:a~i:eo:~~~:~ex~: ~~~~~htin a Ai;i:~~:icab~ut fe;~~~ r-~·i~~~~~;;~~·s.·~~-" ..... assist Mrs. Donovan as co-chair­ ish quartet. they so-short-sighted .as not to which could not fail to recall to ! man. On the Reception Commit- "I have always considered The realize that what the Commun- the minds of their listeners the I The favorite barber . tee will be Mrs. Adolph J. Koch, Times-Star as representing con­ ists are doing to the Catholic time when a youthful American j of the Campus President of the Booklovers; Mrs. servative opm10n. Why this Church in Spain, have done to democracy was sending its agents I Louis J. Tuke, Vice-President; moral support to Communism? Catholic and non - Cat ho 1 i c to Europe begging for aid against I 3757 Mongomery Road Mrs. Charles Schmitt; Mrs. W·ould you care to see these so­ Churches in Russia and Mexico, a foreign oppressor. Democratic Thomas Brown; and Mrs. Mc­ called. Loyalists, loyal to Mos- they will eventually do to all republicanism in Spain is only XERVAC Grath. Christian churches if they gain six years old. If it should fall Scalp and Hair Treatments The following have been se­ rx.;~~~ ~c-on;;;t r;;;;ol;;;. _____;;;; ____ uiiiiniiiiid;;;e;;;r;;;t;;;h;;;e;;h;,;a;;m;;m-ea;r;;b;;;loiiiilwiiiils-o;;f;;t;;h;;e;;;"<:a;•·---·-·--·-·--·--·--·-._·------=··• lected for the committee on 8 Cards: Bridge-Mrs. William A. Meyer, Mrs. Joseph P. Kiefer, Mrs. J. T. Clear, Mrs. B. J. Blum; I By Five Hundred-Mrs. H. C. Geers, JIM HAUSMAN Mrs. Patrick Kilgariff, Mrs. C. J. I Wetherell, Mrs. Louise Brock­ •:•.1~1--11.-11...-.11.-.11.-11 ....11~1~~)~(··· Mahley & Carew man; Lotto-Mrs. H. B. Brugge­ I take this time to remind you mann. that there are but three hundred Combination Raffle and fol'ty five more shopping •""JI Mrs. J. Ray Frederick has ac­ days till next Christmas. A week cepted the chairmanship of the before Christmas I heard a man Committee on the Combination who had dropsy say to another, Raffle and will have as her aides: "Only seven: more dropping days Mrs. William Helmick, co-chair­ till Christm~.s." man; Mrs. Louis Tuke, Mrs. Well, let's get explainin'. Sev­ George Linfert, Mrs. Charles En·­ eral letters have been: received; Sale! neking, Mrs. H. Freking, Mrs. two very intersting comments or Albert Howe, Mrs. A. Antonelli, Foghaus were among them. Mrs. H. B. Berning, Mrs. W. B. Men's 1.00 and 1.50 Clark, Mrs. J. ,J. Fay, Mrs. Clem Foghaus Voet, Mrs. J. Bergman. Dear Sir: The Committee on Door Re­ I have been reading your pa­ ceipts for the valuable·door prize per for quite some time now, ancl I NECliWEAR to be offered is the following: never have I enjoyed a column .Mrs. J. B. Casello, Mrs. J. A. before as I enjoyed "Foghaus." Greatly Reduced to Clear Flick, Mrs. William Kohlhoff, Why was this wonderful column Mrs. Frederick Michaels. discontinued? John Fogarty, Sr. Response to the efforts made Dear Sir: 3for thus far by the members of the Why was that remarkable col­ Association has been unusually umn "Foghaus" discontinued? It 2.00 large and it is expected that an 69e was great. overflow crowd will be in at­ W. F. Hausman, Sr. tendance at the affair. It is rumored that the co-au­ Reservations thors, Fogarty and Hausman, had Hundreds to choose from, including all Reservations already received an argument over who was to in­ the most popular fabrics and patterns include those of the following: terview a certain person, a blond of the season! Shop early and choose Mrs. A. Antonelli, Mrs. Adolph person, I believe. at least three smart new ties to liven Koch, Mrs. Louis Tuke, Mrs. F. up your wardrobe. Satins, twills, E. Mackentepe, Miss Esther Crow­ Ladies Man charvets, repps, basket weaves, bro­ ley, Mr. Arthur J. Conway, Mrs. Jim: cades, Barathias and Spittlesfield ties Francis Rielage, Mr. P. Lincoln What man at Xavier is the -all handsome and resilient. Mitchell, Mrs. J. B. Tangeman, Miss Ada Hummel, Mrs. Vincent most popular with the ladies, and Beckman, Mrs. Thomas Brown, if you don't think it's me, you're crazy. SPECIAL? Mr. Albert Wesselman. Virgil Lagaly Mrs. George Linfert, Mr. An­ I'm crazy. thony Elsaesser, Mrs. Louise Regular 2.00 Ties; re- Brockman, Mrs. Harry Klaine, duced to clear at- Mr. Edward P. VonderHaar, Mrs. Honesty James J. Fay, Mrs. W; B. Clark, Dear Jim:· 1.19, 3 for 3.50 Mrs. George Fern, Mrs. George Is there one honest man in Xa­ Overbeck, Dr. Edward J. Mc­ vier? I know all those pockets Finer Ties; regularly 2.50, Grath, Mrs. E. S. Runnels, Mrs. aren't bulged by handkerchiefs! 3.50 and 5.00, reduced: Frederick Michaels, Mrs. James Len Donlin, cafeteria cashier. to- Wheeler, Mr. Victor O'Shaughn­ Well, I wouldn't go so far as essy, Mrs. J. B. Ryan, }Ion. Rob­ to. say that there absolutely is l.69, 3 for $5 ert J. O'Brien, Hon. Dennis J. one honest man, but there are Ryan, Mrs. E. A. Fitzgerald, Mrs. quite a few who haven't been J. B. Casello, Mrs. B. F. Scherer, caught as yet. "Honest John" Mc­ Men's Store : Mrs. Charles Donovan, Mrs. Har­ Gowan is the foremost of these. Stre~t Floor ry Geers, Mrs. H. B. Bruder, "I won't talk till I get my law­ Mrs. George E. Wrockloff, Mr. yer," he has been known to say William T. Burns, Mrs. J. Ray on: several occasions. Frederick, Miss L. Winters, Mrs. '.fhe fact that you are a cashier i · G. Leugers, Mrs. W. H. Ferguson, doesn't rmt you above suspicion, Mrs. Patrick Kilgariff, Mrs. E. A. Mr. Donlin:. Remember what Fr. Tepe, Mrs. Frederick W. Hinkle, Coughlin has to say about the Rev. Warren C. Lilly, S. J. . "money changers." - THE XAVERIAN NEWS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937 PAGE THREE President's War Attitude· Louisville Club F etes Refutes CJ1arges Against Him Local Xavier St11dents right of freedom of religion. But Speech Proves That this ideal, these words presup­ Spitalny Will Left to right: Matt Allgeier, pose a belief and a trust in God." Alex V. Griswold, and Jo Roosevelt Is No Coin· Where now are the rabble rousers? Where the demagogue? Bring His Band seph R. Kruse. munist But Firn1 Be- Where are those who have dared cry Communist? To Pron1e11ade liever In Religion. Now they are silent-too weak, too ignoble to retract. (Continued from Page 1) BY EDWARD J. KENNEDY JR. Shades of Lenin. Page Stalin. . ' What a Communist is this man ites in New York, and Specht, T urn back the calendar Just a Roosevelt He dares now call who recently returned from a few days. We. are .in the m~dst 'upon the· Deity. He dares have European tour, enjoys the dis­ of the last Presidential campaign. faith in Him, The Author of Life. From the hustings we hear He dares believe in God. tinction of having played at .the charges and countercharges, but Who is God? inaugural balls of Herbert Hoov­ noi;e stand out. as do those _in What does he mean by faith. er and Franklin D. Roosevelt. which the President of the Umt- Verily we in the United States To Sign This Weck ed. States was pictu~ed and pil- may thank God for this "Com­ loned as a Commumst. munist," who believes in Him The Committee will select the . From the lips of the leaders of and seeks and dares to look to Prom band this week, according the oppo·sition as 'well as from Him for help. May his tribe in­ to Chairman Stephan. The sign­ those of the general-store oracle crease. May this nation ever be ing of either of the three .bands were preached the grave charges: blessed with a leader who real­ now being considered by the This man, this Roosevelt who ized that only in Him and seeks re-election is a Commun- through Him and with Him can Committee would be in keeping ist. (It mattered not that some abiding national peace and suc­ with the policy of the Social of those who hurled the charges cess be assured. Committee ta bring nationally little knew what the Commun------famous bands to Cincinnati for ist theory is.) This man is a Xavier's Promenades. Two years Communist. Look at his associ­ "X" Clubhers Hold ago, the P~·om featured Art Kas- R. ates, look at the men with whom Shown above is Joseph Kruse, president of the Stu­ he has surrounded himself. look Meeting Tonight te1 and his Kassels in the Air. I dent Council and recipient of the Legion of Honor award at his advisers. Look at Tugwell, ~sctheysetraar, pSlaamemdy J:t{atyhe apnd his this year as he addressed a group of his fellow students and 0 Y a e rom. L · 1 · tl K k t d' at Richberg, at Frankfurter-he The gradua.te "X" Club will In an effort to create interest omsv1·n e a um~ recei:;i. y.. ruse spo e a a mner spon- F is following in their .steps. These hold its annual eledion meeting in the Promenade on the sored by the Xavier Umversity men, ·too, are Communists, and at tJhe Palace Hotel tonight, ac­ the Committee is sponso~f::;t~~ Alt~mni Club of Louisyille to ler and Kruse. he feeds from the same trough. cOt'd~ng ta an announcement all-expense raffle. The winner which al~ . pre.sent ?Cay1er stu­ In addition to Kruse, speakers Verily it is true-who will de­ made this week by Paul E. Gos­ will be given a ticket to the ~en.ts res1dmg i_n Lomsville were were F'ather Stechschulte, Major ny ·it-defeat this man-this iger, president of the Club dur­ Promenade and the senior break- mv1ted. The. dmner was held at Harper, Bucklew, Snyder and Communist! ing the past year. fast which is to follow, a corsage the French village. Crowe.· More than twenty-seven mil­ The Clu1b is composed o.f grad­ and parking accommodations. Among those in attendance at lion spoke .their choice. They se­ uate lettermen and during the The prize is valued at eight dol- the dinner were: Rev. Victor C. ------lected the "Communist" to be pa.st year assisted the University lars. Stechschulte, S. J., professor of DUTTE UNIVERSI y their leaders for four more years. in a .promotion ·capacity. Tickets can be obtained from physics at Xavier; Major A. M. J.'lo.. i T Days move on-the calendar Committeemen Stephan, Charles Harper, F. A., head of the mili- COLLEGE OF MEDICINE changes. The newly elected Pres­ L. McEvoy, Robert E. Meyer tary department; Phil H. Buck­ ident visits our South American For1ner Rector John E. Fogarty, H. Frederi~ lew, graduate manager of ·Ath­ DURHAM, N. C. neighbors on a good will tour. Nebel, and Paul M. Kelly, junior letics; James E. O'Toole, John E. Four terms of cle\·en weeks ore He speaks to the people there. Of Xavier Dies given ench ycnr. 1.1 hcso n1ny bo tnl'­ class president who is an ex-of- Snyder, A. A. Daugherty, Vin­ ~n consccuth·ely (grnduntlon In Out of the maze of charges of ficio member of the committee. cent E. Smith, editor of The Xa- three nnd one quarter ycurs) or Communism, social strife, sup­ three ter1ns tnny ho tultcn ench (Continued from Page 1) Tickets for the Prom are being verian News, Gene Profumo, pression, dictatorship, c;omes the ye1u• (gr1uluntlon In four years). Prefect of Discipline until 1901. sold at four dollars. The event Matt Allgeier·, Edward P. Von­ 'l'ho untranco rcquireinents n.ro ln­ smiling face and pleasing voice will ·begin at 9: 30 and end at derHaar, director of promotion at tollfgcnce, cluu·~tcler and nt least St. Mary's two ycnrs or college \\~01•lt, includ­ of the world's ·greatest diplomat, 1:30. At a meeting of the Social the University, E. Milton Crowe, ing tho subjects s11ccllled for the only man who has the power In that year, Father Kister re­ Committee Monday, an increased H. J. Schoo, Alex V. Griswold, Grntlo A 1ntHllcttl schools. Cntn­ and the will to crush the isms,­ turned to his old school, St. logucs nnd uppllcntlon forms muy budget over that of last year was Joseph Schuhmann, Joseph Blunt, be obtnlncd from the Denn. thus: · Mary's, as Prefect of Studies, voted to the Prom Committee. Emmett Ratterman, Graf Moel- Peace And Faith where he remained until 1911. "Peace comes from· the spirit In 1911, he was made President and must be grounded in faith. of Campion College in Prairie du IHAT C:OM81NATIOl'J PROBABLY-A AS A MATTER YOUR PIPE WOULD In that faith and spirit we will Chien, Wisconsin, a position that IOMAl-\AWI< AND PIPE METAL BOWL.IS OF FACT, MY BE 0.1<. WITH THE all watch and guard our hemi­ he held until 1918. IHE INDIANS USED RATHER PIPE SMOKES TOBACCO BUILT sphere. In that faith and spirit He came to Cincinnati in 1918 PRIMlll\/E: HOT AS BLAZES FOR COOLNESS­ may we also, with God's help, of­ to act as Dean and Chancellor r-----..,. ----1 PRINCE ALBERT fer hope to our brethren over­ of St. Xavier College, now Xa­ seas." vier University. After serving "But this faith of the western for six years in this capacity he world will not ibe complete if we was made director of the Xavier fail to affirm our faith in God. In education courses given at the the whole history of mankind, downtown college. He then went far iback into the dim past be­ to St. Mary's College as Presi­ fore man knew how to record dent. His failing health forced thoughts or events, the human him to retire from his work, and race has been distinguished from he spent the last several years of all other forms of life by the ex­ his life in an advisory capacity istence - the fact - of religion. at St. Louis University High Periodic attempts to deny God School. SURE!:: IT IS. P.A. IS have always. come and will al­ During his 13 year stay in Cin­ SCIENTIFICALLY 'cRIMP CUT ways came to .naught. cinnati, Father Kister was Mod­ - rr PACKS SNUGLY IN "In the ·contributions and in erator of the Xavier University A PIPE - SMOKES MILO the practices of our nations is the Alumni Association. AND MELLOW- Former Xavier Rector

Rev. George R. ICister, S. J., former Xavier Rector PRINCE ALBERT MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE - who died Smoko 20 fragrant pipofula of Prince Albert. If you don't find it tho mellow• eat, taatiest pipe tobacco you ever amoked, return the pocket tin with the last weelc. real of the tobacco in it to ue at any time within a month from this date, and we will refund full purchase price, plus postage4 ~ (Signed) R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY

pipefuh of fra• Krant tobacco in every 2-ounca tin l'RINGE ;7,-:;;;: 50 of Prince Albert A11Eif PAGE FOUR THE XAVERIAN NEWS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937

country could accomplish such a praise­ THEXAVERIANNEWS worthy result, especiaUy those schools PRODUCTIONS Published weekly from September that are in the larger cities. Kent State to June by the students of Xavier University is located in Kent, Ohio, a not YOU SAID IT IN CITY'S THEATRES University from their offices in Room too large city, but this does not detract B'Y JOHN FOGARTY 56, of the Biology Building. Phone from the accomplishment achieved there. BECKON TO COLLEGE JEfferson 3220. Congratulations to the Edirtoi· of the ET'S HOPE the new terms STUDENTS Subscription: Per 'Year $1.00 Kent _State University paper.-'F. R. S. L Holds a lot Of high marks which l\lembc_r t ,Jesuit CollL•ge News1inpcr· Assoclntlon, IN10INNATI'S theatre-goers will be Nntlonnl College Press Association, Ohio College Pax Romana- W·e now ain't got. Newspn1ier Association. C treated to their most unusual ibill­ s THE NAME of a new organization Kruse can't lose on this P1rom; his date of-fare in history this week-end when REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL. ADVERTISINC:I BY that lists many Americans among its (the Queen) is being chosen by and from National Advertising Service, Inc. l Leslie Howard appears at the Tailt in the members. It is made up of Catholics who the X. U. night school and 500 night College P11bllshsrs Re~r ..entatloe screen version of "HamJet" while ·being 420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK, N. Y. are conscientious objectors against war, school students can'·t be wrong. Now that CHICAGO • BOSTON • SAN FRAP.•CISC:O simultaneously featured at the Capitol in LOB ANGELES • PORTLAND • SEATTLE who plan to plead exemption in the event we're back in the groove after the holi­ of any open international rift. Consider­ days, several bright spots can be seen­ the movie production of "Romeo and Editor ...... VINCENT E. SllUTII ing it from one aspect, the organization there's the exams, the retreat and Lent. Juliet." Never before has Cincinnati had Business l\Innugcr ...... LEO C, VOET No kidding Meyer, did that old clothes seems to possess much of the truth of two Shakespearean productions rivalling J ••. · ~ RAYlllONll J. ICElllDI,E party at the Price Hill House end up with Mnnnglng E1lltorR: . JOSEPII R. ICRUSI~ Catholicism, since the Church is a vigor­ each other. And perhaps in few places ALUEit'r A. BTl~I>IIAN ous and outspoken opponent of war, everyone sitting on the dance floor? in the nation has an actor 1been starred J,EONAUD c. OAitTNI~R preaches brotherly love but considering Ha, I expect droves of the Sword and News Editors: ...... EDWARI> J, IU~NNI~UY { l~OBEitT F. OltONElllAN it from another point of view, it seems Plume brethern to !l!ttend the Prom after at the same Hme in one dty in t.ihe mo­ ,JOHN O'CONNOit strange that in the Hght of the full 1phli­ the patronage the undergmds ga.ve the tion pictures and the legitimate theatre. Copy E11ltors: ...... CIIAltLI~S L. l\ICEVOY Pow-Wow, which, lest anyone get wrong ~ VDWI~N'r JI, UECl\.i\L\.N losophy of Catholicism, any Catholic The talented Mr. Howard has not been Sports Editor ...... UOilEUT E. CUl\lllllNS should fail to see the logic of fighting ideas and s1Jart oiling rifles, was a very ·accorded the prominence he deserves in when war breaks out. The government fine dance. However the loca1l lads pre­ DONALD l\llDDENDORF the famous role of the Melancho·ly Dane Fenturo Editors: ...... { UOUI~nT II. FOX is the agent that demands our wihole­ dict that in this year's Prom they will because John Gielgud, the English actor, 5FELIX R. SHEPLEY hearted support. definitely have something. "Pal Al Pro­ Asslstunts: ...... ~ JACR A. JONES 1 In times of war, it has the right to ask vides the Perfect Prom." Pra·vo! has been shattering all successive-per­ REI>OJtTEltS t John J, Ilrmlcr, Leonard J. formance records along with a well­ Donlin, ,Joseph Il. 1''lsh, 1'~dwnrd J, Oonelln, El­ for our defense, and we have the duty to mer J, Gruber, Alex \V. }leek, Chnrles \V. defend it as the agent that guards our N I'.DS RAFFLE, the Prom Committee known suppo1-ting cast as ·he plays the ll11ght:s, Jose11h 1'', J,ulf the student body. If they advertise the school bels when an officer takes him into cus- Presents which the boys apparently propaganda that preceded "A Midsummer to their friends, and especially to high tody and because he seems a martyr to did not get from Santy: Night's Dream" last year-the movie ver­ sohool seniors, they can do much to as­ his cause, he stirs up the sympathy of "Ants" Kuhlman-a silencer. "Blood sion transcends any of the .play's many sist in the University's. progress and a·l­ many of the by-standers. Yet when he and Thunder" Salem, a deflation ma­ ·successful stiage performances since the leviaote the work of the promo-Hon com­ has control of the situation as in the as- ch:ine. Ed. "I'll resign if you don't" scenes p.re more animated and more in m~ttee later on in the year. serrubly last week, he does not tolerate Kennedy, a hair cut. ·Jim "Xplanatory conformity with fourteenth-century Italy any dissenters. On the contrary, he com- Notes" Hausmaan, a sense of humor. bhan any stage effort could possibly have mits the same injustice tihat he falsely The Xaverfan News, a tyipewriter. Cliff been. · Power Of College Press- thinks is being done to him when preach- "do you think I'll graduate" Strohoffer, At any rate, Xavier students should be HAT COLLEGE NEWSPAPERS can ing sed-ition on the street-'Corner. an alarm clock. eager to see iboth prodiuctions. Wouldn't T be considered more than merely And so it is with Communism in gen­ this make a wohder.ful schedule: Tom<>r­ another college frill has been decisive.J.y eral. It resents the denial of freedom of row, 3 o'clock, "Romeo and Juliet" iat the proven by the newspaper of Kent State speech when prohibited from openly rid­ Capitol; tomorrow 8: 15, "Hamlet" at the U which recently accomplished. unaided i:cuHng the Ami;rican government. But Taft? If Cincinnati is tq_ have more of something that any newspaper would ibe when given free sway, it nega•tes all free­ College World the type of entertainment that distin­ proud of claiming, that is the ridding of dom of speech and persecutes vigorously B'Y ROBERT H. FOX guishes this week, both productions must the slot-machine menace from a city. ·all those who condemn or criticize its be ardently supported by the intellegen­ Through tJhe editorials of this paper the doctrine. "MY DEAR YOUNG PEOPLE, what- sia and college students en masse. Fur­ whole town was rid of this menace. The incident last week brings up the . ever we may say or think, there thermore, . the productions are part of a The existence of this evil was first no­ interesting question oi whether in view is going to ·be a change-either a .change college education. ticed when students began to complain o·f the world-wide danger of Communism in government for the worse, or a change Another interesting fact in connection that they had lost their lunch money by and Fascism, freedoin of speech should in the people." So the new president of with tJhe plays is that the film version of starting out to play these machines and be as untrammelled as it is in the United Loyola of New Orleans, the Rev. H. A. "A Midsummer Night's ream" ·completed then being forced to put in their entire States today. Though we as individuaols Gaudin, S. J., addresses his students. · a run at the Strand 'last week. Hence, pocket money in order to try to regai•n may cherish our right to cri!ticize, we A columnist in the Crimson-White of Cincinnati will h:i.ve seen three Shake­ their losses wlhich they :could not afford. must admit that there is a potent argu­ Ala:bama makes a New Year resolution: speaTean performances wibhin two weeks. In blistering editorials the paper demand­ ment for censorship because the right has "I'll have a good time all the time where­ ed the immediate abolishment of these been so sordid.J.iy and openly abused. ever I am, whatever I do even if it kills N CONNECTJION with the above arti­ machines from the city, but they received But howeyer much we may differ in me." I de it can be noted that ·the picture, no coopera·tion from the authorities. Not our viewpoint on this legal matter, we Dr. R. C. Foster, new president of Ala­ "After ", in it:s second week being discouraged the editor continued are unanimous in saluting the Xavier bama University defines a university as 'at Cincinnati theatres, is well worth the his scathing editorials on the subject and graduate who had the fortitude to call "a congen~al cooperative group of schol­ attention of local theatre-goers. A spark­ finally public opmion was aroused to la·st week's meeting what it really was. ars and students." ling detective story-comedy oi the frotlhy such an extent th·at the authorities were (lt was dominated by the "American "Expense, nuisance and nonsense" is type, it is drawing Ia.rge audiences daily. forced to do something. The result was League against War" and ·Fascism that the way they describe commencement at Inimitable and non­ that some two or three hundred slot­ time and again h!as been proved to be the University of Arkansas. "How many chalant , together with Asta, maohines were confiscated from the dif­ nothing more than Communistic in dis­ seniors have any desire to endure a fun­ of previous "Thin Man" fame turn in ex­ ferent cigar stores and lunchrooms in the guise. eral exercise fea;turing boresome intro­ eellent performances. Cast and story city. ~avier is proud to own the distinguwh- ductions, political bombast and mediocre unite to make ·a well nigh perfect eve­ • Perhaps ~ot many of the schoals in the ed cnhc as an alumnus. music?" ning of light entertainment. THE XAVERIAN NEWS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937 PAGE FIVE CADETS PROMOTED TO SECOND LIEUTENANT RANK Oh Say· Can You See???

OU'D guess the answer if we Y put the question; therefore, we'll give the answer smack. Af­ ter years of babbling and bobbing we finally got to the top of the Carew Tower-with a country cousin. It was almost the case of the Parisian-no, you're correct; it was a Parisienne - the Pari­ sienne who answered the coun­ try cousin's request to see the Eiffel Tower with "What's that?" There's a small charge (try to make it a rich cousin), but even the ride up in the chromiumed elevator is worth it. You change near the seventh heaven for a little bird-cage lift, which makes you think you're in a dirty Third Street office building, A. D. 1875. No such thing; it's a ruse. The boy helps you squeeze out into a corridor that ends in a window ankle-high, open at the bottom, peering at the empyrean. It's only the empyrean when you get home to talk about it; at the time if's just prosafo sky, space. My . country cousin, being used to silos, strolled right over and put a foot on the sill. I fingered the wall for grip projections, but ti' every.thing was flat and modern. Never before in my life had I thought so endearingly of a street-car strap. I should have welcomed the hangman's noose just then. That open window seems to,c::ay, "Come on; if you're going . · ,.iommit suicide, do it now. We don't want the papers These photographs were taken to be saying that he leaped from Tue5day,,moming at Xavier Field­ the roof of the Carew Tower." house whel} fourteen cadets of After that little welcome your the R. 0. T. C. were promoted to phobophobias take courage. You, the rank of second lieutenant. too, put your foot on the si11 and In ·the top photograph are wave both hands towards Price shown the cadets answering the Hill with the inaccurate but brac­ roll call on Corps Day formation. ing wind-taker, Beautiful Cincin­ The lower photograph was taken nati. while the cadets were receiving .. . their awards of commissions . E'RE not permitted to say Left to right are the Rev. Den­ what we saw froin the top; nis F. Burns, S. J., president of Wthat wouldn't be fair to the man­ Xavier; the Rev. Patrick J. Mul­ agement. ·When you remember hern, S. J., chaplain of the Re­ that the Empire State Building serve Corps presenting· the promoters one year paid all the awards; Cadet Herman G. Ruff, interest on all the notes on all 4319 Ridgeview Ave., receiving their big adventure from the re­ commission; Capt. George E. ceipts on Empire State Building Wrockloff, Field Artillery; Major tower~perchers, you can aP,preci­ Arthur M. Har.per, Field Artil­ ate our refusal to kill local talent. lery, professor of military sci­ There are teasers. For instance, ence and tactics, and on the ex­ when you look out over the bowl treme right, Cadet Robert J. An­ of our fair city towrads Clifton tonelli, Newpol't, Ky. Heights, you-we did anyway------­ want to pick a tower off Hughes High School. That gives us a Committee For better understanding of baby sis­ .t;'I ter's designs on the moon. Again, if you've ever had anything Breali.f ast Is against Kentucky Hills, you get \ over it for the time. Then there's the realization that once upon a Announced time the Choctaws, or Aztecs, or Esquimaux, or Eskimos, or who­ ever it was, flitted nimbly on the. Yates, Bailey, And Feltes mud of the Ohio at just about accompanist. Creighton, Marquette, and St. the level at which you stand, that Are Named By Senior Clef Club At the last meeting pl'ans were John's College of Belize, British they cooked their dinosaur back­ formulated for a smoker to be Honduras. bone soup and cleaned their President Kruse. held on January 29. The com­ The Xavier papers were se­ teeth with flint dust over Old Opens Seas·on mittee appO'inted to arrange the lected by a committee of ~aoulty Vienna and Mahley and Carew's. stag affair is led by Joseph judges. And the little old Ohio! One Announcement of a committee Schulte and includes Richard The contest consisted of writ­ could ride the Carew Tower as a in charge of the Senior breakfas't At Mt. St. Joe Schmidt and Edward Ryan. ing a 3,000-word essay on "The hobby really, - winter, 9pring, after the Junior Prom, was made Catholic Graduate and Secular­ summer, in snow, night, twilight, this week by Joe Kruse, presi­ ism." The College of Mt. St. Joseph­ Papers Selected A prize pf $100.00 in cash is di­ dawn. We didn't notice Long- dent of the Senior Class. on-the-Ohio rwas the scene of the view. Maybe one cari see it ·too. vided among the leading five Headed by James H. Yates as opening concert of the Xavier For Intercollegiate contestants. Xavier has won a What we (let's junk that we; it's only one of us, and it irritates Chairman, the committee consist- University Clef Club season, place among the first ten for Monday night. One concert was English C o n t e s t many years. me as much as it does you; bowl- ing of Donald S. Bailey, Edwin given at the Paramount Theater der and dam it and be done) yes, Feltes, and Roy •Ferneding, has last night, another will be given I was prepared to say that I re- begun work on plans which will tonight. The Intercollegiate English pa­ Fourteen Cadets cently heard of. a C~l'tain prof. of provide an entertaining program Under. the ibaton of Franklin pers of Leonard C. Gartner and Freshman English m New York . . Bens the Club presented a var­ R:aymond J. Kemble, arts seniors, 2nd Lieutenants · who assigned his class a single to ~msh a perfect evenmg at the ied program 1of ,song. T"homas and Vincent E. Smith, ar·ts jun­ subject for the semester. The Jumor Pram. ior, were selected to represent Gorman sang UwO' solos: "I Love (Continued from Page 1) subject was New York City. And A suitable site has not been Yiou Truly" and "Mother of Xavier in the annual essay con­ he said he wanted facts by per- chosen yet, but such a selection Mine." test that is now being judged by tournament. The winning team sonal observation. What's the wiJl be made within the next The quartet's rendition of provincial authorities. consisted of Cadet Thomas P. use of comment? You can see, as few days. .Breakfast will be "Home on the Range" was en­ The contest was open to 10,000 Hogan, Cadet ·Raymond P. Fox, I think I see, what fun it would served immediately after the thusi:asticaily received. The four­ students in the Jesuit colleges Cadet Robert H. Fox, Cadet J·ohn be to spent a semester scooting Prom, and a popular. orchestra some .consists of Thomas Harper, and universities of the Chicago H. Fortman, Cadet Joseph A. around Cincinnati, getting the will provide music for late danc­ Joseph 'Schulte, Jack Schack, and and Missouri province~. The ten Glandorf, Cadet Albert W. Ges­ facts, and writing them up. Or ing. Frank Moore. The ensemble's best papers will be s~Iected from elbracht, and Cadet James C. even just sitting on the Carew Tickets will .go on sale next versions of "Song CYf thi:> FJea,'' the ten institutions that, in ad­ Gibbons. This battery also re­ Tower. 0 Solomonic Prof! And week, and may be purchased and "Xavier Chimes" were the dition to :Xavier, include John ceived the insignia of athletic to think that most of us are be- from any member of the com- popular feature of the programs. Carroll, Loyola of Chicago, De­ supremacy which was attached yond Freshman English! mittee. Miss Margaret Marsh'all was the troit, Rockhurst, Regis, St. Louis, to the g.uidon. One Year Ago This Week: Xav­ Three Years Ago This Week: ier's University Musketeers The Xavier Musketeers defeated trounced Alabama's Southeastern a highly-touted Ohio University Conference five in a game at the The Xaverian News team at the fieldhouse by a score Xavier fleldhouse by . a score of of 25-21. The outcome was in .a5-20. Co-captains Lee Sack doubt until the closing minutes of and Russ Sweeney shared scoring p play when John_ Wiethe goaled honors for Xavier. s 0 R s twice from the floor. PAGE SIX CINCINNATI, OHIO, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, W37 Crowemen To Appear In Twin Net Bill Akron, l(entucky, Captains Of l{entucl~y Wildcats Four Contests Butler, Musketeers Feature Dorin To Play In Games co)) Bo,vli11g Loop The double-header Saturday at - the Xavier fieldhous which will Fine Bowling Helps Buz. pit Akron against Kentucky and ·the Musk:eteers against the Butler zers, Daisies, Poppies Bulldogs was giving Coach Clem And Gerties To Win. Crowe more concern Wednesday than the battle tonight at Ath­ The scores checked in for the ens with Ohio University. Elet Hall Bowling Le·ague con­ Coach Crowe is not taking the tests the past week continued to Buckeye Conference favorites look like par for nine holes of lightly but he is determined that golf with the ag,gregates ranging from - we11 - anywhere in the his Musketeers will defeat at neighborhood of a hundred to least one of the "big time" op­ ninety to eighty and so forlh ponents on the Xavier schedule counterpinwise. and is convinced that Saturday The first night of play was Pin night the· Muskies may be able Boys Picnic with the gutters t·ak­ ing a terrific beating at the hands to turn :the trick against Butler. of the baffled Buzzers who stung The Bulldogs proved their met­ the awful Aces 564-5'32 and the tle last week-end when they lost Tee Hees who made the Dollies by one point to the same Notre say ma-ma-539-535. Dame team that trounced Ken­ Steve Sofka, the Wheeling whirlwind, did it again! After tucky 41-28. a comprehensive demonstration Coach Crowe feels ;that his of how it should •be did and is :team, strengthened by the flashy did by the champeens, he squ•ar• play of sophomore Pat ~o~ov~n, ed his shoulders and led the Buz­ will slip over a "surprise vic­ zers to victoTy with 146. Jfan tory Saturday night in the local "One in :a Mil-lion" Farasey as­ season's biggest .basketball at­ sisted Steve, although Steve traction. modestly denies it, with 142. The Akron Zippers who have For the giggling Gerties, Kim played sensational · basketball "Comed1an" Darragh and "Good this season may see their win­ as" Goldcamop, paced their goils ning streak shattered .in the oth­ with 125 a head. er game of Saturday's twin bill In the wake of these encoun­ when rthey stack up against the ters (they certainly were dead)' Kentucky Wildcats. "Butterball" Baker and his Pop­ Ralph Carlisle and Joe (Red) pies set .a new high wh1pping Hagan at forwards; H om e.r C-liPT. WflRF1£LJJ 1JONOfliJ£-G/J!/~lJ Donnies Lads 623-487. "SHly" Thompson, the sophomore star, Schuhmann led the lordly five at center; and Capt. Warfield with 153. The closing event saw Donohue and Bernie Opper, the American honors. 0 pp o s ·i n g the Daisies leave the Satchels coaches h•ailed him as the finest behind 554-493. "Wierd" Patton, Jewish ace from New York, at 1 guards, may give the Wildcats NEBEL CHOSEN center they had seen; Gus Dor­ Progra1ns Fo1· he of the charming wardrobe, enough power .to turn the trick. ais, of Detroit, be.fo1g particular­ ti :pped gaily ahead of his daffy Kentucky is gunning for another TO LEAD XAVIER ly impressed by Nebel's WOl'k as Double 11 eader Daisies with 140. Southeastern Conference cham­ ON GRIDIRON a roving center, descri•bed him as pionship. the '~bes:t center in the MiddJe Souvenir programs, a novelty Chess Club Wins Bob (Twenty Grand) Davis, West.'' star halfback of the Wildcats Fred NebeJ, Junior, center and He is a Junior in the College to ,Jocal basketball fans, will be of l;iberal Arts and •a leader in Opening Contest last season, and former member Xavier's candidate for All~Amer­ presented to all spectators at the of the Times Star boxing team, campus activities, being a mem­ dou·ble-header basketball attrac­ ican honors, was elected by a ber oi the S·tudent Council and At L. B. Harrison is on Coach Adolph Rupp's squad tion at the fieldhouse ·Saturday and will undoubtedly see service unanimous vote of 21 lettermen active in the Masque Society, night. in Saturday's twin bill. to lead the Muskie grid machine Olef Club and Germaltl Club. Of'fe'ring the line-ups of the Gartner And. Hogan Long Scrimmage in its 1937 campaign. Four Seniors, ten Juniors and The husky pivotman is a na­ five Sophomores were awarded four te·ams-Xavier, Butler, Ken­ The Musketeers went through monograms: Seniors: Co-Cap­ tucky, and Akron, and featuring Leacl Disciples Of Pala· a long scrimmage with the fresh­ tive of Chicago and prewed at tains Kruse and Dremann, Ko­ short sketches of the participants, n1ides To Victory. men yesterday in preparation for Fenwick High School in Oak prowski, Darragh; Juniors: Ne­ the Student Council i;> publish­ :their game Saturday and for Park, where he won All-Oatholic bel, McGowan, Cummins, Kucia, ing the .p·rogram in cooperation their invasion o.f :the Bobcat laJr recagn·i tion. Schuhmrann, Russ, Geers, Fara­ with local advertisers-friends of Pfaying its initial contest Mon­ at Athens Thursday night. In his sophomore ye·a·r he sey, Ubis·, and Kelly; Sopho­ the Blue and W.hite. day night, the chess team out­ Coach Crowe is endeavoring showed greait possibilities and mores: Howe, Neary, Walsh, B. pointed a guest team from the tO' perfect a defense to stop the easily cinched his Ietfor. The Snell and D. Snell, manager T. .A. A. Daugherty, former stu­ L. B. Harrison to win by a three high-scoring Nick L·alich and past fall he was outstanding and Schmidt and cheer leader P. ·dent at Xavier, is now dramatic to two count. Gene Rinta, Ohio U.'s chief of­ was awarded AH-:Ohio and All- Lang. critic on The Louisville Times. Leonard C. Gartner, president fensive threats. "Red" Hood and of the club, defeated Mr. T. Ed­ George Malokas, juniors, like La- wards in an uphill battle while lich and Rinta, together with Thomas Hagan was an easy vic­ sophomore center, Bill Grothaus, tor over his opponent. complete the starting lineup. I Ray Wilson and Jack Bruder, The Xavier mentor is experi­ Xavier's Football Schedule Ann·o11nced freshman members, were oot­ menting in an effort to find a manuevered 1by Messrs. Edwards place in his line-up for Donovan. "------' and Kack respectively. Alex Wednesday the sophomore sharp- Although only nine games Toledo U . ity of their aggregations. Can- Griswold forced Mr. McCreary shooter was play.Ing at forward have been announced to elate, This schedule is the most isius College of Buffalo is also to resign following his sixty-four in place of Frank Kucia who in- Xavier's Musketeer gridders difficult in the scJwol's history, a topnotcher in the East. move, thus securing an Xavier jured his wrist in Xavier's game will play a full ten game sched- since, unlike other years there Creighton, the Jesuit univer- triumph. with Loyola last Saturday. ule in 1937 .• Eight new clubs are no breathers. Every team sity of Omaha, last year held Mr. Salvador Bon'Cilla-ISosa, Kucia will probably be in appear on the schedule which to be encountered is a leader Marquette and Detroit to one acting as coach to the team, had shape for the Ohio u. game, and calls for four traveling games in its own sector. Xavier fans point victol'ies. arranged the match and was on Donovan may be moved to one at Providence, Canisius at Buf- are already familiar with Ken· Baldwin Wallace, Akron' and hand to judge the merits of the of the ..guard posts where he falo, Baldwin WaJJace at Cleve- tucky and Centre. Providcn'ce Toledo are all well known players. played last Saturday as a substi- land and Akron. Kentuclcy and College has been outstanduiit around Ohio as leaders in tile Contact has been made with tute. Centre are the only old faces in the East for many years. As Ohio Conference, the forme1· the chess team of the University he bleachers have been erect- to reappear in the lineup. being runner up to Western Re- of Cincinnati, and ·a match will T ·t· t th f t for Wes.t Virginia, Queen City t f d b · ed in the fieJdhouse bringirig the in a dd1 ion o e our rav· serve 1as a 11 an num ermg be held within the next fortnight. seating capadty up to 4,000 for cling games-all of which are fans in general are acquainted among its players the nation•s A return engagement with the :Saturday's double-header. The against new.foes, there are con- with the calibre of their teams leading scorer, Norm Schoen. L. B. Harrison is scheduled for Xavier band will play between tests with the West Virginia and Cincinnati fans, in partic· The opening date has not F e b r u a r y, Mr. Boncilla-Sosa the halves of each game. Mountaineers, Creighton, and ular, know intimately the qual· been filled. said. THE XAVERIAN NEWS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 14, 1937 PAGE SEVEN

l(ruse Stars In Skir1nish lookin' from the In Windy City SPORTSIDE Xavier's wandering Musketeers traveled to the Windy City this by Red Haughey week where they were swept aside by Loyola's rangy scoring _ machine 41-31. The Maroon quin­ A.,"'{ SCHMELING is getting der squeeze by the big shots in the tet, undefeated in seven starlts M boxing racket, and all be.cause he's a furriner. Max deserves whipped the inexperienced Mus­ first crack at Jim Braddock's title by virtue of his upset of the kies only after a tough battle in Bomber, but the boys who get their bread and butter from the which their height and superior game in this country think too much of the title to allow the Ger­ passing prevailed. man to carry it off. They don't care a whole lot what Schmeling Joe Kruse, husky senior pivot­ has to say about the affair, but certainly Max will soon be saying man, again paced the Blue scor­ plenty. More important than Max's protest will be the public's ers with four baskets and two response. John Public wants to see the best man on the throne, and foul shots for ten points. He was closely followed by two of Xa­ he doesn't care who or what the best man may be. Taking the con­ vier's sophomores Pat Donovan queror of Louis out of the heavyweight picture will hurt the gate who accounted for seven points more than the risk of the German taking the title from the country. on three ·baskets and a penalty Just how great is that risk, is a matter of opinion. Some think that toss and Al Howe who dropped Braddock can take either Louis or Schmeling, some believe Schmel­ in three fielders. ing is a sure thing over Braddock and a cinch to repeat his victory For the Chicagoans "Web" over the Bomber, and still others will bet that Louis could take them K:autz and Marv Colen, diminu­ both on the same night, if not at such psychological disadvantage as tive guard, were unstoppable and was the case in his loss to Schmeling. Yours truly will bet all accounted :for twenty four of available sheckels on a wiser Joe Louis to lick ·either the champ or their team's points, Kautz wVth EARL GERKENSMERYER EARL OVERMAN the German, or on Braddock to outbox Der Max ten out of fifteen fourteen and Colen with ten. Butler U. Forward Butler U. Forward rounds. The boys who are squeezing out Schmeling are lowering Mike Novak, .beanpole 6 foot, 9 inch center used his height to the price on ringside seats for the next few championship bouts, an good advantage in tallying elev­ because he might run off to Nazi-land with the title. They just en points and featuring on the 1 can't see that Max could never land that right (it's all he has) on defense by tapping potential field I cautious Jim Braddock, so they're playing things the safe way, and goals away from the net. at their own expense. All Kautz ~~~~~-x•~~~~~- EANWHILE the rising Musketeer quintet is continuing to The first half -was all Kautz. I In the period he registered eleven M surprise the basketball fans of the district. On paper of his fourteen points and led the boys shouldn't be able to lick Podunk, bufi ()(Il the floor they the Maroons to a 27-18 lead at play just a little bit behind the best of them, e. g., Purdue, Ken­ the gun. The second half saw tucky, and Loyola. There's not a Sack or Sweeney on the K:autz go out on fouls after scor­ squad, but they get results. Coach Crowe is one reason and ing three more points. The Ma­ the traditional Musketeer fight is another.

roons, however, managed to stave ~~~~~~x.~~~~~- off a last minute rally by the " SNOWY" GARTNER, the man who cornered the s}1eckel market game Muskies. 1 on the campus during football season by picking all the up­ A blue note was added to the sets, evidently isn't leading the same clean life. Gartner "figured," defeat by the discovery that Frank Kucia, Blue fo.l'ward suf­ ·and bet, Northwestern over Minnesota, the Gophers over Nebraska, fered a severely spmined hand , Duquesne over Pitt and Marquette, and, among others, New York in a fall in the second half which 1 IU. over Fordham! But recently he has been slipping. He liked forced his retirement from the Washington to beat Pitt, but has paid for his bad judgment. He game. Although X-rays revealed thought Kentucky could out-ramble the Ramblers on the basketball no break, Kucia will be out of floor, and he missed a long way there. The score at the half was the lineup for at least a week. 31,-6! Now he's firmly convinced that Notre Dame.and Xavier will The continued smootn per­ both finish the season undefeated. Maybe it's school spirit; or may­ formance of Joe Kruse and the WILLIAM GEYER be he didn't know that Butler, who comes here Saturday night, lost stellar showing of Pat Donovan Butler U. Guard to Notre Dame by a single point. Whatever it is, we hope he's right, were the only bright spots of the but think he's pixilated. ' evening. Donovan, sophomore, played his first game for the ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Blue. He had been out of the HE GAME Thursday night at Athens shoulcl be a honey. line-up due to an injury sustain­ T The 0. U. quintet 1>layed over their heads to defeat the ed in football. His pep and Muskies twice last year, and three straight wouldn't look so shooting eye added a valuable hot in the record book. The Bobcats trounced Miami and seem unit to the ~avier machine which headed for the Buckeye title. Beating them on their own floor is developing rapidly. would be a pleasure. In SJ.lite of the fact that Kucia's injury will keep him out of the line-up, the Crowemen should take this one for the first major win of the season. Three Teamsi Lead. Burkhordt's

Stokers, \\j\/\Ct '{tf\RL'{

Clearly showing the results of WILLARD FAWCETT GEORGE PERRY SALE. two weeks of intense training Butler U. Guard Butler U. Center over the Christmas vacation, the \SON · · · squads in the dearth::-defying, hit­ and-riun, dormitory Basketball Wrestlers by 21 to 9. Gorman In the nightcap, Frank League struggled through the clicked for eleven markers, while Moore's Ringers swamped the weekly Sunday morning session Captain "Elbows" of the losers Jokers under an avalanche of on the fieldhouse floor this week, was scoring all his team's points. shals, and came off with a 28-9 with a ca•rd of three entertaining In the middle emhroglio, Can'n triumph. Hawley tossed in four acts. "Ashtray" Hooffstetter and his fielders to lead the winning at­ T1he Stokers, Ringers, and battling Stokers puffed away to tack, while "Sing me a love song" Cashiers repeated their pre­ an 11 to 8 victory over "Chief Sills and "Scooter" O"roole were Christmas triumphs of the first Sleeper" Weber and the noncha­ aiding the cause with three loop­ round, and jumped into a three­ lant Snoozers. This contest re­ ers each. In Slatteiry and "Chub­ way tie for first place with two sembled a complete wrestling by" Schuhmann tugged 1best for victories apiece, against a clean card with Nebel, the FJegeville the losers. slate in the loss column. flash, and "'roday I Yamma Man" The third round is scheduled l, next Sunday morning, in the I With Tom Gorman, the pride Cummins featured in the main r of downtown Fort Wayne, lead­ go. It is reported that both bat­ march toward the league cham­ ing the way, Captain Len Don­ tlers will have .recovered from pionship and the individual bas­ lin's Cashiers walked into an severe joltings in time for the ketball awards for winning play­ easy victory over Darrragh's next assault on Sunday. ers. PAGE l'!lIGHT THE XAVERIAN NEWS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 1'J,, 1937 11:1::=:=-c=: ======I :======-=====111:1======:1==:t:=m=m11B:::ll dents by means of a bulletin r------, ]);mte l~x·.change board to be placed in Science Hall. Night School l.nttroduced Submit Names S1nokers Q!ztarrel Fellows in need of transporta­ To Be Given tion to school d·ances can place Il }' "·~~~,, C I u h their name on this board, and Scie1rz.ce Steps the "X" Club encourages those On Hall Place In Bool~ with cars to offer these men a '---·------­ ride by signing just opposite 1 Trausportation Afford.. their name on the bulletin board. BY IWBERT F. GRONEMAN one can bother with a bulky The smokers who congrE?g:ate pouch or can of tobacco. They Editors Work On Lay.. ed\ ]\)orm.itory Students In this way many iboys who in the basement of Science Hall wonder how ma.ny matches the would like to ride someone can have found something to argue pipe smoker must carry to light Out To Present Puhli· F'or So1r!ilal Functions pick out a friend and thereby about. Which is the better, pipe and rel'1ght his pipe throughout cation As Per Schedule help increase the attendance at or cigarettei' the day. They remind the pipe Andi Sch.ool Dances. University affairs. The pipe puffer looks upon smoker that they do not have ti;> The boa,rd may also be used in the cigarette smoker with dis­ contend with th•e messy business Xavier University's Ni g ht securing •transportation for any dain. For him there is n•()thing of cleaning and filling pipes. School will have a place in the B~~ginninr~. tomorrow, the un­ other dates at any time. like the old .briar to shoo .away The argument usually ends in Annual for the first time in the A committee has also been ap- the cares of the day. You can dergr.~duai£! "X" Club of the a dra~. The hoys a~e. waiting history of the school, Leonard V. pointed to under-take a Pinochle study much better, University will inaugurate a conc•entrat.~, for a cigar smoker to JOm them. Griffith Editor-in-Chief of the Tournament to be held sometime when you have a pipe :m your Then, they say they will have a Annual' announced today. "dafo e:i.:change," whereby they after the examinations. Anyone mouth, says he. The stinging, hope 1.o solve one of the most wishing to take part, may enter acrid fumes of the cigarette ean­ real argument. A special section of the An- importar..t problems of dormi­ the tournament by signing up on not compare with the fragrant nual will be reserved :for the Prof. Charles Boyton, of Syra- Night School, which U; celebrat­ tory social life. the en~ry b~ank on the bulletin aroma of a faithful pipe. A pipe board m Science Hall. is a man's smoke, he contends. cuse, is said to have perfected a ing its Silver Jubilee this year. Rea Hzi ng that many of the out­ Women smoke cigarettes, but device to mea.sure the mental Editors Griffith, Ray J. Kem­ of-town. students never attend The Philopedian Society, now ·they haven"t started smoking strain of students before and af- ble, and L. C. Gartner are com­ school dances because of a lack in its 96th year, will celebrate pipes. Another point which the ter taking an E>xamination. Ac- pleting the fay-out and ·Will cording to Prof. Boyt

A new place on the Chesterfield Map The new Wake Island Hotel-over-night stop on the new Pan American Airways route to China•

.~iC)~,ID'NAY ,_...() ... u-~ °"~ ~ SAN FRANCISCO :Jon ~ZIJ cruise

Carrying more pleasure to tnore pe:ople At three o'clock that afternoon the ... giving smokers what they want Chesterfields were on their way. Four ••• Chesterfields are offon a new cruise. days later back came the message: "CHESTERFIELDS ·JUST ARRIVED. From Wake Island 5000 miles out in FAST WORK. the Pacific Ocean, Pan American Airways PANAIR WAKE.'' flashed this radio: When smokers find out the good "RUSH TEN THOUSAND CHESTf:RFIELDS things Chesterfields give them ... ' TODAY'S E:HINA CLIPPER." nothing else will do Copyright 1937, L!GGBTT & MYERS TOBACCO Co.