Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 66, No. 14

Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 66, No. 14

r:,. X y / ^JA: THE NOTRE DAME SCHOLASTIC $3.00 THE YEAR FEBRUARY 3 15 CTS. A COPY 1933 PROFESSIONAL DIREC TO R Y X-ray Expert Eye Glasses Properly Fitted (Residence 3-4041 Service at Moderate Prices DR. E. S. LUCAS J. BURKE, Inc. D entis t Optometrist and Manufacturing Opticians 702 J. M. S. Building South Bend, Opposite Oliver Hotel fodiana Established 1900 228 S. Michigan St. Office Phone 3-3309 Res. Phone 5-1343 DR. B. A. KAMM DR. J. M. SINGLER Ear, Nose and Throat DR. E. A. PROBST Suite 526 Sherland Building Jefferson and Michigan D entists (10 to 12 m. Hours (3 to o5 p. m. South Bend, Indiana Phone 3-1254 405 Associates Building Office Phone 3-2574 Corrective Shoes Dr. E. J. Cain Dr. H. H. Rogers Residence Phone 4-6354 DR. O. J. GRUNDY ROGERS Registered Podiatrist—Foot Ailments Eyesight Specialists 432-34 Associates Bldg. South Bend, Ind. Phone 4-8251 213 S. Michigan Street Office 3-6978 Residence 2-6741 DR. LEO J. QUINLAN FRANK J. POWERS, M. D. University Physician D en tist Office at Hours: 514 J. M. S. Building South Bend, Ind. University bifirmary 12:30 p. m. to 4 p. m. (10 to 11:3 0 a. m. Hours |2 to 4 p. m. DR. H. BOYD-SNEE SPACE RESERVED Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat 716 J. M. S. Building South Bend, Indiana Febriiary S, 1933 One Does Your Budget Include This Important Market? Now comes the new year and a new advertising budget. Probably yours isn't going to be so large this time—and we can understand why. But before you slash appropriations look around you at the successful companies who continue their contacts with the public. • • • • And when you have decided upon the correct amount, CAREFULLY select your medium. Now, more than ever, every dollar in your appropriation must pull more than its weight in returns. • • • • We ask that you consider the SCHOLASTIC. Space in this live news weekly contacts a compact market of nearly three thousand students who depend upon South Bend merchants for their needs, and does it so economically that you can't afford to leave us out of your budget. A call at 3-1121 will bring a representative to your store. At The University Notre Dame, Indiana Two The Scholastic MoRRissEY HALL Center of the old "Gold Coast." February 3, 1933 Three THE SCHOLASTIC is ptib- Entered as second-class lished weck'y at the Univers­ matter at Notre Dame. In­ ity of Notre Dame. Manu­ The Notre Dame Scholastic diana. Acceptance for mail­ scripts may be addressed to ing at special rate of postage. THE SCHOLASTIC. Publi- Disce Quasi Semper Victu7-us Vive Quasi Cras Moritums Section 1103. Octobsr 3,1017. catio>is Office, Main Building. authorized -June 2.'>. 191S. FOUNDED 186-5 EDMUND A. STEPHAN Editor-in-Chief JAMES S. KEARNS Managing Editor Associate Editors Desk Editors Features Staff F. GRANGER WEIL WALTER JOHNSON P.-VTRIOK OORCORAN ' JOHNCONLEY R,VY WATERS Features Editor WILLLA.M DREUX LLOYD TESKE HOY SCHOLZ ROBERT DILLON LOUIS HRUBY EDWARD J. O'BRIEN LESLIK RADDATZ Department Editors WILLIAM KENNEDY -BRYAN DEGNAN News-Staff' TIGHE WOODS The Week PAUL DOYLE LOUIS GIR-\GI ROGER BEIRNE Theatre Talk JOHN D PORTERFIELD MITCHELL TACKLEY News Editor ROGER McGOVERN College Parade JAMES BYRNE .Assistant News Editor RICHARD PREZEBEL StajSf AHist THOMAS PROCTOR.-AssisfantNcios JSditor „ „ Business Staff Sports Staff EDWARD MANSFIELD RICHARD TOBIN ^,^^^ MACBETH ALBERT L. McGUFF '^^"^ ^- STOECKLEY. ...Graduate Manager JOSEPH BUCCI ROBERT ERVm JAMES F. McKEON NICHOLAS CONNOR J- ALBERT SMITH .Advertising Manager JAMES A. HART JOHN McELLIGOTT JOHN CARBINE HOWARD WALDRON RAYMOND J. NABER...Circulation Manager FRANK KELLEY MICHAEL WIEDL EDWARD VAN HUISSELING HARRY McGOWAN JOSEPH SIMON VOLUME LXVI. FEBRUAEY 3, 1933 No. 14 Smooth-working Carnegie quintet bows to Irish when SUMMARY Krause tips in winning basket as gun goes oft" 23 NEWS "Tip-Oft"s," Al McGuff's sport column, to sponsor hand­ Alumni Secretary Armstrong Leaves On -Speaking Tour ball tournament 23 In The East 5 Pittsburgh noses out Notre Dame in thrilling finish on Dr. Arthur Pillsbury Interviewed by Staff Member 5 Panthers' floor „ 24 Walter Donaldson Will Assist in Direction of Notre Introducing Leo Crowe 2(> Dame Operetta, "The Vagabonds" 6 Jack Miles and his Orchestra To Play for Junior Prom, February 24th 6 SCHOLASTIC Boxing Show for Bengal Set for March 3.... 7 COMING EVENTS University Players Score Hit in "Charley's Aunt" 9 Father Eugene Burke, Winner of Autographed Football FRIDAY, February 3.—SCHOLASTIC Staff meeting. Edi­ torial Board, 6:30 p. m.; Editorial offices, Ave Maria at Testimonial Banquet, Donates It to The Lepers Building; news, sports, and features staffs, 7:00 p. m. of Molokai J. 10 SATURDAY, Feb. 4.—Track meet. Varsity vs. Marquette, FEATURES at Milwaukee; Basketball: Varsity vs. Chicago, at Chi­ Les Raddatz, 211 Walsh, Is "Man About Campus" 8 cago; Movie: "Doctor X;" Last Day for change in reg­ istration. More • Praise for THE SCHOLASTIC in "Voice of the Campus" : ,..J....:.. - 9 SUNDAY, Feb. 5.—Masses: 6:00, 7:00, 8:00, 9:00.a. m.. Sacred Heart Church; Irish Club meeting, 10:30 a. m.. Importance of Farm Problem to "Nation's Welfare Law Building. Brought Out by Walter Johnson 16 Historical Display in Library Creates Much Attention....!? MONDAY, Feb. 6.—^Ticket Sale for Junoir Prom begins. TUESDAY, Feb. 7.—Patricians meeting, 7:45 p. m.. Law Building. • SPORTS WEDNESDAY, Feb. 8.—^Wranglers formal membership Track team to open season tomorrow against strong banquet at Rose Marie Tea-Room, 7:00 p. m.; Fresh­ Marquette team in Milwaukee 20 man Smoker: Gym, 7:30 p. m. Basketball squad to meet Chicago in first cage game of TRURSDAY, Feb. 9.—Spectators meeting, 8:00 p. m., Law schools' history -- 20 Building; Two pictures to be presented in Washington Keoganites pile up huge score in easy victory over To­ Hall under auspices of Commerce Forum: "The Nation's ledo, winning 42 to 14 ., 21 Market Place," and "The Mechanics of the Nation's Interhall basketball leagues to open play Sunday 22 Market Place." Four The SchoU^stic By Tighe Woods w and science. Science furnished the medium, and HEN a Notre Dame athlete makes an All- nature the work of art. A Washington Hall audi­ American football team we murmur, "Yes, isn't it ence which ridicules the acting of George Arliss nice," and let it go at that, but when a Notre could hardly be expected to appreciate a wonder Dame journalist makes an Ail-American literary of nature, but they came through like little sol­ team, we ought to at least give him a paragraph. diers. When the technicolor "fast"-motion cam­ Indiana is kno^vn as the cradle of basketball and era unfolded the sheer beauty and delicate grace American humor. Once a year Bill Fox, feature of the little desert flower, there was an audible writer for the Indianapolis Star, combines Indi­ gasp from the sentiment-scorning sons of Dillon, ana's two claims to immortality and picks an All- Corby, Sorin and Badin et. al. American literary basketball team. Paul Fogar- ty, a graduate of the school of journalism, was thus honored this year. His teammates include George Ade, Bruce Bairnsfather, Johnny Hen- X F the campus seemed a little sad after Tues­ nessessey, Steve Hannagan, Jonathan Brooks and day it was because a gallant crew passed from Glen Long. Fogarty's songs, "Betty Coed" and our midst. Tuesday we said good-bye to the rear "She Loves Me Just the Same," are two of the guard of the class of 1932, the colorful, carefree, most popular novelty numbers ever written. V picturesque, Point-Fivers. They toiled not, neither did they spin credits, but their names will be by-words in the halls when the maxima cum A FTER living through the past examinations laude men of 1936 and 1937 are long forgotten. with a hall full of lawyers, it is the conclusion of They will be best remembered as the remnants of THE WEEK that the worst things about semes­ the most powerful political machine that ever ter examinations are the post-mortems. What ruled the Notre Dame campus. Triflers, you say? could afford more pleasure to the eye than to see Yes, perhaps, but even Cardinal Newman insists some beaming neophyte of jurisprudence, flushed that, "the end of a liberal education is not mere with success at a task well done, come tripping knowledge." lightly from an examination in Contracts. Fol­ low that same barrister-to-be to his room. He V greets his companion with zest, aye, with gusto. But they receive his boyish enthusiasm with cold eye and unbending mien. They begin on his first w E don't know whether to offer congratula­ answer, "That can't be right!" "Here the cita­ tions or sympathy to the freshmen entering Notre tion right here in the book." "Tough, Jack, looks Dame for the first time this week. They are go­ like you missed that one," and so on down the ing to miss half the fun. Nobody will try to sell list. By the time they have tossed the now- them any 1928 SCHOLASTICS or 1930 Jugglers as chastened, corpus delecti back to his books, he those have all been bought up by their classmates hasn't faith in the ability to write his own name who have preceded them by a semester. But then correctly. they are lucky in one way. If the chairman of the Student Activities Committee has to welcome V them he will have had about three months to practice his speech instead of three weeks.

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