St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

6
THE VIA TORIAN PUBUSHED BI-WEEKLY BY THE STUDENTS OF ST. VIATOR COLLEGE, BOURBONNAIS, ILL. No./ 6 WED NESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1927. VOL. 44 SELF- HELP DEPT. EMPLOYS 86 STUDENTS I HEAVY SNOW KEEPS ORCHESTRA FROM SENIOR DANCE College Musicians Substitute for Joliet Band at Last Minute. U'hat loomed as an impcnd:ng tra - Thirty-five Stu d ents Required in gedy about ten o'clock on the evening Serving Meal. o! .January 13th in what I might be said to be a \'ery enjoyable Perhaps one o! the most important af!alr. The Seniors had planned ex- and advantageous departments that tensively f or their dance on that eve- !uncUons at St. Viator College is tbn..t I nlng. had gone to the trouble of in· I which enables students to work out f curring extra expense ! or program::;, I part ot their tuition in various capaci- l had sent out numerous invitations ancl tles on th e campus . The Selt-Help d e· had hired one or the best little bands I partment bas been th'=! means of a 1 ln this part of the state. Harriet countless numbe1- of students Sweet's Orchestra or Joliet. The an education whic·h otherwise would Senior Dance of 192i was to be a bri have been an impossibility. li a nt success. Requests had been re- I The history or the Sel!- Help Depart· ceived for more invitations and one of ment Is intereHtlng. l!ack In 1920, dUl'· the biggest crowds t:vcr anticipated was Jn g th e presidency of Rev. Father Be•· to dance in the new gymnasium. However. the working of for the bene!it ot n!!edy students. Tlw deemed otherwise. Fot· l'i\'O days be· JJlan arranged !or a deduction from the fore the dance lt snowed consistently tuJtlon of each student equal to thP with the result that the night of the amount ot 'iVOrk that he did. For·ty 13 th toun dthe well nigh im· passable, all electric lines shut down to the at ud,·nts, all deducted !rom and only the st<-am railroads pushed th(• s tudcnt.'a O.<'COUnt . that their way through the huge drifts on yNtr, 104 were em pl oyed, with l ate schedu l es. ·rhe orchestra started a. total o f $1 I ,542.44 earned, or a per }L\RY LYNCH S T. VIATOR LOSES DEVOTED TRUSTEE A ND BENEFACTOR ca.vtt..1. t ot.n.l or $110.!1!1. rn 1921 . 22 , the o ut from Joli et ancl reached \Vilton L otal earning!-( wcrl' $15.722,61, o r a per Center where th e dr'ift s became too Fo under of Two Scho larships and (·apl ta fl.mount or $lfiil.78 ro r· 96 st u dents much fo them and they were unable Loyal frie nd of College •• Dies in Chfcago. $170.57 flV£·ra,.;-(·. fn 1923·2-1, the total plte the t act that several of th e young W::t..'i $23.807.32. Ol' an average of $273.65. gentlemen had l ady Cr-iends from out In 1924 -25 the trJtni nmount earned was of town they consented to play !or the $28,143. 10, Ol' $290.10. Last year th e remainder of the evening so that our t ota.J Wf•r·c· $2-I,RSO.fi2 or $292.72. guests would not go home entirely dis· From rtgun·!{ thfl great benefit appointed. Their music , of which ·we dAr\vecl ft·om thiH d<·pn1·trnent Is recog- had a very splendid opinion since they n17kd. played f or the basketball games. proved The m<•mh<'I'H o! the Selt· H elp de- t-xcellent and it wns not l ong alter ten J):trlm€'nt ttr'c> <•mployod In many capa· thir ty o'cl ock th at everyone h ad for- cities. St•\'f·ral a1 ·e In th•:: go tt en that Sweet's were somewhe1·e Tr t·aHlii'C· r'H oiYI<.·f'. oth('I'H n<.:t a.."' secre· between h ere and J oliet. '.rhe Academy tal"lcs tf1 th <' Mtker'!-1 or the co ll ege, stil l lads saved the day an d the thanks o! others an· r-m plo yc·d In th e ll b1·ar y. In the entire Senior Cln ss Is ext ended to "'l'!"h build ing th()r(' iH 11 ("' rpe ot Wt>l'k· tbe.m. In the d eath of :Mr s. Mary Lynch of Chicago, St. Viator Coll ebe suffers the l oss of one of its most l oyal fr iends and generous benefactors. Mr·s. Lynch died at the D1et·cy H ospita l atter a brief ill · n ess Sunday morning, January 9th, anrl was buried at Mt. Oli\•et Cemetery, "\\'ednesday, J anuary 12t h, fr om SL Mar y's of th e Lake Church, Chicago. In appreciation of her· life of kindn€'SS and charity, a life every day of whi ch f ruitful in good deeds, sco es of prie st::; n.nd n'l onsignori we c in the> sa nct uary. St. ViaLOL" CoJlc,;e was i·cn· esen ted by its Lhc Yery Ti ov. '!'. J. Rice. c. s. v., n ev . .E. M. Kell ey, c. s. v., dir ecto 1· of stude nt activltie. 4. R ev. \ ·V. J. Ber gin. c. s. \"., C'elebmnt the Mass. and R ev. J. P. O'i\'[o d1 on ey, c. s. v., who pt·eached tho fun eral SC I'· wlw hHve c·e ,·tn..in duties to nc ,·(o•·m After a ll th e tr agedy ot the evening- undo•· t he ot an olclc r an ti everybod y went home convinced that more c• xp(•• ·icnf'Pd Th e g r en .. t- th ey had a good lime. This w as evi- nurnlx q· or HtuclcntFI nrc empl oyed In denced by the ! act that althou gh Presl· th c r c r c•cto .. y. MOt'(' Lh ttn thir·ty-rive dent H arrington had a nnounced from s tudent H ta l<tan active part In thf' the pl at f orm thaL the management fwr vtcc or ,•al'11 m<·: d. TheRe wo1·kers 1 !)J 9 l\ I I'H. Lynch rounded two CC'h·ect suffld(·nt l'nJoyment tol· the C\'e· scho l arships tor young men stud yin!=;' IJ<'rlbed . nlng. It bt qultf> f•dch·nt Lhat the unmmu l ) he Collef:'e. who died in the ot on the nights they give in relation to (lth('l' t·o ll l'gN:I. Plans nre their respective receptions and that they gave to the ottice 1 . 8 ot' the thro lwlng f ormulntNl now to establl!ih will not be compelled to su f!cr· the In· service o! hel· wonderful business ac·u· ho! poor men In dirE'Ctlng the arralrs or the insti- 1 h•lp now o ught to be who in theh· nnturc strove to membered hCL 'e ::tfl one who \o\·ed fJt.' tu ll y nnxlnuM tn of(l'r thf'il' cnnpe1·a- mak e the evening- the- s u ccesH that It Viator with an In t ense moth('t'IY ; tl- tlo u In Lnnlcln,.:- thll'l tunll a n:nllty. pronounced IJy a ll who attended. tectlon. bcCr\UH(' she 1 -enlized the g-rc·at Thf:'I'C IH no douht lllat thC'S(, wor l< that our Cutholi c Coll eges arL' npprc-l'iu.lu lht• uhl that IH g-lvcu tht•IJJ VIA TOR SENI ORS doing tot· tho protection and tl·alning' on d lht''' nught tn ht• glad to e:x pn·.-iH j o! ou young- m en. Evel' y day n.'-1 thn th olt· IH HIIC'h n !iUh!ilnntial RECEJV£ HONORS students g-a t her around the a ltat· hi'l" t hnt mm't• de-tniJH or ll11' ! nnme shall lin• in the me-mento mad"' CAMPBELL HEADS WRESTLING CLUB FOR FIRST YEAR First Series of Supervised Bouts Held on J an . 11th. The second meeting of the \Yrestling and Boxing Club held on :\Ionday evening . .January 11th in the gym. At this time the officers for the· year were elected. The following receiYed the honor of being the first men to lead the new organization: Edwanl Camp· bell. president: Yi ctor Simec. ,·ice-presl· dent: John Daley, t1·easurer. nnd Her- bert Hinton. secreta r y. Following the election the first super- vised bouts, since the society was for med. were held. Th ey included en- t t·ies from the bantam class to tho heavy-weight tilts . Only boxing was indulged in. \Yhat might be termed ns being pe1·· haps the most interesting scuffle in the heav3rweight division took place be· tween Paul ''Cyclone'' \\-els h, the. Dol· ton City nash , and Dominic "Bustem" Lizzardo. Those two !ollowers o! manly a rt, being the heaviest in their di\·isions. wer e well matched and showed VALPO MAKES IHIRD VICTIM F OR G REE N Viator Stows Away Valparaiso, 31-20. In the fi rst I nerstnte game, and tho third game of the season. St. Vintor registered its second tri· umph OYE'r her tnulltion:1l rin1.l. V<\1· para! so Universi t y. in what was i:\ spots good and poor basketball. Thu final 31 to 20 might havo been a much l arger difference had not Coach MeAl · lister seized u pon tho opportunity to line up some of h is second string m ateri a 1 when the score stood 20 to :l nt the hnlf . Dunne. E\'ard. Gampbell and Bielll worked most or the scconll h al f. and while not hn\·ing- tho finish of the regular team showed to a(l\'nn· their adroitness in pushing the gloYes. tace. Joe Murphy and "Cicero" Coecukus Yi ntor Scores not being so h ea\'y, put up some ratheA f ou l in the first two minutes o[ cl ever footwork but they seldom failed play gave Dalrymple an oppor tun ity to to let an opening go that offer ed an op- draw first blood, but VH.lparniso ca me port un ity to get in n. solid punch. bacl-. " ·lt h the .fi rst !reo throw of thNL \Vithout a doubt ''Gip'' Fanel an1l all o tmen t of seventeen nnd even ed tho "Grabbem'' Pa ris are both inclined to S<'<.•re. In tho m atte r of foul s. B ill Johrnix p syc hol ogy with their punches, be· I son, who is ono of the st rictest cause fl·om the w ay they studi ed ono operating in Chicago, omiltcd callmp: anoth er between swings ther e must b o, no oHen se , and H oo l<s Q: l\ f n.llcy onrly somethi ng in th at ''stare t hem jn th e tn the third quart er went to thu eye " story alter a ll. · showers because of the at·biter's un- "K ayo" F ar rell w as not inc lined to' comp 1 ·oml si ng atti tudC'. Accidental follow hi s brothet·'s tactics and th e! we ll as deliberate fouls we1 ·e toll ed o (( moments when he and "Five-yard'' l with dJsturbing fr equen cy, and It con· Hodge wet·e not exchang-ing healthy si derably m arr ed tho Viator ot! en siv,.., . bl ows they wero endeavoring- to get ill O' Mall ey's li s tl essn ess was appare':tly a little wt·estling too fr om the w ay they duo to hi s tear ot being sent to the st ch.' · went i nto those c linches that were liPeS. ha rd to b1· eak. · Passing Gn me The Radcliffe-Doyle a ffair was w II The short . rapid passes or the Vlntor· ex ecuted on both sides. There were i nns was an o ut standing- t ent ure of tho times when 1\'£r. Doyle, a Ia Dempsey. game. 'l'he boys in gr een a endeavor ed to make the Ho n. 1\lr. m ar l<Cd superi o ri ty in p as:.;i n g. a nd .t cliffe f orget a ll hi s worries via the K. 0. lmp1·ove>n1ent ove r . the-It· route but th e l atter gen tl eman was n ot two l)l'CV i omc lntll vHiua of th at o\Jliging nature that char acte · ly, Viator hrnc a team of izer\ !iOm or Demp cey's o pponent!; and potentia l mnn Heernecl w hPn the soundC"d both gentlemen flt l C' d en 1• Th o we1 ·e Rti ll VPI'Y Wi(l(' rt. w:lkf' nn d g-oing: unlt v or ac liun uf((•ll:-tlvc ly A('<:' t1l Od \ 'n.-..: s tJ· on g. lv '1-towt' cn nw han · ''St. Lo ui s'' Ga ll aghm· see m ccl to be (iilv with a t'unnlng qu ite awn.1 ·e o f th e fa ct th at he was with .l ohnnit1 ll rrbC l'L who g'rt t' · l aghcr had to be ''s ho wed ", and th at mlnutC'H of pl ay sne:lkNl tlHoug-h three wa8 exactly what his opponent nt· lim<'H frmn h \!'1 at gua rd to .. should get bool<ing in compan . v. t lw C• ! Its f-lt;11• g-ua1·d, who mHllt· hl!-1 nu· which time practice events, prcparato1·y nwrnl with lh(• lJnh•et·!'llty or Miehlg-an to the ann ual exh i bition, wi ll be partie\ · (l't'!-lhmen. Hpl ndl cr wnR Luken clown paled in. 1t is expected that l\r1·, H nn·y with an attack of blood the w1·estlng instructo 1 ·, who ll e>athcote. a mc·mht•J' of t1 1 C' J\linnc-l"O· Is nUJ'Hing a broke n l eg, will be bncl< on tu lJniv r ."lty li'roRh two 1\g"O, nnd the job In ano th er week. r.IIchaC'l, ro1 ·mHIY 11! l .ou\ 1'! Unlvt• r- ANNUAL RETREA T BEGINS JAN. 2 8TH W<'l 'l' thl• oulHlfll1ding pc•rfnrm<·•·H. Th P IHll f'r m ruiC' Cou,· points In n·H1ny tdl':-1 [L•om tou l, rt nli J\ ('ath<'lllf' drup pcll tWO or lh(• t \11' ('0 ChtL H('eH giv+•n (n him , Uoth tiH'!! O IH(IH Wf'l'll mnrl<t·d In th o Nll'I Y IJHl 'l (JC th o g: unl· :11 1 11 lh•• I (JKO Pa ssio nist Father to Con d uct gua 1 ·<llng n! thl\ Vialol'la l tH t·•·n1 l 1·n·d Cer e monies. It wltJ1 prl(h• nnd enthusiai-lnl for our hencfaetot·s In the H(1l y Sncl'l· Jlhlll \\ill hl, l't•\'('all"d nt a that w 1 - h·at·n('(l thnt twn of OUJ' envi lice ot th(' and ·1s the years 1'01 1 l.ltt•r dn.h• \l JH'f'!'4f'Ht till' aht.· f•·llow !'!tmlentfl tl> b. priests ,1)\\e t·ealization {:r Fl"lday evening-, Janwu·y I!-! to lntf'J"t·.td nil t th(' Self- ,,. 111 ,."'., 11 t amnng- (Jthf·l'!'! th(' \'O<·atinn to her· pious lu·nt>faetions I the 2Rth nnd continuing- !or tlll'ce day!'!, lll•lp dl•partnlt'nt In ll\-l!tlng a tund. tht· \\l'itt·•·s ot thl' prE.>Rt:'nt day . In eVCI' numbt•l· will bl'l"flth<· the students or both tho and t·x..tct runount or "hlt •h ht>t'll I httnor wn!-4 <"nnr,•n·('(i upon a P•·ayer rm· the womnn who A<·ntlcmy will go into l't'· dt•tt•nnln••d )l't. lly rorm.·r· Jvhn • 1 , and 1-:le-nnor :\I f{o\' tu (;oct the· c 1r her wealth. l!·eat. 'J'h<> will hC' a 111en11.H.IN or tht• di•p.lrtnwnt and rdso .!-:' "t> '''"h In lht•sl' rt'W lines to ('On· To hf•r children and I' ·lati\'N4 the Yia· Fa thE! I' (r·om St)I'WOIJd, lllino;H, or thf• thn .\C'•IUalnt.wt·t·<e \\ h,, f\rf' known lluth u! tht·rn ht•;,u·ttly CHI thl'il' torlan e-xt<•ndR Rin('et·<' anLI same as tho of hl 00 ltHt•t t'"lt•tl 111 l"harltubiP work. the assurance that the nn.me: o! M;.u·y last YNtr. tlwm IH•lpl c·HH In g-<·lllng J-1(•t !OJl' O<dd goa lH. V(Jn IHIHldrk arHI J·H<'h h(•ipNI tn two f\(•ld whllr- Bh•:JH(• Hllpp••d In out· on a, Junql- (OI' th(' rehoun•l r1·flr ll thf· ltank\I(JaHI. Thi H lndltat<•H tlw dt!•·nHf' VlillOL" lllUHl{'l'('(l. lt. WHR t)l(' flrtll Hf't iJUl'k foJ' Vnlpt), Pn·viCIItH to thiH j<,ur·t•(·y l11 t:ourhon· na!M, ('m•(·h i\lf,ll'" nutlll hnf\ trlurnplwrl ow··· <'1·oua· TI'C'h, :! I :J:i; 3 1·2·1, ant i :11'1·17. \'late,,· IH Rf·ht•dtli(•(i to ViHJt \!ltiJifl .1\T HJ'I'I! IHt, at whl<-11 tltn(' froHIIfl(• "' "' L (,r t·h:11nplouffldp Hhoui fl haw· IJ(•(·n 1\f•('\(lf·d In "cll n' 'fJil(.'8 f lL\'111'- IH't' I·'H ilt,plng, 'l'hht tural. Jt tnq:e will h.• I)J!It'l'( L.lt\tm nt Lh..>nf·l John Lynch will be handed down in hi'nf'· l 'l'he orde1· ot thC' day will he virtually tn,e-stNI und th•• lntt•Jt "t u t•d tn ht'lp !-UH Jn HI" 11.-llll.. nt t'XPt'R'' ''.Johmoon diction to succeeding or stu - the aarno as that oC III'CVious }'(•arH. lf' rlll t un.ttt• tttUdt•OtH \\ ho tli'O\ t' l \\a, 1 ., •• H t•" lntJm.tll·!'! nt u d dents as onto wh() held a big Hharf• Rising will Uc at six-thirty; tho Sac.-! \\ Orty lu thiM rnnnLWl' till' pn•!-!elll podlt I •PPLt·dauon In the develllpment or thl\ olleg-e Wf· Cle-f\ or H oly MaHs a.t breukfaHt ... t-udt• •H 'i\ Ill Htot Pllly !thu\\ tht·h· op ,. 1 ,,tm HtL.hltut!'! "hilt· ct,•,HHu· Ho' '-c love so muC'h. nt aevt•n·thlrty: the rlrat ('rmr('r<·nce or Pit dCL tlon Hf tlh l-.!oii!HH1H''' th.tt h.a--c l"*'lll 1111 '! .. lkt, proot th o Uay ut nine: tho conlN't>nC·I· tJot:-t'lll .,:1\t•l\ th-·ua. l1Ut th+•) \\Ill ht\t tJl,Jl ,, pol'ti<' ,lltllltv 1 " nnt len li!l'ty-rlvt-: chnnf•l' at twt!Vf': l•t'•l\hktl <I rmHI lh It \\Ill })tl v( 1m la•·killl.:' lllll•nL;" U!'!. Th•· Whrth anrl MO NOGRAMS Stations oC thl• fLl twll: thn third nw \tcuntltlt• \ lith tn twtotl;t m' rlt nf tlu 11 .. 1 ,ul 1 ,... eonrerf'nC't• nt thrf'C·th.l ny: svlrtual h1turt> , 11 1t·c,ultf·ly t•)' tht· f:u·t th \l tht"y wt•rt. A W ARDEO and rmmr: <Lt r1vP thirty; HU!'" F. C. F. TO STAGE BANQUET FEB. 27 dwz.wu r 111 m tlu man} \\hh·h ""n' 1,( !Jf'l at Mix, nud night IJntyf'ra, the tina! r .,,.d in tht• ,, hl'lll I•Y tht· C'On !PrcnC'e and at elghl. At a 11! thf· RjjtJn· mPnt will tHkl· fll<tf'(· at nln,. ..\thiHu· .\lh'l"''l·y J;(),lrd ,,r St. thirty ·rh1· n·tn•aHt ;tllhflugh In nttf·rHI.wc·(•, fl,, IJl·<.·n ""' 11 /Joran i' I·II•!'H(>Il f[t•ath('tJtl' V11n f:UMkli k Hlt·:olf' .\ l ld!df·l Yi4Lthr C 'ullt (•Jilt•\\ U\\ .trd•·d \"ar!-4\ty \\t:' tt- t-nt: l:•nn , fHdJI _\Jafltl'·r\. l,.1 <I 'l· hardt . \\ •• tl ku. lf+·rbert, Ct tlg-:m ('.arrull . D.alrymplt• t"aml•l.lt-11 J:oend.a, Vunne \1,..18 Cf•iVf'·tl by th,. t·ntlt·,, Htud,·nt hndy. 'rtu· JJaJq·rnpl• ltt·w-rf•nd Prf.,.trt(·nt h.ut ,t\\\ ayl4 1 'lJnn• ll. rl·lrf-a.t IJ! thl• (1rdf-r I l!tJWh r \ lf n.,£;er. an1t r;uJC .. n ('h r '"·tdr·r in .. un•t /J tl after thf• ct,nr-\u Jon of th,· fDgh Mll.a.8 ()' MnJJ 1 y t)n mrJrnlnJ.:". v.hif·h m;trk* th1• I HJPIII dnew. th1• Puutrmlat Prle t wtll lJ4>tttr,w 1 ff'rl>4·r t P.t[Jnl Blf ''" -dt wh,, h;tw- ,.,,m , 1 ,... 11 n1 d at MEXICAN CLUB VulJJ itt' ahw . V(: Sl. \' in f ,w. vr: ELECTS OFFICERS Bro. R. Drolet, '28, 1'"'1" I 1-r I I" I' I Recuperating (Jn Tu ,.,-L•y, .J:w. I, r Hhy•·r 'ZfJ, ,,rAt. ruard HaJJ, utttlt·r. we-nt 11n IJ(Yrlltit)n (11r th"" •• 1 t,( h •t. lf ,ry"H t,f,'fll/U:d In K At h,. I• t"'CI'lt11y, a 1J It 111 h'JP"J'fl l<l h18 Jv.Mt ,,f t 1t h 'Wlll MA'Al t,t natJfrt] l.IJ tJil lA\ck (10 lhe m"u•

description

The Viatorian, Vol. 44, No. 6

Transcript of St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

Page 1: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

THE VIA TORIAN PUBUSHED BI-WEEKLY BY THE STUDENTS OF ST. VIATOR COLLEGE, BOURBONNAIS, ILL.

No./6 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1927. VOL. 44

SELF- HELP DEPT. EMPLOYS 86

STUDENTS I

HEAVY SNOW KEEPS ORCHESTRA FROM

SENIOR DANCE College Musicians Substitute for

Joliet Band at Last Minute.

U'hat loomed as an impcnd:ng tra-

Thirty-five Stud ents Required in gedy about ten o'clock on the evening Serving Meal. o! .January 13th result~d in what

I might be said to be a \'ery enjoyable

Perhaps one o! the most important af!alr. The Seniors had planned ex­

and advantageous departments that tensively for their dance on that eve­

!uncUons at St. Viator College is tbn..t I nlng. had gone to the trouble of in· I which enables students to work o u t f curring extra expense ! or program::;, I part ot their tuition in various capaci- l had sent out numerous invitations ancl

tles on the campus. The Selt-Help de· had hired one or the best little bands I partment bas been th'=! means of a 1ln this part of the state. Harriet

countless numbe1- of students securin~ Sweet's Orchestra or Joliet. The an education whic·h otherwise would Senior Dance of 192i was to be a bri l· have been an impossibility. liant success. Requests had been re- I

The history or the Sel!- Help Depart· ceived for more invitations and one of ment Is intereHtlng. l!ack In 1920, dUl'· the biggest crowds t:vcr anticipated was Jn g the presidency of Rev. Father Be•· to dance in the new gymnasium.

~~~· ;~:;:~ 0~~~1~1~;~eihi~tr~~~~~e~~ However. the working of ~ature for the bene!it ot n!!edy students. Tlw deemed otherwise. Fot· l'i\'O days be· JJlan arranged !or a deduction from the fore the dance lt snowed consistently tuJtlon of each student equal to thP with the result that the night of the amount ot 'iVOrk that he did. For·ty 13 th toun dthe road~ well nigh im·

~~~~ :~d h~~~~~.::~'i ;~~?;:~t!o~:-!~: ;;:~~~ I passable, all electric lines shut down t o the atud,·nts, all beln~; deducted !rom and only the st<-am railroads pushed th(• s tudcnt.'a O.<'COUnt . Durin~ that their way through the huge drifts on yNtr, 104 studenLc:~ were em ployed, with l ate schedu les. ·rhe orchestra started a. tot a l o f $1 I ,542.44 earned, or a per

~l.RS. }L\RY LYNCH

ST. VIATOR LOSES DEVOTED TRUSTEE AND BENEFACTOR

ca.vtt..1. t ot.n.l or $110.!1!1. rn 1921 .22 , t he out from J oliet ancl reached \Vilton Lotal earning!-( wcrl' $15.722,61, o r a per Center where th e dr'ifts became too Founder of Two Scholarships and (·apl ta fl.mount or $lfiil.78 ro r· 96 stu dents much fo t· them and they were unable Loyal friend of College

;~1~o t~:rc~t~~~~~~J{'C~~ •• ~~la~~~:~i.8;n ;;2~~ ~~a:e;h:~r~ft~d t~h~h~o~l:;nee o:~~e~~: Dies in Chfcago. $170.57 flV£·ra,.;-(·. fn 1923·2-1, the total plte t h e t act that several of the young W::t..'i $23.807.32. Ol' an average of $273.65. gentlemen had lady Cr-iends from out In 1924 -25 the trJtni nmount earned was of town they consented to play !or the $28,143. 10, Ol' $290.10. Last year the remainder o f the evening so that our t ota.J e:trnln~H Wf•r·c· $2-I,RSO.fi2 or $292.72. guests would not go home entirely dis· From t h "~'' rtgun·!{ thfl great benefit appointed. Their music, of which ·we dAr\vecl ft·om thiH d<·pn1·trnent Is recog- had a very splendid opinion since they n17kd. played f or the basketball games. proved

The m<•mh<'I'H o! the Selt·H elp de- t-xcellent and it wns not long alter ten J):trlm€'nt ttr'c> <•mployod In many capa· thir ty o'clock that everyone had for­cities. St•\'f·ral a 1·e c~mp loycd In th•:: gotten that Sweet's were somewhe1·e Trt·aHlii'C· r'H oiYI<.·f'. oth('I'H n<.:t a.."' secre· between h ere and J oliet. '.rhe Academy tal"lcs tf1 th<' Mtker'!-1 or the co ll ege, stil l lads saved the day and the thanks o! others an· r-m ployc·d In the l l b1·ar y. I n the entire Senior Cln ss Is extended t o "'l'!" h building th()r(' iH 11 ("'rpe ot Wt>l'k· tbe.m.

In the death o f :Mrs. Mary Lynch of Chicago, St. Viator Collebe suffer s the l oss of one of its most loyal fr iends and generous benefactors. Mr·s. Lynch died at the D1et·cy H ospita l atter a brief ill · n ess Sunday morning, January 9th, anrl was buried at Mt. Oli\•et Cemetery, "\\'ednesday, J anuary 12th, from SL M ar y's of the Lak e Church, Chicago. I n appreciation o f her· life of kindn€'SS and charity, a life ever y day of which wa~ f ruitful in good deeds, sco1·es of priest::; n.nd n'lonsignori we1·c prc~ent in the> sanctua r y. St. ViaLOL" CoJlc,;e was i·cn· 1·esen t ed by its Jll'C~i dent, Lhc Yery Tiov. '!'. J. Rice. c. s. v., n ev . .E. M . K elley, c. s. v., directo 1· of student activltie.4. R ev. \ ·V . J . B e rgin. c. s. \"., C'el ebmnt ~· f the Mass. and R ev. J. P . O'i\'[ od1o ney, c. s. v., who pt·eached tho funer al SC I' ·

~ r!-1 wlw hHve c·e ,·tn..in duties to nc ,·(o•·m After a ll the tragedy ot the evening­undo•· t he Jnan n).('(~mC'nt ot an olclc r an ti everybody went ho m e convinced that more c• xp(• •·icnf'Pd ~ tudcnt . The g r en .. t- t hey had a good lime. This w as evi­eF~L nurnlx q· or HtuclcntFI nrc employed In denced by the ! act that a l t ho u gh Presl· thc r crc•cto .. y. MOt'(' Lh ttn thir·ty-rive den t H arrington had announced from studentH ta l<t• an active part In thf' the p lat f orm thaL the management

fwrvtcc or ,•al'11 m<·:d. TheRe wo1·kers ~~~,~~- ~~~~: r~~ad~~at ~-~,f('un~~l(l a~~~~n~~~ m~~- 1 !)J 9 l\ I I'H. Lynch rounded two

~~~o d~~~:t~~~ ~~~yll~:cw~r~~tl~~~;~,~~ ~!l~-~~ee CC'h·ect suffld(·nt l'nJoyment tol· the C\'e· scholarships tor young men stud yin!=;'

IJ<'rlbed . nlng. :~~ ~~~np~~:~~c~~di~:.!~,-~~e~1~1~~~d~~t h~~· It bt qultf> f•dch·nt Lhat the unmmu l wl~~·eb~nl: ~~~~;: t~~~d~~e t:e~~eCI'O~l~'; ) he Collef:'e. who died in the :-~ervice ot

~~·.lpvt:~~~:::(~;~:h·~~. l~lt'l~ ~t~~~~~tst,!1i~~:~~ C'fJ II<~ge c·hl8S<'~ on the nights they give :~:v~~~nat~·}~ ~~:~~~~b~:· ~:~h(;o]l~::~ s~.~ in relation to (lth('l' t·o ll l'gN:I. Plans nre their respective receptions and that they gave to the ottice1.8 ot' the Colle~o thro lwlng formulntNl now to establl!ih ~l will not be compelled to suf!cr· the In· service o! hel· wonderful business ac·u·

~;~~~,' \~a'r!~;~~~o~·~~1~1 ~~;.~~~hu;~~\~ob~J~~~~ conve~ience ho! poor ~·e;th~r ~~d s~all men In dirE'Ctlng the arralrs or the insti-

~~o~~ ~~~;,:···:·.~~;,"'"~~:~~'~;. ·~~ ~~~<1~:;~: ~~:1~ ~f~l~~::;~~~ ~~::~h:: ~ ~~~:thr:~~ ~~~D~!~I~£~~~~~~:~~;:,~;~:~HrE ~~~ 1 h•lp l)~ )lal'tmt~ut now o ught to be e~ who in t heh· ~ood nnturc strove to membered hCL'e ::tfl one who \o\·ed ~t. fJt.' •tu ll y nnxlnuM tn of(l'r thf'il' cnnpe1·a- make the evening- the- su ccesH that It Viator with an In tense moth('t'IY ;tl-tlo u In Lnnlcln,.:- thll'l tunll a n:nllty. wn..~ pronounced IJy a ll who attended. tectlon. bcCr\UH(' she 1-enlized the g-rc·at Thf:' I'C IH no douht lllat thC'S(, studl•lll~-'~ wor l< that o u r Cutholic Colleges arL'

npprc-l'iu.lu lht• uhl that IH g-lvcu tht•IJJ VIA TOR SENIORS doing tot· tho protection and tl·alning' ond lht''' nught tn ht• glad to e:x pn·.-iH j o ! ou t· young- m en. Evel'y day n.'-1 thn tholt· ap~JI't•t·latl t'n IH HIIC'h n !iUh!ilnntial RECEJV£ HONORS students g-a t her around the a ltat· hi'l"

llli~~H~:r.ht•Jlt''l t hnt mm't• de-tniJH o r ll11' ! nnme shall lin• in the me-mento mad"'

CAMPBELL HEADS WRESTLING CLUB

FOR FIRST YEAR First Series of Supervised Bouts

Held o n Jan. 11th.

The second meeting of the \Yrestling and Boxing Club ~'US held on :\Ionday evening . .January 11th in the gym. At this time the officers for the· year were elected. The following receiYed the honor of being the first men to lead the new organization: Edwanl Camp· bell. president: Yictor Simec. ,·ice-presl· dent: John Daley, t1·easurer. nnd Her­bert Hinton. secretar y.

Following the election the first super­vised bouts, since the society was f or med. were held. They included en­t t·ies from the bantam class to tho heavy-weight tilts . Only boxing was indulged in.

\Yhat might be termed ns being pe1·· haps the most interesting scuffle in the heav3rweight division took place be· tween Paul ''Cyclone'' \\-elsh, the. Dol· ton City nash , and Dominic "Bustem" Lizzardo. Those two !ollowers o! th~

manly a rt, being the heaviest in their di\·isions. were well matched and showed

VALPO MAKES IHIRD VICTIM

FOR GREEN Viator Stows Away Valparaiso,

31-20.

In the first I nerstnte Conferenc~

game, and tho third game of the season.

St. Vintor registered its second tri· umph OYE'r her tnulltion:1l rin1.l. V<\1·

para! so Universi t y. in what was i:\

spots good and poor basketball. Thu final 31 to 20 might havo been a much l arger difference had not Coach M eAl·

lister seized u pon tho opportunity to

line up some of h is second string m ateria 1 when the score stood 20 to :l nt the hnlf. Dunne. E\'ard. Gampbell and Bielll worked most or the scconll h al f. and while not hn\·ing- tho finish of the regular team showed to a(l\'nn·

their adroitness in pushing the gloYes. tace. Joe Murphy and "Cicero" Coecukus Yintor Scores

not being so hea\'y, put up some rathe1· A f oul in the first two minutes o [ c lever footwork but they seldom failed play gave Dalrymple a n opportunity to to let an opening go that offer ed an o p- draw first blood, but VH.lparniso cam e portun ity t o get in n. solid punch. bacl-. " ·lth the .first !reo throw of thNL

\Vithout a doubt ''Gip'' Fanel an1l allo tmen t of seventeen nnd evened tho "Grabbem'' P a ris a r e both inclined to S<'<.•re. In tho m atte r of foul s. B ill John· rnix p sychology with their punches, be· I son, who is o no of the strictest refer~~·::. cause fl·om the w ay they studied ono operating i n Chicago, omiltcd callmp: a nother between swings ther e must bo, no oHen se , and H ool<s Q:l\ fn.llcy onrly som ething in that ''stare t hem jn the tn the third quarter went to thu eye" story alter a ll. · shower s becau se of the a t·biter's un-

" K ayo" F arr ell w as n o t inclined to' comp1·omlsi ng atti tudC'. Accidental n~ follow his brothet·'s tactics and t he! well as deliberate fouls w e1·e tolled o (( moments when he and "Five-yard'' l with dJsturbing frequen cy, and It con· Hodge wet·e not exchang-ing healthy sider ab ly m arr ed tho Viator ot!en siv,.., . b lows they wero endeavoring- to get ill O 'Malley's lis tlessness was appare':tly a little wt·estling too from the w ay they duo to his tear ot being sent to the s tch.' · went into those clinches that were ~o liPeS. ha rd t o b1·eak . · Passing Gn m e

The Radcliffe-Doyle a ffair was w II The short. rapid passes or the Vlntor· ex ecuted on both sides. There were inns was an o utstanding- tenture of tho times when 1\'£r. Doyle, a Ia Dempsey. game. 'l'he boys in g r een ~hawed a endeavor ed to make the H o n. 1\lr. ~ad· m arl<Cd superio ri ty in p as:.;i ng. and .t cliffe f orget a ll his worries via the K. 0. <·on ~i<l f'rable lmp1·ove>n1ent over . the-It· route but the latter gen tleman was n ot two l)l'CV iomc t~nt;nc::ement:.;. lntllvHiua l · o f tha t o\Jliging nature that char acte1· · l y , Viator hrnc a team of tr(·nH.' ndn u~ izer\ !iOm or Dem pcey's oppo nent!; a nd potentia l !'ll l"C' n~th . E~ 1 c h mnn Heernecl w hPn the ~ong soundC"d both gentlemen ~nrinent. l y flt l C'd en 1• hi~ n:-;si~·nment. Tho w e1·e Rti ll VPI'Y Wi(l(' rt.w:lkf' nn d g-oing: unlt v or ac liun uf((•ll:-tlvc ly A('<:' t1l Od \ 'n.-..: l · s tJ·on g. lv it~lprov ccl . '1-towt' cn nw throu~h han·

''St. Louis'' G a ll aghm· see m ccl to be (iilv with a spn l'idln ~ ~t\ l11 C' . t'unnlng qu ite awn.1·e o f the fact t hat he was ev~ n with .l ohnnit1 ll rrbC l'L who g'rt t' ·

;~;~;~n~~;~ss~~~~~~· ~:~n a~~~~~~;~~ ~~~:: :~:: ~1~~~~-~~!,s.lh l~; P:!~~~~ J7c~~~\~~ 7,~11\ "~~~~y-r~-~ 0 laghc r had to be ' 's howed", and that mlnutC'H of play sne:lkNl t lHoug-h three wa8 exactly what his opponent nt· lim<'H frmn h \!'1 po~ltlon at g u a rd to

=~~~~:r~:~~i~~;~~ ~~~~:~~~~~~::b1:i:;ri·~~;.,~ ~~:~o~"a ·~~~~.~ .. r~;<l~,:~:'.~·~:~ 1 "c~:~ r n~~:: should get bool<ing in ra~te 1 · compan.v. tC' •~~~d~~~r~~~o hrt~~t t lw ~(' 1'\' IC•(•!'! C• ! Its

m~!ti~~s ~~~e~t ~~~~e~et~~t ,~~~s~~~~~~~~ f-lt;11• g-ua1·d, ~plndh•r. who mHllt· hl!-1 nu· which time practice events, prcparato1·y nwrnl with lh(• lJnh•et·!'llty or Miehlg-an to the ann ua l exh ibition, wi ll be partie\ · (l't'!-lhmen. Hpl ndlcr wnR Luken clown paled in. 1t is expected that l\r1·, H nn·y with an attack of blood poi~on ln ~. Bro~seau, the w1·estlng instructo1·, who ll e>athcote. a mc·mht•J' of t11C' J\linnc-l"O· Is nUJ'Hing a broke n leg, will be bncl< on tu lJniv r ."lty li'roRh two ycano~ 1\g"O, nnd the job In ano ther week. r.IIchaC'l, ro1·mHIY 11! ~t. l .ou\ 1'! Unlvt• r ­

ANNUAL RETREAT BEGINS JAN. 28TH

~l ty. W<'l'l' thl• oulHlfll1ding pc•rfnrm<·•·H. ThP IHll f'r m ruiC' Cou,· points In ~IH n·H1ny tdl':-1 [L•om tou l , rt nli J\('ath<'lllf' druppcll tWO o r lh(• t \11'('0 ChtL H('eH giv+•n (n him , Uoth tiH'!!O IH(IH Wf' l'll mnrl<t·d In tho Nll'I Y IJHl 'l (JC tho g: unl· :11 111 lh•• t· I(JKO

Passionist Father to Cond uct gua 1·<llng n ! thl\ Vialol'la l tH t·•·n1 l 1·n·d

Ceremonies. I t wn~ wltJ1 prl(h• nnd enthusiai-lnl fo r our hencfaetot·s In the H(1l y Sncl'l·

Jli'O JlO~tt•(l Jlhlll \\ill hl, l't•\'('all"d nt a that w 1- h·at·n('(l thnt twn of OUJ' envi lice ot th(' ~('l!iH and ·1s the years 1'011

l.ltt•r dn.h• \l JH'f'!'4f'Ht till' Jli'(IJ)('I~ftlon aht.· f•·llow !'!tmlentfl wel·t~ chos~n tl> b. priests wh~' ,1)\\e th~ t·ealization {:r He~innlng Fl"lday evening-, Janwu·y I!-! to lntf'J"t·.td nil nwmht•r~ t th(' Self- ,,.111 ,."'., 11 t amnng- (Jthf·l'!'! th(' youn~ t~Pir· \'O<·atinn to her· pious lu·nt>faetions I the 2Rth nnd continuing- !or tlll'ce day!'!, lll•lp dl•partnlt'nt In ll\-l!tlng a tund. tht· t'.~tllfllil- \\l'itt·•·s ot thl' prE.>Rt:'nt day . In eVCI' lm·reasln~ numbt•l· will bl'l"flth<· the students or both tho Co\1('~(' and t·x..tct runount or "hlt•h h<~~ n~1t ht>t'll I Thi:-~ ~iL::na l httnor wn!-4 <"nnr,•n·('(i upon a P•·ayer rm· the ~ood womnn who ~av<.• A<·ntlcmy d€'partmf'nt~ will go into l't'· dt•tt•nnln••d )l't. lly !tolll'llln~ rorm.·r· Jvhn •1, Elli~ .~ 7 and 1-:le-nnor :\I f{o\' tu (;oct the· flr~t rruit~ c1r her wealth. l!·eat. 'J'h<> Mn.r~tf'r will hC' a PW·iSionl~t 111en11.H.IN or tht• di•p.lrtnwnt and rdso .!-:' "t> '''"h In lht•sl' rt'W lines to ('On· To hf•r children and I' ·lati\'N4 the Yia· Fa thE! I' (r·om St)I'WOIJd, lllino;H, or thf• thn .\C'•IUalnt.wt·t·<e \\ h,, f\rf' known ~ratul:ttt• lluth u! tht·rn ht•;,u·ttly CHI thl'il' torlan e-xt<•ndR it~ Rin('et·<' ~ympathy anLI same ('nn~regation as tho ~Inster of hl 00 ltHt•t t'"lt•tl 111 l"harltubiP work. the assurance that the nn.me: o! M;.u·y last YNtr.

tlwm IH•lpl c·HH In g-<·lllng J-1 ( • t !OJl' O<dd goa lH. V(Jn IHIHldrk arHI l'('tt·n-~nn J·H<'h h(•ipNI lilt'lllH(•\V('~ tn two f\(•ld gt1~1I H, whllr- Bh•:JH(• Hllpp••d In out· on a, Junql­(OI' th(' rehoun•l r1·flr ll thf· ltank\I(JaHI. Thi H lndltat<•H tlw tl~;llt dt!•·nHf' VlillOL" lllUHl{'l'('(l.

lt. WHR t)l(' flrtll Hf't iJUl'k foJ' Vnlpt), Pn·viCIItH to thiH j<,u r·t•(·y l11 t:ourhon· na!M, ('m•(·h i\lf,ll'" nutlll hnf\ trlurnplwrl ow· ·· <'1·oua· TI'C'h, :! I :J:i; ~rt·I ·Htau·. 3 1·2·1, anti AI'I<HnHH~ J\ g~o:if·,.., :11'1·17. \'late,,· IH Rf·ht•dtli(•(i to ViHJt \!ltiJifl .1\T HJ'I'I! IHt, at whl<-11 tltn(' froHIIfl(• "'"' L (,r t·h:11nplouffldp Hhoui fl haw· IJ(•(·n 1\f•('\(lf·d In "cll n''fJil(.'8 f lL\'111'- IH't' I·'H ilt,plng,

'l'hht tural. Jt ~utrh·h·ntly tnq:e will h.• ~u.\·~,;1~ 1 .:-. I)J!It'l'( L.lt\tm nt Lh..>nf·l John Lynch will be handed down in hi'nf'· l 'l'he orde1· ot thC' day will he virtually tn,e-stNI und th•• lntt•Jt "t u t•d tn ht'lp !-UH Jn HI" 11.-llll .. nt t'XPt'R'' ''.Johmoon '-~ diction to succeeding ~enerntlons or stu- the aarno as that oC III'CVious }'(•arH. lf' ~ rlll t un.ttt• tttUdt•OtH \\ ho tli'O\ t' l \\a, l<~ 1., •• H t•" lntJm.tll·!'! nt u ~f'nPr d dents as onto wh() ha~ held a big Hharf• Rising will Uc at six-thirty; tho Sac.-! \ \ Orty lu thiM rnnnLWl' till' pn•!-!elll podlt I•PPLt·dauon t•XIMtiu~ nrnun~ In the develllpment or thl\ olleg-e Wf· Cle-f\ or H oly MaHs a.t sc~ven: breukfaHt ... t-udt• •H 'i\ Ill Htot Pllly !thu\\ tht·h· op ,.1,,tm HtL.hltut!'! "hilt· ct,•,HHu· Ho' '-c love so muC'h. nt aevt•n·thlrty: the rlrat ('rmr('r<·nce or Pit dCLtlon Hf tlh l-.!oii!HH1H''' th.tt h.a--c l"*'lll 1111 '! .. lkt, ~lkhlj.:nn. ~'1\NI proot ~I tho Uay ut nine: tho ~f·cond conlN't>nC·I· tJot:-t'lll .,:1\t•l\ th-·ua. l1Ut th+•) \\Ill ht\t tJl,Jl ,, IHl~''"·ll pol'ti<' ,lltllltv 1" nnt ~at len li!l'ty-rlvt-: chnnf•l' at twt!Vf': l•t'•l\hktl <I rmHI lh It \\Ill })tl v( 1m la•·killl.:' lllll•nL;" U!'!. Th•· Whrth anrl MONOGRAMS Stations oC thl• Cl'OH~ fLl twll: thn third nw \tcuntltlt• \ lith tn twtotl;t ~ttua<>nt~ m' rlt nf tlu 11 .. trtld,•o~ 1 ,ul 1,... s;~tuf{t'lll eonrerf'nC't• nt thrf'C·th.lny: svlrtual n~t_• h1turt> ,11 1t·c,ultf·ly t•)' tht· f:u·t th \l tht"y wt•rt. A W ARDEO re;,~(hng and rmmr: <Lt r1vP thirty; HU!'"

F. C. F. TO STAGE BANQUET FEB. 27

dwz.wu r 111m tlu man} \\hh·h ""n' 1,( !Jf'l at Mix, nud night IJntyf'ra, the tina! r .,,.d in tht• ,, 1 .tt~ c· 11 nt 1 ·:-~t hl'lll I•Y tht· C'On !PrcnC'e and J~•·nNliNion at elghl.

At a n·~uhr mf>,·tln~o: 11! thf· RjjtJn· mPnt will tHkl· fll<tf'(· at nln,. ..\thiHu· .\lh'l"''l·y J;(),lrd ,,r St. thirty

·rh1· n·tn•aHt ;tllhflugh f'fllupui~''~'.Y In nttf·rHI.wc·(•, fl,, vt~ al~A-U}'~ IJl·<.·n ""' 11 n·

/Joran i'I·II•!'H(>Il

f[t•ath('tJtl' V11n f:UMkli k Hlt·:olf' .\ l ld!df·l

Yi4Lthr C 'ullt ~o th~ (•Jilt•\\ 1n~ \~ •·r~

U\\ .trd•·d \"ar!-4\ty muno~ram \\t:' tt­

t-nt: l:•nn , fHdJI _\Jafltl'·r\. l,.1 <I 'l·

hardt. U'~l.dlty, \\ •• tl ku. lf+·rbert, Ct tlg-:m ('.arrull . D.alrymplt• t"aml•l.lt-11 ~fay J:oend.a, ~~d~trthy, Vunne \1,..18

Cf•iVf'·tl by th,. t·ntlt·,, Htud,·nt hndy. 'rtu· JJaJq·rnpl• ltt·w-rf•nd Prf.,.trt(·nt h.ut ,t\\\ ayl4 ~f·Un·tl 1 'lJnn• ll. rl·lrf-a.t nnJOtt(~r IJ! thl• hJJ.:"h~>~tt (1rdf-r I l!tJWh

r \ llnrnn~tnn . lf n.,£;er. an1t r;uJC .. n ('h r '"·tdr·r

in .. ""IU~'n<f~ un•t /J tl fmm,.flh~ott·ly 1-~vnnl after thf• ct,nr-\u Jon of th,· fDgh Mll.a.8 ()' MnJJ1 y t)n ~\1tmday mrJrnlnJ.:". v.hif·h m;trk* th1• I HJPIII dnew. th1• Puutrmlat Prle t wtll lJ4>tttr,w 1 ff'rl>4·r t th,~ P.t[Jnl Blf "'~In~ ''" -dt wh,, h;tw- ,.,,m ,1,... 11 n1 d th~ r~tr at ft~·nr:d.

MEXICAN CLUB

VulJJitt'ahw . V(:

Sl. \' in f ,w. vr:

ELECTS OFFICERS Bro. R. Drolet, '28,

1'"'1" I

1-r I

I"

I' I

Recuperating (Jn Tu ,.,-L•y, .J:w. I, t:rf~th• r Hhy•·r

LJrtJ1~>t, 'ZfJ, ,,rAt. r~ ruard • HaJJ, utttlt·r. we-nt 11n IJ(Yrlltit)n (11r th"" rttnt~v-•• 1 t,(

h nr,~o,Hx •t. lf ,ry"H t,f,'fll/U:d In K •nkak~.

At t~re.nt h,. I• Ct1n\la~r." t"'CI'lt11y, a 1J It 111 h'JP"J'fl l<l h18 Jv.Mt ,,f fr!~o-r1 tJ#J t 1t h 'Wlll MA'Al t,t natJfrt] l.IJ tJil lA\ck (10 lhe m"u•

Page 2: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

THE V IATOR!AN WED NESDAY, ] A UARY 19. 1927. ~P~a~g~e~T~w~o~--------------------------~----------------~====~~~==::::~~~::~ f·~::::::::::::::::::::::::~~==~~~=================

om~ ~;~!;!,~,~~~;r,'?~~~N,."" "' "~~~ :~~~~~~:~ •. ! I CAMPUS BRIEFS ~~ TH!:~~~~~NG ...... John J. Toohill '27 the inevit.a.ble day, when power sba~l In spite o f eighteen inches of snow, L,_ __ _:,:_ _________ ~

'27 be given into the hands of the wea , .... !most Impassable roads, slow trains .Editor in Chle! ----············· Ass1stant Editor ··· Business :tlanager .... .

... James T. Connor a nd the migh ty s hall tremble. Now ~nd below zero weather, many forme r ·············· ........ Edward E. Gallahu e '27 comes the day when questions shall be students and fl·iends managed some- Quest ion.

Alumni Notes ............ · Spor ts ............ .

Emmett M. Wal sh '28 asl<ed n.nd answers dem anded-and woe how to a ttend the Senior dance on Jan­- ... ::::~o~~ph A. Harrington '27 to him who cannot answer! Now shall uary 13th. Among the out-of-town

...... E. M. Roy '27 t h e1·e be remembrances of cut classes and themes forgotten, of procrastina·

Do you con sider the United States justified in the stand she has taken to· ward Nicaragua?

Por t Hole Editor Locals ........ · ........ Leslie J . Roch '27 tions, excurs ion s and di versi9ns. And

William Sieber t '28 there s hall be signs on stu dents' faces Warre n J . McClelland '2 8 of perplex ity, fear and dismay. And he

guests were:

M iss Ann O'Keefe, Cal.

So.n Fra n cisco, \ Vhe r e A sl\ed.

Features .. ······· Allen J. Nolan '28 who rides a pony, in tha t day le t him Miss Margaret McAllister, sister of our coach.

In the Library.

L eslie J. Roc h, Scnior.-From my

brief s tudy ot the si tua tion I a m con·

vinced tha t the U. S . has no business m eddli ng in Nicaraguan Interior affairs.

Not only have we k ept our m arines in that territory for a number of years to k eep favorable government in office, but now we inter! e re militar ily t o pro·

teet the Monroe Doctrine under the p re·

text that Italy or Engla nd mig ht send t roops to Nicaragua to protect t heir

interests if we fail t o intervene. It

Inquiring R e porter ----·

Vlatoriana ...... .

...... John •.r. Ellis '27 be car e ful. W h e n these things a re ac· ...... Francis Bell '27 complished the n you s ha ll know that

exams are n igh . The re s ha ll be wai ling . ... ..... Robert 0. Barnett '30 and g n as hing of teeth, for many take

Miss A lice Mae Colle n s, Lake F orest, Ill.

M r. a nd Mrs. Kuhle , with party of four, Onarga, Ill. Circulation

Reporters .. ... '\VIllinm Coste llo, Leo C. Larldn exams, but not a ll pass them.

Miss Mary Edna Fitzgerald, Oak

ON MAKING THE RETREAT. Sin ce the foundation of S t. ViatordCollege ht ta~h~e~~J~~t~u~f t set aside t h ree days each year unng w I C Th"

~:';'h :he hig h sch oo l a nd coll T depar~Strt:nda:~d~ ~h~ef~ilowin~ yea r it op•ts FMday eFenmg, ; nout: this ~ear's retreat will b e the

~~;,d::/p~rrhap:~f~r s~~;'~n will be the last--for a ll it should be

the bW~at is a retreat/ \Vhen th e gen eral of a n armydsees ~at the h as become too strong fo r his soldiers h e or ers t em to

ebemd h lin e of battle and withdraw to ta safer zon e. Then the a ladn onb. ed p .the wounds they h ave r eceived in t h e confli ct, re­so 1e rs m u d . 1 t pp[y o f a m-fresh their bodies w ith food, an put m a comp e e su h muntion The gen eral h o lds conferences w 1th th em to show w e r e the h a ; e made th e ir mistakes a nd h ow to avoid their rep t1t1 on; and he~ean imates the ir courage so their h earts w ill not fa il them m th e

s truga[e fo r victory. [[ 1 f h f · oA · ·t a l re treat is a lmost an exac t para e o t e oregotng .

spm u II h d d to draw Our gen erals, th e superiors o f the co ege, ave or e_re .ud back from the b a tle lin e for a few days. With th eir W IS oh, ma­ture minds a nd expe ri ence, they see that thTe hstrugg lls mb t k ~ut~ side world m ay be as yet too great for us. ey ca us ac o zone of safety a nd quiet. It is there w e bind up the wound s o f our souls; we refresh ourselves by good, sincere confessions a nd .":orthy communions, and we lay up a supply o f sptntua l ammunitiOn­the graces God bestows upon us in time of r e trea t--whereby we rna~ be streng thened to fi ght for, a nd let us hope, to wm the crown o

v ictory. . · · tl For coll ege men especially, th e retrea t I S a lime em m en Y

suited to help one make one' s decision for life. It IS a lime to ~tudy one' 5 tempera m ent, dispositions, tnch n a tlon s, and under t~e a_dvtce of the skill ed retreat master to determine to what work In h fe God

h as called him. .. · d 1 h h " The fi elds are w hit e to h arvest. May we m u ge t e ope

that some in this retreat will hea r the cal l of the Master to swell the "few" so ina d equate to do the harvestmg.

E. M. W. , '28.

"AFTER CHRISTMAS." Tha t long a nticipa ted and much t a lked of event, C h ristmas va­

catio-n, is now two weeks ended. Aside from the possibl e recoll ec­tion of an occasional pleasant memory, many o f us ha~e forgotten a bout it. H owever, there are very few to w h om tha t_ tim e ha~ ~ot meant a d iv iding m a rk in the school yea r. Many thmgs requmng mental exerti on, such as long, arduous research work , h ave been post­poned, with the reserved thought tha t .. there would be plenty of time for such a ctivities "after Chnstmas. Perhaps b ack somewhere in the corner of your mind . there was a n idea (it m ight h ave been a pre-New yea r resolution), that you were g omg to b est ir youreslf a nd v isit the ch apel more often. Possibly there are m any . other thinas th at h ave b een waiting to be r ealized upon the t e rmmat10n of this

0

period . If such h as been th e case, don' t force them t o wait a ny longer.

Things a re not nearly as perpl exin g as they a ppear once one mus­ters the courage to face them. If you have. research work to do, do it nowl A w eek h ence will find you lookmg With p leasure , a nd perhaps w ith pride, upon what you h av': accompli~hed, and that old h a unted feel in g of fear and appreh ensio n th a t precedes th e per­formance of a ny difficult task w ill have vanished . In case you have

fallen into a rut durin g the past months, with the thou ght th a t you would j erk yourself out of it "after Christmas," would not this be a rather o pportune time to take a gentl e r emind er and b egm actm g upon it immediately?

Lake Michigan

P oem whkh appeared in Chris tmas .N umber of t he New \ Vorld.

I have h eard the s low, dreaming chime of yout· beauty

Through a ll the mad clamori ng jazz of Chicago,

Serenely above the wild defiant 8Cr eech· ing of c!JmbJng buildings,

The insistent blare and rush ot m otors and car~ .

Academy Students Have Snappy Sheet

The "Wave," ou1· Academy publica­tion, is now In its secon d yetu· of ex­istence as a campus ped oU ic·t! a nd Jts staff deserves a g reat amo un ~ of pra ise for t he splend id work s hown the re in . Th e enthus iasm 'vlth w hich the pa p e r Js r eceived wh e n it Js d l::.trJbutcd e ve ry Satu1·day m a nifests the Interest and plea8u re tha t it com m a:·uJs, a nd 1lemon· s trates. In a fa r m or e tl !t·ect m:tnner t han wor ds, its est eem :\nd \"al uc t o the student body.

This is Not a Matrimonial Bureau­But-We Alm t o Please.

P a rk, Ill. Miss K a thleen Murray, Chicago. Miss Anna L arkin a nd J ack Scanlan,

both o! Chicago. M iss H e le n K yhm, Chicago. 4..mong the form e r s tudents who came

from a distance to atten d the dance

were: seems t o m e that we are oYer presump-snow Gero.ld Best, L e r oy Wimp, Louis Ba· tuous in our endeavor s to prot ect a few

r osso, L eo O'Neil, Joseph S heeha n a nd

Dear E. M. R.-I a m looki ng f o r a s uita ble m a t e . Will you p lease p rin t the followin g list of question s a nd ask your m a le r eade r s to subm it a n swers? I h ope to thus b e e na bled to find the rig h t m a n:

1. Do you like to walk in drifts'!

2. Can you walk on s tilts? you lil{e to learn?

W ould Joh n L a rltin. ca;i::~:: · \oVall{owial\, High School.­Mr. J a m es O'L eary, forme r professor

of chemistry, s pent last week·end at the College. He m ade a thorough in· s pection of the n e w gym and dining hall, which h e hig hly praised both as archi tectura l a nd practical monuments.

3. Are your notebool{s always per-fectly J,:ept? _

4. Have you ever dug for gold in your back yard or ever in you r front one?

6. W hat is t h e greatest a mbition of yom· li!e?

5. D o you like r ainy days? 7. D o you lik e revolutions? 8. How much s ugar do you tak e in

your coffee or tea? 9. What is the meanest thing you

ever d id ? 0. What is the las t thin g you think

of bef ore goi ng to sleep at nigh t ? 11. How would you spend the time

if you were lock ed up in a r oom t ha t had n othing in it but a chai r, a ta ble and a cot , from which there was no pas· s ibllity of escape , and w h e re you h ad to r em ain a lone f o r a day?

12. D o yo u t hi nk these ques tions a r e fooHsh ?

DELIL AH.

This is a delicate a nd lo\·ely jest of winter. S h e is t ired of be ing called old a nd desolate, blea]{ and barren. If the spring has leaves a nd blossoms, s o h as s he. She fi 11s the arms of the desert· ed trees with white, exqu isite blooms -whiter than t he boughs ot May, Old b u~hes and hedges a.re crowned with t he sll·ange flowe r s of t hi s tn·emature s pring. And the em-th has a soft f eath ­ery grass inches and inches deep. But wintel· d isdains the g reens and blues, the yell ows a nd r eds of h er younger sister. Nay, everything must b e whi t e -pure, m::u·ve lous w htte , sky, water, leaf and flowe1·.

'"e wish to state to a n yon e w ho may be inte res t ed t hat in the poe m , "Christmas Gifts," we did NOT write " board or he lp,'' but "HOARD OF PELF," which you will admit Is some­what different. Another instance of the pl"inter 's genius , which simply de· ti es a ll belief. It is the contin ual a n d unabated amazem ent of our life . H e mal<es you say things that yo u never believed you could eve t· say.

T he GrClLt Silence. I.

\ ,Vher e is the wanderi ng rive r, W here is the dream ing river. Th e r iver t ha.t lau g hed a n d cried, The rive r t ha t s un g and sighed, Whose quest was the arm s of the sea?

II . Ah, t h e te n de r, la ug hin g rive r, Th e m ocldng, n omad rive r, T hat wi s t!ully d r eam ed of the sky, And the birds tha t went fl yi ng by, And longed for the arms of the sea!

III. The river is c lutched by si len ce, Is s lain by a great white s ile nce, Its song is s trangled by deat h , It has n e ither dreams nor breath , And It longs n o m or e for the sea.

Obituary The F aculty a nd s tudents of S t. V ia·

t o r College a nd Academ y offer the ir condole n ces to Mr. Edward Pe tty, Acad. '2 7, tt pon tll e r ecent ednth of hi s moth­e l·, a nd to Mr. H enry O'Gra dy , whose s is te r d ied during the ho lidays.

During his v isit h e m a de m a ny social calls on hi s fri e nds in Bourbonna is a nd K ank akee.

Brig. General J ohn V . Clinnin, fa ther of P a ul Clinnin of the High School de · par tment, has again b een named r e f­e r ee of the Tribune's e leventh annual Silver Skates Derby, which w ill be held on the west lagoon of Washington P "ark, C hicago, n ext Saturday and Sunday. General C linnln h as h a n dled this skat· ing classic very eff icien tl y f or several year s .

Althoug h n early two weeks r e m a in before the close o! t he first school t e rm, two newcomers from Chicago have a l· ready r egister ed for the next semes­t r. They a r e J erome Huber and Ma urice Raycroft. Both of these new students come to St. Viator from Campion High School at Prairie d u Chien , where Mr. Huber has completed his second year and Mr. Raycrof t his fi r st year . We notice tha t they h ave already been con­quered by the spirit of St. Viator

College and that they h ave accepted wholeheartedly the fraternal attitude a nd p e rsonal affections which exist amon g the students.

Students and faculty m embers of the College have missed Monsignor L eg1·is C1·nm his u sual activ ities during the past two weeks. He h as been confi n ed to bed with a ver y ext r eme case of la gl'ippe for abou t t e n days. As w e go t o p1·ess, Miss Simonich, the nurse, as­sures us that Monsignor will be s uffi. ciently t·ecover ed t o r esume h is classes on Tuesday of the present week.

Among t he students who have been patients at the in thmary du t·ing t he week is Raymond Hartnett, who h as been suffering with sin us infection . Ray had been unde r the care of Dr. Roth for severa l days, but with professiona l assistance and his own psychology, re­covered s uffcien tl y to a ttend the Senior dan ce.

P hili p Fitzgerald of the Academic de­tJa rtment is just r ecovering from la grippe, whic h h as kept him in bed for the last te n days.

Jack Casey, Hig h School cheer -leader, was taken s uddenly ill las t Friday with sin us infection and r emoved t o his h ome in Ch icago, where -he is unde r go. in g treatm ent.

There is no doubt that the United Sta t es is justified in m eddling in t he a f·

fa irs of Nicaragua. In r ecalling our trea ties with the Central American Countries , we find that they provided tha t among other things none of the Countries would r ecognize a govern­m e nt a rising as a result or a coup d 'etat or which arose in connection with on e . Now we have the Nicara­g ua n question viola ting this treaty. Must we not uphold our treaty? Must we not prov ide protection for the lite and properties if the re is danger?

\Val'l'en l\1c()lella nd, Junior.- The United States, Mexico, Nicaragua, Ca­nal Zones, loan s , Sarcasa, Diaz, capi­tal1sts and the Monroe Doctrine are just a few of the minor issues or ele­ments tha t consti tute the s ituation which now in volves u s. I do not think that the M onroe D octrine has any part in this dispute. Althoug h ther e are Am· erican financial interes ts involved those in te r ests do not b enefit the United States economically or comm ercially , in fact. t hese financiers are creating for­tun es a nd escaping the Income Tax, listing thei r earnings with outside bank­ing houses. In protecting their inter­ests O lU' Marines are serving in the capacity of Swiss Mer cenaries, wi t h the exception t hat the tax paying citi­zen foots the bill.

PROPAGATION OF FAITH DONATIONS

ARE INCREASING It ·will be g ra tifying t o the r eader s

of the Viatorian to know of the inter· est that h as been taken a t the co llege in spr eading the faith in f oreign lands. I n September, our V ery Rev. President suggested that a collection be taken up at the students' Mass each S u nday of the sch ool year. This plan was adopt ­ed and has proven quite success!ul.

At the c lose of the Christmas recess F ather Rice addressed both the board­ing and day students on the wonderful privilege that was theirs t o par ticipate in such a charitable work, and h e also ' took occasion to thank them !or their past gen erosity.

L as t w eek F ather Ri ce sent the Sun­day collections f o r the first semester to t he Propagation of the Faith head­q ua L·ters in Chicago. The tota l was $110. By June, It we contin ue a t this r ate, we will have more than doubled last year 's donations.

Don't fo r get , w e want St. Viator to be among the leaders in s tuden t and a thletic activit ies, bu t St. Viator must reign s upreme in t hi s c ha rita ble work.

Othe r m embe r s of the coJiege in the intlrmm-y are D ennis Murphy, who a lso contracted a seve r e case of Ia gri ppe; Fabian Laroe, who is r eceiving treat· mont for a cold; Murray Provan c her, with a s prained a nkle , and ' J a mes Cor­be tt, a lso with a case of Ia grippe .

The feas t of the Holy F a mily was cele b1·ated wit h due solemnity at St. Joseph's church, B rad ley, Illinois. The pastOl·, the R ev. H. A. Darche, has been fortunate to secure a new c lassr oom building for his school a nd its dedica­tio n occasioned ,the celebration. At the Solemn Hig h Mass the Rev. T. C. Han·ison was ce lebra nt. H e w a s as· sisted by the R e v. H. A. Darche as Dea­con a nd the Rev. Bro. T . L. Su llivan, c.s. v. , as Sub-deacon.

And the beat or the feet,

And the lu re ot a. mi ll ion races that pass.

Above a ll the jumbled, tuneless mad· n ess king out

'The limpid, golden notes, vib1·ant with powe 1'ful sweetness,

pe~'h:o~·~~~:~ 1~e~e;:1101 08~~~~atl~ ~ed ~~~ One of t h e m ost popu lar (]apa rtments boas t or the staff if-! that a l l or the work in t he n ew gym m ay bo said to be t he is done by the students and we will a dd thJ·ce new bowJlng a ll eys, w hich are that It Is well done. rl' h e s ta ff Is m ade s ituated in the spacious h a ll to the le f t up of severa l editors a nd their ass is t - of the baske tball fl OOJ'. Besides t he stu · untR, berddcs a. goodl y number or r e· de nta w ho take pleaeu •·e I•• knocking porters a nd deJ)artment m an::tger s who down the Dins, the faculty seem to de· make ll their !Jus lness to cover eveL'Y rive e njoyment in ta ldng thei r turn at possi ble source of news t ha t may be or m a l<i n g s tri k es a nd s pa 1·es. Interest to the Academy st udents. It has been s ugges ted t hat a bowling

BOWLING ALLEYS IN CONSTANT USE

The debating pre liminaries a r e be ing s taged every o the r a f ternoon in R oom H, Ma r s ilo H a ll. To dat e a ll bu t four teams h a ve m e t in verbal co mbat, a ncl from a ll a ppearan ces the judges a r e going to h ave a n Inte r esting evening selecting t he m e n who a r e t o r epr esent S t. Via tor in the foren sic fie ld this year. The question which has been de ba ted d uring t hese series or e liminations has been con fln ed to L11 e uniform m a rriage a nd divo r ce Jaw.

It begins t o look as if the College store had gone Jn for some rather e x­te n sive sale!'! t hi s year if the s upply of equipment has a ny defini te bearing on the ques tion . A new six hole Frlg ld­n lre, three new g lass e nclosed display cases, and a gas stove ha vo been added to the a ll·cn.cly pre te n tlous a n ungeme n ts fOl· accommodn.tins the s tudents . Mess rs. Ha1·ring ton a nd Sammon an­n ounce tha t things a r e only s tartin g a nd they u rge a ll t h o c u1·ious to wit tc h tho s tore c losely for further improve­ments-an d lncidenta lly try som e of the ir n e w produ ction s ln the c ulina r·y line.

The Very R ev. Msgr. V. Primeau, or Manteno, Il!Jnols, who h ad formerly been the pastor or St. Joseph's , preach· ed a fine sermon on the H oly Family.

Our V e r y R ev. President was a mong the four hundred pries ts to call on His Emine nce, George Cardinal Mundelein, on New Year·~ day. I n wishing t he Car· dl.Q.al m a n y blessings !o1· the comJng yea t·, F ath er R ice r epresented the fac­ul ty a nd stu den ts of S. V . C.

Strong with the strength and the clear­ness o r l)ea.uty,

Old beauty 1·emembered by wistful h earts In forgotten places,

Beauty dear with the richness , and s tran g-eness, and dust of time.

And all the haz·sh, rough screechlngs or Chicago

Are forgotten, !oq~·lvcn, made beautiful In your voice

Which sounda through all the Oiscord, a ll the ug liness,

With the quie t tri umphant sor cnlty ot pcr!cct beauty,

ELEANOR ROY, '27.

'l'he s n ap a nd xes t of th e var ious de- league be orsa.nl zed ~ nd a series of pat·tm ents mA.ke t h e n.rtlc l c~ very enjoy- games a rt·an gcd ln o. n cf't'o r t lo select a ::tble. The Athletic :.lnd J oke, or ""\Vave- team that co uld be ]~ ltted ag-a.in At som e Je tte" departmen ts n.re especiall y we ll of t h e facul ty In u. studen t-faculty handled. The Illustrati ve mrttcl"ia l, com · m clt.c h . A ny body lnte t·estcd "l If you

~r~~ c~~~;,l:tt,f. t·f~n d~~~de~~~o n~~~~Htl~~~~ ~; .=:l=o·c=·='=·a=l!=' ::!:,t ::"::;P:=· ========= and origi na l. r!'h e Christmas Iss ue o r the "Wave" Ia especially rich with ex­ce llent ca t·toon a and Jllua tmllon s or fino artlallc quality.

T aken :1s a. wh ole, the "'vVovc" 1s n pr·alae worthy publlcn tlon and tho many membct'H o f tho Hl aff toge t her with R •·othe:•· O'Laugh lln, t11 o Jo'uc ult y Mod· CL·fl tOI', deaervc much com rnondall on for lt. 'l'ho nca.tn~sa of the fl.t'l"anscments, the odntlng a n rJ :1.11aembly, the IILc r·n L·y

qurtllty of the nz·lle lea, the c leve t· jokes about cam nu s occu1Tences, nil t hese beat· cvlde n o or the ex tre m e CII I'O n nd dlllgonco thn t goes Into Its makeup. Tho "Wave" I::J t rul y wo1·thy of St. V ia­to t· Ac.:1.demy and the s tudents may well be PI'Oud or the ac h ieveme nt~"; of the AtHJ'i~ In jou •·nnllstlc flc lds. Tho V in.to•·· ion ex te nds Ita g •·eetln gs to t he "\Vave" nnd o tu· wish to the Acncle m y Is "long ma y It \<\"'ave ."

Or de r s we re given to t ho p1·esiden t of tho F'reshmnn c lass by t h e College Club Advisory Board to s upp ly at lens t sJx us he r s to see that t h e vlslton, nnd s lu­clents n t·o seated In t h e m·o pe r places d udn g tho bash:e tbo.ll games that nre sch edul ed for tho r omnindor or the son­son .

The Ka.nkalcee Athle tic Club has a tea m thnt fs composed for the most part of form er Viator s tars. Leroy "Ding " W inte rha lter, J ohn " J a wn" W in terhalter, Howa rd B u s hel a.nd Mick­ey Donnelly have bee n s lg-nod to score the p oints a nd from tho gam es played to date they seem to sntlsty a ll hands concern ed.

An o ld !t·lend in the Pe!'SOn of "Doc" LaCha l"ltle was on hand t o oh ee for the Green at the MJlllkin g-ame. A s a side point it m ig-h t be mentioned that "Doc" presented ono o r the memb rs of the s taff with his s ubsc1·ip tlo n tor the Vin· tol'inn, with Instruction s t hat It be sent to Ass u mpt ion without faJ I.

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Page 3: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1927. THE VIATORIAN Page Three

An Appreciation of Dow son COLLEGE CLUB NOTES

American Aggressiveness By THOMAS L. SULLIVAN, '27. By WARREN], McCLELLAN, '28.

"When I came to read Ernest Dow­son's poetry, I had just s:et aside the little volume containing the com plete poetical works of Francis Thom pson. Happi1-Y the pas.sing from one poet was not without significance. It w as as if I had been transported from o ne world into another. At first t he tra n ­sition was pleasurable. The ~imple . sensuous emotion, the easy music, and tbe exquisite form of D owson 's poe t ry r elieved t he tedium of mind that J experienced in reading the abstract, purely intellectual emotion a nd the com ­pttcated verse a nd rythm of T hompson_ But, as It is the case with all untrue pleas ures. this was a lso 0p hcm C'J.t\. I soon grew to dislike the poetry that at :first I found to be delightful and restful to the mind. Not that the mon­otony ot tone or of s ubject matter was the cause. but that I became in a very s hort t ime surfeited with the ty p e of emotions Dowson treats of . The poetry of Dowson affects u s m :1ch ir-. t he same way that the plea s ures and the joys of ll:fe affected the poet. H ow . ever , previous to an interpreta tion of the m an's life, let me first consider, in more detail. the elements o:f this poetry.

There is a ve ry g eneral, complete method of classifying aU poets and poe try. The first class is comprised of poets whose intellects rule over and govern their passions and emotions. Shakespea r and Dante are at the h ead or this class. The other class com· prlses poets like K eats and Shelley with whom the pleasurable a n d the b eautiful are the dominating principles. In t he fi rst, In t ellect and passion are the es­sentals, and pleasure and sweetnes s the accidents; 'in the other pleasure a nd sweetness are t he essentials, while Jntel1ect and passion are the accidents. In t he llght of th is st udy we will not h esitate for a moment in finding a place for Dowson. Indeed, he stands at the very extreme of the poe ts of the second cla s s; while Thomps on stands at the extreme of the first chl ss.

To Dowson, therefor e , the joys, the pleasures, the sweetnesses and, in fact, a ll that is capable of rejoicing the hum an heart, w e r e t h e subjects of verse. But h e never tries t o make t h ese :feelings a m eans to a noble end; they! are, to him, the end itself. Hence when he sp eaks about >Vomen or nat ure, h e considers merely theil· external beauty of :form and color, and their capabili ty o:f satisfying the craving s of hi s sen ses. Everything h e touches has the mi s leading blus h of a fa ls e beau ty, a bea uty that has not virtue for its heart nor law for its p rinciple o f action. If we r ead his little poem, " Ad Ma nus Puellae '', w e will ha ve a true interpre tation of his art , if by HU Ch a name we can designate his achievements:

"I was a lways a love r of la dies ' hands Or eve r mine heart came h e r e to

tryst! For the sake of y o ttr carved \Yhi te

hands' commands ; The ta pe r ing f in ger s , the da in ty

wrist; 'I'he hands of a g lrl w e t·e w ha t I

l<issed, ' '

Love , li k e wise , to Dows on , VNLS som e · t hing exte rna l. H e loved the exte rn::tl beauty or form, of hair, of posture, bu t h <:~ did not connect these at trib llte::~ w ith nn indiv idual.

' ''Eve n n ow the frag ra nt cla t·k nes:s o f h e r hair

H a d brus he d my c h eel<; a n d one~. In pass ing by ,

H er hancl upon m y hand lay b ·an· quilly;

W hn t th ings u ns pok e n t r embled i n the ai r !"

As a result ot th.ls reac tion thnl Dow ­son unde r g oes in the s ig h t o f externa l b eauty, he has R ti ne power of d eK· ('dptlo n . In th is h e IS compa r able with the g reates t in t ho FJ n gllsh la ngu age. F'(l w like D o \vson ca n create ror us ln verae on Im age t hat bes1dcs being- r ea l l n o. poet 's m ind has a living renlity in na ture as 'veU a.s In the picture h,. Ftives. F or exam-p l es of th i~ powe 1· r l'-ef or you to h is poem on "London" or t hat on t ho "Carthusian~" . '!'his fur l ru~lu.nce :

'' \Vlthout , t h e sull~n noises ot tht-. a:tr eet!

'l'hc voice or London, l!'tldlculn te, Jtoo.t·~ ~l n (l blnspherni ng, suq;t•s in

tho meet 'l'he silent ble.s.s ing of the J mmacu·

la te.

ACADEMY ALUMNI FORM CHICAGO

JAZZ BAND

The first m eeting of t.he n ew year

Dar k is the chur ch, worshipers,

a nd dim the was held in the usual place on the After the rece n t visit of royalty to l trom fundamentalism to m ah•t'iRiis m.

Hushed with bowed h eads as thoug t1 b y some old spell,

W hile through the incen se-laden air there stirs

The admonition of a silver bell.. ,

night of Jan. 10. President D a lrymple our shore s , ·we are furnished w ith add· from hypocrisy to humilit y . from e x ·

conducted the m eeting. Mr. D alr ymple ed reason for puffing ·with pride . Dig- trava gance to c ha rty; in il l! of t h es e

announced the re sults of a. meeting of nitaries, of both the Federal and Sta te YD J ious cha.nges ,ve acc~ntun te th~ the Advisory Board which had been governments, swarmed about Queen fac t that >ve are financiaUy ca r e -free held that afternoon. One of the import· Marie to hear the opinion of Europe a nd morally incompe.ten ~ . Onr ;-c-Jd·

ant matters discussed w a s the f orma · concerning America n ideals . customs ~:ll~~~ce~~!~~11:1,~tedC~t~s~~1~~ng:~~!~­wi~~ ~~~~l:~~i~;~o~! ~~~~c:,~~~h fi~~aJ~ tion of a choir to s ing the m a ss on SL and characteristics. The blue -blooded Fund, and our blindne gs lad us to ))~ ­different man from Do,vs on, t he sen- Patrick' s day. Professor R och, in- lady very graciously passed r emarks ll zve that poverty and hung c · w e r e on­sulst. In them he leaves his " VVine , structor in Music , expressed the hope which w ere received with favor by our lv annual occu!TO:·nces. and w oman and song' ' and turns to th~ tha t a complete college choir would politi cians and embryonic chautauq ua I n this day of aggressiYeness , :youth

~!~~n~~ ~-~~~~s t~fe rs~i~ii~~f r!l~~i~~~e ~~ be formed. It was decided to hold prac- orators. She commended us for our ~~:~:;:n;:~~~i~;d~~~~-~=c~m:cl~ll~il(~;h~ merely hints at the externals-the cer e- tice on Tuesday evenings. vtgor, aggr essiYeness and great ambi- ness. Our somll standards no longeT m onies, the edifices, nuns and monks. Follo~ving this discu sion, Presldent tions. She openly stat ed that the old call :for obedience from ctlldn:n. good

~e a~~~~e~so~~o;: ~:~~:~ s:r:~l :~s~~= Dalrymple asked several members of :''~l:ldt· need~ th~ st:~~:s ~~fw~~=ri~: example from t h e actiYe a dults and Rock of Ages. But, alas, and we pity the undergraduate classes to express uut1a 1ve. .l o ou · ' peaceful declining years t'o1· the a;;ed. him, he can merel'y touch t he rock their sentiments concerning the Senior tarians, Chauvinists, Y. M. C. A. secre- Our sense of prop riety is a dis mal non· when he is immediately carried back ReceJ}tion which would be held on the talies and other itlessed ,. individual·~i entity, if etiquette be con:->rleretl we at'\'!

well known to our Mr. Mencken, Wl as hope lessly misplaced as a bull in a !~ t~n~~a~~~gi~l !ee~i~t~~~-su~;~:-su;!: following Thursday evening . Mr. John continue, through their subtle powers china shop \Ve be long to the llighest of the senses have so satisfied and di s - Bowe assured the co-operation of the of agnification, to hol- dthe h a lo over order of socia l non-confornli!'\ts; lndi vl <l· sipa ted his soul that he is no longer Junior class and ashed a ll those mem· our national brow, No doubt th~y sh~l u:-~-lly wo a re so d issimilar th~ot e ven an able to contemplate the Eternally bers present to make a special at- continue to exalt themselves With t e Aristotle ,.r G Kanl would find trout"'lle

Br~eeaalur·zteifulth.e tNr'·outtht.hathtahteadl lidhr~sotplseeaesuarne~ tempt to be present at the affair. Mr. complimentary tinder so graciously be- in classifying- our vil'tues. :..; stoded by the queen: P erha ps, even The solution of our greatest p c01:-Iem ,

were passing and that they would beg<3t J. Allen Nolan, a rnembet· of the Soph- ~~:~~~;e-~':~~~n a:~l i~~~;:s i~i:. dt~~ tr·sha,,totoufnrkenmo~:n.- i.ngSonmateioonfaoltrarffseacnlear:ico.rnt·· a world of sorrow, regret and punish- omore class, expressed his confide nce Wl t " ment. Yes, he only saw this too welL in the success of the R eception and as- rade of Bronxis~s and platitufdet~i 1:; izen s r ealize that calling our moral, so­He confessed in one poem that: ever may be t e outcome 0 s, 0 cia1 and civil errors Americanisms does

"We shall wander through the meaning

Of a day and see no light, F or our lichened arms are Jeaning

On t h e ends of endless n igh t."

and

"Ye shall previal at last! S urely Ye shal l prevail!

Your silence and aus teri ty shall win a t last; fail ,

D esire and mirth, the world's ephe­m eral lights s hall.

The sweet star of your queen is never over cast."

Like Baltasar, the ChaJdea.n king, dt·unk with wine, he reads on his pa lace w a lls the fated words which pr onounced his doom . Yet he was he lp. Jess . "Foiled, frustrated a nd a lone , a nd misunderstood, dlscrown ed.'' Thus he went thro ug h life and thus he died.

He was a man very typical of this age , an age that worships pleasure and makes mate rial gains the one object of living. Nevertheless, D owson has one difference that distinguishes him from his contemporary m e n of letters: he was capable of seeing Truth , He. like another English writer, was born be twee n two w orlds, one which h e wa s tryin g to leave and anothet' which he cou ld never t·each.

"In a land alone, apart, In a p e rfumed dream land set be ­

twixt the bou nds of life and death _"

This fac t probably accounts fo r the thic k cloud of gloom and despa it· which seems to oYe1·cas t m ost of his poetl'y . At times h e is like Thomas H a rdy in this r espec t. YVhat pag an fata lis m an•l deep da t·k despait' is expr essed in this poem, proba bly the last he \\To te :

" L e t us go hence : the nig ht is n ow a t ha nd;

The day is ovenvorn. th e birds a ll flown;

And w e ha ve t·eaped the c ro pB t he god s h ave sow n :

sured the Senior class that his class- ~a;:s~o!a~~ude:te~~l~l~g~~~t S:e:~~~s~~~ not stamp them as being passable in

~~t~~::e~-1: b;I.~~~:e;tt ~::.r~~~:;n~a~ say we will undoubiffclly continue to the correct order of things. A :few of Freshman class, spoke in the name of duck out hea d in t he sand, in m·1tters our r eal aggressive men, though wholly the largest class on the campus and relative to nationn,l •lniinq uency; whne unrecognized, have ascended the pulpit v oiced his confidence in the Senior Re· at the same time, our hypocrisy will to~ l- o:f reason, and are seeking to preach ception. He asked all the members of low us to strut like chanticleer; in fact, t he unwanted truth. They a.re s triving the Freshman class to attend if possi· we shall still feel our fine plumage and t o rekindle the dying fires of national ble. crow like the cock on the walk. righteousness. They would have u s re ·

We never :for a moment forget that sort of more ethical and logica l methods we are Americans, we are continually in govet·nrnent, education and r elig ion. broadca sting our nationality and enu· .These men are the real aggressive Am­merating our accomplishments. In our ericans. They would confront our na­zeal !or self-pra ise , in our inordina te tional being on its h eadlong j ourney, pride, we fail to realize that our imper· and ask the one ques tion , the everlast­fectons far outn umber our perfection s. ing question, "Quo Vadis. " They r ea l­Everything that we v"enture to do is ize, that just as surely as a n e n g ine done aggressively. VVe pass laws: pro· needs a governor t o assure perfection hibition laws in a flurry of mor.:~.lism. of operation, s o a lso our nation n eeds a and then, condemn them just as r ead- restra ining influence, a s omething to ily. We e lect congressmen and sena· prevent its destruction , That some­tors because they have been placed up- thing is a supply of common sense.

Several other matters of importance wer e discussed, including the existence of a certain amount of small criticism that has been hea rd on the campus re· cently. Presdent D a l rymple a sked the members of the College Club to do thei r utmost to stop this criticism and above all to refrain from it themselves.

Mr. Joe Harrington, president of the Senior class, thanked the members of the College Club for their vote of con· fidence in the Senior R eception. H e as­sured the college men that the graduat ­ing class was doing its best to make the evening a m emorable one and its last public social function a successful one.

Since there was no further business, Mr. Armbruster entertained a motion for adjournment. Mr. John Herbert, president of the Sophomore c lass , sec· onded the motion and the meeting was adjourned.

THE CRYSTAL-GAZER

Dear Ed : I hope that you will excuse my jour­

n a listic s hortcomings, but I am so filled with contentment that I must express my satisfaction publically (pro· viding you accept this). I am aware that the purpose of your column is to publish critical essays, but this one is not critical by any means, it is quite the contrary, and maybe just because it is different you w ill acce pt it and put it in print.

Now. to b egin. T here are a gTeat many features of boarding school life t hat are rather unpleasant. Right at present we have t his excessive cold weather . Then there is t h e routine of class and s tudy. As a matte r of fact, things were beginning to look quite

on a party platform. Almost all our VVe often hea r the statement, "I'm acts are >vagers , made in quite the an American and proud of lt," a nd it same m a nner as a gambler would has always been the signal for hat chance the dra·wing of a n ace from a throwing and huzzahs. In a pe riod o! pack of fifty-three cards. In everything a wakening let u s hope that the phrase . tha t we do we a re more lucky tha n ag- "I'm an American but what of it?" will gressive. VVe may combat every prob- prove more fitting and more worthy of lem that arises, but in combatting it praise. Let us continually carry on, we do not think of the future. Ours is g iving thanks for our many reso ueces mpre a headlong prog r ess, one that will and our un told blessings, but le t us some day cause future generations to not slyly administer a few Jl€Wsona1 look upon u s with bewilderrnent. The pats on the back , us o ur P'resident re· nonsensical mann e r in which we meet cently did in his Thanksgivin g a ddress, situations will some day appear a s gro- when enumerating the things for whic h tesque a nd absurd, a nd equally as un- we ought to be thankfuL Let us admit called for as a gar goyle on an otherwise our errors, and seek to e liminate the m beautiful cathedral. rather than g loss them over fol' a ppear ­

Individually we a r e continually s triv· ance's sake. The truth of it is that ing to demonsteate our aptitude and even Americans n.re not pel'fect. A I·

aggeessiveness. \Ve think t ha t success ~~~~c~~~ :~~p~~~10~=~att~~1n.~'asA~~t·~~~ ~s11~1~~~~~-=~~ b~v:u~~~i~o:~J~~a~a~i~=n~~a~ made a ver y broad a nd somewha t fn l·

so lidity is based upon the amount of a ~~~i~u:s ~~~~~~~1e:~;e ~~~ca~1~esw~10;10~~ll~::

D es pa il' and death; deep darkn ess o'e r the la nd,

undet·- ~~l~;u;~;~u:c~~~~1~ ~~~t ~~~e tit~=t t~~! Broods like a n o;v l; w e canno t s ta nd

man's c redit, or the number of put·· cept it a nd condescend to stamp it chases h e can s uccessfully make on with our imprima tur. Neither does it time paymen ts. VV e teach that litera· follow that natonal hypocrisy s h ould ture is w ritten by Cobbs, Cohens and cause us to peel onions when the r e a r e Hearsts. Too mu ch stress is placed up· tears to be shed , nor t o take la ug hing on the cut of a man's vest, the manne r gas to enjoy American humor because in which h e combs hi s hair, or upon it is American. These things so und ab· the numbe r of >vives he has stt,-cceded s urd , but nevertheless they are no more in divorcng wthout paying allmolly, the !'idiculous than some of our more se l'i · s ize of h er ears. or upon the a mrj unt of ous fallacious American concepts . No alimony she dra\vs and ne number of mattet· wha t the the m e, our pe rpe tua l sources from w hich she d raws it. Daily ego must_ always be dea lt with. If a newsp aper editorials an d other publica- nation mig ht be spoken to, s urely Jn tions cause violent fluctuation ::~ in ou r o ur case the proper admonition would m ental barome te r s , we flit with ea se be , "To thine ownself be true."

Laug hte r o r tear s ."

I n everyt hing that h e \\TOt e t he t·e is somet h ing of th is elemen t. It is not so tT0W, }) u t a ce rta in w ea riness wi th (.\'(' t· y t hng , fo l' like t he Carthu s ians , he wt· Jtes abo ut. he was t it·ed "at last of ,,.,,rid .::> foolis h noises" Yet l n all t h is g loom is the re not som e hope"! Yes. there is sti ll a sta r , t ho ugh the da r k o f ni~ht be eve t· so tense. \ \'e h:tve ~1 ~limpse of th is star in a pmyer h e m tct·s to Mary, the Refuge of Sln n et·~ ­and with him le t us repea t the samt> tha t his wande ri ng soul may reach lhC ha \' ~ '1 It so uns uccessfully soug-ht for:

''Sleep and be Quie t fo t' an aftC>rnoon. tlll the rose whiie angelus

Snftl \' steals my way from the vil­l~ge undet· the hill:

.\foth~r of God, 0 Miseri cord. \oo\{ down !n pity on us,

The weal{ and blind who stand ln our lif!ht and wreck ourseh'cS such ilL'

K. OF C. INITIATION IS POSTPONED

~\hny stwknt~ of St. Viator. who

hu v.- bt>i>n nnxi~1u~ly antici-p..'lting the

s wimming pool would b e open ed u p at t wo o'clock that afte rnoon. If e ver there was good news expressed by the prefect , it was contained in that an­nouncement.

I haven't been at V iator ve r y m a ny y ea r s , but I am quite sure that there n ever was a nything that approach ed our present gymna sium a nd swimming pool i n pas t years. It seems s tra n ge to m e tha t fellows that h ave bee n he re for s ome time a nd have bee n incon ­venienced by the loss of the gyrn a nd dining h a ll s h ould take it upon the m· sel ves tq. criticise the school a t this time. "\Ve have a w onde rful gyrn n ow. The re a r e a n y number of pas times tha t can 00 indulged in and the swim m ing pool Is ju s t ri g ht.

The a u t horities ot the school, and es­pecially those who w er e most concet'n· ed with the Dla.JU~lng and constructio n of the new buildings, surely deserve a big expr ession ot approva l and f.'Tatl · t ude from the stude n t body. Can't some one suggest a fi tt ing way to do this? H ere's hoping .

ONE NOT OF T H E F'OUR.

THANKS

JANUARY 24-28 WEEK OF EXAMS

The posting of the s c h edul e of firs t sem ester examinations h as occa.~ioned a silence and qule tude about the cam· pus tha t is s urely conductive to serious thoug ht a nd cons cientious r e view. The social e vents of t h e semeste r we r e b rough t to a close by the Senio1· da nce of las t Thursday and, with the f ina l whistle of the Norma l bask e tba ll game o! nex t Saturday nig ht, a ll dJ s tl·acting a ctivities will have ended and the s tu­de n ts wll be f ree to s wing w ith a ll se riousness in to their preparatio n !or t he examination s . The re w ill be no basketba ll gam es durin g the w eek re­se r ved ro r examinations.

Monday, January 24 th 8:30 A. M . H isto ry I. E ng lis h V,,

Spanish II . Psycho l o~y, Eth ics. 1:30 P " M. Apologetics I, French 11 ,

Audit ing. Tuesday, Janaary 25th

8:30 A. M. English I, Logic, Onto· !Of,'}'.

Friday, Jan uu.r-y 28th 8 :30 A. M. B io logy, B u s iness Law,

Education IV. 1:30 P. M. Latin I , B u siness Organ!·

za tion, Fre nch V, History IV, P hyslcs, Money and Banking .

T he s c hedule for the Hig h S cho<,J D e par· tment la:

Thursday, Janua ry 27th 8:30 A . M. Classes taug ht dudng the

9:50 o'cloc k pe riod. 10:30 A . M . Cla SBeM taug ht duriJt g

thJ: 10 :45 o'c lock pe riod. 1:40 P. M . Classes ta ug ht dut' fng th •~

11 :40 o 'clock porlod F rida.y, .}anuar·y 28th

8:30 A, M. ClaHses taug ht du r ing the 8:55 o'clock pe riod

10 :30 A. M. Classef:l taug ht during the 1:40 o 'clock pe l'lod.

1:40 P . M . ClasH-es ta ug ht dur-Ing t tu: 2:35 o'clock pe riod .

S tuden ts m ay registe r !o r: t he coming semeH te r during the i r tree ped od H o n Jan . 24th, 25th, 2f.ith , 27th, or 28th .

NEW YORK LEADS IN CATHOLIC SCHOOLS

Our atlf'ntton hM bi>('n c:dlN1 to tht' royal "~(X\t ride'" Into the ranks or the

t •N 'h"t ! Qr th• P.~" ( ,." Wl'<'k• " . nt">w I Knh:ht~ of Columbus, were disappoint· j~~.Z-. orctwstro hns het•n pn")vhhn~ th•~ t•\l la.~t Sunduy when the $Cheduled in·

syo(•OpaUon t\t n numtx•r oC soct.al tU:\th:m was postponed. on acwunt Of !\Jn\.·tl~n~ In nod around lhe Yidntty w..-ntht-r condi t ions. u:ntll a tuture date.

nt t h~ \Y imly City. Th~;• ne-w ouuit Tht\"'i:' who must walt in the '\lark" !o r \\ ~~~h trah·J~ und~·r \th· fUOll" ot t-u· l 1 ~n\~th\•r thri'e> "'\.Vei::'k!:l nre: '\','UHam Cas­kin', Torl'\'ath.H-s, i::t '"''mP..~·:d ot Jilt,: -"'ldY. J~~hn Elti~. Jl)hn HArring-ton, Eu­pi~".:'"'" fvnr f>t whl~h ar-t h.· n .. n· nno. d ~l'lh' Samm()n. Jnm-:3 Connor. Paul Ailh·

~Y )! .. -~ .... ~- H.-..n1ltl \"'Htt· 1:.'-' L ltH-t y,"\t- ~~~~ JS~~h~~""Y· Ed\'.·ard Gallahuc and

lt•l)·. L o.ui.:-Q Bat'Q..~) .u\d Jo)l\0 Larktn L-.W~ Yalle-ley. 19:!6 .\cadf>mY gra.d­~·u nwmbi'~ <>f th~ .\ t.h1ti'mY ~rodu::.n!n~ U<>.tt"', c-ame a.H the way from Chicago

The Senior Class wishes ro t•eeord its dt>ep sense o! gratitude to those who Jn any helped them om o! the d.itt lcultlc..s that arO!'Ie ·when the orchestra !ailed to make its appearance at thei r An· n u.al Rec-eptinn. Thursday. J anu­ary 13th. ' p~dal acknowledge· ment !11. due ~Jiss Lucile .:\Ionte. .:\lr .. Louis Barosso. and the mem­bers o ! the college orchestra. '1..<;

well a~ to th€' n um~;>rOug friend«~ and Nllege men who manHest~t ft !'IYJnpa t hetic int('r,.st in our Wf'l· tare-.

The Ctas8 of 19Z i

The !ollowlng ia t he schedule of examinations tor the College Depar~­

roenL 1:30 P. M. Algebra I. Algebra Ilf,

Business English, Soclolo&'Y­\Vednesda.y, J a nuary 26th

8:30 A. M . Accounting 1, Latin V, Economics, ConstJtuttonaJ Histor-y , Chemistry 11 .

1:30 P . M . Ch~m tetry 1 , Apologeti.-;:f! Il, EngUsh IX.

Thunda;r , Januar-y 27th 8:30 A. :M , French I, Spane:h I.

Italfa n I, Accounting II, CoKmology, ChemJstry Xlll. Education 1.

ln thO n u mber o! Catholle ~;cm l nttT· fcs, colle;;;-tM ana f'r.:-hoo!I; or a.ll Kra.ti~J.fj:,

New i'" ork lr-ctdH all thv ot her t'ltt:tte:H ,-~.·ith a to ta l numb~~r 0! 1 ,061) lnBtltu · tlon~. 10 .7k7 tm~tnH; tOt'J'\ ~.tn d /H>G,24G p u ­J)i\s; Pe n nr~y J vania trJmeJ~ Hf:.COWJ with 9f)~ Institution"', 7,4130 lnstruc tr, rH a n d 2~1 ,~38 KlUrl" ntf!l; IlllnoiH third with 751 lnf4tltut1on~;, 6.46() nHtruetorJ~ <:tn(l 237 .I fi 7 ~turJ~nts; OhJt, f o urth wJth fHHS lnxtltutlom<j. 4 .4::. fi Jn-.trudtJr tt ;Lntl 1f.S,­::lR '"-tll(li'nU,. CJn(l \Vhwon~{n fitth wtth 17X in(l:tftutlvn.,. 3 t,~ ::, i rtH"tnJ<.-tm-H r-.nd ~5.!d~:J pupJlH. K~!')tur:ky h>~ 224 1nHt1· tutl r'"H, 11,071 lnetrvctort~. 2:4,14 8 I)Upfl3.

1:30 P . M. Eng!Jsh J(lll, Sll<!"klng, Bookkeeping I .

P u bH<: \\'yorntng rart~ lowel'!!t with 4 lnJJtttu-, thmH. 2rl Jn~lrut;..1.,ms a nd f.ifiZ pupJJt. -:la.~ I)! '!~t t\) t k11 thf.l thl.rd d~gree.

Page 4: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

Page FouT

SENIOR LEAGUE DRAWS INTEREST

FG f"1tZ • Banjo Bangers­J;mna, ! -·----- 1 :F"1 zg~rald. t _ ---- 1 J.J..-·ade. t - ---- 1

In Jt· th:...n f rJur /L,'\YII toii~YWin g t h e \V,.bf-r, c ... -· ---- 3 p··ttrm M the .. tud.,.nUJ frl)m t hf3 Chrt.t·l ~a"""'• ., u maiJ var;:fltlrm tht· gunA 8t:J.rt.ed bar king SV·vt-nll, g ·- -----·- 0 jo th' !-«: n1or J::,;uk~Lall J..o~;:ague. Un-rlt~r th~> ttbf&: dln·ctJr,n o f the ~e'• Total-8

• eTenth Game.

FT

1 0 0 0 0 0

prt1mr1tt·r, I~v. Thorn-all H arrlJJOJJ, the ttrMt m t f·tJngl!l wt.:f(; ,.tag~l . the capta..ln e , .fr·r·V•tl, th~ tr..:.me po11ted. a nd the of · rid:tliJ w·IN:tf-r) In a rt·mar ka.bly BhiJrt timr•. A t the lnfUal m~J:etlng held on .l:•nUttrY 4th a h u ntJ r r· d and twe nty or w, t•nth uHhurtic YfJUng gentlem en r e­Mpo ndt·tl t o t h., Invi tation ex t e nded t o th~'>m to p:_. rtidpa.le In t he Leagu ~J:. At th lf9 tl rn t· t.W*.: Ivo c~ .. p u-.dnH we re electNI, a.n CI t ht.::Y In turn ad journed to caet Jo ts rr, r t h r· r (!"pectlve pta.yere who sh ould makr· u J) the ir tewnB. The ! oJlowlng m f• n wi·riJ c hoHc· n aft ca.ptalnH : Harold Pt,·!Tc· r , 1Jrm McCarthy , J a ke Waleko, Art ProvtJ.n Chf•r, Murray Provanch er . J . GrJrttn Oa llagh(·r, l"ltzger a ld , "Soap " May, J ohn Smith , P a uJ ' 'D oge" Leary, J1'r a n f'IH Cttrroll a nd Leland Kock.

A. Provanch{'r's Thomas \\'f·nthe, t. . . ..... _ .......... 0 P~rko, f. ........... ----·-· 0 H offman, t .................. - 0 \\'ntson . c ...... ···-··-··--·-- 0 Garnea u , c ......... 0 T iny KeUy, g ............. 2 A. Provan c hE>r, g .......... 0

Cal&-

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

T otfl ls ................... 2 Cnrroll's Vanities--Price. r .... .. 0 Pallerson . f ................... 0 R ogerH, l .... l Pnull. c .......... 4 Car roll. g ..... 1 :\lnrt occio. Bert, g ........ 0 NCIHOn , g ......... . .... 1 D laz, g ............ 0 T.h(· n e w j c rscYH ard vcd a.nd the Orst

l{am(·R wtr o playr·d amM much entbus l­fiHm , no t onl y o n the pa rt of the play-•·rH hut n lf.JO by the s pectators, who T o ta ls · ............ . n1J('kcd to th e g y mnnalum In note· E ighth Oarn e. w orthy numbe rn . B elow a.re the rec · Lc·a ry'~:~ H ot D ogs-fJrll H or the first t wo r ounds.

I'H'NIOR LEAGUE RECORD F irst Game.

('urrQII 'H Vanities- FG Hog-era, f ..................... 1 Price, f .......................... 0 f.Jo. ull , c ............................ 2 Co.•-rol l. g.... .. ...... 4 Nelson, g ... .... .. 0 Mt•rtoccl o , Bert , g .......... 0

'l'oU.~I ......... 6 ............... .. 7 l..(·a t y'l:l Jl ot Dogs-VVn t'd, t. ............... 1 Sh ody , t ...... . 0 lk own, r 0 Lcn,·y, c ....... . .. 0 Lon g , g 1 l:llmcc, g ....... 1

Toto.! A 3 . Second Game.

FT 1 0 0 0 0 0

A. P'r ovan c he r 's T h omo.s Cats-Provanche r·, A., t ... 0 0 Hoffman, I;. ...... 0 0 Wu.tson , c ... .. .... 1 0 Garneau, g 0 0 Per ko , go ... 0 0 '.l'lny Ke lly, g ........ . ....... 0 0

Totals ..... .. ... .......... ..... ... 1 M. P r ovn nch er' s Whootu m s-Monahan, f. ...... ........ ....... 2 P•·ovanchcr, M., t ..... .. ... 2 O'Shea, L., f .. 1 Lewis, C 1 S hort. c 0 L eCla ir, c o 1\fon nco, g o

onwny, g .. 1

'l'olals . ..... 7 Th.ird Gam e.

Koch's K lever K agers-Koch, f 1 Dundon, r Toolan . c ..... . 'tubenwall, c

Gm-rlly, g ... Miller, S"

'l'ot a ls ... Gu.llns-ller 's F oxcs­Swenic , r. Gallagher, f McCle lland , c

orbett, g Lyn ch, g .. .... ..... ............. ..

Totals . 7 Fourt h Game.

Pfetfe l··s Abadn.bas-.. peck, r . ..... 2 Murawski , f. o J. Daley, f .................. .... 2 Pfeffer, c 2 Se nic..<t, g . o Ga.llaghe r , J. , g 0 :1\JcM ah on, g .......... o

0 0 0 2 0 0 0

TP

• 0 4 8 0 0

\ Vnrd , t ...... 0 Made ro, t. 0 Sheed y, f .... 0 Leary, c 0 Slmcc, g ........... .............. .. 0 L ong, g .... 0

T otals M. Provanche1·'s Woot'ums­l\lon a ha n, t ...... 1\1. Provancher, t .... 4

l6 Le wis, ! ....... .. .... 0 O'Shea, c ... ... .... 3 Conway, g 1 Mona co, g .. ......... 2 L e lai r, g .... .. 0

Totals ..... . .. .... 11 N inth Game.

Gallaghe r's Foxes­Corbett, f 1 Swcml e, f ....... 0 McClelland, c .. ................ 1 Gorman , g ........... . 0 Lynch, g ..... . ....... .. 0 Gallagher, g ................... 2

T o ta ls Pt'e ffffe r 's Abadabas-Speck, t. . 2 Jim Daley, f ... .... 1 P fe ffe r, c 3 Se neca, g ......... 1 McMahon, g .. .... .............. 0

T otals 7 T enth Ga-me.

K och's K lever K a gers-Dunclon, t. .... 0 Koch, t .... ....... . o Garrity, t. .... .. ................. 1

15 S tubenva ll , c .... .......... 0 Mill er, g o Madden. g .. ....... ..... 0

Totals ... .... ........ ... .. S m ith 's B a r Flies-Smi th, f 4 Brown, f . 0 Riccio , l ... 3 Sammon, c .. .. .. ·o

12 Magruder, g .......... 0 Nola n , g .. .. ........................ 0 Dowd , g 0

Totals Eleventh Game.

May's Soaks-"White, r o

16 O'Grady, f ...... .. ...... 2 K e lls, f ...... 2 Hartnett. c 0

4 Go1·don , g ... ............... . 0 0 1\'lay, g .......... .. ... .. .. ........ o 4 6 0 0 0

'l'ota ls Fitz's Banjo Bangers-Lemna, r ... ... .................... 0 .F'itzger a ld, r 0 Meade, r o

14 \ Vebe1·, c o

TP

3 2 2 5 0 0

13

THE VIA TORJA:-1

SWIMMING POOL POPULAR RESORT

'\\"t>w Sp1al"h ·c·mon In tht. wu.tr>r'!l t:tne·· Anyone prowlin~ about in the vlcJnH.y of the J1f_•w s""immlns.:: pool on Saturday. January th would hav(' been witness to a performance ~' replete with nautlral exhihitlnns Lh:\l the said person wou ld either have hurr iedly dashed to the dret'.-.lng room !or hi!! bathln~ re~lia or h.\'-'E" stood awed by th£> si~ht befor e h1m. F ather Harrison announced at lunch t h."1.t t h(' nnnl would be opened t or U!SC tor t he first time that after noon. \ Yh11e n 'l liv a were lost In t he rush tor th~ natator ium I t Is o ulte- un necr-.ssary to sta. t e t ha t those who failed to tak e a n opportunity to test out t h e n w d1vlng board that a t.te rnoon w ere either In the ln t.lrma.ry o r busi1y engaged in making up back them es ! or F a the r L y n c h .

The new pool is one o f. the m o::Jt e la bora te In the sta te. T o those who u sed t o pe rform thei r breast strok es and fan cy c ra wls i n t h e de pths of K ell y P ool the new n atnwrium is a n incom · para ble pa ra dise. The ta nk itself 1~ som ewha t la r ger than the regula tion

14 s ize req ul red by t he N a tion a l A . A . U . the dimens ions being 70 t ee t by 35 fee t. The pool has been lined w ith a white til e a nd the difte re nt depths are desig­na ted with blue tile . The floor abou t the pool is o r white m osaic. A s prin g · board and diving platfo rm ha ve been erected a t west a nd deepest end. Im ­m ediately above the diving p la ttonn Is a large balcony tor spec tators. H ere three tiers of. bleach e rs have been placed to accom odate the g rous of spec ­ta tors w ho w ill b e present at s wimming

3 meets. 10 S pecial llf.egua rds are a lways present

0 and a re p repared to act shou ld a ny 6 emergency arise. At pres ent the g ent · 2 Jemen w ho have been secu1·ed to a ct in

this capacity are Messer s Ernest " J ake ·· Walsko and Paul "Dogs" Leary.

25 -•--c~· e··::--·•--•-•--•-•~-•-•--•-•-•--• ·· • ·· •"'

THE CITY BANKS t

12

KANHAKEE, ILL. f

'"''"'"' y,,, ~"'' •~•~ I Cor. Court St. and Schuyler Ave. ~

4 -------- ......... _ - ·----·- · ..... 2 7 ·-·-----·-····-·-· - · ···-· .. · - · -·-·--····-·---·-···

~ t1

Groceries Confectionery f 16

Amedee J. Lamarre j ~ Bourbonnais, UI.i

1:•

l T Cigars Notions

i ---------·--·--·--·-·--·-·-·--·-·-·-·· .. -----·-·--·-·-·--·--·----·----·-·--·-

! Mrs. D. H. K a mman ,

11 D. H . Kamman

~ D. H. Kamman & Co. 0 o I Manu!acturers of ~ lligh Life Ginger Ale a nd Grape

and all Kinds of Soft Drinks

17 Iifu'\TKAREE, ILL. •

-----------·--·----·-·--·-· .. ·-·--· .... ! ..

i DEl\lAND ARSENEAU'S UNIFORM ~

BREAD •

"Its Quality Satisfies" i G. Arseneau Bakery i

Bourbonnais, Dl. f i

llthr m..mtwon:_ of t he- "\"lab~ Col

ALUMNI NOTES .. ny· rrom -~. Paut c: mtn: ry h > oom down t o \1.9.. ·w w re u. ll m lgbt::r

r:::r; a~~t~Y 1~!;; ~= crt.a. .. tl:~: I t::lad to ~ Y'"'U. - ~ srtl. J onlan , Dun·

ad<lre~ to F'ath r Rk rn'm Mr Ja- don a nd :-.;ev m...-. ~ph Healy. ·~s. F rom th• :-\(rth Am-Prica.n College tn Rome. Jta.h·. J · ~'~ 'H ello' ' to al l t he boy'S at \-iator. ·

:'l.Ir . .John L iston, '16. wn~ Uown to ~ee us alt e r Chrlstma.!. H e br(lu~ht wHh him his nephew. M r . .John ~ornn. who is n ow en r olled in t he Acadt'n~· d 1\D..rl· ment .

1\"bUe the R ev. R . J. French. c.~.,-.. "Was tn.ki ng a holiday at Not re D am e Unh·ersi ty n ot long ago , h e c hnnced to mee t l\lr. L.."lwrence P ou dr ie r , o r , n~ he is known Jn r eligion . Brothe r R u pert, c.s.c. Fathe r Fren ch a lso had a visi t w ith M es s r s. Oscar and Ra lp h Garza. both ot whom are e nrolled a t that sch ool.

A!te r his o rclin n lton on D~cemb(' r 21 s t the first thought ot tho R ev. M . J. Mroz, '23. w a s hi s Alrna. Ma ter. F a the r Mroz carne to the college di r eclly nnd s pent a few pleasant days with us. Father Mroz has received a n appoint · ment in Boise, Idaho.

The fea st of the Epipha ny allowed

Amedee T. Betourne

.\ gent for En tman 1\od&lcs

Prompt Develop ing a nd Printl~

ll9 Court St., l\nttl\al ~. Il l.

------~-----~---

1

I

\Ja ke the H ome of

Legris Trust and Sav­ings Bank

Your Banking H orne

105 Co urt Stree t

" Al'IJ{AJ{EE , I LLINOI '

- ----------·---- -·--------1 PAULISSEN MFG. CO. t KANKAKEE, ILL

I So. Washington Street

--------------·-----------·------·---· ~--------------·-·-------·--·----·----------------..

~~ CEN~o~~~u~~~S~~~CY The Store That Service Built

I ERICKSON and RUECKERT

l l

E . a nll R. P ha1·mae y 122 East Colll·t Street Opposite I . C. D epot

·--·-·-·-·-·---·-·-·-·--·-·-· .. ·-·-·-·-·-· .. ·---·-·-·-·-·-.. ··--· .. -·-·-·-·-·-· .. ·-·-·-·-·-·--·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-····-·-·-···•··•··· .. ·-·-·-·-·-··· .. ·· .. ·-·-· .. ·-····-·-· .. ····-· .. ·-· ... -·-· .. ····-·-·-·--····-·-.. ·· .. ·-·-·--·-···•·····

JOHN J. DRURY HOT W ATER H EATING

Vacuu111 and Low Pressw·c System H ca.t iug

Both Telephon es 72 KANKAKEE, ILL. 154 S. Sc huyler Ave.

---·-·-·-·-·-· .. ·-·-·-· .. ·-··~ .. ·-·-·-·-·-·--·-·-·-· .. ·-~·· .. ·--·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·--·----·-· .. ·---.. ~ r-·----·--···~~~:·;,~~::~:~·-·······-·-··---·1

~~ l~mnoe, Loa~ and Bond•j I,'

311 Ci t y National B a.nk Building

..._ •.. ,.-.. ................................................................ -.......... ---·-····-·----·-·-·-·-.. ··---····-·--· .. ~

The Palace CLOTHIERS

252 South East Ave. KANKAKEE, ILL.

WHERE SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES ARE SOLD

-·--·---··---·--·-----· S1~i~;~~s B~: .. Fi i·~·;_=· -- ···· 6 Ste vens. g 0 -·---·------------·----·--Sn1ith, .t ...................... ...... 1

Nolan, f.. o Magruclcr. f. .... : ........ 0 Bt·own , t ... 0 Sa mmon , c .........

0

~~1~~~;, ~ ~--- · ·---~ ~~~:: ~ Hicclo, g ..... 0 Bra.dy, F . , g ....... o

Totals ...................... 1 Fi rth Game.

\\·als.ko's Jakes­Freehlll, ! B osque u e. t. Larkin , t. .. Doyle . c .. 1\ralsko, g

leary, g Culle n, g

'l'otaJs .................. . May·s So.."lks-

1 0

... 0 1

..... -.. 0 .... -.... 0

............ 0

r.;::ens, .t .. ................. _____ _

~¥.~~~- rj::-:-;-~~;:~;~;~:

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Nag el. g o

T otals ... -... 0 Twelfth Game.

"~alsko's Jakes-F!·ee hi ll , t . .. .... 1

a•o(: • ·•-- •-•- • - -•-.. • - • -

! N. L. MARCOTTE 3

Bosquette, f 6 D oyle, c 2

12 The Barber Cleary, g 0 \Yatsko, g 3

26

T ota ls .... ........... ....... ... .. 2

1st Student-Did y o u hear abo ut that boy that was elec troc uted at A.rsnou·s Bakery this m orning? pe~1~d Student-Xo! H O\Y did tha t hap-

i

1st Student-He ste pped on a c urrent·

T eleph on e Bell 237

C. RUHLE Manut.acturer of

Lime, "\VbolesaJe and R-et-ail Cement, Brick, Sew-er Pipe,

Sand, Etc. Otrice--l\,.srehouse, 503 West

A.Tenoe KA ... '-'liAKEE, ILLil\OIB

Bourbonnais

SPEICHER BROS. JEWELERS

Complete Line of. Jewelry High Grade Repairing

127 So. Schuy ler Ave.

Edwin Pratt Sons Co. (Inc.)

Manufacturers of everything ln W1re and Iron Work, Fire Es­capes , Wire and Iron Fences, Store Fronts, Stair Railings, Steel Stairwa ys , Vent Guards, Structural Steel Work.

K ANKAKEE

. I u -----------------~-~----------------

·----·--·-·----·-·-·-·-·-----·-----------·-------·-·-----! i ! D. J. O'LOUGHLIN, M. D. · l

! f

Practice Limited to

EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT ! Bell Telepho ne 25 3

==:·: I G02 City l\at' l Banl< Bldg. KA.c-....'HAREE, ILLINOL'!

~ .. -·------·---------·--------------·--i Phone 922 Phone 92.!

Oscar (Foxy) Byron !

l i l l

f

TAXI Rates t o Kankakee: One passenger, 75c; three passengers, $1.00

Bourbonnais, Ill. Phone Appointments as E a rly as Possible

WILLIAM P. CANNON, M. D. Atte nding Surgeon to Students and Faco1ty of

S t. Viator College OUice H o urs:

2 to 4 p. m. 7 to 8 p. m .

Phone Ottice, Ma..J n 33 7

Phone Home, Main 3073

:w~:wa Cobb Bldg., KA..'>-:KAKEE, ll...LINOIB

Page 5: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

WEDNESDAY. jANUARY 19, 1927. THE VIA TORIAN Page Five

BOOST THE TEAM VIATOR SPORTS I

BEAT

NORMAL

DEFEAT MACOMB IN FIRST LITTLE

'19 VICTORY

VIA TOR DROPS GREAT GAME

TO MILLIKIN BENDA AND CO. STRUT STUFF TO Both Teams Deadlocked at Half;

33-24 WIN. Lead Alternated Until On Wednes;day, Jan. 2, after a slug·

gish start, the Viatorlans had all they End. could do up to the cl osin g minutes of play to stave off defeat from the strong Twenty-five to twenty-four

).{a.comb Normal school. The snappy final scor e . In one of the most excit· passing, that has characterized the ing, in one of the fastest a nd cleanest

;~;~~~a~ers~vo~~~ s!~:~~es~o P~~h~~~e~~ games of basketball ever witnessed in was due to a decision to take things the Millikin gymnasium, a great St. easy until the J;elatlve strength of the Viator team was nosed out in the final visitors was estimated. Then the minute of play. The score at the half Green put on a burst of speed and time was 8-8. The lead a lternated dur­slipped through for some close baskets that were man·e ls of pass work. Cap- ing the second h a lf with McAllister's taln Benda disp layed some sensational men leading 24-10 with three minutes floor work, but failed to make the ftr~t of playing time left . Millildn came !ew shot.~ on dribbles through count because of the uncertain footing on the newly scraped floor. Time and again the Viatorians \\·ould t ear down the hardwood with a scintillating mixture of passes, fakes and dribb les only to over slJde the basket when it ca.me time to slip in throug h Macomb's rather tight defense.

18 to DO at Half. Macomb had a colored g uard named

Page, who was a lso captain of the team. This lad was a fl.ni s hee. basket­ball player. It is a tribute to the close g uarding of the locals that this man Page was held to two field goals, which incidentally were as prettily and as mechanically placed as a nything we've seen in the professional ranks. In the four tries from fou l h e made every one count. The visitors' attacl<: center­ed around him all evening, and had he another supporter of his own ability there is a possibility that the score might have been considerably different.

During the first half the play was m ostly in the V iatoria n t er ri tory. D e· Janey, back at his old guard position, was a tower of strength, taking the b a ll from the Macomb backboard where he lost little time in getting it up the floor. Goal was matched with goal up to a bout 10 a ll, when big R ed O'Mal· ley started on his mad ra mpage , tap­ping one in and inte rcepting a Ma­comb pass to drop another. The big redhead was in there "knocking t hem oiT" to the extent of ten points, which is a night's work to be proud of.

Macomb Catch es Up. St~'lglng a bl'lJlio.nt comcba.clc at the

opening of the second ha lf, Macomb rolled up the score from 10 to 17 while Viator rema ined stationary. The color­ed boy, Page, was one of the main fea­ttu·es in the drive. Towat·ds the close of the first half Benda and Bowe were replaced by Campbell and Evard, and whe n the fin3t two returned to the game late in the second half the Via­tol'ians took on new life . They ran a round the Macomb teachers, forced op enings and s lipped through for tell­ing counters. It was just the needed mo~entum f or the team, although "1:\' hJ!e Campbell and Evard were on the floor many fine rallies were made, only to be crowded out of the g lory of suc­cess by a s lip unde r the basket. Ev­nrd took a ha ndful of the glory by !mocking off two fie ld g oa ls. Campbell showed some of the fin e fo 1·m that won him All Nationa l Academy honors· his dribbling a nd passi ng were on a' par with his work las t year. In short or­de~ Viator r o lled up to thlny-t h1 ·ee POJOt.s, where they stopped to play a sate game for the remain ing minute and a half.

St. Viator . No•·mal. FG FT TP

FG FT TPMorley ........ 3 3 91 Rowe ···-··· 0 0 OLowe ......... . o 11 ~alrymple .. 3 3 9 mithe r s .... 1 21 Jo..vard ....... :! 0 4 Swar·tz 0 Oj O" Malley . 5 1 11Hersch ....... 0 01 Herbert 0 0 OThompson .. 0 OJ Renda (c) .... 3 1 7Coates ...... 1 4] Campbe ll .... 0 0 O Pa~:e (c) .... 2 Bl

back with a couple of sleepers and

made the count 24-23 with only a few

seconds to go. Then everyone in the

gym, which was packed with a yelling,

screaming crowd , went wild. It seem­

ed that the teams a lso went wild . The ball surged up and down the floor with

Mllllkin taldng chances on long shots. The ir star, Captain Art Long, was cov­ered by Captain "Chief" Benda, and it looked as though the Green was com· ing back to Bourbonnais a winner. Some desperate work on both sides in their mad endeavor to gain possession of the ball kept the crowd on its feet, yelling fractically for a Millikin vic· tory. Viator missed a long shot, and the ball went outside. I mmediately the Bourbonnais five went into their five man defense; it looked impossible to carry the ball thro1!5h; with some Jin-htning passes and speedy dribbling, C~pt. Long, who cOvered himself with g lory both offensively and defensive ly throughout the evening, shot the ball to Bishop and the latter although close· ty guarded, let go of the ball to have it fall through the hoop for the neces­sary point. Even then Viator came back. stronger than ever but the g un beat them to victory and thus ended the first conference game for the lo­cals .

Everybody Stars. T o pick the stars of the evening is

to pick the men on both t eams. Offen­sively Viator starred; so did Millikin; defensively it might be said that Mil· Jildu, playing on their o"Wn flnm-, were just a trifle sup erior.

The small margin of victory takes a.way not the slightest from the high pra ise from either team. Viator is es· sentially a large floor combination , and their pass ing and general team work was somewhat hampered by the rather s m a ll playing space of. the Millikin gym. Vilhen t h e combination got un­dm· way, it took everything Millikin 11ad to stop it. Bowe and Dalrymple crossed over from either side and work­ed their way throug h with O"Malley their pivot man, with machine like pre· cision. Time and again Dalrymple fak­ed around a guard only to be forced out of bounds. the floor b eing- just a trifle too narrow for the shifty for­ward. Millikin had the a dvantage in height and put it to good u se, nipping some of Bowe's pot shots with desper­ate leaps into the air. O'Malley, Via­tor's center, was the nea rest approach in h e ight to the Millikin t eam, a nd he fell short of his man by at leas t two lnches. j The big r edhead beat his man to the top on the jumpoff, but the (l.ir tig ht clefense of the Millikin club more or less offset this advantage.

Herbert and Delaney a lternated in one of the guard p ositions, while Evard relieved Bowe for a few minutes, oth· e rwlse the combination Benda and Her­bert and D e laney at g uards , O'Ma lley, center , and Dalrymple and Bowe, for­wards, carried the brunt of the battle. Millikin returns F e b. 21st.

The score: ~'lillikin .

PAGE MR. HARRINGTON

MR. JOSEPH A. HARRL~GTON

St. Viator teams have of recent years

p layed schedules t hat any school might

well be proud of. To the casual omserv­er this point may have little signifi· cance, but to those who have studied

the situatlion this item is one of mo·

mentous importance. To win cham­pionships in either the Little 19 Con­

fe rence or the Interstate a ce rtain num­be r of games must be playe din each. As the various seasons roll a r ound and t h e moleskins are traded for basketball jerseys a nd they in turn are doffed in favor of baseball togs, who is it that a rranges these schedules? Who is it that books the games and dickers for the dates? The athletic manager bears the burden. And the gentleman direct· ing the activi ties of this important posi­tion at St. Viator is Mr. Joseph Har­r-ington, '27.

Joe tool< up the responsibilities of this position a t the beginn ing of his junior year. T h e basketball chart fot· last yeat· was more colorful than that scheduled by any other team holding m e mbership in eith er of the two con­!et·ences. The recent football schedule c.:1.Il ed for games with some of the most noted teams in illinois, Iowa and In· diana. You need no introduction to our basketball card that has b een arranged for this season. Everyone realizes the difficulty involved in securing a pre­~entab l e college basebal l schedule. Yet, las t year the Varsity met eleven teams som e of which were otre D ame, st: Louis University and M~higan State.

Besides his duties as manager of ath· letics, Mr. Harrington heads the publici­ty department. It might be worthy to note that only r ecently our football schedu le a ppeared on the sport page o! the New York T lmes. In the mean­while Joe finds time to direct the activ­ities of the Senior class of which b"e is president. During the years he has been on the campus h e has r ounded out an enviable record both in his classes and in student activities.

Fish That Builds Nests The stickleback, a small gasrerold

fish of fresh and salt waters of north· ern r egions, builds nests for t11e r~

ceptlon of the spawn, which Lhe males defend until It Is hatched.

ACADEMY FIVE WINS THREE

ST. MARY'S DOWNED 20-13

Barnett's Lads Play Strong Defen- Last evening Coach Barrett ani his sive Game. basket tossers took a trip to B looming·

Things begin to appear as if Coach

Bill Barrett has for the third consecu­tive year succeeded in putting a n Academy basketball team on the floor that Is capable of making the record necessary to obtain an invitation to the Loyola National Tournament. I n the first four games to date the Aca­demy cagers have annexed three vic­tories and lost the remaining game only after the toughest kind of I uck in an overtime period game with St. Igna­tltiS High School of Chicago. At the forward positions Walkowiak. a n ace from las t year and Captain "Cy" Daley as well as Van Warmer h ave bee n showing to advantage. Pombert is gradually rounding into form at center and has al l the earmarks of a comer. Ed. Matthews a n d H erb Hinton have exhibited marked defensive strength to date, and to all appearances they are ~he logical men tor the two vacant guard positions.

St. I g natius 14-Academy 12 Benny Connor '22. popular coach ..:t.t

St. I gnatius, trotted a rather finished bask etba ll team o u t upon t he new gym· nasium floor to meet the loca ls in their

•first game. During the first half it cannot be denied that both fives played sluggish basketbal1 with the players on both sides missing many easy chances at the hoop. At the half Barrett's boys were leading by a margin of six points the score being 8-2. During the sec­ond period the Chicago boys seemed to think that WalkowiaJ.: was a man worth watr.hing with the result that two mer. covered Wally at every turn. 1'his action on the p;~rt of St. I g nat ius was rat he r e ffective; the Viator offen­~;ve was dead. The se-cond half ended in a .:lcadlock at 12-12. During the overlirn -.! lJ€.} iod there was some fre n­zied playing on both eides, but the fa.tGs appeared against the locals as they failt-d to score and allowed a St. I gna­tius player to slip in .1ne that won the game for i.he Chica~·) team. \;n :i)e:·: at center played best for the Jesuit five.

BARON HUOT 13, ACADEMY 15 If the first game with St. Ignatius

was thrilling t he second contest with Baron Huot was doubly so. It took three overtime periods to decide the final score. It was WaJJwwiak that nulled the game out of the hole with but fifteen seconds to play that finally won t h e g-ame in the third overtime stretch with a pretty toss from th~ sideline. He seemed to be in on every play, and a lthoug h closely guarded wa!:> always in the thlck of the fight both offensively and defensively. Pornbert hit his st ride during the second half and arched in some counters a lthoug h he missed several other long tosses ])y

the narrowest of margins. Ed. Mat t· hews took particular delight in dribb­ling around his fellow townies a nd play.

·--·-----·---------·-----t

ton, Dlinois, where they m et the St.

Mary's High School five of that place

in a spirited tussle, which t e rplinated

in a sweet victory for the locals. The

game was hotly contested throughout but the guards of the Bloomington out·

fit were not able to cope with the Via­

torian offense. St. Mary's had earlier 1n the week

defeated Pontiac High School in a rath· er brilliant victory, which goes to prove

that Capt. Daley and his team are go­

ing to make things interesting tor all com e r s during the remainder of the sea·

son.

ed a rather clever floor game. Hlnton and Daly played a snappy game and through their close guarding were able to hold the much larger Baron H. Huot team to a few long shots.

St. Yiator Academy Baron Huot fg ft tp

Daly 0 0 OPatcheff Van Warmer 0 0 ODevine Walkowiak 3 3 9Menard Pombert 2 0 4LaFleur Matthews 0 2Cook Hinton 0 0

Totals 6 3 15, Totals

fg ft t p 2 2 6 0 0 0 0 1 1 2

4

5 3 13

VALPO RESERVES 14-ACADEMY 23 On Saturday, Jan. 15th the Academy

exhibi ted thei r superiority over the Val­paraiso University Reserves in a one !':!ded game. The Indiana outfit . 'vith the exception of the ir lanky center Toepel, seemed unable to penetrate the local buards. The latter gentleman succeeded in getting a pair of baskets and a free toss to bring his total to five points Walkowiak was the high man for both teams with a total of 12 markers.

This game shows somewhat that Coach Barrett bas a nother scoring combination in Walkowiak, Daly and Pombert. These three time and again worked their way past the Hoosier g uards to register with fast shots under the basket. Van Vlarme t· also s howed abi lity in passing the balL Valparaiso R eservesSt. Viator Academy

fg ft tp f g ft tp Bartholomew (c)

0 1 1 Walkowia k 6 0 12

Roepee 0 1 1 VanWarmer 1 Bischofber~er

1 1 Daly (c)

Edwards Toepel Hinz

1 0 2 Pombert 2 1 1 1

Claysing 0 0 McConey 0 1

Tota ls 4 6 14

Matthews

Hinton

Totals

3 1

1 0

0 0

11 1 23

i f !

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Referee. Young, Jllln ols V'l'"cs leyan.

I. S. N. U. HERE ON SATURDAY

On next Saturday evening the V n!'· ~it \· cngers \\ill m eet another dangel'OUR l.lttle l9 opponent when they enter the c-ourt against I!Hnois State Normal Unh,.('rS!Ity o( Normal. Illinois. The lat te r outrt boasts or rive consecutive vi torles, their most r ece nt win havln~ hef'ln ~C'ored o ver the hnrleston ::-.lot":'· ma l quntet which had ))reviou.s ly de­ten t"d s u ch teams aa Bradley Tech and ~lJillkJn University. This Is the !irst m unc St. Viator hns pal·tlcip..'l.ted in 1\J;uinst the X ormn.l School since 1923, und n r-eturn contest Is to be played at Normal on F elJr un ry :!6.

FG F'l' FTM PF A . Long , f .... 3 0 1 1 Kinsey, f 0 0 0 0 Klsh, f .......... 1 1 o 'Vilrnoth, c ___ .... 1 o Bishop , g ···--·-·-·- 3 0 C. Long, g 3 0 0

St. Viator. FG FT F'l'M PF

Bowe, f 3 1 0 0

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~ =====--·----·--: I Dalrymple, 0 0 E vard, f . 0 0 THE WINNER O'Maller, c 1 0 Herbert, g ·-- 0 0 D elaney, g ······-·· 0 0 ~ STAR CLEANERS ! j Bostonian

L. BEAUVAIS II I Correct A pparel For M en

Shoes Mallory Hats

PLANT-KERGER-DANDURAND Benda, g (c) ··-··· 1 0 0 Technical touls-Benda (1). Score at end ot first halt, Millikin. 8;

Viator, 8. R eferee--Pierce, Wesleyan.

! T eleph on e \\"abash 3815 I

H. E. COYER

Work Called for and Delivered ~-

167 No. Schuyler ~lain 283 1

"The Horne of Kuppenheimer Clothes in Kankakee."

+ ! CHAS. C. RIEL Y WALTER J. RICHERT Telephone 995 l

i RIEL Y & RICHERT

II Miners nud

CRERAR CLINCH COAL COMPANY

hippers or

KANKAKEE I I l !

SHOE REP AIR CO. j j HAT CLEANING l

SHOE REPAIRING lj DirecUy Opposite Majestic f

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS and DEALERS Electric \Vashing Ma.chin.es, Ironing Machines, Sewin g Mn.chlnes,

Lamps a.nd SuppUes Mo·tors, Vacuum Cleaners, Fixtures, Applia nces

Electricians for St. Viator College 370 EAST COURT STREET

M. \ JE 'l'IC-COAL-McCLI~TOC:K . I 6-15 Tbo Rookery UHICAGO, ILL. I +

I ! ----------------------------------------~

Theatre • SPECIAL RATE TO j f VIA TOR STUDENTS i I ELECTRIC WIRING ELECTRIC REP AIRING

Page 6: St. Viator College Newspaper, 1927-01-19

Page Six

Students, Notice! At a. m~;c·tlng '>! thf; AdvlJIIory Board

of thf· CrJII~>ge Club In the PMestM' P.e.­!N~tOTY la~t Monday evening, deflnite pl:.a.nl'J wer_, m<:t.dc: VJ establh'h orderll-0,.,.-!i :_~.t ()Ur baJJkC.thall gam,·tt. So far thfH yf•>tl"' tho stud,-•nts have been tJcat· tt·rNJ throughout the entire gymnasium and prf'1tent.ed an ap()f'aranc,:;: o! diHor· derllnt•Jo~H.

rn or-der to avolrl any s uch condition In thr, fut ure th~ Collr•ge Club has de­f'id(!.rl upQn certa.l n J·egulatlf')ns wblcb must be obHf:rvcd. The College Club, In ~)J( rnu('h :n, It Is thr, hlghe8t organ­lu·tl brKly r1t the KLurJcnt body, reels tho.L It huH thr· n uthorlty to present thcso n!Hlf"lc;tlnnH an(l also hopes that r1ther ory,11 nlr.u.tfr,na rJn thf· campus will HUpport and advocav· them.

J. I~w·ry t~turJr·nt. whr-thcr College or 1 flgh Sch()f"JI, Hho uld attenrl both Varsi-1 y :liHI J l lg-h ~chool g-ames.

2. J•:vcry HLU(Jr- nt will be required to J)n·w:nt hiH ticket at the door and also ha.v<: th(• ticket vunch<·d bf'tore each game. In thf"' <·-v<:nt thn.t the students are In th(> ~ymnoRium bMorc lhe ush· ('r!i and cJO(Jl"m ·n arc In attendance , the UHhf'J'S will go about In the assembly :• nd (•xarnlnc and punch tb e tickets.

3. ~tudcnts cntorlnl{ tht: gymnasium from th(• Inner VCRll iJU! C of the build· tng will UHC the c·r;O·:rnc:e o n the ex­ti'Pmc left. Vlsltor·H will usc the en­ll'stnc<· on the extreme r·ight. 1'he cen­t<•r door· will be locked.

4. All ~:~ lu dentfl will please remember lh:\.t til e ushon; have the anangement of. the atudents at the games ln their handf! and that their· orde1·s must be ohservccl.

5. Studc·nts will occupy the seat s on lhe Jolt f-l irl c of· the gy mnasium only. The MCatln~ a l·rang-'-·mcnt .follows :

a. The J•',·eshme.n wlll be seated in a g-1·oup Jn the center of the stand. Fresh­men l<indly obse,·vo that they must wear theh· caps llll'oug hout the enti re evenJng.

b. Th o Acaclemy students wJll be scaLed 11t the left of. the :B"reshmen.

c. Upoercla~smen of the College De­pa ,·tment wl!l be seated a t the right of Lhe Freshmen.

rl. Further in formnli on can be ob· La.Jned from the us l;·era.

e. l<Jndly note that this arrange· mont make~ it poss ible fo1· the whole

r-----·-·---··-·······-·-··1·1-·--·-·-·-·-, Chas. Wertz Co. !

~ Lt~:::•:· :::::.lt~J:~.ick~I~:te. t ware P laste1·, Glass,

t a nd Coni ! -·-·-·-·--···· .. ·-·---...................... ~ .................. ;.

~ ......................................................................... .. ! Bell 'f e lephon e 407

!. Einbeck's Photo Studio t\ sati s fied pah·on is our best ad­vertisement-\\'e gtJarantoo sntis­facti on-1\·~a l<ei'S OC ]>Ol'traits that

pl ease 143 North' Schuyler Avenue

J{ANliAJ\EE, ILL .

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~---·--·--·-·-·-·-·-· ................................. .. l Standard Hardware Co.

I i ! f.

Both Phones 259

Use Our Hardware-It Stands Hard \Vear

Blue a nd \ Vhite E namel Rauges

Expert Furnace Men

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T i\ffiN ! .. : Bu y 'l'heir Clothes and Fu mish-! ,1 T ings at

1

I VANDERWATER'S i i liA.Nl\iU\EE, ILL. ! 1 f too----·-------··· .... -·---·-·-·-·-·-..:· r-·------·-----·-------... ~ t Safety First · I CALL 7 6 TAXI

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YELLOW CABS

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THE VIATORIAN

Btudent body to be seated on one slde I Eureka, Kan~-Katbleen Ryan. ot the gymnasium. who fought and won a case agr .nst

6. Everyone mWit be seated~ . the Eureka school board for her b!.gh 7. Students are requested to remam 8(.-bool diploma, will baYe to fight ~he

treated In ONE place during the games. case to the highest court In Kansru. 8. Students wHJ retrain lrom any un· The board, at a ~peclal metting here.

timely or unseemly conduct during the decided to appeal to the state Su-

~esi:rnder no circumstances will re~ preme court, aft r losing the case in marks about the players on visiting the District court. teams be tolerated~ ~11ss Ryan, a h!gh school student,

10. Students wlll remember that they was cbargtd with "cheating" in n are always expected to conduct them- high school examination in history 6elvea as gentlemen. and refused credlt for her work. She

Pioneer Street Car The Orst e lectric street car to run

in the Unite(] States was run In the ci ty ot CJe,·eland a nd was first oper· o.ted tn connection with the East Cleve­land Railroad company on July 26, 1884. The route began on Garden (Central street) , two blocks west o! Wlllson, then to New street and then to Qulnry street.

Goldaton Keep& Book After many peregrinations the fa­

mous Ot.tenberg Bible. printed by John Gutenbe rg from wooden t YPP. In 1456, has .. eached England and ts t h~

property of. Edward Goldston. Tempt­ing otTers for the Bi bl e have been made by Ameri ca n collectors, but Go ldston says the Bibl e will r emain Jn Eng land.

Malays Up on Poison One prick from the poisoned dnr ts,

as used by the Malays. will cause death in half an hour.

was not allowed to grnduate with her class. She denied the charges and wns given another and more strict E:xam· lnation. This he passed with flying honors. Still the school authorities refused to give her the coveted honor.

Through her parent . iHr. and Mrs. Leo Ryan. the girl appealed to tbe District court. J uclge Benson, before whom the ease was tried, 11eard testi­mony and decidecl that in \'lew of thfl fact that the girl passed the se::cond examination, she was entitled to credit and her diploma.

Now the school board has voted tv file an appea l.

·----·----·-··•-•···--·-·---····-···-·-·--~

Kankakee f Book and Furniture

Store

Everything in Books an6.

Furniture

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FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT AND CAFE

Kankakee, Illinois. • t f ............................................. -... ·-·-·-·-·-·-·--····-·-·--·-·-····-····-···•··· .. ···•···-···•··· ....................... _

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A Hearty Welcome Awaits The Students and

Friends of Saint Viator College

........................ _ ................. -·-·--·-·--·------·--·-···-·-·--····-.. ··--·-·-·--.... ·-·--·--·-·-·-·-·-·-· ............................. ·-·--·-·-····-·-·-· .. ·--···---·-·-·---·-----·--·-·--·-·-·--·-·-·---·-·-· ' DR. L.0!:15~REEK I

Suite 412-414 Cobb Bldg.

Phone Main 304 ! - l ·-····-·-·-·-·-·-·-···•···--·-····-· .. ·--····-·-·-····-·-·-·--·-·---····-·-·--·--·---.......... -............... _ ............ .. r·······-·-·---·-·-····-·-·-·-·-·-· ···-·-·-·-·-·-·-····-·-···~··-·-·-·-·-····--·-·······-·-·-·-····-·-~··-·-·-1.·

JAFFE CLOTHIERS Special Service To The Students

You Walk One Block and You Save Many Dollars

E~ST A VENUE Kankakee

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RENT-A-CAR 32 SO. SCHUYLER AVE.

i i l : ! l !

f. l

WEDNESDAY. jANUARY 19. 1927.

The LUNA BARBER SHOP For Years The Tonsorial Headquarters

for

St. Viator College Students

l ! ! l f i

t ·---~--·---·-·~---.:.

Always drink pasteurized milk. Our wagons pass your door every m o rning before you h a ve breakfast

KANKAKEE PURE MILK CO.

Both Phones 4;;

Bulgarious Butter )li1h 306 South Schuyler A venue.

Drink l\lllk

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i Dr. F. R. Jones , ; I ; (Dentist) I

! Phone: Main 437 311-312-314 Cobb Building tf! l t M·-·-·---·----·-·-·-····.,·-·-·---·-· .. •· .. --·-·--·,.--·--·-·-·-·-·M·-···•··-·"·-····---·--·--..................... ·-·-·-·-· .. ·-·-·-·-·-·-"·R·-·-R .. O·-·-·--·--·-·--·-.. ··-·-·-·-·-·--·-·-· ..... ·-·---' NOTRE DAME CONVENT

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This institution is conducted by the Sistel's of Notre Dame, offers every oppot·tunity to you ng ladies for a thoroug h Christian secula r education. Prices reasonablt: . Fot· catalogue address

SISTER SUPERIOR, Noto·e Dame Convent Bourbonnais, Illinois

a.nd and

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t PRINTERS /U'ID STATIONERS

264 East l\fe1·chant Stree t

f Telephone 406 HANliAiiEE, ILL.

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F. 0. Savoie Company DIS'l'RIBUTOR S

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Manufacturers of

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KANKAKEE, ILLINOIS

·--------------

ERZINGER'S PURE FOOD

STORE

KANKAKEE, ILL.

306-24 E. Court Street

I

I