St. Edward's Cadet (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1945 Page: 2 of 4
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2
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ST. EDWARD’S CADET
September 19, 1945
Crazy About Pictures
y
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Jill
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Reprinted from the OctobS issu^f Esquire
/744y
He isnft only demobilized—hefs immobilized’9
Class-ifications
AT HOME
with
THE ALUMNI
Freshman:
visited
J
pro-
the Bonin Islands in August.
Juniors:
.}
Seniors:
A-
A
4=—
Ye Old Scuttle Butler
-eti
For Better
Or Verse
Harry Mazurkiewicz have been
studying at La Porte since grad-
uation.
St.
the
% 1
Photographers
Cartoonist__________
Faculty Adviser.
with the 87th division in France
and fought on all sides of the bat-
tle of the bulge.
Sgt. Leo Phillips, 1941, Fort
Worth, was killed in action over
,s
“Air Apaches” squadron which
was cited by the President.
Paul Ottis has been graduated
A
the
Religion
Faith, Like Liberty,
A Gift Easily Lost
Luis Garcia and Ronnie Rabalais
-------------------------------George Becerra
----------------------Rev. C. L. Boehm
Will gather round, they’ll
ceed to confound
Your mental avoirdupois.
Sophomores:
Nothing much left for these to
learn
So if the rest of you hoi polloi
Innocent receptacles
For all the sophs’ tall tales,
They’ll die a thousand deaths
from fright
Unless credulity fails.
Double, Double Toil and Trouble;
Sullivan Serves and Sodas Bubble
By GLENN SATTERFIELD
Song and Cheer Conscious
For some unknown reason, singing as a pep stimulant
rather passed into the discard last year and has remained
there for a longer time than this section of the CADET
considers healthy. We wonder if there aren’t others about
the campus who feel the same as we, namely that a few
good fight songs put inspiration into a team when other
factors fail.
(
Editor-in-Chief.
A --------------------------------------------Glenn Satterfield
Associate Editor ,,
News Editor________ T ,12
Leonard Wenzel
ea uies Larry Lamar, Wm. Slessinger, Carl Liebscher
sporters—uames Gravis, Wm. Bolanz, Richard Cobden, Fernando
Daly, Wm. Deason, Oscar Eichelman, Robert Kennalley,
Edward Morend.
trayed so intimately upon a Book-
of-the-Month-Club stage, even a
greater thrill to find it portrayed
so realistically, completely, and
likeably, with nothing left Lout,
with nothing slurred, either the
weakness or the fineness of the
people who live the Catholic life.
Sgt. Carl Young visited the
Book Review
Blood, Sweat, and
Tears of Laughter
In Catholic Novel
If you want a book packed with
Catholicity, you can, without fear
of holy bilge or sacred bunk, find
it in The World, the Flesh and
Father Smith, by Bruce Marshall.
In this novel, which has been high
on the best-seller list now for
some weeks, you’ll get yourself a
dose of healthy spirituality along
with all the interest of a book-
m
now in
school two weeks ago. He was
Dignified, periwig-ified,
Summary of all that’s serious.
Will stand for nothing but
“noblesse oblige.”
And I hope we’ve made that
clear-ious.
7 1
There’s a thrill, moreover, in
finding your own religion por-
THE CADET
Published semi-monthly by the Journalism
students of St. Edward’s Military Academy,
Austin 1, Texas
“We like lots of pictures in the CADET.”
How often have you heard this comment made by students
on the receiving end of this printing project? Well they
have good tastes. We like them too. And the more photos
we have contributed for publication in these pages, the
more we’ll enjoy sitting down to our bi-weekly job of
juggling this make-up.
In fact the Aremac Club of two years ago could be revived
on the Hilltop this year with a great deal of profit to school
spirit and to student enjoyment. The existence of candid-
camera artists and prowling photographers on the loose
once more would be welcomed by the whole Cadet and
Tower staff.
That word “Tower” reminds us that there is such a thing
as a year-book in prospect, one guaranteed by the editors
right now to reflect the wishes of all the Cadet corps. It
should be worthy of our best talents and should preserve
for future inspection a record of this year from the very
beginning.
Come on you addicts of the little box with the magic
shutter. Let’s see what miracles of the sensitized touch
those deft fingers of yours can turn out.
d
Suave, trim, smooth, at last a
member
Of the socially elite;
Quite a sack of male (girls
notice!),
The gentleman complete.
There are several St. Edward’s songs that have been
written in the recent past, including an SEA adaptation of
the “Victory March,” any of which might very well serve
as an Alma Mater melody. Let’s learn these songs, and by
dint of putting them to a vocal test decide which is going to
be our favorite—to give spirit to athletic contests. Per-
haps some musician in the corps can make some ingenious
changes that might salvage the poorer, or capture a melody
more infectuous than those already on the market.
If you have ever paged through an album of college songs,
you ll know that many of them are pretty sour to unpre-
judiced ears, both as to words and as to notation There’s
no reason, therefore, why ours can’t be well above the aver-
age, with all the harmony and word masters about the
premises. By constructive suggestion and criticism let’s
make them, since they can still be considered in the forma-
tive stage, as popular and high-class as they should be.
What goes for songs, goes also for cheers. Let each of us
make it our business to learn the rhythm, swing and words
to this year’s crop of cheers, make them part of our school B-25 engineer-gunner with
life and tradition. -
Garcias, two Satter-Flushes. Man, with two of
those gattling-tongued Sullivans on the campus
we’re certain to have some talked-of heads rolling
on the premises before long.
Sullivan Special Coming Up
Speaking of the elder of the latter duo, Mr. J.
is quite a hand behind that new P. X. counter.
While Legan and Noonan are calmly and non-
chantly waiting on their customers in the drygoods
department, over yonder you can see Mr. Many-
places-at-once trying to please a very large group
who are all giving orders at the same time. If he’s
not jumping wildly to the coke box, he’s handing
out five different brands of cigs to four Cadets and
trying to figure out who ordered what.
Best of all, in the midst of all this confusion,
someone orders a chacolate soda. You can see
that this is Sullivan’s pride and joy. The only hitch
is that one of these days, with all his business, in
the course of opening soda pops with one foot and
selling bars of soap with the other, instead of the
ice cream, chocolate syrup, and carbonated water,
he’s going to turn up a soda with the following
contents: a dab of shampo, some hair tonic for
phiz, chocolate syrup, and an X-lax tablet. We’ll
call it “The Sullivan Special.”
as a medical doctor from the
University of Oklahoma and be-
gins his internship this September.
J. Martin Hamley, last a student
here in 1942, is reported missing
in a plane crash somewhere in the
Pacific. A naval fighter pilot,
Hamley is from Lake Providence,
Louisiana.
Navy man Leroy Mozingo from
Santiago and Bill E. Sullivan from
Corpus were on the campus
recently.
Academy last Saturday. He and
club thriller. It’s as good as
“Going My Way” and even more
spiced with life. It’s as modern
as the latest plastics and yet as
old in tradition as the catacombs.
The story, though written by a
layman, is about a priest and about
all the incidents both funny and
tragic to be found in his career.
There are the humorous clashes
between the sacristan and Lady
Ippecacuanha; there’s the murder
of an erring wife by one of Father
Smith's parishioners. There are
pages filled with fascinating, grip-
ping reading, in the kind of plain
talk which you and I enjoy, and
which we know to be the real heart
of Catholic life.
The course of the story takes
the reader through both world
wars, through love affairs and con-
fessionals, through lives of nuns
and actresses, through star dust
and slum dust. It has all the color
and the good sound reasoning of
Catholic theology proving itself as
workable in the modern world as
in the mediaeval one. Bishops and
their purple, women communists
and their lipstick, sacristies and
the shell holes of the battlefield,
with Father Smith anointing a
boozy major with a great bloody
gape in his belly—these are the
people and places that make the
story worth a hundred times the
few hours it takes to read it.
Louis Wozniak,
Mary’s Seminary,
Well, it’s nice to get back and find that higher
education has the same old familiar ring: “Are you
a new Cadet, Mister? Well, brace, Mister. Pull
that chin in, stick that chest out, suck that stomach
in. Mister, how many chins can you show?
What, only four! You can do better than that.
Come on! Snap in to it!”
It seems that out of all the arguments still rag-
ing anent the comparative value of the two Hilltop
halls, old Sorin still wows the Cadets with discern-
ing tastes. Garlands of praises are still being
showered on this small humble domicile with the
homey atmosphere. We hear even Jerome Kralis
is moving away from his old haunts; Perhaps he
wants more adventure and excitement this year.
That Daily Daley Diet
Maybe our eyes are deceiving us, but it looks
to these aged glimmers as if Edgar Daley has re-
turned with the right to a few misgivings about a
certain curvaciousness he is beginning to develop.
Couldn’t be pushing those scales up in the vicinity
of 200, could he?
St. Ed’s rather holds in its hand what might be
called a triple full house this autumn, with two
Sullivans, two Rabalaises, four Serranos, four
e 8—
$86
X*-1 ivwy
It’s easy to lose your faith—just like it’s easy to lose your
liberty. When people get used to the possession of either
one of these gifts, they begin to become careless of their
value. That s why families who have a long time been Cath,
olic begin to forget what a wonderful prize faith was upon
1tS.first inception, and members of those families begin to
dritaway, drop Sunday Mass, marry outside the Church.
Its like a nation that has a long time enjoyed freedom,
and not having the fresh realization of what it was like to
be slaves to another people, begin to treat this precious
hen loom as if it were a plaything—and liberty is in for a
OIaCK-OUt.
, Do,men who have gone to Catholic schools ever lose their
azth; Have men who attended St. Edward’s ever lost their
faith. The answer, of course, must be the affirmative to
both questions, although such cases are rarely found except
among those ex-students that liked to cut corners on such
things as class, discipline, and conscience. Life had to be
all cake for them—and so big a cake that they could eat it
with a shovel.
Weare here this year to learn something about both life
4nd. the.faith, Let’s get something from this education
that will last a lifetime. Our faith outweighs all else in
value. Let s so ground ourselves in it that it can never be
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St. Edward's Cadet (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 1, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 19, 1945, newspaper, September 19, 1945; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518966/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting St. Edward’s University.