St. Edward's Cadet (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 14, 1945 Page: 4 of 4
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ST. EDWARD’S CADET
November 14, 1945
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COOK FUNERAL HOME
Back the Team.
1
Fr.
principle.
!
Choice Steaks
Mexican Food
♦
3202 So. Congress
(San Antonio Highway
Phone 2-7741
Austin Army and Navy Store
UNCLE WALT’S
201 West 6th
Phone 8-5400
615 Red River
PHONE 2-6846
1117 S. CONGRESS
NO DELAY CLEANERS
Compliments
of
Jno. R. YOUNG
W. O. WOODS
EDWIN A YOUNG
JNO. R. YOUNG & CO., Agents
Peden Iron and Steel Co.
400 Nueces
City
COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
Houston, Texas
920 Chronicle Building
PATE’S
HOUSTON, TEXAS
FOOD STORE
COMPLIMENTS OF
1311 S. Congress
TIPS ENGINE WORKS
Phone 8-6421
Slessinger Takes Reading of Stars,
Consults Barometer, Snares Birdie
Ex-Prof Reveals Landing with Marines
On Service Station for Whole Pacific
1100 Colorado
Phone 4351
Austin, Texas
the
she
Pieper, speaks of the natives as
being strong, handsome, healthy,
and friendly.
100% WHOLE WHEAT BREAD
UNCLE WALT’S BAKERY
STRUCTURAL STEEL,
MACHINE SHOP,
FOUNDRIES, TIPS
MOBILE POWER SAW
ss
Quality Super
Seafood Market
1816 San Jacinto
Telephone 8-5737
WHITE PHARMACY
Ben W. White
6th and Congress
Dial 2-5451
S
Ne
J
Sandahl Beverages
Manufacturers of
Pop-Kola, Hire’s Root Beer,
B-1, Suntex Orange
SANDWICH SHOP
C. E. (Jack) Pearson, Owner
j
I
Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
CONGRESS AT SIXTH
BECKER LUMBER CO.
HOMES BUILT ON EASY TERMS
---Complete Line Building Material---
On Congress Avenue at the Bridge
PHONE 3548
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CLEANERS — ALTERATIONS
B. F. MEWIS
THE
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
n
Snapshots taken in the firing range show Ruben Cardenas and
Conrad Garcia with pointers, top, during dry firing. With guns at
bottom are Henry Barrett, Garcia, John Hensley, Gillispie Baker,
Joe Fischer, Fernando Daly, Ernest Santos.
EAT GOOD CANDY
Distributed by
0. G. Hanseler
K
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H. DITTLINGER ROLLER MILLS CO.
“The Quality Millers”
FLOUR — FEED — MEAL
New Braunfels, Texas
w
Barbecue
TIP-TOP
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Cadet-of-Week . . .
(Continued from page 1)
for many renowned roomers in the
past, he claims to store himself
there with huge reservoirs oi
sleep, working no doubt on the
sleep-well-and - you’ll - look - well
“Now It Can Be Told” stories
from the Pacific finally have re-
vealed to the St. Edward’s campus
the exact location where Fr. James
Norton, former popular SEU pro-
fessor, has been stationed the last
year.
The key to the mystery, accord-
ing to a letter received from the
Marine chaplain last week, is
Ulithi, an atom of an atoll, 350
miles west of Guam and 110 miles
east of Yap in the Western Caro-
line Islands. The hub of almost
all naval operations during the
preparations for Iwo' Jima and
Okinawa, the chain of islands was
kept a secret as far as news re-
leases were concerned until very
recently.
Japanese military leaders had
thought the islands useless and
abandoned them. The Marines,
however, having grabbed them
King favors basketball and base-
ball in sports. Having under-
studied at first base last spring,
he may blossom into a first string-
er this year. If poise and grace
are sufficient to insure success, we
can be certain our friend from San
Diego will come into his King-
dom.
roll and carted them down to be
developed.”
The next day Slessinger was
told by the Studer man, “These VP
are very good pictures. The only %
thing wrong is that none of them
turned out. Your camera must
have a leak in it.”
“That,” concludes Slessinger,
“about sums up my career as a
successful photophile."
Musicians Portraits
Grace New Exhibit
Artistic-fingered Father John
Gallagher, priest- musician who
hobbies in expert drawings, has
sketched six portraits of famous
composers to grace a new music
rack set up in the library this
week.
Replacing the Catholic Book
Week display, which was with-
drawn Friday, this exhibition
seeks to interest students in clas-
sical and liturgical harmonies, in
line with the drive to enlist more
Cadets in glee club and choir ac-
tivities.
"F,
■ I
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do. It was to Ulithi that
Franklin was towed when
nearly capsized off Japan.
Fr. Norton, in a letter to
Film Fun
“There was a set of directions
with the thing, and I followed
them exactly. The first picture I
took was one .of my sister. Then
I snapped a picture of our swim-
ming pool, followed by one of the
bird’s nest on our front porch.
When I got the pictures back, my
sister seemed to be floating around
in the swimming pool with a bird’s
nest on her head.”
When Slessinger got back to St.
Ed’s this fall he had lost his direc-
tions. Firgt thing off, therefore,
he went to town and bought a
photography magazine in the
hopes that it would explain how
to operate his Kodak.
Photo Fiddle-Faddle
“Under one illustration, I read,”
continued magic-handed Slessin-
ger, “that the perfect picture
should be taken with a 93:xb}
film in 100 sunshine with the pho-
toelastic shift at 987.34 and the
shadow-guage elevated to one
kilo-cycle about 7Q:ZO.
“After that slug of scientific
lingo,” went on Slessie, “I just
closed my eyes and hoped for the
best. I took all the pictures-on the
without cost, built an airstrip
there, finishing it in 18 days.
Turned into a vast service sta-
tion, Ulithi enabled entire fleets to
operate indefinitely at unpre-
cedented distances from their main
bases. Its anchorage can hold
nearly 1,000 ships, something
neither Guam or Pearl Harbor can
By Bill Bolanz
Ray Veselka pulled a sleeper on
a certain railroad company last
week Taking a little nap in
from Taylor, he siesta-ed himself
right through Austin and another
forty miles without anyone being
much the wiser. He enjoyed the
sweet dreams and the free ride,
but, of course, had a little diffi-
culty getting back from New
Braunfels in time for class after-
wards.
Carl Liebscher gets all turned
around, apparently, in that last
fond moment of leave-taking.
Several times now, after he’s
escorted his date home, he has
wound up way out in Enfield. On
one occasion he walked- 32 blocks
to find he was on the shores of
Lake Austin. The school is urged
to send out a radio beam on rec
days so Leeby can ride in on it
when the love-fog is especially
heavy.
George Sims and Glenn Satter-
field were going to the Halloween
dance all spruced up in a couple
of rented Tuxedos, that is, until
they called up and found out how
much they cost. Oh hum, isn’t
it beautiful weather! Balmy,
misty-eyed autumn! Season of
love and dreams!
When you see Captains Cautious
acting peculiar in the first corri-
dor, creeping Indian-style along
the walls, looking this way and
that, you know it’s because An-
derson is on the warpath again.
One notable has some souvenirs
of former battles consisting of a
broken broomstick and a bouncing
bottle of rubbing alcohol.
Au”.
By Glenn Satterfield
Interviewed on the subject
“How do you account for your
success as a cameraman?” last
week. Bill Slessinger had a great
deal to offer this CADET reporter.
“Resolved to learn the popular
art of photography,” quoth sly-
man Slessinger, “I procured a
Kodak this summer. It was one of
' those ‘simple’ kinds, with a lever
[ for this, and a button for that,
and turn a dial if the sun is up-
side down, or the moon, is shining
at noon.
Rooky Bookie
Bookie Henderson was planning
quite an outing in Dallas two F«
weeks before the Jesuit Hi Game.
It seems the following week-end’s
turn-of-events, however, somewhat
dampened the beauty of those
prospects. - .
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St. Edward's Cadet (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 5, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 14, 1945, newspaper, November 14, 1945; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518970/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting St. Edward’s University.