St. Edward's Cadet (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 15, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1946 Page: 4 of 4
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4
ST. EDWARD’S CADET
May 8, 1946
By Bill Bolanz
3
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23,
*'
d
PG gets along' in Spanish,
has
COMPLIMENTS
OF A
FRIEND
Compliments of
BUTLER BRICK CO.
race at the band picnic last
Austin, Texas
-Reininger
BECKER LUMBER CO.
COOK FUNERAL HOME
Austin, Texas
Austin Army and Navy Store
*
201 West 6th
%
PHONE 2-6846
1117 S. CONGRESS
NO DELAY CLEANERS
Mexican Food
Choice Steaks
Barbecue
w. o. WOODS
Jno. R. YOUNG
EDWIN A YOUNG
JNO. R. YOUNG & CO., Agents
400 Nueces
City
COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
920 Chronicle Building
PATE’S
4
HOUSTON, TEXAS
Phone 8-5400
615 Red River
FOOD STORE
COMPLIMENTS OF
1311 S. Congress
TIPS ENGINE WORKS
Phone 8-6421
Plans Completed
For Chic Picnic
In New Braunfels
1100 Colorado
Phone 4351
lug’
week-
UNCLE WALT’S
100% WHOLE WHEAT BREAD
UNCLE WALT’S BAKERY
STRUCTURAL STEEL,
MACHINE SHOP,
FOUNDRIES, TIPS
MOBILE POWER SAW
Quality Super
Seafood Market
1816 San Jacinto
Telephone 8-5737
WHITE PHARMACY
Ben W. White
6th and Congress
Dial 2-5451
N
Na
Member of Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
CONGRESS AT SIXTH
TIP-TOP CAFE
SANDWICH SHOP
Vera and Harold Schroeder, Owners
3202 So. Congress (San Antonio Highway Phone 2-7741
HOMES BUILT ON EASY TERMS
—Complete Line Building Material—
On Congress Avenue at the Bridge
PHONE 3548
7 1 a
ne
CLEANERS — ALTERATIONS
B. F. MEWIS
EAT GOOD CANDY
Distributed by
0. G. Hanseler
no hobbies except that he takes to
swimming like a shark, having
done distances up to five miles.
He also likes hunting, especially
in the Philippines where no game
laws restrict a person from such
fare as boar, deer, iguanas.
Right now he’s putting up with
an education, and, until his fili-
pino fates are better to him, is
singing his favorite song of “Yes
we have no ‘mangoes’ today.”
Hunters down prehistoric horse. That’s a skeleton there in the
hands of Lamar, Trochta, and Dahstrom.
to drink two
THE
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
to every one of
with that All-
American desire to win, laid his
money on the table and started
off. The best he could do, how-
ever, was eight bottles, which was
far from enough. He seemed to
have forgotten JL is Irish.
Carl Liebscher and Bill Deason
started to catch the bus from New
Braunfels, the other day, ten
minutes after it had left. In the
family car it took them just five
miles. We don’t know whether
to call them the Hilltop Speed-
kings or the Death-defying Hou-
dinis.
bottles of pop
Leahy’s. RR,
Frank McGehee returned to the
campus last week very downheart-
ed and disconsolate—from having
to tear himself away from a won-
derful morale booster wearing the
name of Ruth and also apparent-
ly on SEA senior ring.
Concave and convex mirrors in
physics are very interesting to
most everyone except Jaime May-
torena. Half asleep when Broth-
er Lucian came over to him with
a concave mirror, Maytorena
jumped off his seat in alarm. His
sleep-dimmed vision finally re-
cording what was in front of him,
he thought he was having night-
mares.
Bill Deason took a “header”
fully dressed into Lake Austin
during the holidays. He had an
embarrassing time getting back
through town to change clothes.
Slippin Up On Sleep
Henry Barrett, FrankMcGehee,
and Bill Nichols have changed
their minds about the desirability
. of being absent from reveille.
Having put in for passes recently,
they found next day that the little
certificates read, “Stay home and
catch up on your sleep.”
Dennis Mahoney spent the Eas-
ter vacation broadening his Texas
education by taking a trip with
Dueitt to Spring. He came back
talking about having eaten arma-
dillos on the half-shell.
Chuck Weber was trying to ease
J. S. Garcia’s pain resulting from
the recent auto accident by telling
how in his wreck his knee had not
only been fractured but broken in
four places. Now J. S. goes to
church to thank God he’s not
Weber. Hope there’s no double-
meaning intended.
Randy’s Rep Wrecked
Randy Reininger and Jack
Leahy decided to have a “chug a
X
y
Though born in Pensacola,
Gunn has adopted Manilla as his
home of preference. Having first
left the States in 1934 for Ha-
waii where he lived for five years,
he eventually tired of hula-hula
girls, going on to Manila and the
hubba-hubba girls.
Interned at Santo Tomas
As narrated before in these
pages, Gunn became so well
known during the Japanese, oc-
cupation that the Nip officials in-
vited him to stay at the Santo
Tomas Internment camp at its
own expense, if any. During that
time he saw 10 per cent of the
occupants starve to death—along
with other atrocities the telling of
which has gained him the repu-
tation of story teller 'de luxe
about the premises.
Gunn hopes to return to "Ma-
nilla after college. Since he’s
lived both in Florida and in Cali-
fornia and laughs at these resort
centers as compared to the Philip-
pines, the latter must really have
something—or someone!
Fillip of Philippines
P —
- -
life ' coe0.,.u
Wk w
Insurance Policy
Covers Accidents
Student insurance policies, new
on the campus this year, paid off
over the Easter holidays as Jose
Garcia and Henry King, involved
in an automobile accident, in San
Diego, suffered a fractured leg
and a broken collar bone respec-
tively.
Broad in scope and covering all
accidents including sports, wheth-
er sustained at school, at home,
or while traveling between school
and home, [the new insurance
plan, subscribed to by most of the
Cadets’ parents, has paid off
handsomely in several individual
cases this scholastic year.
The policy provides medical re-
imbursement for expenses arising
from accidents, including X-rays,
hospital bills, surgeons’ expenses
incurred as the result of an ac-
cident. Payments are made up
to $500 for each accident. The
policy rate per individual is $12
for the school year.
The school pays for those on
varsity squads during the time
they are engaged in athletics.
Philippinophil Finds Folly in Fame
Of California-Florida Attractions
By Bill Deason
Source-book on Japanese prisn-camps, the man with “a
past” right out of the most lurid pages of the war years, this
week’s Co-Cadet-of-the-Week, Paul Gunn, is the cosmopoli-
an of the campus, having traveled all over the East, the
Philippines, China, Japan, Australia.
CYO Shoo Fly Pies
InDrama Pan D o wdy
“Oh Susan,” no relation to her
Sioux City namesake, was pre-
sented April 24 and 25 by the
C.Y.O. of St. Mary’s Church, a
number of Hilltop Cadets partici-
pating in the play.
A comedy about a boy whose
parents . want him to marry
against his will, the play has its
plot solved when the boy falls in
love with the girl his parents had
picked for him.
Those in the cast included Dan-
ners Meredith, Joe Fischer, Janet
Dalton, Patsy Hughes, Mrs.
Weatherly, Pauline Paulissen,
Rose Parson, Patsy Connally,
Edith Parson, Phoebe Cunning-
ham, Chester Pittsford, and John
Lingo.
Exes Help Make
A-Bomb History
Two alumni of St. Edward’s are
currently involved in news ema-
nating from Washington. Ber-
nard A. Kmiecik, of Houston, re-
cently received a citation from
the Secretary of War, Henry L.
Stimson, for “participating in
work essential to the production
of the atomic bomb.”
Lieutenant Frank H. Comins,
at present with the USS Pollux,
will take part in the atomic bomb
action at Bikini.
■
12
gossssegggegF-gmeggeggc
H. DITTLINGER ROLLER MILLS CO.
“The Quality Millers”
FLOUR — FEED — MEAL
New Braunfels, Texas
/
A Ke A
TO®
Guild Determines
Who Will Qualify
For Scholarship
Women Guild members in their
meeting last Wednesday decided
the qualifications necessary for
winning their scholarship.
From a fund which will eventu-
ally be increased to pay for the
tuition and books of four Cadets
at St. Edward’s, they will allot
$150 next year to one student
from Austin.
The student will have been
chosen from among graduates of
down town schools after the first
six weeks exams.
Jesuit To Give Retreat
Rev. Harvey W, Rockwood,
S. J., of the Jesuit Mission Band
in New Orleans, will preach the
retreat for the priests and broth-
ers of St. Edward’s during June.
I -
.1:
-.ns
28
Two hundred tables with ac-
companying picnic facilities will
be reserved for the Cadets in the
Tulsa Oilers’ spring training park
a week from Sunday when the
student body journeys south for
a combination outing and base-
ball game with New Braunfels.
Arrangements having been made
with the town authorities before
Easter, many recreational oppor-
tunities will be open to the Ca-
dets. These will include swim-
ming, fishing’ boating, golf, and
tennis.
New Braunfels, famous for
some of the largest springs in the
United States, is one of the beau-
ty spots of this part of Texas.
Major Cassidy has arranged for
transportation. Mrs. Charles
Weber of the PTA is in charge of
the picnic menu.
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St. Edward's Cadet (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 15, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 8, 1946, newspaper, May 8, 1946; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1518980/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.