The Notre Dame Scholastic 753

Q'>>"|> •iiiiiniuiuiiii I iiiuiniiiii • iiiii •••iiiiiini •••iMiHiiiiiiiiinMiiniiuiiiniiiitiiintiQ COMMENT I The Notre Dame Scholastic \ Art McManmon in tights . . . Has­ kell Askew \\'restling Al Culver . . . \ Disce Quasi Semper Victurus Vive Quasi CrasMoriturus I i Founded 1S67 \ Carl Cronin giving his interpretation of The Sheik . . . (direct from the tents in Carroll dorm) . . . Joe Kurth EMIL L. TELFEL—EDITOK-IN-CHIEF in his latest terpsichorean creation Assistant Managing Editor Managing Editor Assistant Managing Editor NEIL C. HURLEY JOHN E. BERGAN . . . Johnny Lisicki giving a sermon JOHN A. KIENEB Associate Editors on the evils of chewing Bagpipe to­ EDWARD E. BRENNAN JAMES J. KEARNEY EDWARD R. BRENNAN bacco . . . Dinny O'Keefe doubling AUSTIN BOYLE JAMES CARMODY PAUL J. HALLINAN for Marie Dressier, in "Reducing." JOHN PICK WiLUAM W. CORR LLOYD TESKE These are but a few of the thoughts The Week Make-up Editor College Parade which come to us when we think of RICHARD J. O'DONNELL V. BEESLEY DANIEL C. WILLIAMS the approaching "Absurdities," given annually by the monogram men. Music and Drama Feature Editor Campus Clubs FRANK E. SEWARD JAMES K. COLUNS W. LESLIE RADDATZ Neius Staff WILLIAM C. KARL, News Editor The yearly entertainment provided WILLIAM F. FITZGERALD, Assistant News Editor by these men is always good for JOHN CONLEY ANTHONY R. SCHREINER LAWRENCE PRYBYLSKI many rounds of laughter, but this MYRON CRAWFORD F. GRANGER WEIL EDMUND STEPHAN RICHARD MOLIQUE WALTER JOHNSON JOSEPH DECNAN year we have been promised a show WILLIAM KNOX LAWRENCE DUNDA which will leave us with hiccoughs for at least two weeks. Art McMan­ Sports staff mon says it's going to be great, and ' HENRY B. ASMAN, Sports Editor we wouldn't tliink of doubting Ar­ CLEVE CAREY GEORGE BELTING T. EDWARD CAREY thur's word. Profsesor Frank Kelly JAMES E. MCFEELY, JR. JAMES KEARNS IRVING B. HALPER is doing the directing, so we have EDMUND MORIARTY HARRY BURCHELL further proof of the quality of the Business Staff show. JOHN R. BLANDA, Local Circulation Mgr. ANDREW MCGUAN, Foreign Circulation Mgr. FREDERICK BAUER RAYMOND J. NABER JOHN P. HESS J. ALBERT SMITH DANIEL E. BRENNAN JAMES H. RORKE, Advertising Manager From the time that this column JOHN F. STOECKLEY—GRADUATE MANAGER OF PUBUCATIONS fii'st voiced its opinion as to those MERLE BALDWIN, Publications Office Manager who were either forgetful or just plain dumb enough to smoke on the street cars while ladies were present, Vol. LXIV APRIL 24, 1931 No. 24 we have been reminded of the article, time and again. But the opinion I Frontispiece : 7-52 hasn't changed, not in the least. If I * The Week—Ricluird J. O'Donnell 7-54 a college man hasn't learned that it : Engineering Hall Announced—Walter Johnson 755 is inhuman to suffocate a lady during i Lawyers' Ball Held Tomght—William C. Blind 756 the short time he is on a street car, : Harper Is Athletic Director 1 759 he should be sent home to start all i Glances From the Magazines—Ediuard R. Brennan 760 over again. I Book Reviews—John Pick 761 I Father O'Donnell's Radio Address 762 i A Man You Know—Edivard E. Brennan 764 : Campus Clubs—Leslie Raddatz 766 Cigarette smoke—clouds of it—is \ Editor's Page 1 767 bad enough in a crowded car, but the I The Wink 768 meanies who light their pipes and i Trackmen Fall Before Badgers—Edivard Moriarty 769 try to outdo their companions who i Golfers Win Two More—r. Edivard Carey 769 are riding the Camels . . . the only I Bill Sullivan Expects to Take Up Law—James Keaims 770 man for whom we have less respect j Interhall' Sports ^" 777 is the prof who flunks a man on a : On Down the Line 780 69. Is that forceful enough?

THE SCHOLASTIC is published weekly at the University of Notre Dame, Manu­ scripts may be addressed to THE SCHOLASTIC, Publications OfEce. Main Bufldinsr. When your hair has turned to golden . . . and when Indiana stabi­ Entered as second-class matter at Notre Dame, Indiana. Acceptance for mailinz *t lizes her weather conditions . . . we'U special rate of postage. Section 1103, October 3, 1917. authorized June 25. 1918. all be happy. Until then we should always be ready to wish everyone a THE ADVERTISERS IN NOTRE DAME PUBLICATIONS DESERVE THE PATRONAGE or very "Merry Christmas." ALL NOTRB DAME MEN.

—W. V. B. E)•liiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilililiiiiiiiliiilliiiiiiiiliiili i ••••••••••••••••••••••"•••"••••••(••••••••••••••(••••••••("••••••••"""••"""•'•••"••••••"•Q 754 The Notre Dame Scholastic

Sophomore. The loss of the game was attributed to the WiIT H the Ball but two weeks away, seniors are fact that the regular Sorin team was still in bed at the practicing up on their letter-writing technique. The time the game started, and a set of unprepared substi­ problem of how to extract funds for the big weekend tutes had to take their place. Either the games will have from the parental pocket is one that must be confronted. to begin later in the day hereafter, or else Sorin will Therefore the outgoing mail in Sorin hall will be heavier have to relinquish all ideas of winning the championship. than it has been since the football season came to a'close. In the inter-club league, a strange method of alloting After four years of practice in the intricate art of obt positions on the teams is used. The president is the taining finances through correspondence, most seniors pitcher; the vice-president, the catcher; the secretary, have developed ability along this line. They usually pre­ shortstop, and so forth. With elections in the various pare in advance by gradually increasing the number of clubs in the immediate offing, the members would do well letters sent homeward, until that state of mind which is to consider the athletic capabilities of the candidates be­ known in business as "sales resistance" is completely fore voting for them. There would be no sense in elect­ banished. They emphasize the amount of work they are ing a president unless he had the ability to pitch nine doing, how necessary it is that they soon have a little hard innings of playground ball. recreation, how they are staying home o' nights, and the excellent grades they are going to get on the next bulle­ tin. A few subtle remarks are made about the approach of th6 Ball, the importance of the Ball, the fact that it kJTUDENTS who are now at the University, and espe­ is the last big social event of their college career, and cially those who will remain here next year, should con­ so forth. The whole plan is carefully worked out, and gratulate themselves upon being privileged to witness when the climax comes, and a check is requested, it's the climactic events in the evolution of the new Notre a hard-hearted parent who will not mortgage the old Dame. The announcement on Monday night of the dona­ homestead, if necessary, that his son may fulfill his duty tion made to the school by Mr. John F. Gushing of Chi­ to his class and his university by attending the Ball. cago, following as it did upon the news of Mr. Hurley's (Yes, gentlemen, the writer's father read? the SCHOLASTIC gift, and the beginning of the construction of two new every week.) residence halls, stirred the imagination of the entire student body to expectant ideas of the future appearance of the campus. Progress has been rapid at Notre Dame within the past few years, and the most obvious deficien­ A.PPARENTL, Y the boys in Morrissey hall are ardent cies in buildings and equipment are being consistently followers of this column. They at least carried out one filled. The University is gradually acquiring all the ac­ of the suggestions made here last week . . . the one per­ coutrement of modem education, and what is more taining to the utilizing of the lakes. The Gold Coasters praiseworthy, it is avoiding the evils of modern education. promoted a swimming meet on Tuesday night. It was a There is intensive work in improving the school, without one-man meet, and the only participant, a cold and shiv­ the -usual consequence of extension of courses, and en­ ering freshman, won the plaudits of a large group of in­ largement of enrollment. The next few years should terested, if not innocent, bystanders by the manner in witness not only splendid architectural development, but which he braved the freezing waters. Such courage had also continued maintenance of high academic standards. not been witnessed since the last time the Vigilance com­ mittee went into action. Incidentally, the once highly- feared committee was not responsible for this impromptu bathing party. All credit goes to those considerate gen­ B»ADI. N HALL is housing a newly-formed horticulturist tlemen of Morrissey and Howard who are determined to club. An aesthetic group that lives within those hallowed further the benefits of physical exercise among the res­ walls has become enamoured of the art of landscape idents of their side of the campus. They not only en­ gardening, and is working its initial experiment upon the dorse exercise—^they sometimes enforce it. lately -plowed plot in front of the hall. The purpose of the experiment is the determining of the effect of sowng seeds by moonlight. Now that the seeds have been planted, the gardeners have been eagerly awaiting the 1 HOUGH it may be an exaggeration to say that every­ results, watching daily from Badin porch for the first one at Notre Dame plays football, at some time or other indications of success. So absorbed is one youth that during his four years here, it is not stretching the truth he has been cutting classes for several days, intent upon much to say that few students have not participated in being present at the debut of the sun-flower he has been the playground ball games that started this week. With nurturing. Since the group which is conducting the ex­ an interhall league, an inter-club league, and a Chicago periment was rather large, and since each of its members club league, there are teams enough to permit even Albert had his own ideas as to how to go about it, it is doubt­ and Alex to form a battery and step out on the diamond. ful that there will be much unity in the resulting pattern. The season opened rather drastically for the Sorin hallers, The effect will probably resemble a painting by a drunken who bowed in ignominious defeat before the nine from modernist. The Notre Dame Scholastic 755 ENGINEERING HALL ANNOUNCED

John F. Gushing, '06, of Chicago, UNIVERSITY ALUMNI Donates $300,000 For Building OBSERVE UNIVERSE NOTRE DAME NIGHT Twenty-five Years As Engineer Have Shown Alumnus Needs MEETINGS WORLD-WIDE of University Student.

Father O'Donnell and Father Universal Notre Dame night, al­ John Cavanaugh Address ways a noteworthy occasion for both Club Gatherings. alumni and students, was made even more memorable last Monday eve­ Universal Notre Dame night was ning when, at the banquet of the observed last Monday night by Notre Notre Dame club of Chicago, the Rev­ Dame clubs throughout the world. erend Charles L. O'Donnell, C.S.C, The atmosphere of joy characteristic president of the University, an­ of former gatherings was somewhat nounced a gift of 1300,000 which mil subdued at this eighth annual affair, make possible the erection of the as it was the first oppox-tunity of the John F. Gushing Hall of Engineering. alumni as a group to pay a tribute to John F. Gushing, the donor, now Mr. Rockne. The gatherings, how- president of the Great Lakes Dredge evei", were not sombre, for as the and Dock company, Chicago, is a Reverend Charles L. O'Donnell, C.S.C, Notre Dame man. He was graduated president of the University, said in from the University in 1906, with a his address over radio station WGN degree from the Department of from the Chicago Notre Dame club Civil Engineering. Father O'Donnell JoHN F. GUSHING banquet at the Drake hotel, "he him­ stressed this fact as indicative of a self would not wish that that joy of growing tendency on the part of tive view of the professional prepara­ living, of Avhich he was so fine an Notre Dame men to contribute to the tion which the college gives and, check apostle and exemplar, should be needs of Catholic educational institu­ this against the requirements which clouded for us just because the joy tions. the profession makes. I have done which he brought into our lives was In his correspondence with the Uni­ this often enough in my own mind, so suddenly and so tragically stopped." versity in regard to this donation, Mr. in more or less informal way. It is Two items in Father O'Donnell's Gushing said: "As an engineering difficult to reduce those reflections to address were of particular interest to graduate of Notre Dame who has fol­ anything like a fixed formula, but a the alumni and students of the Uni­ lowed the profession of engineering, few things stand out pretty clearly. versity. After paying tribute to Mr. I am naturally interested in the Col­ "I conceive that an engineer, speak­ Rockne, Father O'Donnell announced lege of Engineering at my own school ing particularly but not exclusively of that Jesse Harper, former head foot­ and that from two points of view. my owm field of civil engineering, ball coach at Notre Dame, had been Even though a quarter of a century must be a man with a conscience in appointed as the new director of has passed since my undergraduate his profession. The gravest of all athletics. days there, I feel I still know the natural responsibilities are borne by Announcement of the §300,000 en­ spirit of the place, the atmosphere him. He will be responsible for hu­ dowment for the new engineering in which the boys live and study. I man safety and human lives. He building by Mr. John F. Gushing, G.E. think I know, too, the quality of the must know his materials and his prin­ '06, of Chicago, was made. In com­ men who compose the faculty and ciples of construction. He must menting, the speaker said: "I make appreciate the spirit that animates respect the one and be faithful to the this announcement with the more them. In other words I can still see other . . ." satisfaction as Mr. Cushing's bene­ Notre Dame from the inside, so to In continuing his letter Mr. Gush­ faction is the largest single gift the speak. ing remarks on the serious aspect of University has received and it is the "On the other hand, twenty-five the responsibility of the engineering first important foundation made at years of engineering work away from profession, at the same time pointing Notre Dame by a. Notre Dame alum­ nus. There can be only one such first there has given me the other side of out the unlimited possibilities that gift, and I am sure that Notre Dame the picture. I have learned engineer­ exist for a young man contemplating men everywhere vn.\\ join with me in ing from experience, I know what the a life work in some field of engineer­ congratulating Mr. Gushing upon his graduate in engineering is facing ing. "There are still great oppor­ unique distinction." when he leaves school. Knowing both tunities for those prepared to seize the difficulties and the opportunities them. The field of service, indeed, is The Notre Dame club of the St. (Continued on Page 778) on the outside, I can take an objec- (Continued on Page 778) 756 The Notre Dame Scholasti

il^^^ ffii-yif.s.jal LAWYERS' BALL m£^:iUKaV.^'^^^ H k^i^^^^^UL HELD TONIGHT W^^^ » » » » » » » » » » » ^ ^^^^^^ ^ . •ii^-:^^^ '1 ^^^^.&^r^riili. ' ^^^^^ •I^ -t^ - •^SJ^ 8^^'C ' ^fej^^j^jBjit^ "-^^^ tions this year will be in the form of S*£r- ^s-'. •-•'.• - S^as^b' "•*"•* •'S^y^^^g"-£^^^KJM^ ^ a warrant for arrest instead of a p-••"•.'.. .^ ^^^BMlk ^•^^^'•^^^^ m.-J. ii:^ ^^^^^^^^^Pj:* ^^^i^^^^SK subpoena as in previous years. They m-V •''-•'.'• ~ ^^^^W'^^^m' S':'^ i :7A pv.-. ''"'•''^^"^^^' have been arranged by Chairman James W. Murray and contain several iii amusing features. Issued from the "State of Eomance, County of Amar­ anth," they "summon, rouse, notify, pursue, convoke, warn, and otherwise invite" the fair lady to whom it is sent "to be prepared to waltz, fox­ MR. JOSEPH P. GUADXOLA trot, double-shuffle, camel hop, poUy- Glenwood Springs, Colo. wog, or otherwise disport the intrica­ General Chairman cies of the dance premiere," and to "be gi-aced, adorned, ornamented, gar­ The Lawyers' ball at the Palais mented, or othei*\vise attired in decol- Eoyale ballroom tonight marks the lette habiliments of formal decree." beginning of the usual brilliant post- The programs this year will be Lenten social season at Notre Dame. especially elaborate. Chosen by Chair­ Chairman Joseph P. Guadnola and his man Eobert E. Duffy, they are of assistant committeemen report that white leather with a gold lawyer's no eifort nor expense has been spared seal in one corner and the coat-of- to make this dance a perfect one for arms of the University in the other the lawyers and their guests. The MISS CHARLOTTE PAULS and are bound by a blue and gold members of the various committees Long Beach, California cord. Adding further to the novelty have worked hard and if the success of the. occasion, the dances will be Guest of Mr. Guadnola of the ball is to be measured by their listed by legal terms instead of num- efforts it will certainly exceed every expectation, according to Guadnola. bers. The progi-am will also contain the song written especially for the occasion, a list of the patrons and Garrigan's Orchestra to Play SONG patronesses. Law club officers, chair­ Jimmy Garrigan and his orchestra "JUST YOU, ONLY YOU" men and the members of the various have been secured to furnish the music committees. and the entertainment for the dance. Words and music by Guests of Honor Garrigan is not only well known to EDWARD SIASSA the denizens of Chicago's bright spots, Miss Charlotte Pauls of Long having played at the Via Lago Cafe Chorus: Beach, Calif., as the guest of Chair­ for the past two years, but will also man Guadnola, will be the queen of If I ivere as true I wmddn't feel be remembered by radio fans as hav­ the ball. Joseph E. Yoch, president ing broadcast over national chain blue of the Law club, will entertain as hook-ups for the past two years. Al­ For never a day would I be guest of honor Miss Albertine Gagnier though this is the first local appear­ away. of Churubusco, New York. ance of Garrigan, he leaves notliing to Your tears have told be desired. He has played at num­ That I was too bold La%\'yers and their guests will dance erous affairs of other "universities and Arid now tliat it's over I've lost to the strains of "Just You, Only has been well received. In addition to you, just you. You," written especially for the his regular orchestra he has promised Your picture I'll keep Lawyers' ball by Edward Massa, a to bi-ing TOth Mm his original sing­ And rays tvill leap freshman in the College of Law. The ing trio and other unusual arrange­ And sparkle from out of your song has been featured for the past ments which have made him and his eyes. week at the Colfax theatre and has oi'chestra favorites everywhere. Which know our dreams are been well received by the public. A faded, it seems, special arrangement of it has been Invitations, Program Original In thoughts of you. promised by Jimmy Garrigan. As another feature to make this Just you, only you. In accordance with the usual custom La\\'yers' ball distinctive, the invita- the lawyers have invited as their The N otre D a m e Scholast 1 C 757 JIM GARRIGAN'S BAND TO PLAY

« « « « « « « « « « «

suspended from the ceiling. Mahoney and his committemen are to be com­ mended for their excellent work in decorating the ballroom. Patrons and Committees The patrons and patronesses for the La\\'yei-s' ball will be Colonel William J. Hoynes; Dean and Mrs. Thomas F. Konop; Judge and Mrs. William M. Cain; Judge and Mrs. Orlo R. Deahl; MR. JOSEPH R. YOCH Professor and Mrs. Homer Q. Earl; Professor and Mrs. Aaron H. Hugue- St. Louis, Missouri nard; Professor Clarence E. Manion; Pres. of Notre Dame Laic Club Professor and Mrs. Elton E. Richter; Professor and Mrs. William D. Rolli- Bitter, Charles J. Kovacs, George W. son; and Professor John B. Whitman. Vander Venet, John D. Voss, Robert Several informal parties will be M. Ward. held in South Bend over the week­ MUSIC—Kenneth J. Konop, chair­ end. Resei-vations in the various man; Vernon J. Freed, Anthony W. restaurants of the city promise an Kegowicz, Walter F. Kelley, Stanley interesting time for the guests. T. Nowotarski, Wilton J. Shennan, MISS ALBERTINE GAGNIER Many graduates of the College of Harry F. Walsh. Law of the past few years have sig­ Churubusco, New York nified their intention of being present. RECEPTION—^William B. Jones, chair­ Guest of Mr. Yoch Residents of South Bend and sur­ man; John E.. Chevigny, Clarence J. rounding towns vriU make a typical Donovan, Edward J. , Dennis J. O'Keefe, Manfred H. Vezie, Joseph guests: Emil L. Telfel, editor-in-chief lawyers' reunion of this affair. L. Wetli. of the SCHOLASTIC; Joseph L. Wetli, Committees for the dance: associate editor of the Notre Dame Joseph P. Guadnola, general chair­ PROGRAMS—Robert E. Duffy, chair­ Laivyer; William Lee O'Malley, asso­ man. man; Francis J. Downs, Kenneth J. ciate editor of the Notre Davie Laiv­ Durbin, Emmett D. Ferguson, Arthur TICKETS—^Robert J. Kuhn, chair­ yer; John E. Bergan, editor of the P. Hoctel, Alvin G. Kolski, Fred W. man; Walter R. Bernard, John A. Santa Maria; John E. Dempsey, edi- Lensing. fcor-in-chief of the Juggler; Walter L. Terre, editor-in-chief of the Catalyzer; ARRAIV'GEIMENTS—Norman J. Hart- Paul J. Hallinan, editor-in-chief of the WEEK-END PEOGRAM zer, chaii-man; Thomas W. Callahan, Dome; Louis A. Bi'ennan, editor of Donald D. Coleman, Sylvester J. Cot­ Scrip; Timothy Benitz, chairman of ter, Alan M. Foley, John J. McMur- the S. A. C; Edward B. Madden, Friday, April 24— ray, Benedict L. McShane. chairman of the Blue Circle; Robert 3:30 p. m.. Baseball PUBLICITY—Austin J. Barlow, chair­ J. Ruppe, chairman of the S. A. C. game, Hillsdale vs. man; John W. Carberry, Joseph R. dance committee; John F. Saunders, Notre Dame, Cartier Donlan, Joseph L Glass, Richard V. president of the senior class; Vincent Field. Konkowski, Edward G. McClallen, P. Cavanaugh, president of the junior 9:00 p. m.. Lawyers' Joseph A. Moran. class; and Edward W. Dailey, presi­ Ball, Palais Royale dent of the sophomore class. Ballroom. DECORATIONS—John M. Mahoney, chairman; Earl L. Hessmer, James E. Keating, Earl J. O'Brien, Joseph V. The decorations for the Lawyers' Saturday, April 25— Stodola, John R. Sullivan, John H. Ball this year are original and dis­ Informal Parties, South Tuberty. tinctive, according to chairman John Bend. M. Mahoney. The lounges are in the INAQTATIONS—James W. Murray, form of jury boxes, and at one end Sunday, April 26— chairman; Francis G. Feddei*, Oliver of the ballroom is placed a huge blue 9:00 a. m.. Mass, Sacred F. Field, Garchin R. Friedman, Wil­ and gold monogram. Another novel Heart Church. liam J. Judge, William L. O'Malley, attraction is the huge Lawyers' seal Henry R. Pratt. 758 The Notre Dame Scholastic

SENIOR CLASS HONOR AWARDS COMING EVENTS MADE BY FACULTY COMMITTEE FRIDAY, April 24—SCHOLASTIC staff meetings, editorial, 6:30 p. m., Pub­ Baker, Carey, and O'Malley Made Valedictorian, lications office; news and sports staff, 7:00 p. m., 222 Main building. Poet, and Orator, Respectively —Lawyers' baU, 9:00 p. m., Palais Royale ballroom.

SATURDAY, April 25--Track, Drake ^^^^•HHB Relays, Des Moines, Iowa.—Movies, Richard "Remote Control," 6:40 and 8:15 p. Baker, V^Wt^ m., Washington hall. class ^^B / valedictorian rv-.B-ij*^ ;* .il^t^ii^^ SUNDAY, April 26—Masses, 6:00, i•^•:'ifi*^ 7:00, 8:00, and 9:00 a. m.. Sacred •,yy:hT ^^ •£|\'^?{^'^^Mrs^ ^ .-.•*.M:» Heart church. M ••V.--,>3i MONDAY, April 27—Baseball, Iowa William k^^^H ^^^^^ '^^^M at Notre Dame, 3:30 p. m., Cartier Lee l-^^iifl field.—Italian club meeting, 6:30 p. O'Malley, m., Room 2, Main building; French class club meeting, 6:30 p. m., Room 3, m-ator ^^^^^^^ik^^^^l Main building.—Knights of Colum­ bus meeting,. 7:45 p. m., Council rooms.—Off-Campus S. A. C. repre­ sentative nominations, 12:30 p. m. According to a recent announce­ Charles Carey, C.S.C, Kokomo, In­ TUESDAY, April 28—Senior class diana, of Moreau seminary, and a ment made by a faculty committee officers' primaries, 12:30 p. m.. composed of the Reverend James senior in the College of Arts and Gymnasium.—Spanish club meeting, McDonald, C. S. C, the Reverend Letters, has been named class poet. 7:00 p. m.. Science hall.—Metro­ Francis J. Boland, C.S.C, and pro­ He has been a frequent contributor politan club meeting, 6:30 p. m., old Law building. — Concert orchestra fessors Paul Fenlon and- Charles to ScHp, Notre Dame's literary me­ rehearsal, 3:30 p. m., Music hall.— dium. Among his works, his poem Phillips, all of the College of Arts Classical association meeting, 7:00 and Letters, the valedictorian, the "Northland," has become particularly p. m., Classical room. Law building. class poet, and the class orator for well known. Mr. Carey is a past as­ the 1931 commencement exercises sociate editor of the Moravian, Mo­ WEDNESDAY, April 29—Senior S. A. C. representatives nominations, have been selected. The awards were reau Seminary's literary publication. 12:30 p. m.; A.B., Room 3, Main He, too, has majored in philosophy. not based entirely on the scholastic building; Science, Room 1, Main records of the individual, although William Lee O'Malley, who will be building; Engineering, Room 5, the class averages were large factors graduated from the Law school, is Main building; Law, Law building; in the final determinations. The gen­ the class orator. He has had con­ Commerce, Room 2, Main building. siderable success in public speaking, —Scribblers' meeting, 8:00 p. m., eral capability of the student to Howard hall "rec". — Wranglers' serve in the capacity to which he was having at one time been a member meeting, 6:30 p. m.. Law building. delegated was the point most con­ of the varsity debating team, and at —Baseball, Northwestern at Evan- sidered. present a member of the Wranglers. ston. Moreover, he is a past wimier of the To Richard Baker of Lima, Ohio, THURSDAY, April 30—Junior class is given the honor of delivering the Mclnerny award, a prize donated each nominations, 12:30 p. m., Gymna­ valedictory address for the class of year to the best orator in the Law sium.—Spectators' meeting, 6:30 p. 1931. Enrolled in the College of Arts school. At present he is lecturer in m., Howard hall "rec".—Publica­ tions banquet (announcement of and Letters, and majoring in philoso­ the Notre Dame council of the Knights of Columbus, and is an as­ editors for next year), 6:30 p. m., phy, he has made a phenomenal scho­ faculty dining hall. lastic record. He received the first sociate editor of the Lawyer. He re­ ceived his high school training at St. two years of his prep school training FRIDAY, May 1—First Friday, Mass, Ignatius academy in Chicago. 6:20 a. m.. Sacred Heart church.— at St. Rose High school in Lima, but Last day for handing in graduation was graduated from Cathedral Latin Other class awards will not be theses and prize essays. — Golf High school of Cleveland. He is at known until commencement week, as match, Loyola at Loyola.—Sopho­ present an active member in the Blue the final examinations often play an more class nominations, 12:30 p. m., gymnasium. Circle and in the Cleveland club. important part in determining them. The Notre Dame Scholastic 759 HARPER IS A THLETIC DIRECTOR

Former Notre Dame Coach Will Head FR. O'DONNELL PRESENTS KEYS TO SCIENTISTS; Administration of Athletic Department PAPERA GIVES TALK startled the football world by the in­ vention and the practical use of the The Reverend Charles L. O'Donnell, Returns From Farm in Kansas forward pass. C.S.C, president of the Universityy, to Take Reins Left Vacant The 1914 team lost two games, to presented the key of the Academy of by Death of Rockne. Yale and to the Army. In 1915 Science to thirteen members of the Harper's team won six of the seven organization at a special meeting games, losing to Nebraska by a single held on Wednesday evening in Sci­ Jesse C. Harper of Kansas City, touchdown. The next year the team ence hall. In addressing the members will be the new director of athletics, won eight games, but was stopped by and guests following the presenta­ according to an announcement made the Army. The 1917 team was cheated tion. Father O'Donnell stressed the this week by the Reverend Charles L. of a perfect season by Nebroska, who importance of what he termed "in­ O'Donnell, C.S.C, president of the won by a single point. tellectual thoroughness and honesty." University. Harper will take up his In a confirmation statement, Har­ "Get the facts. Then follow the evi­ new position on May 1. Although he per expresses his pleasure for the op­ dence to the goal to which it lead had been under consideration for sev­ portunity to resume his old position you. If the evidence is true, then eral weeks. Harper officially accepted which he relinquished to his famous the goal is the ultimate goal," he the position last Tuesday. pupil, Ivnute Rockne. He says that said. Under the new arrangement, also he is "very much pleased, after being A paper was read by John Papera, announced by Father O'Donnell, away so long, to be asked to come a member of the executive commit­ Harper will have control of all ath­ back again." He said that it was Ms tee of the academy. Papera chose as letics. He will be assisted by "Hunk" intention to continue the athletic poli­ his subject, "Edward Lee Greene, Anderson, senior football coach, Jack cies now pursued here. His Kansas Botanist." Mr. Greene received his C h e V i g n y, junior football coach, ranch is efficiently managed, and will early training in botany while ser\"- George Keogan, basketball and base­ not suffer by his absence, he said. ing in the Civil war, and later joined ball coach, and John Nicholson, track the Episcopal ministry. In 1895 he coach. O'MALLEY, PICK ELECTED received the degree of doctor of laws Harper is a graduate of the Uni­ BY CLASSICAL CLUB from the University of Notre Dame versity of Cliicago, class of '06. He shortly after he had joined the fac­ learned football under A. A. Stagg At the regular April meeting of ulty of the University. He died in during his four years as an under­ the Classical Association on Tuesday, 1915, leaving an extensive botanical graduate. In 1913 he came to Notre Francis F. O'Malley was elected pres­ library and herbarium to the school. Dame as director of athletics and ident, and John Pick, secretary. Fol­ The Reverend Julius Nieuwland, C.S. football coach, and in 1914 he made lowing the election O'Malley read C, world-famous botanist and chem­ Knute Rocloie his assistant, and a paper on "Forms of Literature in ist and member of the University fac­ placed him in charge of the track Greece and Rome," a synthetic dis­ ulty at the present time, was a stu­ team. In 1917 Harper resigned, and cussion of the literary types of classic dent and co-worker of Mr. Greene. Rockne was made head football coach antiquity, and their influence upon on Harper's recommendation. It was the forms of our English literature. Professor Caparo Speaks during the period from 1914 to 1917 At the next meeting on Tuesday, The Spanish club held its last meet­ that Harper and Rockne worked out April 28, John Pick will read a ing last Tuesday, April 22.iMr. Mar­ the shift which is now famous as an paper titled "Paul Elmore More, and tinez announced that all plans for the integral part of the Notre Dame sys­ Irving Babbitt" and James T. .Meehan banquet had been taken care of, and tem. will present a detailed study of St. that he expected all members to at­ Harper made a remarkable record Thomas Aquinas as scholar and tend. saint. while in charge here from 1913 to The principal speaker of the eve­ 1917, inclusive. In his five year pe­ ning was Professor Caparo, of the riod his teams played 39 games and Class Primaries Monday electrical engineering department. He won 33 of them, with one resulting in The annual nominations for class talked about South America, although a tie. In his first year here, in 1913, officers will begin on Monday, April he said that he had not been there for he turned out an undefeated' team, 27, according to an announcement twenty-two years; he recalled the winning all seven games on the made today by Timothy Benitz, pres­ most interesting things that exist in schedule. This was the team that in­ ident of the Student Activities coun­ Peru, his birthplace. augurated the long series with the cil. The present secretary and treasurer Army. Rockne, as captain and star Each class has several men running of the club gave a few words of fare­ end on this team, and Dorais, as for president. Candidates from each well. quarterback, were mainly responsible class for the S.A.C. are also being Mr. Martinez closed the session by for the terrific 35 to 13 beating that voted upon at this time. The final thanking the members for the co­ was given the Army. This team also elections will be held at a later date. operation on the success of the club. 760 The Notre Dame Scholastic

"DOME" SATIRE SECTION OF THIRTY PAGES IS Glances at the Magazines FINISHED BY BOYLE The Satire section of the Dome is now complete, and numbers about Harpers Magazine for April con­ tation and orchestration, of which he thirty pages. Austin Boyle, satire tains two sonnets by Edna St. Vincent had only an instinctive knowledge. editor, and his staff of able workei-s, Blillay which are included in her new The "Concerto in F" was completed Leslie Raddatz, Donald Sullivan, and volume of verse, Fatal hitervieiv, to and performed in Carnegie hall by the Charles Hanna, have burlesqued be published in the near future. New York Philhannonic Symphony practically the entire campus in this orchestra under the baton of Dam­ The feature article in Harpers, year's fun feature of the aimual pub- rosch. A great many people have "Bank Failures: The Problem and the licaticn. Two of the articles which never heard this work and to many it Remedy," is a frank and lengthy are sure to be received with a great is inconceivable that a graduate of Tin treatment of the subject, written from deal of favor are "The National Pan Alley could write such absolute the depositoi-'s point of view by J. M. Chumps" and "The RoUo Boys at music . Later he composed piano pre­ Daiger, who has had much experience Notre Dame." These two laugh pro­ ludes and an operetta. He has even in bank organization and investment ducers are expected by the publishers taken into his hand the conductor's problems. Other interesting articles to be instantaneous hits. are "Diderot," by Harold J. Laski, baton. Gershwin, whose special idiom Those who have seen the copy and and "In Defense of Snobbery," by is jazz, is, however, ultimately inter­ the specially posed pictures, which are Margaret Culkin Banning. The short ested in all music, and he would drop well taken care of by Austin Boyle stories are by Liam O'Flaherty, the jazz in a minute if he could not find and his cohorts, deem it "the most Irish novelist and stoiy Avriter, in it sufficient modes of expression. sparkling comedy on the campus this Charles Caldwell Dobie, and Lord He is not yet thirty-three years old, year." It is expected to far surpass Junsany. To the Lion's Mouth de­ and his ambition is to write an opera the now famous "Elastic" and "Din­ partment Elmer Davis and Philip of Amei'ica, of the melting pot. ing Hall" burlesque which appeared Curtis contribute the humorous short in the 1930 edition. essays, "On Lying Fallow," and "Amos 'n Andy 'n Art." Of the tendencies of some modern biographers, the Ave Maria remarks: New Library Books "In times past biographers sought for More than twenty new books have The April issue of the Ladies' Home 'subjects,' whereas today they very been added to the University library Journal is attractive as always. John often hunt for 'victims.' Those who during the past two weeks. The fol­ Galsworthy's "Maid In Waiting" is achieve greatness used to fear death lowing are the titles and authors: continued, a new mystery novel by because of judgement and the world Harold Macgrath begins, and there is to come. In this generation they are BIBLIOGRAPHY: Collecting American an abundance of shoi'ter fiction by confronted with a new terroi'. They First Editions by Richard Curie. Dag\'ar, F. Bi-itten Austin, and others. fear death, because in the world they HISTORY: Coronado's Childo'en by James Frank Dobie. One of the most interesting features have left biographers that have be­ EDUCATION: Principles of Guidance in the Jouinial is the series of articles come detectives and criminal law­ by Arthur Julius Jones. by Dr. Isaac Goldberg on the career yers." LITERATURE: Tlie Man WIio Made of George Gershwin. This series, en­ Good by Hilaire Belloc; Selected Ar­ titled "Music by Gersh^\^n," is con­ The latest issue of Scnp is, per­ ticles on Censorship of the Theatre cluded in the cui-rent issue. Some of haps, the best that has ever been and Moving Pictures by Lamar Taney the high spots of that career as point­ edited. Mr. Louis Brennan has had Beman; Collected Poems by Robert ed out by Dr. Goldberg, may be noted. his editorship commended by no less Frost; The History of the English Gersh%vin wrote his celebrated "Rhap­ an authority than Mr. E. J. O'Brien, Novel by Ernest Albert Baker; Jeanne sody in Blue" in three weeks' time. who recently in a letter to the editor, d'Arc by Percy Mackaye; Five Mas­ The oiDening movement of the piece praised the high literary quality of ters by Joseph Wood Krutch. came to him while listening to the Scnp. Mrl O'Brien is an acknowl­ noises of a train in which he was rid­ SOCIAL SCIENCES: Ame^-ica's Story edged critic of the literary maga­ ing; the middle theme occurred to him as Told in Postage Sta/tnps by Edward zines, and his annual collection of at a party. The occasion for the com­ Monington Allen. position was an invitation from Paul short stories is the result of constant FINE ARTS: Art in America by Su- Whiteman for Gershwin to contribute and careful examination of every qanne LaFollette; The Spirit of Amer­ something to a program given in New source of the short story. ica by Nathaniel Currier. York on February 12, 1924. Com­ The stories by Joseph McCabe and PHILOSOPHY: TJie Contingency of positions by Victor Herbert were also George Spalding, the play by Frank the Laws of Nature by Emile Bou- featured. Walter Damrosch was so Seward, and the study of Max­ troux. impressed by the "Rhapsody" that he well Anderson's contemporary drama, RELIGION: Dramatic Stories of tJie immediately requested the young com­ "Elizabeth, the Queen" by Ronald Bible by Thomas David Williams; poser to write a concerto based upon Zudeck are outstanding in this quar­ The Things That Are Not Caesar's jazz motives. With no idea at all as ter's Sc^ip. The poetry and other by Jacques Maritain. to what a concerto was, Gershwin con­ features are unusually good. Father BANKING: Selected Articles on tracted to do the job, but first had to Ward's essay on "Humanism" is Chain, Group and Branch Banking by learn the fundamentals of instrumen­ splendidly done. Virgil Willit. ;^sa!eBiBiiMn^!sg»aB^8Bwswi!fiSffl)Heaai8a^^

The Notre Dame Scholastic 761

NORTHWESTERN DEFEATS N. D. NEGATIVE TEAM IN GOOD DEBATE Book Reviews Professor J. H. McBurney, critic- judge, awarded Northwestern uni­ Grand Hotel. By Vicki Baum. Dou- •Jonathan Genti-y. By Mark Van versity a decision over Notre Dame in bleday, Doran. $2.50. Doren. Boni. §2.00. the discussion of the pros and cons of Grand Hotel takes its readers It was a lost love which, in 1800, unemployment insurance last Friday through the revolving doors of a sent Jonathan Gentry across the At­ evening in Washington hall. The Berlin hotel and opens to them the lantic from England to forgetfulness University, represented by William lives and characters of half a dozen and peace among the hills of Amer­ Kirby, Charles Hanna and Timothy people who are guests there: Otto ica, down the broad and yellow Benitz, defended the negative side of Kringelein, a middle aged clerk from stream of the Ohio to fertile acres the question. It would seem that the provinces, who has been told by in Illinois. With this long trek be­ Northwestern was out to avenge their his physician that he has only a few gins Mark Van Doren's newest and defeat in a different sort of activity weeks more to live and who resolves certainly his most ambitious poetic last fall, for the debate was one of to spend his savings in a riotous fling effort, a lengthy narrative poem built the most interesting, and most hotly at life; Dr. OttemsMag, once a on epic lines, the story of Jonathan contested heard in Washington hall brilliant sui-geon, whose ennui has Gentry and his progeny through sev­ this year. brought him to deep and bitter depths eral generations, the story of his re­ Issues resulted over the ability of of boredom; Grusinskaya, an aging birth in a new land and the story of economists to forecast future condi­ star of the ballet, whose happiness how, more than a century after the tions of unemployment and the suc­ hangs precariouly by the thin trickle founding of his line in America, cess or failure of the plan in Europe of adulation which is still hers; the inevitable disintegration sets in, and certain industries in America. Gaigem, a young and handsome and awaiting a new rebirth of the Gentry The financial soundness of the affirma­ charming crook, a member of the old blood. Let it be stated here, if it is tive's plan was demonstrated by and impoverished nobility; Fraulein not already apparent, that the his­ means of a rather indistinct chart, Flamm, a young and engaging beau­ tory of the Gentry fortunes, of course, which received its share of attention ty; General Director Preysing, a epitomizes the gi'owth and the expan­ from the Notre Dame team. wealthy and no longer youthful in­ sion of America, from its humble This is the third defeat suffered by dustrial executive of the new Ger­ beginnings in the hands of sturdy Father Boland's teams this season. many. pioneers to its urbanization today. Two more debates remain, a dual dis­ The lives of these men and women Mr. Van Doren's poem falls into cussion with Illinois, both negative three distinct divisions. The first, and affirm"ative teams debating. at cross currents with each other constitute a tale of absorbing inter­ entitled, "Ohio River," describes Jon­ est, of tense drama and vivid colors. athan Gentry's coming to the new KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Swift, vigorous characterizations land. OFFER SCHOLARSHIPS make Kringlein, Grusinskaya, Gaig­ From the standpoint of sheer nar­ em, and the rest of them entities in rative the Civil War section of Jona­ Scholarships for the eighth con­ the reader's consciousness. They be­ than Gentry is the most successful, secutive year have been awarded by come real people, whose lives are and in it may be found some of the the Supreme Council of the Knights made by the author to epitomize the finest verse that Mr. Van Doren has of Columbus for college graduates de­ fleeting and tragic uncertainty of written. siring to follow the course in boy human happiness and existence. The final division, much longer than guidance. Gi'and Hotel is probably best de­ the other two, entitled, "Foreclosure," The scholarships are for one year scribed as a melodrama with philo­ deals with Gentrys who bear little and are open to graduates of recog­ sophical undertones. That is what it kinship to the original Jonathan nized colleges. They include room, is, but its melodrama is not the sort Gentry, except that the Gentry cycle board, and tuition for one year of that palls upon the reader. Rather, has been completed and a new Jona­ graduate study in boy guidance at it is authentically of the stuff of life, than Gentry, of a changed and chang­ Notre Dame. this melodrama, and Vicki Baum has ing land, meets with the. infidelity written a curiously moving and pow­ which had driven the original Jona­ Notre Dame Popular erful novel about it. than to these shores. In a list compiled by the state de­ Jonathan Gentry is Pulitzer prize partment of Ohio, Notre Dame is in­ material made to order. But that is cluded as one of the fifty most popu­ Runt. By Joe Anderson. McDade. not to say that Mark Van Doren has lar colleges and universities in the $1.00. deliberately set out in his new book country. The popularity was judged Of this book 0. 0. Mclntyre recent­ to capture the award. He is of according to the institutions in which ly said, "Today I read the rowdy and pioneer Illinois ancestry. The mo­ a comprehensive number of high inclement exploits of a country tive and theme of his poem is of his school graduates have enrolled in the mongrel dog named 'Runt' — a big blood, and in his career as poet and last five years. The department is bear hug for whoever sent it—and I critic the long narrative verse has gathering information about these not only rolled on the floor in wild always been a major interest. He fifty colleges with the purpose of guffawing, but burst out afresh has built a poem of fine craftsman­ publishing a series of guidance man­ every little while in a sudden cackle." ship—one which is frequently of uals to aid the prospective college This, indeed, should be- a sufficient great beauty and which is sometimes student. recommendation. marked by power. 762 The Notre Dame Scholastic ra1iiiiiitiittiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii*ii>iiii*i(ii>iiitii*ii*>iiiii***iiii>*t>i>ii>iiiiiiiiiiit*iiii>*iiii>(>iiii<<(iiii*<*ittniiiiiiiiittiiiiitiliiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiii Address by the Reverend Charles L. O'Donnell, C. S. C i Broadcast From WGN, Chicago, on Universal Notre Dame Night |

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Mr. Toastmaster, Guests of Honor, announcement, now made for the first Dame by a Notre Dame Alumnus. Members of the Notre Dame Club of time, that his old friend and coach, There can be only one such first gift, Chicago, Ladies and Gentlemen of Jesse Harper, has been engaged as and I am sure that Notre Dame men everywhere will join with me in con­ the Radio Audience. Athletic Director at Notre Dame. Notre Dame is approaching the gratulating Mr. Gushing upon his I begin with a word of sincere close of its 89th scholastic year, grad­ unique distinction. In this connec­ thanks to WGN, the Tribune Station uating a class of some 450 seniors, tion, it should be recalled that last on the Drake Hotel, for its very great coming up from its five colleges of year aimouncement was made that a courtesy in tendering us this interval Arts and Letters, Enginering, Law, substantial endowment for the Col­ of time in our celebration of Univer­ Commerce and Science. Its enroll­ lege of Law was provided for in the sal Notre Dame Night. I wish to ment, representing several foreign will of the late William P. Breen, take this occasion, too, to express our countries, including the Orient, and '77, of Fort Wayne, Indiana. Thus appreciation to Mr. Quin Ryan, per­ every State in the Union except one, in one- year's time, the Colleges of sonally, for the extraordinarily splen­ reached a total of 3200, in spite of Law, Commerce and Engineering did manner in which he accomplished the fact that serious efforts were have received munificent benefactions. his part in the broadcast of recent made to hold registration to a total If we record this as an event of religious serv'ices at Notre Dame of 3000, and some few hundreds of major importance and if our satis­ which the whole nation, it seems, at­ applicants were denied admission. faction seem naive to some of our tended in the spirit of mourners. I Next year 3000 will be the absolute contemporaries in the field of educa­ refer, of course, to that sad happen­ maximum admitted. Facilities for tion, I might point out that "relativ­ ing which must give a solemn tone accommodating students on the cam­ ity" plays a part in calculations other to the observance this year of Uni­ pus next year will be increased by the than those associated with the name versal Notre Dame night. Wherever addition of two new residence halls of Einstein. Harvard's endowment is Notre Dame men are gathered to­ vnth. a total capacity of 482 boys. a hundred and twelve million dollars, gether, there will be a reverent bow­ One of these structures will be known I believe. (These figures may be ing of heads at the mention of the as Alumni Hall, the other will be out of date, for I haven't seen today's name of our beloved , named Dillon Hall in memory of paper). Yale University has re­ and from every heart there will as­ Father Patrick Dillon, second presi­ ported in one year alone gifts cend a silent prayer that peace may dent of the University, the centenary amounting to twenty-three million be his possession and i;est in Our of whose birth occurs this year. dollars. -Incidentally, this is two Father's House, in Paradise. million dollars more than the total Solemn but not sombre and over­ In addition to these important ad­ combined endowment of all Catholic cast need this memorial be. He him­ juncts, as we consider them, to Notre colleges and universities in the United self would not wish that the joy of Dame's traditional mode of student States, acquired over a period of living, of which he was so fine an life and training, the University will nearly one hundred and fifty years. apostle and exemplar, should be have two new buildings, one to house The University of Notre Dame in this clouded for us just because the joy the School of Commerce, the other its 89th year of service has a perma­ which he brought into our lives was the School of Enginering. The first nent endowment of one million dol­ so suddenly and so tragically stopped. of these is made possible by a gift of lars. Consequently when in the space Rather, I take farewell of him, in the ?200,000.00 from one of Chicago's of one year gifts to an amount ap­ name of all Notre Dame men, in the most esteemed citizens, whose fame proximating that total are received, following beautiful lines addressed hy and whose record of public service we can not help being pleased. It is their author, Major Maurice Baring, are national and international, Mr. not that the work of all these years to a companion lost in the Great War: Edward N. Hurley, in whose honor this structure will be called "The is only now being appreciated. Notre Because of you we will be glad and gay, Edward N. Hurley College of For­ Dame men have always been singu­ Remembeiing you, we will be brave and strong. larly devoted to their school, proud And hail the advent of each dangerous day eign and Domestic Commerce." And meet the last adventure with a song. The second building likewise we of its record, and fond of the men, And as j-ou proudly gave your jewelled gift. owe to the generosity of a Chicago from Father Sorin down, who put We'll give our lesser offering with a smile. benefactor, a member of this Club, a their life's blood into their work. Nor falter on that path w»here, all too swift. Rather it is, I think, that now there You led the way and leapt the golden stile. Notre Dame Alumnus, a classmate of Whether new paths, new heights to climb you my own, Mr. John F. Gushing, C.E. is a greater general competence than find. '06, now President of the Great Lakes formerly, matched with a finer spirit Or gallop through the unfooted asphodel, Dredge & Dock Company. His gift of sacrifice in the individual even We know you know we shall not lag behind where financial resources may not be Nor halt to waste a moment on a fear. of $300,000.00 makes possible "The, And you w^ill speed us onward with a cheer John F. Gushing Hall of Engineer­ extensive. And wave beyond the stars that all is well. ing" which we hope will be ready for Then, too, Notre Dame's appeal is I am confident that if "Eock" could occupancy in September. I make this cumulative and diversified. Millions speak to us tonight he would say that announcement with the more satisfac­ of Americans know of last year's all is well. Especially I am sure he tion as Mr. Cushing's benefaction is football record, but only Notre Dame would approve our carrying on with the largest single gift the University men know that out of fourteen inter- the coaching staff which he had built has received and it is the first im­ up, and that he would welcome the portant foundation made at Notre (Continued on Page 763) The Notre Dame Scholastic 763

PHARMACISTS SPONSOR N. D. MONOGRAM MEN TO FROUC TRIP TO INDIANAPOLIS The Pharmacy club sponsored a IN ANNUAL "BLUE AND GOLD REVUE" trip to Indianapolis on April 20-21, visiting the pharmaceutical and bio­ logical laboraotries of the Eli Lilly Original Songs, Backfield Dance, Harmonica company. Karl Scherer, president of the club, was in charge of the ticket Playing Feature Performances sale, and Dr. H. D. Hinton was the faculty representative, and was in charge of the trip. In addition to the The "Blue and Gold Revue" has by Professor Joseph Casasanta, head members of the Pharmacy club who been chosen as the name of the pro­ of the music department. Campus made the tour, senior pre-medical duction to be put on by the Notre composers who iiave contributed ma­ students and other seniors in science Dame Monogram club in "Washington terial to the production are Walter were guests. The party left Monday hall on April 28 and 29. The cast Philipp and Austin Boyle. They have morning, visiting the laboratories in will give three performances: a mat­ written a "Carry On" march dedi­ groups of eight in the afternoon. inee at two-thirty on Wednesday, cated to the memory of Knute This was followed by dinner at the April 29, and evening performances Rockne, and a satirical number, writ­ Severin hotel in the evening. On on that day and Tuesday, April 28. ten in more typical revue style, called Tuesday morning the party was taken Prices are fifty cents for general ad­ "Fathers, Be Pals to Your Boys." by bus to Greenfield, Indiana, where mission, and seventy-five cents for Pat Patterson, downtown theatre the biological farms of the Lilly com­ reserved seats. organist, has expressed a desire to pany are located. There the students Professor Frank Kelly of the include the "Carry On" number in his were shown the inoculation of a calf speech department is in charge of the radio broadcasts soon over a local with smallpox virus, and also all the production. The show will feature a station. Featured also in the musi­ steps in the preparation of diphtheria number of skits, original songs, and cal ensemble of the show will be sev­ antitoxin, from the bleeding of the pure slapstick comedy. Rehearsals eral popular songs by the Monogram horse (whose blood is used in the during the past week under the direc­ trio, Brant Little, Alex Wilson, and preparation of antitoxin) down to the tion of Mr. Kelly are fast rounding Gene Howery. final packaging of the goods. Lec­ the show into its finished form. Both Among these will be the Senior tures by ofiicials of the company were the Monogram club and Mr. Kelly are Ball song, "Romance by Moonlight." also heard as part of the program. attempting to make the revue more With the help of this trio and the After the return to Indianapolis, the fast moving than those of past years. leather-lunged chorus, success of the group were guests at dinner. The re­ Master of ceremonies for the pro­ musical portion of the show seems mainder of the afternoon was free to duction is Tom Conley, captain of the assured. Johnny Perone, Freddy Ra- the students. 1930 national championship team. In haim, and other popular campus en­ addition to him, every member of the tertainers are working hard on the Theme Song Rendered monogram organization will take skits and comedy material submitted Joseph Talbot, a freshman in the part in the revue. Singing, dancing, by campus writers. College of Law, appeared on the and even harmonica playing will The extra performance of the revue stage of the Colfax theater, Wednes­ show the versatility of the athletes. has been added on account of the day and Thursday. He sang, "Just A backfield dance, featuring Frank wide-spread interest already shown You, Only You," the theme song of Carideo, Marty Brill, on the campus and in South Bend. the Lawyer's Ball. Talbot is mak­ and Nick Lukats, will be one of the Since full houses are expected at all ing his last appearance today. The outstanding numbers of the show. performances, students are advised to words and music to the song were The many musical numbers in the get tickets as soon as they are put written by Edward Massa, a fresh­ show are being whipped into shape on sale. man in the Law school.

faculty were invited to accept charter Stoddard and Egan, Father John FR. O'DONNELL'S ADDRESS membership in this national organiza­ Zahm and Albert Zahm, Stace and (Continued from Page 762) tion. And passing on to another de­ Green, Neill and Howard, Hoynes partment of art, it is not too much to and McCue. collegiate debates, some of them Avith say that the whole United States was Certainly those men to whose keep­ the leading universities of the coun­ enraptured by the beauty of the music ing the destinies of our University try, Notre Dame won thirteen. This recently broadcast from our campus are now committed, whose spokesman year to date we have won ten debates when the University choir sang at the I happen to be, celebrate this Univer­ out of a total of twelve. Similarly, funeral services of Mr. Rockne. sal Notre Dame night in a spirit of little news gets into the papers about These things the Notre Dame man profound gratitude to the excellent our chemical research, but the leading knows and loves. They go to make Mother of God, our patroness, who chemists of America keep their eyes up the appeal of his school. He feels has given us such good work to do fixed on our laboratories. Again, that Notre Dame today, in art and and such joy in the doing of it. there is the literary tradition of music and letters, in science, in law, We rejoice in the loyal support of Notre Dame. It is interesting to in engineering and in the other de­ the finest body of alumni in the land note that upon the formation this partments is true to the best Notre and we are grateful to uncounted year of the Catholic Poetry Society Dame traditions, has kept faith with hosts of friends, the world over, for of America, three members of our the men of the past, Gregori, Girac, their devotion to our University. 764 The Notre Dame Scholastic DEMPSEY DOES IT AGAIN A Man You Know "Juggler" Girls Number Best

At this time a write-up of Mr. Mr. Smithberger has always led a of All Time, Says Editor. Smithberger is particularly appro­ very active life—one full of divers priate because of the momentous vocations and avocations. He was events of his recent life. Late last once editor of The Green and White, Editor John E. Dempsey has an­ week he joined the army of Proud the college paper of Ohio university, nounced that contributions to the Parents. On Poetry, his first book, Girls' Number of the Juggler have %\Titten in collaboration with Mr. Mc- been pouring into his ofiice. Excellent drawings, satire, poetry and humorous Cole, will soon be published. 'Tis writings have been received. This not often that a man becomes both yeai*'s contributions have exceeded all a parent and an author at the same others in quality. The cover is one of time. The coincidence is at least un­ the finest examples of pastel work usual enough to merit comment. ever to appear on a Notre Dame Mr. Smithberger was bom on a Juggler. It has been drawn by a girl farm near Harrietville, Ohio. Since who has won fame as an artist. She the nearest city is twenty-five miles has drawn heads of many famous away, he claims quite correctly that theatrical characters and a head of his home is twenty-five miles from Knute Rockne which might possibly civilization. After attending the be reproduced in colors inside the rural schools, Elk Rural High school, Juggler. The cover will be reproduced and Marietta High school in Mari­ by a special four-color process similar etta, Ohio, finishing at the latter to that used on the cover of the place in 1921, he entered Ohio uni­ Christmas Number of the Juggler. It versity in Athens, Ohio. He was PROF. ANDREW SMITHBERGER will undoubtedly be the finest cover graduated with the degree of bach­ ever to appear on any college publica­ elor of arts from this university in and a post of that sort keeps its oc­ tion and will compare favorably with 1925. Since then he has taught at cupant rather busy. Various sports those on the best national periodicals. Notre Dame — taught a variety of take up a lot of his time now. Among English courses, ranging from Fresh­ Another feature will be the repro­ them are tennis, handball, and swim­ man English to the English Prose of duction in four colors of the cover of ming. When he insists that he only the Romantic Period. In 1927 he re­ the May, 1931, College Humor which plays at tennis, does not play it, he ceived his master of arts degree was awarded to the Juggler for the is more modest than truthful. His from Notre Dame. best art work at the recent meeting handball playing is something to When well-meaning persons insist of the National Association of College watch and admire; 'tis better to do in confusing Ohio university and Comics. The same plates which were that than to play against him. Ohio State university, Mr. Smith­ used in printing the cover of College Humoi' are now in the possession of berger takes great pains to set them He spends most of his vacations at the Juggle^' and are being prepared right on the matter. He chose Ohio his home in Ohio, working on the for this feature., university as his school because of farm for twelve or fourteen hours a its beautiful setting, and because it day, and loafing the rest of the time, The contributions received from was much smaller than Ohio State. resting up for his return to school girls from every part of the country The school is the oldest institution of in the fall. He likes farm work, are all uniformly good, according to higher learning west of the AUeghe- having the gift of finding enjoyment Dempsey, who further said that the nies, having been founded in 1804. where other less fortunate find only Girls' Number of the Juggler will un­ One does not hear very much about hard work. His favorite occupation doubtedly be one of the finest College its football teams because they are on the farm is hay-making, a task comic magazines of all time. monotonously good. which has never been considered easy.

Ball Song on Sale Kohlbrenner Writes Articles Work on Dorms Progresses "Romance by Moonlight," theme Bernard Kohlbrenner, instructor in Work on the superstructure of the song of the Notre Dame senior ball, the school of education, published an two new dormitories, Alumni and Dil­ has been placed on sale downtown by lon halls, will begin this week. The article entitled "What Supervision Do the composers, Walter Philipp, Austin work will proceed with the setting of Teachers Receive" in the March Boyle and KathrjTi Ullman. South the granite and the laying of the Bend music stores will feature the number of the Catholic Educational bricks for the outside walls. The number until the time of the ball. Review. The article is a complete forms for the interior columns are to Sale of the song on the campus is be­ summary of a study carried on at the be started at the same time. At ing mthheld for another week. The University during the summer school present there are thirty-five men em­ halls will then be canvassed. Boyle of 1930. Mr. Kohlbrenner at present ployed on the two buildings. Alumni and Philipp are busy at present work­ is working on another article which hall will be a U-shaped building, and ing on material for the Monogram when published will be the result of Dillon hall \v\\\ be in the form of club's "Absurdities." ten years' study. an H. •rajimi n?r^f?«™sitr*"^'^^•""•T'*"*" nr 11 •tftiT7~fiiiirrr'i~rn" ^n—i—f~-'

The Notre Dame Scholastic 765

BAND WRL PLAY IN SENIORS NOTICE! SENIOR BALL PLANS ST. JOSEPH CARNIVAL On Tuesday, April 28, at HEARING COMPLETION four o'clock, room 311 Science hall, oral examinations will be Also to Participate in South held for all seniors of the Col­ Isham Jones Will Play For Tea Bend Dedication Program. lege of Arts and Letters major­ Dance on May 9. ing in philosophy. The exami­ The University band has been in­ nations will be given by a board Plans for the Senior Ball are vited to attend the blossom festival to of the faculty of philosophy. quickly nearing completion, accord­ be held at St. Joseph, Mich., May 9, ing to general chairman Walter Ca- according to an announcement by hill. An announcement this week Professor Joseph Casasanta, director DR. KUNTZ INSPECTS stated that orders for the favors have of the band. The blossom festival is been sent, and that the Chain-0'- an annual event at St. Joseph. The INDIANAPOLIS SCHOOL Lakes Country club has been engaged band will march in the procession for the tea dance upon the occasion of selecting the Last Wednesday Dr. Leo Kuntz and Tlie favors, the exact nature of " beauty queen of the blossom festival. Mr. Bernard Kohlbrenner of the which is not yet revealed, will be re­ The band has also been invited to school of education made a trip to ceived here a week before the dance. participate in the dedication exercises Indianapolis for the purpose of visit­ Although the idea of the favors is to be held by the LaSalle Memorial ing Cathedral Latin high school, an not novel to the campus, they are of society, May 19. At the exercises institution which is under the supei-- the best imported leather and are will be a massed band of five hundred vision of the brothers of the Congre­ hand designed. The programs will be pieces, including the Notre Dame ag­ gation of the Holy Cross. In his posi­ of the same type of leather as the gregation. Professor Casasanta will tion of critic supervisor for the state favors. direct the massed musicians. department of education, Mr. Kuntz Through the efforts of chairmen The orchestra is preparing for a inspected the teaching methods of the Shean and Golden, the Chain-0'- program to be offered sometime in brothers in Indianapolis. While the Lakes Country club has been engaged May. The program as planned will be latter receive their teaching credits for the tea dance. The hours for the a presentation of a string ensemble. from Notre Dame they must, on the dance will be from two to five on Preparations are under way for an approval of Dr. Kuntz, obtain a Saturday afternoon. This affair will entertaining program. license from the state. During his be augmented hy the appearance of stay in Indianapolis Professor Kuntz Professor Casasanta sfiys that the Isham Jones, who is the creator of attended to a few business matters department of music has received a such popular song numbers as, "I'll Avith the state department of public number of requests for "When Irish See You In My Dreams," "On the instruction located in that city. Backs Go Marching By," the latest Alamo" and "What's the Use." Jones Notre Dame song, from all parts of has also made an orchestration of the country. There is a big demand Walter Phillip's "Romance by Moon­ for copies of the song. K. of C. Initiation light," which is to be played espe­ Exemplification of the first degree cially at the ball. initiation of the Knights of Columbus Although Daylight Saving time will Express Office Notice will take place at a meeting of the be in effect in South Bend at the time The following students and profes­ Notre Dame council 1477, Monday of the ball, it will create no mixup in sors have packages at the express night in their Walsh hall chambers. the plans for the weekend social af­ oiRce: The first degree team of the Misha- fair. Everything will be run on Cen­ Harvey Eoclnvell, Howard hall, waka council. Knights of Columbus, tral Standard time. will have charge of the proceedings. Norman Greeney, St. Edward's Invitations to the dance should be Announcements will be made at hall, secured from Walter Cahill at 206 this meeting concerning the second Sorin hall. Matt O'Brien, Sorin hall, and third degree initiation, to be F. J. McCarthy, Walsh hall, held May 3 at Elkhart, in conjunc­ J. J. Flynn, Freshman hall, tion with the Elkhart council of the Postpone Chicago Club Dance Lawrence O'Leary, Chemistry de­ Knights. The Chicago club formal dance will partment, The Notre Dame council yesterday be held June 8 at the Drake hotel, Thomas P. Madden, English de­ attended a Requiem High Mass in Chicago, according to announcement partment, Sacred Heart church, celebrated by made this week at a meeting of the James A. Withey, English depart­ the Reverend John Reynolds, C.S.C, club. The dance, scheduled for ment, in memory of Knute Rockne. Easter Monday, w^as postponed be­ J. E. McCarthy, Commerce depart­ cause of the death of Knute Rockne, ment, honorary president of the club. Raymond Pence, English depart­ Father Lavin Recuperating Eddie Ryan and Frank Holland, co- ment, The Reverend Walter Lavin, C.S.C, chairmen of the affair, wish to ex­ Daniel C. O'Grady, Philosophy de­ rector of Sorin hall until taken ill press their gratitude to the Drake partment. last year, recently entered the Mayo hotel and Keneway, Inc., for their Express office hours are from Brothers' hospital at Rochester, kindness in extending their contracts 12:30 to 1:10. Minn., for treatment. to make the postponements possible. 766 The Notre Dame Scholastic CAAiDU/

Tsk, tsk, L to R. More Fan-mail; // Fan-ma i Miss Butts

TABLOID BIGGER AND BETTER Above is a photograph, hitherto unpublished, of this Interclub baseball, an annual spring activity on the writer's secretary looking in dismay at the pile of invita­ campus, has excited more interest this year than in many tions to banquets which friendly campus clubs have sent a season past. to the dubs editor during the past month. The secretary (a Miss Butts) is chagrined because the publications allow The CHICAGO club has done more than any other group to keep club baseball from languishing. In addition the campus clubs editor only one secretary. The campus to its team in the interclub league it has teams of Chicago clubs editor, however, thinks it's not so bad. men from each of the halls. By means of bulletins, the FIGHTING IRISH club lets its members know the latest news of the hall teams, their schedules, the places where they will play. The NEW JERSEY club followed the IOWA club last week in electing its officers for the coming year. Chosen were S. A. Bontempo, president; Al Capter, vice-president; PLANS Ray Geiger, secretary; Sabby Adonizio, treasurer. New That Notre Dame club activity does not cease with the President Bontempo won by a landslide; elections of the end of the school year is shown by the fact that some of secretary and treasurer was more close, but not close the city clubs have already begun discussing plans for enough for excitement. their summer dances. In many instances these affairs are more pleasant than the more touted Christmas dances: CANCELLED the weather is pleasant and Notre Dame men again meet All club dances scheduled for the Easter holidays by to compare notes after some time away from school. Notre Dame's clubs were cancelled on account of the death of Mr. Rockne. INTERNATIONAL

MEETING A feature of the last meeting of tlie FRENCH club The CLEVELAND club met last week in the old Law was a talk by Ralph MoUer, a young man of German building to complete arrangements for the club's extraction, who spoke in faultless French of China, the country where he lives when he is not at Notre Dame. baseball team and to aimovmce elections to be held early in May. Leading presidential candidates are Myron Crawford and John Collins. FRENCH club president William Dreux also spoke. The Notre Dame Scholastic 767

ANOTHER FORWARD STEP HARPER RETURNS The need of a new engineering building at Like Gincinnatus who left his plow to lead Notre Dame has been for some years an urgent the ancient Romans to victory, Jesse Harper one. It was therefore with much pleasure that leaves his farm to come to Notre Dame. The the news was received this week that Mr. John University has made a popular decision in ask­ F, Gushing had made a donation to the Uni­ ing him to return. Formerly head coach over versity for the erection of an adequate struc­ the late Knute Rockne, he seems even now an ture, fully equipped, to house the Gollege of integral part of Notre Dame and of Notre Dame Engineering. Mr. Gushing has an appreciation athletics. He it was who many years ago in­ of the requirements in equipment and facilities vented the play that "Rock" used so often last essential to the thorough education of men pre­ year—^the play which took Schwartz over the paring for careers in the field of engineering. goal line to win the Northwestern and Army He, himself, described the graduates which he games. The shift, an integral part of the Rockne expects Notre Dame to produce as "men with system, was introduced here by him. adventuring minds, and a conscience in their It seems only fitting that the original teacher profession." Certainly, his contribution should should now return to supervise the organization materially assist the faculty in working toward left behind by his master pupil, to watch the this end. progress, as it were, of another pupil. Many names were rumored for the position that Mr. The ability and the efficiency of the teaching Harper is now to fill—^those of younger men, staff in the engineering school are unquestion­ business men. But more than a business man ably of the highest quality. In spite of the is needed. Rockne was more. So must be his obstacles which have confronted them in the successor. That, most certainly, is Jesse way of limited space, they have been doing Harper. As Rockne's teacher and friend, as a work comparable to that in similar departments former Notre Dame coach, as the Gincinnatus of schools more highly endowed, and almost of football who left his farm to carry on for his perfectly outfitted. This has been accomplished school, he will bring a prestige that any other however, only in the face of great difficulties man would have found difficult to furnish. A and inconveniences. Mr. Gushing's generous better man than Jesse Harper could not have gift should effectively do away with these been named. handicaps.

Mr. Gushing's contribution makes more ob­ FORE! vious the fact that Notre Dame's alumni may Many Notre Dame mashie wielders have a greatly further the University's drive toward bad habit of giving no warning whatsover as perfection along all academic lines. The recent a bad hook goes sailing past the ears of a golfer donation of Mr. Hurley was of immense assist­ a hundred yards or so down the course. The ance to the administration in its progressive least that anyone can do is to wait until the men work, and Mr. Gushing's gift will undoubtedly ahead are out of striking distance, and to yell tend to increase Notre Dame's prestige among lustily if he happens to be lucky enough to hit the nation's institutions of learning. a good ball. 768 The Notre Dame Scholastic

IDEA think, they live with nature. And then with the aid of a Forty-nine bottles stubby little pencil and a dictionary of rhymes, produce delicate, fragile bits of poetic composition about the moon, SiitiJi' 071 a wall, gnats, and camelopards. Forty-nine bottles —Wa'al. And now a new star bursts into view in the literary heavens. Bangheart is the name—Oscar Bangheart to you. He has written a serious, beautifully tender poem QUICK WINKS entitled "Birds." It is the last word in the field of nature Certain way^vard old meanies who were caught plant­ poetry. It is subjective, of course. The poet once he had ing corn in the newly finished park in front of Badin and determined his theme was not content to write objectively the library. A nassy trick, because after all the trouble of our little feathered friends. He wished to write that has been gone through to have Badin emerge from authoritatively, mth full and inside data on their lives the mud it just wouldn't do to have its light hidden away and habits. He decided to investigate, and with permis­ under a bushel of corn . . . Ronnie Zudeck is pretty sion from Mayor Walker and the Waterbury Garment definitely assured of a fine position after graduation with Makers' Bird league, began his studies among the the National Broadcasting company in New York. The Whiffle-Whippets, a species of the thrush genus, which rest of the Senior class will very probably return next fall inhabit the south banks of the St. Joseph river. to enter the Law school . . . The staid and serious Mr. Soon he had made great friends with the shy subjects Lou Hasley going comic in the new mag, College Stoi-ies. of his investigation, by the simple expedient of humming We suggest some sort of an investigation into the question. popular tunes and being generous with his candy and What price the Master's degree? . . . Aussie Boyle, ye cakes when he received packages from home. Quickly he old caddy maestro, complaining that he has heard quite learned their language, and before long the birds were enough in class of the Scholastic theory of this and that, initiating him into all the secrets and intricacies of their and just for a change would like to have someone explain mode of life. In the comparatively short space of three the Juggler theory of things . . . Father Clancy's little weeks, he could perch for two hours on a fence rail or joke about McTarnish and McTavish. The former was telegraph • cable without losing his balance. In another entertaining the latter, and when it came time for refresh­ week he could build a very substantial nest, knew where de­ ments asked, "And now, McTavish, will you have a cup sirable locations for nests were, and how many houi*s a day of tea?" McTavish thought it over and decided, "No tea." he was expected to be "in the nest" as the W-W's say. Later McTarnish tried again and suggested a sip of coffee. (W-W is the poet's own affectionate abbreviation.) The "No coffee," answered McTavish. In a final effort to final expression these birds showed of their confidence in fulfill Ms obligations the host said, "Well, McTavish, will their new friend was when they taught him to rise early you have a whisky and soda?" McTavish thought a mo­ and obtain his breakfast by only his sense of smell. ment before making up his mind. "No soda," he said. After a year of this life, Bangheart was satisfied that he had arrived at a very thorough knowledge of the life HEREDITY and habits of the Whiffle-Whippets. He knew their loves, I am they say, the Biggest Boob— and hopes, and secret sorrows. He had laughed and talked My antics simjily slay 'em; and sported with them, and played their games. Much Yet you ivould know them family traits, against his wall, however, he had to leave them. The day If you would stop to weigh 'em. of parting came all too soon. Bowed were the heads of For father was a behemoth his friends when on that last fateful day, at a touching And tvore an eighteen collar; farewell ceremony, Bangheart read these few affecting Aiid grandpop bought the Brooklyn Bridge lines: For one-tenth of a dollar. BIRDS —THE WARDEN. Birds are free and so are we; They fly the land and sea. INTRODUCTION TO A POET Birds do work and so do we; We take great pride in introducing for your approval Tliey build their nests in the tree. a new poet. Among the many, many contributions that Birds spend their time like us; came to our offices from our two readers, there was one In.the winter doivn south they goest. that we singled out for special mention. Birds sing and so do tve This is the season of poets, whose highly sensitive and In the tree and over the lake. spiritual souls extend themselves in this weather to plumb Birds are kind and so are we— the blissful depths of nature. Flowers may concern them, They help us kill the worm. or trees, or sweet, soft nights. Romance may intrigue —BANGHEART. them. Or their subject may be the vaulted heavens, the budding blooms or something, the gentle rains, or golf Then off he hurried to attend the Senior Ball. "So SOX. Their approach is generally subjective. Their ego long," said the W-W's. is projected into a blossoming cosmos. They feel, they —THE WEARY BUMPER. The Notre Dame Scholastic 769

Trackmen Fall Before Badgers

64-62 Decision Lost When Branfort GOLFERS WIN TWO FROM Slips Over Line In Throwing Javelin MICHIGAN OPPONENTS establish a new Notre Dame record N. D. Sprinters Lead Scorers; in that event, while Kabat, bespeckled Detroit U. and State Teams weight man of the Badgers, set up a McCormickWins 100 and 220; Lose By Wide Margins. new mark in the discus throw by- Kelly, Gough, Also Shine. hurling the platter more than seven feet farther than 's old mark Notre Dame's golf team added two Wisconsin's well balanced track of 140 feet in that event. more victims to their growing list of team officially raised the curtain for defeated linksmen last Friday and the opening of the 1931 outdoor sea­ Saturday when they whitewashed the son by scoring a 64 to 62 triumph squads representing Michigan State over Coach John P. Nicholson's Notre College and the University of Detroit. Dame squad in one of the most closely The State outfit lost by 17% to Vz, contested meets ever to be waged on and the university team fell, 1-5 to 6. old Cartier field. The result was not The victory over Michigan State, decided until the running off of the at East Lansing, was the most de­ final event on the program, the javelin cisive one that the Blue and Gold team throw, in which the Badgers placed has scored this year. Larry MoUer first and second to clinch the meet. and the Beaupre brothers, Fran and Notre Dame had assumed an early Euss, were tied for low, each getting lead and after thirteen of the fourteen a 74. Captain Fran Beaupre and events had been run off, were leading MoUer turned in the best card of the their rivals by a 61 to 56 score. day, scoring a 70 in the best ball "Brandy" Brantfort made a gallant matches. Michigan State got their attempt to win the meet for Notre lone % point during the afternoon Dame by hurling the spear 177 feet, round when Minier, pla3ring No. 1, 8 inches, a distance that would have tied Euss Beaupre on the second nine. won handily, but he became over­ Long driving featured the play of anxious on the throw and fouled by the Notre Dame team. This well inches, thus ruling out what would balanced squad all turned in excellent have been the \\anning toss and a cards, no man being separated from victory for Notre Dame. his teammates by more than a single The Badgers ran true to form by stroke. No one broke par on the long exhibiting well-balanced strength in Michigan State course in the singles •every event with the exception of the matches, although Fran Beaupre and 100-yard dash, in which Notre Dame Larry MoUer with a sensational 30, scored a slam. Wisconsin evened six strokes under par on the second matters in this respect however, by nine in the best ball matches, turned placing one, two, three in the shot put in a card of 70, three strokes under -to add nine points to their winning the perfect score. -total. Bill McCormick, of Notre University of Detroit provided the Dame, and Roden, of the Badgers, Notre Dame team with the stiffest were the leading point-getters of the competition that they have experienced day with a pair of firsts apiece. Mc­ thus far during the season and ma­ Cormick was not pressed in winning "CHINK" KELLY terially aided by tie scores in both of either the 100- or 220-yard dashes and —ivho served notice cm sp^'inters last the best ball matches, managed to Hoden had things just about his own Satiirday that he viust be reckoned score 6 points against the South Bend way in both hurdle events. The ex­ with in the dashes from noiv on. quintet. treme closeness of the meet alone MoUer and O'Shea turned in the tended to make it interesting, as the Notre Dame was counted upon to best cards in this match, each getting marks set up were only fair and only snatch a great many points in both 79. The Beaupres, MoUer, and two Cartier field records were broken. hurdle races, but Wisconsin pulled the O'Shea SAvept their matches in the "Dutch" Johnson soared to a height surprise act by annexing two firsts of 13 feet in the pole vault, to (Continued on Page 776) Continued on Pase 772) 770 The Notre Dame Scholastic

that rival even the Oregon special­ BILL SULLIVAN, HARD-HIITING FIRST ties. Which reminds us: Bill has a hobby and photography is it. He takes BASEMAN, EXPECTS TO TAKE UP LAW fine pictures and develops and prints them himself. He sounded capable of giving a great explanation of the Starred In Basketball And Track As Well As In art, but we didn't think we could fol­ Baseball At Columbia Prep low. The local roto experts, though, thought enough of some of his Carri­ bean scenes to run them in a Sunday supplement. (They were not the pic- We hesitated for a moment in front played a great game around the ini­ tui'es of the people.) orRoom 114 Walsh hall before knock­ tial bag and gathered an unusual to­ Together with the hobby. Bill has ing. The prospect of bursting in on tal of base hits last year to win a a group of pet superstitions. A load a home run hitting baseball player place on the varsity. This season he of hay or of barrels always means a awed us a little. We did knock, has shown all of his old time form win in a ball game. The loss of a though, and pretty soon we were certain penny that had gone through perched on the bed listening to a lot a season in BUl's shoe almost proved of interesting things about Bill Sulli­ fatal on one occasion at Michigan van and writing down those that we State. He uses always his own style remembered. bats, having had them made at a Afterwards, when we arranged Louisville factory. Two or three of what we had, it seemed that William them Avere drying behind the desk in Joseph Sullivan had been bom in 114 when we were there. Chicago on October 23, 1910. That Other activities than athletics have makes him quite a youngster for all claimed much of Mr. Sullivan's time the first base ability that he has. His since his coming out of the west. He father was a ball player too, though, was general chairman of last year's being a catcher in the American edition of the "greatest" prom. He League for quite a spell, so maybe acted as private secretary to the Rev­ it's natural. The SuUivans moved erend John Cavanaugh, CS.C, for a from Chicago to Detroit and later to three year period, and he kept his Portland, Ore., which is the present scholastic average up very close to location of Coach Keogan's first Back­ the ninety mark at all times. He er when "at home." He went to high plays golf, too, in his spare moments school at Columbia University's prep both here and in the summer. We department there, where he met his couldn't quite see, however, just when present neighbor, Father Farley, he ever found any "spare" ones. rector of Sorin hall. Bill also took a As to his ambitions and plans, Bill year of his A.B. work at Columbia is rather definite. He will finish his before leaving for Notre Dame. A.B. course this June and expects to He still remembers it as a great go on to Law school from that point. place. "They have rivers there," he Possibly the legal training will be explains, "and canoes and, now and gotten at a Chicago institution, pos­ then, a moon." He got off on a sibly not; he isn't just sure. He is tangent for a minute but straight­ BILL SULLH'AN Slugging First Baseman sure, however, that success in the ened out again to find that he had business world is his primary goal played baseball for four years at the and is one of the- steadiest men on in life and is the most important job western school and almost as much the squad. he has just at present. Baseball, he basketball. He attempted a career When College Humor selected its regards as but a pleasant means to as a javelin thrower too, and whUe all-star college team for a trip to that end, never as an end in itself. he showed plenty of promise, it was Panama and Cuba during the last Along about this time Bill guessed cut short in order to keep up on the Christmas holidays, Bill Sullivan was that "that was all" so we guessed so, baseball and to save a good throwing the choice for first base and he justi­ too, (with our tongue in our cheek) arm. fied that selection with a classy field­ and folded up our notebook to grab Coming to Notre Dame as a sopho­ ing exhibition and a four-base blow a little "unofficial" conversation. After more. Bill continued his A.B. work in the final game. He likes to re­ a while we left, and as we ducked in­ and also the baseball. The basket­ member that trip and to talk about to the rain and splashed through the ball was limited to interhall com­ it. With "Dutch" Eyth of Carnegie puddles, we got our tongue out of petition and the track was given up Tech as his roommate, he seems to our cheek by resolving to put it down altogether. There was another Sulli­ have had a most successful vacation. that Bill Sullivan was more than a van making a name for himself in At least the pictures that he showed hard-hitting first baseman with a college baseball circles at that time us backed up that idea, for the places yearning for photography. He's just in the person of the 1928 Blue and and things he had snapped were swell about the most interesting and the Gold captain. Bill's brother Joe. —^not to mention the people. They' most friendly fellow that we have The present family representative seem to have moons in the Carribean ever met. The Notre Dame Scholastic 771

when Askew had singled. O'Connor his timely four-bagger. BASEBALL TEAM WINS then rapped out a single, advancing Mannix, who went the route for the Askew. The latter scored when home guards, gave up 11 hits, but Sullivan Knocks Homer With O'Keefe rang the bell with a base hit. kept them well scattered. Notre Dame Lomasney was gi'anted a walk, filling Bases Loaded in 8th. also collected 11 hits, five of which the bases and setting the stage for the Avere bunched in the eighth inning, terrific drive from Sullivan's bat that Going into the eighth inning Avith enabling the Keogan-coached boys to was to follow to clear the bases. The the score tied at 2 all in the game roll up the score. The Eecreations ball, on this smash, was driven far with the Indiana Eecreation team last used two pitchers during the course of along the first base line, taking a Saturday, Notre Dame scored five the contest. bounce and finally stopping on about runs in a rally which featured Sulli­ A large crowd divided its attention the 50-yard line in old Cartier field. van's home run with the bases loaded between the Wisconsin track meet and this game. Eumor had it that Stanley to bring the score to its final status— Notre Dames' first run was made Coveleskie, world series pitcher with Notre Dame 7, Indiana Eecreation 2. in the second inning on three singles Cleveland in 1920, woidd be seen in S.coring their second run in the first by Sullivan, Kolski, and Mahoney. In action, but although he plays in South half of the eighth frame by virtue of the third Mannix drove out a scream­ Bend during the summer he is not two singles and a sacrifice fly, the ing triple and crossed home plate yet in condition. Eecreation squad knotted the count. after O'Connor sacrificed to short. The score by innings: In the Notre Dame turn at bat Man- Only three hits were for extra bases— nix started the rally by garnering a Tarrick, of the Eecreations, doubled; Ind. Eec. 0 0 0 10 0 0 1 0—2-11 walk, but was caught off second base Mannix tripled, and Sullivan recorded N. D. Oil 0 0 0 0 5 X—7-11 for bedtime hunsfer

THERE'S nothing better than a bowl of delicious Kellogg's Corn Flakes and milk. So easy to digest, it invites sound sleep. Dietitians advise it. How much more health­ ful than hot, heavy foods. So order Kellogg's when you drop in at the campus restaurant tonight. Enjoy with canned peaches, or sweeten with honey for an extra treat. Good . . . and good for-you!

The most popular cereals served in the dining-rooms of American colleges, eating clubs CORN FLAKES and fraternities are made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. They include ALL-BRAN, PEP Bran Flakes, Rice Krispies, Wheat Krumbles, and Kellogg's WHOLE Yovfll enjoy Kellogg's Slamber Masic, WHEAT Biscuit. Also Kaffee broadcast over WJZ and associated CORN Hag Coffee — the coffee that stations of the N. B. C. every Sanduy evening at lOJD E. S. T. Also KFI ^KES lets you sleep. Los Angeles. KOMO Seattle at 10.00, and KOA Denver at 10.30. 772 The Notre Dame Scholastic "{' GOLFERS WIN TWO MORE (Continued from Page 769) I Go To The U. S. Flying School • RESIDENCE OFFICE f The U. S. Air Corps takes yearly over PHONE 3-4041 PHONE 2-1067 f 700 college men for free flying training as Student Flying Officers. Get the best instruction and more than 200 solo hours. singles, while Bill Eedmond broke You will be paid a good salary. Receive even with his opponent, Lapham. generous mess allowance, frequent leave, Dir. Edgar S. Lucas social privileges and prestige of officers. Euss Beaupre was the only player to Hundreds go each year. So can YOU. Find out: how to get in, pay, rank, leave, score the maximum 3 points. Dentist actual life, etc. Take the first step now. Mail (§1.00) for complete information. Same information concerning West Point Summary of Detroit meet: 702 J. M. S. BUILDING and Annapolis, same price. All literature SOUTH BEND, INDIANA compiled by those who have been through SINGLES—K. Beaupre (ND) defeat­ the schools. ed Mooney (D), 3-0; Redmond (ND) Cor. Main and Washington U. S. SERVICE BUREAU. 513 Lissner BIdg., Los Angeles, Calif. tied Lapham (D), 1V2-1%; F. Beau­ pre (ND) defeated McFawn (D), 21/2-%; MoUer (ND) defeated Tmtle (D), 2%-!^; O'Shea (ND) defeated Wliiting (D), 2%-%.

BEST B.4LL—Redmond and R. Beau­ pre (ND) tied Mooney and Lapham WHERE Don*t (D), l%-li^; MoUer and F. Beaupre (ND) tied Twitle and McFawn (D),

Look Summary of Michigan State meet: NOTRE DAME SINGLES—R. Beaupre (ND) defeat­ ed Minier (MS), 2%-%; F. Beaupre (ND) defeated Jones (MS), 3-0; Hol­ B ecause ler (ND) defeated Sisontis (MS), 3-0; O'Shea (ND) defeated Wayne MEN MEET (MS), 3-0. « « « BEST BALL—R. Beaupre and Red­ "Always in the Crowd" mond (ND) defeated Minier and Jones (MS), 3-0; Moller and F. You'll never find a Beaupre (ND) defeated Sisontis and Wayne (MS), 3-0. South Bend autoist disputing the Chicago COACH ART PARISIEN highways with a per­ DRILLS FROSH NINE spiring truck driver. The South Bender pre­ Answering the call issued by Art Parisien, freshman baseball coach, 123 fers to use the hourly first year men reported Monday after­ s e r V i c e of America's noon for the initial workout of the Excellent Sandwiches fastest electric railway, season, accoi'ding to Bob Balfe, with its downtown Chi­ varsity baseball manager. In some quarters it was feared that interest Hot and Cold Drinks cago terminal. in the popular sport was lagging at Notre Dame, but from the enthusiasm evinced by this large number of fresh­ Hot Chili men, officials feel that such fears were Hot Tamales unfounded. «c 4C «e Regular workouts will be held dur­ ing the season, and after Parisien has Ice Cream had opportunity to see the many can­ Candy didates in action a cut will be made. Numerous practice contests will be held within the ranks of the freshman Delicious Malted Milks WXWl squad in order to give the embryo varsity men a firm knowledge of the, game. Every Jwur on-the-hour to KEWPEE HOTEL Michigan City, Gary, Hammond, Chicago Some three hundred papers are 327 N. Michigan St. sold dally, (Simday excepted), at the news-stand in the cafeteria. The Notre Dame Scholastic 773

scores, it can be seen that the Notre AL HOWARD RECEIVES HILLSDALE NINE TO Dame foe for this afternoon is any­ thing but a slow ball club. Western JOB AT SO. CAROLINA MEET NJ). HERE TODAY State teachers in Kalamazoo defeated Wisconsin, 11-9, recently, and Notre Another member of the national Iowa and Northwestern Also Dame defeated the latter team by a championship team of 1930 will take on Card For Busy Week. one run margin, 8-7. Last Saturday up the coaching reins. This time it is the Hillsdale outfit handed the Teach­ Alan Howard, former fullback. A ers a 13-1 lacing, the winning tmrler few days ago Howard received his In the second regularly scheduled letting the opposition down with only appointment as assistant coach at the game of the season and the third in three hits. Hillsdale's squad is com­ University of South Carolina. He the last week for Notre Dame, the posed of several veterans who played will aid Charley Collins, an end on Hillsdale college nine comes here Fri­ on last year's victorious club, and, the national championship team of day to engage the local squad on Car- according to reports, has developed 1924. tier field. The Hillsdale outfit hails into a fast traveling outfit. from Hillsdale, Mich., and last year held the position of champions of the Mannix went the full route in his Joe Prelli.Dies Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic As­ first start of the season last Satur­ Joe Prelli, stellar halfback on the sociation, otherwise known as the day. Palt, Lisicki, and Eomanin all teams of 192-5 and 1926, died last Sat­ Little Big Six. pitched in the contest against the urday morning in a Chicago hospital, Mishawaka Indestructros. Lisicki and The other games on tap for Notre following an operation for appendici­ Dame within the coming week are Palt also bore the brunt of the Wis­ tis. those -nuth Iowa on Cartier field Mon­ consin attack a week ago. Those day, and Northwestern in Evanston facts make the selection of a starting While a student at Notre Dame, Wednesday afternoon. Iowa has pitcher for Friday's game a toss-up, Prelli besides being a two year mono­ played several games throughout that although Eomanin or Lisicki seem gram man, was president of the • Cali­ state, crossing bats \vith Luther col­ ready for the job. Hillsdale is slated fornia club and a member of the Glee lege in several games which showed to present the pitcher who zipped the club for two years. the mettle of the Hawkeyes. North­ ball past Western State last week. Victor Martzell of the class of western rounded into shape during The rest of the line-up will probably 1930 represented the University at their recent southern trip and battled be the same with Sullivan, Askew, the funeral services, which were con­ Indiana Monday in a Big Ten con­ Mahoney, and O'Keefe in the infield ducted in St. Rita's church, Chicago. test. and Lomasney, O'Connor, and Mc- Interment was held in his town, Oak­ By resorting to the comparison of Grath in the gardens. land, California, Thursday morning.

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ISIiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii ••••••••Ill ••••••••••••I <••••• • < • • liiii|2| S" ..Q 774 The Notre Dame Scholastic

represented in a quarter-mile relay in relay race in which Clarence Kaplan, DRAKE RELAYS ON TAP which Kelly, Gough, Dilling, and Mc- Brill, Nick Lukats, and Johnnie Cormick will attempt to snatch a win O'Brien will carry the burden for FOR FRIDAY, SATURDAY over other strong quartets of baton- Notre Dame, and the local gridiron passers. speedsters are expected to give a very good account of themselves against Coach Nicholson Enters Large In the individual events, Bill Mc- the other quartets entered. Cormick will match his speed in the Squad; Grid Relay Runs. "Century" against such men as Tolan, the "Midnight Express' from Michi­ The track program for this week­ gan, Haas of Minnesota, Swifts of JONES AND VEZIE GET end finds Coach John P. Nicliolson Washington State, and Glass of the COACHING JOBS FOR '31 and his Blue and Gold squad at Des Oklahoma Aggies, all of whom boast Moines, Iowa, where they are sched­ marks under 10 seconds. If Captain uled to take part in the colorful Drake Johnnie O'Brien's leg responds to Word was received today that Bill relays which are being held in that treatment, he will be entered in both Jones and Manny Vezie, freshmen city. Each year hundreds of the na­ hurdles, but it is doubtful if Roy football coaches, had received ap­ tion's best track athletes are attract­ Bailie's persistent injury will even pointments as college mentors. ed to this nationally-famed meet, and warrant his competing in the meet. if the present entry list is any cri­ Jones will go to Mount Charles terion, the competition will be just as "Dutch" Johnson will be entered College, Helena, Montana, where he keen as in other years. against a strong field in the pole vault will assume the position of head but on the strength of his past per­ coach. He was guard on the Notre Notre Dame will present strong formances, he should give a very good Dame teams of 1927 and 1928. He relay teams and Coach Nicholson is account of himself. Bob Darling will will be graduated from the College most anxious to record %actories in compete in the high jump, Laurie of Law in June. these events, especially the mile. The Vejar and Gough in the broad jump, quartet which is expected to run in Brantfort in the javelin, Gene How- Vezie will assist Tom Lieb, a for­ this event will probably be composed ery in a special three-mile race, while mer Notre Dame assistant coach, at of Kelly, MacBeth, Little, and Wilson. there is also a possibility of "Nordy" Loyola college, Los Angeles, Cali­ Tlie Blue and Gold will, in all prob­ Hoffman and "Marty" Brill being en­ fornia. Vezie played right end on ability, be pushed to the limit in this tered in the discuss and shot respec­ the 1928 team and held the same race by Michigan, Kansas and Chica­ tively. position during the national cham­ go, all of whom boast of excellent pionship drive of 1929. He, too, will teams. Notre Dame will also be There will also be a special football receive his law degree in June.

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!I The Notre Dame Scholastic 775

until the end, he was finally over­ The scores: NETMEN LOSE AT TERRE come by Moore, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4. Sulli­ SINGLES—Quimby (ISN) defeated JTatt van closed the singles match with a O'Brien (ND), 6-0, 6-1; Reaume (ND) de­ HAUTE IN INITIAL MATCH loss to Kelley, 6-2, 6-2. feated Hutchins (ISN), 6-1, 6-4; Phillippe Notre Dame fared even worse in (ISN) defeated Kendall (ND), 6-3, 9-7; Mike Blue and Gold Lose By 6-3 the doubles than they did in the O'Brien (KD) defeated Stanley (ISN), 6-2, Margin; Reaume Stars. single matches. Mike O'Brien and 1-6, 6-3; Moore (ISN) defeated Borda (ND), Sullivan were the only team to reg­ 6-3, 2-6, 6-4: Kelley (ISN) defeated Sullivan ister a victory for Notre Dame in (ND), 6-2. 6-2. Notre Dame's tennis team lost its these events. After losing the first DOUBLES- Quimhy and Hutchins (ISN) opening match of the season to the set, 5-7, they staged a classy exhibi­ defeated Matt O'Brien and Kendall (ND), 1930 Indiana state champs, the State tion of racquet-wielding, and finally 6-4, 1-6, 6-1; Moore and Phillippe (ISN) de­ Normal team of Terre Haute. The downed Kelley and Stanley of the feated Reaume and Borda, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4: Sulli­ matches were played last Saturday Teacher's outfit, 6-4, 6-2. Quimby, van and jVIike O'Brien defeated Stanley and afternoon at Terre Haute, and ended the Indiana Intercollegiate champ Kelley, 5-7, 6-1, 6-2. with the Teachers holding the long teamed up with Hutchins to trounce end of a 6-3 score. Captain Matt O'Brien and Bob Ken­ Interclub Baseball The' biggest of the afternoon came dall, 6-4, 1-6, 6-1. Moore and Phil­ Due to rain and cold weather aU in the first match, when Quimby, a lippe brought the match to a success­ interclub games scheduled for Mon­ veteran State man, defeated Captain ful conclusion for the hosts, by de­ day were postponed. These games Matt O'Brien, 6-0, 6-1. Bill Reaume feating Reaume and Borda, 4-6, 6-4, are to be played at a later date. Ac­ tied things up, however, when he took 6-4. cording to schedule there are to be Hutchins into camp, 6-1, 6-4, but The same men who represented games for Monday, Wednesday, and with the next match Indiana State Notre Dame in the match at Terre Friday. again took the lead, when Phillippe Haute, will journey to Kalamazoo to­ do%\'ned Bob Kendall, 6-3, 9-7. This morrow afternoon, where they will Besides having a team entered in time it was the other O'Brien who engage the Western State Teacher's this league, the Chicago club has came through for the visitors. Mike College team of that city. "Skinny" formed a league of its own. Accord­ had a tough time beating Stanley, Byrum, a South Bend boy, and pres­ ing to Mr. Masterson, who is in and did so only in the third set. The ent holder of both the Michigan In­ charge of the league, there will be score was 6-2, 1-6, 6-3. That was tercollegiate and the Michigan state thirteen teams in the organization. all the scoring for Notice Dame in the championships, is captain of the There will be a prize given to the singles. Although Borda held on Western State outfit. winning team. —PALACE Starting Saturday ON THE SCREEN Exiiosing the Woman Racket BARGAIN MATINEE—ALL SEATS—23c LEW AYRES Evenings and Sundaj-—^Balcony and Mezzanine, 23c; Main, 30c Star of "All Quiet" in Equaling his Success in "Dawn Patrol" "IRON MAN" RICHARD co-featuring Jean Harlow—Robert Armstrong BARTHELMESS Iron Man! Yes . .. but he melted at the touch of a beautiful girl's lips. Story by the author of "Little Caesar" Directed by the man who made "Dracula." "THE HNGER

GALA RKO VAUDEVILLE POINTS" A bevy of Singing-Dancing Beauties An underworld reporter JOE HERBERT who uses cold type to in defy the hot lead of ''Personalities**' the gang. with RUTH HAMILTON Added attraction Lillian Gordon—^Dave Steiner—^Edna Mae "Winning Putts" Mary Sawyer—Harriet Sunderland of a series of "Golf" with MELINO & DAVIS TOMMY EVANS Johnny Farrell Pints of Comedy One-Man Jazz Band JOE CHRISTY & COMPANY NEXT SATURDAY "The Perfect Nut" in Musical Capers Constance Bennett 25c till 6 p. m., including Saturday IN "BORN TO LOVE" 776 The Notre Dame Scholastic

BADGERS WIN BY 64-62 The latter event marked the ini­ Eoden (W); O'Brien (ND), second; (Continued from Page 769) tial appearance of the diminui- Poredon (ND), third. Time :15.5. tive Laurie Vejar, in the role of a 440-YARD EUN—^Won by Wilson and a second in these events, and this Notre Dame thinclad, and he ac­ (ND); Kuhn (ND), and Mitchell really proved to be the turning point quitted himself in fine fashion by (W), tied for second. Time .50.0. of the hotly contested meet. Captain A\dnning the broad jump with a leap Two MILE EUN—Won by Wright Johnnie O'Brien and Poredon, Notre of 22 feet, 5 inches. (W); Howery (ND), second; Cort- Dame, finished second and third "Chink" Kelly, "Nordy" Hoffman, A\n-ight (W), third. Time 9:40.5. respectively in the 120-yard highs, Bob Darling, Gene Howery, and POLE VAULT — Won by Johnson •while Eoy Bailie took a tliird in the Eegis Kuhn, were the other Blue and (ND); Lovshin (W), second; Lunde 220 lows. Bailie showed indominita- Gold point winners for the afternoon, (W), third. Height 13 feet. (New ble courage in even attempting to Kelly annexing a third in the hun­ Cartier field record.) compete, since he has been under dred and a second in the two-twenty; DISCUS THROW — Won by Kabat Hoffman a second in the discus, and strict surveillance of a doctor since (W); Hoffman (ND), second; Sim­ Darling and Kulm both garnered ties the indoor season, and was warned mons (W), third. Distance 147 feet, for second in the high jump and 440- that if he competed he would be in 8 inches. (New Cartier field record.) danger of permanently injuring his yard dash respectively. foot. .220-YARD LOW HURDLES—Won by Summaries: The 440-yard dash was carded as Eoden (W); Lee (W), second; Bailie the feature race of the day, but this ICO-YARD DASH—Won by McCor- (ND), third. Time :24.7. failed to materialize Avhen Captain mick (ND); Gough (ND), second; BROAD JUMP—^\\^on by Vejar (ND); Bill Henke, of the Badgers, was -with­ Kelley (ND), third. Time :10.0. Gough (ND), second; Lunde (W), drawn from the race after competing third. Distance 22 feet, 5 inches. ONE MILE RUN—^M'^on by Kirk in both the 100- and 200-yard dashes. (W); Little (ND), second; Thomp­ HIGH JUJIP—^Won by Shaw (W); Alex Wilson had things just about his son (W), third. Time 4:27.8. Darling (ND) and Murphy (W), tied own way then, and won the event for second. Height 6 feet, 1% inches. 220-YARD DASH—Won by McCor- easily in 50 seconds flat. Wilson soon 880-YARD EUN — Won by Little afterward completed his efforts for mick (ND); Kelley (ND), second; (ND); Wilson (ND), second; Mett the afternoon by placing second to Henke (W), third. Time :21.5. (W), third. Time 1:59.5. Brant Little in the half-mile. SHOT PUT—^Won by Behr (W); JAVELIN THROW—^Won by Lemm Gough gave a good account of him­ Kabat (W), second; Simmons (W), (W); Nee (W), second; Brantfort self by aimexing a second in the third. Distance 47 feet, 9 inches. (ND), third. Distance 175 feet, 1 100-yard dash and the broad jump. 120-YARD HIGH HURDLES—^T^^on by inch.

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I E)« ...Q The Notre Dame Scholastic 777

explicable reason had strayed to dif­ ferent fields. After they had gotten started Walsh, found easy pickings in Interhall Sports the freshmen, who secured but one run. Led by Mike Crawford and Art Bec- SWIJMMING var, Walsh crossed the plate exactly Morrissey clung to the top of the ten times. Kiep and Louy starred The second preliminary interhall ladder in Group I by trouncing Corby swimming- meet was postponed last for Howard. 1.5 to 7. The Morrissey hallers, aided STANDINGS Friday and will be held tonight at by Herb Giorgio's homer, got to the GROUP l eight o'clock. Mr. James T. Master- Corby twirlers early in the game and AV L PCT. son, in charge of the meet, has an­ handed Corby their second defeat. nounced that the list of oflScials will Morrissey 2 0 1.000 Jack Gandour also batted well for St. Edward's 2 0 1.000 be the same. And so, it seems, the Morrissey, while Bill Newbold, Corby swimmers of Sophomore, Brownson, Badin 1 0 1.000 shortstop, looked good in defeat. St. Sophomore 1 1 .500 Walsh, and Sorin halls, after a week Edward's was granted a forfeit vic­ of anticipation, will finally tangle in Sorin 0 1 .000 tory by Lyons who failed to put in Corby 0 2 .000 the natatorium tonight. an appe'arance either last week or Next Friday, the representatives Lyons 0 2 .000 this. Badin drew a bye in Group I. RESULTS: Morrissey 5, Corby 7; of those halls which have not j'et Group II has Freshman and Carroll St. Edward's 9, Lyons 0 (forfeit); competed will swim in the third and for its leaders. Each team has won Sophomore 7, Sorin 1; Badin, bye. final preliminary test. The finals are two victories, Carroll winning from to be held either on the first or OfF-Campus by a forfeit. Freshman STANDINGS second Friday in May. was forced to their utmost to dovvm- GROUP 2 BASEBALL a stubborn Brownson squad led by TV L PCT. Led by Bucky Halperin, who was Curt Milheim and Johnny Buckley. Carroll 2 0 1.000 the batting and pitching star, Sopho­ Dupuy and Krause were the Fresh­ Freshman 2 0 1.000 more won an easy victory over Sorin man luminaries. Brownson 1 1 .500 by 7 to 1. The star players of Sorin Manager Tony Wirry, in charge of Walsh 1 1 .500 failed to appear, and those who did interhall baseball, saved both. How­ Howard 0 2 .000 proved no match for the Sophomore ard and Walsh some embarrassing Off-Campus 0 2 .000 nine. Dick O'Donnell starred in the moments by going around from dia­ RESULTS: Freshman 11, Bro\\Tison field, and Bill Artman batted well mond to diamond and gathering the 7; Walsh 10, Howard 1; Cai-roll 9, for the seniors. competing teams, who for some in­ Oif-Campus 0 (forfeit).

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MEN'S NEW SPRING NOVELTY-COLORED Fresh Strawberry Sundae OXFORDS Corduroy Pants with Whipped Cream 15c Black or Tan, Endicott- All sizes, 28 to 38. Tan, Johnson make, new toes, Grey or Blue. Regular all sizes $4 to $5 5 to 11 $1.95 values $2.49 I GIL-BRO'S \\ DRUG I FORMERLY —U. S. ARMY STORE | i STORE I 330 SOUTH MICHIGAN STREET | | Comer Michigan and Colfax .13 778 The Notre Dame Scholastic

NEW ENGINEERING HALL turally this addition to the Univer­ What's YOUR (Continued from Page 755) sity facilities will greatly increase the efficiency of the College of Engi­ favorite neering, and at the same time ful­ constantly broadening. Electricity, fill the hopes which Mr. Gushing out­ for example, seems always to be in its lines in his letter. infancy. Nobody knows what the next In discussing the plans for the new day will produce. The same is true as building Mondaji^, Father O'Donnell tobacco? to the extension of the principles of pointed out that it is through such mechanics. We want adventuring generosity as that of Mr. Gushing minds in all departments of engineer­ that Catholic education will be al­ ing. Where shall we look for these lowed to progress. Advantages of results except to 'the products of non-Catholic secular institutions are schools like Notre Dame?" the direct result of greater financial In concluding his letter to Father resources. Thus the increasing aware­ O'Donnell, Mr. Gushing says, "Being ness of Catholic men and women of deeply impressed with 'The Needs of the importance of. the need is espe­ Notre Dame' as so clearly set forth by cially encouraging, he said. you in The Alumnus of January, 1930, The erection of a new Engineering and because I find at Notre Dame the building at the University, makes conditions that make for the twofold possible the extension of the expan­ training of great engineers in all the sion policy adopted by University departments of engineering, a tech­ officials six years ago. Since that nical training that ranks with the best time three dormitories, Lyons, How­ and a training in character founda­ ard and Morrissey halls, the dining Most PRINCETON tion nowhere excelled, and because I hall, a Law building, and Notre Dame feel I owe Noti-e Dame a debt of stadium have been added to the cam­ men smoke— gratitude which I can never fully pus. Plans for the immediate future discharge, I ask you to accept from include, in addition to the Engineer­ me a gift of three hundred thousand F you walk along Prospect Street ing hall, a Commerce building and in Princeton you'll notice how dollars toward the erection of a hall I two more dormitories, Dillon and many men load their pipes from of engineering to serve the immediate Alumni halls. the famihar blue Edgeworth tin. needs of the College of Engineering At Senior Sin^ng on the steps of and to meet the expectations of older Nassau Hall this spring the pipes will glow with Edgeworth. men like me who confidently look back UNIVERSAL N. D. NIGHT to Notre Dame to produce the men (Continued from Page 755) A pipe and Edgeworth—this is that are to carry on." the smoking combination that has won the college man. Yale, Dart­ The building, designed by Francis Joseph Valley observed the occasion mouth, Cornell, Illinois, Stanford Kervick, professor of architecture at with a 7:00 o'clock dinner in the Uni­ ... all agree with Princeton. Notre Dame, will be called the John versity dining hall. The Reverend College men everywhere respond F. Gushing Hall of Engineering. It John Cavanaugh, C.S.C., was the chief to the appeal of pipes—packed with will be located east of the new Law speaker of the evening, while Mr. cool, slow-burning Edgeworth. Be building, to which it will conform in Dudley M. Shively, retiring president, guided by their choice: Try - architecture, Gothic, carried out in a acted as toastmaster. The musical worth yourself. Taste its rich nat­ entertainment consisted of two groups ural savor that is enhanced im- modem manner. The exterior of the measm-ably by Edgeworth's dis­ structure will be decorated with of songs by the Notre Dame glee club tinctive eleventh process. carved panellings representing noted and two baritone solos by S. Jerome Catholic scientists. Ampere, Volta, Roach, soloist of the glee club. Nearly You will find Edgeworth at your 300 members and guests attended the nearest tobacco shop—15fi the tin. Ohm and Roentgen, are a few of the Or, for generous free sample, ad­ men who will be thus honored. banquet. dress Lams & Bro. Co., 105 S. The new hall is designed in three In practically every large city in 22d St., Richmond, Va. sections: the first, containing class the United States a group of alumni and drafting rooms, ^ will be three met to celebrate Notre Dame night. stories high. A second portion, two Meetings were also held in Manila, EDGEWORTH stories in height, will house the va­ P. I.; Montreal, Canada; Shanghai, SMOKING TOBACCO rious laboratories and machine shops, China; Pilatos, Cuba; Arequipa, Peru; while between the two, a single floor Havana, Cuba; Rome, Italy; Dacca, Edgeworth is a blend court will include an assembly room, Bengal, India; Mexico City and Mon­ of fine old burleys, terey, Mexico; San Juan, Porto Rico; with its natural savor seating approximately five hundred enhanced by Edge- and fifty students. and Cartagena, Columbia. worth's distinctive eleventh process. In 1897, the College of Engineering Buy Edgeworth any­ at Notre Dame was etablished. Dur­ where in two forms "Scholastic" Receives Praise —"Beady-Rubbed" ing the thirty-four years since its or­ Much favorable comment has been and"PlugSUce." All ganization it has grown in enrollment sizes, IS^ pocket received at the SCHOLASTIC office on the package to pound from seventyrnine students to four Rockne Memorial Number. From humidor tin. hundred and thirty-nine, in 1930. The many sections of the country come re­ old enginering building contains a quests for copies. Although an extra mechanical laboratory, a machine lai'ge number was printed the issue shop and various laboratories. Na­ is being rapidly exhausted. The Notre Dame Scholastic 779

GRID SQUAD CONTINUES Frosh Numeral Times WITH SPRING PRACTICE; BOXERS NOTE! for Swimming SCRIMMAGE DAILY All men wishing to enter the Numeral times for freshmen Student Activities Council box­ swimmers are here reprinted by ing tournament to be held some the SCHOLASTIC in order to re­ Notre Dame's embryo 1931 foot­ time in the near future, should mind those taking part in to­ ball squad added another week to its file their names with Ed Mad­ night's meet of their chances to spring conditioning drive in the past den in Sorin hall. win their '34. seven days. Aided in the first part 40-yard breast stroke :27 by perfect weather, the men prog­ 40-yard back stroke :28 ressed rapidly under the tutelage of 40-yard free style :21.5 a large staff of coaches. The rain 100-yard breast stroke 1:22 and poor conditions of the later part 100-yard back stroke 1:18 of the period slowed up the work 100-yard free style 1:05 considerably but did not prevent the daily workouts. DRAKE RELAYS WINNER With the squad divided into five TO GET ROCKNE TROPHY groups, scrimmages w-ere held almost every day. Four of the forces are EUROPE and Drake university has announced named for a quartet of major oppon­ that among the rewards this year in ents on next year's schedule. "In­ Back... $185 diana," "Northwestern," "Carnegie the annual Drake relays, scheduled Sell Dad on the idea! TJnited States for Friday and Saturdaj"-, will be a Tech," and "Southern California" Lines makes it so inexpensive. "Tourist new beautiful EJiute Eockne Memo­ form those groups while the fifth is Third" fares range from SI 85 round rial trophy. This trophy will become designated as the "varsity" and meets trip on the palatial REPUBLIC to S231 the others in scrimmage. on the mighty LEVIATHAN, 5 day the permanent possession of the speed to Europe. Remarkable values school winning the 440-yard football In the practice encounters held also on the flyers AMERICA and relay race. This particular event was GEORGE WASHINGTON. prior to the middle of the week, the Travel ivdth the college crovv'd. Last instituted as a regular feature of the "Indiana" contingent was the only year on one sailing of the LEVI ATHAiS^ 1929 carnival, and is open only to opponent to register a score against 60 colleges were represented. This year football players that have won their the Harvard-Yale track teams sail July the "varsity" squad. The various 1st on the GEORGE WASHINGTON monogram. groups are under the supervision of for the Oxford-Cambridge meet. members of the regular coaching staff Come on along! Enjoy fine food ... aided by veterans of the past season comfortable staterooms .. . movies ... Rockne Eulogized by Coach sports on big sun decks... nightly dances who have finished their careers as to the rhythm of real college bands from Ray Morrison, Southern Methodist players. Yale, Harvard, California, Pennsyl­ football mentor, is of the opinion that The practice sessions will continue vania, Ohio State, Virginia, Columbia, Notre Dame's football team will be Fordham, Maryland, Penn State and daily for another week or more under more formidable next year than other colleges. the same arrangement. If the weath­ ever before. In an address at Send at once for the booklet,"TOURIST er remains favorable much progress THIRD CABIN TO EUROPE" and Dallas, Texas, recently, Morrison said: should be made in that time. make reservations before the rash starts. "Notre Dame will be harder to beat Official fleet of tine Intercollegiate in 1931 than ever before, because Alumni Associations Consult Your Local Steamship Agent or those boys will be fighting for an A. I. E. E. to Elect Officers ideal. You won't ever need to men­ UNITED STATES tion Rockne to those fellows. They An election of officers for the com­ loved him." Morrison w^ill be remem­ ing year will be held at the next LINES meeting of the Notre Dame branch of bered as the coach of the Mustangs 216 No. Michieran Are., Chicago, lU. the American Institute of Electrical who brought his team up north and CHAS. KREILEK. General Agent. Engineers on Monday, April 27, in gave Notre Dame, an awful scare Chemistry hall. Dr. E. G. Mahin, of last fall. the chemistry department, will give a FORDHAM UNIVERSITY talk on a subject of interest to en­ Preregistration of Lawyers SCHOOL OF LAW gineers. NEW YORK Thomas P. Konop, dean of the Col­ Mr. J. L. Kreimer, of the Indiana- Case System—Three-Year Course lege of Law announced ;this week Michigan Electric Company of South that preregistration of students wish­ Bend, spoke on "Substation Design" CO-EDVCATIONAL ing to enter the Law college next at the last meeting held April 13 in College Degree or Two Years of September will take place in the Law^ Badin hall. According to Earl Brie- College Work with Good Grades Required building on Tuesday, April 28, at ger, branch president of the A. I. E. E., Kreimer was a member of the Transcript of Record Necessary in 7 p. m. All Cases. class of '23 and is connected with the The program of courses offered to MoKNiNG, EARLY AFTERXOOK AND those who are eligible is posted on substation department of the local EVENING CLASSES. company. the bulletin board in the Law build­ WRITE FOR CATALOGUE ing. Eligibility consists of either three years college work or of ninety There are 270 bottles of milk sold CHARLES p. DAVIS, Registrar 233 Broadway, New York hours accepted credit. in the candy store every day. 780 The Notre Dame Scholastic

* On Down the Line

. . . HELENE MADISON, Seattle swiming star, now holds 12 world titles and 28 American records . . . Penn is scheduled to play 29 base­ ball games this year, including the Eastern Intercollegiate league two- game series with Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, Columbia and Cornell . . . The British open championship is the only important golf title which has thus far eluded GENE SAEAZEN . . . JACK DEMPSEY is expected to take over the FITZSIMMONS bowl in Detroit this summer . . .

. . . TED BECKETT, guard on the California football team last year, caught the longest pass on record ^ov the spirlf that last year ... it was a 285-yard pass, thrown -from the top of the Cam panile at Berkeley, Cal., by BILL IN­ m/7S the dash GRAM,, new University of California football coach . . . seven other players Whether you like your track on the smooth cin­ failed to make the catch . . . Phila­ ders or prefer detouring cross country — you delphia and Boston will be members of the American league professional know it's more than second wind that keeps you soccer circuit during the 1931-32 sea­ going. To go faster and farther —try Shredded son . . . Wheat. Your coach knows it means more fuel ... A bout between ERNIE for the body—and that's more speed for the legs. SHAAF and JIMMY MALONEY, That's because all there is of Shredded Wheat rival Boston heavyweights and one of is ^oo

. . . This is BABE RUTH'S seven­ SHREDDED teenth season in baseball . . . Right- handed pitcher MAHAFFEY of the Athletics writes with his left hand . . ."Bear Down" is painted in large letters on the roof of the gym of the University of Arizona ... it is in HEAT memory of the late "BUTTON" SALMON, football star, who on his WITH ALL THE BRAN death-bed told his team-mates to OF THE WHOLE WHEAT "Bear Down" for him ... It is be­ ing planned to stage combination prize fights and wrestling matches at the same arena . . . this is the first time it has ever been done in Chica­ go .. .