The Notre Dame Scholastic Entered as second-class matter at Notre Dame. . Acceptance for mailingT Cat special rate of postage. Section 1103. Oct. 3, 1917. Authorized June 25. 1918.J

VOLUME LXVIII MAY 24, 1935 No. 26 ROBT. SCHNELZLEWINS NINETY-FIRST ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT BREEN ORATORY NEDAL EXERCISES WILL BE HELD NEXT WEEK From a group of seven finished speakers that survived the prelimi­ nary eliminations, Robert Schmelzle, junior in Arts and Letters, emerged VARIOUS EVENTS PLANNED victorious in the Breen Medal Ora­ "SCHOLASTIC" EDITOR torical Contest Wednesday night in By John Gillespie Washington Hall. The -winner, prom­ inent in campus forensic activities, A full and varied program will be has been an outstanding member of offered in the 91st Commencement the Varsity debating team during the Exercises, on May 31, June 1, and last two years. June 2. Athletics, banquets, con­ Schmelzle's oration was entitled certs, addresses, and reunions will "My Brother's Keeper." His speech make the three days eventful and focused attention upon the existence of individualism in the past and pres­ enjoyable. ent and the need in the future for an increased desire to improve society, Visiting alumni will be registered rather than to satisfy one's own ends. on May 31 and June 1 for lodging. Emphasizing his thesis the speaker Alumni Hall will house the members asserted, "We must fight against the of the classes before 1920; Dillon grim tradition that every man must Hall is to be reserved for the classes fight and plot against his fellowman of 1920 and after. The Alumni Golf from the cradle to the grave, and that Tournament will be held on the Uni­ if the individual falls through mis­ JOHN S. MORAN versity course, Friday and Saturday. fortune or circumstance, his riddance He'll be head man. Reunion dinners are scheduled for will be the gain of society." In con­ Friday, at 6:00 p. m. cluding, the speaker remarked, "A new vista of abundance will stretch The varsity baseball team meets before man as he proclaims to his FR. O'DONNELL PRESENTS University on May 31, and Creator, 'I am my brother's keeper!' " LAETARE MEDAL State on June 1, at Cartier Field. The second annual Notre Dame The three judges. Professors Doyle, SUNDAY National Catholic Interscholastic Downey and Cox, who judged the Track and Field Meet will take place merits of the speakers upon their Friday and Saturday. Many new delivery and material, awarded The Rev. J.Hugh O'Donnell, C.S.C, high schools are included in this in­ Schmelzle the coveted medal for his vice-president of the University, will creasingly popular feature. The an­ excellence in both of these phases. formally present, on Sunday night, nual Alumni Banquet in the Univer­ Besides the winner, two other May 26, in the Church of the Blessed sity dining halls, and a concert by the speakers received honors. John Lo­ Sacrament, Hollywood, the 1935 Glee Club in Washington Hall close gan, junior law student, who spoke Laetare Medal to Frank Hamilton the festivities for Saturday. on "Social Progress vs. Greed and Spearman, California novelist and At 9:00 Sunday morning, the Most Cupidity," gained first honors for his scenarist. impressive presentation of the child Reverend Francis J. Spellman, D.D., labor situation. William Fieweger, The writer was named recipient of auxiliary bishop of Boston, will give junior, speaking on "Banking Insur­ the medal on March 30. Most Rev. the baccalaui*eate sermon at the sol­ ance" received second honorable men­ John Joseph Cantwell, Bishop of emn pontifical Mass, in the gjrmnasi- tion. Monterey and Los Angeles, will pre­ um. The nationally famous Moreau side, and the Hon. Joseph Scott, 1918 Seminary choir will offer special mu­ The four other finalists and their medalist, will speak. sic. The Monogram Men's luncheon topics were: Richard White, "Gov­ in the dining hall provides the next ernment Ownership of Railroads"; The Laetare Medal is awarded an­ important incident. Thomas Sheiflfer, "Pope Leo XIII and nually by the University, and is rec­ His Encyclical on Labor"; Emil Peter, ognized as the highest honor a Cath­ At 4:00 p.m. the 91st graduating "Is America Sleeping?"; Ed Boyle, olic layman can receive in the United class will assemble in the gymnasium "A Tribute to the King of Rugged States. The medal is a solid gold for the awarding of degrees. The Individualists." The men competing disc suspended from a gold bar, bear­ Hon. Shane Leslie, famed on the cam­ in Wednesday's finals were deter­ ing in black enamel the words "Lae­ pus for his distinctive lectures and in mined by four preliminary try-outs tare Medal." The medal is so named the literary field as an essayist and a of twenty speakers during the past because it is announced on Laetare dramatist, will deliver the Commence­ weeks. Sunday, the fourth Sunday in Lent. ment address. Ma-y 2-4, 1935 One Cusack, Burns, Mulligan Are JOHN COM TO HEAD Winners In Class Elections PIGHTS OF COLUNBUS

CUSACK GIVES BANQUET Tom Murphy Elected In a spirited and closely contested election, the Knights of Columbus Head of the Student By Paul Foley selected their new officers. With the Activities Council council chambers full arid nearly a The last wisp of the smoke of full rosti-um present, the lai'gest vote battle has blown away from the an­ in several years was cast. The votes nual spring battlefields, the final bar­ Thomas J. Murphy, of Newport, Rhode Island was elected by. the Stu­ were well distributed among the var­ rage of ballots having been laid down ious candidates, and the result was on Thursday, May 9, when the elec­ dent Activities Council to succeed Thomas K. LaLonde as president of uncei-tain until the ballot count was tions for. all 1935-1936 class officers almost complete. were held. the organization. Murphy will be starting his second year as a member John V. Coyne was elected Grand In the main encounter, the race for of the S. A. C. having been received Knight as a result of his popularity into the organization when he was gained in his able handling of several elected last spring as president of the major activities throughout the year. Junior class of 1934-35. Grank Knight-elect Coyne nosed out Murphy was elected by a 10 to 4 Ray Martin by a close margin. Rob­ count over his nearest rival, Robert ert Cavanaugh, the only candidate to Cavanaugh, of Rouseville, Pa. be nominated from the floor, ran a In reaching the presidency, Murphy substantial third. has followed exactly the sequence by For Deputy Grank Knight, Edmond which LaLonde was elected. LaLonde Hammer led the balloting over Paul became a member of the S.A.C. in the Schrenker and Harold Druecker. Ar­ spring of 1933, when he also was thur Cronin polled a substantial mar­ awarded the presidency of his Junior gin over. Henry Dendler for the of­ class. fice of Chancellor. Frank Matthys Hal Miller, president of this year's who has been active in many K. of C. sophomores, was elected secretary of events, was elected Recorder over the S.A.C. Miller is from Indianap­ Thomas Foy, who was handicapped olis, Ind. Charles Boyle of Duluth, by his newness in the council. HOWARD CUSACK Minn., was made treasurer for next William Bowes, who held the office His margin was comfortable. year. of Recorder this year, nosed out The balloting was held at the last Francis Deery for the office of Treas­ the Senior class posts, Howard Cu­ regular meeting of the S.A.C. for this urer. Thomas Reardon will return to sack and his ticket emerged \actorious year, a closed session held on Monday take over his duties as Warden, hav­ by a comfortable margin. Cusack, evening. May 20. ing defeated Nicholas Casillo. August who was elected president of the Church, the only uncontested candi­ 1936 class, is a native of Brooklyn, date, will continue in his present po­ . He succeeds Thomas Rybicki Heads Cracow Club sition as Advocate. Proctor, of Elkhart, Indiana. Eugene J. Rybicki was elected pres­ The office of Inside Guard will be held by Julius Rocca, who defeated Daniel O'Brien, of Cleveland, , ident of the Charles Phillips Cracow Thomas Funk. The closest race of will be vice-president of next year's Club of the University of Notre Dame the election was run between Achilles graduates; Arthur Kerns, of Saginaw, at the last meeting of the Club for Moorman and George Thomas for the Michigan, and Arthur Huber, of Fort the school year. He mil replace Pres­ office of Outside Guard. Moorman Atkinson, Iowa, were elected secre­ ident Arthur L. Korzeneski next fall. won the position by a slight majority. tary and treasurer, respectively. The other officers-elect are respective­ The Cusack ticket was swept in ly: vice-president Alfred A. Sniadow- ski, secretary Joseph J. Sckoczylas, behind the peaceful and effective Catholic Poetry Society campaigning of Lee Moorman and and treasurer Daniel F. Kalczynski. Tobias Kramer. Korzeneski, who will graduate in At the first meeting of the newly The winners inaugurated a novel June, was elected president of the established Notre Dame branch of the \actory celebration when President- Polish Student Association of the Catholic Poetry Society of America, Elect Cusack was host to his many first district, at the district conven­ Sister M. Madelva, C.S.C, president workers and party supporters at a tion held in South Bend recently, of St. Mary's College was elected dinner, held shortly after the elec­ when, as president of the Notre Dame president. The organization, which tions, at the Morningside Hotel, in Cracow club, he was host to many held its initial meeting in the lay fac­ South Bend. guests from universities in the first ulty lounge on Wednesday evening. Martin Burns, of Chicago, Illinois, district. May 15, also elected Professor Nor- a sti-ong pre-election favorite ran true bert Engels of the English depart­ to form in the final balloting and was maries had been stormy, but the final ment as secretary. elected with a long lead over Walter elections were run off smoothly Nineteen members attended the Neinaber, his competitor for the enough and there was never much first meeting. Brief talks were given presidency of next year's junior class. question as to the final outcome. The by the Rev. Patrick J. Carroll, C.S.C, Thomas Foy, of Central, New Mex­ successful Bums ticket was ably the Rev. Leo Ward, C.S.C, the Rev. ico, was the successful candidate for championed by James Bacon, William Eugene Burke, C.S.C, James Arm­ vice-president in a surprise victory McNally, and Steve Finan. strong, Louis Hasley and Rufus over John Gillespie who held a wide Next year's sophomore president Ranch. Sister Madelva reviewed margin in the primary balloting. Wil­ will be Thomas Mulligan, Joseph briefly the history of the Catholic liam Lynch and George Lane were O'Boyle is to be vice-president, Poetry Society of America. The or­ elected secretary and treasurer, both Chauncey Rooney was elected secre­ ganization will reiriain inactive dur­ amassing comfortable leads. tary, and John Kelley will hold the ing the summer months, but will re­ The junior balloting in the pri- treasurer's position. sume its program in October. . Two The Scholastic PRENDERGAST IS NANED Moran, Davis, Tombragel, Named TO "SCHOLASTIC" POST To 1935-'36 Editorial Positions

The appointment of Joseph P. Prendergast to the position of Man­ Final Issue of "Lawyer" "SCRIP" PRIZES AWARDED aging Editor of THE SCHOLASTIC for to Make Appearance on the school year 1935-36, was an­ Campus Early Next Week The announcement of the appoint­ nounced this week hy the Faculty ments, for 1935-36, of John S. Moran Board of Publications. Prendergast is a junior in the College of Arts and Expertly written articles by lead­ and of DeLancey J. Davis to the edi­ Letters and is a resident of Ware, ers in the field of law, recent deci­ torships of THE SCHOLASTIC and the sions, notes on cases, and book re­ Dome respectively, was made at the views comprise the May issue of the Notre Dame Laivyer, the final ap­ annual Publications Banquet, Monday pearance of the journal this year. Co- evening. May 13. Maurice F. Tom- editors John Berry and Joseph Mc- Cabe announce that the publication will be released early next week. Prof. Thomas F. Konop, dean of the Notre Dame College of Law, is the author of the leading article on the legal rights of man. Henry Clay Johnson, graduate of the law school last year contributes, "An Analysis of the Present Legal Status of the Col­ lective Bargaining Agreement." "What's Wrong with Law in the United States?" is the title of the ar­ JOSEPH P. PRENDERGAST ticle by Rev. John Noonan. Father DELANCEY J. DAVIS He's worthy of promotion. Noonan is a member of the faculty of .4 wise selection. Mass. In addition to his duties as Loyola University, Chicago. A feature managing editor, he will conduct the of the May issue is the compilation bragel, a senior in Arts and Letters, campus sports column, "Splinters of a restatement of the law of Agen­ was chosen editor of Scrip early this Fi-om The Press Box" during the cy with annotations to the Indiana week. The appointments were an­ coming year. decisions prepared by a committee of nounced by the Rev. Lawrence V. Notre Dame law faculty. The article Broughal, C.S.C, chairman of the The editorial board of THE SCHO­ contains the first twenty-six sections. Faculty Board of Publications. LASTIC announced this week, with the approval of the Board of Publica­ Co-editor Berry, Richard Molique, Moran succeeds John D. Carbine as tions, the appointment of six new and John Locher contribute to the de­ editor of the University news weekly. staff members, three to the news and partment on Notes. The recent case The new editor is a junior in the Col­ three to the sports departments. The contribution is the work of John lege of Arts and Letters and is a resi­ men added to the news staff are: Keller. Don F. Wise prepared the dent of New York City. He has been Gregory Byrnes, Arts and Letters book reviews. a member of the news staff since his sophomore from Ontario, Canada; Throughout the year, the Lcnvyer sophomore year, and served as news Harold Williams, Arts and Letters has been highly praised by outsiders. editor during the past year. freshman from Baltimore, Md.; and Commendations were made especially John Hurley, Rushville, N. Y., a soph­ on the articles of the Rev. Charles C. Davis, a sophomore in the College omore in Arts and Lettei-s. Miltner, C.S.C, Hon. Leonidas Pita- of Commerce, succeeds John W. The sports staff will be enlarged mic, W. C. Dorsey, and Louis Jackson, Walker as editor of the Dome. During through the addition of Andrew all contributors to various issues of the past two years he has worked on Crowe, Arts and Letters freshman this year's Lcnvyer, The notes and the yearbook and has' familiarized from Lafayette, Ind.; Arch Gott, Chi­ recent decisions have been the objects himself with its make-up and produc­ cago, III., a sophomore in the College of favoi-able comment from many. tion. His home is in Schenectady, of Commerce; and Allen P. Bride, Notations from the Laivyer appear New York. Hartford, Conn., a sophomore in the in several recent case books on law, Tombragel, who will return for College of Commerce. namely those of Prof. Chafee of Har­ graduate work next year, succeeds vard, and Prof. Hepburn of Alabama. George A. La\\i;on as editor of Scrip. Co-editors Berry and McCabe are He is a resident of New York City Class Day Exercises Will to be congratulated on the high cal­ and has been, during the past year, a Be Held in Washington Hall ibre of work they have turned out frequent contributor to the literary this year. quarterly. As an important part of the three- Ninety campus journalists attended day Commencement program, the Italian Club Elections the banquet, at Avhich Shane Leslie Class Day exercises of the 1935 grad­ Patrick Dizenzo was elected presi­ gave the principal address. The an­ uates will be held on Saturday, June dent of the Italian club at the spe­ nual |25 prize for the best prose con­ 1, at 10:00 a.m., in Washington Hall. cial election meeting held Friday eve­ tribution to Scrip, literary quarterly, John Francis Holahan, of Gales- ning, May 17, in Walsh hall base­ was divided between William A. Ken­ burg, Illinois, is the Valedictorian; ment. Dizenzo succeeds John Busichio. nedy for his "Late Bus," and Maurice Joseph Francis Becek, of Ambridge, Anthony P. Serge was elected vice- F. Tombragel for his "Gallery After­ Pa., the Class Orator; and George president; Enrico di Brienza, treas­ noon." The $25 award for the best Carlos Hager, C.S.C, of Moreau Sem­ urer; and Matthew Bruccoli, secre­ verse was given to Harry J. Cozad inary, Notre Dame, is the Class Poet. tary. for his "Johnson's Hill."

3iiay 24, 1935 Th r ee SCIENCE GRADUATES GIVE DR. ZAHN IS ELECTED AS SURPRISE BANQUET FOR RYAN IS APPOINTED TO HONORARY ALUNNI HEAD FATHER WENNINGER GLEE CLUB PRESIDENCY The seniors of the College of Science James E. Armstrong, secretary of gave a testimonial banquet to the The 1935-1936 Glee Club officers as the Notre Dame Alumni association, Rev. Francis J. Wenninger, C.S.C, recently appointed by Professor Jos­ announced recently that Doctor Al­ dean of the college, on Wednesday eph Casasanta, director of the Club bert F. Zalun, occupant of the Gug­ evening. May 1-5. The banquet was and head of the music department genheim chair of Aeronautics in are as follows: Washington, had been mianimously John F. Ryan,a junior in Arts and elected honorary president of the as­ Letters and a resident of Oak Park, sociation for 1.9.35-1936. Illinois has been made president. Dr. Zahm is one of America's Mark Finocchiaro, of Rochester, New outstanding aeronautical authorities. York, a junior in Science will officiate While here at Notre Dame he became as vice-president. noted for his pioneering achievements in aviation. Though he vsras interested The business management of the prunarily in the physical laws of club will be taken over by Irwin Gold­ flight he put his theories to a success­ man of Long Island, a junior in ful test by flying one of his own glid­ REV. FRANCIS J, WENNINGER, C.S.C. journalism. His assistant will be ers in the days when this was a real A Popular Dean. achievement. As one of the Univer­ Thomas E. Adamson, a junior in com­ sity's outstanding sons he was the held in the lay faculty dining room merce and a resident of Geneva, 111. unanimous choice for this honorary and was attended by 25 members of position. Managing the publicity of the Club the senior class. is John W. Kirsch, a commerce junior The dinner was a complete surprise The latest issue of The Notre Dame from . Lindsay Phoebus to Father Wenninger who was under of Cumberland, Maryland, a junior in Ahnnnus is a fitting tribute to the the impression that it was merely a memory of the late Father John W. A.B., is the assistant publicity man­ final social assemblage of the class. ager. Cavanaugh. Manj-- of Father Cava- After the purpose of the banquet was naugh's brilliant speeches are re­ announced by William Bernard, who The Glee Club presented a quarter- printed in this issue. They are well acted as toastmaster, the class gave hour program over the Columbia worth reading especially his com­ the guest of honor a rising vote of broadcasting system this morning at mencement addresses for they give a thanks. 11:30, Central Standard Time. The vivid conception of his ideal Univer­ After the dinner Father Wenninger broadcast originated in the studios of sity and his ideal Notre Dame. was thanked by the toastmaster, in WSBT in the Engineering building, Several pages of the Alu7mms are the name of the senior class, for his and was carried over the entire Col- required to print the many hundreds services in guiding and directing the mnbia network. of telegrams and letters that were present class through their four years of academic education. Father Wen­ received from alumni and friends in Hochreiter To Head The every part of the country. The power ninger responded by expressing his of his personality and the magnitude gratitude to the class for the honor Commencement Ushers of his achievements are shown both they had bestowed upon him. He by the number and evident sincerity wished the men every measure of suc­ For the first time in many years at of these messages. Men high in the cess, and said that regardless of the Notre Dame the Commencement ranks of government, industry, and success that they might obtain they ushers will be students of the gradu­ education join together in their ex­ would always be welcome back at ating class. Following the procedure pressions of sympathy. Notre Dame. at several other universities, the Pre­ The connnittee appointed by the fect of Discipline appointed a mar­ Another section of this issue con­ graduating class to arrange for the shal, who had the power to select, tains the official commencement pro­ banquet consisted of William Ber­ with the president of the class, the gram. It is expected that an unusually nard, chairman; Samuel La Monica men to act in the capacity of ushers. large number of the alumni will be on and John Shaner. hand this year. Many new features Franklyn C. Hochreiter, senior in have been arranged to make this the College of Arts and Letters, was y e a r's commencement particularly Chicago Club Dance appointed marshal with the following memorable not only to the graduating The Chicago Club will hold its an- three deputy marshals—John D. Car­ seniors and their friends but to the nuar^summer dance on June 11, in bine, Vincent A. Gorman, Jr., and visiting alumni as well. the Joseph Urban Room of the Con­ John J. McGrath. The other men on gress Hotel. Charley Gaylord's or­ the staff are: George Barber, John An interesting account of Father Breen, James Cronin, Clifford Dud­ O'Hara's recent European trip, re­ chestra, which is now playing in the Pompeiian Room of the Congress, will ley, Martin Hendele, Robert Henne- ports from the various city chapters berger, Cecil Hobert, Robert Lee, indicating the enthusiastic reception furnish the music. Tickets for the affair have been priced at $1.75 per Fred Locke Morris, Walter O'Brien, of the Universal Notre Dame Night Vamum'Parrish, and Eugene Witch- couple, a reduction over former sum­ broadcast, an accoimt of the doings ger. of the various alumni groups, and a mer dance prices. summary of recent athletic events on Table reservations may be made The ushers will act at the four pub­ the campus complete this Memorial with any of the club officers, with lic functions over the week-end—^the issue of the Alumnus. . - any of the hall' representatives, or Class Day Exercises Saturday morn­ by calling the Congress Hotel during ing, the Glee Club Concert Saturday The annual mail-ballot election of June 10 and 11, Tickets may be evening, the Baccalaureate Mass Sun­ the officers of the Alumni Association procured from any of the officers,' or day moiTiing, and the Conferring of is now in progress. at the door on the night of the dance. Degrees Sunday afternoon. Four The Scholastic SECOND AERONAUTICAL Bishop Noll Will Celebrate Opening of MEET HELD ON NAY IS Tenth Episcopacy Anniversary Tomorrow

Jeanne d'Arc Medal STUDENTS TO TAKE PART By Louis Da Pra Awarded to Forbes; Colonel Eddie Rickenbacker and Doyle Gets Mention By Bertram Smith Major Alford "Al" Williams were the principal speakers at the University's The Most Rev. John F. Noll, D. D., The French department of the Uni­ Bishop of Fort Wayne, vnll open the second aeronautics conference held in versity has announced that the much Washington Hall, Wednesday after­ celebration of his tenth episcopacy coveted Jeanne d'Arc Medal, the anniversary with a low mass at 6:30 noon, May 15, before more than 600 a w a r d for general excellence in students and a score of leaders in the French diction, language and litera­ American a\aation industry. ture, was won this year by Robert L. The Rev. John F. O'Hara, C.S.C, Forbes of New Rochelle, New York. president of the University, opened Forbes will graduate from the Col­ the conference by outlining the aims lege of Arts and Letters this June. of the course in aeronautics in the The medal was awarded following a College of Engineering and the contest held in the Main Building on course in airport management in the May 15. College of Commerce. Father O'Hara During his course of studies here warned the nation to keep ahead of at the University, Forbes has spe­ the rest of the world in aviation for cialized in the studies of the French commercial and defensive purposes. and Spanish languages \vith a view towards a career in foreign trade. Colonel Rickenbacker, America's Gerald P. Doyle of Chicago, also a greatest war-time flier and vice-presi­ senior graduating from the College of dent and general manager of Eastern Arts and Letters in June, was award­ Air Lines, told of the immense strides ed first accesit. made by the fledgling industry and Forbes' name can now be added to prophesied greater achievements to the following list of the ^vinners of come. In referring to airmail con­ the contest since it was first held. tract cancellations, he told of the ob­ 1933—David W. Dalrymple, gradu­ stacle that politicians have placed in ate student in the Institute of Med­ the way of the industry. ieval Research here at the Univer­ sity; 1934—George C. Martinet. In speaking of the need of young men, he said: "There has never been a time in history when opportunities Major General Markham for young men were so great as they Addresses The Engineers are today." Major General E. M. Markham, Colonel Rickenbacker predicted chief engineer of the United States that adequate aeronautics develop­ Corps of Engineers, addressed the ment will prevent future wars, that faculty and Notre Dame engineers on in three years the Atlantic will be the afternoon of May 10. His educa­ spanned by regular air service, and tional talk covered the history, oper­ that scheduled air transports will fly ations and duties of the department the Pacific within a year. which he heads. Major Al Williams, one-time star General Markham delved lightly in­ pitcher for the New York Giants, to the history of the Corps of En­ crack pilot in both the United States gineers, mentioning the construction navy and Marine corps, one-time of the Panama Canal and the gigantic MOST REV. JOHN F. NOLL, D.D. world airplane speed record holder, feats performed durng the World His tenth anniversary. and now head of the aviation division War. tomorrow morning in Sacred Heart of the Gulf Refining company, praised Part of his talk dealt with the church. The Bishop's novena, which the University's planned aeronautics government irrigation, power and course. He said the industry was cry­ flood control projects which his de­ has been conducted for the last week, ing for trained men. partment has recently completed and will end Saturday when the students' is contemplating. He brought out an spiritual bouquet \vill be presented to Inclement weather in the East, interesting feature in the construc­ the Bishop. making it impossible for him to fly tion of the dam across the Columbia Sunday afternoon the student body his Cui-tiss Hawk biplane here, caused river. Over a million dollars was has been invited to participate in the the postponement of his originally spent for a fish elevator to carry the Deanery Eucharistic celebration, in scheduled aerobatic exhibition over salmon above the dam during the honor of Bishop Noll, to be held in the campus. He then showed several spawning season. Another intriguing the stadium. The pageant, in which reels of motion pictures illustrating and astounding fact his talk brought 25,000 are expected to join, is spon­ some of his famous aerial tricks. out was the extensiveness of the Mis­ sored by the Catholic Youth Organi­ zation of • St. Joseph County. The An informal conference at lunch­ sissippi levees. These levees are larg­ procession, marshalled by Mr. Robert eon in the faculty dining hall pre­ er than the great wall of China and ceded the formal meeting in Wash­ withstand a more formidable foe. Riordan, registrar of the Uiiiversity, ington Hall. Nothing developed which Besides his talk about his depart­ will form at 2:15 o'clock, school time, would materially change the air ment. General Markham praised the in Cartier Field and proceed to the course that will be added to the cur­ Engineering department at Notre stadium. There the assembly will riculum next fall. Dame. (Continued on Pajte 20) -34ay 24, 1935 IV e SOCIOLOGY DEPARTMENT SHANE LESLIE SPEAKS AWARDS SCHOLARSHIPS ON CARDINAL MANNING

By Clifford F. Brown Mr. Leslie's final lecture wiU be Awarding of five graduate scholar­ given on May 28. It will be en­ ships in Social Case Work for the titled: "Ghosts and Ballads." school year of 1935-36 were an­ Last of the men about the campus nounced this week by the Graduate to be presented in these columns for By Harold Williams Curriculum in Social Work. 1934-35 is the man who ranks third Prefacing his lecture with the re­ Awards were based upon scholastic in the list of graduating seniors. mark that it would be the final one attainment and upon the testimony Since leaving Corpus Christi High, of the year unless a few students sur­ of reputable judges concerning the John Francis "Bud" Holahan has de­ vive the examinations and appear qualifications of the applications for veloped into a salesman, politician. next Tuesday night, Mr. Shane Leslie social work. The minimum require­ spoke on the life of Cardinal Manning ment for students to secure these on May 21 in Washington Hall. awards was 20 hours in social science. After refuting and disclaiming the eA^idence given in the first biography Graduates of all colleges were elig­ of Manning, which was written a few ible for these scholarships. In re­ years after the Cardinal's death by sponse to this opportunity, applica­ an obscure journalist named Purcell, tions came from cities as far distant Ml'. Leslie, who wrote the second bi­ as San Diego, California and Provi­ ography of Manning, went on to trace dence, Rhode Island. the ecclesiastical life of the Cardinal. All of those who have been awarded Cardinal Henry Edward Manning, scholarships are Notre Dame men, the son of one of the directors of the since many other applicants were un­ Bank of England, was born in 1808. able to fulfill the requirements of He attended the public school of Har­ sociology background. It is note­ row and later the University of Ox­ worthy that few Catholic colleges of­ ford. No sooner had he finished col­ fer the comprehensive courses in the lege when his father became bank­ social sciences which are considered rupt and Manning was forced to give essential in a pre-professional rela­ and scholar. He heads the graduates up his ambition to enter politics. He tionship and social work. Notre of the Commerce School with an av­ soon turned to the church and became Dame, however, offers many more erage of 94.6, and is the first stu­ a curate in Sussex in 1830. Later he courses than are contained in the dent of that college to be chosen as was advanced to an archdeaconship minimum requirements. valedictorian of his class in the last at Chichester. It was while Manning ten years. Avas at Chichester that he became a The following are the recipients of Being selected to deliver the Vale­ convert to the Catholic Church and tuition scholarships for the academic dictory was not a new experience for ten weeks later one of her priests. year, 1935-36: James A. Bartley, A.B. him. Back in his high school days he Manning's first major achievement '30, graduate student from Morgan- was chosen for the same honor. Since was a result of his acquaintance with field, Kentucky; Walter J. Kennedy, coming to Notre Dame, Frank has ac­ Florence Nightingale. It was through A.B., '34, of Glenbrook, Conn.; and quired the abilitj'^ to handle profit and his influence that she journeyed to Cornelius J. Crowley of Brooklyn, loss statements and balance sheets the battle fields of the Crimean War New York, Paul P. Halbert of Weeds- like an adding machine. However, with a group of Irish Nursing Sisters port, N. Y., Luke F. Kelly of Albany, mathematics alone do not take up of Charity to bring aid and comfort N. Y., all three graduates of the most of his time for the library has to the wounded soldiers and fame to class of 1935. experienced a sharp increase in the hei-self and the nuns. Gerald A. Purcell, A.B., '35, of turnover of novels since he tried to It was not long after Cardinal Scranton, Pa., was named first alter­ cover four years of reading in one. Manning had returned from Rome nate. The Knights of Columbus Schol­ His ventures into the political whirl where he had been working for the arships in Group Work will be an­ at Noti-e Dame have brought him a acknowledgment of the infallibility of nounced at a later date. membership in the S.A.C., and. the the pope that he became a champion chairmanship of the student trip to of the working class. In the greatest the Navy game in Cleveland last fall. Servers Club Holds Banquet dock strike in the history of England He is another of that smallarmy who during the year 1889, laborers were The Server's Club held their first were powers behind the machine that striking for a penny more an hour. annual banquet in the Faculty Dining elected the president of the class of' Cardinal Manning at the age of Hall last Monday evening. In the ab­ '35. His latest task is furnishing eighty attempted to bring the two sence of the Revl J. Hugh O'Donnell, seniors with the proper commence­ parties together. His first attempt C.S.C., the sponsor of the organiza­ ment invitations. at conciliation failed, but his sec­ tion, the group was addressed by Galesburg, Illinois is his home ond one met with the approval of Rev. Frank Cavanaugh, C.S.C, who town, but Frank has a sincere affec­ both parties. A few months after- spoke on Catholic Action, and Rev. tion for Louisiana beauty. Having Avard the Cardinal died, the acknowl­ James Connerton, C.S.C, who gave visited the southern state during one edged champion of the working class. a very intei-esting treatment of the vacation, his deep sense of the aes­ theme, "Daring to be Different." thetic has prompted his frequent re­ the boys as the campus cannon ball. Rev. Eugene Burke, C.S.C, extend­ turn. The eventful career of the 1935 Val­ ed the best %vishes of the members Occasionally Frank can drop his edictorian began with a six week's to the Server's Moderator, Brother quiet and easy going attitude. This stay in historic old Brownson Hall, Boniface, CS.C, who will leave for was demonstrated one night by the back in '31, and again history repeats Germany in June. He is expected to exceptional speed with which he re­ Itself and he will finish his final se­ carry on the wor'k of the gi-oup next turned to the campus from a dance. mester by another six week's sojourn September. Since then he has been known among in the same place. Six The Scholastic NET CLUB MOVES TO College Parade REYNIERS PERFECTS SOLVE ITS TROUBUS With Vincent Gorman SCIENTinC METHOD FINAL ISSUE By Paul Foley With the final edition come certain Professor James A. Reyniers, of The Metropolitan Club coasted dispensations and privileges which we the College of Science, has recently blithely to the end of a rather hectic cannot refrain from greeting with completed a biological experiment year with all sails still intact. After pleasure. Regret marks these last which has puzzled scientists for more the many feverish weeks of planning, slow clicks of the much-abused 'port­ than fifty years, and which may lead the officers succeeded in puncturing to the isolation of cold, influenza, and the lethargy of the members and infantile paralysis germs. Guinea managed to reach a satisfactory set­ pigs, in which bacteria are cultivated, tlement of their long harbored deficit. have been for the first time raised absolutely germ-free in the bacteri­ With the club's financial standings ology laboratories. on a more even keel, elections were held on Tuesday, May 14. Carl Let- The importance of this work, which sen was elected president of the New culminates six years of research by York organization, out-balloting Ed­ Professor Reyniers lies in the fact ward Hammer for the position. that it permits a study of any single William Shea will act as vice-presi­ genu on a living organism, heretofore dent during 1935 -1936, Joseph considered impossible by most sci­ O'Brien was elected treasurer, and entists. George Lane won the treasurer's The guinea pigs are bom and berth. raised under the most ideal condi­ The election of Inter-Borough rep­ tions science can devise. They are delivered in a germ free operating resentatives who will replace the able,' but with it is mingled a feeling board of trustees was postponed un­ chamber by caesarian operation to of relief, now that the end is nigh. avoid contamination, and raised in a til next fall in order to give the offi­ The calendar gives a sly old wink to cers time to work out the details of completely air-conditioned chamber. signal that our term will soon be over, A "glass-mothei-" feeds the pigs, a the new set-up. the office is getting ready to assume A new constitution is being di'afted synthetic pig milk especially .prepared its coat of summer dust, the gang is by Professor Rejmiers. for the organization, and v/ill go into writing 'heads' and reading proof for effect next year. It provides for many the last time this year. All too soon The guinea pig estate occupies an radical departures, especially in the these weekly rituals must cease. area of sixty-four square feet in the method of determining membership bacteriology laboratories on the sec­ in the organization, selection of dance It's been a pleasurable jaunt, visit­ ing the different spots in college-land ond floor of Science Hall. The com­ chairmen, and the appointment of partment in w^hich they live resembles committees for club affairs. since last fall. Now in retrospect, the highlights of the journey come back a square diving bell, with portholes Arrangements for the final \\aping to parade once more. The encourage­ to pei'mit inspection of the inhabit­ out of the deficit accrued by the Met­ ment of those few faithful who ants, and ports through which steri­ ropolitan Club are being handled by trudged with us so patiently all year lized rubber gloves can reach any retiring President Andrew Maffei. has been sweet, nor has the contemna- part of the cage. Under his guidance settlements have tion—perhaps rightful—of those who been reached with most of the large Attempts to develop a "living germ- joyed in stepping on our toes been free test tube" have been made since creditors and letters have been sent anything but welcome. Every bit of to the parents of Met Club members. Pasteur first suggested it in 1880. it contributed to whatever success While definite results on the mail Professor Reynier's experiment marks campaign are not available, it ap­ this eft'ort may be considered to have the first completely successful work peared that the ice had been success­ attained. of this kind, and will probably open fully broken and that the New York Many there were who did not side the door to research fields which were organization is due for clear financial Avith us on the matter of war. Some formerly considered impossible of sailing. took afront, others attacked, still oth­ access. President-Elect Letsen announced ers merely smile. To all of them we this week that plans are being made submit our sincere apology for any distress they suffered. This goes, also, for the holding of a summer dance Lawrence V. Broughal, C.S.C, that but they have not yet progressed be- to all those who found our pronounced stands on other matters questionable our deep appreciation goes for his vond the tentative state. kind advice and consideration; and to or disagreeable. It w^as our attempt the men of the Publications Office our to disassociate all comments from ref­ thanks for their tolerance. To John Detroit Club Elections erences to personalities, but if in this Carbine, our astute and capable ed­ we failed, we ask only that our lines Lee Moorman, who successfully itor, and to Ed Van Huisseling, the be accepted in the spirit in which backed the candidacy of Howard pimster of the Press Box, a verbal Cusack for senior president, went they were given. slap on the back and best wishes for still further in the campus balloting And if, at any time, our remarks continued success. And to all those by adding the Detroit Club presi­ offended the student bodies of those graduating Scholasticers — Bill Ken­ dency to his list of victories. Moor­ campi which we visited, it is our hope nedy, Joe Bucci, Roy Scholz, Louis man will succeed Thomas Stringer, that they \\ull be consoled now that Hi-uby, "The Hoch," Mickey Glanz- who held the president's post during these words will soon be silenced. ner and Jack Flanagan a hope that we'll meet again, and soon. 1934-1935. PARTING OF THE WAYS John Ullman will assist Moorman in the capacity of vice-president, The grateful traveller can, in bid­ Before closing up the old noise-box Robert Hart was elected secretary, ding his hosts farewell, give little let us offer a toast to the class of and the ti-easurer's job was voted to more than verbal expression to his 1935 and, our flight ended, say to all Jerrv Schaefer. thankfulness. It is then to the Rev. of you, "Good luck and thanks a lot I" Seven S\^ay 24, 1935 FR. O'MRA PRESENTS Dome Dust WRANGLERS CELEBRATE KEYS TO SCIENCE MEN By William Tonmey TENTH ANNIVERSARY

The Reverend John F. O'Hara, It's been so nice, knomng you . . . The Wranglers Society celebrated C. S. C,. President of the Universitj'^, I hope you enjoyed it as much as \ye its tenth anniversary with a testimon­ was the honored guest at the final did . . . Honestly, no fooling, and all ial banquet in the Rose Marie Tea meeting of the Academy of Science that sort of stuff . . . You know, every Room last Sunday night. held Friday night in Science Hall. Fr. column like tliis . . . "now is the time The occasion was honored with the O'Hara presented keys, of the Acad­ college paper has to end up with a emy to sixteen members, nine juniors presence of three past presidents: and seven seniors. To be eligible for Professor William Coyne, the founder this key, a student is required to have of the society and Coach of Varsity been a member of the Academy for Debate at the University; Hon. Jos­ three semesters and must have read eph P. McNamara, second president an acceptable paper before the organ­ and deputy attorney general of the ization. State of Indiana; and Arthur Sand­ usky, eighth president and a student Three papers were read at the final in the Law School. Each of the above meeting. "The Nostrum Menace," a past Wranglers reaccounted experi- paper dealing with the dangers of . ences during his regime. A letter using quack medicines, was presented from James J. Walsh of Brooklyn, by Robert Ervin, a junior in the De­ the third president of the society, partment of Pharmacy. Norvin Cas­ was read by the secretary. per, a junior in the Pre-Med depart­ ment, read the second paper entitled The banquet, which is held annual­ "EflFect of Electrical Shock on Eats." ly as a farewell to departing seniors, The third paper, "Tissue Culture," was the last formal meeting of the discussed some of the technique and following Wranglers: Arthur Korzen- theorjT involved in this phase of his­ we must part" stuff ... It is tradi­ eski, president; Franklyn Hochreiter, tology, and was given by James Coll, tional . . . And a swell way to fill up secretary; Thomas Proctor, John a senior in Pre-Med. space . . . But, to get specific in our Clark and Richard Ballman. The two At the conclusion of the session. farewells, may we say adieu to one first men, in their remarks, turned Reverend Francis J. Wenninger, and all . . . And to the marginal over their chairs to the incoming of­ C. S. C, Dean of the College of Sci­ reader . . . Also to the cop at the ficers, Eugene Malloy, president and ence and Moderator of the Academy, gate who can't understand how con­ Robert Schmelzle, secretary. Proctor, gave a brief review of papers pre­ venient it would be for the cabs to Clark and Ballman also expressed sented during the year, and also dis­ drive up in fi'ont of Soi'in at 11:15, their adieus to the Wranglers. cussed some of the theses submitted F.B.T. (Father Boland's time.) . . . As a particularly interesting part this spring for bachelor degrees. To Ollie and Tom in the East dining of the program the new chaplain was hall, who open the doors at precisely introduced to the society in the per­ two and a half minutes before meal son of Rev. Norbert Hoff. Father Father Murray's Book time . . . Another month of it and Hoff succeeds the late Rev. John Cav- To Be Published Soon we'd sci-eam . . . You don't think we anaugh, C.S.C., who was the society's would, do you . . . Well, give us an­ chaplain since the founding of the Publication of a new book. Intro­ other month around here and we'll group. show you ... And a fond fare-thee- ductory Sociology, by the Rev. Ray­ James Burke, Charles Boyle and mond W. Murray, C. S. C, head of well to the laundry manager . ... We. feel sorry for that fellow . . . He sure Joseph McGrath, all juniors, were the University department of soci­ took a beating this year . . . And he's the new members to be presented at ology has just been announced by the such a great fellow when you get to the banquet.. It was their formal in­ New York publishing house of F. S. know him . . . But, they say every itiation after having been approved Crofts and Co. The text, described cause must have its effect (philosophy. by the society a* week ago. by the firm as one "which marks an 3a) . . . Also a parting tlu-ust to the Arthur Korzeneski acted as toast- important departure in Catholic gang who have to work for McAllister master for the dinner and Franklyn sociological literature," -jvill be ready next year ... McAllister is another Hochreiter was the chairman. by July the first. great fellow, when you get to know The prunary purpose of the book him , . . But he isn't very susceptible is to present the facts, theories and to introductions. . . techniques of current sociology in Boston Club Elections their relation to the fundamentals of The results of the Boston Club elec­ Catholic social belief. That the author tions held May 13, in Brownson "Rec" has been successful may be learned This isn't really goodbye . . . It's are as follows: George J. Moriarty, from the excellent review given the only a beginning ... You see, college Lynn, Mass., president; Paschal A. book "by Rt. Rev. Msgr. William J, is just a mile stone along the path of Tofuri, Winchester, Mass., vice-presi­ Kerby. This well-known authority, life . . . We are going out into-the dent; James W. McHugh, Fitchburg, in announcing the publication of world ... To make our mark . . . ;We Mass., treasurer; Bernard E. Megin, the work, says in Commonweal for won't, of course, be welcomed with Concord, Mass., secretary. May 10: open arms . . . On.the contrary, my "I know of no other text A\T:itten friends . . . Little do we know of its us out ... But life will be nothing from a Catholic standpoint in the hardships . . . There will be pitfalls like that . . . We will have two roads United States that has attempted on every side of us ... To be brutallj'^ to take . . . One is straight stuff . .". what Dr. Murray has completed. His frank, we won't know what it's all The other's as easy as all get up . . . volume has a message of the greatest about ... Of course, it was rather But, beware ... Do you, my innocent significance for our Catholic semin­ difficult, at times, to make the hall by seniors,.know where that road leads aries. Catholic universities and coll­ riiidnight ... And it wasn't always you to . . . I do . . . Come up and eges." easy to call up and have someone sign see me some time. .. Sight The ,S ch olds tic Voice of the Campus THE WEEr Bj WilUam A. Eeimedr To the Senior Class: "One week from Sunday the mem­ bers of the Senior Class of 1935 will Top of the Week any other fellow in Mt. Clemens, but gather together for the last time. It who will probably get along despite has been a good year, a year of both Those two fellows will do anything such a damning description. Baby acMevements and disappointments, of to get in the headlines. Hochreiter talc, powder puff and all, he's one of soiTows and joys, but all in all a good gives Korzeneski two dollars to get the most quiet and lovable graduates year.' The men of the class of 1935 him a corsage to take to the St. of the year. He hit a triple last week. have cooperated in every way. To Mary's Ball. Korzeneski has it sent He has alfalfa hair and owes us eight, them I am grateful, and I believe I bucks. Good luck—^particularly on the echo the sentiments of the other of­ eight bucks matter. ficers of the class. This class has been unique, I believe. It has caught the spirit of the times; it has not been afraid of change. Through all activ­ Miscellaneous ities, the Senior Smoker, the Senior It is easier to register now than it Ball, the work at the funeral of the was four years ago. Reverend John Cavanaugh, C.S.C, The collapse of the dock last year the class has shown a splendid Avil- made us very happy. We did not like lingness to cooperate. In athletics, the structure. It dispensed splinters forensics, musical acti^dties, publica­ too readily. tions, club activities, this class has The folding of the Juggler was the been as good as the best. Out of year's saddest event. Humor, hitherto difficulties encountered during the written, became vocal, and that is year have come better understanding to the Monogram Dance, where Hoch­ usually too bad. and even greater cooperation of the reiter was not. Result: No corsage, men of the class. Who remembers the 1933 Army no two dollars, and this publicity. game? A chap by the name of Baker? "It is the aim of the ofPcers of Bob Cavanaugh backed a candidate Then, of course, there are the new the class this year to knit the class buildings, and new streetlights, and together with strong bonds, to make for president of the Senior Class, ran for chairman of S.A.C., Grand post office, and radio station. The lat­ the men realize that they have a duty ter hasn't really started as yet, but to work Avith one another and not for Knight of K. of C, and president of Commerce Forum. Cashes in on with a little student help next year it individual gain, to cement friendships should grow.a great deal. Maybe we that would be lasting, to marshall to­ number four. The men who write stuff get their can take the network away from gether the men who are to be repre­ O'Keefe some night. sentative Catholic leaders in the. last decent meal of the year at the world of today which is looking for Publications banquet. With delightful And the emancipation of our neigh­ leaders of the right kind. An ideal­ naivete and commendable optimism, bors across the way, and its opposite istic aim perhaps—^but if it has been the speakers all try to sell them effect upon us. only partly achieved the effort has> something; Nobody buys. The Blue Circle, we are pleased to been worthwhile. Old Gold gives away ten rings to note, now not only does not do any­ "So to the men who made the var­ the best collectors on the campus. thing, but does not mean anything. ious activities possible, the Senior Toby Kramer, who could buy the ten Ball committee, Franklyn Hochreiter of them mthout blinking, "wins" and the Senior Smoker committee, three. Finis John Breen, Walter Powers, Frank Alumni's Mr. Weiss continues to Now if you others will run off and Holahan, Thomas Thompson, men hold weekly meetings of his riding study for your exams, we'U concen­ who have handled various committees, and driving club. Each Sunday the trate on the seniors, who from this to men who have offered their ser­ officers and members ride across the date on will have a lot of spare vices, willingly from time to time, countryside—alone. minutes. such as Leo Hanlon, Bill Coen, Bill Hoffert, Kurt Simon, Gerald Rank, Carideo, with a steady home-stretch We're going out, it seems. A bunch Arthur Korzeneski, William Miller, drive, just passes Solari in the wear- of us, but we're not so important, you and to all the Senior Class ,of 1935, the-monogram-sweater marathon. know. Haven't you heard? They're the officers can only say vnth all sin­ going out all over the world, many • others. But never mind them—^we're cerity and depth of feeling, "Thanks, Mention and good luck wherever you are, different. We're men now—^morally- Those who have helped us out with informed men. Trees, growing strong, whatever you do."—^Thomas G. Proc­ the column, especially the ones who tor, President, Senior Class. waiting to be chopped down. Thafs began: "Here he comes, don't say Miltonic, that thought. anything—" And then: "Say, did you But we're graduates, aren't we? hear about. ..." Cap and Gown Distribution "' Much obliged for the education. It The seminarian who answered our was nice of you all. Really it was. Caps and Gowns will be distributed distress signal for a certain book at by a representative of the E. R. Hope to come back some time. a certain time. There are very few What's that, mister? No jobs? Why, Moore Company, at 4:00 p.m., Fri­ of these gentlemen. day, May 31, and again on Satur­ there must be some mistake. They day morning, June 1 just before Class Paul Foley and his Met Club story, told us there'd be jobs. Oh, only -posi­ Day exercises in Washington Hall. which will be just as good next year. tions, you say. Well, let's see—^well At the time these are distributed in With Letsen as president, we don't take three of your best. Beg pardon? the Dome room of the basement of see why it shouldn't be better. AVe It's noon already? Go 'way and let us Walsh Hall, seniors and others re­ mean the story, not the club. sleep. 'Still early. We're young yet. ceiving degrees will be expected to Bob Shanahan, whose pastor once There's time and time and time and pay the rest of the cap and gown fee. said he had more common sense than time.

^ay 24, 1935 <^^tne working for self-improvement, but we know that there The Notre Dame Scholastic was something far deeper and finer than that. Disce Quasi Semper Victunis Vive Quasi Cras Moriturus FOUNDED 1865 To our managing editor and valued friend, Ed Van Huisseling, we offer our sincere thanks. To call Van a THE SCHOLASTIC is published 26 times during the school year at the Managing Editor is to draw a very sharp distinction for University of Notre Dame. Address manuscripts to editor, 119 Sorin Hall, Notre Dame, Indiana. he performed all the duties of a co-editor. To the 1935- '36 editor, John Moran and to his first assistant, Joe Prendergast we offer our editorial blessing. JOHN D. CARBINE Editor-in-Chief EDWARD J. VAN HUISSELING Managing-Editor THE SCHOLASTIC'S year has been a pleasant one, but hardly a calm one. Most of the current abuses about Associate Editors campus we thought too insignificant and too petty to be JOSEPH A. BUCCL Chief Associate Editor ROBERT F. ERVIN LOXHS H. HRUBY given publicity. Some of the major abuses—such as the ROY O. SGHOLZ condition of some clubs—could not pass unnoticed. Our Departmental Editors policy of giving their affairs full publicity brought sev­ WILLIAil A. KENNEDY : The Week eral violent repercussions. Now that it is all over, we are WILUAM H. TOUMEY. Dome Dust still sure that we were right in our determination to keep VINOENT A. GORMAN, JR CoUege Parade MITCHBLL C. TACKLEY Graduate Assistant hypocrisy out of our columns.

News Staff After four years on campus, one grows to love Notre JOHN J. MORAN News Editor Dame. A man cannot help it because Notre Dame is his CLIFFORD F. BROWN Assistant Neivs Editor university, and, after four campus years, every student ANDREW D. HUFNAGEL. : Assistant News Editor ROBERT L. GROGAN JOSEPH RATIGAN is sure that it is a good univei'sity. It is then with a PAUL FOLEY IRWIN L. GOLDMAN mingled feeling of rejoicing and regret that we leave PAUL BLA.GIONI FREDERICK SHANLEY ANTHONY F. O'BOYLE FRANKLYN HOCHREITER Notre Dame. Eejoicing because we have been so for­ BERTRAM SMITH LOUIS DA PRA tunate as to spend four years here, and regret because we LINDSAY PHOEBUS HARRY A. BALDWIN JOHN A. GILLESPIE. : GREGORY BYRNES are about to leave Notre Dame and about to terminate HAROLD WILLIAMS : JOHN HURLEY some fine friendships ^^•ith Notre Dame men. Sports Staff- JOSEPH p. PRENDERGAST i Sports Editor CYRIL F. STROKER Assistant Sports Editor JOHN L. GLANZNER ROBERT J. DONAHUE A GRAVE RESPONSIBILITY JOHN L FLANAGAN. JAMES A. WALDRON EUGENE VASLETT. JOHN CACKLEY One of the most difficult problems of those running a JAMES MCMULLEN. ANDREW CROWE ARCH GOTT A.LLEN F. BRIDE university is the preservation of its good name. The Business Management reputation of the University depends not so much upon JOHN F. STOECKLEY ; Graduate Manager how efficient and exemplary the administration is, but

MEMBER upon the type of men it turns out as graduates. ^soctated ^blUstatc $ress ^"934 (g,|Ij^|)£gpgj 1935=- Notre Dame may do all she can. She may train ntsecm ^ wiscxJtsN ninety-five percent of her students to be perfect Catholic gentlemen. Her scientists may make new and important JlAY 24, 1935 discoveries; her scholars may delve deep into ancient lore. And yet the few who have not taken full advantage of SONG OF OURSELVES their training may counteract all this progress and leave an unwarranted unfavorable impression of Notre Dame. That this, the twenty-sixth number of the sixty-eighth Take the case of a studeiit from a town with a popula­ volume of THE SCHOLASTIC, is the last issue of the 1934- '35 school year probablj!^ means little to the majority of tion of five thousand. The inhabitants of the village know students on campus. To the small group who produced that Notre Dame is in Indiana, that the Army game is played in the Yankee Stadium, and that John Blow goes the twent}''-six SCHOLASTICS this year, however, it repre­ sents the culmination of a year's hard and sincei'e effort. there to. college. If John can. answer all the questions We leave impressed, not at all, by the fact that we can and his conduct is emulative, then Notre Danie is apodic- dummy pages and write headlines. We have been, on the tically a great school. ' If John slips on one or more of the other hand, almost awed by the constant loyalty to THE answers and his conduct is; a'bit questionable, then Notre Dame is slipping. ; - , _ , SCHOLASTIC of the reporters on the news and sports staffs. These men wi-ite THE SCHOLASTIC. An occasional byline Perhaps this, is unfair to Notre' Dame., Perhaps every is their only glory. And yet week after,week they come student should not serve as an ambassador at large. But to the regular Friday night meetings and receive their as­ the point is that every student does, and that there is a signments. Issue after issue they wrote their stories and grave responsibility attached to the student's boast, "I'm wrote them well. It may.be said that these men were a Notre Dame man." y ^

Ten The Scholastic NTEDS NOTRE DAME SMASHES PANTHER SPEU FROA THE PRESS BOX WITH TRACK VICTORY LAST SATURDAY

By Edward J. Van Huisseling 1^ NICHIGAN STATE DOWNED GOPHERS Contracts were signed yester­ day for a two game home and By Gene Vaslett home series between Notre Dame The Pittsburgh domination of and Minnesota, thus continuing Notre Dame athletic teams was over­ the traditional policy of meeting thrown last Saturday in a track meet the nation's strongest grid teams. in which the Irish forged ahead in the The newly-signed agreement calls last few events to win by a score of for a Notre Dame appearance in 67-59. This was the first Notre Dame Minnesota in 1937, with the victory in any sport over Pitt in three Gophers returning here on Oct. . years and the Irish were hard pressed 29 the following year. to secure it. The Irish have met Minnesota The meet was filled with record teams under the former Gopher shattering performances by members coach, Doc Spears, three timesl In of both teams. "WTien the action was 1925 and 1926 Notre Dame was vic­ over nine meet records had been brok­ torious, hut was tied hy the Norse­ COACH JOHN NICHOLSO.V en, two Cartier Field records were men on Cartier Field in 1927, 7 to 7. He smiled and smiled. established, and one meet and one This was the first time Notre Dame field record were tied. The two out­ failed to win a game on the historic standing records were turned in by Cartier Field sod since 1905. Herb Captain Vince Murphy and Don El- Joesting crashed over from the three IRISH GOLFING STREAK IS ser in the high jump and shot put yard line to draw the Gophers abreast BROKEN BY LOSS TO respectively. Murphy cleared six feet of the Irish in a game fought dux-ing 5% inches on the high bar and Elser a typical . NORTHWESTERN hurled the shot 51 feet 1% inches. Fleming, dusky Pitt star, turned in JINX BROKEN The Irish golfers suffered their the best individual performance of initial defeat in three years of. dual the day by outdistancing everybody Friday evening no one would have play on May 11th, bowing to North­ in the 100 and 220 yard dashes and believed - it. Saturday morning they western 11%-9% on the Kildeer the 220 low hurdles. Elser took sec­ said it was impossible. With eight ond place in individual honors by events remaining on the card they course in Evanston. Bill Fljmn, the Purple's leader, sank a 10-foot putt scoring eight points during the meet. were moaning that the Pitt jinx was Elser assured Irish victory by placing still dogging the Irish. Then, with on the last green to prevent a dead­ lock. Notre Dame's superb record of second in the low hurdles, trailing little ado, Nick's trackmen stepped Fleming by three yards. out and picked up points with amaz­ twenty-one consecutive victories was ing consistency. The jinx was drawn started in the season of 1932. Coach Leo MacFarlane triumphed in the and quartered and Notre Dame su­ Payseur's divotees came through to two mile run being closely followed premacy over the Panthers was re­ win the best ball matches 3% to 2%, by Gott, but Mac had to be satisfied established 67 to 59. and the individual frame 8 to 7. with a third in the mile run which Win Day led the field in scoring was won by the lanky Wagonhouser Arvel Fleming, dusky Panther, of Pitt. did his best to prevent Nick's with a 68—^ two under par—, while broad jumpers from scoring a Cole captured the runner-up place The Irish led in the early moments slam in their event, but his ef­ with a 72. Bob Saielli topped the of the meet and then relinquished the forts bore no fruit. Perhaps the Wildcat shooters by checking in with lead when the Panthers scored 25 Pitt ace was a bit weary after a 73 card, one stroke behind Cole. out of 27 points in three events. The scoring fifteen points with firsts Notre Dame team then succeeded in in the 100 yard dash, low hur­ Another triumphal march was in­ tying the meet up once more at 54 dles, and 220 yard dash. The ac­ augurated by Notre Dame's repre- all with but two events left, the broad complishment assured him of sentativeson the fairways last Friday, jump and the low hurdles. A clean high scoring honors. when they eked out a 7%-4% decision sweep in the broad jump and a second at the expense pf Michigan State. and third in the low hurdles assured It' looked like the same old story There was but a total of four single the Irish of their first victory over when Tost took the lead in the open­ matches played, Avith Win Day and Pitt in three years. ing event, the mile run, and led the Captain Johnny Banks forging ahead field around the four lap journey to to capture high tally honors of the Michigan State Meet get the visitors off on the right foot. afternoon. It marked the final appear­ The Irish tracksters journeyed to -ArchGott hit "a new high for ance of the Irish this spring on foi*- Michigan State May 11 to engage the (Continued on'Pafie 19) eign greens. (Continued on Paste 18) r^ ay 24, 1935 61 even NEW BURKE MEMORIAL TROPHY DUnOND NEN BEATEN DONATED TO GOLF CHAMPIONS BY WISCONSIN BADGERS When Win Day, a member of the was made. Father Holderith carried Junior class, won the University golf out all the details of the plaque with The Notre Dame baseball club con­ championship for the third consecu­ the engravers. tinued to be a paradox to its coach tive time this past fall, he also won The plate containing this delicate and supporters by preserving its rep­ permanent possession of the William map engraving is ten and a half utation of winning the return en­ J. Burke Memorial Trophy, which had inches deep, and fourteen inches wide, gagement with any team which has been donated by Mrs. Burke in excluding the border. The reproduc­ defeated it this year. Presenting a memory of her late husband. This tion of the course is large enough so revised and bolstered hitting attack, left future golf champions without a that the name of each winner, which Notre Dame traveled to Evanston on suitable award to crown their efforts. under a novel arrangement is to be Wednesday, May 14, and tamed the Wildcats of Northwestern, 10-8. Frankie Gaul continued his sensation­ al hitting spree by getting a triple and a single. Al Costello, all-around utility man of the Notre Dame team, punched out three hits, one of them a triple, to lead the 12-hit assault which revenged a previous defeat by the Northwestern club. The Notre Dame sluggers un­ wrapped their war clubs and swung lustily at the offerings of Purdue's ace pitchers and when the final count was recorded, the Irish had won a 13-4 victory, last Saturday. The old formula of never losing twice to the same team was upheld by the mur­ derer's row of Gaul, Pilney and Cos­ tello who collected seven hits among them including two doubles and a home run. Previous to these games, Notre Dame dropped a 7-6 decision to the Badgers of Wisconsin on Tuesday, May 14. . After throwing away the customary early inning lead, the Irish tossed in six errors to aid Wisconsin in defeating them. Notre Dame (6) Wisconsin (7) AB R H P A AB R H PA Cunha, 2b 4 N'trom.s 3 1 Went'th.ss 4 FeiTis,3b 5 1 Mettler, cf 5 C'Ison,lf 3 3 Pilney, rf 4 Heyer,2b 4 3 Gaul, e 3 Gei-rk,cf 3 2 Dunn, lb 4 8 OlDeM'k,rf 4 0 0 2 Fromh't,3b 3 3 OlWag'r.lb 4 0 H3 Sepe, If 2 1 0|R'done,c 4 0 12 Velcheck.lf 1 0 OlTomek,p 2 0 0 Thernes, p 3 0 2lP'rson,p 2 0 0 Totals 33 612 24 91 Totals ..34 7 8 27 17 Errors—Cunha, Mettler (2), Fromhart (2), Sepe. Two base hits—Carlson, Pilney. Three base hits — Gaul, Gerlack. Struck out — by Themes 4, Pearson 1, Tomek 1. Base on balls —off Thernes 4, Peai'son 4; Double plays— -Ferris to Wagner. Wild pitch—Themes. Win- ninff pitcher—Tomek. Umpires—Schuler and Wootton. Notre Dame (10) Northwestern (8) AB R H P A AB R H PA C'unha,2b.. 6 Col'ns.Sb 5 1 Mrs. Burke announced that she engraved on the award, will be easily Went'th.ss 5 Hen'ff,2b 4 0 would offer another trophy to replace legible. The first 18 University cham­ Mettler, cf 4 Merell,ss 4 3 the one that Day had captured, and Pilney, If 5 Ped'n,rf 2 pions AAall have their names engraved Gaul, c 5 A'q'ist,cf 0 several suggestions were offered as to on the near greens, the second group Dunn, lb 1 Clab'rn,c 8 0 the form of the new award. The Rev. of 18 winners will be inscribed on the Costello, lb 5 1 Shan'n.lf 1 0 Reagan, 3b 2 2 Walsh.lb 012 0 George Holderith, C.S.C., coach of the tees, and the third group will be Mathews.rf 4 2 K'bell,p 1 0 G golf team, proposed that the trophy listed on the fairways. The process Wioods,p 10 2 take the form of a metal plaque, suit­ will then be repeated, so that in all Totals . 41 10 12 27 151 Totals -.40 8 11 27 11 ably mounted on a wooden shield, on 108 University Golf Champions, in Erroi-s — Weiitworth, Dunn, Costello (2). which was to be engraved a topo­ addition to the scores they chalk up, Hentikoff, Merell (2), Claborn. Two base bits —Collins, Toumey, Cunha; Three base hits— graphical .map of the golf course. and the years they accomplish their Costello, Gaul; Sacrifice hits — Wentworth, Jerome Gushing, senior in the Col­ feats, will be engraved on the award. Hentikoff, Shanahan; Stolen bases—Mettler, Pilney; Struck out by—^Toumey, 3 ; Woods, 3 : lege of Engineering, headed a group Around the plate is a raised border, Kimbell, 3 ; Base on balls—off Toumey, 3 ; off of five classmates who did the sur­ 7-16 of an inch thick, which is de­ Woods, 5; off Kimbell, 3; Hit by pitcher- Reagan by Woods. -Wild pitches—^Woods. Los­ veying and constructed a map, from signed to give the engraving the ap- ing pitcher—Kimbell. Umpire Stack. which the reproduction on the trophy (C'jntinued on Pajre 18) (Continued on Page 19)

Twelve The Scholastic NAROUETTE TRACKNEN Wisconsin and Michigan State SHOW HERE TOMORROW Remain on Baseball Schedule

By Arch Gott Notre Dame Racquet IRISH OUT FOR REVENGE Fresh from their victorious meet Weilders Set Down with Pittsburgh, the Irish tracksters will tangle with Marquette at Cartier In Three Contests By Cy Stroker Field on May 25. The last time the On May 31 and June 1 the Notre Dame baseball team Avill Adnd up its two teams met was indoors when the By John Glanzner Nickmen squeezed through to a 48-47 season in return games Avith Wiscon­ The string of Notre Dame tennis sin and Michigan State. So far Kline's charges have ten Avins chalked victories came to an abrupt end when up to their credit to offset their six the Irish were trounced in three con­ secutive matches by Mchigan State, Ohio State, and Illinois. Misfortune overtook the Irish in the Michigan State meet when Joe Waldron tAvisted his ankle in the cru­ cial doubles match and was forced to default. After splitting the six sin­ gles matches, the men of Notre Dame lost the doubles matches to bow in defeat 6-3. Captain Frank Weldon came through with his usual brilliant play JOE UNDERKOFLER to down, the ranking State player, He hears the cam grow. Klaisinger in a bitterly contested three set duel, 9-7, 4-6, 6-3. Joe losses. Both of the nines that en­ CAPT. VINCE MURPHY Prendergast had little difficulty in counter the Irish next week succeeded His final home appearance. in finishing on top in preAaous con­ overcoming Eissler in straight sets tests, although the margins in both win so there should be plenty of'fur 6-4, 6-3. Bill Fallon accounted for cases were small. flying in Saturday's get-together. the third and final Irish win. Mc- Nulty and Cannon matched stroke for May 14, the Irish travelled to Mad­ Notre Dame appears to be the fav­ stroke with O'Dell and Eissler only to ison Avhere they engaged in a contest orite in this encounter because of weaken in the decisive third set and that ended in a pitched battle. The powerful added strength in the field lose 3-6, 6-3, 4-6. fight ended in a di-aAV but the Wiscon­ events. Elser, Michuta and Cum- sin gi'oup Avon the ball game 5-4. The mings are all scoring heavily in the After the Michigan State defeat Madison men have not made a very shot-put and discus. The hurdles Avill the Notre Dame aces journeyed to Co­ imposing record this year, so that be closely contested Avith Layden ap­ lumbus only to lose decisively to the Notre Dame's defeat can be safely pearing to have the edge on Pandjiris highly-touted Buckeyes of Ohio State regarded as an upset. If Themes, of Marquette in the highs. Don Elser 8-0. This time it Avas Bill Fallon Beach, Tourney et all. can hold the will make another appearance in the who suffered a sprained ankle to ham­ Wisconsin sluggers to a small num­ low sticks and should be able to plunge per the chances of the Irish for vic­ ber of hits, Jake Kline and his co­ along ahead of the field. Big Don has tory. horts have little to Avorry about in shoAvn surprising form and has a next Friday's game. The Madison From Columbus the Ii'isli packed hurlers are not generally knoAvn to driving finish which will aid him to­ up their racquets and embarked for morrow. be kings of the mound in spite of Champaign and Illinois, the team their ability to throAV a Avicket right. In the middle distance, Jessel and that had tied Northwestern earlier in Beckett of Marquette in the quarter the season. The last game of the season, that and half-mile runs will be pushed to Notre Dame, forced to play with­ Avith Michigan State, should prove an the limit by Bernai-d and Shells of out thi'ee of her outstanding stars, interesting contest for the graduation Notre Dame. The two mile run Avill again suffered defeat 7-0. The ankle visitors as well as for the players. see O'Neil of the Hill toppers. Central jinx still prevailed and Waldron and Here is a team that has consistently A.A.XJ. 3000 meter champion, pressed Fallon were unable to play. In addi­ beaten the Irish in the last few games closely by McFarland and Gott of the tion to the loss of these two men, the in Avhich they have participated vnth Irish with an upset due to arise. deLandero charges lacked Ed Bur- Notre Dame. The one point advan­ chart, who had been suddenly called tage Avith Avhich the team from East Phillips of Marquette who nearly home. Lansing Avhipped the Klinemen is no beat his famous team-mate Metcalfe indication of their ability. Michigan here last year, stands out in the 100 Undaunted the Irish played their State is ail all around good club that and 220 yard dashes but Irish run­ best in a vain attempt to gain Aactory. features consistently strong batting ners should score at least seconds and McNulty, in particular, shone in his and air-tight fielding. If Notre Dame thirds in each of these races. match Avith Mclnich, undefeated in wants to round out its season Avith a collegiate tennis circles this year. Joe victory in this quarter, it Avill have The following Saturday, June 1, Prendergast Avas unable to maintain to put out its best brand of ball for finds the Notre Dame team playing his early lead and fell Adctim to the nine straight innings. host to the Indiana state meet. Squads smashes of Hicks 7-5, 8-6. Captain from Purdue, Indiana, Butler, and Weldon shoAved a reversal of form If the Irish make a reasonsably (Continued on Page 19) and Avas doAvned by LeAvers 6-2, 6-3. (Continued on Pase 10) •3iay 2i, 1933 Thirteen CENTRAL AND NATIONAL INTRODUCING TRACK MEET FOR N. D. By Joe Prendergast "Come in," droned a lazy voice Captain Weldon's home and often By Jim McMuIIen from the second floor, northwestern during dull moments Frank would Coach John Nicholson has a lot on cornered room of 202 Corby Hall and watch the master professional per­ your correspondent entered to find form. As a result when Weldon was his mind these days. Following the Francis Joseph Weldon sleepily con­ a sophomore at lona Prep he started all-important Marquette meet, the versing with his roommate, Gene plajang tennis and took to the game Irish trackmen will compete in the O'Reilly. The dwelling was filled with like a radical orator does to soap state get-together June 1, and then a tennis atmosphere — four recently boxes. The only coaching Frank ever born robins were peeking over the received was from the tennis captains proceed to the Central Intercollegi- nestled security of their circular of Fordham and Holy Cross who were ates starting June 21. In discussing the Central Intercol- legiates, Nick expressed a fair amount of optimism. His men will face rep­ resentatives from every school in the Big Ten except Michigan, as well as from all the major free lance com­ petitors. Pittsburgh State Teachers, and the Emporia State Teachers from out Kansas way seem to be among . the strongest of the squads entered. Nicholson plans to send to Marquette all the men Avho have had any degree of success in the state meet. A lot depends on the coming ac­ tions of Bernard and McFarlane. A bad foot has hampered the quarter miler in practice sessions, and there is a slight possibility that he may have to withdraw. Meagher, Elser, and Murphy look especially strong at Marquette. Together Avith any break in the mile and half mile relays, these niANK WAS SPORTS LDITOB or UIS MIGU three men should assure the Irish of S049)L YLAR BOOK. a position very near the top, if not AND VCORKLD ON TUfc the actual bunting carriers. SCU03L MPU. Ub IT ANY WONDbP Ub AI.SO PARTICiPATU) IN UAS SUCU A PbRrbCT rOUR DiTTbRbNT SWINGS—Ub WON A Out at Berkeley, it's a different SPORTS, ONb orwucu^ DbBATING VaZ.^ ONCI proposition. Coach Nicholson AA^III /:/cjsc£Gt/i 'ss AA'ait till the very last minute before Mt'AS TLNNIS. ^ selecting the personnel of the squad abode on the western window sill, rac­ counsellors at a summer camp which bound west. Right noAV it looks like quets were in abundance, even the boy Frank attended. As a senior he Avon Meagher has cinched his right to above entered into the spirit of the the lona Prep tennis championship compete in the broad jump. Captain affair by thimiping ferociously on the and might have won it in the two Vince Murphy will, be there to high floor, love was written over the pic­ previous years Avhen he had advanced jump, for according to Nick, he is tures on the wall and in general the to the semi-final rounds only to have right now the potential champion of air was tennisy and then some. rain and cold weather cause the tour­ the United States. He has only to Francis Joseph Weldon, for those ney to be called off. Frank won tro­ duplicate his feats of almost every amongst the students who chanced to phies for being finalist in the city afternoon in the Notre Dame gymna­ miss the fine tennis matches waged by toui-nament in 1933 and '34. • sium.; Big Don Elser Avith his heave the team this year, is captain of the Captain Louis Chreist of the Univer­ of the sixteen pound shot, 51 feet, % Tacquet-wielders. His home is in New sity's 1932-33 racquet combine asked inch, is not far behind the record toss Rochelle, New York—15 miles from sophomore Weldon to play with the of the current year by Dees, of Kan­ New York City—^where Frank was team after Fr'ank had eliminated two sas, of 51 feet, 7 inches. Don Avill born on December 8, 22 years ago. varsity members in the annual fall : also face such star performers as Jim Shells, the stellar 880 yard tournament. Frank ti-iumphed in his Ticknor of Oklahoma, Reynolds of track man, was Frank's classmate at first competitive match against Valpa­ Stanford, and the powerful Theo- lona Prep for four years. Frank raiso 6-0, 6-0, only ten points wei'e doratus of Washington State. played two years of baseball at lona, scored against him that day in two sets The makeup of the rest of the two of football, two of basketball and the official scorecard shows. During the squad, if Nick decides to take more oddly enough only one year of tennis course of the campaign Frank com­ is very uncertain. Leo McFarlane, —^his most proficient sport. Concern­ peted in six individual matches and sound legs and all, has been improv­ ing his prep school football days, came out victorious in four of them ing steadily, and should be at top Frank was a quarterback and was for a most impressive record. peak by the time of the big national guiding the team in that historic en­ In the fall of 1933, Frank teamed shoAV. Bernard, minus his tough rac­ gagement Avith GeorgetowTi Prep in up with Bill Pallon to annex the ing luck, might be allowed to pack 1930 which ended in a 12 to 12 tie. doubles championship of the school. up for the trip, as Avell as the best Frank Hunter, noted professional, Last fall he won the singles cham- representative-from the ranks of the used to work out on a court nearby (Continued on Patre 18) half milers. . Fourteen The Scholastic BALL TOSSERS ADD WIN Notre Dame Golfers Seek Revenge AND LOSS TO RECORD For Last Pittsburgh Upheaval

Howard Hall Victors By AI Bride STATE MEET ON MAY 31 In Interhall League On May 8 the Notre Dame baseball team dropped a 10-7 decision to Championship Playoff By John Cackley Northwestern, but three days later Encountering extremely stiff op­ displayed brilliant form in downing By Mike Crowe position from all sides, the Irish golf­ the crack Western State Teachers 7-4. ers will go into the final stages of the The first game was characterized by Rallying to score three runs in the cun-ent season. Tomorrow will find an abundance of base hits which were last half of the seventh inning, the them entertaining Pitt on the local Howard nine edged out St. Ed's 8-7 in greens, while from May 31 until June the championship game of Interhall 1 Notre Dame will play host to the baseball played on Cartier Field, Indiana State Meet on the William J. Tuesday, May 21. Burke Memorial course. Although Puplis, St. Ed's pitcher, was hit not definitely announced it is hoped hard throughout the game. He man­ that the Gold and .Blue will be repre­ aged to pitch good ball in the pinches sented with a contingent at the Na­ until the eventful seventh. With the tional Intercollegiates. bases filled and two out, Zarantello Little is known concerning the rel­ lined a single to center field to tie the ative strength of the Panthers this score. Belden then followed with a year, except that they hold a high single to win the game for Howard. rank in eastern college circles. Their most impressive showing to date has Dunn lasted but three innings for consisted mainly in deadlocking the Howard. His successor, Maher, lim­ count with Detroit—a team that ited the St. Edward sluggers to one Johnny Banks and his mates experi­ VIC METTLEB run. Maher received credit for the He'll be a Tiger. enced no difficulty with. An unusual victory. He also started the mnning incident cropped out in the setto' rally by slamming out a long triple. climaxed by a five run rally on the against Pitt held thi-ee years back, on part of the Wildcats in the sixth in­ Megin and Bonner of St. Ed's and the latters' fairway. Using a new ning. In the latter game both teams O'Neil of Howard walloped out home method of talljdng—one point being gave a beautiful exhibition of base­ runs. However, Phil Clark, fleet How­ awarded for each match instead of ball by fielding cleanly, hitting sharp­ ard center fielder won the batting the customaiy three, as in the Nassau ly, and running the bases in heads honors. He lined out three successive system — the Smoky City lads un­ up style. doubles in four trips to the plate. He officially garnered a 4-2 decision, also played brilliantly in the field. which should have been handed to In the Northwestern game the Irish Notre Dame on a 10-8 basis. jumped off to an early lead by scor­ The teams of the two groups in the Invitations have been mailed out ing two runs in both the first and elimination tournament finished in to the leading colleges of Indiana for third innings. The Wildcats broke in­ the following order. the State Meet to be held here on the to the scoring column with a counter University course, starting the last in the fourth, but Notre Dame came The Standings of May. Commencement visitors will back with three tallies to see2ningly Groui) 1 "Won Lost be afforded a rare treat in seeing the put the game on ice. The Wildcats St. Edward's 3 1 top-notch golfers of this section bat­ Sorin 4 2 went doAvn in order in the fifth, but Alumni 2 3 tle for the championship crown. For when the dust cleared at the end of Lyons „ 2 3 the past sevei-al seasons the Irish, en­ Morrissey 2 S the fifth inning they had blasted Badin 1 -I tering a full team, have completely Toumey from the - mound and were Group 2 Won Lost dominated festivities and are expected ' trailing by only one run. At this Howard 5 0 to repeat even better this month. time Woods replaced Lennstaedt for Freshman 'I 1 Carroll 3 2 . The National Intercollegiates — Northwestern and held the Irish at Dillon 2 symbolic of scholastic golfing su­ bay for the remainder of the game. Brownson 1 I premacy—^will be enacted for 1935 The eighth inning found the Wildcats Corby 0 5 in Washington, D. C, the last week cla%ving three of Jake Kline's pitchers Group 1 was thrown into a tie when of June. As yet there has been no for five runs and the ball game. In Sorin won three in a row to tie St. sanction by the Faculty Board of ath­ this game Mettler boosted his batting Ed's. St. Ed's only loss was to Badin, letics, concerning the possibility of average by collecting four hits out although Badin finished in the cellar. the Irish varsity participating. Al­ of four trips to the plate. Shanahan St. Ed's won the play-off from Sorin, ways in the past Notre Dame's 'nib­ lead the Wildcats with three for five. 8-1. lick swingers' have given a remark­ able account of their prowess in these On the following Saturday the This is the first complete schedule meets. A notable recollection is that teachers from Kalamazoo were set played in Hall baseball since 1929. of Captain Johnny Banks, who last down for the second time this season There was much interest throughout spring went to the quarterfinals at by the Irish. Slow bailer Joe Beach as shown by the fact that the sched­ Cleveland, losing out to Ed White of started for Notre Dame and pitched ule was closed on time in spite of Texas on the 37th hole. The first effectively until the seventh inning two successive rainy Sundays. two days will be entirely devoted to when Coach Klein sent in Eed Tou­ The statistics of the championship team play activities, playing a medal mey to hold off any scoring threats of score. The low four at the comple­ the teachers. Western State scored game follow: R H E tion of the second denotes each man's once in the first and twice in the St. Edwards ...... 2 13 10 0 0—7 10 2 position. The remaining time will be fourth, but the Irish came back in Howard 10 3 10 0 3—8 14 2 Puplis and Bonner. Riley; Dunn. Maher and taken up with individual perform- (Continued on Pasie 10) Nijrro. ances^qualifying for it in team play. ^ay 10, 1935 Fijt een ents . . . EARLE SANDE made $500,000 during his career as a TIME DRAWS NEAR FOR jockey ... In one year alone he earned about $80,000 . . . COLGATE NAT. INTER SCHOLASTICS By Jim McMulIen pigskinners are all set to travel 9,100 miles next fall . . . Twenty-four of Can't resist tipping you off that the twenty-seven men who have held By John I. Flanagan the Gold Cup given the winner of the the welterweight boxing champion­ KENTUCKY DERBY each year is ship since 1892 are still alive . . . Commencement weekend. May 31 actually worth §5,()()i) . . . whereas especially JIMMY McLARNIN, the and June 1, the University of Notre the Stanley Cup in pro hockey is Belting Boy from Vancouver . . . Dame will play host to the various worth only $75 and the much herald­ GEORGE LOTT played almost every ed America's Cup of yachting is night for three and one half months Catholic high schools, throughout the worth only $500 . . . Down St. Peters­ during his recent pro tennis tour . . . nation, for the second annual Notre burg, Fla. way they have theii- own yet George finished weighing more Dame Interscholastic track and field than when he started . . . BILL championships. CARR, Pennsylvania's great runner, will never run again ... so he has The large entry last year and the turned into one of the best tennis fine performances assures the meet a players in the Philadelphia district. success both for this year and for ... The MELLON STUART baseball succeeding years. More than two team, of Pittsburgh, is believed to be hundred athletes from twenty-four the only semi-professional club ever high schools competed last year for to make a Florida training trip . . . the team championships and the re­ their sponsor is NED MELLON, son lays; the trophies in each section go­ of Andrew^. . . ing to West Catholic High School of Philadelphia. YOUNG JACK GIBBONS, a mid­ The purpose of the meet was to ideas on baseball . . . Twice weekly, dleweight who has won 47 fights, is the son of MIKE GIBBONS and the inaugurate a Catholic meet which a couple of ball teams composed of would bring together the best men in no players younger than 75, meet to nephew of TOMMY GIBBONS, both famous fighters of some years back. their respective fields. The stimula­ battle it out . . . and don't think they tion of interest in this sport is the pri­ can't draw 'em . . . Recentlv GER­ . . . Ever hear of a bowling mara­ thon? ... At Milwaukee in 1930, mary interest of this meet. The visitors ARD B. LAMBERT paid $50,000 for last year were enabled as they Avill Che Yankee, America's Cup Yacht, GEORGE KINDER bowled 302 V2 that cost $525,000 to build in 1930, games in 50 hours and 28 minutes, be this year to be "Notre Dame men" and $250,000 to renovate last year. averaging 149 per game . . . George for two days, to live on the campus . . . Some bargain, but then, it is ru­ lost 14 pounds during his good time as students do, and to study first hand mored that you can buy the ENTER- in the alleys . . . The International the life of the students of the Uni­ PRICE, Cup campaigner for the New League is carrying extra player versity of Notre Dame. York Yacht club for $25,000 now. strength this season . . . because of early postponements the concession Last year being the first meet all . . . and it cost them .$1,000,000 to winners became record holdei-, but de­ build her . . . They've perfected a has been made to the clubs ... in order that they may carry an extra spite the fine records it is veiy prob­ new type tennis ball now . . . has a able that some of them will be in the knitted cover that its designers claim pitcher . . . AL LOPEZ and MAN­ UEL ONIS, Brooklyn catchers, are discard when the meet ends next Sat­ will far outlast the current sphere. urday afternoon. . . . JIMMY BRADDOCK, present fot from Ybor City, Fla., and both speak of the smiling Maxie, comes from a Spanish . . . CONNIE MACK has one southpaw hurler this year . . . He's The meet will be run at two o'clock family of five fighting brothers . . . Saturday, June 1, with the Com­ RALPH DEPALMA has driven 4,061 VERNON WILSHIRE, who won 18 of the 19 games he formally hurled mencement baseball game with Mich­ miles in competition on the auto igan State carded for 3:30 o'clock. speedway at Indianapolis . . . RALPH for Indiana University ... In high IVIULFORD is next with 4,009 miles. school, the Lefty pitched four no-hit Following are the new" teams so ATLANTA and MOBILE in the games . . . JACK McAULIFFE suc­ far entered: Roger Bacon high school Southern League played a baseball cessfully defended the lightweight of Cincinnati, St. John's high school game in 1910 that took only 32 min­ boxing title in 52 contests before he of Philadelphia, Good Counsel high utes, the latter winning 2 to 1 . . . retired undefeated in 1893 . . . JACK school of Newark, N. J.; Cretin high a total of 9,470 horses competed at ROTHROCK, Cardinal outfielder, school of St. Paul, Minn.; St. Augus­ the various tracks throughout the played nine different positions on a tine high school of Kalamazoo, Mich., United States last year . . . Only two Ijaseball club during the 1928 season. Topeka Catholic higlt school of To- perfect "No Hitters" have been peka, Kans.; and St. Ambrose high pitched in the big leagues . . . AD- Representatives from 14 nations school of Davenport, Iowa. DIE ROSS performed this feat in will answer the call of the Olympiad 1908 and CHARLEY ROBERTSON for the deaf and dumb to be held in The repeaters so far are: St. in 1922 . . . STANISLAUS ZBYSZKO London next August . . . There -will Mary's liigh school, Columbus, Ohio; is the Rabbit Maranville of the mat. be competition in track, soccer, cy­ West Catholic high school of Phila­ . . . the famous Polish wrestler is still cling, and tennis . . . GAR WOOD, delphia, last year's winners; Aquinas engaged in competition down in Ar­ JR. is a chip off the old block. The high school of LaCrosse, Wis.; St. gentine though he is said to be 64 17-year-old speed boat driver won Rita high school of Chicago; De La years old . . , JOE HOOD is the the intercollegiate title last year . . . Salle Institute of Chicago; De Paul Stroke man for the Navy crew ... if For your information, ALDO NADI academy of Chicago; Mt. Carmel high you don't believe ask the generous is one of the most famous of the Ital­ school of Chicago; Decatur (Ind.) treasurer of that institution ... a ian swordsmen, and Aldo won his Catholic high school; St. Bede acad­ starboard rigged shell had to be built first senior tournament at the age of emy of Peru, 111.; Marmion prepara­ for Joe that cost 1,400 bananas . . . 13 . . . since then he has captured tory of Aurora, 111.; Fenwick high while Harvard men themselves build the honors 53 times . . . Only two school of Goak Park, HI.; and St. the shells used against their oppon- jockeys have won the Kentucky Der­ Thomas Military academy, St. Paul. by two years in succession . . . Minn.

S ixt een The Scholastic i I Notice N. C. P. Convention Rhode Island Club .^ iThe barber shop will be open after The Rev. Patrick J. Carroll, C.S.C, At a meeting held Friday, May Krl bper on Monday, Tuesday and AVed- Litt.D., editor of TJie Ave Maria is in the Commerce building, the Ehod«- •fSay next week until 8 o'clock. We attending the National Catholic Press Island club elected John Desmond ol- ank you for your patz'onage and convention, being held this year at Fall River, president. Russell Hum-, ish all a lot of luck. Atlanta, Georgia. The convention is of Woonsocket was made vice-presi ,• The Monogram Formal, held at the in session from May 23 to May 2o. dent; John Sullivan of Fall River.' dais Royale, Thursday evening, Catholic editors from all over the secretary, and Bernax'd Curtin oiL-, ay 16, was an outstanding success, United States are present as it is Woonsocket, treasurer. ^ ore than 22-5 couples danced to the BILL LORD considered the foremost outlet for A short discussion, on plans for thi- usic of Johnny Davis' orchestra, di­ Outstandinff hiterliall Catholic discussion in the field of annual summer dance followed thf^ et from the Netherland-Plaza. athlete. journalism in the world. elections. NOW! America treats you to new luxuries In TOURIST CLASS TO EUROPE

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ay 24, 1935 Seventeen^- BURKE TROPHY TRACK RESULTS (Continued from Page IS) CLUB NEWS (Continued from Page 11) pearance of a framed picture. The thinlies of that school in a track meet, top plate, made of sterling silver, is Rochester Club Elections and returned victorious having tri­ . a reproduction of a view from the Something a bit unusual in the his­ umphed by a score of 92% to 38%. tory of Notre Dame campus club poli­ golf course, and- took over six weeks Eleven out of 15 firsts were gar­ to finish. In the foreground is the tics took place Friday night, May 10 in the Browmson Rec when all the nered by the Irish and two events, the figure of Bill Burke, son of the donor 440 yard dash and the low hurdles, of the trophy, in the act of hitting a members of the Rochester Club were elected unanimously because of the saw clean sweeps made by the Notre golf ball, while in the background Dame squad. may be seen the spires of Sacred simple reason that no opposition was offered. Heart Church, the Dome, and several Don Elser, running his first low of the residence halls. The name hurdle race for Notre Dame, won this plate, on which is lettered, "William Architects Club event handily, being trailed by Lay- J. Burke Memorial Trophy," and the den and Link of Notre Dame. Elser Notre Dame Seal, backed bj'^ two At a meeting held Monday, May 13 competed in the low hurdles in his crossed golf clubs, took R. Gayde, the the Architects Club of Notre Dame high school days and is no novice at sculptor, over 140 hours to finish. Al­ conducted their elections for next the art of scaling the timbers. Big together, ten men worked on the re­ year's officers and made plans for Don turned in the best individual per­ production of the golf course outlay. their annual banquet. formance of the day by taking first The metal work on the trophy is The students chosen to fill the ex­ in the shot put and the low hurdles, superimposed on a shield of American ecutive positions were Leon C. Huf- and a second in the discus throw for Black Walnut. The shield, the work nagel of Clarion, Pa., as president, a total of 13 points. of the Herff-Jones Company of Ind­ to succeed A. C. Hackenbruch of Milwaukee, Wis., and John M. Lee of Vince Murphy scaled six feet 3% ianapolis, is composed of 20 separate inches in his specialty to establish a pieces of wood, which are laminated, Salamanca, N. Y., as Secretary and Treasurer to succeed Aaron J. Hamm new meet and Michigan State stadi­ as in the case of aeroplane propellors, of Waverly, N. Y. um record. Two other meet records and so constructed that the panel Avill were also broken, both by Michigan not w-arp, and the joints will be in- State competitors, Hurd in the mile .isible to the eye. and Wright in the half mile achieved The trophy, which will remain per­ %\ new records in their respective events. petually in the possession of the Uni­ PEP ON , versity, is to be hung in the Library The summary: until a permanent golf clubhouse is THE AIR MILE RUN—Won by Tost. (P) ; McKenna erected. On its reverse side it bears (ND). second; McFarlane (ND), third. Time, RUTH ETTING and •I :24.2 (New meet record) the following inscription: her melody William J. Burke 140-YARD RUN—Won by Bernard, (ND) ; Memorial Trophy RED NICHOLS Kijter, (P) second; Rubly. (ND) third. Time. and his :49.1 (ties field record) To Honor the Memory of rhythm ^^\ SHOT PUT—Won by Elser, (ND) ;" Michu- Her Husband ta. (ND) second; Avizienis. (P), third. Dis­ tance, jjl feet, one half inch. (New rrieet and This Permanent Trophy Has Been hJ- field record). Presented To The 100-YARD DASH—Won by Fleminfr, , (P) : University of Notre Dame .foi-dan. (ND) second; Menal^er, (P) third. by Time :9.9 (new meet record) Mary G. Burke 120 HIGH HURDLES—Won by Layden, of (ND) : Link, (ND) second; Lasky, (P), Portsmouth, Ohio third. Time :15.4. 880-YARD RUN—Won by Groat. (P) ; Con- nelley, (P) second; Ducassa, (ND) third. INTRODUCING Time, 1.55.8 (New meet record). (Continued from Page 14) COLLEGE PROM JAVELIN THROW—Won by Gongloff. pionship of the University beating (P) : Taano. (P). second; Sawiski, (P) third. Distance 192 feet, 9 inches, (new meet record) Ed Buchart in a torrid duel, but, as DON'T miss the "prom" next Fri­ yet, with school in its last week, he has 220-YARD DASH-^Won by Fleming, (P) : day. More thrills at college. More Kiser, (P) second; Boyle, (ND) third. Time failed to receive the titular trophy. beautiful songs. More dancing :22.7. Frank has already won two mono­ music. Kellogg's College Prom TWO MILE RUN —Won by McFarlane. grams and this season clinched his visits a different famous campus (ND) ; Gott, (ND) second; AlbriRht, (P) third ensignia in the Indiana match. third. Time 9:52.7. The bast tennis of Frank's career was every week and brings you th* displayed by him about three weeks excitement and merriment of a POLE VAULT—Edwards, (ND) and Pe- party. lucha, (P) tied for first; Gerrety, (P) third. ago and came at a most opportune Height, 12 feet six inches. (Ties meet record) time. He was stacked against George Be sure to tune in each Friday DISCUS THROW—Won by Seiffert. (P) ; Ball of Chicago University and the night And don't forget, every Levicki, (ND) second; Fassingei% (P) third. holder of titles that string from New day. "Keep going with PEPl" Distance 133 feet, 10% inches (new meet York to his home town in Texas. . record)'. Frank was eventually subdued but ; .HIGH . JUMP—Won by Murphy, (ND) r only after he forced the expert Tex­ EVERY Quinlan." (ND) second; Blair, (P) third. an to three hard sets. This spring . Height 6 feet 5% inches (new meet and field Frank has won four single matches record). ^- FRIDAY NIGHT BROAD JUMP—Won by Meagher, (ND) r and is at present in Richmond, Indi- Jordan, (ND) second; Boyle, (ND) third. iana, battling away for the state 8:30 Daylight Savinj Time Distance 23 feet 10 inches. title. He is a senior in the Arts and 220-YARD LOW HURDLES—Won by Flem­ Letters School, majoring in econom­ WMZ Network—N. B. C. ing. (P) ; Elser, (ND) second: Layden, (ND) ics. third. Time, :24.3 (new meet record). Eighteen The Scholastic BASEBALL RESULTS TRACK MEETS (Continued from Page 15) SPLINTERS (Continued from- Page 13) their half of the fourth to even.the score. They continued their hitting many smaller colleges will compete in the next inning and pounded out (Continued from Page 11) and a day of fast races is certain. In­ two more runs to take the lead. An­ diana and Butler will enter their stel­ other run was added in both the sixth lar performers, Don Lash and-Eay and seventh innings to make the score himself in the two mile race Sears in. the two mile run, probably 7-4. when he Bnished a strong second the feature race of the day. • Both, In defeating the Western Staters, behind his teammate, Leo Mc- have run 9:17 this year and both Jake Klein's chargers downed one of Farlane. Arch stuck with 'Leo have won close decisions from the the strongest collegiate, nines in the throughout the race and when~ other in recent meets. The Cartier country. By defeating Brandt for the McFarlane started his sprint, the Field record of 9:30 is in for a tum­ second time this year, the Irish in­ slight Gott lengthened his stride ble if either of these boys is in form. flicted two of the three losses this and plugged along behind the star pitcher has suffered in the last fast-moving McFarlane. Several Notre Dame seniors will be two seasons. competing in their parting home ap­ Box scores: The showing of Chick Levicki in pearance, among these is Jack Ed­ Northwestern (10) Notre Dame (7) the javelin was surprising to some, wards in the pole vault. If conditions AB R H.PA AB K H PA but those who knew of his condition are right Edwards has a fine chance Hanson,3b 1 10 0 1 C"nha.2b 3 1 0 3 didn't expect much from the big fel­ ColIins.Sb 4 0 0 2 1 Wen'th,s 4 1 0 0 1 to close his collegiate career with a HenikofE,2b 6 3 2 11 Metier, cf 4 2 4 3 0 low Saturday. He broke into the victory. Another senior, Jim Shells, Arnquist.cf 5 12 2 0 Pilney.lf 3 1 2 5 0 scoring, however, with a second in Pedei'soh.rf 4 l' 2 2 0 Gaul.c 4 1 1 4 0 will display his famous "kick" in the Liarson.rf 0 0 0 0 0 Dunn.lb 2 1 0 10 0 the discus. 880 yard run for the last time in an Merrell.ss • 4 0 0 14 Sepe.rf 3 0 0 Clahorn.c 5 From'tSb 4 Big Bob Bernard turned in his eifort to win Indiana state laurels. Shan'han.lf 5 Toumy,p 3 '. top performance of the year After two years of hard luck caused Walsh.lb 5 Rydell.p 1 0 0 0 0 L'nstaedt.p 1 W'gner.p 0 0 0 0 0 when he won the quarter mile by injuries, Shiels has come through Woods.p 4 3 0 0 Costelo.p 1 0 0 0 event. He knew^ he was faced gallantly this year to pull his team xVelch'k 1 0 0 0 with a big task in leading the through some tight spots. Captain Totals ...... 44 10 16 27 10 j Totals .. 35 7 9 27 8 speedy Pitt 440 men to the tape Vince Murphy, the greatest high X—Velcheck batted for Dunn in the ninth. so he dug in and did just that in jumper Notre Dame has ever seen, Errors—Collins, Wentworth. Two base hits —Peterson 2, Gaul. Three base hits-—^Mettler, the fast time of :49.1. will bid farewell to home fans with a Pilney. Stolen bases—Cunha. Wentworth, Met- last attempt at the world's high jump tler. Hits—off Lennstaedt 7 in 3 1-3, off Woods 2 in 5 2-3, oft Toumey 10 in 5 1-3. off Rydell record of 6 ft 8% inches. 3 in 2 1-3, off Van Wagner 1 in 0, off Costello 2 in 11-3. StiTick out—by Woods 4, by Tou­ AVERAGES mey 1, by Rydell 2. Base on balls—off Lenn- steadt 5, off Woods 4, off Rydell 1, off Van In two previous calculations we Wagner 2. Winning pitcher Woods. Losing pitcher Rydell. found Andy Pilney and George Went­ WIS., MICH. ST. BASEBALL Notre Dame (7) West State (4) worth leading Coach Jake Kline's (Continued from Page 13) AB R H PA • AB R H P A batters and now -with two games, the Cunha, 2b 3 10 2 6 Hib'rd,lf 3 110 0 Wisconsin and Michigan State con­ Went'th,ss, 4 0 12 5 B'nabo,2b2 0 0 11 Mettler, cf 5 13 2 0 Stahl,2b 2 0 0 11 tests, remaining to be figured in the good record in these last two games Pilney, rf' 5 12 0 0 Miller.lb 5 0 19 0 averages. Catcher Frankie Gaul bobs they will close out a satisfactory sec­ Gaul, c 4 2 3 4 2 Emery.c 4 12 7 0 Dunn, lb 4 1 114 0 Secory,cf 4 10 0 0 up above his teammates with the re- ond year under the tutelage of-Jake Fromh't,3b 3 0 0 10 N'man,3b4 0 14 4 mai'kable average of .464. Gaul has Kline. Snowed under by defeats last Velcheck.lf 4 14 2 0 Salfrs,rf 4 10 10 Beach, p 3 0 0 0 4 M'pah,ss 3 0 110 been hitting at a dizzy pace of late, year, Jake determined that things Toumey, p 1 0 0 0 1 Brandt,p 3 0 112 hitting 18 safely in the last 29 at­ would be different for his second sea­ Totals 37 7 14 27 181 Totals ..34 4 7 24 7 tempts. son. The team realized his hopes by Errors—Gaul. Fromhart (2). Millspaugh rolling up a high average. Although (2). Stolen bases—Cunha. Pilney. Fromhart. In second place is the speedy several defeats have blemished the Mettler. EmeiT (2). Two base hits—Velcheck Andy Pilney. His rating shows 2, Mettler, Brandt. Miller. Three base hits— record somewhat, the nine has played Gaul, Hits of Beach 6 in 61-3, off Toumey. at .413, vrith the recent leader, a much superior tjrpe of baseball this 1 in 2 2-3. Struck out by Beach 4, by Toumey Wibby Wentworth, in third post* 1, by Brandt 5. Base on balls off Beach 4 off season. Brandt 3. Winning pitcher. Beach. tion with .383. Arnold Velcheck completes the .300 class, hitting Faculty Tennis Toumey at that figure to sneak into the charmed circle. BASEBALL GAMES Progresses to Quarterfinals (Continued from Page 12) AB R H Pet. Four players have reached the Gaul, c 56 14 26 .464 quarterfinals round of the faculty, Pilney. rf. If 63 14 26 .413 Notre Dame (13) Purdue (4) Wentworth. ss 60 11 23 .383 tennis tournament now in progress. AB R H P A AB R H P A Langford has drawn a bye in the Velcheck, If 30 4 9 .300 Cunha, 2b 4 3 2 4 2 Do'ney,lf 10 0 10 first round and beaten Armstrong to Costello, lb, 3b, p 27 3 8 .296 Went'th,ss 4 12 2 3 Dailey,c 3 0 0 0 0 Cunha. 2b 67 16 19 .284 Mettler, cf 5 1 0 0 0 Arm'n.3b 4 0 2 0 0 advance to the one of the final eight. Pilney. If 5 2 2 10 Craig.2b 4 0 0 3 5 Collins also drew a bye and defeated Dunn, lb 47 . 8 12 .255 Und'k'fler.c 0 0 0 10 B'bach,lf 4 12 5 1 Matthews, rf 4 2 1 .250 Gaul, c 5 3 3 7 0 Sk'ski.lb 4 2 2 8 0 Don Plunkett in the next round to Van Wagner, p 4 11 .250 C'ostello.c 4 2 2 5 0 Ghe'co.rf 3 0 0 2 0 gain a quarterfinals berth. Dev. Dunn,lb 5 0 16 0 H'g'nd,cf 4 12 0 0 Toumey, p 18 1 4 .222 Reagan,3b 3 0 2 0 0 Lucas,ss 4 0 0 5 1 Plunkett has defeated both Dr. Kuntz Sepe. rf 19 2 4 .211 Beach.p 4 1112 Emst.p 3 0 10 0 and Elmer Layden to earn his quar­ Mettler, cf 68 9 14 .206 Martin.p 0 0 0 0 1 terfinal round place. Hasley has de­ Regan, ss. 3b 13 2 2 .154 Totals 3913 15 27 71 Totals ..34 4 9 24 8 feated Boscki and Dooley Avith com­ Themes, p 15 1 2 .133 parative ease to win his way into the Fromhart, 3b 41 7 5 .122 Errors—^Baumbach. Hoagland. Lucas (3). quarter-bracket. Beach, p 15 4 1 .067 Mettler. Dunn. Two base hits—Skoronski. Cos­ Rydell, p . 4 10 .000 tello. Gaul. Home runs — Pilney. Skoronski. Joe Petritz has won from Mr. Chiz- Sacrifice hits—Wentworth. Stolen bases—Met- • Underkoffler, c ... „ 3 0 0 .000 tier, Pilney, Gaul. Struck out—by Beach. 6: ek and Mr. Hinton has defaulted to Palkovic. ph 10 0 .000 by Ernst, 2. Double plays;—Cunha to Dunn. Mr. Corona. These are the only Wentworth to Cunha to Dunn. Base on balls— off Beach 2: off Martin. 2. Passed balls— matches which have been played. Totals aio 100 ' 1.58 .290 Dailey. Losing pitcher—Martin. May 24, 1935 'Nineteen expecting to carry off some of the final weekly meeting of the year. IRISH TENNIS TEAN laurels. August Petrillo, past president of the Six men are being taken to the conference, presided, and Frank Mc- ENTERS STATE MEET meet: Captain Frank Weldon, Ed Gahren, the first president of the or­ B u c h a r t, Fredericks, Prendergast, ganization, read the yeai-ly reports on Waldron and Verbaet. The Notre the wor'k accomplished by the society. Smarting under the sting of three Dame team Avill be handicapped by consecutive defeats, the Irish tennis the loss of the incapacitated Fallon team, under the able direction of BISHOP NOLL still limping from his severe ankle (Continued from Page 5) Coach Pedro de Landero, will seek sprain suffered last week. vengeance in the Indiana intercolleg­ renew its Holy Name, C. Y. 0., and iate meet at Eichmond today and to­ Captain Weldon, Buchart and Fred­ Legion of Decency pledges. Bishop morrow. Eai'lham college is the host ericks will be making their final bow to varsity tennis and are determined Noll will give the sermon, which will to make their final match successful. be followed by solemn Benediction sung by the Moreau choir. The altar Avill be placed on the south side of the St. Vincent de Paul stadium in front of which the C.Y.O. The St. Vincent de Paul society parish units of the deanery will form is making its final drive of the pres­ a cross during the ceremonies. ent school year for old clothes, fui-- The procession wall include in niture, and magazines, which will be order: the university band, parishes given to the needy people in this vi- of the deanery, St. Mary's College cinitj"^. Collectors will canvass each students, Holy Cross and Moreau hall during the first three daj^s of seminarians. Brothers from Dujarie CAPT. FKANK WELDON next week. Signs stating places for Institute, Moreau choir, clergy of the The leader still leads. leaving discarded articles vnll also deanery, including the members of be posted in the event that the col­ the Holy Cross Congregation, and to the galaxy of net stars who will lector does not call. The cooperation finally the Bishop and his escort. gather to claim the intsrcollegiate of the students is asked by the society Preparations are in charge of the titles of Indiana. in order that the members can make Eev. Vincent Mooney, C.S.C, J. Wal­ Purdue, Butler and Indiana this drive the largest and most fruit­ ter Mclnerny of South Bend, general are expected to furnish the great op­ ful of the year. chairman; and Eobert Riordan, J. position to the Irish. Against this Thursday evening, May 23, the Arthur Haley, and Raymond A. Hoy- cream of Hoosier stars, the Irish are members of the society held their er of Notre Dame.

LIGHT AN OLPQOID fOF VOUIlg 1(163$

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e p. Lotillard Co.. Inc. Twenty The Scholastic BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY "OLD GOLD" CONTEST FOR GRADUATING REV. W. BOLGER TALKS AWARDS ANNOUNCED SENIORS ON LABOR'S PROBLEMS The McGraw-Hill Publisliing Co., one of the largest and most pro­ Thirty-eight entrants tui-ned in gressive firms of its kind in the The Rev. William A. Bolger, a total of 8,059 Old Gold package United States, is seeking several C.S.C, delivered a lecture on "The fronts in the Notre Dame ring con­ graduating seniors who would be Relationship Between the Labor test wliich closed May 15th. interested in a permanent connec­ Encyclicals of Popes Leo XIII and tion with this organization, start­ Pius XI, and the National Indus­ The first ten men listed below ing in the sales department. trial Recoveiy Act" on Wednes­ •will receive official Notre Dame Seniors who have had some sales day afternoon. May 15, in the Law rings as gifts of the P. Lorillard experience, or who are interested College Auditorium. Co., makers of Old Gold cigarettes. in entering the business side of the Tliis contest was one of a series publishing field, are urged to write "The labor encyclicals issued by sponsored by this company at a direct to Mr. M. E. Mitchell, Pope Leo XIII and Pope Pius XI- number of leading universities in Division Sales Manager, McGraw- contain the essentials of labor, the the middle west. Hill Publishing Co., Inc., 501 principles of reconstruction of the present social and economic order The Old Gold company extends Guardian Building, Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Mitchell will correspond and the most important principles its appreciation to all those who on which human life of the future entered the contest—together with -personally with all applicants and will arrange to meet those quali­ will be built," stated Father Bol­ its regrets that 38 rings were not ger, head of the department of available. fied at a convenient time and place to discuss the matter with them economics at Notre Dame. The official count as announced personally. . He further states: by the judges follows: Father Bolger reviewed the his­ "Ours is a national oi'ganization tory of labor and its development Joseph G. Clifford 714 and we would be interested in dis­ through the laissez faire period Thomas Houghton 534 cussing our proposition with pro­ and the reaction against its abuses G. Molinari 531 spective salesmen, from any part in England. Father Bolger com­ Toby Kramer 509 of the United States. As Distict pared both" encyclicals \^ath the Jo. C. McNally 506 Manager for the Middle West, I N.I.R.A. Wm. McNally 500 would transfer applications for In discussing Section 7A of the Robt. J. Sullivan 450 other sections to our other division N.I.R.A., Father Bolger stated that J. Coon 408 managers." it embodied as strongly as law can Anthony Brick 374 McGraw-Hill publish a number the doctrine which the great Pope of business magazines and trade Wm. A. Kennedy 347 Leo XIII expressed in 1891, that journals, as v/ell as a great many Chas Hill 339 people as members of society have books on business problems. E. J. Nerad ...288 the right to organize as they see B. Scliloemer 234 Because of the unusual atti-ac- fit. J. Crunican 231 tiveness of tliis offer, interested Jack Hickey 225 seniors should Avrite at once to "Although the workers now have Amerigo Brienza 192 Mr. Mitchell, giving full details of all their desired liberty, they have A. F. O'Boyle 169 their qualifications and experience. not organized to the extent that Carl J. Senger 167 friends of organized labor had ex­ pected them to. Company unions Roger Barrock 164 BROTHER MARCELLUS DIES Robt. Barry 159 have grown faster than general Chas. S. Pitzsimmons 152 After a long illness. Brother labor unions since the advent of Paul W. Carroll 133 Marcellus, C.S.C., aged 75, one of the N.I.R.A., he stated. Then Fa­ J. Blunt 104 the oldest members of the Congre­ ther Bolger gave three probable John Kirsch 100 gation of Holy Cross, died of pneu­ reasons. Chas. McNichols -. 82 monia at 7:45 o'clock Monday Bill Lynch 64 night. May 6, in the Community 1.—"The apathy of the people." Mason Fox 63 Infirmary. 2.—"The lack of confidence in Don Varraveto 61 Before taking his vows at the the leaders of the Ameri­ Marcellus Ball 60 age of sixteen Brother Marcellus can Federation of Labor." Jno. Zdon 51 was known as William Kelly. For Don Hanning 47 six years' he served as assistant to 3.—"Active and effective objec­ Sam Lawler 41 the. late Rev. Gilbert Francais, tions of the employers Roger Ashany 20 . C.S.C., Superior General of the through Company unions." John J. D'Matteo 17 congx-egation. He formerly taught Father Bolger also mentioned Fi-ank Smith —.., 10. mathematics in Central Catholic that both encyclicals condemned Tom Needham .... . 10 High Schol, Fort Wayne, Ind.,' a socialism and communism. He de­ Jos. Singleton 2 school which he helped found. He clared that the N.I.R.A. is built Geo. Milton 1 had been retired for fifteen years. upon the assumption of private Funeral services were held at property. Concerning the wage Sacred Heart Chui-ch at 8:00 a.m., contract Father Bolger said: MAGAZINES WANTED Thursday morning. The Requiem "Sacred Heart Messengers" are Mass was sung by the Rev. J. Col- "The wage contract in itself is wanted for distribution among the lentine, C.S.C., superior of Holy not unjust, but it needs to be sup­ colored in North Carolina, accord­ Cross Seminary. Burial was in plemented by a contract that ing to an appeal recently received the community cemetery. makes a partnership out of the em­ by THE SCHOLASTIC. The maga­ Brother Marcellus has only one ployer-employee relationship. This zines, however old, should be sent surviving relative, a nephew, Wil­ can come about either by sharing to Reverend Charles J. Gable, Box liam Kelly, of Watertown, Wis­ in the ownership, profits, or man­ 438, Greenville, N. C. consin. agement." May 24, 1935 T wenty-one FRAH^ %%^ '•"

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ITALIAN GOV'T. AWARD Pasquale Pirchio, professor of GOLD WANTED Joseph Mangelli, of Bayonne, Italian and mechanical drawing at the University, announced the Highest cash prices paid for your old , a sophomore in the award, which was made thi'ough jewelry, dental work, etc by licensed College of Arts and Letters, was gold buyers. Pays up to $35 an ounce. the Casa Italiana of Columbia Uni­ Mail gold to O. E. Elling. 409 Lumber awarded a handsome leather-bound versity. The Italian government Exchange BIdg., Minneapolis, Minne­ volume of the complete works of bestows such prizes for proficiency sota. Will mail check and hold gold Alessandro Manzoni, Italian poet for ten days for your approval. We in the study of Italian in all uni­ also buy silver. and novelist of the 19th century, versities which offer courses in the by the Italian government. Italian language. T w enty-tw o The Scholastic