<<

The Archives of The

607 Hesburgh Library Notre Dame, IN 46556 574-631-6448

[email protected]

Notre Dame Archives: Alumnus

S!Siaf^»ioasa><»«B»J''^i'in>'r'nTsjai»iBai>a.HW»BgntviiWUipiiMiiii,iB«iiiiii>i MUBBaB—w.mwiiinwiiuwij.i." "'^"i " iI>P^—-«'^»»i>"»' . v.^ This book is not t

•/ v Notre Dame Alum

DECEMBER, 19

i^>

^ ^m^^m W^: 74 THE NOTKE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933

to the above agents was thereby dis­ book permits, but it is generally used pelled, to the lasting progress of to illustrate a point where common whatever remedies may be definitely sense would agree with Harry that CCMMENT employed to prevent a relapse in the Merriwell school of expression 1934. would lead the reader astray. The book reveals the author as an able What would YOU comment about? follower in the literary football field so well pioneered by Fi-ank Wallace, The w^orst of it is, so little is left To mention something that should '23. Columbia is one of the mediums to be said. have been mentioned earlier in the frequently graced by short stories by football season, if you want to settle the author of "Big Football Man." That 13-12 is so eloquent of ever}'- back and enjoy a fictionized mirror thing that Notre Dame football has of many of the famous episodes in ever stood for that you can see in it " Notre Dame football history, thought­ the lEchigan goal post, Dorais-to- fully sci-ambled, read Harry Sylves­ The ALUMNUS cannot avoid sug­ Eockne, Gipp, the Four Horsemen, ter's "Big Football Man," a title gesting that the patience of the the 13-10 Northwestem-N. D. classic which Hariy disclaims, but which alumni and their consideration for of '25, Pai-isien, O'Brien, Elder, nevertheless is the key to securing a Notre Dame and for the the coaching Schwartz, and all of the other heroes copy from Farrar & Rinehart. .It staff was both justified and rewarded of the headlines who have happened has a lot more of the frank conversa­ in the Army game. The University to be the tool for a time of a destiny tion of the men-are-men school of and "Hunk" have appreciated this that seemed particularly Notre wTiting than the Ave Maria stj'le- spirit throughout the season. D.^.me's. You see in it the justification of the faith that has kept alive the bril­ liant spark that is Notre Dame spirit, through times which have tried the uninitiated. THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS You see in it the unquenchable jAiiEs E. ARMSTRONG, '25, Editor flame that has been, as it will con­ tinue to be, the beacon for boys who The magazine is published monthly during the scholastic year by the Alumni will not be beaten. Association of the University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, Indiana. The subscription price is $2.00 a year; the price of single copies is 25 cents. The You see in it one of those links annual alumni dues of S5.00 include a year's subscription to THE ALUMNUS. which have so frequently been Entered as second-class matter January 1, 1923, at the post office at Notre forged in the fire of adversity to Dame, Indiana, under the Act of March 3, 1879. AH correspondence should form the gi-owing chain of Notre be addressed to The Notre Dame Alumnus, Box Sl.^Notre Dame, Indiana. Dame ti-aditions, a shackle of senti­ ment which holds Notre Dame men JlElIBER OP THE AMERICAN ALUMNI 'COUNCIL and the friends of Notre Dame in such pleasant bondage. JlEMBER OF THE NATIONAL CATHOLIC ALUSINI FEDERATION

The following have been blamed THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION for the defeats of 1933 — Harper, Anderson, the sophomores on the of the team, the seniors on the team (who i • nominates the juniors?), the present UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME generation of softies, the new Dining Halls, the students, the alumni, the Alumni Headquarters, Main Floor Administration Bldg., faculty (the ALUMNUS is tempted Notre Dame, Indiana to subscribe to this latter theory, feeling, from academic results this JA-MES E. ARMSTRONG, Secretary-Treasurer year, that classes are being made en­ tirely too attractive and that the curse of scholarship is resting upon ALUMNI BOARD the hitherto allegedly simple ath­ BYRON V. KANALEY, '04 - - - - - Honorary President letic fraternity), the natives of South M. HARRY MILLER, 'lo ------President Bend (if such be defined to include Bearskin and the Old Growler), 3.2, FRANK C. WALKER, '09 First Vice-President blondes, the weather, the Notre ARTHUR E. CARMODY, '15 - - - - - Second Vice-President Dame system a la Frankenstein, and JOHN F. O'CON.VELL, '13------Director as many variations of causes as there have been commentators. ROBERT E. LYNCH, '03----:---- Director An eleven-man jui-y composed of HUGH A. O'DONNELL, '94------Director the flower of our country's young FRED L. STEERS, 'il ------Director manhood having acquitted the Notre FRANCIS A. WERNER, '33 - - - - - (one year) Director Danie team of all charges in its final appeal on the afternoon of CLARENCE MANION, '22 - - - - - (ex officio) Director Dec. 2 in the court of the Yankee Stadium, City and State of New York, much of the blame attached December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 75 ATHLETICS =By JOSEPH PETRITZ= Greatest Notre Dame Victory Closes Season Of Upsets

For the benefit of those many back there. Febel came in from no­ alumni who do not have access to the 1933 Record where, took the ball on the dead run New York papers, we wish to state and scored. The other two Purdue in the strongest words at our com­ Oct. 7—Kansas 0; Notre Dame 0. touchdowns came when long passes mand, along with the 1933 football Oct. 14—Indiana 2; Notre Dame 12. sailed over the heads of the Irish record which must be printed here for Oct 21—Carnegie 7; Notre Dame 0. secondary into the waiting arms of Boilermaker receivers. posterity, that Notre Dame at the end Oct. 28 —Pitt. 14; Notre Dame 0. You'd think that a team would be of 1933 was still a climax team. Nov. 4 — Navy 7; Notre Dame 0. discouraged at this point and ready The details of the 1933 Army game Nov 11—Purdue 19; Notre Dame 0. are vivid in our mind, as they will to succumb to a Northwestern team always remain, but it is necessary to Nov 18—Northw. 0; Notre Dame 7. which had fumbled itself out of any go through the season to get the Nov. 2.5—So Cal 19; Notre Dame 0. title hopes after standing off Stan­ proper background for the grandest Dec. 2 — Army 12; Notre Dame 13. ford in a tie game. But the fates fin­ ally smiled on Notre Dame up at football picture these eyes have ever Totals: 0pp. 80; Notre Dame 32. seen. It was a picture painted on the Evanston, Three Chicago boys got green of the Yankee Stadiimi Dec. 2 the same idea at the same time:-;Ed Krause blocked a Northwestern' piint, by as stout-hearted a group and as was a quick-kick situation, third down harmonious a group of Notre Dame Kitty Gorman recovered it on the 11- and ten to go on Pitt's 20-yard line, yard line, and Andy Pilney ran it men as we have seen in our six brief with Notre Dame on defense. The years at the old alma mater. over for the only touchdown. And back called for a short diamond de­ then did Notre Dame rise to the Kansas had taken this inexper­ fense, so that one man would be back heights of defensive play! Northwest- ienced team in its opening game and to chase the kick and return it. But em made only one first down during played it to a scoreless tie. It is an he decided too late. He had just the entire game to Notre Dame's 12. actual fact that Coach "Hunk" An­ called the play and had turned to go The experienced, talented, Inspired derson used five quarterbacks and back, while the other players were sons of Troy turned in another South- made numerous other substitutions, starting into their defensive positions, em California victory the next week sending all of them in with instruc­ when Mike Sebastian came tearing at South Bend. Playing against a tions which, believe it or not, most through a gaping hole in the center terrific gale, Notre Dame outplayed of them promptly forgot. Each man of the Irish line and past the second­ Howard Jones's team during the first he sent in had three signals to call. ary before the boys even knew the quarter. Then Big Don Elser was Of the five quarterbacks, three called play was under way. It was a 75- hurt. He left the game. Irvine (Cot­ the first play, two called the first and yard run and a touchdown. An Irish ton) Warburton entered for Troy, second, and none called the third. One fumble shortly later paved the way and very shortly afterwards he en­ called the same play three times for for a long Pitt pass which resulted gineered two scoring marches for a net loss of some 35 yards. indirectly in a second touchdown for himself, the result of constant driv­ If that were stage fright, the fol-. Pitt. ing off of Notre Dame's left tackle lowing incident is an even more pot­ Navy, with one of its strongest by said Warburton, led by Aaron ent example, for it cost the Irish their teams in recent years, was pushed Rosenberg, the best guard in the game with Carnegie Tech, after Nick and passed slightly fewer than 400 country, Capt. Ford Palmer, one of Lukats and Don Elser had scored yards over the turf of Baltimore sta­ the best right ends, and several other enough points to win from Indiana, dium, but a fumble, followed by a suc­ big fast Coast stars. Homer Griffith, 12 to 2. cessful pass and an end run gave the a fine quarterback, made the other The Carnegie Tech game provided Middies the touchdown they needed score when he fooled the Irish secon­ one of the most unusual plays of the to give Notre Dame its third consec­ dary with a flat zone pass and trotted season. After the Irish receiver had utive loss of the season, 7 to 0. Notre over the goal line unmolested. fumbled the opening kickoff, a soph­ Dame threw scoring passes away, omore Notre Dame back allowed the fumbled deep in Navy territory, and And that is the background. Out­ Skibos to score right through him made other mechanical and mental played only by Pittsburgh and South- when he knew what play was coming, mistakes which should have been suf­ em Califomia, Notre Dame had lost saw his man come out, knew his as­ ficient to last them all season. five games and tied one, winning only signment, and merely found himself The following week they stood off two. They went East to play an .A.rmy frozen to the ground, scared to death Purdue's previously undefeated team, team which had gone through nme for some reason unknown to himself making as many yards and more first games without a defeat or a tie. or anyone else, except stage fright. downs, but succumbed to their own Army had already received feelers on His man Lib Lewis, at any rate, came errors again. Nick Lukats threw a a Rose Bowl bid, Notre Dame had out of the line at right end, streaked pass to Fritz Febel, a Purdue guard, gone through an ine-xplicable series down the middle of the field, turned for a touchdown and was roundly of discouraging breaks from start to and took a pass from Angelo Beve- censured. He knew he was trapped finish. But the spirit of these Irish vino for the only touchdow-n of the for a 10-yard loss, he saw an Irish lads never flagged. They had gone game. back in the clear ahead of him, and! into every previous game with the The Pittsburgh game a week later he took a fairly safe chance of re­ idea of ^vinning. They had played deeming the blocking failure of his winning football, with the exception saw a senior back "go dumb," as the (Continocil on Page 86) saying in football circles goes. It mates which had left him stranded "THE ASSOCIATE BOARD

OF LAV TRUSTEES" » : » » » »

(See story on Page SI)

"The Aitsoeiatc Board of Lay Trustees, organized in the Fall of lOSO, is charged icith the responsibility of holdingt investing, and administer- inj the endjicmmt funds of the University. . ."

This brief statcutfiit in the University Catalogue does not tell of the thirteen years of sacrifice of personal interests by the mm who have comprised the Board. It does not indicate the brilliance of their unremuncrated conduct of the trust imposed, to the stability and progress of the University they served. It docs not reflect the gifts and bequests from members of this Board as c result of their close study of the problems and needs of tlic Univcrifity — totalling almost as much as the funds they were enlisted to administer. The Edward N. Hurley College of Cotnntcrcc; the John F, Cttshing JJall of Engineering; the William P. Brcvn bequest; the Matthew Carney Scholarships; the Leonard Anson Scholarships; annual prizes, for graduates, bearing the jtames of .A. R. Erskine, Byron Kanalcy, Miles O'Brien^ Frank Hcring—prizes which in varying fields stir tJtc interests of nndcrgradiiates most gratifyingly; the most recent manifestation — the $S5,000 scholarship fund in the will of the late E. N. Hurley. And t/icrfc brqucsts and gifts arc but the publicized evidences of a unanimous spirit of loyalty and support in t/ic financial problems of Notre Dame which has pervaded tJie Board during its short but crowded thirteen years — among those men who, without tJie ties of attendance, have joined as ivillinoly and eagerly in the sacrifices which the honor involves, as have the splendid men who have represented the Alumni Asso- ciation in the work.

The Board at it Xovember. 1933, meeting left to riEht: Very Rev. Jam?s A. Bums. C.S.C., *8S; Rev. John F. O'Hara. C.S.C.. '11: Frank E. Herinfr, '08; Frank \V. Lloyd; Fred J. Fisher; James J. Phelan, and Byron V. Kanaley, '01; standin;r—Miles "W. O'Brien; Matthew J. Carney; Brother Ephrem. CS-C, M.A.. '24; Frank C. Walker, '09; Georjie M. AnsDn. '95; Warren A. Cartier. '87; John P. Mun>hy. '12; John F. Cush- ins, '06; Edward J. Doyle, and C. Roy McCanna. Angus D. McDonald. '00. is the only member of the Board not in this picture. (A portrait of Rev. Andrew Morrisst-y. former president, and Gropori's portrait of Pius IX can be seen behind the Board.) THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS Vol. XII December, 1933. No. 3

Alumni Association To Aid N. D. And Catholic Education

Program Launched by Board Will Bring: Best Prep Students in Contact With Notre Dame through Alumni; Work Will Promote Catholic Education Generally

A program of contacts, in which able conditions. Notre Dame, with acquaintance to the lasting benefit the Alumni Association will serve as less piincipal endoxoment than, to of Club, Association and school, a clearing-house bebveen the Univer­ take one example, Princeton, has an­ which always results ultimately in sity on the one hand and preparatory imal income from endowment, de­ the benefitting of the individual schools and individual students and rives its main source of upkeep and alumnus. parents on the other, is announced progress from the relatively com­ by the Board of Directors of the plete utilization of its educational The program will undoubtedly in­ Alumni Association as a result of facilities. Sending students, under volve the preparation of attractive two November meetings on the cam­ these conditions, is equivalent to literature of the campus which can pus. contributing large endowment funds, be used to interest and enlighten the by which many of our contemporar­ alumnus as well as the boy in whom The progi-am is to be under the he is interested. uirection of the Board through the ies are enabled to operate. Alumni Office and the present Alum­ The number of px-ospects for col­ It will involve appearances before ni Secretarj'. It has the sanction and lege today is narrowed by economic schools. Clubs, and other organiza­ co-operation of the University and conditions. The competition for them tions of boys and theirs parents of comes as the answer to a need whose is increasing. representatives from the campus. gi-owth has been felt and expressed This element of personal contact has by both Notre Dame and the hun­ These are, in brief, the practical long been needed by the Association, dreds of high schools from which the considerations which have caused the and ought, under the new program, University draws its students. Board to launch the program at this to bring these benefits to our own time. It has many ramifications of organization as a part of its func­ ."llumni and Alumni Clubs have a more permanent and ideal charac­ tioning. been consulted in the formation of ter which will become evident, the the program. The Board feels that Board is confident, as its functions Similarly, alumni records, being it serves an invaluable purpose in progress. necessary to the promotion of the strengthening the organization of the new program, can undoubtedly be Association through the satisfaction It should interest the highest type perfected to a point exceeding that that comes from successful service. of student from both Catholic and which has been possible under our non-Catholic schools. It should in­ own machinery. During the financial stress of the terest them in such numbers that last four years, alumni have been ob­ the University can exercise a selec­ Pending the economic recovery of viously and admittedly handicapped tion, which will improve the general the alumni generally, the University in anything bordering upon help for academic standards of the University will share the expenses of this pro­ Notre Dame of a monetarj' nature. ' student w^ithout sacrificing the broad gram, which brings an admitted life It is equally true that, without ex­ character of the student body as it saver to the -Association. As condi­ ception, the Classes of these last has always existed. tions improve, it should be a source years, and those already out, have of pleasurable pride to alumni to held and increased their loyalty to Such a program will bring the contribute enough to the -Association the University in the general adver­ preparatoiy school, especially the to permit the full financing of this sity. Catholic high school, and the Univer­ program, which, in itself, is a justifi­ sity together in a manner that should cation for' the existence of the As­ Experiments on a small scale last prove of definite constructive educa­ sociation. year proved that the alumni can ren­ tional value to both. It should stim­ der the most valuable service in ulate preparatory school activities by The program permits the individu­ bringing together the parents, the bringing to them the University per­ al alumnus, outside Club areas, to students and the preparatory school spective. participate actively in the Associa­ agencies that desire knowledge of tion program, to repay his particular Notre Dame wants prospects who debt of gratitude to the University, Notre Dame, and those Notre Dame will make good. Alumni can pass agencies which can bring them this or to do as important a bit of work judgment on the likelihood of candi­ in the field of Catholic -Action as the knowledge. Priceless as this service dates to "fit in" at N. D. By con­ is to both parties, the alumni them­ opportunities of the average layman tacting a boy before he enters Notre present. selves have little, if any, financial Dame, in many cases following him obligation involved in the arrange­ through several years of his prepara­ -After thorough consideration, the ments. The plan, the Board feels, tory work, the alumni, the Local Board of Directors of the Alumni As­ has special merit for alumni at this Club, the -Association, and the Uni­ sociation feels that the program as time through this absence of cost. versity itself, come to know him well, outlined and contemplated fulfils to Too, it has a positive financial and he knows them. As a result, the a greater degree than any other pos­ benefit to the University, equal to spirit that has grown so strong in sible project in this period of our endowment that would be improb­ the average four years ought to be history the elements of moral, mate­ able even under much more favor­ strengthened by these added years of rial, and fraternal progress. 78 THE NOTBE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933

Dr. S. J. Maher, Laetare Medalist, Nears T. B. Cure (Gp) Edwards, '09, in Charge OF Studebaker Truck Dep't Dr. Stephen J. Maher, New Haven, for tuberculosis—^which is the great­ Conn., recipient of the Laetare medal est prize in the world." in 1932 in recognition of his heroic "Last July," Dr. Maher added, "it To direct and expand an intensive work in tuberculosis research, today occurred to me that my own unsup­ campaign to sell more commercial is the center of interest in the medi­ ported claims might fail of securing cars, the Studebaker Corporation, cal world as the result of his recent from its headquarters in South Bend, prediction, following long and inten­ has recently announced the appoint­ sive investigation, that a "cure for ment of W. H. 'Cap' Edwards, '09, tuberculosis is in sight." as general manager in charge of all Dr. Maher's prediction was made truck activities. at a gathering, to which 18,000 phy­ "Cap" is particularly known to a sicians had been imited, at the large portion of the alumni through Laurel Heights Tuberculosis Sana­ his close connection for many years torium, Shelton, Conn. After 25 with Knute Kockne and with Jesse years research. Dr. Maher said, a Harper and "Hunk" Anderson. He technique has been developed for the has played an important part in breeding of a special tj^ie of bac­ Notre Dame football ever since his teria which destroy the bacillus of own playing days at the University. tuberculosis, human, bovine, and The following partial account, taken aWan. These new destroyers of one from the South Bend News-Times, of mankind's worst enemies are a will, therefore, be of particular inter­ species of bacteria known as cocci est to many. and diplococci. They come into ex­ istence from the tubercle bacilli "The appointment of (Cap) Ed­ themselves, after they are given a wards—everybody in this city knows certain food, consisting of sterile him affectionately by his nickname— milk and the bacilli are treated with brings an old friend . and business glycerine. intimate to the inner circle of Stude- These cocci and diplococci, Dr. baker's executive staff. Maher said, are non-acid fast and "Perhaps no man who has not been produce an acid harmless to them­ DB. STEPHEN JVLVHEB on the Studebaker payroll has ever selves—"but full of harm to the tu­ Science and faith in harmony. been more closely identified with the berculosis germs from which they corporation. are derived." the attention they deserved and I " 'It is just like asking a brother "We have not as yet," Dr. Maher decided that, before I made my re­ to pull up a chair and have dinner'," cautioned the physicians present, sults public, I would ask some prom­ said C H. Wondries, in charge of "secured any convincing evidence inent physicians among my associ­ sales in the truck division. " 'In fact, from animal experiments that these ates in the tuberculosis campaign to 'Cap' Edwards has worked so closely cocci and diplococci have any pre­ endeavor to corroborate my results." with us for so many years that it ventive or curative effect on tuber­ has been hard to believe he was not culosis in guinea pigs or rabbits, actually one of us. He has a vast but we have abundant evidence that New Novitiate Progresses acquaintanceship with the entire these cocci and diplococci, whether A new novitiate for the Congrega­ Studebaker organization. He knows derived from avian, bovine, or very everybody in the plants and the Ad­ pathogenic human tubercle bacilli tion of Holy Cross, to supplant the familiar building on the far side of ministration Building. And he knows produce no' harmful effect when in­ and has discussed sales plans with jected into guinea pigs or rabbits. St. Joseph's Lake at the University, is being built at Interlacken, near nearly every regional sales manager, "In itself this is a very important dealer and distributor in the field. matter if we are to consider any Rolling Prairie, Indiana at a cost of §350,000. Construction was begun a He's always been one of us—and possible therapeutic (curative) use we're mighty happy to have him more of these cocci and diplococci derived short time ago, following the award­ ing of the contract to the Ralph Sol- closely identified'." from tubercle bacilli. "The story of 'Cap' Edwards life "Despite its present accessibility, litt Construction Co., builder of num­ erous recent structures on the is a brilliant example of that famous this new field contains, in the opin­ newspaper headline, 'Local Boy ion of some of us, the long-sought campus. The cornerstone for the new novi­ Makes Good.' He is a native son of and greatly needed specific cure for South Bend who has made good. tuberculosis. tiate was laid on Nov. 13 by Very Rev. James W. Donahue, C.S.C, su­ " 'Cap' Edwards was bom in South "Of course, the temptation to Bend, Sept. 5, 1888. The scene of preserve silence on this work of perior general of the Congregation of Holy Cross. Assisting him were his birth was the old Edwards' farm, ours until we can say — 'Here is a three miles south of the city. He cure for tuberculosis!' has been very Very Rev. James A.. Bums, C.S.C, provincial. Rev. Edward Laurin, was a grandnephew of J. M. Stude­ strong. But we have resisted this baker. He was educated in South temptation because we realize that, C.S.C., Rev. W. R. Connor, C.S.C, Brother Bernard, C.S.C, and Brother Bend public schools and in 1906 he if we are on the right track, the entered Notre Dame. One outstand­ cure will be achieved much sooner Alban, C.S.C. Constructed of red brick and ing 'Believe it or Not' about his life if we impart our knowledge of di­ is that he began playing football on rection to the whole world, than it trimmed with limestone, the new structure, three stories in height, will the sand lots oif the city in 1900— could be if we tried to find this cure and played the game continuously alone. follow the Lombard style of archi­ tecture. It will contain living quar­ until 1926. Every autumn for 26 "Once sighted, nothing, not even years found him in football togs and political scheming or lack of funds, ters for 150 novices and their super­ iors and will be ready for occupancy even Cap himself cannot guess how could keep the world from secxinng (Continued on Page 79) immediately and developing the cure next spring. December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 79

'CAP' EDWARDS Catholic Peace ConFerence At N. D. November 19 (Continaed from Pase 78) By Paul Ooyle, '36 many football uniforms he has worn On Sunday, November 19th, the spoke in the absence of Dorothy out. University of Notre Dame was host WlUman; and Doctor Jeremiah Sul­ " 'Cap'" Edwards was Knute Kock- to sixteen speakers representing livan, of the school of journalism, ne's close friend. He aided Jesse Catholic colleges and societies who Marquette University. Harper in coaching the famous Notre discussed topics related to peace at The part of Education in develop- Dame team of which Rockne was cap­ tain. He received his Notre Dame diploma in 1909. "When the war came 'Cap' Ed­ wards was chief inspector of ordnance in northeastern Indiana and with George Sweet had charge of produc­ tion of all ordnance material in the Studebaker plants during the war. After the war he served on the claims board in the Chicago district of the ordnance department. "In 1920, 'Cap' and his brother. John, founded the Edwards' Iron Works in this city. The two brothers built the iron and steel business to an annual million-dollar volume. In 1930, they began the manufacture of truck bodies and cabs. Today, they are among the country's foremost builders of semi-trailers. During the growth of this business, they worked very closely with Studebaker's truck division in both the plant and the Left to riiiht scatiKl: Rev. Joseph Keincr. S.J.: Sr. JI. Benidictus. C.S.C, Miss Marion sales department. McCandlcss: Rev. Frederic SiedenbarK. S.J.: Rev. J. W. R. Masuire. C.S.V.: left to right "In years past, 'Cap' has gone into standing; Prof. G. P. O'Donnell: Dr. Francis jrcJIahon; Dr. Robert Pollock; Rev. Charles C. Miltner, C.S.C., vice-president of the Catholic Association for International Peace, and the plants in his shirt sleeves and Rev. Francis Mullin, helped in the construction of convey­ ing machinery, mill work, and he has the one-day regional meeting of the ing proper mental attitude toward designed and installed most of Stude­ Catholic Association for Internation­ peace, the contribution of organiza­ baker's assembly lines. Moreover, he al Peace. This was the first time tions to the progress of world amity, has the same 'shirt sleeve' acquaint­ that the annual assembly had met and the need of a mass movement in ance -ivith the selling organization in on the campus. behalf of peace were among the the field. items discussed during the morning "During his career 'Cap' Edwards The day-long convocation opened session. has always been associated with dvil at 9:00 o'clock Sunday morning with and municipal activities. Last year, Mass in the Sacred Heart Church. In the afternoon meeting, nation­ alism and its selfish principles were he was president of the South Bend His Excellency, Bishop John F. Noll, Chamber of Commerce. His acquaint­ D.D., of Fort Wayne, Indiana, cele­ bitterly denounced. God and not the state was shown to be the Prime anceship in the city is probably the brated the Mass, and delivered the largest of any -litizen. Testimony to sermon in which he scoi-ed national­ Object of a people's patriotism. President Roosevelt's adoption of an his popularity was seen at the Stude­ ism and advocated a turning to God baker Administration building, when for deliverance from war and the isolation policy was looked upon as presenting a serious obstacle in the he was deluged with telephone calls present economic ills of the world. of congratulations from plant work­ After Mass the first formal session path of world peace. Pleas were voiced for world disarmament as a ers, civic leaders and automobile of the day was held in the auditori­ executives everywhere." um of the Law Building. Reverend necessarj' step in acquiring inter­ William Bolger, C.S.C, of the Notre national amity. Dame Economics department pre­ Hon. William M. Cain presided as Conaghans Terrorized sided at the meeting. Reverend chairman of the afternoon discus­ Thieves who forced Mr. and Mrs. . Charles C. Miltner, C.S.C, delivered sions, which were also held in the Paul Conaghan, '20, from their car the first address on "Peace and the Law Building. Those who spoke in in Chicago, Dec. 3, and drove it off, College Curriculum." After Father the afternoon and their topics: Rev. discovered they had unwittingly kid­ Miltner, the following speakers pre­ R. A. McGowan, of the National naped Paul's infant son and his nurse sented a symposium on "Education Catholic Welfai-e Conference, "Eu­ who were in the rumble seat. Probab­ and Peace":Reverend Joseph Reiner, rope—Its Problemsi and Efforts for ly frightened by the fate of recent S.J., of Loyola University, Chicago; Peace"; Rev. Frederic Siedenburg, kidnapers, they hurriedly put nurse Miss Marion McCandless, represen­ S.J., dean of the University of De­ and baby out at the first stop to the tative of the International Fedei-a- troit, "Disarmament"; Dr. Francis relief of the frantic parents. tion of Catholic Alumnae and the E. McMahon, professor of philosophy National Council of Catholic Wom­ at Notre Dame, "Nationalism"; States"; Rev. Francis A. Mullin, of en, of St. Mary's College, Notre Charles P. O'Donnell, head of the Columbia College, Dubuque, Iowa, Dame; The Eight Reverend Msgr. history department at DePaul Uni­ "Peace Policies in the United J. M. Wolfe, of Columbia College, versity, "Peace Treaties"; Very Rev. States"; and Dr. Robert C. Pollock, Dubuque, Iowa; Sister M. Benedic- J. W. R. Maguire, C.S.V., president of the philosophy department at tus, of St. Mai-y's College; Miss Vir­ of St. Viatoi-'s College, "The New Notre Dame, "The Catholic Students' ginia O'Brien, of South Bend, who World Position of the United Responsibility Today." 80 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 19S3 The Young Alumnus (This is the second of a scries of editorials attcmptino to ouilinc an eagerness to help, the young alumnus, economically the possibilities that reside in the various groups our Association, and handicapped, naturally is faced with that well-known to convey to those croups the attitude of the Alumni Office.) "AVhat can I do?" That is where the Alumni Association takes the floor. /f^QOVTR is the marble from which experience sculp- Notre Dame has asked its alumni, young and old, for ^-^oiltures age. very little. But the Association, intimately associated Notre Dame, throughout the peculiar conditions of with the University's problems, need not hesitate to voice growth that came to our colleges after the war, presents suggestions to members based on obvious University a rich quarry. needs and evident opportunities whereby alumni can If you do not care for allusions, the simple fact is repay those things which, as the first editorial in this that Notre Dame, with few of its alumni, comparatively series pointed out, Notre Dame has given so freely to speaking, enjoying the reward of experience and long alumni. careers, has a tremendous faith in its young men. In the new program of the Association, announced in the leading article of this issue, the young alumnus finds Half, or more, of our members represent graduates of a golden opportunity for practical aid to Notre Dame. the last decade, four years of which have thrown an Not too far removed from the student perspective, impassible economic barrier in the path of the new alum­ both college and preparatory, his contacts with prospect­ nus, and caused the very ground to quake beneath the feet ive students can be more valuable than those of the older of those gone before them. alumnus whose judgment and experience are too fre­ Half, therefore, of our membership, can be reasonably quently offset by his lack of knowledge of changes in assumed to be economically retarded to a degree custom­ requirements, curricula and personnel of the schools from arily identified \yith only the first year out of school. which the new students come and to which they go. The half of our membership representing graduates The young alumni usually know the present personnel before 1923 are also not preserved from the inroads that of the community's preparatory schools as teachers they natural financial diff'erences and the unnatural depreda­ themselves have enjoyed, and they can be invaluable tions of a new low in depressions have brought about. in making the most desirable contacts with these teachers. Economically, therefore, almost generally, we are in News of the Clubs and the Classes is one of the prin­ an imenviable position as an Association, and no cause cipal features of co-ordination in the Association. The of great joy to our Alma Mater from an immediate younger classes have done well in both the Class and Club pecuniary viewpoint. columns and this frequent contact in type is bound to Fortunately, especially in the case of the young result favorably. The wide distribution of our alumni alumnus, Notre Dame is among the first of our educa­ makes other contacts than through the printed word tional institutions to recognize that relations with alumni infrequent and impractical. involve a great deal more than potential endowment. Recent graduates, in the natural course of events, Notre Dame recognizes, and wants young alumni to frequently come in contact vrith their contemporaries believe, that in the principles of Catholic education for from other schools. Not infrequently there are compari­ which the University stands, and particularly in the sons of curricula, alumni activity, and other topics the patronage of Our Lady, there is a constant inspiration results of which would be of interest and frequently of that has a power and an appeal of inestimable value to value to Notre Dame and the Alumni Association. the young man launching his career. It is usually the younger men who mingle in the There is also a potential leadership in our young men broader social and sporting circles where so much of with which Notre Dame has a concern broader than the misinformation concerning Notre Dame is rife. They dollars in its concept. can, if they are properly informed, do the major mission­ This is the leadership of right thinking and right ary work of crushing error and aiding the various truths living. The world outside the realm of about Notre Dame to rise again. and Catholic school, is trying to recall in. this admitted Catholic action, new in its concepts and new in its crisis sound principles of social justice. President Roose­ fields, must appeal primarily to the young man. Certainly velt has seen fit to recognize them in his quotations from the young Catholic college man is the logical source of and adaptations of the famous Encyclicals, "Rerum Nov- hope and expectation for this movement. What this would arum" and "Quadragesimo Anno." These encyclicals sum­ mean to Notre Dame is incidental to what such activity marize principles of social justice which have been in­ would mean to the individual. stilled Into our Catholic college men. The field of world Criticism is leveled at our Catholic college graduates leadership is, therefore, open to the Catholic young man by the Catholic press, the Catholic theater movement, as never before. The ramifications of this path to power the parish activities. Catholic fraternal organizations, are many—^religious, moral, educational, social. and other general Catholic movements, for their lack of Certainly the concern of our Catholic schools for what should be leading participation. The hope for elim­ their young graduates is not to be wondered at or inating this criticism does not lie in the men long gradu­ doubted, apart from any selfish material interest in their ated, whose circvmistances, however justifiable, gave rise success. to the criticism. The rational reform in these fields The young alumnus, in the position outlined above, obviously rests on the doorsteps of the young alumni. can, if he so desires, coast on this solicitude to a ripe The above paragraphs, somewhat disjointed though age, and possibly into infinity. they are, nevertheless contain in part suggestions of the Notre Dame's good fortune has been the general lack broad field which lies immediately about the young Notre of this desire. Dame alumnus, in which he can grow in all of the virtues But, possessed of a willingness and not infrequently with few sacrifices or few barriers. December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 81

Byron V. Kanaley, *04, Heads University Lay Trustees

Prominent Graduate Elected to Succeed Late A. R. Erskine; OHice Recognizes Years of Outstanding Loyalty and Serv­ ice to Notre Dame; Brings New Honor to Alumni Association

Byron Vincent Kanaley, A.B. '04, sity, it is of added significance that released for publication. It follows: who is now honorary president of few funds in existence have enjoyed Addition of a separate department the Alumni Association after having as uniformly successful administra­ of metallurgy to the college of engi­ held every other office of responsibil­ tion. So able and friendly has the neering this year with Prof. Edward ity and honor in the power of his Board been that it has become a Garfield Mahin, Ph.D., as its head, fellow alumni to bestow, achieved source of general advice in the af­ was mentioned. Dr. Mahin recently probably the highest distinction that fairs of Notre Dame, outside those patented a new process of carburiz- can come to an alumnus of Notre problems of endowment that origi­ ing steel which reduces the required Dame, when, at the semi-annual nally gave rise to its organization. time by 70 per cent. Thirteen meeting of the Board of Lay Trus­ Typical of the interest of members courses, nine undergraduate, are of­ tees of the University on November was the attendance at the Nov. 24th fered in the college. 24, he was elected to the chairman­ meeting when Angus McDonald, '00, The research activities of the de­ ship of the Board, succeeding the absent through the most urgent busi­ late Albert Russel Erskine who had partment of chemistry during the ness, was the only living member of last academic year were reported to been its chairman from the founda­ the Board not present. Albert R. tion of the Board in 1920. have exceeded those of any previous Erskine, chainnan during the entire year in the history of the depart­ This tribute of the University and 13 years of the Board's history, and ment. Twenty-two publications have the non-alumni members of the Edward N. Hurley, one of the most appeared in a number of standard Board to Notre Dame's own alumni active advisors, had died since the scientific and technical journals, four representation thereon was empha­ previous meeting of the Board last more have been, submitted and 18 sized by the election of Hon. War­ May. are almost ready for publication. ren A. Cartier, '87, to the temporary chairmanship preceding the election The Board, recently increased to Chemistry of acetylenes, olefines of Mr. Kanaley. Successors to the eight members each of alumni and and boron fluorides were principally late A. R. Erskine and E. N. Hurley non-alumni, now is comprised of: the subject of researches of the in the personnel of the Board were chemistry department and some of not elected at this meeting, leaving NON- ALUMNI them promise to have considerable two vacancies to be filled at the NAME TERM EXP. commerical value, the report stated. meeting in May. Mr. Fred J. Fisher, Detroit, Mich 1935 Formation of a graduate course The new chairman is connected Mr. Miles O'Brien, in medieval philosophy under the with Notre Dame as one of its most South Bend (re-elected sec'y) 1935 direction of Rev. Philip Moore, active graduates. He is a monogram Mr. C. Roy McCanna, C.S.C, and Dr. Robert Pollock, was man in ; he was one of the Burlington, Wis 1937 mentioned as an important departure best of the golden era of debaters; Mr. Matthew J. Carney, in the field of philosophy at the Uni­ versity. he edited the Scholastic and was New York. City .; 1937 president of the Class of 1904. Mr. James J. Phelan, The college of enginering was re­ He is connected by marriage. Mrs. Boston, Mass. .-. 1937 ported to have received from the Kanaley's father attended Notre Vacancy to be filled Bell Telephone company of New Dame in 1860. succeeding Mr. Erskine 1937 York and from Western Electric He is connected by one of those Mr. Edward J. Doyle, company new equipment valued at "younger brothers" so frequent in Chicago (re-elected) 1939 several thousands of dollars. New Notre Dame history—John Kanaley, Vacancy to be filled equipment also has been purchased .now a partner in the Kanaley in­ succeeding Mr. Hurley 1939 for the laboratories of the depart­ vestment brokerage offices at 120 S. ment of physics and metallurgy and La Salle St., was graduated in 1909. -A.LUMNI three laboratories have been added He is connected by posterity. An NASIE TERM EXP. in the department of physics. application hangs on the Alumni Of­ Mr. Warren A. Cartier, '87, Two professors were reported do­ fice wall for the entrance of Byron Ludington, Mich 1935 ing advanced work in California, Kanaley, Jr., made out the day of Mr. John F. Gushing, '06, Rev. James Kline, C.S.C, studying his birth, Aug. 17, 1919. Further Chicago, 111 1935 astronomy at the University of Cali­ than that, a daughter, Adele, is the Mr. Frank C. Walker, '09, fornia, and Rev. Henry Bolger, wife of Fred Miller, '28, former cap­ New York City _ 1937 C.S.C, physics at the California In­ tain of the Notre Dame football Mr. George M. Anson, '95, stitute of Technology. team; a nephew has attended the Merrill, Wis 1937 Academic honors which came to University, and another nephew is Mr. Angus D. McDonald, '00, Notre Dame faculty members during making plans for next fall. San Francisco, Calif. 1937 the year included: All Notre Dame men are familiar Mr. Byron V. Kanaley, '04, Rev. Julius Arthur Nieuwland, with and appreciate fully the great Chicago, 111 - 1937 aid that the University has received C.S.C, who was elected Golden Ju­ Mr. Frank E. Hering, '98, bilee president of the Indiana Acad­ during the 13 years of the Board's South Bend, Ind 1939 existence from the advice in the ad­ emy of Siecnce and given an inter­ Mr. John P. Murphy, '12, national honor, the Morehead medal, ministration of the endowment funds Cleveland, Ohio 1939 of the institution given by the lead­ an award annually conferred by the ers in business and finance who have Rev. John F. O'Hara, C.S.C, '11, International Acetylene association comprised the group. Limited as is acting president, gave a brief report for researches in acetylene. the total endowment of the Univer­ of the University's year, which was (Contmuccl on Page 91) 82 THE NOTKE DAME ALUMNUS November, 19SS

By CAMPUS MEMORIES R.. .Joh n W. Cavanaugh, CS.C.

Every campus seemingly has its Catholic school in Marshall, Michigan. wrote the Introduction to Father uncrowned laureates. Supreme among His mother was for years in charge Zahm's first volume of the South them all in our country was the fam­ of the Minims here before the long American Trilogy. ous Southern convert. Father John and beautiful day of Sister Aloysius, B. Tabb, of St. Charles College, near and so, it happened that in 1860 Ar­ President Thomas E. Walsh, CS.C, thur Joseph matriculated at Notre . ('81-'93) was not only consummate Baltimore. Once when the College Latin and Greek scholar but a master president commissioned Tabb to send Dame, doing double duty as teacher of French language and literature as a note inviting Cardinal Gibbons and in the preparatory department and well, and with a special knowledge of his guest, Bishop John Foley, of De­ student in the college, and making English literature and an artist's troit, to dinner, the poet—^unrivalled friends always by his unobtrusive, at­ power of English e.xpression. The list master of the quatrain among Eng­ tractive manners and his perenially could be much extended. lish-writing poets of the modem age playful and friendly disposition. Four —achieved this: years later, he was Bachelor of Arts Professor Arthur J. Stace was for Dear Cardinal Gibbons with all your red and two years afterward, in 1866, he years the. leading mathematician of ribbons was Master. the campus, had done practical work Pray show us the light of j-our face; From 1864 until his death exactly as a civil eng^ineer in the Rockies and And brinff with you holy John Michigan Foley 30 years later he was a prominent was far more than a dillettante in ^Vho hopes soon to be in your place. and brilliant member of our faculty nearly all the branches of science. He (with occasional brief leaves of ab­ was a writer of smooth, imag^ative, Both prelates came. Again when an sence) teaching a somewhat mottled delectable humorous prose and had Italian Count named Sacropanti program until he settled down com­ fluency, power and charm in both ser­ brought the anticipatory cardinalitial fortably in the chair of higher math­ ious and comic verse. But he ^vrote red biretta to the first Apostolic Dele­ ematics. He was Notre Dame's first real poetry, too. gate (about whom there had been Professor of Civil Engineering. Dur­ In 1885 his faculty associate, the some amiable grumbling because so ing his last years he was (fortun­ many people had sent him presents) ever-memorable and beloved Profes­ ately for me) much occupied with sor Joseph A. Lyons, for whom one there was a dinner in honor of the classes of History and English Lit­ Count and Tabb was among the of our residence halls has been named, erature: I had my freshman English gathered out of bound volumes of the guests. During the speeches the poet under him. assuaged his ennui by scribbling verse Scholastic certain offspring of Stace's which under duress he permitted a So far we have been contemplating muse in the 20 years following his friend and familiar to read. They ran not only the mottled program but a graduation. Not all his work is there as follows: highly variegated sage. There was alas! but nearly all the best of it. something about the Notre Dame man He assumed the pen name of Justin Sacropanti, Sacropanti do not ask for riches: of that elder day not so common Thyme,* a characteristic corruption Indeed we have not gold enough to fill j'our among those of us who came later. holy breeches. of words! The title of the little vol­ From the viewpoint of broadest cul­ ume, (alas! now out of print with That is one of the hitherto unpub­ ture many of us think that the two only an occasional copy surviving lished bits of the ivitty wizard, John finest products of our university from here and there among bibliophiles!— B. Tabb. the beginning have been Judge Tim­ was "Vapid Vaporings," and perhaps othy E. Howard and Father John A. it is fair to record there was some Unappreciated to the point of mor­ Zahm, CS.C. Howard was mathe­ perturbation when the charming Irish tal sin among us is the beautiful matician, popular astronomer, accept­ writer Rosa MulhoUand (who became poetry of George H. Miles, of old Mt. able poet, master of a distinguished Lady Gilbert by marriage) sent over St. Mary's, Emmetsburg. Delectable prose style, amateur historian, prac­ the seas an aggressive and menacing "Billy" Phelps, of Yale—I'm glad his tising attorney, professor of law. message because the Professor had middle name is Lyon and not Goat!— Chief Justice of Indiana, Laetare unwittingly used a book-title very like is happily -with us still, and there Medalist and really eminent jurist. one she herself had employed for one have been more than one Oliver Wen­ He served as Mayor of South Bend; of her volumes years before. "Vapid dell Holmes at Harvard. There have an attractive park there commemor­ Vaporings" published in 1885 has been more than one Holmes on our ates his name. Father Zahm's first never been reprinted as yet, I regret own campus, too, but chiefest, bright­ love was pure literature. But they to say. est and best loved among our local needed a science teacher when he was laureates was Professor Arthur J. ordained, and compliantly he became The contents of this piquant and Stace. This piece is about him. professor of chemistry and physics. pungent little book are assembled un­ Bom on a farm in Sussex, England, His flair for wTiting continuing, and der nine captions, themselves amusing losing his father early by death, but his general knowledge of all the enough: I, Exemplifications of Style; fortunately enjoying the care of a branches of science broadening, he n. Chansons Psysiolo^ques; HI, mother of exceptional talent and spir­ naturally undertook the work of apol­ Rhymes in Season; IV, Furtive ituality, the boy -was received into the ogetics and won national applause Snatches at Hash; V, Knocks Around Church at ten with his mother, and and repute. Later returning to his the Rockies, VI, Vindictive and Man­ both -were confirmed by the popular first predilection, he produced a ser­ iacal; VII, Other Themes; VIII, The and erudite Cardinal Wiseman, then ies of works on various aspects of Commentator; IX, II Ciriegio. Titular Bishop of Melepontanus. At South America under the name of Dr. H. J. Mozeans and won critical com­ As illustrating the first group, it fourteen he emigrated with the family will be appropriate to use some lines to what -was then called Canada West, pliments throughout the English- speaking world. It was he who in­ in which the poet disavowed the title now Ontario, and his adolescence was of professor. in Toronto, serving as a printer's ap­ duced President Theodore Roosevelt prentice until his twentieth year. to go to South America as Teddy him­ * Observe, Boethius, Thyme is pronounced as Then he took charge of a primitive self tells in his big book. Later, T. R. • if spelled time. December^ 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 83

AN UNDESIRED PREFIX HI.—Moderato. Speed away and fetch Apollo, from Olympus The decoration of the acrobat. Juno, of course, in public, to smoke would long exiled— not be seen. The nesro-minstrel's boast, the shoe-black's "Go bring him back now. Mercury,—no longer handle. But she-slipped into the kitchen and she are we riled." Claimed by each clown that learns to "skin smoked behind a screen; the cat," And Ceres, though for Proserpine she could XI.—Dolce. Each expert playinp sames not worth the not weep enough. The winged-footed Mercury not sorry felt candle! Yet found a consolation in the inter\'cning to go. Was it for this I burned the midnicht oil? puff. He sought Admetus' pasture, where Apollo Called aorists my friends, and oft would was, you know: IV.—Scherzando. dally "Nov.\ Foil old boy. good news for you— Diana tried to stint herself to three cigars With sines and tangents until what was toil the gov'nor wants you back. a day; Seemed pleasure? though Dame Nature out- So leave your flocks and wing with me again But Venus found it easier to cast restraint rnsed rally the upward track." away. Her rebel forces, led astray by mental appli­ (Solo on the Jyre, expressive of Apollo's cation— And people for a season were exempt from delight.) amorous sweats. Strike mc with shattered ner\'cs. For she kept the infant Cupid twisting up XII.—Prestissimo. As such nejilect deserves. her cigarettes. Apolk> gladly tuned his lyre, and sang. "I'm And drive me out to take vacation. going home," And then with Mercury set out to reach V.—Un poco piu piano. The title once, indeed, seemed hard to Rain. Olympus' dome; Vesta, you know, had always smoked - from And hence the strain; And while they sped their heavenward way. But unto him who titles would refuse, golden days of yore. be learned the fashion new. 'Tis harder far to lose: And she wondered how the others had not To smoke the fragrant meerschaum, just as In vain I flee to parts unknown— found it out before; you or I would do. Debauch my tongue with current slang— The Furies smoked like fuo*. and the Fates Scarce seven days have o'er me flown did not forfend. XIII.—Cantabile. Ere some wclI-meaninR friend While the Muses and the Graces in the general That afternoon, Apolk>, his adventures bid to Some letter or some postal card will movement blend. tell. send— Was smoking with the rest of them, and May such po hang! VI.—Adagio. spitting, too, as well; From the address they cannot doff But the azure-eyed JMiner*"a with severely But though he'd learned from Mercury to virtuous scorn. That odious prefix "Prof." smoke—alas! too soon. Viewed the shocking bad example set to He had not learned from Mercury the use of Great Henry Wadsworth, borne on spirit wings millions yet unborn ; the SPITTOON. From thy long fellowship* with earthly things I She sniffed the smoky atmosphere with much In that bright sphere which now thou call'st offended nose. Xrv.—Tempo di Marcia. Con Brio. thine o^vn— And when they spat upon the floor bow high Giuocosissira o. Than which Excelsior shall ne'er be known^ her choler' rose! Minen.'a poked it over, but he didn't seem to In that bright sphere, say, do they ape the see. leaser VII.—Sostenuto. Just what it was intended for. "Minerva, And outrage spirit ears by calling thee Now the floor of heaven is brass below and dear," said he, "Professor?" overlaid with gold. "That's a handsome new invention, but it I pause for a reply; Inwrought with many a jewel, as by ix>ots grieves me much to state If "aye" we are told If you don't remove it farther, I shall (sfor­ Then I No wonder that Minerva, then, should mur­ zando) SPIT IN'T, sure as Fate. Shall hesitate to die! mur and repine. (Curtain) To see it soiled with spittle, though the spittle A jest that has since become famil­ Mr. Stace's scientific bent is most iar enough was extended into some­ were divine. (Instead of the chorus at the end of this pleasantly exemplified in group No. thing" like a brief comic opera in verse, a grand staccato movement from the II, of which a characteristic specimen THE SONG OF ^HE SPITTOON orchestra expresses the feelings of Miner\*a.) is: I.—Andante Grazioso. VIII.—LargD. THE LADY ANATOMIST. Once, as old Homer tells us, the Olympic Gods To remonstrate would be useless, as she I. came down couldn't help but feel. So fair is her face and so classic her brow- To sojourn with the Ethiops, then blameless * So she sought to find a remedy the gross No pen can her beauty portray; in renow^n; abuse to heal; But in \*ain do the Graces her figure endow And the latter in their gratitude, or else to And after mighty pondering she solved the She is cold as a vestal, though bound by have a joke. problem soon. no vow. Taught their celestial visitants tobacco for to From her (calando) depths of inward con­ x\nd she casts adulation away. smoke. sciousness evolving the SPITTOON. Chonts (Spiritnoso) after each stanza: (Solemn and metaphysical symphony on the II. Perhaps it was by accident, perhaps 'twas by bass drum.) From her lips scientific the words that are design. heard IX.—Allegro Vivace. But whether which or 't other it is no con­ Seem to issue direct from her brains; cern of mine: The invention was successful, and they rec­ Like Minerva, whose owl she has always For no matter bow it started, we appreciate ognized its" use, preferred. 'Twas calculated to instruct as well as to the boon Regarding it as a superior bird amuse; Conferred by great Minerva, in inventing To the doves Cytherea maintains. They are agreed jnnci-\-a for her skill had (sforzando) the spittoon. won the belt. UL n,—Con fuoco. And that a want had been supplied that long Yet low at her feet see the youngster that The gods were all delighted: no nectar pleased time had been felt. sighs. like this, • And offers her jewels and gold: And e'en the gentle goddesses* were fain to X,—Macstosct. While in piteous strains his entreaties he plies share the bliss; Now Jove was feeling jovial, as he often docs, To gain—were it only a glance from her From the dewy hours of morning to the they say. eyes— glimpses of the moon. Ho beckoned unto Mercury and bid him Yet he obdurate finds her, and cold. Old Olympus had a redolence like that of a speed away— IV, saloon. "But let me interpret thy silence aright:— * Do you get it, Bocthius ? - Vesta is the personification of the domestic r know I was wronff from the start:— ^ Iliad, Book I. verses 423-424. hearth. Thou car'st not for gold or for jewels so • A thesis on "The Poet as Prophet." * ^\Tien the collar rises high it Is ruff. bright:— 84 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 19SS

Mere wealth can afford to thy soul no How snugly we gather thee in. V. delisrht;— "While gravy so unctuously drips. And while the friendly flagman for those cruel Then I offer thee, dearest, my heart!" And our faces expand in a grin thorns did look. As we lift thy loved form to our lips. Beneath his patient surgery I shivered and I V. « shook; A gratified flash from her eye he obser\*es. PEANUTS. And though he said they all were out, that is, And he can but rejoice at the sight. L all he could get— " 'Tis just what' I wanted—^blood vessels and Oh, how detestable. Is it fact or is it fancy?—sometimes I feel nerves. Is this comestible! them yet! And muscles contractins: in rcKular cur\-es!— Doctors denounce them as quite indigestible. I'm caused to you, really, sir, quite! Undoubtedly it was the pretense of II. murderous wrath against a South VI. Still the boys- munching them. Bend newspaper man, himself a hum­ "I'll examine your auricles, ventricles too, Cracking and crunching them. (While the muscles rela:c and contract.) orist, who had sportively attacked Vainly expect the effect of a lunch in them. Stace in print, that inspired the di­ And the "valves that the swift-fiowins blood ni. passes tfaroufirb. visional title, "Vindictive and man­ Stuffed to satiety. And 1*11 see what the chordae tcndincac do. iacal." First came the poet's rejoin­ (Farewll, propriety!) And how the aorta must act. der: Still, they go cracking on, pests of society. . VII. IV. TO A NEIGHBORING EDITOR "And since you're so free with your heart, I S>Tnptoms of cholera. I. suppose Making them holler "ah!" I've .a quiet disposition, but the unprovoked That your lungs you will also donate. Soon supervene, while the peanuts they attack With the air cells and bronchial tubes they swaller, ah! Which you made upon me recently desen-es enclose; V. an answer back. I'll keep them in spirits"—^but here he arose "Would you our gratitude For talent conversational you've made me out With his love metamorphosed to hate. Gain, from our latitude a bear. vin. Drive this abuse—it would comfort us, that it And you've robbed me of the summers that "I'll be blowed if you will I"—it was all he woiJd J have thinned my golden hair. could say. VI. II. Though his feelings ttunultuous raged. Banish it utterly; Don't think your predecessors* luck to share, So he bowed a farewell; but he called the Nuts in the gutter lay: and bid defiance, same day Then I'll subscribe myself, yours, sir, Their assailants did not have recourse to Pn another young lady just over the way. peanutterly. mathematic science. Who didn't anatomy study, and they Their "Gunnerj*, and Pnojectiles" they neg­ In less than a week were engaged. Naturally the experience as a civil lected, every one; engineer in the mountainous, western But I've got a little formula for loading up A droll blend of gravity and fun country produced some good things. a gun. that may illustrate the seasonable Only four poems are listed under this HI. rhymes of the third division is: heading, and while regretting I can­ And before I kill you utterly and put you out THE GROUNDHOG TO HIS SHADOW not share them all with my readers, o£ pain Perturber of my hibernating dreams! I am sure all \vill derive pleasure I'll make you roar for mercy—that you'll Dark, fateful child of wintry solar beams— from never do't again, Of that chill sunlight, powerless to thaw. ril heap inflictions on you with accelerating THE LAY OF THE CACTUS. Companion of the breezes, bleak and raw.— force. Say, dost thou lie in wait my hopes to blight. ARIA: El Uso del Vcrdc. And put you through the torture of a mathe- When I awake from this long winter's night— L matic course. To dog my footsteps, chase me back to earth, Oh! glorious is the cactus in the merry month IV. tut off for six weeks more my second birth? of Slay: ni pass a polar axis through your center of Molest me not, dire phantom, troublous c^f. With crimson, pink and amber hues the gyration. Malevolent presentment of myself; mountain side is gay; And then reduce to lowest terms your "per­ Let thickening clouds obscure the solar ray. You might travel many a weary league nor sonal equation." So oft desired, so nndesired to-day. see a view so bright; rU differentiate you from your forehead to Then shall I revd in Dame Nature's lap. But the cactus isn't just the thing to sit upon your toes. Nip the young twigs and taste the ascending —not quite! And wind a helicoid around your editorial sap; ^ nose. II. A jocund life of genial days commence I V. I was scrambling up the canyon side my level In a hyperbolic spiral your ideas I'll entangle. So mote it be! Hence, horrible shadow, hence! on my shoulder— With a radius vector varying inversely as FEBRUABV 2, 1885. The way was steep and treacherous with your angle. broken stone and bowlder. "Furtive Snatches at Hash" de­ I'll make you square the circle and triangulate And one tmcertain foothold brought a trouble the sphere. serves to be exemplified by two brief unto me. Then dismiss you on a tangent, with a cissoid poems. For upon a rampant cactus I sat down so in your ear. suddenlee. THOUGHTS ON HAVING SAUSAGE FOR VI. BREAKFAST. III. Your horizontal parallax I'll next proceed to How nice, when at mom we descend. If you sit upon a thistle, it may startle you. find The succulent sausage appears: 'tis true. With a double-barrelled telescope and levelUng- While odors deliciously blend Yet when you rise the thistle's thorns are rod combined; In a rich touf-nwniibic that cheers. growing where they grew; I'll then project you upwards with intensify­ ing speed And yet would caliminious spite But the stickers of the cactus will desert the parent stem. Till the cosine of your alUtude is very smaU E!en here a suspicion instil; E'en here would its venomous blight And attach themselves to any that make over­ indeed. Forbid us our joy to fulfil. tures to them. VII. rv. Beyond the reach of gravity you'll find your­ For some would persuade us the purp As the squaw from out her husband's chin self at last. And his tougher old father, the dog— doth carefully erase With asteroids annoying you and comets That the cat and her kittens usurp Each sprouting hair that threateneth to beard whirling past; The place of the orthodox hog. his gentle face. And never to your earthly home serenely will How quickly such calumnies vile So from me a friendly flagman undertook the you float. Thy genial presence dispds; extrication— Till the infinite hyperbola shall meet its The libel we meet with a smile. Each individual thorn required a separate asymptote. And our conduct our confidence tells. operation. (Continued on Page 90) December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNTIS 85

BY CAMPUS JIM KEARNS, '34

November wasn't all sack cloth Francis J. Linton, '34, of Chicago, and Tim Galvin, '16, were the and ashes with the student body, the as chairman. speakers. Navy, Purdue, and Southern Cali- Robert J. Nachtwey, '34, of Lan­ The night before the U.S.C. game fornia games notwithstanding. sing, Iowa, was elected president of the biggest of the year's pep ses­ Classes went along about as usual; the revivified German club, that con­ sions was held. Captain Ray Bran- so did extra-class activity. Witness: tinues to increase its activity and cheau, '34, Coach "Hunk" Anderson, LECTURES: On Nov. 12th and promises to be among the most ac­ '22, Robert Proctor, '04, Arch Ward, 13th, Francis J. Sheed, member of tive of campus groups. '21, sports editor of the Chicago England's famed Sheed and Ward Late in October the Cracow Club, Tribune, and Ted Busing, famed Col­ publishing house, lectured to large campus Polish group, joined with the umbia system announcer, were the audiences in Washington hall on Polish societies of South Bend and speakers. Features: fifteen minutes "The Catholic Evidence Guild" and Mishawaka in a program celebrating of fireworks, a four minute ovation "The Modem Ideas of God." Also the 250th anniversary of the Battle for "Hunk" before he spoke, and an­ during his stay on the campus, Mr. of Vienna. other about as long after he finished. Sheed visited one section of senior John E. Conley, '34, of Waverly, DANCES: Two informal football philosophy. Father Leo E. Ward's dances following Purdue and U.S.C. rational psychology class, gave a for­ N. Y., was elected president of the Press Club as the organization held games. The first was sponsored by ty minute lecture on current trends the Senior Class with Ray Waters, in philosophical thought, and spent regular meetings and made plans for a pre-Christmas banquet. '34, of Perth Amboy, N. J., chair­ the remaining time answering ques­ man. The S.A.C. sponsored the tions. The A.I.E.E. heard two speakers U.S.C. game dance, Joseph Condon, On the first of the month, Henry during the month. William Quails, '34, of Brockton, Mass., was chair­ H. Heimann, executive manager of superintendent of the elctrical de­ man. partment of the city of South Bend, the National Association of credit The Chicago Club sponsored a for­ men, and a member of Gen. Hugh outlined plans and values of efficient street lighting. Dr. C. L. Snyder, mal the night of the Northwestern S. Johnson's industrial advisory game. Held in the Cameo Room of board, talked to the students of the also of South Bend, inventor of the "Arup," new type qf airplane, de­ the Morrison hotel with Cory Lynn College of Commerce. furnishing the music, the dance drew Also during the ' month, Charles scribed his invention to the club. On the first of November, Mr. L. about 150 couples. President John Wilson, crime specialist of North­ Quirk of the club, and general chair­ western University demonstrated a H. Means, of the personnel depart­ ment. General Electric, interviewed man John Kiely, made the arrange­ "Lie Detector" to the Law Club and ments. a large group of interested students. all of the senior electrical engineers Helping with the demonstration was in re job prospects. The Villagers held their annual Mr. Emery Smith, assistant attorney DEBATE: Fourteen men were Thanksgiving dance at the Erskine of the state of Illinois for the past named on the varsity debate squad country club. South Bend, the night nine years and also a member of the by coach William J. Coyne. Profes­ before Thanksgiving. John DeWnde Northwestern faculty. sor Coyne also announced arrange­ and Jack Mullen, club president and ments for debates with Michigan and dance chairman respectively, were in Frank J. Duffy, first vice-president Northwestern before the Christmas charge. of the American Federation of La­ holidays. TRIPS: Approximately 600 stu­ bor, general secretary of the Car­ INTERHALL DEBATE: Under the dents and faculty members made the penters and Joiners International direction of the Wranglers, the inter- official student trip to Evanston for Union, gave the students of the de­ hall debate season moved into its the Northwestern game Nov. 18. partments of economics a fine lec­ final stages. Sorin, discarding its Prof. Casasanta's band made its only ture on labor's attitude toward the mantle of indifference toward things foreign appearance of the year at NRA. The meeting was held on the labeled "interhall," produced a two- that game. afternoon of Nov. 23, with the at­ man team of John J. Locher, of The Metropolitan, New Jersey, tractive auditorium of the John P. Monticello, Iowa, and John O'Con­ and Connecticut clubs of the campus Gushing, C.E. '06, Hall of Engineer­ nor, of Kansas City, holdovers from jointly sponsored a special train to ing packed for the talk. last year's championship Howard New York for the Army game. More MOVIES: Distinct from the regu­ team, and went through the first than 100, slightly below the normal lar run of Washington hall movies rounds of competition with sufficient figure for the trip, took advantage of were two shown during the month. ease to become favorite to win the the chance for forty hours in a day The first, "The Shepherd of the Lemmer Trophy. coach, a look at the Empire State Seven Hills," depicted many of the PEP MEETINGS: Navy game— Bldg., and, for most of them, turkey activities of Pope Pius XI during the with no radio broadcast available, at home. period of his papacy. the student body heard the Navy JUGGLER: Joe Degnan's Novem­ The second of the movies, game announced over a special loud- ber offering was the "Big Game" "Through The Centuries," was speaking system in the gym. A di­ number of the Juggler. Considerably shown for the first time here before rect wire from Baltimore brought Improved over its preceding issue, being released to metropolitan thea­ play by play details to the an­ the humor magazine Iiit a new high tres. The picture was distributed nouncer. The next day the entire for campus sales. One cartoon, "You by the Beacon Films, Inc., a newly student body greeted the team on its ought to see them when they're win­ formed Catholic cinema service. return to the campus. ning," by Art-editor Gerry Doyle, '35, of Chicago, made the number CLUBS: The Economic Seminar At the Purdue pep meeting, held Nov. 10, Captain Ed Krause, '34, as­ worth while if nothing else had ap­ continued its regular meetings peared. But there was plenty more. through the month, and elected sistant coach Nordy Hoffmann, '33, 86 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933

man to set the stage for another Irish guards, supposedly weak all touchdown. season, opened cavernous holes in the ATHLETICS You could almost hear the murmur Cadet line during Lukats' drive to go througK" the stadium: "So that's the first touchdown, (Continued from Pajre 75) what 'Hunk' Anderson has been up Capt. Hughie Devore, Tom Roach, against all fall. The poor guy. To of the occasions when some individual Ed Krause, Wimsch, Pivamik, Tom think they're after his scalp!" Gorman, Lukats, Brancheau, Steve or other decided to go dumb, berserk, The rest of the game is ancient his­ unorthodox, and native all at once. Banas, Frank LaBome, and John They had played for keeps. tory already, and we're writing this (Red) Tobin were playing their last the day after the game. How Lukats, game for Notre Dame. They proved The record of Notre Dame's oppon­ about whom we've said lots of dis­ that they belong, without any ques­ ents shows the kind of football the paraging things up to this point, tion to the Fighting Irish tradition. Irish played. Pitt and Southern Cal­ drove and fought, and slashed his Freddie Carideo, who went in at ifornia were the only teams to win way through the confident Army sec­ fullback to replace Don Elser, was their games' after they had played ondary; how Wayne Millner, the playing his first game of the season. Notre Dame. scrappy and rugged sophomore left He made exactly 33 yards in 19 at­ Came the Army game and Notre end twice fooled the Cadets on two tempts, and he was a constant Dame went out again to play for end-around plays for a net gain of source of worry to the Cadet sec­ keeps. In the first quarter Nick Lu­ 20 yards; how Lukats again and ondary. His slants off the weak side kats, Fred Carideo, and Ray Bran- again laid punts dead inside the pulled the Army secondary over to cheau slashed their way to the Army Army 10-yard line (where the Cadet Notre Dame's left, leaving the right six-yard line. On fourth down, quar­ safety men would have nothing to do side open for Lukats to run at will, terback Reyman (Buddy) Bonar with them), how Lukats finally drove 20 times for 80 yards. called for a pass to Brancheau which the last tivo yards to the Army goal "Red" Tobin, about whom you caught Army flatfooted, despite the line for the first touchdown, how Mill­ haven't heard much, was supposed to pronounced pass situation. Brancheau ner blocked an Army punt and recov­ be weak on pass defense. He had was clear, the pass came true from ered it for a second touchdown, how been shifted to fullback during the the hand of Nick Lukats, and it kept Bonar dropkicked the point after the week preceding the game. But, in the right on going, through the out­ first touchdown to give the Irish the few minutes he played he intercepted stretched hands of Brancheau; We \actor}'' they most wanted. one Army pass and knocked down an­ are not writing this to disparage This brief recital of events doesn't other. His blocking was a work of art. Brancheau because we couldn't do it. begin to tell you of the fine spirit of Individual performances could be The hand-shaking and back-slapping sportsmanship exhibited by both named in glowing terms for every his mates inflicted on him would have teams. Coach "Hunk" Anderson's member of the squad, for it was a done the average politician in. It first words after the game were: "We team victory rather than an individ­ certainly showed the respect the lads were lucky to win. Army has a fine ual one, even for Lukats, Millner, all have for Brancheau's unquench­ team." and Bonar. able spirit, his gentlemanly demeanor It doesn't begin to tell how the If it did nothing else, we hope it and his football ability, bitter as the Notre Dame line played through 60 taught the sophomores who will carry pill was to swallow. terrific minutes ivithout a replace­ the burden next year that Notre Dame A fumble by Lukats a short while ment e-xcept at right guard where does not win just because it is Notre later paved the way for an Army Anderson used both Harry Wunsch Dame. It fights to win. The boys com­ touchdown. Andy Pilney shot a third and Joe Pivamik, because both are ing up have their model. We know down pass into the hands of an Army seniors. It doesn't tell you how the they -will follow it.

BASKETBALL UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME VARsrrr BASKETBALL ROSTER. 1933-31 The prospects for a winning bas­ Yrs :. on ketball season at Notre Dame are al­ Name Pos. Home Totcti Prep Age. Wt. lit. Sid. most as high as those for the foot­ "Edward .loscph Alberts F LoKansport, Ind Logansport, H. S. 21 165 6:2 2 ball team were when we started dop­ Donald Lewis Allen G Chicago St. Mel H. S. 18 187 6:2 0 ing the season three issues ago. Adelbcrt Chamisso Baur F Chicago De Paul H. S. IS 160 6:1 0 But Coach George Keogan won't *»Leo Jerome Crowe G Lafayette, Ind. Jefferson H. S. 21 170 5:9 2 admit it. His grounds for pessimism Daniel Joseph Cunha F St. Petersburg. Fla. St. Rita H. S. 20 loS 5:8 1 are as follows: John Edward DeMots C Minot. N. D. Minot Senior H. S. 18 165 6:2 It Donald Lewis Elser G Gary. Ind. Horace Mann H. S. 19 215 6:3 0 1. The loss of Johnny Baldwin, as Vincent Joseph Fehlip: G St. Louis. Mo. St. Louis Univ. H. S. 20 160 6: 2 nifty a guard as ever wore rubber .Tohn Francis Ford F Indianapolis. Ind. Cathedral H. S. 19 165 5:10 0 soles; and Leo Keating, a speedy, de­ Edmund Francis Goldsmith F Northboro, Mass. St. John's H. S. 20 165 5:11 0 pendable reserve forward, through John Andrew Hopkins F Elizabeth, N. J. St. Benedict's Prep 19 165 5:9 u graduation. Gcorjrc Martin Ireland G Madison. Wis. Campion Prep. 20 175 6: 0 "John Joseph Jordan F Chicago Quigley Prep. 22 ISO 5:11 1 2. The loss for several games at ••Capt. Ed W. Krause G Chicago Dc LaSalle H. S. 20 205 6:3 2 least of Big Don Elser, giant soph­ Victor Herbert Mettler F Hammond. Ind. Hammond H. S. 21 160 5:10 1 omore fullback who was hurt in foot­ •James Russell Newbold G Rushville, Ind. Graham H. S. 21 175 5:11 2 ball and who will not join the basket­ Michael John O'Connor F Indianapolis, Ind. Cathedral H. S. 20 168 6:3 0 ball squad until after Christmas. He Joseph Cornelius O'Kane F Washington, Ind. Wash. Catholic H. S. 20 173 5:11 1 is being groomed for a guard berth Lawrence ThoF. O'Neill G Albany, N. Y. Christian Bros. Acad. 21 184 6:1 2 •where he can utilize his 6 feet 3 Martin Joseph Peters F Peoria, 111. Spalding Institute 19 205 6:3 0 inches in taking 'em off the back­ Thomas Joseph Treacy G Montdair, N, J. Im. Conception H.S. 19 175 6: 0 23 board and starting the offense. ••Joseph Thomas Voesele C-F Peoria, III. Spalding Institute 177 6:1 2 Frank Chase Wade G Howe, Ind. Lima Cons. H.S. 19 170 6:1 0 3. The 24-game schedule which ap­ George Roland Wentworth F Bucksport, Me. Bucksport, Seminary _19..,-15 0 5:10 0 pears in another column. It is as tough as any Notre Dame has ever Denotes basketball monogram December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 87

faced and includes four more games '33-34 Cagre Schedule Shiels and Bay Troy returning in the than are usually played. latter event and DuCassa, a sopho­ 4. The loss for the first two weeks Dec. 4—^Kalamazoo College, Here. more, showing lots of promise also in of Capt. Ed Krause, all-American Dec. 9—^Northwestern, Here. the 880. center the past two years, and Marty Dec. IS^Ball State Teachers, Here. Peters, a sophomore forward from Dec. 15—^Albion College, Here. Distance Euns—Eddie King, Jake Bower, and Moran are returning for Peoria, who apparently has the mak­ Dec. 19—Purdue, Here. Dec. 22—Bradley Poly. Inst., Away. the mile event, while Capt. Joe ings of a great cage .star. Both Young, the lightest Notre Dame mon­ will be out shortly after the Army Dec. 30—^Northwestern, Away. Jan. 4—^U. of Arizona, Here. ogram man in history at 124 pounds, game, but it will take them some time and Norman Duke are excellent tim­ to adjust themselves to the popular Jan. 6—Michigan State, Away. Jan. 9—^Marquette, Here. ber for the longer g^d. Leo McFar- winter sport and to get the right lane, a star in cross country, will run muscles in the right shape, or some­ Jan. 13—Butler, Here. Jan. 20—Pittsburgh.Away. either the mile or two-mile. He is a thing. Both stand 6 feet 3 inches tall sophomore. and weigh more than 200 pounds. A Jan. 24—Chicago, Here. basketball to them is just a marble Jan. 31—Valparaiso, Here. Pole Vault—Prospects are only fair to you or me. Feb. 3—^U. of Detroit, Away. in this event, with Edwards, Caven- Feb. 6—Minnesota, Here. 5. The chance exists of going down der, and Howard of last year's team Feb. 10—^Xavier (Cincinnati), Away. in defeat in the early games before all returning. None of the three is Feb. 12—^Temple, Away. George is able to get his best com­ phenomenal, but it will take a good bination formed. This may cause the Feb. 17—Pittsburgh, Here. team to slam the Irish in this event. Feb. 21—Michigan State, Here. boys to press in later games and to Shot Put—The presence of Don go into a prolonged losing streak. Feb. 24—Butler, Away. Mar. 3—Ohio State, Here. Elser and Joe Sullivan of the football 6. The strain of the 11-game ^vin- Mar. 10—Marquette, Away. team, both sophomores, has strength­ ning streak which this year's team Mar. 12—Minnesota, Away. ened this event "considerably. Finkel inherits from last year's. is returning from last year's squad Enough of bear stories. The fore­ also. Sullivan was interscholastic in­ going jottings are all true, but, ever- first 20 and win the N.C.A.A.A.A. door champion for the nation while optimistic, we can see nothing but a meet in New York from 180 repre­ at St. John's of . He was great year. sentatives of other schools. And also national Catholic prep champion. Capt. Ed Krause at center, Joe Michigan State was good enough to Elser holds the Indiana state inter­ (Arms) Voegele at one forward and beat a good Notre Dame team, 19 to scholastic record. Eddie Alberts or Peters at the other, 37. Leo Crowe and either Don Allen or Broad Jump—^Most of the points in It was the same story in the Cen­ this event will tide with a sopho­ Elser at guards. There's a team tral Intercollegiate conference meet, with heighth, weight, stamina, and more named Meagher, since Eddie which the Spartans won easily, with Gough has been graduated after fail­ everything else it takes, with the ex­ a couple of other teams in ahead of ception of experience in two posts. ing twice by fractions to break the Notre Dame. Indiana and Purdue Notre Dame record. It was inexperience in several posi­ met Notre Dame in a triangular tions which wrecked the football meet, but Indiana is another of those High jump--Vincent Murphy, who team's chances of more victories, and fine teams, one which has won every won most of his starts last year, will since we went to extremes in predict­ meet in Big Ten competition this perform again, and you can count on ing a great football year, we'll go to year, and the Irish had to be satis­ five points almost every time he com­ the opposite side in predicting, face­ fied with a good second, far ahead of petes. tiously enough, a terrible basketball the Boilermakers. year. Hurdles—^Very promising. Jim Fa- Getting down, however, to the pros­ gan, who gets more out of less natur­ pects for the coming track season, we al ability than perhaps any other Keogan's N. DI . Record find that the record of the team \vill man on the squad, will knife in there depend largely on the schedule, and for points in almost any man's meet. 15. Lost 8. 1923-24—Won the schedule will be drawn up Dec. 9. He is a perfect example of what un­ 1924-25—Won 11. Lost 10. relenting work will do. The sopho­ 1. 1925-26—Won 19. Lost Coach John Nicholson admits his mores ^vill help out a lot in both the 192S-2r—Won 19. Lost 1 boys will be stronger than last year. 1927-28—Won 18. Lost 3. highs and the lows. Francis (Mike) He has lost all his sprinters and dis­ Layden, the football playing brother 1928-29-Won 15. lost D. cus throwers, but will have capable 1929-30—Won 13. Lost 5. of Elmer, could be a great hurdler if 1930-31—Won 12. Lost S. performers in every other event. he didn't want to be a football play­ 1931-32—Won 18. Lost 2, Taking them in order, we find the er, too, but even so he's good enough 1932-33—Won 16. Lost 6. following to be true, as far as Nich­ to be the man for other teams to try Total: Won 1.57 , Lost t 19. olson cares to be quoted, at least: to beat. Sullivan, not the weight man, Sprints—Eddie Gough and Fran and Elser, are also good hurdlers. Murphy were lost by graduation. Link, on whom Coach Nicholson has TRAC K There are no returning veterans been working all winter, is a very promising prospect. "Nick" was an The cross-country season was : worthy of mention. Two sophomores Pilney of the football team and Fraw- old Olympic hurdler in his day, so good; bad; fair; indifferent; all de­ you can depend on him turning out pending upon how you look at it. ley, showed some promise, as fresh­ men last year and in high school. men up to the standards set by John­ Coach John Nicholson's lads showed ny O'Brien and Roy Bailie, two of his great improvement over last year and Middle distances—Capt. Fred Mac- products. now "Nick" is kicking himself for Beth, and Gough were lost by gradu­ giving them such a tough schedule. ation. Two returning veterans, Bow- Relay teams—^The four-mile relay They won from Carnegie Tech, 21 to dren and LaFrambois; and three team will be hard to beat. The dis­ 34; "from Pittsburgh, 26 to 29, and sophomores, Eubly, Bernard, and tance medley will be a shade less im­ then met Michigan State. McGrath, give Nicholson's team portant, and the two-mile and mile Well, Michigan State was good promise of strength in the 440-yard teams are both good, but not excel­ enough to place four men among the and 880-yard events. He has Jim lent. Notre Dame (A reprint—through the courtesy of the Football Program of 193S)

• The thousands gathered here today Religion is a part of practically all are interested chiefly in one phase of student activities, academic and athletic. Notre Dame — the athletic. The athletic teams dedicate each game There are two others which, as any to some saint. Inspiration for many a lax student or alumnus will tell you, are Catholic has been given by the football given considerably more emphasis at men on their trips, attending Mass in a Notre Dame than athletics have ever body at a church near their place of had or ever will have. These two phases lodging, the morning of the game. A are the academic and religious life of the player who had the reputation of being students. the most fearless on the squad, once con­ Every facilitj' for all branches of fided as follows: athletics is provided that students may "If I have been to Mass and have French mission and moved it to Notre not have to go elsewhere for their exer­ received the sacraments, I can let my­ Dame several years later. He was fol­ cise. But there is no compulsion about self go in a game. If I haven't, I am lowed nearly a century ago by the Very athletics. You may take them or leave hesitant about diving into a scrimmage them. Rev. Edward F. Sorin, C.S.C, who, or making a tackle." with a small band of brothers of the • But, considering the academic side, • Maybe here is the answer to Notre Congregation of Holy Cross, founded the students must attend all but three Dame's football success. the University of Notre Dame du Lac classes a semester; they must maintain on the shores of Lake St. Mary's. Father an average of 70 to pass their courses; The never-say-die spirit of the ath­ Sorin, the founder and first president, they must maintain a general average letic teams at Notre Dame might be at­ was a tireless worker. of 77 for four years to receive a di­ tributed to a number of things. The ploma. There are countless other "musts" Irish football and basketball teams o£ • He is reputed to have made 42 At­ which are left up to the individual pro­ the past have been especially well-known lantic crossings in an effort to secure fessors. as great second half teams. Irish fans funds and art objects, and to supply the hope that the opposition will score first Spiritually, the student is given other material needs of his new com­ in a tough game, because then they every opportunity to live up to the munity. He was a close personal friend know Notre Dame will come back with practices of the Catholic church, if he of the Emperor Napoleon III of France a rush which is often strong enough to be a Catholic himself. There is a defi­ and the Empress Eugenie, who furnished win. nite religious program at Notre Dame Notre Dame with several priceless ar­ designed to form religious habits in stu­ • Tradition plays a strong part in this ticles of religious use. The gold cloth dents which will guide their daily lives spirit. Missionaries from France came vestments given by these rulers of France after they have left the campus. to Notre Dame 250 years ago. They are still used for high feasts of the church. • Morning and evening prayer are founded a mission within 10 miles of compulsory. Privileges, such as permis­ the present site of Notre Dame. Their Father Sorin had more than his sion to go to town or to leave the hardships were manifold. Bitter cold share of financial troubles and other campus for week-ends, are denied if the winters, lack of food and shelter, at­ difficulties. Twice the administration student becomes lax in the obsen-ance of tacks by the Indians, and a thousand building was destroyed by fire. Each this fundamental rule. Then, if a student other discomforts and hardships dogged time it was rebuilt. So great was his docs not approach the sacraments at rea­ them, but did not break their zealous faith that he returned gifts of money sonable intervals, his case is referred to spirit. for the construction of the third admin­ the prefect of religion. The impediments Nearly 150 years ago Father Stephen istration building, saying he preferred in his spiritual way are cleared up for Badin was ordained, the first priest or­ to rely on God's providence to see the him. dained in this country. He came to the work through. Before the bricks were

-- '•'•-'r'.-V-t-Stjiiajaa-iAJB^SE^S^iiSSJifViilli. Three Phases

academic, and spiritual programs, was is eagerly sought and read by every appointed coach and director of ath­ student. letics. The academic program was improv­ • The diamond jubilee celebration in ing, as we have said, through all the 1917 dates one of the fastest and most early years. Its strides became more and complete developments in the history more rapid during the administration of educational institutions. It was held of the Rev. John W. Cavanaugh, C. S.C, 16 years ago. Since then Notre Dame president from 1905 to 1919. athletic teams have reached the peak, • The three succeeding presidents far above most other schools of the same were the Very Rev. James A. Burns, C. size. S. C, present provincial of the Congre­ gation of the Holy Cross, the Rev. cool, he and the other members of the The following buildings were erect­ Matthew Walsh, C, S. C., and the in­ religious community, the faculty, and ed: eight residence halls, the college of law building, the department of archi­ cumbent, the Rev. Charles L. O'Don- the student body were cleaning them. nell, C. S. C. The fire occurred just before the Easter tecture building, the Edward N. Hur­ vacation. The new building was ready ley college of commerce building, the They took advantage of every for occupancy, although not quite com­ John F. Gushing hall of engineering, the chance to further Notre Dame's inter­ ests, and now opportunities are more pleted, the following September. finest and largest dining halls of their kind in the country, a new power plant, plentiful than in the early days. Notre • The Cure of Ars told Father Sorin a new stadium which replaced the Car- Dame could aSord to raise scholastic that his school would go through 75 tier field stands built during the same barriers that many greater schools did years of hardships before blossoming period, and numerous smaller structures. not ask their prospective students and forth in its full strength and vigor. current students to hurdle. Notre Dame There were hardships in those 75 years, • Enrollment jumped from 587 in was so well established in 1929 that 1915 to 3,200 in 1930-31 and a volun­ but somehow Notre Dame always made Father O'Donnell could start work on tary limit of 3,200 was set at that time its way. Its scholastic rating was raised a building program which has cost near­ so that Notre Dame might not lose its constantly. Its enrollment increased with ly $3,000,000 during the depression. boarding school atmosphere for an im­ each succeeding year. As the depository personal spirit. • There are still many things the for the Catholic church for years its priests of Notre Dame dream of for archives became the most treasured in It was at the time of the diamond jubilee that the Rev. John F. O'Hara, their school in their campaign to make the nation. Early professors like Dr. Al­ it the greatest Catholic university in the bert F. Zahm, LL.D. and Professor C. S. G., was made prefect of religion. Now he is also vice-president, assistant country. But the essential things are Jerome Greene won acclaim for the provincial of the community, and chair­ here, just as they were in the first days. school by their experiments in aviation man of the athletic board of control as The indomitable spirit, the vigor of and wireless respectively. The basis of well as prefect of religion. A Jack-of-all- young men, the tradition of men now the art collection was formed. The phys­ trades, he is master of all. But he will al­ old or dead, the religious zeal of a ical equipment of the campus was en­ ways be to Notre Dame men the man monastery, the academic fervor of the larged and modernized from year to who developed spirituality to its most faculty members, priests and laymen — year. spiritual yet most practical plane for all the intangible things which went to The prediction of the Cure of Ars them. The gift of making men do see Notre Dame through its early days came true almost e.\acdy 75 years after things spiritual for themselves is his. His are still here. it was made. It was at that time that daily "Religious Bulletin" with its witti­ The other desired things in the way , whose football teams cisms, homely philosophy, advice, an­ of physical equipment will come, for did so much to bring the attention of nouncements and theology J_ sugar Notre Dame has undeniably blossomed the world to Notre Dame's athletic coated with campus verna I cular into its full strength and vigor. 90 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933

VIII. Awaked me. Phosphor, harbinger of day. and sagacious Gammon justly observes, the Then beware!—it is the season now for maples Threw shadows of my lattice on the floor constant, recurrence of the aspirate resembles to be tapped Distinctly traced. A thousand stars or more the pantiiig and puffing of a steam engine, Learn wisdom from the sugar camp, before Shone in the East: the glowing Charioteer and sadly mars the harmony of the poem. "We your strength is sapped; And Leda's twins with crowns of lambent fire. have thought it an emendation to substitute For though you estimate yourself the heavier Belted Orion, and the maiden choir the epiritus Icnis of the cockney dialect, so man to be. Of Pleiads; red-eyed Saturn, too, was near. often met with in the works of Dickens, and Yet mine's the greater modulus of elasticitee. Cross-lights from these too feeble were by far which was cultivated by the inhabitants of To fur the edges of those shadows cast. London, a celebrated eastern colony of the ON RECEIVING FURTHER OBLOQUY Transcendent joy, by shade of misery past. ancient Americans. This reading is supported FROSr THE SAME SOURCE Is measured, like the light of this fair star. by one of two manuscripts, and is undoubtc

sluBiberine peacefully ia the midst of diaboli­ cal explosions, such as arc hinted at in the second line of this remarkable poem.* We are Leo Hassenauer/20, Assistant U.S. District Attorney sorry that no more than this frsBment re­ Leo Hassenauer, '20, whose recent berg went to Washington last spring mains to us, for wc are sure that the context appointment as first assistant to the would utterly confute the ridiculous conjec­ Hassenauer was associated in many tures of men like Flinders. United States Attorney for the north- of the Richberg cases, including the em district of Illinois, was announced city gas rate fight, the battle for It was a pretty compliment Presi­ in the October issue of ALUMNUS, was dent Cleveland paid the poet, scien­ railroad valuations, and the drafting tist and scholar, when he commis­ of full crew train laws. sioned Stace, American scientific eK- "But he was not entirely outside of pert, to represent our country at the Ickes' ken. Secretary Ickes' wife, Mrs. Paris World Exposition of 1890. As Anna Wilmarth Ickes, is a state rep­ amusing as anything he ever did in resentative from the Seventh district. verse, were his regular reports in let­ Their Illinois home is in Hubbard ters from Paris to the Scholastic en­ Woods. Hassenauer lives in nearby titled "Diary of a Scientific Ex-spurt" Wilmette and in 1931 and 1932 he A man of delicate frame and dur­ was chairman of the legislative com­ ing the final third of his life of frail mittee of the American Legion or­ health, suffering constant and severe ganization in the Seventh district. pain. Professor Stace became through "Thus Richberg and Ickes are both patience, a hero to the Faculty and given credit for the appointment of students, to whom, on account of his the new first assistant district attor­ kindly nature, his bright disposition, ney and, it is rumored, they are sup­ and his charm of speech, he had long porting him for the district attorney's been a beloved friend. The shadows job if their reported efforts to keep gathered about him in the spring of Green in the post—in which it is said 1890, and at five o'clock on the eve­ they are supported by Senators La ning of Sept. 20, the tolling of the De FoUette and Norris—are not success­ Profimdis bell brought grief and pain ful. with the announcement that the unique and wholly admirable scholar, B. Kanaley Heads Lay Trustees gentleman and friend had passed (Continued from Page 81) away. Among those still surviving who knew him, he still has his place Rev. Charles C. Miltner, C.S.C, in affectionate remembrance. His dean of the college of arts and let­ grave set among the tombs of the LEO HASSENAUER, '20 ters, who was elected president of priests, brothers and professors whom Ability and Contacts the Catholic Philosophy of America. he loved, is marked with an exquisite Prof. James Reyniers, honored by little,. Celtic cross, on which is in­ the central figure in a political story appearing in the Chicago Tribune on international biology authorities for scribed: Nov. 17 under the by-line of Parke his new method of isolating single Pray for the soul of Brown, widely-known political writer. cells announced last spring. His de­ ARTHUR JOSEPH STACE Mr. Hassenauer's headquarters are in partment was reported to be work­ Bom at Berwick, Eng., Jan. 28, 1838 Chicago. ing at present on two very important Died at Notre Dame, Sept. 20, 1890. Mr. Brown was discussing the in­ problems which will be announced Poet - Scholar - Christian. soon. , May he rest in peace! fluence which Harold I. Ickes, secre­ tary of the interior and public works Fellowships in the American As­ administrator, and Donald R. Rich- sociation for the Advancement of berg, general counsel for the NRA, Science were awarded Rev. Francis BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES wield in the Roosevelt program, al­ J. Wenninger, C.S.C, and Prof. Ed­ Positions Offered though, according to numerous com­ ward Maurus. ^ _1. Real estate firm, Chica­ plainants, speaking through Mr. Bequests announced during the go, needs two or three young Brown, both are Republicans. The year were: men for selling. Seems better story is centered particularly on fed­ A $1,000 gift for the endowment fund of the University by the late th:.n usual prospects. eral patronage in Chicago. It says in part: Mrs. Kate E. Herbert, of Chicago, Positions Wanted and an annual income of §695 each, 1. Recent Commerce grad­ "It was a Richberg man who landed for six scholarships, to be appor­ uate, with considerable bank­ the best of the three • places under tioned among the students of six ing experience, desires connec­ discussion, that of first assistant southern states, provided in the will tion in Chicago district. United States attorney under Green. of the late Augustus F. Meehan, of 2. Recent Law graduate, Last August this post' went to Leo J. the class of 1890. Chicago, ,;^'ith 414 years rail­ Hassenauer, who also is believed to Service credit to the amount of road ofBc'e experience, seeks have had the Ickes o. k., as his prac­ $116,000 has been allowed this year opening, legal or otherwise. tice of law began in the days when to 484 students. 3. Recent Physical Educa­ Richberg and Ickes were law partners Too late for the above report tion graduate, Chicago. in the firm of Richberg, Ickes, Davies came the announcement on Nov. 25 4. Recent Electrical Engi­ and Lord, an association that term­ of a bequest of $25,000 in the will neering graduate. East. inated in 1923, Richberg and Ickes of the late Edward N. Hurley, for 5. Recent Commerce grad­ separating. aiding those students who have to uate. Middle West, willing to "Hassenauer followed Richberg and pay half of their way through school start at bottom in advertising with the two also was associated Da­ by working. agency. vid E. Lilienthal, now general coun­ The bequest to Notre Dame for Further information as to any of the sel for the Tennessee valley authority, situations listed here may be had by this purpose was significant of Mr. addressing the Alumni Office. the governmental unit in charge of Hurley's interest in Notre Dame and Muscle Shoals. From 1923 until Rich­ the boys who are students here. 92 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 19SS

ALUMNI CLUBS

IMPORTANT NOTE TO CLUBS Chicago's activity can be set at organizations as a good man for the rest. (Some of those jobless stenog- office, but like Ray Miller who was Because of the recurring misun­ i-aphers or underpaid schoolma'ams a candidate for the office of mayor derstandings that have arisen he- ought to be willing to type out a the odds seemed to break against tween campus Clubs representing little dictation for the sake of the him. Ray surely did great things in geographical locations and the Local practice. Bill.) a helping way towards giving Notre Alumni Clubs in those areas, the Almost by accident, the Editor had Dame men work when no other em­ •University has ruled that no campus the pleasure of attending a joint ployment seemed obtainable. Any of Club shall be allowed under any cir­ luncheon of the Notre Dame and you Notre Dame men who might cumstances to conduct a Christmas Northwestern alumni, our alunmi be­ drop into Cleveland sometime and Dance in its home area -nrithout iirst ing guests of the Northwestern Club would like to see either Ray Miller, securing the sanction and coopera­ in the dining room of the Chicago Dan Duffy, Don Miller, or John But­ tion of the corresponding Local Bar Association. Tug Wilson repre­ ler just drop in on them at the Ter­ Alumni Club. sented Northwestern, and the Editor minal Tower on the square and have This ruling of course is the Uni­ found himself, due to the coincident one of those old Sorin Hall discus­ versity's recognition of the prioritj' funeral of the late E. N. Hurley, sions. of the rights of the Local Alumni representing the University. "Another news item is news of Club to have at least an advisorj- Austin McNichols carried the ban­ our Club having a Christmas dancing participation in a manifestation of ner of the Alumni Club, bolstered party. The arrangements are being Notre Dame activity -which has by a few of the fellows who had handled by none other than one of reached highly creditable proportions given Northwestern a few sentences the so-called old timers, namely, in most localities, but which, through for their football book. Freddie John Reidy. He has not as yet an­ this very strength, has in others on Collins, Jack Elder, Joe Rigali, and nounced his committees or the news occasion been the cause of embar­ Norm Barry were among these. that goes with such an affair. Great rassment to the alumni and the Uni- November 4, the Club held a things are being planned for the versit}-. "Loyalty Rally" at the Auditorium local society folks. This ruling should do away with Hotel, getting the Navy-Notre Dame "'Dutch' O'Day of the Killamey most of the existing friction, which game on the grid-graph. is as unnatural as friction of a ser­ O'Days is now hanging his hat in a Pre\ious to the Purdue game, 25 very fine home on the west side with ious and continuous nature between Purdue alunmi met with the Notre parent and child. The boys at Notre his wife and family. We of Cleve­ Dame Club at its regular Friday land are glad to have him in our Dame come from your community, luncheon at Mandel's. spend a veiy short time here at most, fold along with Vic Hart of the Captain Paul Host of the 1932 Harts of the class of '29 who has and then return for their careers to eleven spoke at the November 3 join your Club. The new program decided Cleveland is quite the town luncheon at Mandel's. and will roost here at the Cleveland of promotion announced in this is­ So you can see that this Chicago sue should blend this student rela­ Club, the bachelor quarters of this Club is a long ways from being out city. Otis Winchester has finally tionship to much better advantage of the picture. and eliminate the useless barriers convinced one of the officials of the that have been allowed to grow. cmcrNNATi Woolworth Company that they But in the meantime, the ruling should help the N.R.A., so conse­ places a responsibility on you. In­ In spite of a busy week-end at quently, Mr. Otis has honored the dependence is a familiar characteris­ So. Calif., a number of Cincinnati club luncheons with his presence. tic of undergraduates, and an im­ alumni were seen about the campus Our genial treasurer, Jerry Reidy, patience with the restraints of an —outstandingly the convalescent has been forced to cancel a few of older generation. You may find the Commodore Ed McHugh and the al­ his heavy dates and miss some of boys at school seeming, especially in ways genial if somewhat perturbed that good old sleep because the Ohio this first year of the edict, distrust­ Hogan Morrissey. The special train, Telephone Company decided they ful of your motives. To secure the sponsored by the Notre Dame Club needed his services for a little over­ best results, try to meet them at of Cincinnati, brought over a hun­ time, work. I think the fact that he least half-way — more if you can. dred fans to the contest. is missing some sleep has caused him considerable worry. Larry 'Hagen' The quicker you build up the friend­ CLEVELAND ship of this year's campus Club and Krai was very much in a lucky mood next year's, the quicker will be the "Although you have just about ex­ the other day because after investi­ transition to the new relationship hausted my supply of information as gating his sales talk, I found that he where you will work together in far as Cleveland is concerned, I can was decisively beating none other communitj' projects of a Notre Dame give you a little story about a couple than Prank Svoboda, our coming nature for what is bound to be your of our men, Notre Dame Alumni, journalist; incidentally, Frank is mutual advantage. they were great in defeat. guiding the way of one of our local The University has made the rul­ "As I mentioned to you in my last foreign newspapers. Krai is in the ing the Alumni Clubs have been letter that Joseph Smith was run­ business of office supplies, etc. One seeking. The success of the ruling ning for re-election as a municipal of our most recent luncheons that depends, in this first year or two judge, and Ray Miller for re-election was very well attended turned out to particularly, upon the wisdom of the as the mayor of Cleveland. Every­ be a round table discussion with un­ Local Alumni Clubs. one but Joe Smith thought that he usual debating talent coming to life. would be re-elected as judge. There As one looked around the table table CHICAGO has been no greater advocate of jus­ there were present our President Any doubts you may have had, in tice during his term in office and Matt Trudelle, Billy Ryan, Harry the absence of prolific penmanship that probably was the reason why he Miller, George Kerver, Fred "Fritz' on the part of Bill Kearney, as to was indorsed by most all papers and Slackford, Charles Rohr, 'Chuck' December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 93

Mooney, Frank Celebrezze, Stan Co- ders, Chairman of the Republican "Wednesday noon lunches at the fall of the Standard Oil Cofalls, National Committee, is in George­ University Club are proving very Jack Duffy, and 'Wee' Willy Van town Hospital following an opera­ popular with such well known per­ Rooy. tion. Bud and Bernie Loshbough sonages as Larry Moore, Al Schmitt, "You can tell John 'Babyface' Mc- are sharing an apartment on M St., Joe Suttner, Gene Kennedy, and Manmon that if he wants to get in N. W. Larry Moore in attendance. touch with John Viktoryn, Doctor Prank Kerjes, '31, is living at the "Another licensed practitioner of John if you please, he may be able to Chastleton Hotel, and is in his senior law in our midst in the person of do so by writing in care of the local year at the Georgetown law School. Mervin Aggeler who crashed through club. Since John has hung out his Bill deary, '31, of Brainerd, Minn., the recent bar exams with ease. shingle I have not received his new who had the misfortune of losing "Sid Sidenfaden is still building address. It has been understood both his mother and father since up Union Oil's already flourishing that a few nuts are still available graduation, is attending Georgetown business. Fred Kcque is looking for the reason of the story I was told Law School and living at the Chas­ well fed and contented after a three recently. It seems as though a four­ tleton Hotel also. "Bo" Richards is weeks trip east. Larry Moore and some in the company of Chet Brum- operating a restaurant in George­ Charley Kennedy are movie mag­ leve and 'Doc' Joe Heiman, etc. town. nates. Joe Hiss is doing well in went playing golf one Sunday morn­ I see Charlie Mannix, '29, from bonds. All of our coaching staff is ing in a very cold rain as a matter time to time. We're having lunch doing well—^Mannie Vezie has given of fact I understand the rain and air together today. Charlie is driving a so many radio talks that he is well was so cold that when it touched the new Dodge co.upe. I am keeping in on his way to becoming an an­ golf club it transformed to ice. I touch with Father Vince Mooney, nouncer or a crooner or somethin'— don't think they had any ice picks '16, at the N.C.W.C, and of course, reports say that Moon Mullins and with them either. Further details I see my good friend Eddie Dowling Johnny O'Brien are also doing very can be gotten from 'Chef or 'Doc' when he is in town. Bill Cronin, well. Contradicting a statement seen if desired. '30, comes to Washington with Mr. in a late issue of the ALUMNUS it Walker each week. is herein set down as a matter of How about hearing from some of record that' Spike England is not thesei fellows, Jim. If you find any Johnny Law is one of the busiest dusting vegetables and sweeping lost from our city send them home." men in the football business around ffies off of cheese in a grocery store New York. Week before last he in Kansas but is right here in our DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA scouted New York University for own fair city seeing that no mistakes Georgia, went down to make his re­ The following dope sheet for the are made by the Internal Revenue port and stayed to scout the Violets Department, a position which he fills District was received from HENRY again for Fordham, then came back WATTS EICHER: with the dignity becoming so high an by airplane to see the Sing Sing official. From the north we hear that I had a short but pleasant visit Prison team, which he coaches, play •s\ith ART HALEY at the Navy Bernie Abrott is ably assisting the its Sunday game. Incidentally, Public Defender—^thought we'd bet­ game. I saw the game with Frank Johnny is a member of the West­ Kersjes, '31, E. H. Pierson, and Bill ter tell you because their Secretary chester County Alcoholic Beverage up there speaks and writes but little CleaiT, '31. Control Board at White Plains. John Bernie Conroy, '30, one of my English. Emmett McCabe, (to re­ is married and has a fine son. turn to Los Angeles), is still mis­ New York room-mates drove down If you hear from Jerry Hayes, tell directing merchandise for the Los to Baltimore with Eddie Fallon, '26, him I have given }iim up as a hope­ Angeles Soap Company, where he is and Mr. and Mrs. "Doc". Gelson, '26. less correspondentr so well liked that it is only a matter Lieut. Hughie and Mrs. McCafFery, Watts. of months until he will be made '28, were on hand with Mr. and Mrs. president. Jimmy Quinn, '27. Jimmy, as you LOS ANGELES know, is at the head of Quinn and "Pinch hitting for our esteemed "Sorry for typographical errors, Boden, book publishers. secretary, Ed Cunningham who very omission of class dates with these Frank Hayes, '14, of Chicago, suddenly vacationed to Honolulu—r names, etc., and etc., but I refuse came to the game with "Dutch" and thereby hangs a tale. He sat in to struggle through it again. Bergman, '17. I also saw Father on a bridge contest the other night Doug. Daley, '30." John MacNamara, '97, who attended during which his opponents all of a the game with a group of visiting sudden bid and made seven hearts in , LOGANSPORT priests. Joe Byrne, '15, was on from spite of a double from him—some­ An item in the paper last summer Newark. Paul and Mrs. Mallon, '19, what of a contretemps considering concerning a Notre Dame dance has %vere over from Alexandria, and I that he held two aces but seemed un­ brought to light the activities of a talked with them after the game. Of able to take tricks with either. To number of Notre Dame men in Lo- course, Jimmy Hayes, '17, was on hide his confusion he quickly grew gansport, Ind. The Alumni Office is hand with a delegation of alumni, in­ a beard but that w^as not enough— negotiating with the group for the cluding Rudolph Rice, who is with ugly rumor was afoot by the next formation of a Club which can con­ the U. S. Tariff Commission. day so. he immediately hopped a tug tinue and expand these activities. Jack Walker, '30, has accepted an bound for the ukelele land where he appointment at the Emergency Dept. is probably right now drowning his PHILADELPHIA of Public Works. He tells me that sorrow with cocoanut milk. "First off, the Phaadelphia Club Tom Keegan, '30, and Walter Stan­ "The cycling craze reached such wants to go on record as being as ton, '30, are also connected there. a fevered pitch here that certain of much behind 'Hunk' Anderson and Bill Newbold is working for the our brethren were considering a our team as any group of Notre N.R.A. A chap by the name of Mur­ moonlight ride hoping to get Jack Notre Dame men should be. They phy, whom I am told went to the Wadden into a pair of shorts, which have the stuff and, some afternoon, • old school, is in the office of Emil would, no doubt, have been a sight they're going to blow some club so Hurja, ^vith whom Eddie Dowling well worth the exercise but every­ far the pieces will not be found. and I shared an office at the Bilt- thing had to be called off because "Coming to the Quaker City—^that more, at the Public Works Dept. Jim Kelly, class of 3.2, refused to will welcome the return of "Hunk's' Bud Markey, '29, who is working ride in anything more hazardous boys any time they come—^the first in the law offices of Everett Saun­ than a motorcycle sidecar. Fall meeting, October 18, 1933, was 94 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933

marked by the adoption of two im­ "Jack Elder was down a month Coach McGee explained the plays. portant motions, namely, first, by ago with a team of fighters from William T. Halloran and James E. Gus Desch, that a Communion Break­ Chicago that took on our Own Sullivan, members of the Rhode Is­ fast be held twice yearly—on the C.Y.O., and needless to say we gave land Association of Football Officials, Sundays nearest 'Rock's' anniversary them a nice trimming. We had a outlined the rule violations and the and the Feast of All Souls', the lat­ dinner that night for Jack, and I was penalties incurred. ter in honor, and for the repose of able to get in a nice long talk with "Dr. Anderson when asked about the souls, of all Notre Dame men him. this year's football squad at Notre deceased; second, that the meetings Joe Langton." Dame, replied that he was of the of the Club be held on the Second opinion that lack of experience was Tuesday of each month at the Penn UTICA partly the cause of their poor show­ A.C. (Does Brill—^who, incidentally, Congratulations, Utica! ing in recent games. He also stressed is quite proud of the results of the It's too bad we haven't the soul­ the need of good quarterbacking for 'memory-improving' M.D., who's at­ less corporation's front for the open­ the team. tending him — need that to remind ing of a new unit. We'd like to "An explanation of various points him of a certain N.D. holiday on crack a bottle of champagne over the of football was put on by W. T. Hal­ Franklin Field in 1930?) Utica Club's hull, or have all our loran and James E. Sullivan. The "We were happy to welcome back star alumni present at a gala first former told of his experience in to the fold two former wearers of night, or some of those things that handling Notre Dame games and Our Lady's mantle — Gene Oberst, should meet with the following sim­ praised the Notre Dame men. who gave Tom Conley 'Eock's' fun­ ple but effective communication, in "Among the other men, prominent damentals before sending him west, the Editor's mail bag! in Rhode Island sporting circles, at and Charlie McKinney, whom we had We have formed an Alumni Club the carnival were John McManmon, the pleasure of felicitating on his here in Utica for those from this one of the original 'seven mules' at marriage, of the week prerious, to city and surrounding towns. At our Notre Dame; Edgar Wholey of St. Miss Alice Nolen, of Philadelphia. first meeting we had ten fellows Raphael's, John P. Cronin of La Salle, Tom Collins and Tiny Martin "Harry Stuhldreher, not trusting present so that the actual forming of the club has been completed. of Barrington high, James McGeogh the above mentioned treatment OUR of Warren high, Walter I. Pearce of MARTIN is receiving, put a few We elected officers and they are: Dr. A. C. Hitzleberger, Honorary Patwtucket high, Walter Scott Mc- plays down on paper for LA Phee of East Providence high, Joe SALLE'S S.AVIOUR, and, turning President; Dr. John F. Kelley, '22, President; Vincent Fletcher, '32, Fay of Central Falls, Bob Brennan with always willing hand, accepted of Mount St. Charles Academy, John the chairmanship of a committee to Treasurer; Joseph FuUem, '31, Sec­ retary. E. Martin, Scholastic Officials Com­ cooperate with you and THE ASSO­ missioner, and Gerald Prior. CIATION'S aims. Chief Neeson I have the list of names of former X football autographed by the made a not unheeded plea for the students and graduates that you sent Notre Dame squad went to Robert members to back you financially. to Dr. Kelley. I now wish to ask if Can- of Pawtucket. "We report with regret at our loss you will kindly send me a list of for­ "The affair was in charge of John the demise of Andrew Hanhauser, mer men who might have lived in R. Jolly of Pawtucket as general '98, on November 4. May his soul Rome, Ilion.Mohawk, Herkimer, and chairman. He was assisted by John rest in peace and his Mass be well Oneida. Brady, Leo R. McAloon, and John attended. The reason I am asking for that McClurg, football clinic; Eugene Mo- "Clarke Reilly joined the Bene­ list is that they are surrounding reau, relations; Charles A. Grimes, dicts, this Pall, and, as yet nothing to\vns to Utica and we want to have talking pictures; Vincent A. Doyle has been heard of him. Later word a large and active club so that we and John Reardon, tickets, and J. has it that Clarke is living at 3501 can be of some service to the Uni­ Clement Grimes, publicity. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md., and is versity and promote good fellowship Leo McAloon was master of cere­ with Electric Bond & Share Co. among our former alumni. monies." "Can't mention all the names, In the name of the Club, I wish The above newspaper clipping tells boys—^guess Marty will have to give to thank you in advance and hope the story. A letter from Charlie me that specialist's address. that any suggestions or information Grimes confirms the story. More Tom Slagee. that we might need for our success, than a thousand persons, "including you will be kind enough to send mothers, fathers, sons, and daugh­ PEORLA. to us. ter," enjoyed the carnival. News­ "I've kind of fallen down on you Joseph Wm. FuUem, Sec'y. paper and radio publicity before and as far as supplying news for the after was very much along the lines Alumni Club column of the ALUM­ RHODE ISLAND advocated for the Local Clubs. NUS. However you can rest as­ "Dr. Edward Anderson, head Pardon the old preacher if your sured that it was due to being verj', coach of football at Holy Cross, was attention is once more called to the very busy. the guest of honor at a football car­ obvious moral in this tale of Rhode "Last Tuesday (Nov. 7) the nival, held by the Notre Dame Club Island's David-and-Goliath activities. Peoria-N.D. Club had a meeting and of Rhode Island at the Pavrtucket a nice turnout, the object being to senior high school auditorium last WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA make plans for the Notre Dame- night. Other prominent coaches at Dr. Leo O'Donnell, '17, is greatly Bradley game here, Dec. 22. We all the meeting were Joe Sheeketski and responsible for the wonderful show­ plan to attend in a body and have Joe Locke also of Holy Cross and ing of the Duquesne Dukes. The arranged for a special reserved sec­ Joe McGee and Johnny Brady of doctor is the team physician, and tion for alumni. We have also ar­ Providence College. their fine play has been attributed to ranged to hold an informal Christ- "The St. Agnes Fife, Drum and the splendid condition of the men. . mas dance after the game at the Bugle Corp opened the ceremonies The boys have such great faith in K. of C. Club. followed by a demonstration football Dr. O'Donnell's diagnosis that they "We drafted a wire to 'Hunk' and game put on by the members of the would submit to any form of surgerj' • the team, and I see by an Associated Providence College Freshman squad if it would increase their stamina Press article in tonight's paper that and the St. Raphael squad. The for­ and vigor any slight degree. it was received. mer team took the offensive and (Continued on Pape 101) December, 19S3 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 95

=THE ALUMNI

N.D. Joins Nation In Mourning Edward N. Hurley, LL.D. '18 Laetare Medalist, Lay Trustee, Donor of Commerce Building, Donor, by Bequest, of Scholarship Fund, Was Eminent Friend of University and One of America's Great Catholics

The nation Nov. 14 mouraed the cellent service by awarding military sonally I am deeply grateful to you." death of Edward Nash Hurley, chair­ medals. Millions of American dough­ Mr. Hurley resigned because, he said, man of the United States shipping boys and mountains of war supplies "I feel that my work has been done." hoard during the war and lay trus­ were moved across the Atlantic as For his services in the world war. tee of the University of Notre Dame Air. Hurley received the Distin­ since 1927, who died in Chicago at guished Service medal from General the age of 69 years. He donated John J. Pershing for "exceptionally $200,000 in Noveraher, 1930, for meritorious and distinguished serv­ the construction of the Commerce ice in connection with the shipment huilding which was dedicated in his of troops and supplies." He also was presence at Notre Dame, May 17, made a commander of the Legion of 1932, and constitutes his outstanding Honor of France and a grand officer gift to the University. of the crown of Italy. China con­ Physicians laid the cause of his ferred upon him the decoration of death to leukemia, a disease marked the order of Ta She Cha Ho. by the existence of an over-supply In a book, "The Bridge to France," of white corpuscles in the blood, published in 1927, Mr. Hurley told complicated by the sudden develop­ ' the inside story of the United States ment of pneumonia. His illness he- shipping board and the Emergency came critical only a few hours be­ Fleet corporation and declared that fore he was removed to a hospital the ships provided in 1918 by the where death came. Mr. Hurley was United States turned the tide of the stricken a few days after returning world war toward the allies. from Miami, Fla., and Washington. The commerce building at Notre In addition to fame he had won Dame commemorates the donor's by speeding the transportation of early struggles in life and his first soldiers and war materials to France success which from then on made with his merchant marine fleet, Mr. him successful in virtually every­ Hurley was known as president of thing he undertook. the machine company bearing his HON. EDWARD NASH HURLEY In 1897, when he was 33 years of name and served as co-receiver of Notre Dame's Advisor, Benefactor. age, he was unable to finance in this the Middle West Utilities company country the patents for the pneu­ after the crash of the Insult utility Mr. Hurley built a special merchant matic drills and hammers which he empire. marine fleet to meet the emergency. and two Kimman brothers were mak­ During the last decade, his name The gigantic task was assigned to ing in a bam behind the Kimman was frequently mentioned for a Mr. Hurley, one of the "finds" of home in Chicago. number of important posts at Wash­ the Wilson administration, at a time ington. His war as well as peace when it appeared hopelessly impos­ "I," said young Hurley, "will see work merited numerous decorations. sible for the country's shipping in- what I can do in London." Four The Catholic church of which he was dusti-y to cope with the heavy de­ days after his arrival in England a member, honored him in 1926 with mands of the war crisis. He was after a journey to Europe, he sold the Laetare medal, annually pre­ swift to establish order out of confu­ his British patent rights for $125,- sented by the University of Notre sion. Assembling the greatest mer­ 000. Dame. chant fleet America ever had, he From that episode, he said at the The year 1913 saw Mr. Hurley's commandeered all hulls and shipping time he made the donation to Notre debut in the political life of this materials in American shipyards. Dame, he derived the idea and ideals country. Long a prominent mid- When the world war ended, he in harmony with which he believed western industrialist, he was ap­ went to France to plan the return the enlarged school at Notre Dame pointed trade commissioner to Latin of .\merican troops and supplies. could profitably function. America. Later he became chairman Upon his return he began to curtail "I hope," he declared in making of the federal trade commission. the ship building program and to known his project, "that young men Resigning that post in February, plan for a permanent American mer­ from this school will blaze the trail 1917, he was appointed by President chant marine. of modem and equitable business Wilson in June of that year, chair­ In 1919, he was back in Chicago, methods just as our forefathers man of the United States shipping resuming direction of his own in­ blazed the trail for civilization and board to rush American troops into dustries. President Wilson, upon his commerical progress by their ex­ action in France. He was identified resignation, wrote him that he had change of goods for furs." with this post throughout the war "served the country with distinction Bom at Galesbnrg, 111., July 31, and resigned in 1919. in these difiicult times. No one ever 1864, Mr. Hurley was the son of The United States and foreign served his country's interests more Jeremiah and Ellen Nash Hurley. He countries paid tribute to him for ex­ devotedly than j'ou did, and per­ received a common school education. 96 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933

September 30, 1891, he married whole-hearted devotion to Notre of the Notre Dame Club of Eastern Julia Keeley of Chicago. She died Dame was an inspiration. His coun­ Pennsylvania at the time of his death. in 1900 and five years later Mr. Hur­ sel was asked freely, and his advice ley married Florence Agnes Amberg. was always straightforward, frank, In a managerial capacity, Charley Two sons were bom to the first mar­ and sincere. He will be remembered won %vide popularity with the boys riage and a son and daughter to the as a cornerstone of the greater Notre on the teams of his time. The Four second. Dame." Horsemen were present at his fun­ eral in Allentown on Thanksgiving The University of Notre Dame Day. Father John O'Hara, whom conferred upon Mi'. Hurley the hon­ The cold and detail-less machinery Charley had named in his Question­ orary degree of LL.D. in 1918, and of the mails has brought to the naire as his favorite priest, preached Knox college at Galesburg gave him Alumni Office too late for further the funeral sermon. Charley's inter­ a D.C.L. He was a member of sev­ checking the word "Deceased" after ests on his Questionnaire—Commun­ eral Chicago, New York and Wash­ the names of ity Chest, Boy Scouts, Knights of Col­ ington clubs. His home was on the LT. COL. W. L. LUHN, '87, whose umbus and Holy Name—are in them­ fashionable Lake Shore drive in Chi­ selves a eulogy. cago, and he also maintained a fine last address was Santa Fe, New Mex­ place at Wheaton, HI., whei-e he ico. Col Luhn had been at various The -\LUMNUS extends its sin­ raised pure bred stock. times in connection with his post in cere sympathy to Mr. C. J- Mr. Hurley w^as a charter member the U. S. Army, in Omaha, Ft Meade, SCHMIDT, '11, upon the death of his of the board of Notre Dame's lay Ft. Sam Houston, and Portland. •ivife; to Mr. GEORGE W-4.CK. '23, trustees, and his six-year term was LAWRENCE EMIL EOMBAUT, upon the death of his mother; to Sis­ to expire this year. He, however, M.S., '22, whose last address was the ter Constance, C.S.A., '33, upon the had already been reelected. Warner Chemical Co., Carteret, N. J. death of her father; to Rev. JOHN JL^EGRAF, C.S.C, '15, upon the The University was represented at ROBERT JOHN MOYNIHAN, death of his mother; to Rev. FR-AN- the funeral by Rev. John F. O'Hara, B.C.S., '26, whose last address was CIS LUZNY, C.S.C, '14, upon the C.S.C, acting president; Francis 702 Valley View Ave., Wheeling, death of his father; to Rev. PAT­ Lloyd, controller, and Dean James E. W. Va. RICK HAGGERTY, C.S.C, '16, up­ McCarthy, of the college of com­ on the death of his uncle; to JA3IES merce. George Shields, chairman of From Philadelphia, through the DONNELLY, '33, upon the death of the S.A.C., James Moscow, president Club, comes word of the death on his father; to LOUIS BRUGGNER, of the Senior Class, and William Mc- ^ Nov. 4, of A, J. HANHAUSER, '97, '23, upon the death of his father; to Cormick, senior in the College of after a lingering illness which for Mr. PAUL FENLON, '19, upon the Commerce, represented the students several years had kept him from the death of his mother; to CHARLES of Notre Dame. In a statement Notre Dame associations he had pre­ RILEY, '33, upon the death of his Father O'Hara said: viously enjoyed so much. father; to ARTHUR SULLIV.AN, "Mr. Hurley was one of the best WILLIAM F. ROBINSON, '06, '27, upon the death of his mother. friends Notre Dame ever had. In died suddenly in his office in Gulf- spite of the fact that he was weighed port, Miss. His death was relieved by down by duties of state and private his long habit of Daily Communion, MARRIAGES affairs, he gave unselfishly of his his reception of the Blessed Sacra­ time in developing the interests of ment preceding by only an hour his Miss Mary E. Murty, of Cleveland, the University during the critical sudden end. He was in the real estate period of its expansion. Ohio, and Dr. FR.ANCIS A. HAL- business in Gulfport. In his Ques­ LOEAN, '21, were married on Octo­ "Mr. Hurley became identified tionnaire he has several things of in­ with Notre Dame in 1918 as hono­ ber 28, at the Log Chapel, Notre terest: "Shook hands with William J. Dame. rary dean of the college of com­ Bryan, Alfred E. Smith and chatted merce. Although he was burdened with President McKinley. I belonged Miss Catherine R. Sullivan, -Akron, at this time with governmental du­ to several debating societies at Notre Ohio, and FRANCIS E. S'TEEL, '25, ties, he gave splendid help in shap­ Dame. I glee clubbed under Prof. were married on ThanksgiWng Day, ing the destinies of this then recent­ Peterson and sang in church choir at November 30, at the .Log Chapel, ly organized department of the Uni­ the farmers mass until I broke up Notre Dame. versity. He rendered notable serv­ the choir by catching cold . . . Jack Mr. and Mrs. Peter Auman, Bay ice in the endowment campaign of Shea, Thomas Lally, Thomas Ham­ City, Michigan, announce the mar­ 1921-22, and made a personal con­ mer and myself received the honorary riage of their daughter, Cecile Eliz­ tribution of ?25,000 at that time. In degrees of being the King B Rough- abeth, to JOSEPH H. JIULHALL, November, 1930, he announced a housers of Notre Dame. . . I was ex­ '29, on November 11, Bay City, Jlich. gift of ?200,000 to the Universitj' pelled from Notre Dame three days Mr. and Mrs. Andre J. Breaux an­ for a building to house the college after I matriculated for not knowing nounce the marriage of their daugh­ of commerce, which was then named how to sling hash—then I got rein­ ter, Yvonne Elizabeth, to STEPHEN for him, the Edward N. Hurley col­ stated for not knowing how to speak E. McPARTLIN, Jr., '29, which took lege of foreign and domestic com­ or understand the Irish language. The place August 29th, in Chicago, 111. merce. The University appreciates Irish Brother of the Senior Eefrec- The marriage of Miss Marv Hub­ the fact that this w^as the first gift tory then made me his assistant. . . bard and LOUIS C. CH-APLEAU, of a building it had received in the I later assisted Brother Leopold at '30, took place on November 29, at 88 years of its existence. In 192C, the refreshment store. . ." St. Patrick's Church, South Bend, the University recognized Mr. Hur­ Indiana. ley's staunch Catholicity and distin­ Younger alumni will be shocked to guished service to the state by con­ learn ofthe tragic death of CHAR­ Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schreiber an­ ferring on him the Laetare medal, LEY McDERMOTT, '27, who was nounce the marriage of their daugh­ her highest reward for excellence. killed in an automobile accident near ter, Elizabeth, to TIEllNEY -A.. "The University feels a deep sense -Ambler, Pa., Nov. 26. Charley was in O'EOUEKE, '31, on September 23, of personal loss in the demise of Mr, the investment banking business in in Brooklyn, New York. Hurley. He was a self-made man -AUentown. He was 29 years of age, Mr. and Mrs. James C Walsh, who kept his feet on the ground, unmarried. Active in the alumni af­ Chicago, Illinois, announce the mar­ and was always a true friend. His fairs of his district, he was Secretary riage of their daughter, Dorothy, to ALBERT G. MALONEY, '31, on Oc­ tober 19, at Notre Dame, Indiana. We recently received word of the marriage of Miss Rosella Casella and JOHN J. McMURRAY, Jr., '31, which took place on June 17, at St. James Church, Chicago, Illinois. ROBERT C. STREB, '32, Canton, Ohio, was married November H, in the Log Chapel, Notre Dame. Mr. and Mrs. William W. Lucier, of Adams, Mass., announce the en­ gagement of their daughter, Irene Dora, to JOSEPH A. WILK, '31.

BIRTHS

Information without further de­ tail from the Athletic Office reports the birth of daughters to Mr. and Mrs. JOSEPH BYRNE, Jr., '15, and Mr. and Mrs. FRANCIS P. KEN- NEY, '17. Until recently we had not received the announcement of the birth of a daughter, Jeannine Ann, to Mr. and Mrs. SEBASTIAN BERNER, '27, on May 16th, South Bend. Mr. and HENRY C. WURZER, '25, announce the birth of a daugh­ ter, Suzanne, on October 7, Daven­ port, Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. FRANK DONOVAN, '28, South Bend, Indiana, announce the birth of a daughter, Marj' Paul­ ine, on October 2. A clever NRA card — 'Nouncing Recent Ai'rival — was received from CRUISING CUNARD 3Ir. and Mrs. GEORGE DELANA, '14, to tell of the birth of a son. Bill, The ship's smoke-room . . . serenity -UAi; R ETAN I A ... to the Wea< essentially male. Talk of yesterday's IndieM and Sonlh AMerlra. The White on November 3rd. Cruise Queen on an itinerary that few ships Mr. and Mrs. ALFRED SCHNURR, ports and tomorrow's . . . Havana . . . could equal 5300 miles in 12 days ... Port of Jr., '28, announce the arrival of a Naples . . . Port Said! Casualness that Spain, Trinidad; La Guaira, Venezuela; son, Ronald Alfred, on November fails to hide the thrill of experiences Willemstad, Curacao; Colon, Panama; Havana, 21, Sanduskj-, Ohio. Cuba ... including a 240-mile daylight vista of sliared, of adventure yet to come .. . the Leeward and Windward Islands! From Cruising Cunard is an achievement New York Nov. 25 ... $125 up. First Class PERSONALS in fine living ... a world created solely Service tliroughout. Later sailings Dec. 9 and to please you . .. full of ease and solid 23, Jan. 27, Feb. 10 and 24, Mar. 10 and 24, Apr. 7 ... rates on application. enjoyment. Before 1880 Sail warm seas to glorious foreign S^VM ARIA ... to 'Snamm, Havana aad An interesting letter has been re­ shores, tliis wnter . . . and give your­ Bermuda. 11 days ... leisurely yachting ceived from MATTHEW TORBETT, over sunny seas in a ship famed for comfort... '73, 6 Oxford Place, Atlanta: self a week or tvvo or four of such living to the three highspots of the West Indies! From In reading over the ALUMXUS, as this! Choose from this elaborate New York Jan. 20, Feb. 3 and 17, Mar. 3, 17 November 1933 issue, just received, I program under renowned Cunard and 31. Low rates . . . $125 up. First Class Senice throughout. note on page 64 the death of TOM management! DUNDON with much regret, as he A Q IJ IT A > I.% . . . to E:<.vpt and the FRA^iCOXLA New Year's Cmlae to was one of my student friends and .>ledilerraneaii. Januar}- 31 and March 7 Nassau and Havana. 9 days... 3 days ashore, fellow members of the "Boat Club." ...SS days in the newly remodeled Aquitania... including New Year's Eve in Havana! From In the comments on his record as a to ten most alluring Mediterranean ports: New York Dec. 26... S107.50 up. student, etc., it reads. "He was a Madeira, Gibraltar, Algiers, Villefranche for BEREXGARI.A Unealn'a Birtiiday meber of the winning crew of the the Riviera, Haifa and Port Said for the Holy Week-ead Cmlse t* Benaada. 3 days famous boat race between the Santa Land and £gypt, Rhodes, Istanbul, Athens, Maria and the Pinta in 1873, "de­ Naples! Rates only S495 up. First Class; S265 from New York Feb. 9... $55 up. First scribed in a previous issue of the up. Tourist Class. In Cooperation with Class Service throughout ALUMNUS." AS I also was in that Raymond- Whitcomb. No passports needed for West Indies. race, pulling third oar, I would be Literature and resenuiions through your local agent or Cunard Line, 23 Broadway, New York most interested in having an oppor­ tunity to read that account of the race. Won't you kindly inform me as to what issue of the ALUMNUS it was in? I usually read over the ALUJINUS very carefully, looking for the names of those who were fellow students with me in 1873. "DANIEL E. MALONEY (Har- 98 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 19SS

vard. 111.) was captain and stroke prison? I dare say you recall our ruler of the B. P. 0. E, and an active oar; JOSEPH B. CONNER (Hast­ "evening sessions" with JOHN EW­ worker in the Notre Dame Club of ings, Minn.) was coxswain, and I ING, BECKER, NEILL, ROTHERT, Tiffin. The ALTJMNUS, with his class­ pulled the third oar of our boat. This KLEIBER, and LATSHAW as par­ mates, extends prayers and sympathy I have a note of in my autograph ticipants. The mortar board and to him and the children in their sor­ book; also have in that book names "top hat," I believe, made their ini-* row. of T. J. DUNDON (Marquette Mich.) tial appearance at Notre Dame in '87 while football of the present day 1913. E. G. GRAVES (San Antonio, Tex­ HARRY KIRK encloses a clipping as), and many others, but no record was unknown. Hand-ball was popu­ lar in the old gym while baseball at­ to the Alumni Office which brings of their positions. WeU do I remem­ the edifying news of the entrance of ber that day, with the great number tracted an occasional game with the "Green Stockings" of South Bend on his daughter, Margaret Mary, into of visitors we had, and especially of the Carmelite monastery in Balti­ the efforts of the ladies in pinning special "rec" days, when, I believe, FATHER BURNS, • acquired some more. She was an honor student and onto our sweat-saturated thin under- very active in dramatics both at Holy shiirts the medals received." reputation as a catcher. I am enclos­ ing a newspaper story of BROTHER Rosary high school in Columbus and 1887 LEOPOLD and his famous "pie in St. Anthony's high school in Wash­ store" which you will enjoy as one ington, D.C., where Harry opened Monticello, Ind. of his thousand of customers. He is consulting engineering offices two My dear Cartier:— approaching close to a century. You years ago. Margaret Mary was pres­ The Class of 1887 is indebted to might send it to Rothert who has ident of the senior class at St. An­ its Secretary for keeping alive an been in poor health for some time thony's last year. otherwise doubtful existence and and will appreciate a few lines from thanks are due for your contribu­ his friends. Another article I en­ 1922 tions to the ALUMNUS. Your Octo­ joyed was a recent eulogy on Profes­ ber letter prompts me in i-ecalling sor Hoj-nes in the ALUAINUS by Perhaps no man of our class has that it is now fifty years since I en­ JOHN D. WILLSON, a former worked harder and has had more tered Notre Dame and if "living in study-hall neighbor from Iowa. worries this fall than our own Hunk the past" has its pleasant memories Anderson who without complaint is If my visit found no familiar faces doing everything in his power to it is equally enjoyable to renew one's I enjoyed meeting several new ones youth on the scene of those days, carry on the work of building a foot­ in ST. GEORGE, JHTCHELL, HIL- ball machine to match those" of other albeit time has brought wonderful GARTNER,JAinESON and O'CON­ changes. days at Notre Dame. Maybe some NOR whose welcome made me feel of us have been disappointed because Our Class was small in number it at home. I have eased off in active our football team has not lived up to is true but, with the possible excep­ life here in Monticello and the mem­ our expectations, but let it be said tion of JOHN C. WAGONER, fate ories of Notre Dame contribute not a has been kind enough to let us all right here that we of '22 have the little to its pleasure. greatest confidence in HUNK -A3r- "carry on." I have frequently re­ Wishing you and yours all the gretted the failure of a full attend­ DERSON as a coach, and our query good things of life for many years to those who would remind us that ance of our Class at some re-union I am. but seemingly the proper urge was the present season for Notre Dame lacking. Largely in the hope of Sincerely yours, has been a drab one, is: 'What of , meeting some of the old students W. K. O'Connell. it?" We all know from experience and attracted by the array of celeb­ that there are times when everything rities on the program I attended the 1897 goes wrong despite our every effort recent Commencement feeling some A letter from FATHER MacNA- to accomplish something worth while. guilt for a frequent absentee. Fancy MARA states that he is established The same applies to football. Keep the pleasure I anticipated should I on the estate at Bel Air, Md., amid plug^ng away at them. Hunk, giving meet such old-timers as M. 0. surroundings that sound like one of the best you have and things will BURNS PRED COMBE, 1LA.T the settings for a moving picture. brighten up. As previously men­ WHITE, CHARLES and HENRY You remember the P. 0. address. Box tioned in this column, we are with PASCHEN, GEORGE N. O'BRIEN, 64. His disappointment in the out­ Hunk Anderson, win, lose, draw, or ED PORTER, EDWARD S. EWING, come of the Navy game was, as al­ no contest. P. E. BURKE, C. J. STUBBS and ways, subordinated to his enthusiasm We regret to learn that HARRY PRANK HAGENBARTH. Luck was and confidence of better days ahead. MEHRE'S Georgia Bull Dogs had unkind and my hopes were shattered. their undefeated record marred by a Not a student or member of the fac­ 1904 defeat administered to them by Au­ ulty of the early 80's could I locate. An interesting letter from THOM­ burn. But while we must console Knowing your Notre Dame activi­ AS J. JONES, 828 N. Rural Ave., Light-Horse Harry, at the same time ties I felt more hopeful and made reveals correspondence he has had it would not do to overlook con­ frequent inquiry for your presence TOth THOMAS J. JONES, Jr., '29, gratulations to the victor — CHET and that of JOHNNY DEGROOTE, Boise, Idaho. Indianapolis Tom also WYNNE. We bet these men never now Father DeGroote, only to be has a son, THOMAS JONES, C.S.C, dreamed while at Notre Dame that disappointed. It was comforting, '31, who will be ordained next year. they would one day be coaching however, to meet two veteran Indi­ Thomas J., Jr., of Boise has a son, football teams and battling each ana students in M. HENOCH and Thomas J., Ill, so you can see why other for the supremacy of the DR. BERTELING although they pre­ Alumni Office records sometimes go South. Both men have been most ceded my time. Denied the pleasure ' awry. successful coaches and we rejoice at of exchanging personal reminiscen­ their success. ces I am wondering how many recall 1911 Good Old BUCK SHAW coaching the Symposium at the old Red Mill, Mrs. C. J. Schmidt, wife of in conjunction with Morrie Smith at the overland trips to the Community CHARLES J. SCHMIDT, 260 Mel- Santa Clara is highly elated over farm at Granger, to feast on fresh more St., Tiffin, O., died suddenly his team's showing in the annual milk, and hikes to Bertrand. Were Nov. 5. She is survived by her hus­ game with Saint Mary's. The game you with us as guests of the Mur- band, two sons and two daughters. ended in a 6-6 tie, which is almost a dock boys at the Michigan City Mr. Schmidt is deputy grand exalted moral victory for Santa Clara. The December, 1933 THE NOTKE DAME ALUMNUS 99

colorful St. Mary's team is coached with the law firm of Walsh & Nagle by SLIP MADIGAN. in Helena. RED CROWLEY is one of the few- LARRY CULLINEY writes from men of Boston who did not run for 635 West 115th Street, New York mayor in the last municipal election. City, that he will be back for the ristmds Red is in the wholesale grocery busi­ Southern California game. ness. He is self appointed custodian of the sacred cod. PAUL E. WENDLAND promises to take time out from his work as Memo for Alumni We have had no news from JOE Ladies Ready-to-Wear buyer and and ALVIN RHOMBERG for a long manager in H. G. Wendland & Co. time. We trust they ivill give them­ store in Bay City, Michigan, to at­ -^^^ selves up with out a further struggle. tend the Southern California game. CHUCK FOLEY would ^vrite if we He's anxious jto see the Band's new could get him peeved about some­ I shall subscribe to the AVE thing, but he is too good natured. uniforms. MARIA for one year because WALT KLAUER is the original Hit­ PAUL LUKEN wrote from 6537 ler 6f our class, so it is perhaps just S. Sangamon St., Chicago, that he (1) I can practice Cath­ as well we do not rouse him or his was planning a trip through the olic Action by bringing able playmate MUSSOLINI CAR- South. Paul, we shall expect much this fine Catholic influence- MODY. We desire peace at any news concerning the Southern gang into my home 52 times a price. when you return. You might get year. Among the many things that have after KIRWIN WILLL4.MS for not come in concerning the football seas­ sending in his notes for the column (2) I can still be in­ on, one which must prove gratifying this month. fluenced by Priests who to "HUNK" is the following verse FRANK HEGARTY is now prac­ taught me while at Notre ^mtten by LEONARD LEVITT, ticing medicine in Pittsburgh at 3710 Dame. Cairo, 111., a classmate: Fifth Avenue in the Medical Arts (3) I can aid in spread­ Building. ing devotion to our Blessed Notre Dame, old Notre Dame Mother. Tho you've lost many a game. JOSEPH P. KISSLING is practic­ There's no stain against your name, ing law at 39-0- Main St., Flushing, (4) I can help in the Notre Dame, old Notre Dame. N. Y. preparation of young men DRS. MARCUS FARRELL and to the Priesthood and Remember Gipp of old renown; DICK WEHS are internes in Mercy Brotherhood. How to his memory "Knute's" men Hospital, Pittsburgh. DR. ROBERT respond, MacDONALD is pathology resident (5) I can share in hun­ Remember Rockne's last request at Cleveland City Hospital. DR. dreds of Masses and in the To make "Our Lady's" team the best. FRANK GUARNIERI is at the King­ prayers of the Holy Cross ston Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. Community, Listen to the cheering grand; PAUL BRUST is associated as an (6) I can cultivate in my Hark the playing of the band. architect with WILLIAJI J. RED­ home a taste for good Win this game, resume your stand, DEN, '14, 3525 North Avenue, Mil- reading. Notre Dame, old Notre Dame. w^aukee. Wis. • (7) I can keep informed 1925 GEORGE SARGUS is in New- of current events from a York with Macy's. His address is Catholic standpoint. GEORGE CHAO sent a card re­ 392 Bleecker St. cently from Louvain, where he has AL TAYLOR wrote from 1282 been studying at the University, re­ The AVE MARIA is the old­ ceiving his Ph.D. last June, announc­ Union Street, Brooklyn, N. Y., ask­ ing for WALT PARENT'S address. est weekly Catholic family ing his return to China after many magazine in America. For 68 years absence, including study at Had a note from PETE GALLA­ GHER from 143 Fern St., Freeland, years it has been edited and Notre Dame, Fribourg and Louvain. published by the Priests, Broth­ George's address in China is, c/o N. Pa., where he is teaching in the Free- land High School, inquiring about ers anu Nuns connected with C. Chao, The Shun Pao, 24 Hankow the University of Notre Dame. Road, Shanghai, China. the possibilitj' of replacing his class pin w-hich he claims he lost—but he It commends itself to all Cath­ 1927 didn't say how. You did well to keep • olics, particularly to Alumni. it this long, Pete. Remember how You can enroll in this fast A letter from ART SULLIVAN, JOE BRANNON lost his the first growing AVE MARIA family in addition to bringing the sad news time he went up to the Palais Royale in a very simple way. Simply of the death of his mother in Mora­ after getting his pin. via, N. Y., Nov. 10, also brings the enclose check, currency, or brighter news of the success of JOE VINCE WALSH was here from money order for ?3.00 in an BOLAND as radio announcer for Monticello, Illinois, for the Purdue envelope addressed to us and WCCO, Minneapolis. The Editor game, as were JIM ALLEN and ED the AVE MAEIA will arrive heard Joe between the halves of the McKeo^vn from Chicago. It seemed at your home the following Minnesota-Michigan game and be­ good to talk over Corby Hall days week and for 51 weeks more. lieves all that is being said about the again with Vince and Jim. Address Boland broadcasting. It's up to the class to get after Eugene P. Burke, C.S.C, KIRWIN WILLIA3IS for not writ­ Editor, 1928 ing the column this month. Perhaps BILL JONES was a most welcome he hasn't any news—so get busy and The Presbytery, visitor on the campus on his way drop him a line at 319 West Gram- Notre Dame, back to Helena, after having visited ercy, San Antonio, Texas, because Indiana. in Detroit. Bill's laugh is just as I'M expecting him to come through heartv as ever. He is still associated next month. 100 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS December, 1933 1929 \rith Twentj'-niners. BILL DWYER Company on November 22nd, there upheld the best traditions of the to hear FRANKLYN EUGENE In the period of economic historj' class in being one of the assistants to DOAN classify the class in the fol­ immediately terminated, gentlemen, the Treasurer of the affair while lowing manner: the theory hased upon the fallacy TOM MEDLIN helped in making it that "two can live as cheaply as one" The fifth annual casino champion­ bigger and better by thinking up ship was decided at Fort Wayne has had a renaissance. Witness the some of the architectural effects decline through matrimony of such after the Purdue game with JOHN­ which were merely night-mares for NY DORGAN first, LOU NIEZER political luminaries as president ordinary folks like you and me. It BILL KREIG who followed Virginia second and FRANK DO.\N third. seems that Medlin must have done a Dorgan's name goes on the cup for Ballweg's teaching on the subject, mighty swell job though, because and unperturbable politician WAL­ the third straight year. Dorgan and there were several large firms who DAN BUCKLEY now have their own TER ELI STANTON who made sure had waivers on him when the thing of one additional vote at any odds closed up for the season. law and disorder office; Niezer up LaPorte way. Incidentally, Wal­ haunts board meetings; Doan spreads ter received as one of his wedding RED LEACH and the Commercial Crowell's gospel. DENNY KEARNS, presents, a brand new shiny office Investment Trust must be getting a Fort Wayne apothecary, says JIM down at Washington, D. C, so that along very cozily together because ROY is still glibbing into Boston we have the honor of announcing Red was recently promoted and microphones. Boston and its nine- his new address as being: 1633 Q moved to Pittsburgh. He is married way mayoral election brought to Street, N. W. Stanton is of the and has one child. ' While we're talk­ mind CHARLEY COLTON. Charley "brains" department in the legal di­ ing about the financial world, we always did make too many promises. vision of the Federal Emergency Ad­ might mention that JOE TOOMEY DORGAN says that P.A.UL HEM- ministration of Public Works. Drop who was working for General Motors MY, the Wisconsin magistrate, will in and see him if you could use some Acceptance Corporation suffered throw you into the jug for practical­ Federal funds. from a break-down late in the sum­ ly nothing at all. GEORGE BRAU- mer and is now back home with his TIGAN and RAY DRYMALSKI are Apropos the announcements folks out in Iowa City. above: TOM LANTRY and scientist Chicago lawyers; VIC ESSROGER BOB SCHULZE conducted a sanity FRAN CROWE took life easy can quote bond prices on 19 tele­ inquest of the entire class the other around Lafayette all summer prepar­ phones simultaneously. None of the evening. With practically all pre­ ing to tell the boys of his Sigoumey above mentioned went to the Cen­ cincts in, the result seems to be that football team to do or die for dear tury of Progress. sanity and celibacy have a slight old but pshaw, I can't Akron is the fiwt city in America margin so far. TOM LANTRY, if get that name off again. LARRY to report six months ahead of time a you must know, is an unreformed in­ O'CONNOR is liable to make it solid delegation to the New Deal Re­ surance man of New York City. Sears-Roebuck and O'Connor most union. ART ERRA (No hits, no Bounding BOB SCHULZE has any time now. His address is Ben­ runs, one Erra) will probably start turned his back on the world' of fi­ ton Harbor, Michigan, which shows in a Dodge and get there in a strat­ nance to join FAUNCE MEYER that some people have little or no osphere balloon. JOE KRAKER and (who is already vice-president of the ambition, Charlie!!! HAROLD BAIR, one a banker, the Indiana Botanical Gardens) in pre­ TOM JORDEN left his paints and other a commercialist and both fa­ senting the world a new organization varnishes unprotected for a week­ thers, never miss a beer fiesta. styled The Central States Labora­ end and came out to see the Notre STEVE and JOE (Incipient Bene­ tories. Dame - Pittsburgh Game. Tom is dict) WOZNIAK will discuss Ohio CY NOLAN has taken over most showing a picture of a bouncing law,—for a consideration. VIRGIL of the legal business of the citizens baby girl. All that Tom would say P. CLINE, it's said, is at Harvard. of Davenport, Iowa, while MAR­ is: "What's happened to JOHN Dayton BILL CRONIN has been in SHALL KIZER is doing the same MALLOY?" Shulze said everything Akron a couple of times. General for the folks down at Plymouth, In­ else. Johnson can't hope to line up the diana. But as far as I know. Law Ohio laundries under the Blue Buz­ Club President JERRY ROACH has Due to the good services of HOW­ zard unless they get together on the best idea. He is practicing law, ARD V. PHALIN who is ^vith R. S. CRONIN'S dress shirts. PAUL HAL- as are many others, and runs a bank Toth and Associates of 1825 Prairie LAHAN was looking over the Army- as a side line just so he can have the Avenue, Chicago, JOE BREIG and Illinois game a few weeks ago. satisfaction of laughing in the face ARNOLD WILLIAMS have been du­ JOHN V. HINKEL recently made a of the Big Bad Wolf. If the Sec. ly introduced to the world as suc­ triumphal tour of the west. Next can borrow enough money to get up cessful short-story writers. week "East LjTin." to Grand Rapids he intends to bor­ Let this ser\'e BOB SCHULZE as row enough courage to bon-ow a lot just a gentle reminder that he prom­ PAUL BERTSCH and CLAUDE of money from Jerry. BOB VOGEL- ised to write "within ten days." HORNING are unman-ied, uncom­ WEDE was in Chicago the last time mitted and unscored upon. They're Had you been able to convince a trying to reopen Akron's big bank. any of the class sleuths were able to particularly observant gum-chewing catch up with him. It is understood You'll recall the case of a guy named blonde secretarj' that (1) you'd Humpty-Dumpty. that he was due to stop off at De­ never attended Notre Dame, (2) catur and give the home folks a were not an insui-ance salesman, (3) LOU NIEZER thinks LitvinofF was treat for a week or so before head­ had no stocks, bonds or old iron to really FRANK McANENEY wearing ing for his winter playground in sell, (4) didn't need a job, (5) had Balbo's sheared beard. Imagine my . a bank account that assured that you surprise when Bill Bullitt, not AR­ The South Chicago police report didn't want to request a loan, (6) NOLD L. "Cy" WILLIAMS, got that that CLYDE ATCHINSON and had an appointment, and (7) had Moscow portfolio. CHARLIE McDERMOTT are still never known Doan "out at school" It FRED IHLLER is trying to fooling the pay-master at the Illinois the chances are about 50-50 that you dope out the sudden ' surge in the Steel Corporation of the South Chi­ might have been ushered into the beer business, maybe he'd bettir find cago plant. inner offices of the Junior Sales De­ out if HANK BURNS visited The World's Fair was well staffed partment of the Crowell Publishing N'Yawk recently and called HENRY December, 1933 THE NOTRE DAME ALUMNUS 101

OELBRICHT and DON O'BRIEN. 1931 buck. DEA is doing the same thing They, with BILL DOYLE of the part time. About all from these Guaranty Trust and DOC HARRI­ Word from Seattle, Wash., is that parts except that JOHN ELDRED6E SON, the Connecticut good-will en­ PHILIP H. DUFFY has entered the is a loving husband to Katherine voy, ought to form the vanguard of seminary. Hoffman since July 5. the east next June. BILL MCCARTHY, 18 Linwood Terrace, Kansas City, Mo., writes 1933 DR. JIM TOBIN, with one ap­ that he has finally landed a job with JOE CLARK, 350 Church St., pendectomy behind him, and FRED the List Construction Co. FRANK Poughkeepsie, N. Y. is with the WAGNER, the former Glee Clubber, lUEN, he adds, was up to see him Aetna Life Ins. Co. were on hand last June. They ought the other day about an insurance GEORGE ALLINGHAM is \vith to be cinches this coming June. policy and was kidding Bill because the New York American. Heard from Barrister BOB MAN- he was working on a statement of a A card which, as 0.0. Mclntyre re- IX a few months ago. He's a Green­ contract, luen took accounting and recently phrased it, "touched off a ville (Ohio) lawyer and probably Bill engineering. drool" in the Publications Office, was head coach of the Greenville High The following comes from RAMON one from ART BECVAE, who wrote School cheer-leading staff. SMITH who was a surprise party at from Prague that "Many an evening the So. Cal. game: I have drunk a beer to your health." CHARLES HASKELL has moved "I forgot to ask you the other day his law offices to Suite 720, Majestic TOM DOWNS writes that he is Bldg., 16th St., at Broadway, Denver, in your office what address you had continuing in the Marquette Law Colo. for Telfel (the old smoothy). Is it School. His address is 1622 W. Kil- St. Norbert's College? (Ed Note: boum Ave., Milwaukee. JACK KEAENS is working for the Yowsah! West de Pere, Wis.) LES RADDATZ is in the inspiring Illinois Highway Dept., the only N.D. "You won't have to answer this let­ environment of Chapel Hill, working man in the Elgin Office district. ter—^just manage to put it in an for his M. -A. at the U. of North ALUJINUS sometime and then send Carolina, FEED McBETH, his form­ 1930 me the ALUMNUS! (Who's an old er roommate, is with the Canadian smoothie?) Bell Tel. Co., in Hamilton. From the ever-faithful BERNIE "Enjoyed the game — believe it or CONROY, contender for the consist­ not^though I think LARRY MUL- ency medal among the Class Secre­ LINS' outfit from St. Benedict's could ALUMNI CLUBS taries : show that backfield plenty about co­ -(Continued from PaRe 94) TIERNEY O'ROURKE and Miss ordination. By the way—Larry tells Elizabeth Schreiber were married in me he is "going places" next year. He James L. O'Toole, Esq. has been Brooklyn on Sept. 23. Tim is em­ was in South Bend but I didn't get to nominated on the Democratic slate ployed by the Equitable Assurance see him, I heard from him just the for Judge of County Court of Alle­ Co. JIM DODSON has been working week before the game. Did you know gheny County. James L. O'Toole for the Pittsburgh Press. FELIX he has a "boncing bebby boy?" An4 .an,d the Democratic party are insep- ISHERWOOD was last reported as do you think I could ask CARIDEG ;arable.' .Ip ;thei.election last fall being the Portland manager of the for a couple of tickets to the game out • • James'-Ll'WEis'.the chairman of the Hamburg-American Line, one of the here at Lawrence between M. U. and. . speaker'."!, committee and the propa- States Steamship groups. I hear that K. U.?—and e.xpect to get them? And. • gahda'-h^ pat '^ut enabled the Demo­ FRED CUNNINGHAM is also in did you know that SPIKE McAD-- crats to carry this county by 30,000 that business. AMS refereed a bout between a man­ • votes, something .unheard of in this ager and some other kid on the ]field; Republican 'sttcnglicld.. We are all "ED McCRIMMON has drifted to after the game? And then ' they piiKing toi Slid- jn 'ih-i forthcoming far-off Honolulu to obtain a job. RON wouldn't fight? Was I disappointed! election and our wishes are that he SULLIVAN is still plugging away at "JIM BRAY, BOB and FRANK make it. -All Notre Dame men are the insurance business. JACK NAP- TYLER and myself had one hell of requested to put the aXe on James TYER, '31, is in Ron's office in Port­ a time going through that snow from Lawrence O'Toole. land. JOHN O'DONNELL is work­ Chicago to Joliet early Sunday morn­ Lost: Leo Vogel, age 37; height 5 ing on the Emergency Relief staff in ing. Took us about three hours, but feet 11 inches; weight 165 pounds; Wilkes-Barre. I met GIL PREN- after that it was clear sledding into further description: baldness. Will DERGAST at the Navy game. Gil K. C. Arrived about five-thirty — anyone knowing the whereabouts of finished law school at Western Mary­ just in time to fall into a tub and the above person kindly notify the land and is now employed by the out for bed. Were we dead! Notre Dame Club of Western Penn­ Hartford Casualty and Indenmity Co. "Business is good thanks and I ex­ sylvania. in Baltimore. pect to be able to get a new suit any A proposed football game between "JIM MALLOY and DAN BAR­ day now—when I pay off the bets I the recent graduates and the older TON are sharing an apartment in lost on the game (and there were alumni is in the making. Several Baltimore. SAM RICHARDS, ED plenty of them too) but then, I ex­ games of mushball between these MURRAY, WATTS EICHER, FR. pect to get even next year." two groups were played during the VINCENT MOONEY, HUGH Mc- summer, the outcome ending in a CAFFEEY and JIM QUINN were 1932 tie series. Now the boys are anxious some of the loyal rooters I saw at JERRY CONWAY is back in to settle the dispute in a game of the Navy game. White Bear Lake, Minn. He is asso­ football. The probable line-up for ciated ^vith the David Adv. Agency old alumni. "CON CAREL lost a close election of St. Paul, securing clients and then L.e., L. Schneider; l.t., J. Bach; in his first political race for the N.Y. planning their campaigns, which is l.g., C. O'Toole; c, J. Reardon; r.g., Assembly." job enough. Jerry says,—^"Have little J. Meinert, Capt., r.t., E. D. Nebel; A fine letter was recently received news to offer from these parts. r.e., F. Wilson; q.. Red Mooney; l.h., from HARRY SYLVESTER, who is SCHROEDEE is still thrusting gaso­ J. Sheedy; r.h., Ed Byrnes; f.b., E. back in Brooklyn, 1118 East 14th St., line down the throats of Mpls. citi­ Layden. Coach: Dr. Leo O'Donnell. after a summer of writing. Harry's zens. DU-AJSTE YELLAND, I under­ Substitutes: Kaiser, Steitz, Barr, latest book, "Big Football Man," is stand, is still insuring them. MAUR­ Devlin, Walsh, Sullivan. well worth the reading. ICE GRIFFIN is with Sears, Roe­ Joseph Bach. LOCAL ALUMNI CLUBS

NOTRE DAME CLUB OF AKRON—Jo­ NOTRE DAME CLUB OF ERIE, PA.— NOTRE DAME CLUB OF MANILA—Al­ seph H. Kraker. 29. 1776-24th St. Cuy- Richard D. Daley. '17, Erie Da3u fonso Zobel, '24, CO. Ayala & Cia, 21 ahoea Falls, Ohio. President; Claude H. Times, President; "Thomas Barber. '24. Calle Juan Luna, Manilla. President Hominsr. '29. 133 N. Righland Ave.. 416 Newman St. Secretary. Akron, Ohio. Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF MEMPHIS— NOTRE DAMD CLUB OF FAIRFIELD Hogh Masevncy, Jr.. 1878 Union Ave., NOTRE DAME CLUB OP ARIZONA— COUNTY —James Murphy. '22, 611 President James D. Bany. '9. 82 W. Pennington Securities BIdlg.. Bridgeport Conn.. St.. Tucson. President: Steve Rebeil. '23. President; Joseph E. Russo. '32. 166 NOTRE DAME CLUB OF MILWAUKEE 620 N. Sixth St, Tucson, Secretary. Hough Ave., Brdigeport Conn.. Secre­ —P. Dudley Pearson, '19. 2037 N. Lake tary. Drive. President; Victor G. Woeste. '29, NOTRE DAME CLUB OF ARKANSAS— 1819 E. Kenwood Bldg., Secretary. Rev. Geo. F. X Strassner. '14, Hope. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF FT. WAYNE President: Burt L. Roberts. 1325 Lincoln NOTRE DAHE CLUB OF MONTANA— Ave., Little Rock, Secretary. —Frank J. Gilmartin. '01. 336 W. Wool- and Ave.. President; Robert Eggeman. Earl W. Brown. '93, 320 Power St, Helena, President; James B. O^Flynn, NOTRE DAME CLUB OF BENGAL-Rt '30, Old First Bank Bldg.. Secretary. '11, Great Falls, Secretary. Rev. Timothy Crowley. C.S.C.. '02. Dac­ ca. President: Rev. J. J. Henessey, NOTRE DAME CLUB OF GREEN BAY NOTRE DAME CLUB OF NASHVILLE— C.S.C., Dacca, Secretary. —^Harold L. Londo. *24. City Engineers' Robert P. Williams. Jr., '29. 105 Galla­ Office, City Hall. Green Bay. Wis.. Pres­ tin Road, Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF BOSTON— ident ; Levi A. Geniesse. '24. 510 Mina- Joseph C. Sullivan. President; Robert J. han Bldg.. Green Bay, Wis., Secretary. Heam. 43 Chester Road, Belmont Mass., NOTRE DAME CLUB OF NEBRASKA— Secretary. Geralad J. Barret. '22, 313 S. 37th St. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF GRAND RAP­ Omaha. Secretary. IDS. MICH—George E. Ludwig, '25. 328 NOTRE DAME CLUB OP BUFFALO— Glenhaven Ave.. N. W. President; Ray­ Paul D. HoefBer. '25, 280 Woodward mond J. Bonini, '27. 2460 Oakwood Dr.. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF NEW JER­ Ave, Buffalo, President; Edmund J. S.E.. Secretary. SEY—Robert Phelan. '22. 481 WUliam Luti. Jr.. '24. 91 Beard Ave.. Buftalo. St., East Orange, N. J., President; Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF HAMILTON. Joseph Nulty, '27. 945 Madison Ave.. OHIO—M. O. Bums, '86. 338 S. Second Elisabeth. N. J.. Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF CAHJMEH' St. President: Marc A. Fiehrcr, '27, 701 DISTRICT—William L. Voss. Jr.. '23. Rentschler Bldg., Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF' CITY OF 55521 Vine Ave., Harvey, HI., President NEW YORK—Wniiam A. Walsh. '96, NOTRE DAME CLUB OF HIAWATHA- 16-18 S. Broadway. Yonkers, New York. President; J. Norbert Gelson. Jr.. '26. NOTRE DAME CLUB OP THE CAPI­ LAND—^Norman Bartholomew. '15, 225 Cleveland Ave.. Iron Mountain. Mich.. 1201 Troy Ave, Brooklyn. N. Y.. Sec­ TAL DISTRICT—^Thomas DoUard. '21. retary. 200 9th St, Troy. New York. President; President; Michael S. Corry. '27. 837 John Vincent Smith, '29. 252 First St. Terrace Ave, Marinette. Wis.. Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF NORTHERN Albany. New York. Secretary. CAUFORNIA — Royal H. Bosshard. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF HOUSTON— '17, 315 Montgomery St. San Francisco. NOTRE D.WIE CLUB OF CHICAGO— M. E. Walter. '14. 1702 Stuart Ave.. President; Robert B. Hill. '23, 5033 Austin McNichoIs. '17. co. W. A, Alex­ Houston. Texas. President; T. F. Green, Proctor Ave,, Oakland. Secretary. ander & Co.. 134 S. LaSallc St. Presi­ Jr.. '27. Conroe. Texas, Secretary- dent; William P. Kearney. '28. 507 Treasurer. County Bld;r., Secretary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF OREGON—. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF INDIAN­ Nat McDousall. '00, 532 Sherlock Bldg., APOLIS — Robert Kirby. '29. 1901 N. Portland, President; Thomas D. McMa- NOTRE DAME'cillIB'0?"-ClScjl

NOTRE DAME CLUB OF ST. LOUIS— Year Name Address Leo SutliSe. '24. 2701 Sfl. Grand, Presi­ dent; Robert HellrunK. '30. 7214 North- Before 1880 Hon. Thos. F. Gallagher Fitchburg, Mass. moor Drive, University City. Mo., Secy. 1880—85 Prof. Robert M. AndersonCirdeville, Ohio 1886 NOTRE DAME CLUB OF SIOUX CITY— Michael O. Bums 338 S. Second St., Hamilton, Ohio Vincent F. Harrington. '25, Continental 1887 Hon. Warren A. Cartier Ludington, Michigan Mortgage Co., President. 1883 John L. Heineman Connersville. Indiana NOTRE DAME CLUB OF SYRACUSE 1889 P. E. Burke 301 Camp St, New Orleans. La. AND CENTRAL NEW YORK—Vincent 1890-93 Louis P. Chute 7 University Ave., Minneapolis, Minnesota Brown. '23, 1418 James St., Syracuse, 1894 Hugh A, O'DonnclI , New York City President: Vincent Goulct, '26. 125 Green St., Syracuse, Secretary. 1895 Eustace Cullinan, Sr. 860 Fhelan Bldg., San Francisco, Calif. 1896 William P. Bums NOTRE DAME CLUB OF SAN AN­ 327 WiUard Ave., Michigan City, Indiana TONIO—Harold Tynan. '27. 240 E. Hui- 1897 Rev. John A. MacNamara P. O. Box 64. Bel Air, sacke Ave., President; Kirwin J. Wil­ 1898 Wm. C. Kcgler 9th and Sycamore Sts., .Cincinnati, Ohio liams, '28, 319 W. Gramercy, Secretary. 1899 Dr. Jo.scph F. Duanc 418 Jefferson Bldg., Peoria, Illinois NOTRE DAME CLUB OF TIFFIN, OHIO 1900 John W. Eggeman Old First Bank Bldg.. Fort Wayne, Ind. —C. J. Schmidt. '11, 260 Melmore St.. 1901 Joseph J. Sullivan 1300, 139 N. Dark St,. Chicago, 111. President: Fred J. Wagner, '29, 152 Sycamore St., Secretao". 1902 C. C. Mitchell 110 S. Dearborn St., Box 3, Chicago, 111. 1903 Francis P. Burke 904 Trust Company Bldg., Milwaukee, Wisconsin NOTRE DAME CLUB OF TOLEDO— Fred A. Sprcnger. '30. 3129 Kimball 1904 Robert Proctor Monger Bldg., Elkhart, Indiana Ave., President: Joseph L. Wetli. '31, 1905 Daniel J. O'Connor 10 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, Illinois 717 Starr Ave.. Secretarj-. 1906 Thomas A. Lally 811-13 Paulsen Bldg., Spokane, Washington NOTRE D.\ME CLUB OF TRI-CITIES— 1908 Frank X. Cull Buckley Bldg., Cleveland, Ohio Richard B. Swift, '20, Kahl Bldg.. Dav­ 1909 E. P. Cleary P. O. Box 356. Momence, Illinois enport, Iowa, President: Heno* M. Mc- Cullough Bids,, Davenport, Iowa, Sec­ 1910 Rev. M. L. Moriarty 1900 Eudid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio retary. 1911 Fred L. Steers 1635 First National Bank Bldg., Chicago. Illinois 1912 B. J. Kaiser 324 Fourth St.. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania NOTRE DAME CLUB OF TRIPLE CITIES—Joseph Ciyey. '32. 20 Roose­ 1913 James R. Devitt 921 Engineers Bldg., Clevdand, Ohio velt Ave.. Endicott. N. Y., President: 1914 Frank H. Hayes 1055 Granville Ave.. Chicago, Illinois Joseph Hennessy, '30, 22 Fourth St.. 1915 James E. Sanford 1033 S. Linden Ave., Highland Park, HI. Johnson City. N. Y., Secretarj-. 1916 Timothy P. Galvin 708 First Trust Bldg., Hammond, Indiana TWIN CITIES NOTRE DAME CLUB— 1917 Edward J. McOskcr 104 S. Union St.. Elgin, nlinois John J. Doyle. '28. 414 2nd Ave.. S.. 1918 John A. Lcmmer lllO-Sth Ave., S., Escanaba, Michigan Minneapolis, Minn., President: Robert Clarence Bader Fogcrty, '28, College of St. Thomas. St. 1919 650 Pierce St.. Gary. Indiana Paul. Minn.. Secretary. 1920 Leo B. Ward 1012 Black Bldg., Los Angeles; California 1921 Alden J. Cusick 1 Park Ave.. New York City NOTRE DA»IE CLUB OF UTAH—Ray­ Gerald Ashe mond R. Brady, '24, 206 Keams Bldg., 1922 226 Glen Ellyn Way. Rochester. New York Salt Lake City, President: Cyril Har- 1923 Paul Castner White Motor Company, Cleveland. Ohio becke, '19, 61 F. St.. Salt Lake City. Sec. 1924 James F. Hayes Fifth Avenue Ass'n., Empire State Bldg., N. Y. City John W. Scallan NOTRE DAME CLUB OF THE WABASH 1925 Pullman Co., 79 E. Adams St, Chicago, HI. VALLEY—Noble Kizer, '25, Purdue Uni­ 1926 Dr. Gerald W. Hayes 96 N. Walnut St, East Orange, N. J. versity, Lafayette, Ind.. President: Peter 1927 Edmund DeClerq 8126 Drexel Blvd., Chicago, Hlinois Vogt, Secretarj'-Treasurer. 1928 Louis Buckley 718 E. Corby St., South Bend. Indiana NOTRE DAME CLUB OF EASTERN 1929 Joseph McNamara 231 Wisconsin St. Indianapolis. Indiana PENNSYLVANIA — Leo R. Mclntyre. 1930 Bernard W. Conroy 72 Barrow St. New York City '28. Bethlehem, Pa.. President. 1931 John E. Boland 3624 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Herbert Giorgio NOTRE DAME CLUB OF UTICA. NEW 1932 9005 188th St., Hollis, L. I., New York YORK—Dr. John F. Kelley. '22. Peoples- 1933 Donald Wise 1246 Hillcrest Road, South Bend, Indiana Gas & Electric Bldg.. President: Joseph W. Fullem. '31. 1621 Nuilson St.. Sec­ retary. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA —John B. Beardon, •22, IS Union Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh, President: Joseph Bach, '25, Duquesne University Athletic* Dept., Pittsburgh, Secretary. DISTRICT GOVERNORS NOTRE DAME CLUB OF WESTERN District Gallic Address WASHINGTON—Dr. Qarence Shannon. I John W. Eggeman. '00 Old First Bank Bldg., Fort Wa>-ne, Ind. O.S. '02: Stimson Bldg., Seattle. Wash.. II Danid Hilgartner, Jr.. '17 2039 E. 72nd PI.. Chicago, Illinois. President: E. Morris Starret, '14-21, EI. '23. 801 Washington St., Port Town- III E. C. McHugh. '13 4220 Cherry St., Cincinnati, Ohio send, Wash., Secretary. IV John V. Diener. '09 704 Cass St.. Green Bay, Wisconsin V Raymond J. Kelly, '15 City Hall, Detroit, Michigan NOTRE DAME CLUB OF WATERBURY —George A. Gaffney, 'SS-'SO, 54 Park VI Thomas Farrell, '26 96 N. Walnut St. East Orange. N. J. PI., Waterbury, Conn., President: James VII William A. Daunt, '08 110 E. 42nd St. New York City M. Monaghan, '27, 44 Ayer St., Water- VIII Dr. Robert Bums, '17 948 Main St. Buffalo, New York bury, Conif., Secretary. IX Joseph P. Gartland. '27 60 Congress St.. Boston, Mass. NOTRE DAME CLUB OF WHEELING, X Anselm D. Miller. '25 1238 Maple St, Roanoke, Va. W. VA.—Thomas F. Howley. '11. Citi­ XI Harold Foley. '21 Foley, Florida zens-Peoples Trust Co.. Wheeling. Presi­ dent: George Sargus, '28, 2111 Belmont, XII Frank Bloemer. '22 126 E. Jefferson St. Louisville, Ky. Bellaire, Ohio, Secretary. XIII Arthur Carmody. '15 819 Slattery Bldg.. Shreveport La. XIV Joseph A. Menger, '25 107 Catherine Court San Antonio. Texas THE WOMEN'S CLUB OF NOTRE Dr. D. M. Nigro. '14 DAME—Sister M. Agnes Alma. O. P.. XV 531 Argyle Bldg., Kansas City, Missouri Mt. St. Mary-on-the-Hudson. Newburgh. XVI Richard B. Swift '20 Kohl Bldg.. Davenport. Iowa New York. President: Miss Rose Stef- XVII Dr. B. C. Monahan. '90 418 Hennessy Bldg., Butte, Montana faniak, 161 Walnut St., Coldwater, Mich. Secretary. XVIII Robert Fox, '01 5730 17th Ave. Parkway, Denver, Colorado XIX James D. Barry, '97 82 W. Pennington St. Tucson, Arizona NOTRE DAME CLUB OF YOUNGS- XX Howard Parker, '17 Sutter Club, Sacramento, California TOWN—John J. Kane. Jr.. '25, 1018 E. M. Starrett, '21 First National Bank. President: Norman XXI 801 Washington St, Port Townsend, Washington Smith, '24, 126 Roslyn Dr., Secretary. xxn Alfonso Zobel, '24 CO. -Ayala & Cia, 21 Galle Juan Luna. Manila, P. L voi/f\LA garettes

Of all the ways in which tobacco is used the cigarette is the mildest form

ou know, ever since the In­ Ydians found out the pleasure of smoking tobacco, there have been many ways of enjoying it. But of all the ways in which tobacco is used, the cigarette is the mildest form. Everything that money can buy and everything that Science knows about is used to make Chesterfields. The tobaccos are blended and cross-blended the right way — the cigarettes are made right — the paper is right. There are other good cigarettes, of course, but Chesterfield is the cigarette thai's milder the cigarette that tastes better esterfield ^^. .just try diem

© 1933. IiGOEiT S: MYBBS TOBACCO CO.