The Notre Dame Scholastic 419 COMMENT |i|ttll(llllliii(i

You have just returned from a dance. The orchestra leader has twisted himself into various contor- No^re Dame 5choiast io tionistic poses in an attempt to be in bisce - Q,ua3i • 5 emper -Vicl;urus»Vlve'Qua5i«CraS'Morilurtts harmony with the jazz. For several Founded in 1872 hours you have heard pleas to release the heat, to maintain a singing voice MURRAY HICKEY LEY Editor-itt-Chief HAKLEY L. MCDEVITT Graduate Manager in the midst of a deluge. But what have you now that you did not have EDITORIAL STAFF when you went to the dance? What T. VINCENT MCINTIRE Managing Editor EMIL L. TELFEL Assistant Managing Editor has been added to your inner self? THOMAS A. CANNON Assistant Managing Editor What is present that was not present J. ARCHER HURLEY The Week some time ago? WALTER LANGFORD The College Parade JOEL EGERER Muaie and Drama A H: V RAMON G. SMITH Campus Clubs ALFRED E. GALL Script Editor You have just returned from a PAUL J. HALUNAN Features Editor concert. Some of the admittedly great spirits of the race have had ' NEWS STAFF their visions of the world and of JOHN BERGAN. News Editor JAMES J. KEARNEY RICHARD J. O'DONNELL GEORGE ALLAN - reality interpreted, for you, by a JAMES COLUNS NEIL HURLEY LESLIE RADDATZ JOSEPH REEDY EDWARD CONNORS group of musicians. HOWARD "WEBSTER EDWARD BRENNAN WILUA:.! KAUI. The views that certain men enter­ AUSTIN BOYLE JOHN MOTZ JAMES CARMODY tained of the eternally present truths, SPORTS STAFF their i-eports on their meetings with JOHN A. KIENER, Sports Editor WILLIAM J. MAGARRAL, InterhaU Sports Editor the air-stalking Giants of Beauty, HARRY A. SYLVESTER, JR. HENRY B. ASMAN JAJIES E. MCFEELY, Jn. have been presented to you. And you, BUSINESS STAFF supposedly, have listened, impres- HARRINGTON J. NOON Local Circulation Manager sionistically, to their reports. What CHESTER M. ASHMAN. .Foreign Circulaiion Manager has been added to your inner self? FREDERICK N. DAVIS Local Advertising Manager What is present that was not present JAMES L. RIZER Foreign Advertising Manager some time ago? JAMES H. RORKE WILLIAM SHERMAN JOHN BLANDA FREDERICK J. BAUER FRANK J. CONBOY ANDREW MCGUAN MERLE V. BALDIVIN NORMAN E. DUKE You have just returned from a visit to a picture gallery. There you VOL. LXIII. JANUARY 10, 1930. No. 14. have seen intense visions of life given intense form in an intense medium. You have seen life given a colored TABLE OF CONTENTS equivalent, you have seen experience find black and white to translate itself, so that you might share the Sacred Heart Statue Frontispiece original experience. You have seen a Coming Events 422 canvas still quivering from the brush A Man About the Campus—J??ni7 L. Telfel ! 42-3 of the wings of Beauty. What has New Law Building to be Erected 42.5 been added to your inner self? What is present that was not present some Music and Drama—Joel Egerer 42.5 time ago? Campus Clubs—Ramon G. Smith 428 College Parade—Walter Langfoo-d 429 The Week—Archer Hurley 430 You have just finished reading a Editor's Page 431 book. You have read what the wi-iter would have told you had he been "I Am the Beginning and the End"—AZ/reci E. Gall 432 present. A vision of life, a Aasion of The Wink 1 434 people, a vision of the world, still wet Blue and Gold Quintet Beats Indiana—John A. Kiener 435 with the dew of the claws of the Splinters From the Press Box—Harry A. Sylvester 445 morning. What has been, added to On Down the Line 448 your inner self? What is present that was not present some time ago? THE SCHOLASTIC is published weekly at the . Manu­ * * * scripts may be addressed to THE SCHOLASTIC, Publications Office, Main Building. Comment on our two persistent questions is needless. In fact words Entered as second-class matter at Notre Dame, Indiana. Acceptance for mailing at special rate of postage. Section 1103, October 3, 1917, authorized June 25, 1918. of any kind, save some six, are un­ necessary. Those six form, peculiarly THE ADVERTISERS IN NOTRE DAME PUBLICATIONS DESERVE THE PATRONAGE OF enough, a question: have you a sense ALL NOTRE DAME MEN. of values? Q., ..»d 420 The Notre Dame Scholastic

H The Notre Dame Scholastic 421

SCIENCE ACADEMY HOLDS (b) Pre-legal students will be re­ nounced by Dean James E. McCarthy, quired to take Mental Disorders and FIRST 1930 MEETING of the College of Commerce. Criminal Law only. Two additional Mr. McJunkin ^vill lecture in Wash­ The Notre Dame Academy of Sci­ hours to complete the number of re­ ington Hall on Tuesday, January 14, ence opened the year with a lively quired hours in the major subject at 3 o'clock. He will speak on some session Monday night in Science Hall. may be selected. [See (a) above.] phases of advertising, and his lecture A large attendance was present. It is urged that all students in this will mark the second of a series in­ group take as their elective course stituted by the College of Commerce Mario Ramacciotti, of Wheaton, 111., Accounting for Lawyers, a new for the special benefit of the Juniors senior in the pve-medical school, pre­ course taught in the College of Com­ and Seniors in that school. sented a paper on the ductless glands, merce to meet the need of pre-law Mr Massman will speak on Tues­ pointing out their general influence on students. This course will be taught day, January 21, in Washington Hall bodily functions. three times a week, (c) Probation at 3 o'clock, and his lecture will be EdA\-ard T. Yorke, of Carteret, N. Work students will be i-equired to take concerned with chain store meth­ J., president of the Academy, present­ Delinquency and Probation, Principles ods of advertising-. ed some considerations regarding in­ of Social Case Work I., and Field In view of the fact that Mr. Mc­ sanity, showing the stubborn resist­ Work I. Either one or two credit Junkin and Mr. Massman are execu­ ance mental diseases offer to cure. A hours may be earned in Field Work. tives in nationally kno\\'n concerns, discussion among the members fol­ One elective course may be taken. it is indeed fortunate that the College lowed the presentation of this paper. Mental Disorders and Criminal Law of Commerce has been successful in are required in the senior year. Freeman Longwell, of South Bend, securing them to speak before its secretary of the organization, an­ "The elective courses open to stu­ members. nounces that the Academy will have dents not majoring in sociology are an open meeting January 20, at which Mental Disorders, Criminal Law and time Dr. Savery, of South Bend, will Rural Sociology." A. S. M. E. VISITS STUDE- talk. The meeting will be held in the BAKER PLANT south room of the library instead of The first inspection trip of the new­ Science Hall. EXAMINATION SCHEDULE ly organized branch of the American RELEASED Society of Mechanical Engineers was taken Wednesday, December 18, SOCIOLOGY COURSES FOR Two more weeks are left to prepare through the Studebaker power plant. SECOND SEMESTER for the semester examinations. Tlie The boiler and turbine rooms, as Avell tests will start on Friday, January 24, ANNOUNCED as the fuel analysis laboratory, were and will continue until Tuesday, Jan­ included in the trip, which was con­ The Department of Sociology makes uary 28. The Reverend Emiel De- ducted by Mr. Toby, chief operating the following announcements con­ Wulf, C.S.C, has announced that the engineer of the plant. examinations will be the customary cerning courses in the second semes­ Mr. J. H. Clouse, instructor in two hours in length. The complete ter: "The scope of the course, Mental mechanical engineering, and fifteen schedule follows: Disorders and Criminal Law, will be upperclassmen made the trip. Friday, January 24—Classes taught broadened so as to include such mat­ A business meeting will be held ter as is usually taught in courses on Mondays (but not Tuesdays) at 8:00, 10:00, 1:15, and 2:15 will be Wednesday, January 15, at 7:45 p. m. which attempt to give social workers in Badin Hall basement. A constitu­ some idea of the general rules of law, examined at 8:00, 10:00, 1:15 and 3:15. tion, registration of members, the na­ as well as to point out needed social tional charter and other items of im­ Saturday, January 25 — Classes legislation. In this way the course portance will be taken up. will meet the need of the student who taught on Tuesdays at 8:00, 10:00, merely wishes to find out something 1:15, and 2:15 will be examined at about law, as well as the pre-law 8:00, 10:00, 1:15, and 8:15. student. Rural Sociology, announced Monday, January 27 — Classes "ALUMNUS" OUT WEDNES­ in the catalog as an evening class, will taught on Mondays at 9:00, 11:00, DAY, JANUARY 15 and 3:15 will be examined at 8:00, be taught during the day instead. De­ According to James E. Armstrong, 10:00, and 1:15. linquency and Probation, Principles of alumni secretary, the January num­ Tuesday, January 28 — Classes Social Case Work, and Field Work ber of the Alumnus will be released taught on Tuesdays at 9:00, 11:00, will be limited to students majoring the 15th of this month. The new plan and 8:15 will be examined at 8:00, in Probation Work and Boy Guidance. for the co-operation of the alumni 10:00, and 1:15. "Students majoring in sociology are association with the University offi­ di\aded into three groups. General cials, which has been drawn up by •Sociology, Pre-legal Sociology, and PROMINENT EXECUTIVES Judge John D. Eggeman of Fort Probation Work. Information con­ Wayne, president of the Alumni As­ cerning courses in each group is as TO SPEAK HERE sociation, and James E. Armstrong, follows: (a) General Sociology stu­ Mr. McJunkin, Pi-esident of the Mc- will be one of the features of the dents may take Mental Disorders and Junkin Advertising Company, Chica­ issue. The Reverend Charles L. Criminal Law, and Rural Sociology. go, and OMr. F. H. Massman, Vice- O'Donnell, C.S.C, president of the A list of certain courses in closely President of the National Tea Com­ University, has written an article, related departments which may be pany have been scheduled to speak "The Needs of the University," which taken for credit in sociology may be before the students of the University will be one of the features of the obtained at the office of the Dean. during the month of Januarj'^, as an­ January Alumnus. 422 The Notre Dame Scholastic

VILLAGERS TO HOLD POST- SCRIBBLERS ANNOUNCE Coming Events EXAM DANCE POETRY CONTEST The Villagers' Club of Notre Dame With this issue of the SCHOLASTIC will sponsor a Post-Exam dance to be the Scribblers announce the opening FRIDAY, Jan. 10—SCHOLASTIC Edi­ given Tuesday night, January 28, in of the annual poetry contest. This torial staff meeting-, Publications the Palais Royale ballroom in South contest is open to all students of the oifice, Main building, 7:00 p. m.— Bend. Tlie dance, an annual affair, University, and all campus writers, re­ Mo\ies, Gary Cooper and Fay Wray will mark the close of the mid-year gardless of class rank or club affilia­ in "The Legion of the Condemned," examinations at the University. tions, ai-e urged to submit verse. Washington Hall, 6:40 and 8:15 Myron Waltz and his Hotel LaSalle In past yeai's the poetry contests p. m. orchestra, one of the best known dance which the Sciibblers have sponsored orchestras in this vicinity, have been SATUEDAY, Jan. 11 — , have been brilliant successes. Last engaged to play for dancing. The Notre Dame vs. Marquette Uni­ year over one hundred manuscripts band will offer several distinct versity, gymnasium, 8:00 p. m. wex-e submitted to the judges and novelty acts during the evening. prizes were awai-ded to Murray SUNDAY, Jan. 12 — Masses, Sa­ Forrest Hazen has been named gen­ Young, Brother Emil, C.S.C., and cred Heart Church, 6:00, 7:00 and eral chairman of arrangements for Cyril Mullen. It is hoped that as 8:00 a. m.—High Mass at 9:00 a. the affair by John R. Marcus, presi­ great interest will be shown in this m.—Benediction, 7:30 p. m. dent of the club. Assisting him will contest as has been in those of the be Robert Holmes, Charles Cashman, past. , MONDAY, Jan. 13—Cap and gown Jack Fritzer, Al Mailing, Rolland Further infoi-mation concerning the measurements, Carroll Hall refec­ Poulin, and Edward Riley. poetry contest, the rules, judges, and tory, 2:00-5:00 i). m.—A. I. E. E. the closing date, will be announced in meeting. Engineers' Eoom, Badin subsequent issues of the SCHOL.A.STIC. Hall, 8:00 p. ni.—Knights of Co­ COACH ROCKNE TO LEAVE lumbus meeting. Council Chambers, ON SOUTHERN TRIP Walsh Hall, 8:00 p. m. KJnute Rockne, the University's di­ MANY SHAKESPEARE STU­ rector of athletics and famous foot­ DENTS SEE LEIBER IN TUESDAY, Jan. 14 — Philadelphia ball coach, is leaving the snowy rigors Club meeting. Law building, 8:00 of South Bend's climate within the CHICAGO p. m.—Wranglers meeting. Public next few days for the sunny charms Many of Mr. Rufus Rauch's Speaking Room, Walsh Hall, 8:00 of Miami Beach, Florida. Coach Shakespeare students have been for­ p. m.—Scribbler's meeting. Journal­ Rockne was still undecided this week tunate this season in seeing some of ism Eoom, Library, 7:45 p. m.— as to whether he would leave Sunday the plays of Fritz Leiber. Mr. Ranch, Last day for cajj and gown meas­ or Monday, but was evidently anxious after observing the Shakespeare urements for seniors, old Cari'oll to start on his long-promised vaca­ movement for some time has made Hall refectory, 2:00-5:00 p. m.— tion. Only a few members of his im­ some pertinent remarks anent the neo- Press Club meeting, Lay Faculty mediate family are to accompany him. Shakesperean tendency. dining room, 8:00 p. m. The trip will not be a pleasure "The test for any drama is the WEDNESDAY, Jan. 15 — Rocky jaunt, but an opportunity for the stage, ultimately and finally. We, in Mountain Club meeting. Law build­ much needed rest "Rock" courageous­ the Middle West, are fortunate, in ing, 7:45 1). m.—Alumnus will ap­ ly denied himself while fighting fact most fortunate, in having such pear on the stands. through the football season with his an organization in our midst as The championship team. When asked if Chicago Civic Shakespeare Company. THURSDAY, Jan. 16—A. S. M. E. he would return in the spring Mr. The repertoire of the group consists business meeting, Badin Hall, 7:45 Rockne said, "I hope so, but I'll stay of ten plays of three different types, p. m.—Spectators meeting, Journal­ until I get well." comedies, tragedies and histories. It ism Room, Library, 7:45 p. m. would be easy to be hypercritical but on a whole the work is very well FRIDAY, Jan. 17—SCHOLASTIC Edi­ ANNOUNCE K. OF C. MEET­ done." torial staff meeting. Publications ING, JANUARY 13 Mr. Leiber is considered best in the office. Main building, 7:00 p. m. Next Monday evening, January 13, a sijecial meeting of Notre Dame tragedies and of these Hamlet is his Council, Knights of Columbus, has finest achievement. The Company has been called by Grand Knight John a five year contract in Chicago and NOTICE! Chevigny. It will be the first meet­ next year hopes to add other Old English plays to its repertoire. It Contributions for "Scrip," the liter­ ing of the new year and the last be­ has been financially successful, an<.l ary quarterly, must be in not later fore examinations. Final plans for than January 27. They may be sent the initiation will be announced and New York producers have entered in­ to Louis C. Heitger, 305 Walsh HalL various other business matters dis­ to rather serious competition for road No matter what pseudonym contri­ cussed. A prominent speaker has showing. - butions are published under, the been secured for the evening. Grand "In this day of hoped for 'big runs' author's name must be kncwn by the Knight Chevigny urges that all the Leiber is to be highly commended for editor. This applies to some anony­ members attend. The importance of his excellent work in this field. Let mous compositions already in the this cannot be stressed too much; in us only hope that more students will hands of the board, as well as any fact the meeting will see transacted take advantage of this truly fine op­ contributions submitted in the future. much business of pressing import: portunity next season." The Notre Dame Scholastic 423

mittee and the LaA^'yer's Ball com­ "JUGGLER" ARTICLE RE­ mittee. He has been a member of the A Man About the Campus Monogram Club for three years; this PRINTED IN "JESTER" year he is secretary-treasurer of that An article by Coach Rockne, en­ organization. The Law Club numbers titled "My First Football Game," When one interviews "Ooney" Don­ him among its members. Last—at which appeared in the Football Num­ ovan one also inter\aews his room­ least in his estimation—^he is a mem­ ber of the Juggler, was reprinted in mate, Frank Dailey. At least, that ber of the Blue Circle, and he has been a recent issue of the Jester, humoi*- was our experience. The interview a member of its Vigilance committee, our publication of Columbia Uni­ at times took on the aspects of a duet. though "Ooney" is doubtful as to versity, New York City. In its edi­ Dailey kept suggesting very intimate whether that may be listed as an torial, the Jester commented very touches for the article; and "Ooney" honor. favorably upon Mi". Rockne's article, kept emphatically vetoing the sug­ Being a law student, "Ooney" was and upon the general excellence of gestions. From the two of them we somewhat cautious about making any the Juggler. finally managed to get enough print­ statements. He kept referring us to John L. Nano\'ic, editor of the able material, but it was a tough job. Dailey, who was quite willing to say Juggler, announces that the next something about his versatile room­ issue, the Home Town Number, will mate. be out sometime between the 15th "Donovan," said Dailey, "was quite and 20th of this month. He promises a lad in his day, in fact, he still is. an exceptionally fine number, with He lives in Bedford, Indiana, and the many new and striking .features, the Sorin Sub, and is a junior in law. natui-e of which he wishes to keep a When he first came to Notre Dame surprise. Howevei", he gave out the he had ambitions to be a mechanical information that the various home engineer, and accordingly, enrolled in towns of the students will be fea­ the College of Engineering. But— tured. realizing his mistake two days later, he decided that he wanted a broaden­ ing education rather than a narrow­ McDEVITT ELECTED TO IN­ ing specialization; so he changed his course to liberal arts. He has never TERCOLLEGIATE PIC­ regretted the change, as he has dis­ TORIAL COUNCIL covered that the good old classical Harley L. McDe^dtt, Graduate Man­ Clarence J. Donovan course is an excellent and necessary foundation for the study of that ager of Publications at the Uni­ noblest of the professions—law." versity, was elected one of the "Ooney" is captain of the basketball seven members of the executive coun­ team, which statement is more or less Being properly impressed by such cil for the Intercollegiate Pictorial unnecessary. The captaincy is his re­ oratory, we did not further impoi-tune Association, at the first meeting of ward for three years of extremely Donovan for a statement, but the Association, held December 27, efficient guard play. Donovan is one "Ooney," with the professional jeal­ 1929, at the Dartmouth Club in New of the cleverest guards to be de­ ousy of the lawyer, made this rather York City. veloped at Notre Dame—^with all due cryptic remark as we were about to The purpose of the Association is respect to players like Dahman, Con- leave: the betterment of relations between roy, and Smith. His floor work and "The Navy and Elder forever." American and foreign universities. passing are superb, and his accuracy With this purpose in mind, the Asso­ at long range is.uncanny. ciation will publish a magazine: The Donovan's basketball honors are VILLAGERS HOLD JANU­ Intercollegiate Pictorial. The pro­ equalled by his distinctions in other ceeds from the sale of the publica­ fields. The phrase, "a scholar, an ARY MEETING tion will be placed in a scholarship fund which \\iW. be used to enable athlete, and a gentleman," can be The January meeting of the Vil­ American students to study at foreign applied to him very fittingly. Tliat lagers' Club was held last Monday universities and foreign students to he is a scholar is proved by the fact evening, January 6, at the Rose Marie study at American universities. Nel­ that the Keach-Hering award for the Tea Room. son Rockefeller of Dartmouth College monogram man having the highest The Reverend J. Hugh O'Donnell, was chosen editor of the Intercol­ scholastic average of his class was C.S.C., and Professor H. C. Staunton, legiate. awarded to him in his junior year. of the English department gave short, That he is a gentleman is attested to interesting talks. Mr. George Eastman of the East­ by all who know him, including the The principal business of the meet­ man Kodak Company and Mr. John writer, who once received financial ing was devoted to making plans for D. Rockefeller, Jr., are the sponsors proof of it. the post-exam dance which is to be of the movement, which embraces In his sophomore year "Ooney" was held on Tuesday, January 28, at the most of the leading universities and elected president of his class. In his Palais Royale. colleges of the country. The next junior year he became secretary of A report was also given on the meeting of the organization is to be the Student Activities Council; he Christmas Formal the most success­ held during the Easter vacation at the was also on the Junior Prom Com­ ful affair ever sponsored by the club. Princeton Club in New York City. 424 The Notre Dame Scholastic

COFFIN FELLOWSHIP AP­ ATTENTION, SENIORS! SPECTATORS TOUCH DI­ PLICATIONS NOW Absolutely no orders will be taken VERSE TOPICS IN for ca]3S and gowns after Tuesday, BEING MADE MEETING Januai-y 14. Measux-ements will be Last night saw the first meeting of The Charles A. Coffin Foundation, taken in the old Cax-roU Hall refectox-y the Spectators Club for the year 1930. established some years ago by the between the hours of 2:00 and 5:00 p. President Hasley called the meeting General Electxic Company, has an­ m. on Monday and Tuesday. Those to order and briefly outlined the pro­ nounced that applications are now who ai'e late this time will be assessed gram to be followed by the club this being made for the Charles A. Coffin for the cost of a special measurement. year. The schedule calls for the in­ Fellowships for 1930-31. It will be remembered that Wednes­ troduction of many diverse topics, and The terms of the Charles A. Coffin day, December 18, was set as a dead­ an attempt at an intelligent fox-mula- Foundation made provisions for the line for measuz'ements, but the num­ tion of a scale of values to govex'n the award of five thousand dollars an­ ber of tardy senioi-s was so gi'eat that selective process. nually for fellowships to graduates this extension is being gx-anted. Don John Hickey pi-esented some perti­ of the universities, colleges, and Sullivan wishes to remind the un- nent data on Oriental Religioiis, dis­ technical schools throughout the measux-ed seniox-s that the caps and cussing the personalities of their who have shown, by gowns must be ready in time for the founders and pointing out the sig-nifi- the character of their work, that they cex-emonxes on Washington's Bix-thday, cance of the enox-mous numbei-s of could, with advantage, undertake or February 22. their followers. continue research work in educational Murray Hickey Ley spoke on "Criti- institutions either in this country or , cism Today," setting forth in the abroad. coux'se of his remarks the diiferences ax-chit€ctux-al guidance of an eax-Ij^ Tlie fields in which these fellow­ between the "Impx-essionist" and the Brother and was completed in 1893. ships are to be awarded are Electrici­ "Objectivist" schools of cx-itical The building was used as a Com­ ty, Physics and Physical Chemistry. thought. Walter Pater and T. S. munity House until 1896, when due to The Committee, composed of Mr. Eliot, Arthur Symons and Norman the congested conditions in Brownson Gano Dunn, representing the National Foerster wex-e lined, one against the and CaxToU dorxnitories it was opened Academy of Sciences, Mr. E. I. Rees, other, in critical battle array. representing the Society for Promo­ to the students. For years athletes of the University, including our jjres- The meeting concluded with a heat­ tion of Engineez-ing Education, and ed discussion anent the relative values Mr. Harold B. Smith, representing the ent football coach, Mx*. Knute Eockne, chose Corby "Sub" as their exclusive of subjectivism and scrupulous ob­ American Institute of Electrical En­ servance of standards. gineers, desires to make the awards to i-esidence. Many px-iests of the faculty men who without financial assistance, also lived in Cox-by. would be unable to devote themselves The personnel of the Hall has al­ to reseax-ch work. Tlie fellowships ways been x-epx-esented in campus ox-- vdll carry a minimum allowance of ganizations, and this year Corby men five hundred doUai-s. This allowance ax-e to be found in some of the most The new Law Bulletin and Alumni may be increased to meet the special outstanding campus clubs, such as the needs of applicants to whom the Com­ Dix-ectox-y, which is published by the Wx-anglei's, Scribblei-s, and Spectators. students in the College of Law, has mittee de'cides to award the Fellow­ Last year's vice-px-esident of the Jun­ ships. recently been released for distribu­ ior class, John Mox*an, resides with tion. An axxhitect's drawing of the Jim Deely, senior representative of new law building, which will be ready CORBY HALL MAKES CLAIM the Students' Activities Council. Two for use by Septembex-, 1930, appears other members of the S. A. C, Jack on the f x-ontispiece. FOR CAMPUS HONORS Keefe, secretary, and Hax-old Duke, treasurex-, also reside within its pox*- * * • >;= Corby Hall, one of the old and tals. Emil L. Telfel and Thomas Can­ Dean T. F. Konop has returned uniquely situated buildings on the non, assistant managing editors of the fx'om New Ox-leans, where he attended campus, makes its debut this week SCHOLASTIC, and J. Hax*rington Noon, the annual session of the Association as not only a hall of fame and honor, cix-culation managex-, x-eside on the of Amex-ican Law Schools. The ses­ but also as a i)ortrayal of Notre Dame second floox*. Mx-. Telfel, aside fi-om sion lasted four days, and he x-epox-ts history. Its picturesque location af­ his editorial duties, conducts sevex-al that it was interesting as well as in­ fords a panoramic view of the cam­ columns, including "A Man About the structive. The Political Science Asso­ pus, grotto, and Saint Mary's lake. Campus" and "A Man You Know." ciation was also holding a convention The hall received its name in honor The Corby vax-sity football players in New Orleans at the same time. of the Very Reverend William Corby, and letter men for this year are: C.S.C, who, following the Civil War, Richard Donoghue, tackle; Thomas served as president of the University Kassis, guard; Norbex-t Christman, Judge M. M. Oshe, of the Chicago and later as Provincial of the Congre­ quax'terback; Marchmont Schwax-tz, Title and Trust Company, will deliver gation of Holy Cross. His statue, halfback. a lectux-e to the law students on Fri­ erected near the entrance of the hall, day, January 10, at 2:00 p. m. pictures an historical scene px-eceding Scholastically, Corby Hall is well the battle of Gettysburg, when Father known as holding high averages, and Corby gave general absolution to his for this a great deal of credit is due to Professor Brandt, of the University battalion. He was Chaplain of the the Reverend Dominic O'Malley, C. S. of Minnesota, will deliver a series of Sixty-Ninth New York Irish Brigade. C, who for eight years has served as lectures at the law school dux*ing the The hall was erected under the I'ectoi". week of January 13 to 17. ..-• l...,.j.^.,^' ...... y -a.iTiiVjfiirhafi'i

The Notre Dame Scholastic 425

in spite of its being slightly inferior New Law Building to be Erected to the former attempt of Kaufman in collaboration with Edna Ferber. The Notre Dame College of Law pression of the Gothic art, the dining Sunday evening Rosa Raisa and will be housed in a new building after hall being a somewhat modified Giacomo Rimini will give a joint re­ completion of the present school year. Gothic, and less ornate than the con­ cital at the Civic Opera House. It is Work has begun on the new structure, templated building. for the benefit of the Rosa Raisa and the Ralph SoUitt Construction The interior will be richly fitted Scholarship Fund and begins at 8:1-5. Company has contracted to finish it by with floors of marble and terrazzo If you should like to hear Mischa the beginning of the term next Sep­ composition, and marble walls in the Elman on Sunday afternoon, Januai-y tember. The building will be erected main reading room. In this room will 19, it were better that you write on the site directly across from the be three magnificent stone columns, to the box office of Orchestra Hall for Post Office and will have a frontage and an exposed hammer-beam ceiling your tickets immediately. of 100 feet on Dore Road and of 157 luxuriously furnished in oak. Unit ^ feet on Notre Dame Avenue. The ex­ heaters using both steam and warm ARMSTRONG PRESIDES AT cavation, which is already well under air will supply heat and there will be ALUMNI JMEETING way, is being carried on by the same a modern ventilation system. crew that has been working on the Inside the entrance there will be Ml'. James Armstrong, secretaiy of new stadium. an elaborately decorated hall with a the Notre Dame Alumni Association great double staircase leading to the and editor of the Notre Dame AZMHI- The building will represent an out­ upper floors. The class room and «?i.s, departed January 9 for Wooster, lay of approximately $400,000. It will stack rooms for the filing of books Ohio, where he will preside at a meet­ be three stories high, and of true and papers will be designed for beauty ing of the American Alumni Council Gothic form. The exterior will be of as well as for utility, in keeping with which is being held at Wooster Col­ Gothic brick trimmed with Indiana the plan of the rest of the building. lege. Mr. Ai-mstrong is chairman of limestone and granite, and will be The plans for the new structure the Fifth District of the Council richly ornamented with Gothic tracery were drawn by Maginnis and Walsh, which includes the alumni of colleges and embellished with statues and architects of Boston. This firm is con­ and universities of eight different carvings. The structure will har­ sidered the foremost in the country states. All the schools in these states monize with its near architectural in this type of work, and many of the have been in\ated to send representa­ neighbor, the University dining hall, buildings at Boston College were de­ tives to the meeting, and it is e.x- but will present a more faithful ex- signed by them. pected that more than fifty will attend. The purpose of the meeting is to further the organization and activities of the alumni of the schools . the dance as the Theramin is in the which are represented in the Council. world of music. For several years Music and Drama they have been wox-king in Germany and have at last perfected a style SCHOLARSHIP DANCE I that is subtly fine in- its beauty. The chief characteristic of their NEXT SATURDAY Last night the Roxy String quartet dancing is lovely movements of the The Scholarship Club will sponsor was heard in Washington Hall and hands and a sense of perfect, un­ its third dance of the school year next with them was an old Notre Dame broken rythm. They seem ethereal in Friday evening, Ja"nuary 17, in the favorite, Chicago's contribution to the their movements and at the same time gymnasium of Saint Joseph's School, world of melody, nimble-fingered Lee perfectly substantial. They are fleet­ Hill Street and Colfax Avenue, South Simms. Mr. Simms is about as clever ing visions of graceful and perfect Bend. Music will be furnished by the at jazz tunes as anyone could wish. bodies guided by intelligent minds: "Jugglers", from 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. He is the sort of person that personified music seems to approach This will mark the last dance of the starts out with Broadivay Melody, as near as any other term in describ­ semester for the student body, and the runs through Home, Sioeet Home, a ing them. Thej"- gave a concert at Or­ committee in chai-ge has announced chestra Hall, Chicago, last Sunday Haydn Sonata, Yes We Have No that a large number of girls will be afternoon, and unfortunately it is pz-esent. The usual prices for admis­ Bananas; and he will possibly end their only appearance in that city sion will prevail. with The Star Spangled Banner. He this season. Among the numbers on leaves his audience in a perfect maze their program were the famous as to what has been going on, but it is "Angel of the Annunciation," and ALUMNI HONORED IN conscious of a wonderful bit of tune "Jester's Dance." SOUTH BEND weaving and variations that is seldom Well, Jwne Moon was a success in­ Walter L. Clements, '22, and M. found in a modern pianist of his sofar as a sparkling bit of humor and Edward Doran, '21, were signally hon­ type. a really well staged play go, but it ored in the new city administration Harald Kreutzberg and Yvonne was anti-climactical in comparison that took office Monday in South Georgi! Two names that have re­ with the Royal Family. George Kauf­ Bend. Mi-. Clements Avas appointed cently flashed across the billboards of man's lines were brimming over with city attorney and Mr. Doran president our larger cities and two names that their usual bright wit and presented of the Board of Public Works. are impressed in the minds of those quite a contrast to Ring Lardner's Both -men are graduates of the fortunates who happened to see one more subtle contributions. It is Hojmes College of Law and were of their incomparable performances. playing at the Adelphi Theater in prominent in student affairs while at They are as unique in the world of Chicago and it surely is worth while the University. 426 The Notre Dame Scholastic

HOWARD WINS INTERHALL NEWS SERVICE FOR RELA­ DEBATE TITLE TIVES OF COLLEGE Gleanings Howard Hall led the race at the STUDENTS conclusion of the interhall debating. A college news service called Both the affirmative and the negative Collegiate A^eivs Flashes is now Newspaper writers in Hollywood teams came through in fine style. issued by the Radio Department of insist on dwelling on the rumor that" Howard triumphed throughout the College Humor Magazine and released is to appear in the talk­ season, scoring well-deserved victories through the manufacturers of Majes­ ing picture version of the musical over Carroll and Brownson Halls. tic Radio. This should be of interest play, "Good News." "Rock", how- Freshman Hall forfeited its contests. to relatives of the one million college .ever, has publicly denied that he will enter the talkies, although he ad­ President James J. Walsh, of the students in this country as well as mitted that he received an offer. Wranglers Club, who sponsored the those in Canada and abroad. debates, pronounced the season one of The hew service will be broadcast the best ever held at Noti-e Dame, on the Majestic Hour over 46 stations Harold Lloyd has also been the re­ although he regretted the inability of of the Columbia Broadcasting System cipient of some publicity through the Freshman Hall to compete. every Sunday evening, beginning De­ coupling of his name with the "Fight­ Tim Benitz and Frank Noll, cember 22nd, 8 o'clock Central Stand­ ing Irish." Lloyd, according to the coaches of the victorious team, deserve ard Time. papers, wishes to use the Notre Dame a great deal of credit for their work. All news of students and student football team in his next picture The men were well prepared to meet activities in all institutions of learn­ which centers about college life. all the objections brought up by their ing in this country, Canada and opponents, a feat which they handily Europe will receive deserving mention accomplished. in these news flashes. Outstanding If we are to believe the Alumims, The varsity question of disarma­ achievement by individual students John McMahon, who graduated from ment was used in all of the contests. and campus groups will be reported tlie school of journalism in 1928, has Thomas Keegan, of the Wranglers, weekly. Also, particular attention will already attained prominence as sports was chairman of the committee in be given to sporting events, faculty writer in New York City. He is con­ charge. news, and individual achievements. ducting a column on sports in 'the In a few weeks a banquet will be New York Sun. John is the boy who given by the club in honor of all the DEBATE HEARD OVER alliteratively dubbed our football team participants, during which the pre­ the "Galloping Gaels." sentation of the Wranglers Cup, em­ STATION WLS blematic of success in intei-hall debat­ On Monday, Dec. 16, Notre Dame ing, will be presented. Also, an All- and Purdue varsity debaters engaged Frank Allen Smola, who became an Interhall debating team will be se­ in a non-decision debate over station alumnus la.st June, is at present one lected by the coaches and published in WLS in Chicago. Mr. Morris and of the privileged members of George next week's SCHOLASTIC. Mr. Otto of Purdue defended the. af­ Pierce Baker's famous Yale Theater. The members of the victorious firmative side of the question. Re­ He spent his holiday vacation com­ Howard Hall affirmative team are solved: that the prosperity of the muting between Notre Dame and Roger Bierne, Jacob Leisen, and farmer is more important to the cities Chicago. Eoger Allan. The negative team is than cheap food. Mr. Francis Mc- —0— Greal and Mr. Thomas Keegan very composed of John Barry, James Wade, Professor Charles Phillips is about and Frank Cawley. ably upheld the negative side for Notre Dame. to edit a volume of poems entitled, "Wings of Sunset," written by "TAMING OF THE SHREW" The debaters were cordially re­ Ina Coolbrith, well known California ceived by Mr. Edgar Bill, announcer NOT TO BE GIVEN AGAIN poet. Miss Coolbrith is a personal for WLS and the Notre Dame team friend of Mr. Phillips, who will write Reports circulating about the cam­ feels indebted to the station manage­ a preface to the edition. pus that another performance of "The ment for the courtesy shown them Taming of the Shrew" will be given during their brief stay. in the near future are without foun­ •Favorable comment on the debate Jack Cannon seems to have ex­ dation, those in authority declare. was extended by many in the WLS hausted the adjectives of the sport Tlie production was so successful and radio audience and it is hoped by writers of the country. All he has to was received so enthusiastically be­ those connected with the station that do now to consummate his brilliant fore the holidays that many who more debates of this type might be athletic career, is to get a match with missed it would like to have it staged engaged in during the future. Art Shires. again. No such action is contemplated, according to Mr. Frank Kelly of the Speech and Drama Department, un­ SCHOLASTIC STAFF MEETS The Reverend E. Vincent Mooney, less perhaps another performance TONIGHT C.S.C, ex-Dean of the Physical Edu­ might be given during Commencement All members of the editorial staff cation Department here, is now sta­ week for the seniors and their friends. of the SCHOLASTIC are urged to be tioned at St. Thomas Military Acad­ It is expected, however, that several present at the regular staff meeting emy in St. Paul. Father Mooney spent more productions will be given during this .evening, at seven o'clock in the' several days of the holiday vacation the year' by the University Theatre Publications Office, Main Building. in Pittsburgh, and dropped in on some in co-operation with Mr. Phillips' Plans will be made for the year's of the local boys who made their debut playA\Titing class. work. in Freshman Hall under his guidance. The Notre Dame Scholastic 427

CONLEY CHOSEN FOOT­ DEBATING SCHEDULE IS one, at the present time. It is, "Re­ BALL CAPTAIN AT ANNOUNCED solved, that all the nations- should BANQUET adopt a plan of complete. disarma­ The Reverend Francis J. Boland, ment, excepting such forces as are Tom Conley, end on the 1929 foot­ C.S.C., coach of debating, announces necessai-y for police protection." This ball team, was elected to captain next that this year's debating team faces is one of the world's foremost diplo­ years' football team at the conclusion the most difficult schedule ever matic problems today. A good deal of the annual football banquet held attempted by the debaters.' Many is being written on the subject and Wednesday evening in the Dining interesting debates have been ar­ every person is vitally interested. ranged. Western Eeserve is one of the noted teams to be met. Year in and year out they have one of the FOOTBALL BANQUET HELD best teams in the country, and this The 20th annual football banquet f-'',v year's team promises to be no excep­ C^<•'-.•. •^^ ^ was held Wednesday evening in the C» «",•"•- "j'jj'E tion. April 7, Notre Dame is to be i.t^.'. Dining Hall under the auspices of the ?'."•••; host to the Harvard Chinese de­ Athletic Association. The varsity, ft ."- <^^ baters. This team numbers among reserves, freshman squad and student -" * ?, its members last year's winner of the managers, were the guests of honor. Harvard-Yale debating contest, one of The football banquet was notable the debating classics of the East. for the presence of Coach Knute K. This same individual was also the tr - •'^<, •-. Rockne, athletic director of the Uni­ winner of the All-China debating con­ V '•'"' versity, who gave the first speech of t test before coming to America. the evening. In his short talk he ex­ An honor to be appreciated is the pressed his gratitude for the work done ^ invitation received to debate North­ by the team, coaches and managers. He western at the new McClintock cam­ introduced , assistant coach, pus. It will be held March 28. Pur­ who acted as toastmaster, and called due will be the other Big Nine school upon the following speakers: the to be debated on March 16. Over a Reverend Charles L. O'Donnell, C.S.C, hundred letters were received by sta­ president of the University,who con­ tion WLS, Chicago, regarding the re­ gratulated the team of '29 on their ToiJi Conleij cent radio debate between these two splendid sho^v^ng during the season; Joe Byrne of New Jersey, a prominent Hall. Conley, a native of Philadelphia, schools. The response was so favor­ alumnus of the University; the Rev­ was elected to succeed John Law by able that another debate will be ar­ erend J. Hugh O'Donnell, C.S.C. pre­ the monogram winners, and will be ranged with an opponent as yet not fect of Discipline of the University playing his thii-d year on the varsity selected. Other schools on the sched­ and a member of the athletic board; next year. ule are: City College of Detroit, Michigan State, and the University of Coaches Ike Voedisch, Jack Chevigny, Next years' captain is a junior in Florida. "Cap" Edwards, and Hartley Ander­ the college of Arts and Letters, and son, former coach, William Jones, played right end consistently during For the iirst time in many years the freshman coach, and , the past season. His greatest ex­ team wU travel to the East, April 22. who is leaAring the University. He hibition of play was in the Southern Princeton will be met at Trenton, and spoke briefly, and stated that he re- California game when he speared two April 23, New York University at gi'etted leaving Notre Dame and. that forward passes, making a long run New York City. The prospect of this the school would always remain in on one, and scoring a touchdown on trip has encouraged many to try for his memory. the other. He is also a member of the team and all are working hard. the varsity basketball squad, and was From the large squad of over 60 Professor Frank Dickinson of the president of the Sophomore Class, and men who began work as candidates University of Illinois presented the a member of the Student Activities for the team over a month ago, only Eessman trophy, symbolic of the na­ Council last year. twenty remain for the finals. These tional football championship, to Coach have been divided into two groups, Rockne, who accepted it for the Uni­ AIR VISITOR ON CAMPUS the first of which is to speak Friday versity. The monoplane which aroused the evening, January 10, and the second Short talks were given by the curiosity of the campus last Wednes­ on January 13. From these twenty, members of the team, who have day belonged to Max Conrad of six will be selected for the Varsity. played their last game: Captain John Winona, Minn., a former student at The team was hard hit by the loss of Law, Jack Cannon, Ted Twomey, Jack the University who at present con­ many good men through graduation. Elder, Ed Collins, John Colrick, Joe ducts a flying school at Wino'na. Haskell, McNamara, Williams, Beam- Nash, Bud Gebert, Joe Locke, Tim Max was recently injured in an er, and Happer were the men lost. Moynihan and Tom Murphy. Stu­ aeroplane accident and for that rea­ Those remaining from last year are: dent Managers, Quinn and Conroy son the plane was piloted by one of Baer, Kier, Charles Hanna, Frank also spoke. the two students who accompanied McGreal, Walter Stanton, and James The graduates were given presents him from Minnesota. Walsh. Many of the new men show of life insurance policies by Lester Conrad is leaving soon on an ex­ promise and threaten the veterans Livingston, '13, of Chicago, and the tended air voyage to Florida and the seriously for their position. monogram winners were awarded west coast, with the intention of stay­ The topic chosen for debate this gold footballs emblematic of the ing in California for some time. year is one of gi-eat interest to every­ National Championship.

miwim)i!L*ii|iiiiii.ii;r 428 The Notre Dame Scholastic D CAMPUS CLUbS D

Campus Ckibs this week will be rather a have not as yet been found . It might be well for disappointment to a great many club members a few to drop a note or so in the post office so who hoped to see their club mentioned as having that he, if no one else may benefit by the news, the most successful dance of the Christmas sea­ might know what is going on within the club. son. If there are any reading this page with no other purpose in mind, they might well discon­ If we had not promised at the beginning of this tinue the wear and tear upon their eyes at once; article not to mention more than three clubs, we there are but three, clubs directly mentioned. might here add a great many more whose Then too, there were so many successful Christ­ officers have not, as yet, mailed us a write- mas dances given by the various clubs this year up. It seems to us that it should be con­ that we couldn't keep track of them. We were sidered one of the prime purposes of a club to forced to resort to the radio to even hear music let someone know what is going on among its from any of them. Johnnie Hamp, as far as we members. The Campus Club Editor promises that have found out, entertaining approximately one- he will not be tempted* to "play favorites" if all half of the Chicago Club, was the only member club secretaries either mail details to him in of that numerous group of Campus Club enter­ Science Hall, the Publications Office, or stop him tainers who succeeded in performing before a on the campus with adequate write-ups about microphone. Nor could we even audit the Vil­ their campus clubs. lager's Formal, although we were in South Bend. Rumor, however, praised it higlily. We make this promise because we are, after all, human, and consequently have our "pet clubs"- We have gathered by this time that very few —^the kind that always have something to give us clubs tender complimentary tickets—even if they if we call,—^yes, we call,—^if the secretaries live did, we would seldom be able to take advantage somewhere between Science Hall and the Dining of them—^but we must thank the Pittsburgh Club Halls. for their nice bid although we couldn't have made Pitt on a bet. We must also thank those numer­ Not only would the Campus Club Editor benefit ous other Clubs whose officers offered assistance by more numerous write-ups in 1930, but in "crashing the gate" should we be able to ap­ if regular meeting dates, and regular places of pear. We couldn't enjoy a single Club dance this meeting were announced to him a good week in Christmas, so we will have to take your own advance, the Coming Events Editor would benefit words for the various successes,—"The Christ­ greatly also. mas dance of the Club was the best I Now that we have got this far in saying a ever attended in all my life." great deal about nothing, we shall close with a Now that we are erasing 1929 from our papers promise. This time next week, since it has been and letters as incorrect, it might be a good idea called to our attention that only a few for the Campus Club Editor to make an attempt clubs on the campus have complete charters, there at getting better acquainted with the people he will appear on this page a copy of a Campus Club has to deal with. It would be impossible for him Charter. All club presidents who have not as yet to attend each club meeting, dance and smoker secured a charter for th^ir clubs are recommend­ even if invitations were extended, so he asks that ed to fill out one, using our form as a model, and there be greater cooperation between all club sec­ hand it to the Student Activities Council retaries and himself this year. He seems to think immediately. that an editor must have some dignity about him Now we might be excused for taking up much to live up to his position, and after a few forced valuable time, in wishing you a Happy and Pros­ marches, oftentimes fruitless, about the campus perous, New Year, even this late in the game, and in search of write-ups, he feels that this dignity we sincerely include in that wish, a desire of our must suifer. Some club secretaries, he complains. own to know more of you in 1930. The Notre Dame Scholastic 429

Altitude counts for at least something at the San Jose Once more it is safe for a peaceful, law-abiding citizen State College out in balmy California. All the fellows of of Kansas to venture forth after nightfall, for a treaty the college who extend upwards for six feet, three inches, of peace has stopped, temporarily at least, the feud that or more are eligible for membership in the Longfellow raged between Kansas University students and Kansas Club, the platform of which organization includes such Aggie students. While it lasted it was a war in which planks as these: All awnings on stores should be elevated night raids were the principal sport. Painting and bai-ber- to a height of eight feet in order that the Longfellows ing also played quite a part in the activities. It seems may meander along the streets without having their hats that a bunch of Kansans would sally forth towards Man­ constantly flipped off; all hotels should provide beds eight hattan, there to paint up the town and make things in feet long to allow these elongated gentlemen to stretch out general very embarrassing for the Aggies. Even w-hile they and wiggle their toes in comfort; the rows of seats in street were engaged in these intellectual doings, a similar expedi­ cars and in theatres should be farther apart so that the tion would be on its way from Manhattan to Lawrence with long boys won't be forced to sit with their knees up around the same purposes in mind. It so happened that on some their shoulders. occasions the raiders met with a huge and hearty reception. —0— Som.etimes the hospitality was so great that the visitors just wouldn't be allowed to return for several days, and Only a few students are privileged to operate automo­ even then the hosts insisted on fixing their guests all up biles at the University of Michigan. Of course that is with beauteous haircuts a la prison. And, while we are neither very interesting nor very unusual, but now we come speaking of Kansas, we are reminded that Vachel Lindsay to something that is. Those students who are fortunate proclaims the Kansas Jayhawk yell as the best college yell enough to have cars are strictly forbidden to give rides to in the country. And everyone must admit that Vachel other students. And there is also another interesting point knows his yells. in regard to the auto ban. The only students who can drive cars are the ones who are married, and since the ban has —0— been in effect a record number of students have come to The Eunomian fraternity at Michigan State recently the office of the dean with demands for permits to drive suffered what might have been a very embarrassing loss automobiles on the grounds that they are married. It is in slightly different circumstances. Someone stole the bath­ feared that, at the present rate, marriage and matricula­ tub of the society, and for a day or two no one succeeded tion may soon become coordinated as ceremonies attendant in locating the truant vessel. The Eunomians, however, on registration at Michigan. No doubt this effect is entirely had already decided that bathing in a bathtub is a practice at variance with the motive of the Eegents in passing the to be associated with the folks in history and accordingly ban, but anyway the justices of the peace up in that neck had installed other and more modern conveniences. The of the woods look upon the whole affair as a mighty good theft, therefore, was not nearly so bad as it might have proposition. been, from their point of view. But the thing that made —0— the recovery of the tub imperative was the fact that they It seems that all we need here in The Rainy State are had inveigled some unsuspecting person into buying the a few chimes. At Ohio State when the rain is falling with tub and now could not make delivery until it was found. that maddening steadiness and puddles are everywhere, Finally it was discovered and the news went forth that it when students both flickered and otherwise are splashing had been taken by a certain professor, who claimed to have to classes and from them through the mud and water, when been under the impression that the Eunomians had set the once-dignified professors are frantically leaping puddles tub outside for anyone who wanted it to cart away. with brief cases clutched close to their bosoms and with —0— hang-dog expressions on their faces,—in short, when every­ Those co-eds of Ohio State who are more-than-pleasingly one has the blues because it's raining, they simply start plump have resorted to reducing tables in an effort to playing some song like "Singin' in the Rain" on the Orton regain or attain the sylph-like figures we hear so much Hall chimes, which can be heard all over the campus. The about and see so little of. Each of these co-eds receives effect, according to all reports, is immediate and miraculous. 1500 calories a meal and no more. If this campaign proves Everyone starts singing the chorus, no matter where or a success there will probably be .an influx into that uni­ who he be. Those few who do not know the words hum versity of co-eds who rather run to avoirdupois. the tuneful refrain, whistling being too difficult in the rain. Slickers and umbrellas fairly glisten with joy. The stu­ dents all grin and even the profs smile a little bit. The Here is one for the masculine element to gloat over. whole campus is turned into an ecstasy of song and good The journalism classes at Oregon State College were given will. So it looks like we shall certainly have to install an exam on current events, and in each of the three classes some chimes. But we will have to have at least two sets the twelve highest scores were made by men. These three of them, for you know continuous action will wear out dozen gentlemen are due a vote of thanks for taking the almost anything. co-eds down several notches. 430 The Notre Dame Scholastic

^_JNE of the accidental pleasures of going home is in official request that no sleeveless gowns be worn. In order seeing what has become of the men who left college a few to make the Prom really distinctive, and to assert for all years ago—^what they are doing, and why they are doing it. time the right of the male to rule, the Juniors might well College men are supposed to differ from the rest of man­ demand that every girl attending their affair wear one kind, to which race, most, if not all of us belong, in the green and one pink glove. It would help to assert the arrangement and number of cracks on their brain. True, colorfulness of the wild and revolutionary dance of youth. education has never pretended to change the shape of the nose, the color of the eyes, or the texture of the hair—hence the comparative recency of female education. But collegian's ^^EN in the Academy of Science, especially fervent heads are slow in developing. Some heads are shaped like bacteriologists like Bill Moran, are of the opinion that the bullets; yours, and most others, are formed like eggs; Bunsen burner and test tube are two of humanity's greatest while myself and a few other egregrious eccentrics are discoveries, and that no man really understands life until blessed with pates following roughly the contour of the peak he has been awarded a scientific recognition. Moran, for on Mount Olympus. ^ instance, has a little book, "Bacteria—Their Parlour Games and Folk Lore," which means more to him than a book of A bullet head sort, probably with his head shaved, used hymns does to a reAivalist. And among the recent happen­ to sit near you in grade school. And when you went on to ings in the world of science he says that at a recent meeting high school you found that he and many others had dropped of the South Bend chapter of the Isaak Walton League out, having achieved their educational saturation. All along the state board of health sanitary engineering division gave through high school pupils were leaving, until at commence­ a report on the condition of the St. Joseph Eiver. The ment you graduated in a class about a third as large as sluggish old stream was found to have liver trouble, a the one in which you started. chronic case of hymophelia, and was further judged to be in the earlier stages of sleeping sickness. Science has found You went to college, or, more probably, were sent there, numerous little bacteria innocently bathing in the river to and found that history was being traditional and repeating prove all this, and everyone is very thankful. After such itself. By the senior year all the bullet heads have dis­ an investigation we should have an editorial praising the appeared, most of the Olympian pated herd either have been thoroughness of scientific methods, as being the usual thing. put in psychopathic homes or have turned to modern litera­ Science is welcome to all the bacteria, and when members ture as being one of the vocations where baldness is well of the Academy of Science begin conversing in technical paid. terms of over six syllables I am going to keep on eating Their one consolation is that they are all in one basket— spaghetti and looking innocently stupid. the collegiate basket. This basket is dropped once a year, at commencement, and but few of the eggs survive the shock. Most of them are rather soft shelled, and run all JJ NDEECLASSMEN are doing their best to get out over the place until they are hardened by exposure. A very from under—^from under inferiority, and from under mis­ few eggs, usually those that have never taken themselves apprehension. Imagination is at a premium; the market is or their education too seriously, • manage to roll along phenominally high, and experts predict that the bottom through life, always knowing that no one will ever know must soon drop out. Everyone is trying to retrospect to very much, and as contented as a discontented mortal can paint his holidays and his home town with just a few more be. Like any number of ham actors I must fry a moral daubs of a trifle deeper red than can any other man in the with this egg tale—^Instead of your worrying about ho%v to hall. Consequently no one believes what anyone else says make a living, why not u'onder about how to have living about vacation, not excepting the ones who snarl—^"Yeah! make you? it was awful, the deadest vacation I ever had."

^^ HAT it is that makes fashion fashionable has always OCKNE was back with his players for a while during been pretty much of a mystery to me, hence it is rather the Monogram banquet Wednesday night. And the good reassuring to know that it is possible for a woman to change cheer they evidenced at again having their coach smiling the style of her gown almost as readily as she changes her down on them made the banquet the success that it was. mind. Monsignor Robinson, new papal nuncio, is to have a Tom Conley, the captain-elect, has well earned the confi­ reception at Mansion House in Dublin soon. And the Irish dence of his team-mates. May his ye^r as captain be as girls are all flocking to their di-essmakers because of an memorable in the annals of sport as is that of John Law. The Notre Dame Scholastic 431 EDITOR'S PAGE

**T€ SLEEP BEECCE EVENING*'

As the year nineteen hundred thirty notches itself in the arch over Time, there comes to us the knowledge that we again face a new country, with its lands and waters, its mountains and valleys, which, though lying concealed, are nevertheless 'present! From the crest of the hill of previous years we look out over the one before us; and we realize that each and every day we rise to, ^vill burn ^^^th a light only as bright and brilliant as we make it. One of the most charming writers of the past century has told us that there are few courses of action more mistaken than, "on this short day of frost and sun, to sleep before evening." "To sleep before evening!" The words have a beauty and a quiet intensity of meaning all their own. Like scarlet and purple bees they gently buzz round the great white lilies of thought. There are many ways of sleeping before evening. But there are some ways of living that will never permit of hastened rest. Chief est in importance, if one would never surrender his right to hear the bugles of the light, is the formation of a sense of values. Life today presents us with such a multitude, s uch a gayly clad array of attractions and attention claimers, that it is indeed difficult to choose among the proffered objects, and, in choosing, select those few things which will contribute to the growth of the inner being. Wlien I say inner being I mean that within us, which, like a silent silver sun, lies untouched by automobiles, moving pictures, social affairs, airplanes, jazz, and all'the externalities of a civilization that is all too given to externalities, a civilization that, in lieu of a warmly frigid pole of reference by which to measure all outward events, has seized these same outward events and fastened on them its own unfastened attention. And all the time the wild candles of day flare down to the dark waters of the night; our hours shorten, and we know that our remaining time must be a range of mountain peaks of living. The mind, too, has its Mount Baldys and its Mount Everests; and they are climbed onlij by that same mind, and onkj when that mind climbs up through the mist with the aid of thought and beauty and human sympathy. Only a proper sense of values can finish the climb. Our privilege it is to lace our air with the fireworks of thought; our privilege it is to draw thun­ der from the vast organ of the world's fierce beauty ; our privilege it is to help a fellow human being who has not attained to the good fortune that is our enjoyment. The external things, precisely because they are external and can never really touch that which is deep within, would, while waking us in life, put us to sleep in living. The dark panthers of evening are on us all too soon, as it is; let us not dream their coming, till, arising lazily, we meet them before us; rather let us live, climb the mountain peaks of being, and, when we see the great cats in the distance, descend to meet them with a smile and a gi-aceful gesture of welcome! —^^- ^- ^^- The Xotre Dame Scholastic—Page V y^m the Beginnin

By ALFRED E. Realizing the place in which I stand, I pause before going farther. My mere Qtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitftiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiniiit words might add to the history of its I "Lord! His not ours to ini beauty. They might serve, too, as a mo­ notonous repetition of what is already \ And earth and sky a hout known of its exquisiteness. But will the I But in Thy sight our ojfc account of its various treasures, symboli­ I A humbler temple, 'mad-Ci cal paintings and historical background, [•Ji 11111111 • • 11111111 • I • I n • • 1111111111111111111111111111 i 1111 • 111111 encompassed by its four walls, better ex­ emplify the subtleness which is character­ ized by its imposing massiveness, by the halo of holiness which seems to permeate those sacred walls? I pause.

The alpha of oui- careers—yes. As freshmen we caught our first glimpse of real University life through its huge por­ tals. We often paused to wonder at the almost faultless Gothic architecture, de­ signed by one of the good Brothers of THE BERNIXI ALTAR Holy Cross, whose modesty will not permit us to reveal his name. PLACE to go to, and not a place to write about; a basilica of religion as well as a We bless ourselves at the font, and upon A treasure house of relics for the veneration of entering, glance down a long, double col- all, the faithful; wliere sins are told and absolved; onnade of verdantique columns, capped the repository of the Blessed Sacrament; its '^^'ith gold. A number of cherubic angels vaulted ceilings and buttressed sides enclosing the Peer down at us from the gilded capitals, hallowedness of ages; hushed footsteps moving down We can barely make out the tiny light of th? long aisles to kneel before the Almighty in the sanctuary lamps in the distance and whose Hand lies the realization of the future; ^^'e genuflect in the presence of God. praying for ailing friends, spiritual grace, modest jjow can I adequately describe what you .successes; the alpha and omega of the careers of ^^^ ,,,^^^1^, ^^^^^^ ^j^^H I ^^y „f th^ Notre Dame men-Sacred Heart Church. g..^^^^ ^^^^^^^^ Q^.^^^^.. ^^ ^^^^^^ ^^.^^ ^^ magnificently embellished the temple with his genius? What about the wonderful frescoes, aisles, the apsidal chai^els, the main altar, and the unique Bernini altar? Or of the Blessed Virgin's crowm, gift of the Empress Eugenie of France? Or of the richly ornamented windows, marvels of beauty and delicate workmanship?

We walk slowly down the long center aisle. The SACRED HEART CHU arcades have the effect of allowing the ceiling to soar free, thus giving it the apparent note of greater Over the entrance of the naY%' height than it really possesses. The spandrels be­ organ, whose pipes reverberate th tween the columns are occupied by life-size saints, depicting mortification, ardent piety and beauty of " The song the sanctified. St. Dominic, St. Francis Assisi, St. Which He who listens to th Rose of Lima, first American saint, St. Mary Mag- Of choiring Seraphim cleligl vS dalen, St. Cecilia—"All ye blessed saints, pray ?o for us." On both sides of the organ ai-^-j Between the long windows are placed the won­ paintings, one representing the ch derful Stations of the Cross, which have been ad­ the desert attacked by venomous i mired by many connoisseurs. They are set in Gothic frescoe representing Christ walki frames, elaborately ornamented with gilded gables, This latter picture is in thanksgiv pinnacles and crochets. Above the stations are of the Very Reverend Edward Sori pendants Avith beautifully sculptured capitals uphold­ of being lost on the steamer "L'A ing the roof, the panels of which are frescoed in We have now reached the tran: WAR MEMORIAL ethereal blue, gemmed with a myriad of stars. cross arms reminds one of Christ's The Notre Dame Scholastic—Page

md the End' (Apocalj^pse 1, 8) ,L the cross. The upper walls, we find, are IllllllIlllllIlM decorated with a connected series of paint­ SCrt = ings portraying the life of the Blessed "\''irgin. Each one represents a mystery and one or two corollary scenes. Over /ue; E the entrance at the east end one sees a golden grille, behind which St. Bridget of ¥}£." 1 Sweden and her daughter, St. Catherine, iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiQ used to hear daily Mass. An addition has been put on the east transept, in the form of a War Memorial porch, dedicated "To God, to Country and to Notre Dame," in silent tribute to our gallant dead of the THE STATELY GOTHIC IXTERIOR late war. Our nomadic footsteps lead us to the of this icon in Poland is a tale handed down by devout Polish mothers. baldachinoed main altar, rich in its rubri­ "St. Dominic Keceiving the Rosary from the Blessed Virgin," cal simplicity. Seven lamps, reminding hangs on the wall of the Holy Cross Chapel. In the tabernacle of one of the seven Spirits of God spoken of this chapel reposes a tiny relic of in the fifth chapter of the Apocalypse, the True Cross, exposed on the hang in the sanctuary. The apsidal feast of the Holy Cross. chapels significantly suggest the same Our eyes, riveted first on one idea. The main altar reiiresents a perfect object of art, now on another re­ symbolism of the great artisans of the ligious reliquary, are vainly striv­ Middle Ages. ing to visualize the accumulation The early idea of an altar included of such beauty. Glancing upwards its erection over a tomb. Liturgically over the main altar, one sees three sjieaking, an altar is not complete in its of Gregori's paintings: "The Coro­ significance unless relics are placed be­ nation of the Blessed Virgin," "The neath it. In this one we find particles Death of St. Joseph," and "The- ex ossibzts St. Stei^hen, the first martyr, Apparition of the Blessed Virgin St. Vincent and St. Sebastian. Pilasters to Bernadette at Lourdes." On the support the altar of sacrifice and form ceiling of the arched recess of the niches for detailed statues representing Bernini chapel we have his "Exal­ the virtues. tation of the Cross," a gift in honor The rear altar, in the recess directly of Father Sorin. The value of this back of the main one, is the only example treasure is priceless. of the celebrated artist, Bernini, in Amer­ ica. In the niche above stands a lovely statue of Notre Dame. Suspended over The careful study of Gregori's her head is a jewelled crown, gift of the paintings would entail pages of Empress Eugenie of France. description. Needless to say, an The Reliquary Chapel, containing relics of the twelve aijostles, a jjiece of the Beth­ afternoon spent in the church just Se grand lehem mangerl pieces of the veil and girdle drinking in the beauty of his art, le edifice of the Blessed Virgin, relics of all the would be an afternoon well spent. saints of the Church for the year—a veri­ table devotional center in its entirety. The nas bones of St. Severa, one of the third cen­ The deep rich note of a bell tury martyrs, rest in a box beneath her reaches our ears, interrupting our waxen image at the foot of the altar. In rge mural the third apsidal chapel on the left of reveries. It is the huge seven-ton t Israel in the main altar hangs a replica of the bell knolling out its chant to a de­ t the other Miraculous Madonna of Czustochowa votion. Like the proverbial Arabs the waves, (pronounced, I believe, Chestokofa by our of old we fold up our tents and Polish-speaking neighbors). "And there­ the rescue steal away, leaving the temple of ill danger by hangs a tale" as Petruchio (correctly /•/HCRtl) WttliTCliVRCU pronounced Petrukio) would have it. The God to the incoming young men to vhose long story of how the Blessed Virgin repelled present their petitions anew at the ;d arms on an attack of Swedish soldiers at the shrine feet of an Almighty God. c»«Li.y ac»«.X'«.r icu. 434 The Notre Dame Scholasti THE WINK

T. Talbot Tabloid had occasion to journey down East spend in New York and they quit. Although bridge bores to the charming little village once known as New Amster­ you, you stick it out until all are ready for bed. Then you dam during Christmas. She was a brunette and insisted drop off at Pittsburgh so you won't have to see them in on plajnng Contract Bridge, the bugaboo of all middle-west New York. social climbers. T. T. T. got going and doubled the dealer's The third embarrassing circumstance is the week-end in bid, thinking that his partner would get wise that he had Chicago. Sometimes this is blamed on a mythical uncle a good hand. On the contrary he found that there is no but uncle or no uncle you are now in Chicago playing Con­ longer "an informatory double." It was not until he bought tract on the thirteenth floor of the Stevens. Steamer is a Judge that he found an advertisement telling him of his there because he always is—^just as he consistently re­ error. It read: mains quiet and at one of the Big Ten (pardon us. Hypo­ "You can now play Contract and avoid murder and its critical Nine) Universities. Steamer, thinking you have consequences. plenty of bucks, plays a dumb sort of game but in spite "For the informatory double, more responsible than any of him you manage to break even. Finally everyone pivots other bridge convention for excusable housewifely homicide, and you get that long-hoped-for chance to challenge. How­ has been replaced by the new Challenge. And George ever, just before you challenge Steamer lets out what looks Keith's new book is the only place you can get the complete to you like a "two command" bid. Your chagrin is so great rules and tactics governing the Challenge." This, of course, that you run around the corridors looking for 1354-A. On is an error because T. T. T. now has mastered a number the trip you run into several people whom you push down of tactical maneuvers for accomplishing the Challenge. an elevator shaft. As a result they name the place Chagrin The first and most obvious is as fellows. North deals Falls and as soon as the Eapid Transit goes through, half and bids at least three spades. On his left sits North by of the South side of Cleveland moves out there. The I. C. C. Northwest out of Man O'War who is playing opposite his complains because they had a crazy idea that Chagrin Falls wife Battle Axe by Capone out of a Machine Gun. North was in Ohio and they can't for the salaries paid them by by Northwest bids nothing, merely mumbling to himself you-know-who think how Chagrin Falls got to be in the something about turning off the radio. Battle Axe kicks Stevens Hotel. Then after it's all over, you learn that him under the table and, taking a poor aim, kicks Mrs. Steamer didn't know it was a two command bid he was North who is sometimes called Gertie by the people who making and the I. C. C. has him arrested for violating the knew her when. Mrs. North promptly slaps Battle Axe, recapture clause in .the 1920 Act. saying "I challenge." B. A. hands over her calling cards —DONNIE D. which were neatly but not gaudily engraved by Gorham- Well, that's that. And what I want to know is: "How Spaulding, Black, Starr and Frost just a week before. Mr. did Donnie D. check up so Avell on everything that happened North and North by Northwest order coffee and pistols for in those two weeks?" We're willing to bet he's one of them two but nothing ever happens because that tyije of person there mystic guys. And something else he missed up on cannot afford the publicity. was the morning Johnnie froze his feet. This first method takes care of the average Contract game. But occasionally one has to play with a group of fellows. Let us say you are playing with a Mr. Richards Now that blondes and brunettes of various classifications of Yale (who lives in Harkness Memorial Quad which cost quantities have been disposed of until Easter, we hope that thirteen million and which no Yale man ever forgets to we'll get gobs of uninhibited verse from various student bodies in the vicinity. Of course if you think you have an mention), a Mr. Karl of Penn (who is about as gauche as inhibition or a repression just keep it to yourself. they make them, having come from that kind of family which was originally Karlovitzki-ol' rags and iron), and finally Mr. Port of the Ports of anywhere in the Middle There is a rumor current that a local hero set fire to a West (who is extremely class conscious and inclined to re­ certain place so that he could take off his tux. "Dear Jack" alize that not so long ago Mothaw—^he picked that up in and "MY Frank" say there is not a word of truth in the N'Yawk—did her own laundering). It will take some time rumor. for any of these people to speak to a Noti-e Dame man but when they find out what you have in your bag besides play­ There is another rumor. That semester exams begin ing cards they forgive you for not being Eastern and the two weeks from today. We stand back of this one. It is game starts. You, of course, are playing with Yale because vouched for by the University Catalogue. he's the only one you can stand. Mr. U. of P. challenges your bid of three no trump. If it is possible you give him If we don't get any contributions for this hodge-podge a very dirty look and manage to knock his glass off the we will have to begin imitating someone else's column, and table. If you are riding on the Pennsy it will fall off by if you don't like us now think how griped you're going to itself. Somehow you and your partner get the bid enough be when the unexpected happens. Well ...... times to get all the dough Karl and Port were going to ' —^T. TALBOT TABLOID. The Notre Dame Scholastic 435

Blue and Gold Quintet Beats Indiana, 30-29

Final-Minute Goal by Norb COACH MIUS GETS APPOINTMENT Crowe is Margin CAGERS WIN 3 OUT OF 5 GAMES LAST-MINUTE eifort right un­ der the basket by Norb Crowe, Rockne Aid For Three Years A a replacement for Bill Newbold Split with Northwestern; Beat To Coach Georgetown who had been ejected from the fray Iowa and Albion; Lose to Grid Team for four personals, gave Notre Dame Ohio State the necessary margin to win a thrill­ Close on the heels of the announce­ ing 30 to 29 decision over Indiana be­ The interval of three weeks prior to ment that Knute K. Eockne had aban­ fore 6,500 rabid fans in the latter's and during the Christmas vacation doned his sick bed came the report field house at Bloomington, Indiana, found Coach George E. Keogan's last week of Tommy Mills' appoint­ last Tuesday night. Blue and Gold cagers playing five ment as head football coach at Starting off with a fast attack games and victors in three of them. Georgetown University, Washington, Notre Dame took the Hoosiers away Albion was first and was snowed D. C. Mills replaces Lou Little who with them and by the half were in under 59 to 11. The game with North­ recently accepted a similar position possession of a 12 to 7 advantage. at Columbia University. With but a scant two minutes left to western on the home floor followed The loss of Mills will be felt sorely play in the final period Strickland and in a great extra-period rally the at Notre Dame and if his work of the gave Indiana a 29 to 28 advantage, Wildcats managed to eke out a 30 to past in coaching the baseball teams but instead of playing a safe game 28 triumph over the Fighting Irish. and aiding Rockne with the gridiron the downstaters elected to try to add Iowa's sophomore squad were the squads is to be held as any criterion another basket. A bad pass gave the next visitors and they were taken into of his ability the supporters of the ball to Crowe and he di-ibbled down camp very handily, 32 to 19. Playing Georgetown t'eam may be assured of the floor and sank the goal un­ at Columbus, Ohio, Ohio State took a very competent and likeable coach. molested. the measure of Notre Dame, 29 to The official announcement of Mills' McCracken began the second half 22, through the sterling woi-k of Jack appointment was given in New York with an under-basket shot to bring Evans, speedy little Ohio forward. City before a convention of represen­ the score to 12 to 9. Donovan, Smith, The first game of the 1930 part of the tatives from the athletic boards of the and DeCook collaborated in making schedule resulted in a revenge victory various colleges by the faculty direc­ three to put Notre Dame far in the over the Northwestern Wildcats in a tor of Athletics at Georgetown. lead, 20-11. At this point Notre Dame sensational last minute rally. North­ Mills came to Notre Dame from Be- began its usual delayed offensive but western led 19-18 with one minute to loit College, Beloit, Wisconsin where with seven minutes to play McCrack­ play but the Blue and Gold quintet he had held for one year the position en dribbled through the whole Blue broke through and a field goal by of athletic director and coach in foot­ and Gold five to tie the score 24-24. Smith and two fouls by Newbold ball and basketball. Previous to this Donovan then counted for Notre turned the loss into a 22 to 18 victory. engagement he was athletic director Dame, but Zeller repeated with a bas­ and football mentor at Creighton Uni­ ket from the side. Crowe went in for versity, Omaha, Neb. for five years. Newbold and sank a short one; NOTREDAME 59; ALBION 11 A graduate of Beloit College in 1905, Strickland gained the lead for Indiana At Notre Dame, December 13th MiUs began his coaching career at again by popping in one from far out. Albion's highly touted quintet was Omaha (Neb.) High School prepping Crowe missed both shots when Veller taken for a rout and left battered and the football and basketball outfits fouled him, but a few seconds later bewildered. The visitors from Mich­ there. made his attempt good under the net igan were able to gamer only two for the winning point just as the gun Tommy Mills has been Rockne's field goals, one of these being a long sounded. chief assistant and the head baseball shot heaved desperately from mid- coach at Notre Dame since 1926 and NOTRE DAME (30) INDIANA (29) floor. The play throughout was in B F P B F P his absence will be missed greatly. Newbold. rf 1 0 4 Strickland, rf 4 Notre Dame's favor and the Nor- Just who is to replace him as base­ McCarthy. If 4 0 1 B. Miller, If 0 theners put up such a vicious attack ball coach at Notre Dame is not DeCook, c 3 0 1 McCracken, c 1 in attempting to obtain the ball that known at the present time, but it is Donovan, rg 4 0 0 Veller, rjr 3 McCarthy and Newbold suffered Smith, \s 10 3 Blagrave, \g 0 gashes over their eyes before the believed that an appointment will be Crowe, rf 2 0 f Zeller, If 3 made in the near future. Eber, rjr 0 game was well under way. 436 The Notre Dame Scholastic

Newbold led the scoring with ten Score: second half but with Jack Evans, points, three goals and four fouls, NORTHWESTERN NOTRE DAME (28) speedy forward, in complete charge with McCarthy right behind him with (30) B F P of Ohio State's offensive, the latter B F P . M'.Carthy, f. school soon had a 26 to 16 lead, hold­ three fx'om the field and three from Riel, f 2 3 Newbold. f the foul line. Gavin netted four bas­ Berghem, f G DeCook, c ing it safely till the final gun sounded. kets for third honors. O'Rourke was Walter, c 3 Donovan, g Under the basket work by Evans the sole light of the invaders with one Lockhai-t, g 1 Smith, g and Ervin, with the floorwork of Fes- JlcCarnes, g 0 Crowe, f ler and Larkins, two fotball stars, ac­ goal and two fouls for four markers. G.ivin, f NOTRE DAME ALBION counted for the Buckeye victory. G F P G F P Totals 12 6 S Totals 11 6 9 Donovan and Smith safely guarded McCarthy, f 3 3 0 Gray, f 0 Score at half—Northwestern, 9; Notre the outer court but follow-up and re­ Newbold, f 4 0 Koblin, s 0 Dame, 9. bound shots proved to be the nemesis DeCook, c 1 3 Renkiewicz, f 0 Referee, Feezle, Indianapolis; umpire,,Lane, ' of Notre Dame. Donovan, g 0 0 O'Rourke, f 1 Cincinnati. Smith, s 0 2 Huff, f Eagged playing and disorganized Gavin, f Sheridan, g team play marked Notre Dame's Busch, c AVeller, c NOTRE DAME 32; IOWA 19 share of the second half and contrib­ Crowe, f Wadsworth 0 0 Johnson, g Rice, s 0 0 At Notre Dame, December 23 uted for the most, part to the defeat. Heenan, f Scoring almost at will, Notre Dame Evans totaled nine points and Ervin Host, f steamrolled over Iowa's depleted made eight during the game, each Carideo, g 0 0 squad to an easy and listless victory. man looping in four goals. DeCook Forsee, f 0 0 was high man for the Irish ^yith W. McCarthy 0 1 0 Although the first half ended -mth. the score knotted 9 to 9, Notre Dame's three and one for seven points. Totals 24 11 11 Totals quintet opened up with a lightning Score: Referee—Young, Illinois Wesleyan; umiJire, fast passing attack which combined' OHIO .STATE (29) NOTRE DAME (22) Warren, South Bend. with the resultant field goals ran the B F P B F P Ervin, f Newbold, f 0 2 1 score up to 26 to 14 with eight min­ Evans, f M'Carthy, f 1 3 3 NOIlTH^\nESTERN 30; NO­ utes of the half played. During this Such, f Crowe, f 0 0 4 period the Blue and Gold forwards Wrigley, c DeCook, c 3 11 TRE DAME 28 were meeting the guards with more Fesler, g Kizer, g 10 0 Larkins,. g Smith, g '12 0 At Notre Dame, December 19th alacrity and the typical Notre Dame Hinchman, g 1 Donovan, g 0 2 1 short-passing attack was seen for In an extra period rally which the first time this season. Totals 12 a 14 Totals 6 10 10 brought to the Notre Dame court some Score at half—Notre Dame, H; Ohio of the most bi-illiant playing since the The first ten minutes of the game resulted in some very sloppy pass- State, 8. triple-overtime Michigan State battle Free throws missed—^Notre Dame, 9 ; Ohio two years ago, the Northwestern work and not until 12 minutes were State, S. "Wildcats, led by the rangy Bergherm, up did Notre Dame score the first Referee, Frank Lane, Cincinnati; umpire, Stanley Feezle, Indianapolis. pushed over a stinging 30 to 28 de­ points of the evening. feat. Notre Dame at one point ap­ Donovan contributed the bright spot peared to have the game virtually won to the progi-am by sinking five bas­ kets for ten points, Crowe rivaling NOTRE DAME 22; NORTH­ after one of the most superb rallies WESTERN 19 ever seen on the local court. They him with three' goals and one foul. At Evanston, 111., January 1 had been floundering around in the Spradling and Hildreth played well forepai-t of the second half until the for the lowans. George Keogan's Fighting Irish count mounted to 24 to 15 against Score: managed to come from behind in their them and eight minutes left to play. NOTRE DAME (3 2) IOWA (19) second meeting of the season with the Then they shifted into high speed. B F P B F P Wildcats and eked out a 22 to 19 win. M'Carthy, f 1 2 1 Hildreth. f 2 1 0 Closing rapidly on their opponents Newbold, f 2 0 2 Rogge, f 0 1 4 It was the first Notre Dame win over the Fighting Irish tied the score at DeCook, 0 3 0 3 Spradling, c 3 0 0 the Purple basketeers in five starts, 25 all with a minute to go and New- Donovan, g 5 0 1 Jebens, g 1 1 1 the Wildcats having won the second 2 2 bold put Notre Dame ahead 27 to 25, Smith, g 0 0 1 Kinnan, g 1 meeting of the 1927-28 season, both Crowe, f 3 1 0 Talbert, f 0 0 0 but Bert Riel grabbed the tipoff and Gavin, f 0 1 0 Reinhardt, g 0 0 0 engagements last winter, and the first went straight down the floor to sink Busch, c 0 0 1 of this season's series two weeks be­ an easy shot and tie the score. De- Conley, g 0 0 0 fore. Cook's attempt as the gun blew went Burns, g 0 0 0 With one minute to play and on the Host, f 0 0 0 awry and an extra session was called. Heenan, f 0 0 0 heavy side of a 19 to 18 score. North­ Northwestern quickly raised it to 30 O'Connell, c 0 0 1 western went off into a stalling game to 27 and a free throw by Crowe was but Notre Dame rushed them and on all Notre Dame could accomplish. Totals 14 4 10 Totals .757 a tip-off after a held-ball, Smith piv­ Bei'gherm and Walter were easily Score at half—^Noti-e Dame, 9; Iowa, 9. oted and sank a goal from center Referee, Feezle. Wabash; umpire, Kearns, the stars of the game, the former DePauI. floor about 20 feet out. Newbold was making six field goals and a free one, fouled by Walter as he dribbled down mostly from a position near the side­ OHIO STATE 29 NOTRE the hardwood and his two shots line about 20 feet out. Eut Walter's brought the score to 22 to 19. Notre new one-handed tossing attack netted DAME 22 Dame then successfully "froze" the three goals and a like number of free At Columbus, Ohio, December 28th ball the remaining seconds. throws. Newbold and Smith turned Starting fast with an 8 to 4 lead, The second half was marked by ex­ in the outstanding Blue and Gold per­ the Buckeyes let Notre Dame take a ceedingly close basketball. Notre formances. 12 to 8 lead at the opening of the Dame held the. lead, the Wildcats The Notre Dame Scholastic 437

would then take it and after each suc­ ceeding" basket the trick would be re­ versed. Both teams missed heavily Erskine Cup to Notre Dame; in the matter of free throws, Notre Dame making only six out of 16 Named ''National Champs" while the Purple got three out of 14. Riel, McCarnes and Walter were the Notre Dame was named as having Notre Dame received 179 votes with outstanding performers for the losers the champion football team of the Pitt totaling 38. Purdue finished in with Newbold and DeCook carrying United States for 1929 in a ballot of the rear with two ballots. The solid the greater part of the burden for vote of the Committee of Award gave the leading sport writers of the coun­ Notre Dame. These two accounted an additional 11 votes to Notre Dame, for 17 of Notre Dame's 22 points, try which was sponsored by Albert' making a grand total of 190. The' each netting three field goals apiece. Russel Erskine, president of the vote of Theodore Roosevelt, member Score: Studebaker Automobile Corporation. of the Committee, was received by NOTRE DAME (22) NORTHWEST. (19) cable from Porto Rico by way of the B F P B F P The result of the ballot was announced War Department in Washington. McCarthy, f 1 0 3. Bergherm, f 0 1 1 by W. 0. McGeehan, noted sports Newbold, £341 Eiel, £ 213 In an earlier ballot to determine the DeCook, c 3 13 Walter, c 2 0 2 writer and columnist for the New first three teams, Notre Dame, Pitts­ Smith, g 10 2 McCarnes. g 3 0 1 York Herald-Tribune, on Januaiy 2. burgh, and Purdue also finished in the Donovan, g 0 1 1 Lockhart, g 1 1 3 order named. Here again Notre Crowe, f 0 0 1 Mundy, s 0 0 1 A silver cup, emblematic of the Whelan, f 0 0 0 Dame completely swamped her field Hails, f 0 0 0 national championship award will be in the number of votes acquired. It in Notre Dame's possession for one is significant in the final selection that Totals 8 6 11 Totals 8 3 11 year. the solid vote of the Committee of Score at half—^Northwestern, 1( •. Notre Award should be given to Notre Dame, 9. The result of the ballot showed how Referee, Feezle, Indianapolis; umpire, Dame. This makes it practically an Schommer, Chicago. Notre Dame completely outclassed her unanimous award for the champion­ closest rivals, Pittsburgh and Purdue. ship team of the United States. "FIGHTING IRISH" IS LATEST CAGE TEAM The lure of hardwood competition has brought Johnny Colrick and Joe Interhall Basketball Season Jachym into the professional basket­ ball limelight. Stephenson's "Fight­ ing Irish," sponsored by a South. To Begin on January 1 9 Bend mill, is the name which became quite popular throughout the Middle West during the Christmas vacation. SCHEDULE FOR PRACTICE GAMES Colrick and Jach3rm form the nu­ SUNDAY, JANUARY 12 cleus of this cage team and their in­ LIGHTS itial game was played as a prelim- HEAVIES Varsity Floor Aj)paratus Roam ^ inary to the Chicago Bruins-Rochester Freshman vs. Sophomore 9:00—10:00 Freshman vs. Sophomore Centrals American professional league Morrissey vs. Lyons 10:00—11:00 Morrissey vs. Lyons game at Chicago recently, defeating Sorin vs. Corby 11:00—12:00 Sorin vs. Corby the Midwest A. C, 18-16. Walsh vs. Badin 1:30— 2:30 Walsh vs. Badin They intend to play a schedule of Carroll vs. Bro^\nison 2:30— 3:30 Carroll vs. Brownson high class teams in and about South Howard vs. St. Edward's 3:30— 4:30 Howard vs. St. Edward's Bend, and Jack Cannon and Johnny Two Off-Campus Teams 4:30— 5:30 Two Off-Campus Teams Nyikos, former Notre Dame star, may also play with them. Although the Interhall basketball hall will have a team for those play­ . DON MILLER MAY COACH schedule does not call for the regular ers weighing over 150 pounds and a slated games to begin until January lightweight squad for participants ^ AT CASE under that weight. Off-Campus is to 19, preparations for the present cam­ Persistent rumors that Don Miller, be represented by two teams in each / member of the "Four Horsemen" of paign have advanced at a rapid pace class. Notre Dame in 1924, would coach the this past week. Practically all of the The coaches have been assigned to /football team at Case School of Ap­ halls have organized their teams and the various halls and are representa­ plied Science in Cleveland, have been the first practice sessions were held tives of either the advanced course in denied by both Miller and the school during the week. Practice games Physical Education or of the Boy ' officials but it is understood that such have been booked for Sunday to en­ Guidance department. Arrangements an arrangement would be suitable to able the various coaches to weed out have been made Avhereby varsity and both parties. Miller served as assis­ their respective teams for the season freshman basketball men will act as tant coach at Ohio State this year, proper. ' referees and umpires. This system and in 1928 was backfield coach at Again'this year there will be two will provide for the varsity and fresh­ ^Georgia Tech. Miller would replace leagues, with each of the twelve halls man players a scientific view of the Art Fletcher who resigned recently. and off-campus represented. Each games and will enable them to better 438 The Notre Dame Scholastic

their own knowledge of the game. All men who intend to play in the Freshman managei-s will act as scor­ lightweight division will weigh in at ers and timers for the contests. the manager's office any evening dur­ PRACTICE SCHEDULE As was the case last year, the ing the w^eek of January 13. Any Varsity Apparatus hea\^nveight team of one of the halls player whose weight has not been Floor Room will be playing on the varsity floor at certified will not be permitted to play the time the lightweight team from with the lightweight team of his hall MONDAY, JANUARY 13 the same hall is playing in the ap- when the session opens. Off-Campus 7 p. m. Freshman pai'atus room. Inasmuch as the first The practice sessions are so ar­ game on the regular schedule of tilts ranged that the. lightweight and Howard 8 p. m. Lyons will not be played until Sunday, Jan­ heavyweight teams will work out to­ Carroll 9 p. m. Badin uary 19, the coming week of January gether on the same floor. The 13 will be taken up with merely prac­ schedule will be made so that each TUESDAY, JANUARY 14 tice sessions to better organize the hall will alternate in using the varsity squads. and apparatus room floors. Brownson 7 p. m. Walsh Sophomore 8 p. m. Corby Morrissey 9 p. Ai.. Sorin COACHES FRIDAY, JANUARY 17 HEA^^WEIGHT LIGHTWEIGHT HALL DIVISION DIVISION Freshman 7 p. m. Off-Campus Off-Campus Fitzgerald-Taylor Chevallier-KruU Lyons 8 p. m. Howard Sophomore Brown Mahon-Carr Lyons Butorac Duff-Hoxie Badin 9 p. m. Carroll Morrissey Griflin O'Brien-Rusk Howard Carideo Kaplan-Ouelette Walsh Lyons Artman-Flynn Sorin Savoldi Heenan-Romanin Badin .Conley Moroni-Izo the 880 yards in 1:58 2-5 in that mem­ Brownson Jachjmi Kosky-O'Connor orable race with Joe White, the Carroll Dilley Yarr-Csorda mini speedster. Freshman Eaton Brill-O'Connell St. Edward's Reaume Leahy-Walsh At the end of the 1929 season Joe Corby .DeCook Capter-Bohnsack received the unique honor of being elected to the captaincy of a team in a major sport after being out of com­ petition the previous year. He was forced to resign from the track Introducing— entirely last year because of sickness and injuries to his legs suffered the CAPTAIN JOSEPH ABBOTT previous summer. It was after this lay-off that his teammates showed Joseph A. Abbott needs no intro­ their confidence in his ability to come duction to Notre Dame men. Prom­ back by electing him captain of the inent in track events during the last 1930 Blue and Gold track squad. three or four years, Joe took on new honors last Fall when he was ap­ With prospects for an exceptional pointed head trainer of Notre Dame's season very bright, Joe is being embryo football champions. Every­ counted on heavily by Coach Nichol­ one knows the success which accom­ son in all the middle-distance events. panied his work in that position with By virtue of his past records and his such a great responsibility. •early season form this year, he is Captain Abbott began his varsity virtually assured of a position on the track career in the 1927 indoor sea­ two-mile relay team from which son. His efforts that year were "Nick" expects so much this spring. crowned with the success which usu­ That he will come through better than ally accompanies everything he sets anyone expects is almost a sure bet his hand to, and Joe was awarded his for Joe does things only in a big way. major monogram, a notable feat for Captain Abbott is a native of any sophomore at Notre Dame. Paterson, New Jersey, and is a senior He reached his peak the following in the Department of Physical Edu­ year during the indoor season when cation. He has always been prominent he lowered the Central Intercollegiate in campus activities, having held offi­ Conference half-mile record to 2:00 ces in the Monogram Club, New Jer­ 4-5, a mark which he still holds. sey Club, and various other organi­ Later on in this same season, he ^ zations during his days at Notre set a new record for the Illinois Uni­ Dame. He will receive his degree versity indoor track when he stepped < in June. The Notre Dame Scholastic 439 Track Team To Be Strongest In History

so OPINES NICHOLSON AS The distance men, including Big­ 75 MEN REPORT gins, Howery, Connors, Lawler, and Bauers, worked outdoors for a short Nearly 75 aspiring candidates an­ time. Bailie, Reimans, Abernathy, swered Coach John P. Nicholson's and Darling worked out at the high call for varsity track men last Mon­ and broad jumps. day afternoon. From this group Coach Nicholson expects to develop Even with all of this material, how­ one of the strongest teams ever to ever, the loss of such men as Captain represent Notre Dame in that sport. Jack Elder, Tom Quigley, John and The greater part of last year's outfit, Bill Brown, Pete Morgan, and John strengthened by valuable additions Viachulis will be keenly felt by Coach from the 1929 frosh, make prospects Nicholson's squad. "Nick" has a the brightest they have been in wealth of material coming up, but no "Nick's" regime here. team can suffer such losses without Led by Captain Joe Abbott, who is feeling it strongly. slowly but steadily returning to his old form after a year's lay-oflf, the The oflRcial schedule was announced squad was put through the usual by A. W. Kegowicz, senior track first-day exercises Monday. Calis­ manager, in the name of Coach thenics, followed by short work-outs Nicholson this week. Without a in their respective events, was the doubt, this schedule is one of the most order for most of the men. difficult ever arranged for a Blue and Gold team and is a strong example Boagni, Redgate, Trandell, and Mc- of the confidence "Nick" has in his Coi-mick \ied with each other in 1930 squad. It includes entries in aU of the principal relays in the country, THE SCHEDULE besides dual meets with the most representative teams in the Big Nine INDOORS and Central Intercollegiate Confer­ Feb. 8—Melrose Games, New ences. York (special relay enti-y). Feb. 15—Illinois at Notre The high lights of the season are Dame. the C. I. C. indoor championships and Feb. 22—Indiana at Bloom- Indiana State championships here at ington. Notre Dame, and a dual meet with March 1—^Wisconsin at Madi­ the U. S. Naval Academy at Balti­ son. more. March 7 and 8—C. I. C. at Notre Dame. Coach John P. NichQlson March 15—Illinois Indoor Re­ Rockne Views Outlook lays at Champaign. getting away from the starting OUTDOORS Coach Kmite Rockne's Neiv blocks on shoi-t sprints. O'Brien, March 29—Texas Relays at Yeav's 'proclamation as given Bailie, Acers, and Reimans again Dallas. to the Associated Press earned accustomed themselves to the hurdles April 19—^Kansas Relays at his 7isiial hard-luck story but while the middle-distance men spent Lawrence. this time as more or less subtle most of their time jogging around April 26—Penn Relays at optimism. Rockne also paid the track. Captain Abbott, Joe Quig- / Philadelphia. Drake Relays at tribute to his cmnpetent assist- ley, captain of the cross-country Des Moines. tants and reminded that he team, Wilson, Little, McConville, Syl­ would be back soon again and May 3—Ohio Relays at Co­ vester, and others were among this be of some aid to them. The lumbus. group. complete quotation as received May 10—^Michigan State at from the Associated Press is as Lansing. "Spike" McAdams, Fishleigh, and I folloavs: "We lost, nine first-class , May 17—^Indiana State meet Slattery, all veterans from last year, football players by gradxiation at Notre Dame. were the outstanding men in the first and face a stiff ten-game sched­ May 24—C. I. C. at Mil­ day's pole-vaulting. Nordy Hoffman ule in 19-10 but don't feel too waukee. appeared near to mid-season form sorry fai' 21s. We'll have a fair May 31—Illinois at Cham­ when he consistently heaved the shot team and be scoring a few paign (tentative). around the 40-foot mark. Donoghue touchdowns. I'm almost tvell and Herwit are also back this year, June 7—U. S. Naval Acad­ again and should be of some and it is understood that Bob Walsh, emy at Baltimore. help to my vei-y able coaching Central Intercollegiate Conference June 13 and 14—^National In- staff." tercollegiates at Chicago. champ last year, may return to school next semester. 440 The Notre Dame Scholastic

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YES SIREE! IT'S A REAL ball coach to replace Phelan who leaves Purdue to coach the University CLUBHOUSE of Washington team next season. Perhaps you have noticed it also The Purdue trustees ratified the three- since you have returned. It is a little year contract with Kizer when they frame house situated right in back of held their annual meeting last Wed­ the first tee on the golf course. Art nesday. West, the genial publicity man of the During his collegiate football career University and at present a very ac­ at Notre Dame in 1923, '24, and '25, tive person about the links, refuses to Ivizer was a lineman and, although divulge any more than that it has weighing only 165 pounds, filled a "the makings of" a real honest-to- guard position and opened up holes goodness clubhouse." through which the famous "Four Mr. West promises that he will Horsemen" rambled. For the past five have several more surprises in the years Kizer has coached the Purdue next week or two along the same line, line and during the season just closed, and that students may watch the his forward wall gained recognition course for further developments. as one of the strongest in the Whatever they may be, he consented conference. To pipes, to let us in on the secret very shortly. Men, NOTRE DAJVIE TO BE HOST KIZER SUCCEEDS PHELAN TO UNIV. OF MEXICO AT PURDUE to Pipes! Coach George Keogan announced , Notre Dame graduate prior to the game with Iowa on De­ RADITION has it that ye of 192-5, who has been assistant to cember 23 that his basketball team Tshall know the fellowship of Jimmy Phelan for the past five years, would meet the University of Mexico pipes with seasoned, masculine, mel­ was recently announced as the latter's quintet on the home floor, January 20. low men of every age and degree. successor at Purdue University. Pres­ The foreign team will be toui'ing the Some try to join this brother­ ident Edward C' Elliott of Purdue country on a good-will expedition at hood, yet fail, and are absolved as approved the recommendation of Col. that time, and their presence on the bom to pipeless lives. But honest Nelson A. Kellogg, director of ath­ local floor should attract one of the effort is required—each man's own letics, that Kizer be made head foot- largest crowds of the season. test with good tobacco in a good pipe. That is the formida. Both pipe and tobacco must be good. The pipe must be pure of bowl, and the tobacco must be Well, Edgeworth, if you'll permit —good old Edgeworth, Class of'04. Tried Edgeworth yet? Now's your chance? Use the magic coupon, and University Book Store we'll rush right back to you a free- Autlionzed Dealers for-nothing packet of genuine Edge- worth to fill yo^xc good pipe with. for

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MARQUETTE FIVE HERE said, was the most sensational ever Southern Methodist University, TOMORROW NIGHT witnessed on the coast. Our All- Pittsburgh, and Pennsylvania, are the For the first time in almost a American guard modestly insists that only additions to those on the 1929 month the students will see Coach without the aid of T^vomey he would schedule, and Wisconsin and Georgia George E. Keogan's Blue and Gold have been greatly handicapped and Tech are the teams dropped. The cagers in action on the home floor accredits much of his spectacular play 1930 team will close its season with again tomoi-row evening when they to the fine co-operation of his team­ the annual Army game in New York buck up against the Marquette five. mate. and another with Southern California Last year Notre Dame was victorious In the MidWest-Southwest Dixie on the Pacific coast the following in both of the games played with the classic at Dallas, Texas, "The Fight­ week. Hilltoppers. The first played on the ing Irish" had for its representatives Thi-ee teams from Pennsylvania— Milwaukee floor was an easy 29 to 17 Gebert at quarterback, Nash at cen­ Carnegie Tech, Pittsburgh and Penn­ victory for the Fighting Irish. In ter, and Collins, end. This trio con­ sylvania—are on the schedule with the second contest played here, Notre tributed quite creditably to the mid- Indiana and Northwestern of the Dame rested content in playing a westerners 25-12 triumph over the Big Nine, and Drake, Missouri -Valley strong defensive game and lopped out stars of the southwest. champs for the past two years. a 19 to 16 win over their opponents The complete schedule is as follows: from the Badger state. TEN TEAMS ON 1930 GRID­ Oct. 4 — Southern Methodist at IRON CARD home. NOTRE DAME STARS PLAY The 1930 grid card was announced Oct. 11—Navy at home (dedication NEW YEAR'S DAY by Coach Eockne on December 14, game). Notre Dame's national champion­ following a meeting with the faculty Oct. 18—Carnegie Tech at home. ship football team was well repre­ board of control. Five contests of the Oct. 25—Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh. sented in both intersectional games ten-game schedule will be in the new Nov. 1—Indiana at home. New Year's Day. At San Francisco stadium now being constructed, and in the East-West clash Jack Cannon five of them will be on the road. Nov. 8 — Pennsylvania at Phila­ and Ted Twomey played stellar loles Southern Methodist, rated as one of delphia. in the 19-7 victory of the Eastern the best teams in the south this year, Nov. 15—Drake at home. stars over the Western aggregation. will be the initial opponent on the new Nov. 22—Northwestern at Evan- Cannon's brilliant performance em­ gridiron. Navy will have the honor ston. barrassed the westerners and made of dedicating the new stadium, and Nov. 29—Army at New York. the onlookers gasp in amazement. preparations are already being made Dec. 5 — Southern California at His uncanny defensive play, it is for this contest. Los Angeles.

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towards the close of the Pittsburgh- the ends were wearing. And the ex­ Nebraska game, the Cornhuskers were pert seems also to have gotten the Splinters from the going places via the air route, an dope on Tom Lieb's latest invention Press Box unusual, but in this instance effective which the Notre Dame backs were , method of gaining ground ior Nebras­ wearing: a set of small anti-skid ka. Not for nothing does the greatest chains designed to be used on just To this writer the Southern Cali­ of the coaches stress pass-defense as such occasions, and which the Notre fornia game seemed indicative of one the most important pai-t of a back- Dame backs were using, although they great truth of sport: That a gi-eat field man's play on defense. were so small as to be invisible to the team can nearly always beat a group spectator. Really, Army did very of great players. Pittsburgh had well, when one considers these things. possibly the best group of individuals And—oh, yes—of course no one knew that any team has had in quite some A feature writer of an esteemed that the O'Shea Knitting Mills, ex­ time; Southern California had a metropolitan daily, for the second or pecting weather of the sort experi­ great team composed of individuals third time this current season and enced, had sent a shipment of red which were riot quite as good, perhaps, post-season, remarks the effect of the flannel earmuffs to New York which as those of Pittsburgh, but which cold on Army's play thusly: "Then arrived the day of the game and Howard Jones, rae of the game's they came home, to take Notre Dame which everyone wore save Joe Savoldi, greatest coaches, has molded, with on a day when the turf was like the who stuck tc the old green ones he frozen tundras, when Cagle's cleats painstaking care, into a really great had worn when he starred for Three wouldn't hold, when his ends and team. And to our mind the one glar­ Oaks (Mich.) High School. backs couldn't hang on to his passes ing weakness which the-Panthers had because their hands were blue with was in the "matter of pass defense. cold." How a group of indi^'iduals, however The indoor track season opened in great, ever got by even a moderately Of course it is a matter of common New York last Saturday night, but tough schedule undefeated, with the knowledge that Notre Dame players not with its usual bang. The times high school pass defense that Pitts­ are immune to the cold, and even a were mediocre for the most part, al­ burgh presented against the Trojans, blind man could have heard, if not though Gus Moore, slim negro speed­ will always remain somewhat of a seen, the bright red muffler that Jack ster, ran a fast two mile, and Carl mystery to me. But at that, Nebraska Elder was wearing to keep himself Wildermuth, Georgetown's diminutive discovered this weakness just too late warm, as well as the lavender gloves flame, equalled the indoor record for in the game with the Panthers; which Carideo, Schwartz and most of the 60 and 100 meter races in winning

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the Olympic sprint series for the third successive time. Ray Conger was beaten in the Mayor Walker half, "T which Fred Veit won in the slow time of two minutes flat, but it is evident J ust how/ asked Bill's roommate, ^^do you sbell financially?" "^^F-i-n-a-n-c-i-a-l-l-y," that the courageous Olympian from spelled 'Roomie' with a Iowa is not in shape. grin, '"and there are also two R'sin embarrassed." The not so amateur Amateur Ath­ letic Union goes right along its merry was pulling peculiar plays right and left. This time Piedkie^vicz, young Polish law student, who holds a vic­ tory over Nurmi, has been barred from running in this country. No one seems to know exactly why, but he is none the less barred. The A. A. U. just wouldn't feel right if it wasn't barring someone, no matter what the reason.

Notre Dame seems to be going in DxsT why on earth," Bill's roommate for international sport in a big way. went on, "do you take time to write a letter home, What with the Meiji ball club that when there's a telephone ri^ht here on the desk? played here last spring, and the Uni­ "Call 'em up! I make it a point to call on my folks versity of Mexico basketball team once a week, whether it's about money or just to plajring here January 20, all that we say 'Hello. need is John Yelland and a few- "ine telephone folks just reduced their Long more of the boys from the great Distance rates again the first day ot tnis year, too. Northwest to form a winter sports team and meet the Swedish and Nor­ Telephomng is by far the quickest way home in any wegian All-Stars, who are reported to emergency." be even now on the high seas on their way over here for a barn-storming Telephone... of Course trip.

^^TTOU telephone rates are lower T^^ X today than ever before x We sincerely wish to congratulate Tommy Mills on his appointment as head football coach at GeorgetouTi INDIANA BELL University. He goes there with the best wishes of the men who have TELEPHONE COMPANY served under him, and who know him for what he really is, that which only too few are today, a very earnest man.

# IBI ''''"'"'""""'"""""""""'*'"""""""""""""""*"""""""""""""""""""*"""""""""*""""F"I Navy seems to be going in for cross­ country rather successfully. In the % I i past the Navy cross-country team i> = PHONE 3-1254 = was "quaint," something like the horse H i 1 marines or some other m3rthical or­ ' / I Drs. Singler & Probst ganization, but this year, under the ^ I DENTISTS I skillful guidance of Earl Thompson, one of the greatest runners of all time, the Middies have defeated Duke, I 261 ASSOCIATES BLDG. | • Georgetown, Virginia and Maryland, while the plebes beat Tome, Mercers- ptliiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiimtiiiiSi burg, and the Maryland and Virginia freshmen. PATRONIZE SCHOLASTIC ADVERTISERS! On Down the Line

. . . The "Four Horsemen," Notre Dame's famed backfield quartet, went through the seasons of 1923 and 24 with the loss of only one game out of • 17 . . . which is a record to be mighty proud of ... "Wild Bill" MEHLHORN once hit the cup with his second shot on four consecutive holes during a golf match . . . JACOB HYER was the first American heavyweight boxing- champ ... 33 years later his son TOM HYER won the same title when he defeated YANKEE SULLIVAN . . .

.. . DAME RUMOR has it that 1930 is to be the last year that the Cath­ olic cage tournament sponsored by Loyola University of Chicago is to be held . . . BOB HART, veteran National league ump, was a prominent roller skate polo player about fifteen THE BEST years ago . . . that sport was exceed­ ingly popular in those days . . . And NATURED CHARLEY MOBAN, another Nat'l league guesser, is considered among U:NDERNOURISHMEN T and a the best judges of hunting dogs in the pleasant disposition don't MAN" United States ... No wonder the Nat'l league players think CHARLEY is mix. The "best natured man" high. It's easy to digest and "going to the dogs" . . . of the senior class isn't the provides the bran to keep the one who spends his time system clear. smiling through a series of . . . Notre Dame's first string bas­ If you want to start the day minor ills. ketball team is composed of four with a cheerful outlook eat Hoosiers . . . JACK McCARTHY is Shredded Wheat Is the two Shredded Wheat biscuits the only "alien"! . . . and South Bend natural breakfast for good- every morning with good and Mishawaka claim one apiece in natured college men. It sup­ rich milk and plenty of fruit. SMITH and DeCOOK . . . "Crafty Sam" HENDERSON, coach of the plies all the vita! food ele­ It clears away those dark Davis and Elkins wonder football ments that keep their spirits mental clouds in a hurry. team, is head coach of all sports at THE SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY D & E ... He has no assistants either . . . HUSTLE ON, purchased as a yearling, in 1927 for $70,000, so far hasn't faced the barrier . . , and few think he ever will . . . How could he be such a bummer with that name . . .

. . . Weekly believe it or not . . . The Chicago Cubs are still waiting for $1,000 worth of world series custo­ mers who have not claimed their re­ funds for the unplayed sixth game i .. line forms to the right please . . . According to PARKE H. DAVIS in his annual football statistical guide, there were 5,000 high school teams . . . 150,000 school boy players were in action last year . . . Only 450 col­ lege teams with 16,000 players per­ 0- •EI formed in 1929 ... which explains why PATRONIZE SCHOLASTIC AD^^RTISERs! the colleges get the star players . . . Ain't dat sumpin! . . . .C3 The Notre Dame Scholastic 449

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'«> SALE

1200 FINE QUALITY €VECCCAT$ $25.00 O'Coats, Now 12.50 $30.00 O'Coats, Now $15.00 $35.00 O'Coats, Now $17.50 $40.00 O'Coats. Now $20.00 $45.00 O'Coats. Now .$22.50 $50.00 O'Coats, Now - $25.00

1,000 New Style /LIT/ $25.00 Suits, Now $12.50 $30.00 Suits, Now $15.00 $35.00 Suits, Now $17.50 $40.00 Suits, Now $20.00 $45.00 Suits, Now $22.50 $50.00 Suits, Now $25.00

Shirts—Ties—Mufflers—Sweaters—Hosiery tiALr-C>CICE MAX ADLEC Inc ON THE CORNER MICHIGAN AND WASHINGTON 450 The Notre Dame Scholastic

ih. FLOKSHEIM SHOE

lor the man who cares . . . about his appearance and his purse . . . this is the time to buy several pairs . . ".

FLORSHEIM'S' nationally famous smart styles to choose from

ADLER BROTHERS