University of Notre Dame - Dome Yearbook (Notre Dame, IN) - Class of 1921 Page 1 of 374
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XHE 1921 DOME HL 1921 DOME A YEAR BOOK PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLA S AT THE UNIVERSITY- NOTRE DAME! VOLUME FIFTELN Edward B. Doyle . . ' . Editor-i7i-Chief Callix E. Miller .... Art Editor James L. O ' Toole . . Business Manager y jii M «■■■■■■- ■mi XI. 11 .11 TK at wj [ji ' TlPvX i I I I I I I HI ' r ' BllPlRpL The producer comes before his audience for a moment before the curtain rises, not to tell them about the show, but to have a look at them and see how the tickets have been selling. Deserted by the angel of previous years, he has had to produce his show at his own financial risk, and to him the seat sale means everything. Some of the play ' s imperfections are due to lack of money, for scene-painters and chorus girls must eat, but most of them are the result of our own limita- tions. Your sympathy, not its own ingen- uity, will make it successful. The producer bids adieu until the end of the show when his audience will see him again. © tnuf[[rr[[[[fffft[[[[[[[[[[[[rr[[[[[ ;g 5aa; k ofiL §1 fTme JdZ0-2J (Place lY Z TRe I isind c CciiOTi Q Jne irabic lorce, (© (Dvr Opponeni ) ff ack c5: a|e Chaiic %e o Tciors VnmasKcdf r pf. rr; ' - !■t ■ s4« a: is «ssai£;sa%-,Sk «,i-; . Mi ams mwi li Father Burns Page i8 1921 Faculty Officers 1921 Page IQ I COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS Father Carrico, Dean Professor Cooney, Journalism Father Miltner, Philosophy Father O ' Hara, Commerce Page 20 1921 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS Father Crumley Father Bolger Father Marr Father III • Professor Farrell 2921 Pagf 21 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS Professor HiNES Father -McGinn Father Foik Father Hagerty Father Thomas Burke Father Doremus Page 22 1921 I ; 1 1 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS Father Carey Father Lahey Professor Corona Professor O ' Connor Father Scheier Professor Becker il 1921 Pagf Jj! COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS Professor Shuster Profe;ssor O ' Haggerty Father Hebert Father Mendez Professor Buckley Page 24 1921 L . COLLEGE OF ARTS AND LETTERS Professor Rafter Professor Plante Professor Costello Professor Weir Brother Cyprian 1921 Pag,- 2$ COLLEGE OF SCIENCE Father Nieuwland, Dean , Professor Scheie Father Kirsch Professor Green Page 26 1921 COLLEGE OF SCIENCE Professor Kaczmarek Father Heiser Father Molony Father Wenninger 1921 Pagf 27 • COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Professor Caparo ' Professor Kervick Professor AIcCue, Dean Professor Maurus Page 28 i9Zi COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING Professor Benitz Professor Ackerman Father Donahue Professor Pino Brother Denis 1921 Pagf 2g COLLEGE OF LAW Judge Farabaugh Professor Hoynes, K.S.G. Judge Vurpillat, Z)f(2« Dean Emeritus Professor Fredericksoi ' Professor Tiernap Page JO 1921 t wmmamF f ? I C h RECTORS OF HALLS Brother Alphonsus, Brounson Father Haggerty, Sorin Father Devers, Walsh Father Cunningham, S.R.O.T.C. 1921 Pagf .? i i L J RECTORS OF HALLS Father Finnegan, Holy Cross , Father Gasensmith, Carroll Father Quinlan, Corby Father McGarry, Badin Page 32 1921 I Page 34 i I 19£1 ' Page 36 1921 Badin x 1921 PiS ' 37 . I Page 38 l fe 1921 V 1921 Pagf 39 jTp::: ; ;,i i ai p 7 ; i i i w iH Hf i  ■!« ■' nsr ■a. Holy Cross The Exiles Page 4.0 1921 Carroll 1921 Pagf 41 s h m nu r— t « . ' i u d pi (! 1921 ' a? ' 4.1 i St. Edward ' s Page 44 1921 r y =5 = 1921 Pai ' 45 Frank E. Coughlin SENIORS H H The career of the class of ' 21 has been B made discontinuous by so many subtrac- M 1 tions from and additions to its member- f . ship that a connected story of it is hard to write. When we started four years ago the war was going on, and during the first year our classmates kept leav- ing us in a steady stream to go over and put a stop to it. After the war, the men who returned to join the class of 1921 were old-timers who had started a year, or two, or three ahead of us. The variety that resulted produced the mar- , - velous versatility that has always dis- W L. B« tinguished us. Scattered as we were in Brownson, Corby, and Badin, during our first year, we got together early for the election of officers. The tumultuous order (tumult, that is, without disorder) that has char- acterized all our elections prevailed at our first one. The fact was impressed on us that there is neither East nor West, border, nor breed, nor birth when the class of ' 21 gets together, when that staunch New Englander, Jim Keegan nom- inated the gentleman (every inch of him) from Iowa, Emmett Sweeney, for presi- dent, and Emmet was elected. Jim Dooley was made vice-president, Carmelo Lombardo, secretary, and George Meredith, treasurer. In the Fall we had a smoker, and in the Spring we put on the second and last Freshman Frolic, competing (rather successfully, the ' 18 Dome to the contrary notwithstanding) with the Glee Club dance. So frolicsome was our frolic that younger classes have paid us the sincerest form of flattery: not attempting to imitate us. Emerging, in January, 1919, wan and pale from the blasting effects of the S. A. T. C, we chose Jerry Hoar to lead us back into the old gait under the thawing influence of normal Notre Dame life. Charlie Davis as Vice-President, George O ' Brien as Secretary, and Daniel Walford Duffy as Treasurer, we designated as Jerry ' s helpers. Largely through the efforts of Dan Duffy, February 17, 1919, is famous at Notre Dame as the date of the best of the Sophomore Cotillions. We can convey an idea of the success of Gerald Hoar ' s first administration in no better way than by simply stating the fact that we elected him for another term in our junior year. Frank Coughlin, the tackle, succeeded Charlie Davis, I Page 46 i9Z r-. the musician, as Vice-President; loyal and energetic Tom Van Aarle was made Secretary, and Cy Kasper, Treasurer. The Prom of last year was all that might have been expected of the class that arranged the Cotillion of the year before. The Prom was the only thing we did as a body, but individually we achieved many things. Slaggert directed the cheers when Frank Coughlin got through the enemy line, or Joe Brandy carried a punt back half the length of the field, in such a way as to make the old-timers forget Joe Gargan. Obie O ' Brien out-Herolded Herold in the Juggler. The students, Slaine, Cusick, and Shubmehl, went gravely on. Kasper, Meredith, Colgan, and Hoar further distinguished themselves on the track. Miles captained the baseball team, and Mohardt was the star pitcher. Davis ' jazz orchestra was a musical wonder. When we came back this year, Frank Coughlin, having satisfactorily served his time as apprentice t o Jerry Hoar, was elected President of our Senior Class. Cy Kasper was designated as the man to take Frank ' s place if little Willie ' s frail constitution should break down under the burden of his duties. Joe Maag con- sented to record the orations of Cusick and Tierney, and Dave Hayes was prevented, by physical force from refusing to take charge of the check-book. The first great problem that confronted us arose with Father Moloney ' s thundering announcement that he would have nothing more to do with Domes. We met, considered, decided that a senior class could finance a Dome, and bade our staff carry on for the honor of school and class. The Ball — which is treated of elsewhere — was a three days ' wonder and is a lifelong memory. If the class of ' 21 be allowed the privilege of feeling proud about anything and saying so, then it is proud, that it has always been perfectly free from the annoy- ances and disruptions of cliques, and it is proud also that it has never paid homage to any single leader . In each activity there has been a leader who has had the support of his classmates, but there have been no Napoleon Bonapartes or Timmie Boyles — not be- cause we lack men who are natural leaders, but be- cause we have none who are inveterate followers. Thc.vas C. Kaspfk Vice-J- resident D.wiD V. Hayes Treasurer Josr.PH M. Maah Secretary 1921 Ph ' 47 , 3V TMt a«4 Frank would have been graduated two years ago with Paul Fenelon had not grim-visaged war shown his wrinkled front two years before that. The bar of Seattle, Washington, has been temporarily deprived of a great deal by the interrup- tion in Frank ' s education when he mounted barbed steeds to fright the souls of fearful Germans, but what Seattle has lost South Bend Society has gained, for be it known that in these piping times of peace Frank capers nimbly almost every night to the tuneful pleasing of a jazz band. Frank ' s success as a lawyer is not difficult to predict. The career of his one-time classmates, attorney Lou Finake of Michigan City, and assistant city-judge Frank Murphy of Lafayette, are but earnest of the things that he will do. No senior has done more than Henry to bring about a closer union between Notre Dame and St. Mary ' s. When he came here as a prep, Henry set to work to get a drag on the other side of the Niles road. He wrote to a genealogical expert the first night, and had him find him a cousin at St. Mary ' s, and then, armed with his credentials, he went over. Ever since that time, Henry has been trying to decide whether it is better to learn to be a lawyer, or to get married yoimg. While he has been trying to make up his mind he ' s been going to classes every day until he has become a lawyer. He may yet realize his other ambition. While Henry has wavered a great deal between the woman and the law, he has never neglected the law for the girl. He is scarcely less regular in his attendance at the sessions of the circuit court of St. Joseph County than is the venerable bailiff of that court. Page 48 U THt ft94 £ John J. Buckley Ph.M. Joseph M. Maag M.E. During his first four years John acquired a reputation as a | olitician, but what he did during those years was not a cir- cumstance to his adroit achievements of 1{120- ' 21, when he returned and became a junior in law, as well as a candidate for a master ' s degree in philosophy. In the latter catjacity he has come into meetings of the senior class; in the former he has attended junior meetings; and as instructor in English he has been eligible for those mysterious gatherings of the faculty behind Brother Cyprian ' s doors. Verily, he has been as iKJwerful as Alden Cusick thinks the S. A. C. should be. For three years John lived on the campus, and for one year in town. Of course, he was President of the Day-Dodg- er ' s Association during the fourth year. This year he has dwelt among the Cognoscenti in Washington hall. One of the first in all things, he was the first to hear the moanings of the ghost last winter. Joe, the best known man on the campiLs, is a product of Richmond, Indiana. The alloted number of words is not sufficient to include all we should like to say of Joe, so only the more prominent offices will be mentioned. He is Sec- retary of the senior class, Secretary of the Glee Club, and a committeeman in the mechanical engineering .society. At work, Joe is a demon. . 11 the i)rescril)cd cla.s.ses did not satiate him, so he added a few extra ones each year. His knowledge of mathematics is supreme; no student gets hLs problems more easily. Only in tnermodynamics is he forced to resort to the excellent line he possesses. We feel sure that Joe ' s name will be connected with gigantic engineering and commercial enterprises. Always he has been a social leader. At St. Mary ' s no one is more welcome. His old friends are bound to him with hoops of steel; he will make a new friend of every new acquaintance. Page 49 y-t o4 t i I Charles W. Morrison Ph.B. in Commerce Charles Dunn LL.B. 1 Except for a summer ' s sojourn in Dowugiac and an even- ing now and then in South Bend, Charles Welstead has spent the hist eight years beneath the shadows of the dome. He has all the qualities of a real student and during his four years as secretary to the Prefect of Studies he has amassed the sum total of all scholastic knowledge. Charlie has specialized in Commerce but his hobby is Philosophy. The large number of Aristotelean principles stored in the regions of Charlie ' s cerebellum have added correct thinking to his natural com- mercial traits. Above all, Charlie has learned the art of living with others. He need not be afraid to match his powers with any he may meet in the business world. Regarding the summer in Dowagiac, John Clancy has fre- quently hinted that he might say things if he had a mind to, but he has never said them. For two long years Charlie was the book-broker of Brown- son Hall. His proficiency in such commercial enterprises often caused his fellow worshipers at the shrine of Black- stone to wonder why he did not forsake the law for Father O ' Hara ' s Jewish-Engineering . In his junior year, Charlie became a member of Father Cunningham ' s metropolitan brood and divided his time between managing the Knights of Columbus club house in South Bend and getting ready for the South Dakota Bar examinations. It is not main- tained that he endangered his health by a too-strenuous application to the Reports , but it is predicted that Charlie will satisfy the law examiners that Notre Dame turns out men who know the law. If Charlie keeps up a corres- pondence with all his Notre Dame friends his period of white collar starvation will be filled with frenzied activity. Tot 04 t Bill arrived at Notre Dame from Highland Park, thi- fam- ous Chicago suburb, in Scptrmbcr, 1916, and since that time he has entered into college life in all its phases, except for the years ' 18- ' 19, when he was a lieutenant. The law, society, baseball, and golf are Bill ' s chief acc( mplisl.ments. he played on the varsity ball team for three seastjns. Lasi year he batted in the four hundred ' ' class. F ' itz forsook the shadows of the dome this year to become one of Father Cimningham ' s off-the-campus students. He entered into South Bend polities in the Fall, and, had it not l)een for the landslide, he would, it cannot be doubted, have carried St. Joseph county for Cox. William J. ' s wit insures him success as a lawyer; hLs smile will make him a successful politician if he wants to be, and, should he aspire to it, his ability at golf will make him a great president. I.arry would not feel entirely at heme except on the page with his Ixion companion. Bill Fitzgerald. If there is one best argument for not having the senior pictures in alphabetical order, it is that Morgan and Fitz would be separated. Like his bosom crony, I.arry is a varsity baseball man. For the last two years he has patrolled the right gra- den at Cartier Field. Last year his bat sent several jjitchers early to the showers. Morgan ' s manner is the perfection of philosophic calm. HLs serenity is a well-adapted foil to the ebulliency of Fitz. But despite his tranquility and Bill ' s effervescence, Larry ' s sen.se of humor is not less keen than his fellow lawyer ' s. When Bill dexterously slips newspapers under Larry ' s arm, Larry appreciates the joke as much as Bill dees. I Page SI rnt  9 t Leo J. MoMSEx Ph.B. in Commerce IZ- Joseph V. Heiman B.S. I . Spig Momsen and Schmucker are, so far as we know, the only men who ever set up light housekeeping in .Sorin hall. In the good old days when men did not go to morning prayer unless they felt like it, when countless subway windows yawned cordially to the late-returning skiver, when a man ' s room was his castle and a prefect never entered it except to deliver mail or borrow a match, Momsen and Schmucker, who were rooming together, installed a chafing-dish. Every night they would lay in food for the following morning, and in the morning they would breakfast, if not in bed, at least in their pajamas. Ere long, the secret of the chafing-dish trans- pired, and other Sorin-ites formed the habit of coming in to breakfast, bringing their own (or, more i)roperly. Father Moloney ' s) buns. One sad day a bun fell on the chafing-dish and broke it. No other picture of a football player had so wide a circu- lation during the sea.son of 1920 as that of George Gipp punt- ing, which is printed near the front of the Dome ' s athletic section. That picture — the best ever made of the greatest player of the year, and the greatest lialfback in the history of Notre Dame, was taken by Joe Heiman, Dome pho- tographer, proprietor of the news stand, and scientist. If Joe sticks to science when he gets out of Notre Dame, a J. Rufus Wallingford will be lost to finance. Joe ' s irnagin- ation conjures up more novel money-making schemes in odd moments than George Randolph Chester with nothing else to do, can think up. The P ' ootball Review, for example. In summer, he promotes baseball games between a hypo- thetical summer-school team, and teams in I.aPorte and Gary. Page S2 rnt 9 k There is scarcely an organization at Notre Dame of which Al Slaggert is not president, secretary-treasurer, sergeant-at- arms, or a member of the board of directors. His mere im- portant jxisitions are: cheer leader, deputy Grand Knight of the Knights of Columbus, associate eclitor of the Dome, and editor of the Scholastic. The question outsiders most fre- quently ask when they first hear of Notre Dame, is ' ' Hew do these Slaggert boys all happen to have the same first name? But, at the risk of being bromidical, we sav there is only one Al. It may be unkind to Alfred to tell this, but our readers have a right to know everything. A young lady and her papa were pa-ssing behind the bleachers to their seats in the grand- stand at the Illinois track meet. Said papa, Which of the athletes do you like best? Oh, Slaggert, daddy replied the girl. To know this big-hearted lad from the I ' pper Peninsula is to like him. Laying aside the bars and spurs of service in France, Gerald returned to argue The Right To Strike with Father Bolger. He has made everything during his career, from captain of the All-Interhall to the ' ' New Idea . He has more than held up the reputation of the long line of Clearys who have been graduated from Notre Dame. Soc- ially he is without a jx-er. To have attended every Notre Dame party in four years Ls a distinction exclusively Clcary ' s. The female motive of this madnes.s has net yet decided whether Gerald ' s future residence will be in Sturgeon Bay or in Eseanaba, so we can ' t tell you. But wherever it is, Klondike , you have our best. , Pagf S3 Titft a4 g Old Atlas had notliins on AUlen J., the chap who came down from Green Bay with a set of drums and oceans of pep- per four years a o and who leaves the shadows of the Dome this June minus the drums but with the resjx ct and admira- tion of every man on the campus, with all the honors that his fellows could heap upon him, and incidentally with a crack- ing good knowledge of law. Ability, dependability, foresight and an immense capacity for work — these are the qualities that gain for the man the confidence of the student body. A debater in his Freshman year, president of the Brownson Lit. in his sophomore year, Financial Secretary of the Knights of Columbus, and president of the University Law Club in his Junior year, Grand Knight of the Knights of Columbus, pres- ident of the Students ' Activities Committee, and class orator for his Senior year; we may have missed some of the jobs Alden has filled but these are the main ones. A good man from the bad lands. Bob hails from North Dakota, but, by spending several years at St. John ' s prep school in Minnesota, he was able to come to us a civilized being. He first attracted attention in his freshnian year (when Sorin hall was a barracks) by smoking a pipe after the ban on cigarettes had been lifted. He lived this down, however, and he has been getting along famously with every- body ever since. Everybody includes the profes.sors and South Bend society. His friends, like his pers, are un- numbered, We know that he will be a success when he takes up Medicine at Harvard next year. Here ' s to you, Bob, and to the day when you can write Dr. before your name and after everybody else ' s. Pagi S4 rnt ft94 t We cannot imagine Red as a farmer. Wherever he tries to seclude himself, surely his fugitive feet will be con- stantly leading him bark to places where lights sparkle. laughter rings out. and jazz orchestras play. Country life may he all right, but we do not Ijelieve it will do for Fd. As leading man in a rural musical ccmcdy, perhaps, with coy chorus maidens dres.sed as milk maids dancing round him singing syncopated melodies in praise of bucolic joys, he would Ijc at home, but not in the real farm atmosphere. But if Red does forswear toddling for farming, agriculture will have gained something. He organized the Agricultural Club and ran it for two years, and made it a thing of real value to Prof .Scheib ' s farmers. Incidentally, he may spread the toddle in farming districts, for he was our best tlance com- mitteeman for four years, and he put on the Senior Bal l. Mike has the happy faculty of looking dressed up in a flannel shirt. hen he roomed with Judy Shanahan, his bell-like tenor could be heard any hour of the day harmoniz- ing with Judy ' s clear baritone and their close neighbors in Sorin wondered when either of them attended enough classes to be rated a junior. His life at Notre Dame has been a striking example of not letting studies interfere with social duties. Mike says that the vacation he spent in summer school was the most profitable one he ever enjoyed. He is undecided whether he will go to South America to please Father O ' Hara or start his business in Springfield to please the local girls. His reputation as a fa.st-fielding shortstop extends even to Mishawaka, and we predict that if he chooses he will make a strong bid for varsity honors this spring. Pag ' 5S z SX THt U9 k Meet a fighting Irishman of Notre Dame. His hist name to the contrary notwithstanding, Abrams maintains that he is as deserving of that epithet as any other dweller under the dome. And after observing his participation in numerous campus activities, we are inclined to second the motion. It is the opinion of many that he is the best dancer in the school, although there are some men among us many adepts of the shoulder-shaking art who acquiesce with re- luctance. When it is considered that Abrams has been a prominent member of the Glee Club, assistant to the Dome photo- grapher, and president of the Surveyor ' s Club, it is a matter of wonder how he kept the C ' s off his bulletin. Bay City waved Good-bye and Notre Darne said Howdy , and Art was lost to the simple country life and enveloped in the strife of prep school. Hut that was eight years ago. Since then he has made Michigan regret that she has lost him, by his rapid strides towar ds success. But in the mean time he has exasperated the second floor of Sorin with his mandolin playing in the Goboon Jazz Orchestra . His favorite indoor pastimes are those of acting as president of the Lifer ' s Club and preparing papers for Chemistry Club meetings. For outdoor amusement, his numerous sisters and more than numerous cousins across the road fur- nish excitement. Knowing Art as we do, we think that Bay City must have missed him during these eight years, but when she sees in him the improvement the years have brought, she will not regret the privation. Page 56 TiULStSkME. Hich is one of those students who obtain Latin phrases on their diplomas. In the morning he knocks ' em cold in his classes, and then in the afternoon he travels to South Bend and turns the theories to practical use. If anyone in this class is obtaining the fullest benefit of a college education, that one is Rick. It should not take him long to be heard from in the mechanical world for he has already secured patents on a couple of his inventions, and patents are pending on several more. This, fora student, is A ' hikvkmfnt. Hich always has time, however, for a walk with the gang to the St. Mary ' s gate, or a good sociable ' game of Black-Jack . He ob- tains results at both recreations. Mac is toa.stma.ster at all the feeds of the mechanical engineers, and his line never fails. I E From St. John ' s prep school way down east , Bob came to us to take science. After taking alx)ut all we have and not being .satisfied, he is going to spend the next four yeais at Johns Hopkin ' s in pursuit of an M.D. Bob had day- dodged for two years, and was not so well known on the campus when he matriculated at Sorin this year. He being, however, a talented banjoist, his rise to fame— or notoriety — via the Cioboon Four was exceedingly rai)id, and now he is classed among Sorin ' s four undesirable musicians. Al- though he ' ll be forgiven for this, he will not be forgotten, for his gfjod-fellowship has won him a host of friends who wish him success but hate to see him go. It is to he hoped that when Doctor Lilla is presented to the admiring public some credit will be given to the second floor of Serin hall. , Page 57 THt g4 i i Jawndeen is possi-ssed of an evenness of temper that noth- ing — even living for a year next door to Tony Gorman — could ruffle, an enduring and productive interest in electrical engineering, and a tender fondness for Whiting, Indiana. He has been a worthy member of the transplanted Sorin Alley this year. His room was used when Gorman was reprisaled ' ' for an insult offered to the American flag by students of McCiill luiiversity in Canada. He officiated at the reading of the Valentine Day address by Gorman to Klondike Cleary. He persistently and loyally failed to get up for morning i)rayer. Because of sickness which has taken him away frcm the university, Fitz will not take his degree with his classmates in June. This good-natured boy was born in Amoy, China, twenty-five years ago. At that time, China was engaged in civil strife, and Paul was forced to go to the Philipjiine Islands for his elementary education. Since then his home has been in Manilla. Last summer he visited there, and next year he is going back for good to use his education as a chemical engineer in the paper business. His parents live there, and there he will always be close to other alumni of Notre Dame. Like Kumagae and Velascn, Ting is a tennis shark, but the racket holds no charm comparable to that of a beaker with a glass rod in it. He has done a lot with these play- things during the last five years. Page 58 , 3V Twt ftq% i. Jock is so thoroughly a Southerner that he can never start the day ' s work until he has read the day-before-yester- day ' s edition of his father ' s pajier, Tlie Memphis Commercial Appeal. The antiquity of the news contained therein (for Jock never gets it until the children of the South Bend post- master are through with the comic pages) makes no differ- ence. It is simply the Memphis atmosphere that Jock wants. Despite the fact that he is a lawyer, Mooney was one of the very l est students in the classes of Father Carrico and Father Hagerty. He was a member of the Scholastic staff this year. His ' ' An Idea of a University was probably the mTst successful article published in the venerable weekly within the vear. Harry Morencj ' is one of the silent forces that wTiters of big-business novels delight in. It is easy enough to say of a man who has not been conspicuous in school activities that he is one of our most loyal workers, in spite of his una.s.suming exterior , and not mean anything by it, but we can describe Moreney only by using these words, and add- ing an urgent request that you believe that in this case we mean it. Harry has watched the growth of the Chamber of ( om- merce from very small beginnings until now when it is too large to l)e got onto a page of the Domk. In this growth he has heli)ed a great deal, and in everything else the commerce men have done in the time he has been here. Page 59 mt 9 t Joseph Sanford LL.B. T Leo D. Kelley Ph.B. in Commerce Xo one at Notre Dame had ever heard of C ' harlevoix, Michigan, until Joe entered school. Now it if? as well known to Notre Dame as Marion, Ohio, is to most of the United States. For three years Joe was able to get pers frcm Father Haggerty when all others failed merely because of his ability on the Corby Hall football team. On the third floor of Corby his room was the bane of Fr. Lahey ' s existence be- cause of the habit his friends had of congregating there to hear him play the mandolin. His reputation as a boxer is so great that there is no need of more than merely referring to it. His feminine friends in .South Bend are as mmierous as his demerits. Yes, he dances! — sometimes not wisely, but too well. Last year he belonged to Sorin alley . After spending a year in the University of Syracuse, and despairing of Greek letter fraternities and the study of Biology, this modest son of Erin journeyed west to take up commerce wit h the rest of the Turkeys . A staunch Dem- ocrat, a hard worker, and an unassuming boy, Kelley is one of the best-liked seniors of nineteen hundred twenty-one, despite the fact that he is cursed with the fatal gift of beauty. Leo has the distinction of being graduated in three and a half years, a feat all but impossible in these days of frenzied credits. In society this boy is no bush-leaguer. He has more elite affairs notched in the handle of his bat than Babe Ruth has home runs. It is with not a little re- gret that we take leave of you, Kel. May you live long to heat Syracuse with your brand of coal. Page 60 -; 3V TKi q4 £ 1 About the only difference between Charlie Kinn and his roommate Joe Meersman is that (, ' harlie sleeps in the upiier deck and Joe sleejjs in the lower. Charlie was pretty lucky to (jet a roommate like Joe, but he was no luckier than Joe was. But, after all, neither of them was so lucky. It was necef«8ary for them to come tojjcther. If two fellows so well suited to each other had been created and then not been brought together, there would be no such thing as design in the universe, and all Father Hagerty ' s teleological argu- ments would ie shot to smithereens. Charlie lived in Brownson duiing the first year, but he went over to Joe ' s room in Corby to get most of his duties . Since the first year they have lived together in Corby and Sorin. Three years in Brownson! Enough to prove the courage and patience of the strongest person, especially when that j)erson is taking engineering, a course that requires all-night lights for the ordinary student. Cy ' s reward came this year in the shajie of a much-coveted room in the main building. As an inter-hall football man. Sanders made a name for himself in his first year. For the last two years he has tried hard for the varsity, and, when he failed, has sub- mitted, like the other unsung hero scrubs , to a daily drubbing by the regulars. His proficiency with a cue gained for him the management of the Brownson rec room where he daily met all comers. In his spare time he heljied Joe Heiman make a success of the news stand. Page 6i w . 3 T t tt04 t I Walter Sweeney ' s name will always be associated with the two-mile run. Whenever a two-mile starts, spectators at Cartier Field will ask each other Do you remember ' Hick ' Sweeney? For three years, indoors and out, Walter was the only dependable two-milcr that Rock had. Some- times, especially in ' 18 and ' 19. he had to run the mile as a preparation for the little marathon , but he always started in the latter like a fresh man, smiled with the spectators at the clerk ' s Twenty-three more , and ' ' Twenty-two more , held on grimly in the middle laps, and put his last bit of strength into a conrageous finish. Walter will probably add his name to the long list of names of yoimg Xotre Dame lawyers -who are members of the St. Joseph county bar association. (I Bob came to Notre Dame four year.s ago and stayed with us for two years. During his second year he lived in Walsh, and between Victrola recitals in his room he found time to take part in athletics. He won his monogram by showing up his competitors in the broad jump, at a varsity meet in Michigan. He did not return here for his junior year but spent it at Boston Tech. Last Fall he came back to Notre Dame to graduate with his class. Bob is a quiet fellow and he must be known intimately to be appreciated. He comes frcm Heading, Pennsylvania, and will probably return there after his graduation m June. He has been a loyal Notre Dame man and his friends wish him the best of success. Page 62 TWt g4 i Xo Notre Dame man is better known in the environs of the university than is Jaok Dcmpsey. Jack has the faculty of makin)( friends with everybcdy from the absent-minded professor to the lively b: ' ll-hop at the Oliver. Last year, Dempsey was a valuable assistant to Cheer Leader Al Slag- gert. As business manager of the Players ' Club he made the success of their one big trip possible. This year he is f)re«ident of the Players ' Club, and president of the Repub- ican Club. In the latter capacity he swung the normally E)emocratic IrLsh to Harding, carrying Notre Dame for the Republicans for the first time. Let the Chicago Dtmocrats prepare, for Jack will soon be spreading the doctrines of protective tariff, high prices, and the empty dinner pail in Cook county. Jack was a member of the Dome ' s e fitorial staff this year. . „ , This pep|)ery little Irishman has talked himself through more classes than most students take in their college carccis. Perhaps he has developed the facility for doing it through having so many friends to practice on. At any rate, Dan is one of our best-known seniors, and his list of friends includes the whole monogram club. In our sophomore year he was class treasurer, and he has been instrumental in putting over every one of our class dances from the famous Krolic to the magnificent Ball. He was one of the men chosen by us to represent the senior class on the Student Activities Ccm- mittee. Dan made a valiant fight against odds for the varsity basketball team this year, sticking with the squad until the final whistle blew in the Wabash game, instead of deserting it as many do, in favor of tea-dancing, when he found that he would be unable to make the team. I — 1 Page 63 TMt ft04 t Harold Foley ' s failure to return to school last year lost to the class of 20 a man whom the class of ' 21 is proud to claim. Harold is known on the campus for his never-failing good humor. No one has ever seen him otherwise than cheerful, even after a hard night boning for exams. His degree in commerce is proof that determination will conquer any sub- ject, even accounting. Three years in Walsh did not pre- l)are him very well for the early walk out from South Bend every morning this year, but such a trifle could not ruffle his good humor, overcome his determination, or impair his punctuality. If he continues to make fast friends as rapidly after graduating as he has at school he will become one of the most powerful political bosses Jacksonville has ever had. 1 For four years Judy has been in and out of scrapes with amazing rapidity. With his fertile imagination it was easy for him to lead Bill Foley astray and also to convince him- self that they wouldn ' t be caught. His desire for know- ledge extends beyond mere text books: in his sophomore year he was the eager pupil of C arm Lombardo in the art of rolling sevens and elevens ' ; when he took up voice culture the following year he chose Mike Scanlon for his roommate; and this year Ted Carmody is teaching him to annoy his neighbors with a banjo. His devotion to athletics should land him a monogram this spring in the pole vault. He changed from the two-mile to the pole vault, for, as he says , there is more chance to rise . Judy ' s success as a doctor is assured, for he can convince even his skeptical friends that he is qualified to prescribe for their ills. Page 64 V V The football critics in the East call Joe the brains of the Notre Dame warriors which is not bad at all when we consider the conservative (jolicy that marks all Eastern criti- cism of anything worth while west of Buffalo. For three years the Idol of Odgensburg has helped bring glory to the name of the University and he has been especially successful when fighting the Cadets in the vicinity of his own back yard. The basketball team profited by his clever playing for two sea.sons. It is little wonder that our rugged athletes saw fit to choose this sturdy brave for president of the Mon- ogram Club. Ji e is a capable student and it is a toss-up as to whether the technical or the athletic world would profit more by his services. St. Thomas college at Minneapolis, has an option on him for next year. We hope that, if Hock ever gets tired of coaching football team.s, Joe Brandy will come back to Notre Dame to take his place. Kalamazoo — direct to you was printed on the pack- age in which Art Butine was shipped to Notre Dame four years ago. He was— and he still is — as proud of Kalamazoo as Joe Scott is of Los Angeles. Art is a splendid example of the value of celery lis a substitute for Mellin ' s Food. Above all, he has that equable calm that ccmcs frcm eating the nerve-soothing plant. There is no more thorough student at Notre Dame than our hero. His constant but not too intense application has accomplished much. Although he isn ' t much at blowing his own horn he has made a capable publicity manager for the Notre Dame branch of the A. I. E. E., and, as we said above, he is loud in prai.se of Kalamazoo. Sturgis, Michigan, will be the scene of Art ' s earliest [xjst-graduate activities. Pagf 6s iL y-t o4ftg If Notre Dame were a co-ed school, and the annoying sex had a representative on the Dome ' s staff it would be pos- sible for us to give you an adequate typewriter-picture of James F. Clancy. As it is, we can tell you only half of it. For four years Jim has been one of the j)rincipal reasons for the success of the Glee Club, both of the concerts them- selves and of the dances that are held after the concerts. He has played a cornet in the orchestra for several years, and last year his cornet was one of the prominent instru- ments in the justly celebrated Davis Jazz-Orchestra. Notre Dame men of ' 21 will never forget Jim; South Bend maidens of the same period cannot if they try. Clancy will return to LaSalle, Illinois, to apply what Prdf. Green has taught him in running his father ' s chain of drug stores. Working on the assumption that every knock is a boost, Bailey delights in picking fiaws in everything from the de- sign of the universe to the spring styles. Nothing was ever accomplished, in which Bailey was not able to point out an imperfection. This may seem to be a bad fault, but Jim renders it a blessing by doing the thing in the better way. W e believe that God must have guided him toward the pro- fession of chemistry for Jim would never be content unless he was able to take things apart and then put them together according to his own ideas. Jim has just guided the Chemists Club through its most successful year. After inhaling some of the odors from his laboratory, we predict that Jim will have a great future in his chosen profession. Page 66 . 3V TWi. ftg t In 1917 this sturdy little athlete st pix-d into our midst. He played around with Klein ' s yearlings the first year, poacheil a championship Freshman football team the next, and then decided to devote all his time to architectural en- Kineering and such things. Mac is the first Architectural Engineer to be graduated in the last five years and he has come up a tough road. Having survived a Maurus, a McCue, and a Kervick, he has, you may rest assured, stood the acid test. Ed has been tried and found not wanting as a gentleman, scholar, and excellent judge of good-looking women. Cleve- land will one day be as proud of him as it now is of Tris Speaker ' s world ' s champion baseball team. i Charlie came in February, 1917, and immediately won fame as a student and as a musician. To-day he still lives uj) to his reputation as a dispensei of jazz music. He plavs anything from a piano (his si)ecialty) to a shoe-horn. ' The only instrument which he has not mastered is the oboe, and his failure with it must be charged to the account of the unappreciative residents of Corby who terminated his strug- gle with the uncivilized instrument by dire threats of vio- lence. Besides leading the school orchestra in his sophomore year, he organized a jazz band which won fame all over northern Indiana. In his third year, he enlarged the jazz band to a syncopated orchestra of twenty-five pieces. Charlie has records for missing morning prayer and for skiving out after t«n o ' clock that will live long in the mind of Father Haggerty. Page 6j Titt ft04tifc III This diminutive son of Milwaukee, will return to his native citv taking to it more technical knowledge than is now contained in the length and breadth of the whole over- grown metropolis. Since Schlitz was legislated away Mil- waukee has needed something to make it famous agam, but its waiting will end on the thirteenth of next June. ith Hannan ' s departure Notre Dame will lose a genial, well-liked chap whose heart has been in every class and school activity during his four years at the University. It is rumored though not generally believed that Paolo is one of the lead- ing malefactors in the gang of Senior yeggs that infest the Main Building and causes several Brownson Hall prefects to be troubled with insomnia. It is not for us to cast stones but we have a strange feeling that, all of the engineering faculty to the contrary notwithstanding, here at least glasses do not indicate a grind. Callix E. Miller has done two services to art. In 191 he left his quiet and happy South Bend, went to France, and stopped the Germans who had already destroyed the Rheims cathedral, and were then bidding fair to wreck every cathe- dral, and rifle every art gallery in France. This year he has art-edited the Dome as it has never been art-edited before. AH the beautiful scenery, the voluptuous costuming, and the ingenius lighting effects in our show are results of his hard work and good taste. Callix is not one who needs the blare of trumpet.s, and the huzzas of the admiring crowd to help him do his best work. Far from the maddening crowd, he strives morosely to attain his ideal. Little Kervick will go to work for an architectural firm in South Bend after his graduation. Page 68 , , ,. 3 TWt U9 §. Jl Raymond J.Schubmehl M.E. IZ James Gepald Cfaugh LL.B. Raymond occupies an unique ixisition among the mem bers of the class. No scented epistles break in upon the calm of his studious life. tSoon after he first purchased a ticket from Perkinsvillo, New York, to South Bend, Schube evinced a marked sus- ceptibiHty to the wilrs of mathematics and physics, and since then he has divided his attention between tho.se two very jealous mistresses. The engineers have paid deference to his capabilities by choosing him to head several organiza- tions and to represent them on the Student Activities Com- mittee. We doubt if his native Perkinsville glories in a Main-Street ' but, should the future crown its aspirations with the rank of a metrojxilis, we hesitate not to predict that one of its prominent thoroughfares will be named Schub- mehl Avenue. Gerald has succeeded Dope Moore as the Notre Dame dopester . He can give you information on base- ball that Hugh Kullerton hasn ' t heard, and his knowledge of football and track is hardly less remarkable. He picked an All-American eleven two weeks ahead of Walter Camp and it contained ten of the men that Camp selected. His himches on the outcome of games imparted to his friends have caused them to reap a golden harvest. Gerald is a quiet lad, but if the old adage about still water ever applied to anyone it applies to him, for he is a student in every sense of the word, and a thinker. He is also a natural born speaker, with a polished delivery and a deep resonant voice which he knows how to use. Whether he becomes a counselor or a pleader he should be a success- ful lawyer. Pagf 6g ' s Tfti fr % i Tillman came to Notro Dame in the year of the S. A. T. C. from Toledo University. He had started his engineering education there the year before, but word had reached him of the fame of Prof. Benitz and Schubmehl and Joe Delaney, and he had wi.sely decided to change to Notre Dame. Charlie has all the outward appearances and manners of a travelling salesman. Even without the clothes he wears, he would be taken for one. It is something more subtle than even his conversation and his confident way of approach- ing a new acquaintance as though he knew him when Hector was a pu]) and Brother Hugh ' s pony a race-horse. Charlie will do well, with his ability to make friends, the wicked rope he tosses, and the engineering skill that he has acquired at Notre Dame. ' . . . , . ' ' Arma virumque cano, Troiae qui primus ab oris South Bend fato profugus, Hullie ' .s-que venit. Tom Dollard came a year ago last September, like Aeneas, from wars. He is not so given to singing his own praises as Virgil ' s hero (albeit the ancient horse of Troy is not entirely without reflection in his conversation), and he has a vaster sense of humor than a Latin classic could have without ceasing to be a Latin classic. Aeneas was here before the war. After it started he was one of the first Notre Dame men to get to France. He was there so long that when he came back he used to get home- sick for the trenches at first. Then he discovered Ted Carmody ' s room. Once a week Aeneas goe s to Mishawaka to see Dido and show her the plans for the building of Rome. Rome is to have nine rooms and a bath, including a sewing room and Tom ' s den. Page 70 TWt ftg% t Wi who dwell in the shadow of the dome have been rheatinu Toledo for some four years of the exuberant, ener- (jetie, j)ersonality whose tintyjK; spoils the upper half of the eolumn; but we m turn have been the victims of a little way- station in Illinois named Jaoksonville. Every time the god- dess of wisdom yawns and declares for a recess, Tcmmy hocks his watch and entrains for the aforementioned village. That ' s all by the way though, and we, his playmates, think of Tom only as the intense student that he really is. The Junior Prom of last year is a credit to his interest and ability in cla.s8 affairs. We have often congratulated ourselves that we selected so able a chap for secretary during our junicr year. Tom ' s good humor is so inexhaustible that he was able to work in the book store for a year and a half without losing it. Ask any Senior Mechanical Engineer where he gets his duties and the an.swer will l)e Culligan . Even the sagacious .-Mphonse of Sorin brands Jim the best student in the hall. In fact we of less studious habits have long since ceased to a.sk the question, How does he do it? finding no answer except Becau.se he is Culligan . If there is a good movie in town, I ' ll get it from Culligan in the morning, we .say. For indoor sjxirt Jim plays society and Five-Hundred . Leave it to Jim to place West Point among the great industrial cities of the United States. He will do for his West Point what his brother M.E., Joe Brandy, ha-s done o another West Point. No one has been able to find out certainly whether or not he was married last Thanksgiving, but few have any doubt about whether he will be by the next one. Pasr 71 3 ' rnt 94 t To Whiting, Indiana, we are indebted for one of the best Irish lads on the honor roll of 1921. Arrived from the sand dunes of Indiana, Hill immediately found protection under Father Haggerty ' s i)aternal wing. During his two years at N. D. he has won many worthy friends by his aggressiveness, resourcefulness and habits of study. He is the fellow who kept Professor Green on the run. Even the dean of the de- partment of Pharmacy has been hard pressed at times to devise means to keephis star pupil busy. When he is at home. Bill ' s favorite diversion is driving the Buick, if he can be said to drive it when it knows the way to Hammond without a driver. Bill has succeeded in placing a fund of knowledge behind his formidable brow, and we are confident of his ability to use it with the force an( the wisdom which characterize all his actions. Moline may have many things to be proud of, but of none of them — not even Charlie King — can she be more proud than of Joe Meersman. No man who was not well and universally liked was ever nicknamed Pete , and that ' s what we call Pete — that is to say, that ' s what we call Joe Meersman. To know Pete intimately was worth all the troubles of four years of mechanical engineering. His radiant presence, and his refusal to admit that there are any things worth worrying about did much to help us through the troubles of the course. Altogether, he is the ideal room-mate. His capacity for work Ls known to all who have observed him in the machine shop. Pete will be a successful engineer. Page 72 , 3 Twt ftq i Never a harder-working man in the school than Fred. If he is not working hard on a chemistry problem, he is biting the tip off of his jx-neil, trying to think of something inter- esting to put in his daily letter to the girl. He helps out in inter-hall sports whenever he is called uix)n, and comes across with a smile. His Lifer ' s and chemistry meetings take u|) most of his spare time, but his welcome smile is ever present when there is work to be done. We all smile with pleasure afterwards when we see how he has done it. When Fred leaves in June he will take with him some- thing more valuable than a diploma, and the world will have gained something more valuable than just a young man with a degree in engineering. if Big-hearted George leaves us this year to practice law in his native village on Lake Michigan. George is one of the few lifer ' s , he having crme here in 1915. One of the first to leave Notre Dame for service across the [wnd, and one of the first to return for a degree after our foreign job was done, George exemplifies the true Notre Dame man. Cieorije has the reputation of seeing more in a given proposition in law than any other man in the course, and this faculty together with his beaming ear-to-ear smile will, doubtless, win him thesame measure of success and hosts I if friends in later life that they have won him at Notre Da me. George ha.sn ' t an enemy. His Notre Dame friends are arranged in alphabetical order in a book named The Bell- hop . Pag ' 73 Tut 9% i I The land of oranges and eternal summer is represented among the oai)s and gowns of this year by Pavlinac. When he first l)egan to frequent Science Hall, Pavie used to get his checks from Pittsburgh but his parents have since moved to Los Angeles. At all events, we are glad that this disciple of Pasteur decided to forego the smoke clouds of Pittsburgh and the movie palaces of Los Angeles for the academic at- mosphere of Notre Dame. Though Pavlinac ' s sports are confined to the indoor varieties, he enjoys intimate friend- ships with many men of the monogram. His chief recreations are playing billiards, and listening to Ted Carmody ' s banjo. ,Ioe will go into Medicine after leaving Notre Dame. We hope he gains jiatients as fast as he destroys Father Hag- gerty ' s, and one half as fast as he makes friends. W hile other men have been complaining at being forced to gorge their brains with such an unreasonable amount of learning in the short space of four years, Al has been quietly acquiring in three years all that a young business man ought to know. He has been here so short a time that one wonders whether he is getting his money ' s worth out of his matriculation fee. But do not think that our Al is a grind . Last year he lived in one of the tournament rooms in Serin and he didn ' t do any more studying than Henry Fritz or the rest of them. This year, living down town, he has not failed to learn those polite and impolite social accomplishments that so personable a young man as he ought to have. Harry Morency ' s guidance and counsel may explain much of Al ' s scholastic and social success; nevertheless, wo are confident that his success hereafter will not be dependent on anyone. THt ft94 fc - I Henry V. Stevenson A.B. Edmund Meagher LL.B. ' zr Because of his niusiral and dramatic criticisms in the Scholastic. Harry mi ht be called The Iconoclast of Notre Dame . Helying on the theory that a man will never be noticed if he always ])taises, Harry achieves f ame by criti- cizing everything from the architecture of the dome to the concerts. His good taste, and his impatience with artistic IK)se and pretence have brought home to many an enter- tainer in n ashington hall that fame Ls not to be had for the asking. To those who know only the author of Harry ' s ar- ticles he seems a decidedly unpleasjint fellow, but those who have known Harry himself have found him warm anti sym- pathetic. Harry has been Father Burn ' s exceedingly ef- ficient .secretary during the last year. hen he leaves Notre Dame he will probably write es.s!iys and stories for other men to criticize. If he ever writes his reminiscences of Notre Dame it is to be hoped that he will not forget about the Washington Hall ghost. Genial Eddie, who needs all his vast good humor to smile at the strange ways in which he hears his last name jjronounced, is a product of Ottawa, Illinois, a city which has sent a large number of its sons to Notre Dame. Since set- tling in Badin hall in September, 1917, he has been a i)ersist- ent student of the law. Although he was a day-dodger from the Ix ' ginning of the last year, a sudden distaste for the city, arising just before the last January exams, led him to remove to Brownson hall, . t the completion of the tests, however, Eddie returned to his land-lady in the city. So successful did his novel experiment prove, that many other day-students have followed his example. , Page 7S TMt ft04 t h Harry J. McLellan M.E. TT Paul E. Sweeney Ph.B. McClellan spent his first two years in Corby hall without getting a demerit. Aside from that he has always tried to get the best out of college life. The fiaxen-haired youth has been most voracious of engineering knowledge throughout his course, and he has ever been willing to help out the less studious among his colleagues. Harry doesn ' t spend all his time studying, though. He is one of the most regular callers at Culligiin ' s, Wednesday evenings, when Five-Hundred renews the worn-out vigor of tired mechanical engineers. His saxaphone is one of the chief drawbacks to life in Sorin hall. In the other things of life , Harry ' s hair is his fortune. Had he not had a natural adaptability to polite society to begin with, his three years ' close association with Joe Till- man would have given it to him. .... Paul Emmett was referred to m an mspired passage m the 1920 Dome as the living example of the heroic Christ- ian in John Bunyan ' s tale . Nothing more need be said on the moral side of his character. This human trilogy of economic lore, oratorical prowess, and romantic fancy had scarcely time to begin to find out the first few obvious things in Economics I, before he was singled out for the presidency of our Freshman class. Em- mett made good on his first job, and he has done the same on a long list of others. He won the junior oratorical contest, he acted as president of the Forum, he was the Memorial Day speaker one year, and at the Comrnencement in June he will deliver one of the bachelor orations. From Notre Dame, Sweeney will go to Harvard to study law. Pi ' s! 76 . , , 3V TMi  9 t Father Marr once called him the man with the t«lltale name . But that was in the old days. He is changed now, and they don ' t even call him Wild Bill anymore. Maybe it was new resjwnsibilities, or SLs , or even the prefects, — who knows? or who cares? Bill is Bill and that ' s all the gang wants. Bill ' s room is always a rendezvous. Where- ever he hangs his hat ' steen others hang their coats. And they are not all Tammany hallers either. What more need be said about his personality — the facts speak for them- selves. As stage director of the Plavers ' Club, Bill set a pace that will be hard to equal. Under his direction the performances glided along without a hitch. Xo one missed his cue to come on; there was no improvising on the stage, while the leading lady back stage looked wildly for his skirt. Jf From the time when he joined us four years ago, ' ' Hank ha.s been una.ssuming and very quiet. He very seldom goes through the hall on a vi.siting four. He has never entered a room without first knocking, and when he knocks you know it is Hank because he has a knock all his own in its gent le- ness. His modest manner has contributed immeasurably to the ease and certainty with which he has made friends. He has been, while with us, an indefatigable work-hound. He puts the best he has into everything he does and he does everything well. To wish Hank success is superfluous because to have done so well everything he has done is certain forecast of success. After he leaves Notre Dame, and starts back to Rochester with his M.E. stuck over his ear, watch him go. , Pagf 77 y  t fto4 fc That MarkZimmerer, Zim ,as he is familiarly known on the campus — came to us four years ago from Niles, Michigan, explains a number of things that would otherwise be incomprehensible. His congenial personality coupled as it is with industrious application to everything that he un- dertakes has earned for him a position of esteem among the members of the class and especially the Mechanical Engin- eers. To hope for his continuance in his ])resent footsteps is to wish him success. Whether he goes up to Niles or else- where Notre Dame will never regret the M.E. it has attached to Mark Zimmerer. Zim worked for the Greeks for three years, and when OUie Clark took over the caf he went in as part of the build- ing. It will seem like getting out of bed on the wrong side next year when Zim isn ' t there to hand us our morning coffee. Rubio is a product of the Notre Dame prep .school and is fully versed in the ways of Notre Dame. As a student he has shown such ability that he is taking only three years to get his degree in agriculture. But he has not confined him- self to his studies at the expense of all those other activities that are a part of a college education. When he was only sixteen he proved his ability in interhall football games. As business manager of Nosotros he has succeeded far be- yond the hopes of his many friends. He is an active member of the Latin- American Association and it is men like hiin that are giving us a better appreciation of the Latin-Ameri- can. Rubio has hinted that after his graduation he will be- come a rancher in Central America. A better example of the true Latin American would be hard to find. I ; Page yS l TWt g% i Cherub , as he is affectionately icnown among his friends, came to Xotre Dame when he was fifteen. For a year he was under Father McGarrv ' s kindly care, and for two years under Father Farley ' s. This year, being now almost a young man, he came to live in Sorin, and played on the hall ' s football team. Gerald, who is five feet, four, rooms with the tallest man in school, and, when they play Five-Hundred together, the roonmiate ases his height unscrupulously. The punch boards at Platner ' s are the one temptation m Gerald ' s virtuous life. In the class room Gerald sets a fast pace; in pre-,Sorin days he always had a class average that entitled him to a general per . He will probably enter the novitiate aiter. his graduation. L Walter ' s career at Notre Dame has suffered several inter- ruptions, one of which occurred when the Marine Corps borrowed him for war. Walter ' s ins and outs at Notre Dame suggest a varitition from ' ' ' Off again — -on again — one again— Flanagan , to ' Dutch again — -Jake again — Dutch again ' Galligan . . graphic chart would be required to trace W alter ' s career. The pleasing qualities that have endeared him to Notre Dame will .secure him a place in the affections of all who appreciate a merry heart. As an entertainer, hehasarej)- ertoire that extends from poetry in the Scholastic to mono- logues for the Glee Club. For all convivial occasions he is all but indispensable. He represented the Day Dodgers on theS. A.C. this year. The very successful senior vaudeville was promoted by him. -— — 1 Page 79 - 3 Mt ft04 g ii Being both a lawyer and a i) )litician, Arch should step out in the world and make himself heard. He is president of the Law Club, which is stepping some already, and vice- president of the University Rejjublican Club. Last Fall he helped direct the Republican campaign in Notre Dame and South Bend. He became one of the men behind the scenes, sitting in back-rooms with the bosses and issuing orders to lieutenants outside. The lawyer-politician combination is a great one; Arch cannot help rea])ing the benefits of it, for both law and politics are natural accomplishments of his. Arch is a good scout, a congenial companion, and a firm friend. He has verbal fluency, — and knows when not to use it; he has a keen brain, and it is never idle. Whether in Green Bay or in Chicago, — step along with them Arch, — you can do it. Ralph is his name and smiling his countenance. Five years ago he came to Notre Dame and smiled his way into the hearts of us all. He played three years on the varsity base- ball team and captained it in 1919 when Notre Dame won the Western Intercollegiate Championship. Raljjh spent a year in France and when he returned he proceeded to grad- uate from one of the toughest courses in the university. Chicago is his home, and we judge from his frequent visits to that city that Ralph loves his home. Of course, there may be something there besides his lares and penates, but — . Anyhow we have no hesitation in saying that he will be always a true son of Notre Dame. For his are the right conceptions of honor and loyalty. Page 80 f . 3 rro. SSkJOOSS T  t tt04 t ' fi ! Mt 1-1 - ' % ' ■T g 1 a Lawrence A. Wallace Ph.B. in Journalism A We Pall him Sa8 , short for Sa88afra88 ; why we mon- iekered him thus is a mystery even to us. Sas i.s about as pleasant a fellow as you can find; and quiet, as a rule,— but eertain companionship, cs)X ' ciiilly in a tower room, will cause anyone to become temporarily wild. Sas is a phil- osopher after P ' ather Connie Hagerty ' s own heart, and he is never afraid toengage in animated descussion to vindciate the theories of his profe8.sor; he is secretary of the Players ' Club. Although a good student, he seems to have plenty of time to step out in the Bend. Sas has been a real hard-luck track-man. Year after year injuries have come at the most inopi)ortune time, — just as he was roimding into condition. This year, we hope, will tell a tale of better luck. Jf Ajidy presided over the show cases of a jewelry shop and aided the swains of his lieloved Stuart in selecting their en- gagement rings before, goaded to desperation, he decided to profit by the tutoring of Professor Cooney. He counts among his many accomplishments at Notre Dame a zealous regard for the interests of the Iowa Club, a steady stream of cf.rrespondence in pink envelopes, a habit of serious study, and a predilection for the theater. . ndy always pays his tuition with considerable reluct- ance. The other member of the senior journalism class spends the nocturnal hours editing the Dome, and the early- morning cla.ss hour u.sually finds him in dreamland far away so that a recitation of the famous war class is impfjs- sible. Andy ' s name is destined to head a column on the dramatic page of a metro|X)litan daily. Page Si ' TWt  9 t From Peru, South America there came, in 1915, this very seiious young Latin, intent on learning agriculture. We have found him a consistently good student, an enthusiastic patron of, though not participant in, athletic games, and one of the mainstays of the Latin-American Association. This year he wa.s assistant business manager of Nosotros. Hector ' s ambition is to help make Peru an agricviltural country. Infurtherance of this design, he will go to Califor- nia next year to extend his own knowledge of agriculture. Hector has never liked the dry climate of the United States, and he has taken out his spite on us by wearing the moustache you see in the picture. The moustache has won him many friends in South Bend. Jerry first became famous as the only man who was able to draw music from the Brownson hall rec room piano. Since those good old days we have learned much more about Jerry that has augmented his fame. As an end on the Fresh- man football team of 1917, he showed great promise, but Rock convinced him the next year that he was a track man. So for three years we have been amazed at Jerry ' s versatility in that department of sport. He has won points for Notre Dame in the high jump, the hurdles, and the quar- ter-mile. This year he represented Notre Dame on the mile- relay team at New York, and at the Drake relays. He had the unique honor of being president of his class for two years. In the class room, Jerry stars quite as much as on the cam- pus and the cinder track. Page S2 , 3 Ttt ft04 t Prof Can- is one of that group of intellectuals which includes Harry Stevenson, John nucklev, and Clarence Man- ion, who live m Washinttton and Cadillac, and have no pre- fects to worry them. Being intellectuals they arc able to get over a chapter in Coffey ' s Ontology, or Evolution and Dcg- ma in a third of the time that other men would take, and they have, therefore, lots of spare time, which they use in in- venting ghost stories for the delight of the rest of the campus. ■hen bold and curious ghost-seekers, skiving from other halls, come to sjiend the night in Washington hall, Dan gives the signal to his clarinet player, and sits back to take notes for his thesis on The P.sychology of the Supernatural . Dan is always on hand at tlie Oliver when Fritz Lieber plays Hamlet , or Ed Wynne presents his Carnival. Anthony is sort of a mystery man about thcschool When he isn ' t visiting friends on Notre Dame Avenue he may be found in his room with bru.sh and pallet putting some of the b ' HUty sjM)ts of the campus on canvas. A visit to his room where his paintings of landscapes adorn the walls would con- vince you that he is an artist. He gazes on the lake at five in the morning and takes long walks to familiarize himself with nature. He has never, as yet, painted portraits but he visits St. Mary ' s camp is frequently, where he may be looking for models. He has an extfnsive knowledge of women that has l)een acquired by reading, and as,sociation with them. He has dates regularly, and spends some time Ix-ing thrilled at the Auditorium serials. W hen Anthony car- ries his Ph.B. away with him in June, he may carry a South Bend girl along with it. He does not know whether he will study art formally, r.r infcimally while faimirg in Ohio. Pag( 83 I TWt ft % t John Xcwiniin is the greatest exponent of the science of accounting that Notre Dame has had for several years, but his princ ' ipal claims to a place in the memories of his class- mates rest on grounds much more solid and enduring than any such ephemeral distinction as this. John ' s chief accom- plishment IS a delicate finesse in the art of living with others. His intimate associates include such diverse types as Brother Cyprian and Henry Fritz, Kenneth Nyhan and Bob Williams. With the complaisance of his great namesake, the urbane and illustrious Cardinal, Clancy succeeds in keeping on terms of the closest friendship with all of them, although he never compromises his own personality in doing it, or sacri- fices his opinions to their prejudices. ' For a few weeks last year John lived downtown. The rest of the time he has spent on the campus. He has been Brother Cyprian ' s secretary for three years. Bryce is one of the members of the class of ' 21 who en- tered Notre Dame in 1916 and had his course interrupted by the late unpleasantnesses in Europe. While here, he has been president of the Metropolitan Club for one year, Deputy Grand Knight of the Knights of Columbus for one year (1918-19), Recording Secretary for ' 19- ' 20, vice-presi- dent of the Friends of Irish Freedom for ' 18- ' 19, and several other things, not forgetting sergeant in the S. A. T. C. If demerits were given for missing class dances, and for nothing else, Babe would never be in danger of getting into trouble. Page S4 A gontlcinun, athlete and scholar. This is the man, Frank C ' oughlin, who leaves N. D. with the June grads armed with an LL.B. Degree. As a gentleman with a big, generous, warm, heart, Frank Ls ' all there ' ' . As an athlete, this bundle of brawn is nationally known, e.sjH ' eially for the creditable manner in which he captained the great grid team of twenty through a hard sea.son without a defeat. And as a scholar, Little illie is not so bad either. V ho can forget his loyal devotion to the senior class of ' 21 as its Frcsi- denf? Frank has carried into his collegiate work the same real and leadership that characterized his service with Uncle Sam as Ensign in the navy. Frank, your past record has been good; your future record is destined to be even better. God speed you a full measure of success. Every one of Jack ' s twenty-nine hundred and sixty ounces exudes good humor. One tries in vain to recollect a time when, even under the most trying circumstances, he has lost his temper, or shortened the length of his smile — • except that he did the latter for some unaccountable reason when he was having his picture taken. Jack is getting his Litt.B. in a little more than three years, since he was out of school almost all of the year 18- ' 19. His thesis on The Development of the Short- Story in America has. at the time we write, already ex- cited a great deal of favorable comment among the members of the faculty who have had the opportunity for an early reading of it. Pag ' 8s , 3V rnt, 9 t. Paddy got his start in the New England CIlub act of the student vaudeville tliree years ago, when he appeared as a red haired colored woman who made a touching con- fession before a merciless minister and congregation, and then defended herself from their virtuous efforts to thrust her forth by siezing a broom and whirling it round her head, the curtain descending on the flying broom, and the justly angered, but helpless, congregation. Then the cur- tain rose to give the heroine a chance to say that the con- fession wasn ' t true, but she had just wanted to say some- thing, and had told the story to give other souls in sin a wa ' nin . Paddy has taught boxing classes every year. This year he helpctl Father Lange manage Freshman compulsory physical training. Connie is one of the Lifers , he having been here both as a prep and as a college man. It is said that at one time he was destined for the seminary, but Fate seems now intent on making him famous as an architect in Kansas City, whither, to the unutterable chagrin of many South Bend young ladies, he intends to emigrate after things are over in June. Despite a quiet, unassuming, and almost bash- ful exterior, this young fashion plate has an extensive calling list in So ith Bend and a line that few young damsels can resist. To his fellow architects, Connie is known as Charlie , Good-Looking , and Steve . He has been a steady worker and holds the respect of all who know him. During the late war Hay served under the colors. Page 86 5 TWt ftg4 t Hall came to Notre Dame at the beginning of his junior year from Wabash. At the down-state college where orators and debaters are as thick, apparently, as basketball players he had been captain of the debating team. He went out for our team at the b !ginning of this year, but, after surviving the first round of tryouts, he dropped out. He had found that the problems of Father Hagerty ' s metaphysics, at ' d the walk out from, and back to, town every day took all the time which he had intended to devote to debating. Since Hall has been here only two years, has spent those in town, and has talked about philosophy and eco- nomics much more than about hinwelf, it is not surprising that we do not know all alxiut him. We do know that he is a shrewd thinker and a hard worker. Hannibal had emulations; Alexander had a.spirations; Caesar had ambitions; but Donald .lames Easley has hal- lucinations. He dreams, muses and fancies, both asleep and awake, on the day when he shall drift down to S mth Africa or South America or over to Honolulu, Shanghai or Tokio, anywhere in general and nowhere in particular just so that he may discover for himself the exact meaning of the term, foreign in his degree in Foreign Commerce. Probably a certain Helen back in Dunbar, Xeb., will have something to say about his globe-trotting aspirations. But Donald has learned much while at Notre Dame — «nd it would not sur- prise us in the least, if the mighty Hoover should be suc- ceeded by none other than this illustrious personage, for Easley has had much experience in administering food, es- jiecially breakfast buns, to a certain ' golden domed ' individ- ual in Sorin. , , Page 87 I.I I sIL TMt Q4 i George came to iis from Peddie Institute with a reputa- tion as a track man , and ,during his four years here he more than lived up to his rep . He speaks Spanish like a native, for in his happiest days, he was the boon companion of our old friend Tony Garcia. His ambition is to follow Johnnie Powers to South America, and on his return build a little bungalow .somewhere in Indiana. One of the most popular fellows in the class, he has held various class offices, and has been president, vice-president, et al of the Trenton Club for four years. Father Pat Haggerty entrusted to him the care of Corby rec room for two years, and this year Father Quinlan saw fit to do the same. We wonder if all the boys believe George ' s plaintive cry, There ' s no money in a ' rec ' ' room! George Meredith — a real gentleman who has the best wishes of all with whom he came into contact. Like all the other men who helped to make the Senior Ball the grand affair that it was. Bill Allen will suffer the penalty of having all his other achievements forgotten in the splendor of that one. Even as we write, still under the in- fluence of the glory of the night of April 28, we can think of nothing else that has happened in Bill ' s eventful career. Oh, there are a few others, but they are all connected in some way with the Ball. There is, for example, the fact that in two years the pink envelope from Chicago in the morning ' s mail has never failed. One morning the postmark was Chicago, 12 P. M. , and Bill was unable to keep his mind on the law, but the next morning, it said ' ' Chicago, 9 P. M. as it had always said before, and the letter explained we suppose, that she had had an ajipointment with the dentist the night before, because Bill looked happy that day. Page 88 . , . 2 . T-t D04 t The name of Cy Kasper was known to all of us when we entered Notre Dame and beeame familiar with the names cf that famous X. D. two-mile relay team that had broken a record the year before. Cy returned frcm the army last year, and immediately began a new attack with a degree as fiis objective. So well has he succeeded that he has been one of the few ' 21 seniors for whom, confronted as we have been with many strange new rules, graduation has seemed certain all along. Upon his return to school Cy became again one of our most dependable track men, and his ability, added to his popularity, won for him the honor of captaining the 1921 team. The easiest way to say that he is a prince of good fel- lows is to cite the fact that after one year ' s residence with his present classmates he was elected vice-president of their class. If you can imagine the practical idealism and enormo us nose of Cyrano de Bcrgerac, together with the personal eccentricities of Don Quixote, sui)crimposed vipon the men- tal acuteness of the Stagirite, you have begun to know Eddie, the Editor , him of the pipe and cane. When the cane appeared, we who knew Edtlie and loved him Ix ' gan to fear for his health of mind. But, considering the immense amount of work attached to the publication of this Dome, and the procrastinating tendcnciesof the average college man, we could not wonder. V e could u.se three or four pages tell- ing you Eddie ' s good qualities, (and as many more, perhaps, in telling of his others). Much better than that we present you this Dome in which you will find them both. ' ■, Pagf Sg TWt ftg% t I Joseph P. Delaney was born in the state of Pennsylvania. He has lived there tlie greater part of his life and still claims that state as his home. We first met Joe in seventeen when he registered at the University to pursue a course in engineering. He has al- ways Ijeen a glutton for work. He carried several studies besides those required in the course he followed. And bad habits, — he has none, except perhaps, — well, some of the boys call him ' ' Midnight and Ether . The real truth is that Joe is troubled with sleeping-sickness only in the day- time. His prowess in other lines can be determined from the fact that, after Joe met a girl from St. Mary ' s, (see page 280) the best she could do in her exams wag fifty-five percent. As an engineering student Midnight has very few equals. We can expect big things from him in the future. Frank, familiarly known as Kangy, is the all-around star of the class of 1921. When it conies to baseball, he is per- fection itself: on the bases he ' s a streak; in the field he turns many hits into putouts. However, Frank has not confined his efforts to the ball diamond but is in his own element whenitcomes to track, and la.st year was one of the N. D. ' s star track men. . nd then the Wimmen, does he get by? well just ask any of the fair ones of the Bend. As to the future Frank is undecided as to whether he will be a big league star or help solve the electrical problems of the General Electric Company, but be assured that wherever he goes that old N. D. pepper that has characterized all his actions on the diamond and in classes, will land him at the top of the ladder. Page go ■■Ik IPMt ft04 g Bill FoU-y, like ' ' Brute Walsh, oomes from a family that has several representatives at Notre Dame, but he has enough qualities ])eeuliarly his own to set him off from the rest; the volummous corduroys, for example, that f5ap about his slender legs, and his connection with restaurants. During all foitf years, Bill has been a bulwark of the cafeteria, both in the reign of Grecian terror, and in the more benevo- lent Clark rule. He has a kind of humor so iM culiarly his own that one does not wonder at the number and variety of tinted letters that the brother shovels into Box 14 every day. So many girls has Bill that he frequently lends some to lonesome friends, notably his roommate, John Hope. .Anything may come out of Iowa— for in.stancc, there ' s East Dubuque — but not on every day does a broncho- busting baritone drop into the Junior cla.ss from Deni.son: .sombrero, cuss-words, voice and all. La.st year, as the Oh, Ivall part of the McCullough-Lally combination, Lenihan introduced himself to Sorin Hall, to the department of -Agri- culture, and to South Bend society. This year he dropjx-d the first and cultivated the others mor« intensively. In rea lity he ought to be a citizen of Kentucky, for his apprecia- tion of everything considered worth while there, has never Ix-en surpas.sed by any Colonel on record. We shall never forget Lally ' s voice, which is in a class of its own, nor his frank and hearty personality which has made a friend of everybody. The.se things alone would make him bestride the world like a colossus. H u Pagf 91 T 4t ft04 t i It is a task worthy of a genius to select from all the things that might be said about Joe, the few things that are to be said. hether it were best to dwell upon the Senator ' s oratorical achievements, his predilection for mental gym- nastics, or better, upon the similies which his facile pen has painted upon the pages of the ScHOLASTicorstill better upon the personal charm which elicits the regard cf all who call him friend, is more than one of the latter can decide. A chapter might be devoted to his quiet and unassuming ways, another to his keen sense of humor, while a digression would relate how he was wont to betake himself to a room on the third floor of Sorin to which no one could gain admittance without knocking half a dozen times. Joe will take back to Rochester the remembrance of a s])lendid career and the warm regard of many friends. Jake comes from illiamsport, Pa., and were it not for the fact that several of us have been in that city, we might think that almost everybody there was quiet and subdued. Jake is one of those forceful, yet una.ssuming fellows who work along diligently and eventually reach the goal that they have set. His amiable disposition and gentle- manly ways have endeared him to the hearts of all his class- mates, and we regret to part with him. Jake played on the baseball team for three years, and captained it in 1916. He was the best third baseman Notre Dame had had for several years, and better than they will have for several more. A popular and aggressive ath- lete, he made an ideal leader. Notre Dame is proud to have Jake wear the monogram. Page g2 .; 3V TMt  9Mt If you like the paint ini; of George Gipp or anything else in this DoMK, don ' t give all the credit to the man that drew the picture or wrote the sonnet. After the picture was drawn there had to be money to pay the engraver for a cut of it, and after the sonnet was written there had to be more money to buy white pajier to print it on. The painter and the poet stopped worrying when their work was done, but James L. O ' Tooie, Jr., went up to his room and buried his head in his hands. The next day he sallied forth and sold a page cf advertising, or a dozen eoi)ies of the book. When he came back at night, he found that there were another sonnet and another picture to be provided for. Last sprinff, Jimmic pas.sed the Pennsylvania preliminary bar exams with one of the highest marks that has ever been made in them. Jf September, 1917, brought to Notre Dame from Kansas, this man from the Sun-Flower State who had become inter- ested in Foreign Commerce. In June he will receive his dejp-ee, go home to W ilson, and then start for South America. Mike is a very influential man in the Chamber of Commerce, and was oneof Notre Dame ' s representativesatthe foreign trade convention in Chicago. He plays a clarinet in the Notre Dame band, and entertains the second floor of Sorin by his daily concerts on the banjo. Also he played football on the Sorin Hall team. In Mike ' s leaving, Notre Dame loses a loyal booster and hard worker, and South Bend may lose one of its younger set. Yes, he is in love, but that is nothing against him. Mike will be successful in whatever he does. Vatch him march to success. ■, Page 93 .4 TMt ft04 t ' A legal Alexander, Scnor Yial garnered a law degree from the Catholic University of Santiago, persuaded the faculty of the University of Chile to give him the title of Master, is now laying siege to the Director of Studies at Notre Dame for the Doctor Juris, and intends shortly to entrain for Europe in search of other conquerable legal worlds. At Notre Dame, Senor spent most of his days with Colonel Hoynes, drinking dee|) draughts from that far famed author- ity on International Law. If a remarkably fine character, a charming personality, and a genuine assiduity in academic matters count for aught, Senor will have as many grabs as he needs at the forelock of that elusive one called Oppor- tunity. Senor has already in his heart a warm spot for Notre Dame. George is from the coal fields of Pennsylvania and he has all the pep characteristic of the sons of old Will Penn. He is famous for being almost the only man who never worries in anticipation of one of Father Bolger ' s examina- tions. Although George is usually quiet, yet when the gang gets going around his section, the hall bcccmes very much like it was in the old days of Father Marr. Not that George is the center of disturbance, but just that he is a good fel- low among good felk ws, knows what is expected of a host, and has Dan Duffy for roommate. Future editions of the Scholastic will carry many paragraphs each recording some new achievements of Slaine ' s. Page 94. ' If , 3V T-ft ft04 fc Young ladies who know the original of the gentle-looking boy above cannot understand why we call him ' ' Brute ' ' , but they arc no more mystified by it than we are. The man who started it cannot be found and no one else knows. Seme fairly plausible reasons might be suggested, however. May- be we nicknamed him Brute because he is so gentle. A more likely reason is that there have been so many alshes around Notre Dame in the history of the school, and espec- ially in the last few years, that all the names that might have Ixfn appropriate to this alsh were used up before he came. The most likely reason of all is that Clyde re- que8te l that the name Brute be given him to oflset the bad effect of his regular first name. In our Freshman year Tom King and Dave were the ends on the varsity football team, and they formed a team little Ie8.s brilliant than the ctmbinations cf which Dave has been a part in 1919 and 1920. After the football season, Dave went to France for reasons that will b ! obvious to the reader. hen he came back he had suffered injuries that made it seem imiK)s.sible that he should ever play football again. With a strong determination to try, and an indomitable courage that was the very sublimation of what we call the Notre Dame spirit , Dave went out when the call for foot- ball men was issued. He has won two monograms since. Speaking, the other day, of the fact that his days a« a college football player are over, Dave said, I ' m a has-been now! ' , but the narrative above proves that he never can be. Pag ' 95 T t fta4 t I The best way to find out what Walter can do is to turn to the advertising section of this Dome and look at the quantity of South Bend advertising. As assistant business manager, Walter was soothing balm to the wounded soul of Business Manager O ' Toole in his many cares incidental to the publication of the first self-supporting Dome. Dome assistants who really assist are an exception to the rule; and Walter was a delightful exception. Although his classmates warned him against it, Bice in- sisted on living in town. The result was that he married one of South Bend ' s daughters. Uhen a man can help get out a Dome, support a wife, and get a degree in law, all at once, he is doing very well. It will be necessary to bear in mind that no tales of won- drous deeds performed are to adorn the lines that are devoted to Neary. True, he neither made nor aspired to a monogram; his name has not become a by-word among distressed pre- fects; nor has he ever been accused of having designs on a ' Maxima Cum ' . But let it redound to the credit of Weary Neary that during the four years he has remained with us he has been a consistent worker, a valued friend, and as true a follower of the Fighting Irish as those valiant warriors could have. Neary enticed his friend Mulcahy from Geneva, New York, but Mulcahy never succeeded in enticing Neary to taste the joys of residing off the campus. He goes now to use in the busy marts of the Empire state the business knowledge that ccmmeree classes and the N. D. Chamber of Commerce have given him. Page q6 II . 3 TWt ft94 £ If we were in Obie ' s loshes, we wouldn ' t know whpther to ro to work for David Belasco or GriflRth, to sup- plant McCutclieon, or to take the bar cNaminations. That George would be a valuable addition to Belasoo ' s stable of stars no one who saw his riotously funny performance as the mother of the jilted (rirl in last year ' s Portmanteau ' s Mar- ried in Haste could doubt. In the Juggler, he has out- Herolded Herold for two years, and for part of this year he has been editor-in-chief. Taking Delrnar Kdmondson ' s place as editor of a humorous magazine is a pretty severe test, and Obie has stood it well. Our Prom programs were mostly his work and much of the success of the Ball was due to him. George has been prominent in all our class activities. Tarnava was born in Monterey, Mexico. He caHle to Notre Dame four years ago, by wav of St. Edward ' s prep school in Austin, Texas, where he had made a reputation for himself as a student and as an athlete. At Notre Dame, his chief interests have been wireless telegrai)hy,and pho- tography. During the first half of this year, he was i)rcsident of the Latin-American Association. He was art editor of this year ' s Nosotros, and photographer for last year ' s Dome. He has been a mfmbcr cf the band for several years. Early in the summer he will go to Tampico, Mexico, to shew his degree to a young lady there named Grace, and tell her how much money electrical engineers make. Pagf 97 I 3 ¥Ht  9% t You will observe from the first pages of the Dome that we started out as a revue. The cap-and-gowned persons who appear above these write-ups are actors, and the write-ups themselves are designed to give you an idea of the part each man is to take in the show. Tcmmy Sheen is the juvenile. W ' hen he came to us three years ago, he was wearing short pants. Despite this handicap, however, and despite the fact that the rest of us had been living together for a year before he came, Tonuuy immediately became one of the most im- portant, popular, and indis))ensable members of the class. Tommy will be barely eighteen when he is graduated, and he will start to Eurepe after his M. D. at an age at which most men are entering college. Better than that, he is one of the most proficient toddlers at Notre Dame. Grand Bapids boasts of two great products, Jacobean furniture that rivals the original and Our Boy Henry, who makes the best of good felliiws look like crabby hack drivers. I ' nder the guidance of Prof. Kervick, the bald blond has developed rapidly, and has produced seme remarkably good design. When not architecturally inclined. Hank may be seen either in one of the social centers of town or possibly on the Niles road. Roush is a pedestrian of fame and he seems to take great pleasure in hiking to the neighboring towns. It was once thought that there was some feminine attraction in Niles but later it was discovered that it was only Henry ' s interest in a certain stained glass window. To the people of his famous city we may say, You gave us the diamond in the rough: we return the finished product, Henry J. the architect . Page qS . 3 THt ftO l Edward Morris has devoted the last seven years to spreading the posix-l of the loganberry in the middle west, and boosting Notre Dame and her athletic teams every- where. He showed his loyalty to the loganberry one evening last Spring when he ran all over the city of Lafayette in order to get a bottle of its juice and present it to a soda-fountain girl who had never heard of it. Those who witnes.sed the presentation and heard the accompanying s] eech feel sure that the girl will never again let her fountain be without loganberry juice. Starrett ' s services to Notre Dame have been many. He has won points for her in the hurdles, and he has .secured for her teams at least as much publicity as any journalist who has been here in the three last years. He was athletic editor of the Scholastic, and the 1920 Dome. Brother Theophilus came to us this year from Chicago, where he had been teaching for several years at the Holy Trinity high sch K)l. As a teacher he had been practiced, and sympathetic. In the cla.ssroom and on the jilayground his feeling of genuine comradeship with his boys had won hearty reciprocation. As companion and fellow-student he has, by his earnest- ness and his geniality, captured the heaits of all. We have found in him a spirit to love and to admire. The only blot on his ' scutcheon is his propensity for philosophy, and his malevolent habit of dragging ontologj ' into conversations that are otherwi.se both pleasant and improving. Despite his lively good humor, in him there is little empty mirth. Page 99 THt 04 t Foregoing the allurements of making complimentary puns on Bill ' s last name, we wish to state that White comes from Ottawa, LaSalle (Jountj ' , Illinois; that he has been ii diligent student of Agriculture; and that in addition to thumbing the i)ages a great deal, he has used up a great quantity of fancy stationery and gathered a coterie of friends. Bill wrote an admirable thesis on Alfalfa . His memory book con- tains a great variety of dance programs; in fact, it is an epitome of Notre Dame social life since White first ascended the front steps and was told to use the lower door forever afterward. Bill is not inclined to go in for competition so he specializes in attending morning prayer, reading the Scho- lastic and maintaining personal neatness. He will receive his agricultural journals at Route No. 9, Ottawa, 111. Van is one of those fellows whom you think you know perfectly until you come to write them up at the end of four years, one of those who meet all demands so adequately, who work so smoothly in all the relations of college life, that they are seldom noticed in a world of jolting and strife. Our saying that we do not know Van so well as we might means not that we could not write at length on his good qualities, but that we do not know of any weakness of his. A,ssuming that, since he is human and a college student, he must have weaknesses, and going on the theory that it is only through his faults that one knows a man, we say that we do not know Van yet. We know, however, that he is an excellent student, and that he gets pink letters regularly. Page loo Jf : 1921 Page JO I JUNIORS i ' Frank Blasius The men of ' 22 came to Notre Dame dur- ing that turbulent fall of 1918. They joined the S. A. T. C, and performed all of the duties that are peculiar to S. A. T. C. ' s until the following Christmas when the war ended and the corp was demobilized. The real history of the class has as its be- ginning the organization meeting which was held immediately following the 1918-19 Christ- mas holidays. John Higgins was elected pres- ident, Roger Kiley vice-president, Gerald Ashe keeper of the notes of the meetings, and Chas. Hirschbuhl care- taker of the mon- ey. The fact that this was the only meeting of the year does not imply that the class remained inactive. In the latter part of Alay, it held a banquet at the Oliver Hotel which was considered at that time to be the best banquet ever held during the history of the school. With one year ' s college experience to their credit the men of ' 22 came back to Notre Dame in the Fall of ' 19 and took up their quarters in Corby. As Sophomores they chose Roger Kiley President, John Hart V ' ice-President, Harold Weber Treasurer, James Jones Secretary, and Leo Mahoney maintainer of peace. School had opened scarcely a week when the Freshman crew trooped over to Corby one evening, and defiantly issued a challenge to the Sophs to come out and scrap. The most modest way in which we can tell what we did to them is to say that they never challenged us again. We rushed out before the breath of challenge had quite passed the Badin-ites ' lips. In the first skirmish they shoved the few men we had back, but the line held while hurried reinforce- Ralph Coryx Vice-President Thomas Keepe Treasurer Alfonso Scott Secretary Page 102 1921 p ji; ments rushed from all the floors of Corby, and in a short time the invaders were driven away. Defeating the Freshmen was not the only commendable thing the twenty- two men did. In a memorable pigskin battle with Walsh, who had the f amous Bill Hayes playing half-back, Corby annexed the inter-hall football title. The relay team tied the inter-hall gym record, and the track team added another cup to Corby ' s already large collection. The crowning event of the year was the Sophomore Cotillion which was held in the latter part of May in the Elk ' s Temple. Attaining the dignity of Juniors, the class moved from Corby to Sorin. This year they elected Frank Blassius, President, Ralph Coryn, Vice-President, Tom Keefe Treasurer, Alfonso Scott Secretary, and Harry Denny, Chief- Bouncer. Pete Eckerle and Emmett Burke were chosen to act as assis- tants to Cheer-Leader Slaggert. Benedict Susen and John Huether were appointed to represent the class at the meetings of the S. A. C. In April the ' 22 Dome board was elected. Harold McKee was chosen Editor-in-Chief; Paul Schwertely, Business Manager, and George Fischer, Art Editor. Because Fischer ' s class work threatened to prevent him from giving his best attention to the Dome, he resigned and Walter Matthes was named to fill his place. The Prom, the great event in the life of a Junior, was held on the evening of May 20, in the Tribune ball room. Joseph Rhomberg will be president of our senior class next year. %i ll. ?MU J. f) AkHCp lSf ( KVt)AKtK. 1921 Page loj u iHf 5M0Cifil ■feTr I)AVMt CiKUHCt. .IwACK ?)M ' Kttf bt SyiuvAt Page 104 1921 1921 Pagf tos Page io6 1921 1921 Page toy Page io8 1921 r:2 K litAAf A ' {i[i n t. l} Hiiu i ' ( kiWi M Caj I Ca Arkpt JAhj JOim Jo , 5vj.LiVAH. 1921 Pagir lOQ Page no 1921 d 1921 Page III tot Ofii r ' ■WpiM mi{ CocAgA t A. J hm Do voft ku.n Cio.ha 09 Page 112 1921 •f AX Kt9 t y ■f ; X oi|Av( fiJ i? Payi Mvicaa J 1921 ' a c J Page 114 1921 1921 Page 11$ SOPHOMORES The proverbial sophomore — the sophomore of stories about college life by men who have never been to college, or who were there so long ago that they have forgotten what it is like — looks upon himself and his class as the bulwarks of the School. In college life as it usually is, the sophomore class is always considered by others to be the hope of the school. This is for two reasons. For one thing, sophs are usually better students than juniors because they have not been at college long enough to learn to walk devious ways. For another thing, they have, unlike the Freshmen, been there long enough to have shown promise, and, unlike the Juniors, not long enough to have disappointed, as they are pretty sure to do the next year. So their claim to respect is really a negative one. The class of 1922 at Notre Dame has a positive claim to the respect of the observer. The center on the football team, the most brilliant two members of the track team, the varsity third baseman and most of the pitching staff, the winner of the Breen medal, and four of the eight varsity debaters, are sophomores. If this does not impress the reader, let him go. to Cartier field to see Larsen shiver the enemy ' s line, and gaze in wonder as Murphy clears the bar at six feet, three inches; let him turn from admiring the steady mound-work of Castner and Falvey, and the scintillating fielding of Mickey Kane, to watch Gus Desch break a record in the low hurdles. Take him then by the hand and lead him to Washington hall to hear, with ears that will ring afterward with the sound, the thunder that is Gallagher, and see, with amazed eyes, the lightning that is Engels. And then, there is Eddie Murphy. It takes a con- ceited writer to say more than just, There is Eddie; isn ' t he cute? Murphy is not a person to be described; he is a fact to be recognized. But he is cute, and Chester- ton-ic, and the most versatile of the Scholastic editors. We want Chesterton, his idol, ' to come to Notre Dame, so we can see Eddie sitting on his knee and bandying paradoxes with him. Lack of space prevents any tributes to the Flannerys, the Wallaces, the Sheas, the Fickses, the Lightfoots, and all the rest. Paul Castner presided over the ' 22 men last year; Leslie Logan did it this year,with Barry as Vice-President and Ficks as Secretary; and Desch, Engels, or Louis Mur- phy will do it next year. President Logan and Morris Dacy represented the class on the S. A. C. in 1920-21. Page 11 1921 X a. o c 5 u o Q Id  i 1921 •a c 7 Page llS 1921 ' 1921 Page iiQ SURVIVAL OF FROSH FISH J Francis Donohue, President A little girl, still young enough to wear long stockings, was coming out of the Library one Sun- day afternoon as a pale-faced sophomore whizzed by in his harmonious corduroys. Mister, she asked very seriously, where is the building that the animals are in? ' ' The pale-faced student looked both dignified and delighted. The only man on the campus who had ever called him mister before was Prof. Kacz- marek. The animals! he mused, Why that building over there is the place you are looking for, he replied pointing to Badin hall, and the little girl left him. The incident suggests the varying degrees along the evolutionary scale from the tadpole to the wombat which the present concourse of freshman offers. For instance, the unmitigated Robert Rink at once suggests the idea of a baby elephant; that is, his appearance does. The humor of Kelly from Connecticut as well as his appearance, suggests the same idea. The infantile prodigies who inhabit the Badin menagerie have for the last few years elicited much investigation on the part of Prof. Kaczmerick, whose biological education is annually enriched by the new crop of frosh. These young denizens of every preserve in the land offer proof of his theory that the development of the species is recapitulated in the develop- ment of the individual. Which is all very easy to understand when one is not a freshman. George Baldus who shares a place in Brownson zoo with his townsman, Robert Rink, at once suggests a resemblance to the Mexican hairless. His expressive countenance exhibits the thrilling intelligence not to be seen in the ordinary freshman. He is sometimes thinking, and when not thinking, which is most of the time, he is sleeping. But Mr. Baldus has more ideas to the cubic inch than anyone else in his class except the Kangaroo King in Walsh, Theobold McEachin, who wears sheep-skin coats to disguise his real animality, which is the Biblical wolf. They call him the Kangaroo King because of his tail which somebody is always on. The class of ' 24 has presented the University some remark- able specimens of biology. They ought to be proud of their record in this line for no freshman class in the history of the university has offered so manyopportunities to scientists. But they are fast taking on the polish of campus civiliza- tion and before another year they will be ordinary campus hobos, or campus orators, or campus politicians (perhaps putrid politicians) and they will lose their individuality. It always happens. Probably that is what education is for. They tell us it is to make men out of us. But the little girl with the long stockings was not fooled. h I William Waters, Treasurer Page 120 I 1 I u z. s X « u X il 1921 Page HI .. , Cahpvjc Page 122 1921 Jl A THE S. A. C. Missing: Coughlin, Blasius, Logan, and Donahue Presidents of the four classes 1921 Page 123 THE STUDENT ACTIVITY COMMITTEE At last Notre Dame has taken a big firm stride toward the Student Govern- ment Goal, and though only in the field two years, a good workable organization has been evolved and established. The present S. A. C. is the result of a plan drawn up by fifty of the student body powers called into conference by Chair- man Beacom before the close of last term. Briefly, the framework of the present S. A. C. follows: there are two units, a Faculty Council and a Student Committee, each meeting separately but co- operating with the other in the interests of the University. The Faculty Council is composed of three members appointed by the President of the University. The Student Activity Committee is composed of thirteen members, the four class Presidents being ex-oflficio members and the other nine being elected by the re- spective classes in the following proportion: six Seniors, two Juniors and one Soph- omore. Largely because of the fact that the S. A. C. is to the last man elective it has this year enjoyed the full confidence and co-operation of the student body. The possible purposes of this committee are legion and the experience of the past year has proved beyond a doubt that a general supervisory student organi- zation has a real and important field at Notre Dame, as well as at the bigger state colleges. Though the purposes of the S. A. C. were not especially well defined when the Committee was organized last fall, a constitution was evolved by the joint labor of the Faculty Council and the Committee and pursuant thereto much new ground has since been broken and the roots of some real student functions well planted. This is essentially a new organization at Notre Dame and it has been working a new field. The record of the present committee is good but the record of future committees should be better. It is in recognition of this fact that we are print- ing a brief record of the more important activities of the Committee this past year, hoping that friends, alumni, and students may help to perpetuate and ele- vate a high standard of work in a student organization with wonderful and almost unlimited possibilities for making Notre Dame a better, bigger and more renowned University. The N. D.-S. A. C. has been recognized by other Universities to the extent that it was invited to send two representatives to an inter-collegiate Conference of student governing bodies held at Columbia, Missouri, on April 7-9. Twenty- eight states were represented at this conference and Notre Dame ' s representa- tives took an active part in the sessions, giving much information and bringing back a great deal more which will be of immeasurable benefit to the committees of the future. Alden Cusick, chairman of the S. A. C, and Frank Blasius were chosen to represent Notre Dame. The following outline aims merely to give a broad perspective of the activity of the S. A. C. during the year 1920-21. There is no pretense to completeness. Personell of S. a. C. — 1920-21 Faculty Council: Father Walsh, Father Gallagan, Prefect Discipline; Father McGinn. Alden Cuscik, Chairman Frank Coughlin .... President Senior Class Frank Blasius ..... President Junior Class James Logan .... President Sophomore Class Francis Donoghue . . . President Freshman Class Gerald Hoar ..... Secretary S. A. C. Raymond Schubmehl .... Treasurer, S. A. C. Daniel Duffy . Chairman Committee on Summer Employment Morris Starrett Walter O ' Keefe Benjamin Susen John Huether Maurice X)acy Edward DeCourcey Succeeded Morris Starrett in February. The S. A. C. has encouraged suggestions from all sources on matters that will Continued on page (1$ ) Page 124 1921 t t 5;. . ' .-if 1921 ' age 7 5 THE CHICAGO CLUB John T. Dempsey Norman C. Barry Roger J. Kiley George A. Dever President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer The Chicago Club, although organized only this year, at once became one of the two foremost social clubs on the campus. Its first event was the spectacular Easter Ball, March 29, in the Gold Room of the Congress Hotel, Chicago. This was the largest and the most successful dance ever given by a Notre Dame Club. The expenditure involved and the work put into it only give added glory to the achievement. The Club gives its affairs in Chicago, and all Notre Dame men in Chicago at these times are entertained as guests. Thanksgiving, Christinas, and Easter dances, together vyith a get-together banquet before the school- year opens will be annual occurrences. The I WILL spirit of the members here will advertise Notre Dame in Chicago, and it will be the means to a more active, a more efficient, and a more enthusiastic Alumni Association in that city. Page 126 z T H 1-: OHIO CLUB O!iio, the buckeye state, stands forth as the most prominent state in the union for the Presidents it has contributed to the nation, as well as for the men it has S:nt to the University of Notre Dame. With the opening of the school year in September, this club, which has been in existence at Notre Dame for the past five years, resumed operations, and held its election of officers. At this election Father III of Cincinnati was chosen honorary President. Daniel W. Duffy of Huron was elected President; Albert Ficks, Vice-President; Walter Stuhldreher, Treasurer; and Thomas VanAarle, Secretary. In the selection of Duffy as President of the club, the men chose a man capable of the leadership of the club. Duffy being a senior in the commerce department the men realized that it would only be a short time under his leadership, until the Ohio Club would be the most prominent club on the campus. It was due to the efforts of Duffy that the men on the Notre Dame basketball team on their trip through Ohio during the Christmas recess were so royally entertained in the cities in which they played. At a smoker held in Walsh Hall during the early part of the year the men from Ohio got together, and from the entertainment furnished it could be easily seen that the Ohio club would make this a monthly occurrence. By this means it was possible to assemble the men together and establish a certain fraternal relationship which cannot be equalled by any other state club on the campus. The men of the Ohio Club believe that the organization of this year, will con- tinue, and in the near future be the best state Club at the University. The prime purpose of the club is to establish a fraternal relationship among the men from Ohio at Notre Dame, and to foster and promote the general welfare of the Uni- versity throughout the state of Ohio, by having a representative crowd from that state on the campus each year. 1921 Page I2J TOLEDO CLUB J. L. Tillman, Jr. K. F. Nyhan R. E. Gallagher E. M. ToTH J. J. QuiNN President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms On the first day of November 1920, the men from Toledo got together and formed the Toledo Club. The idea had been entertained at different times in the past but because of the small number of men from Toledo it was put off till this year. There being enough men to go ahead this year, the club was started. In choosing Tillman as the first President of the Club the men chose their most enthusiastic fellow-citizen. Joe ' s initiative and ability as a leader have been the main link in holding the club together. At Christmas time the members went home and affiliated themselves with the Alumni Association in Toledo. A meeting was held there on the night of December the twenty-second, at which the Club of Notre Dame submitted its constitution to the Alumni who passed it unanimously. On January the fourth, the Notre Dame basketball team played St. John ' s University of Toledo. Our team were met at the depot by the Club members and escorted to their hotel. At one-thirty they were tendered a banquet at the Iverness club in Toledo. The Club members and the Alumni attended the game in a body and afterward the team were guests of honor at the Notre Dame- Toledo dance. About one hundred and fifty couples attended the dance, which was a great success. Page 128 1921 11 I THE AGRICULTURAL ASSOCIATION Giles Cain Frederick Mann President Vincent Trainor Secretary Fice-President Hector rey de Castro Treasurer From humble beginnings the Agriculture Association has developed into one of the most virile organizations on the campus. Organized two years ago for the purpose of evolving a more intimate bond of association between the Ag faculty and the embryonic terrae filii ; to stimulate interest in every ramification of the science and to put the hay-mow cogitators on the map in a social way, this society continues to progress with such phenomenal acceleration that even its founders are amazed. Professor W. A. Johns, former head of the agriculture department, his successor. Professor B. VV. Schieb, Ed DeCourcey whose as- siduous efforts during the pioneer days assured the outfit a dazzling future, and Brother Leo, C. S. C. were especially instrumental in maintaining the tone of the Association. The first organization was effected in February, 1919, when Brother xo, C.S.C., was named Honorary President; Edward DeCourcey, President; G. E. Myers, Vice-President; VV. M. White, Secretary-Treasurer; R. P. Devine, Publicity. Shortly after the initial meeting a big smoker brought all the Aggies together in Brownson Rec. Hall for a social hour and a technical confab and two months later they nibbled as farm hands nibble at delicate viands at the Oliver. Reorganization in the Fall saw the return of Red DeCourcey to the Presidential chair, hiz ' zoner being surrounded by the following staff of aides de camp ; William Powers, Vice-President; William Hoen, Secretary-Treasurer; Tom Ward, Publicity. A veritable shower of smokers, feeds and meetings followed during the ensuing year. The 1920 combination made Giles Cain its chief, con- ferred the Tom Xlarshall title on Frederick Mann, issued to V ' incent Trainor a brand new quill and a spotless note book and charged Hector Rey de Castro with the duty of gleaning money for activities. Meetings have been held every third Friday in Chemistry Hall. The Aggies number among their ranks such well- known campus celebrities as Buck Shaw, track and gridiron marvel, Len ' Lally, the silver-toned ranger and Tiny Lieb, fullback extraordinary. 1921 Paf.f I2f) THE CHEMISTRY CLUB James Bailey George Uhlmeyer President Secretary- Treas urer Father Maguire in the fall of 1919 called together his proteges and founded the Chemistry Club, which is now one of the foremost educational clubs at Notre Dame. During the first year of its existence the membership was small but it has increased steadily so that now it contains practically every student in the chemical department of the University. The club has brought about a closer connection between the professors and the students and promoted a feeling of friendship among its members. Several smokers and a banquet were given during the year and a large attendance at these social functions bears witness to the fact that chemists are just as capable of having a good time as they are of forming compounds in the laboratory. The Honorary President of the organization is also head of the Chem- ical Engineering department of the University. Mr. Froming has by his active interest and sound advice, been largely responsible for the success of the club and although his period at Notre Dame has been brief, he has already won the admiration of every chemistry student and instructor at the University. Mr. James Bailey, the illustrious graduate from the Chemica Engineering Department in 1920, has for two years held the office of President. Page 130 9Z THE MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SOCIETY Ray Schubmehl Cy Fites Mark Zimmerer JuD Hyland Lord High Lubricator Apprentice Lubricator Feed Regulator Director of the Dope Sheet When two or more engineers get together there is bound to be an argument, with a resultant loss of energy and steam. To utilize this steam and increase the efficiency of the course as a whole, a group of Seniors decided to form a club. This was the origin of a now powerful campus organization consisting of about eighty members, known as the Notre Dame Mechanical Engineers Society. No time was lost in organization and at the first meeting Ray Schubmehl was elected Lord High Keeper of the Lubricating Oil, that keeps the wheels of the organization running smoothly; Cy Fites, apprentice Oiler; Mark Zimmerer, Cost Department and Feed Regulator; and Jud Hyland, Director of the dope sheet. Prof. Benitz is the Blow-off valve, otherwise known as critic and Honorary Presi- dent. Meetings are held once a month, in which papers are read on various sub- jects of interest to the members as a whole, such as, The Operation of a Modern Steel Plant and The Blast Furnace . But the club does not confine itself to the sometimes dry subjects of engineer- ing. After meetings are finished and taxes collected by the Feed Regulator, cider, doughnuts, and similar fuels are consumed in enormous quantities; members emit large quantities of cigarette smoke in playful imitation of steam engines; and many incredible stories are told. The final blowout of the year was a banquet fit for kings, the grub was good, the stories better and except for the lack of good liquors to top off the occasion, it was a regular good time of the pre-Volstead days. 1921 Page 131 PIH HMt -? ' i J ' «9 Ik9LI| W S -  . mff - tfl flH M H MiM| fl| _fe | HH MhHH THE advf:rtising club Harold McKee James Skelly Gerald Ashe George Slaine Walter Stuldreher John Higgins President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Members of Executivs Committee Early in the first semester Father Lahey ' s advertising proteges came together and formed themselves into a society which since has been known as the Ad- vertising Club of Notre Dame. At frequent intervals the club convened to scrut- inize, analyze and criticize all forms of advertising, from the small and humble classified ad to the large and majestic double page display. In short the club accomplished great things, so m3ny in fact that an attempt at even a brief enum- eration of them here would require every inch of space in this Dome. Perhaps the greatest event of the year, excepting of course the delightful episode at Bagby ' s, were the lectures by Mr. F. Lamport of the Lamport-McDonald Advertising Agency in South Bend, and Professor V. L. O ' Connor of Notre Dame. But even advertisers must pay some heed to their organic cravings and so the club decided that the mental nourishment which they had fervidly partaken of throughout the year should be supplemented by the substantialities of the ban- quet table. By consulting the advertising section of the South Bend News-Times, they found out where the best place to eat was. They enjoyed themselves very much, but they learned, also, that of even the best and most widely advertised foods one can eat too much. Pai 1921 tl THE KEYSTONE CLUB James O ' Toole William A. Miner Robert Follett Vincent D. Sweeney Rev. p. J. Haggerty, C.S.C. President rice-President Secretary-Treasurer Publicity Man Honorary President The first social event of the year was a smoker, given in Kable ' s banquet hall. The large attendance at this smoker fully demonstrated the spirit of the organi- zation and augured well for the success of the activities that were to follow. En- couraged by the wonderful success of the first social plunge, the committee ap- pointed earlier in the year began arrangements for the great event of the season, the annual banquet, to be held in the Pink Room of the Oliver Hotel on March 20. The committee left nothing undone to make the banquet the best ever. That their efforts were crowned with success was amply evidenced by the general and wholesale expression of satisfaction on the part of all who attended. The Washington Hall sextette furnished entertainment throughout the serving of the groceries. After the camels were lighted, the Rev. Father Burns, President of the University, Father Patrick Haggerty, Honorary President of the organi- zation, and other Keystone Staters from the faculty spoke their choicest bits of wit and wisdom. Besides engineering successful social functions, the organization has for its purpose the furtherance of the interest of Pennsylvanians at the University, and the scheduling of talks to the club by eminent Pennsylvanians who happen to stray thus far into the provinces. 1921 Pag ' ' 33 THE KANSAS CITY CLUB John Redmond Eugene Van den Boom Edwin McCarthy President Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer Among the many innovations of the year was the Kansas City club, formed for the purpose for which most city and state clubs are formed — fraternizing among men who have come to Notre Dame from the same home town, devising ways and means of enticing other Kansas City men to Notre Dame, and laying the foundations for sociability, and mutual helpfulness among the men in later life. The club held a dinner in the Pompeian room of the Baltimore hotel, and a theater party at the Orpheum (in Kansas City, not in South Bend) in the Christ- mas holidays. Fabian Haynes, William Purcell, and Edwin McCarthy formed the committee in charge of the dinner. Shortly before the end of the year the club banqueted at Clark ' s Campus Banquet Room. John Redmond was toastmaster. Stuart Carroll, an N. D. man of ' 17, a Kansas City man of about 1896, and now editor of the Mishawaka Daily Enterprise, spoke on Kansas City Fellowship . Page 134 1921 THE life:r ' s club Arthur V ' allez Fred Glahe Chas. Morrison Ray Giraidan Hubert Keenan President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Soldier of Arms His brow was furrowed and his step was slow when the Lifer finally received his discharge. Long he had waited for his diploma and now that he had it, he did not wish to leave the place of so many dearly cherished memories. He thought of the long days he had spent in the minims , and of the hard ones under Car- roll ' s strict rule. Then he had been a member of the Brownson Corduroy Club , a leader in the snipe hunt, collector of pew rent from Freshmen, and promoter of dances in Dujarie hall. Four years ago he and the other outcasts had banded themselves together under the leadership of George Haller and the protection of Father Hagerty into a club which had — and yet has — a secret handshake; which gives the Lifer an opportunity to indulge in sentimental musings about the days that are no more where ears that hear will understand. 1921 Page I3S THE MINNESOTA CLUB Thomas C. Kasper d. coughlin Paul Castner Linus Glotzbaugh James P. Swift Edward DeGree President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Secretary of the General Committee Publicity Man The purpose of the Minnesota club is to further Notre Dame interests in Min- nesota and to provide a social vehicle for Gopher State students at the Univer- sity. Through the efforts of a cotnmittee headed by Ed. DeGree, the University has received considerable publicity in the home State during the past year and catalogues have been mailed to many prospective Notre Dame men. After the opening of the fourth quarter the Club gathered ' round the festive banquet board and partook of a sumptuous repast. Plans were made to put on a campaign to secure more students from Minnesota. It is planned to hold a dance during the summer vacation at some central point, either Minneapolis or St. Paul. Page 136 1921 THE PALETTE CLUB Robert Riordan H. W. Flannery Professor Vincent O ' Connor President Secretary- Treasurer Honorary President W Whereas most of the state clubs and other organizations at Notre Dame have been formed for purposes in which the palate has played a large part — however c ' .oaked by specious declarations about furthering the study of Walter Pater among the Esquimaux — the small club above was formed because of a common interest in the palette. Although in its first year, the Palette club made itself felt, no small amount of what is good in this Dome is the work of its members. The guid- ing mind of Prof. O ' Connor was at work in many places where his name was not signed. Riordan and Flannery are responsible for a great many of the cartoons. 1921 Pogf 137 THE LASALLE COUNCIL CLUB Gerald Hoar Giles Cain James Clancy William White President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer The La Salle County club of Notre Dame was formed in 1916. Its purpose, in the beginning, was merely to act as a means whereby the students from La Salle County, Illinois, might become acquainted with one another and haye little get-together meetings while at school. Since then the club ' s activities have broad- ened with the increase in its membership. The club now has forty-five members, twenty-five of whom are alumni who have not lost their interest in things. The fifth annual Christmas dance was held this year. Incidentally, the La- Salle County club was about four years ahead of most other student organizations in inaugurating the custom of holding a dance at home in the holidays. On Easter Monday the members heard a requiem high Mass sung for the repose of the souls of its deceased members. This is another custom honored by several years ' ob- servance. A banquet was held shortly before the end of the school year. Two dancing parties will be given under the auspices of the club in the summer. L Page 138 1921 THE LOYOLA CLUB A. C. Morgan J. B. Stephan J. F. Young J. C. Norton President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer We are gentlemen, That neither in our hearts, nor outward eyes, Envy the great, nor do the low despise. With eighteen former students of Loyola Academy, Chicago, on the campus, it was decided that an organization should be formed to keep these men together while at Notre Dame and to place before the students who are now attending Loyola Academy the advantages of coming to Notre Dame after their graduation. Sociability, which is the essence of Notre Dame life, permeates this organization. Four years ago one Loyola man came to Notre Dame. Ever since then it has been only a question of time until Loyo a and Notre Dame would take pos- session of each other. This year the Loyola club has sponsored two social events in South Bend, and two in Chicago. 1921 Page 139 THE NOTRE DAME BUREAU OF THE AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS Frank Miles John Fitzgerald Arthur Butine President Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer The Electrical Engineer ' s society holds bi-monthly meetings at which import- ant engineering topics are discussed, illustrated lectures heard, and electrical experiments and demonstrations ipade. When brains are tired of work, the wire- less outfit is put into use, and the exhausted members are refreshed by orchestra music that is being played hundreds of miles away. Four trips to neighboring power plants were taken within the year. Feeds were held along with most of the bi-monthly meetings, and one big banquet was indulged in. Count de Tarnava, as chairman of the banquet committee, caused even Prof. Caparo to wonder why he was wasting his time on electricity. V Page 140 THE FORUM David Worth Clark Joseph P. Sullivan Vincent Engels Leo Tschudi Edwin Murphy Brother Alphonsus President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Publicity Man Honorary President Hardly had the students completed the necessary arrangements at the secre- tary ' s office and consulted the deans of their departments when the Forum or- ganized for the year. To the first meeting came not only all the old members, but also a varied group of illiterates seeking guidance in casting their first votes from the leaders of this learned body. From the beginning it was evident that the Forum would have a great year— until election day was over. After Brother Alphonsus had started the first meeting with a few words of counsel, Worth Clark and his room-mate, Joe Sullivan, were unanimously chosen President and Vice-President, respectively. But no one said anything. The first big affair of the year was a debate in which Raymond Gallagher and Al Slaggert proved to the judges that James Cox should be elected President of the United States. Later Brother Alphonsus and Professor Shuster made New- man Night memorable by their talks on the Cardinal ' s life and works. The quality of training the Forum gives is shown by the fact that all the mem- bers of the varsity affirmative debating team are members of the Forum. 1921 Page 141 I I THE PACIFIC COAST CLUB Charles B. Foley Alfonso A. Scott Charles J. Hirschbuhl Ivan C. Sharp Hyas Tyee Tenas Tyee Sachem and Keeper of the fVampum Chief Scout Page 142 1921 ♦ i THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN CLUB Worth Clark Davi d Haganbarth Gerald Hagan President Vice-President Secretary- Treasurer 1921 fa ' 143 T H E K . O F C . SCHOLARSHIP STUDENTS • ' V Louis Murphy R. M. Gallagher President Secretary Page 144 P ■■■1 ■m H B - K ■1 s M H H kW K. 1- I ' 1 1 ■r j l H fej Mfrtk ty[ m nV H f P li ' P ■ps Rl HH T . _ B i to - K H N 1 ■r M ■Tm THE MANILA CLUB Pio Montenegro Rafael Gonzales Alfonso Zobel President Fice-President Secretary-Treasurer The Manila Club of Notre Dame University came into being at the beginning of the scholastic year 1920-1921, for the purpose of promoting a better social understanding between the Filipino Students of Notre Dame and their American friends, both on the campus and outside. This organization is affiliated with the Filipino Students ' Federation of America. There are more than two thousand Filipino students in the United States today and nineteen of them in Notre Dame. Though small in number, these nineteen are trying their best to represent the Philippines in St. Joseph County, and for this reason the Manila Club was founded. According to Mr. Pio Montenegro, the erudite president of the organization, the Filipino students came to America not only to learn the text-books of the colleges and universities of this country, but also to learn the ideals of the Ameri- can people and to get the best that there is in American Democracy; because we are going back with the expectation to become useful citizens of the future Philippine republic. The club has undertaken several social affairs in South Bend. 1921 Page 14s ST. THOMAS AQUINAS PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY The Rev. Charles Iiltner, C.S.C. Karl M. Arndt John T. Dempsey Moderator Preside Jit Secretary-Treasurer The St. Thomas Aquinas Philosophical Society meets every two weeks. At each of these meetings a paper is read upon which at least six weeks have been spent in preparation. Following the reading of these papers, general debates are permitted. The papers are criticized and lauded, attacked and defended; discussion, dissension and disorder become rife, yet there is maintained withal a dignity becoming a society of philosophers. All philosophical difficulties sug- gested by the subject under discussion are smoothed out and answered. Be- cause the gatherings of this Society are enthusiastic, yet intellectual, students from every college at the University attend them, seeking to benefit by the know- ledge that they can derive from them. Page J 46 1921 THE LAW CLUB Archibald Duncan President Publication The Notre Dame Latv Reporter 1921 Pagf 147 THE PRESS CLUB L. A. Wallace Harold E. McKee J. Murray Powers William Kelley Daniel Coughlin . . . President Vice-President . ■. . Secretary Treasurer Director of the Round Table THE WRITER ' S CLUB Harry Flannery Che Page 148 1921 il 1921 Page 149 I THE MINING ENGINEERS ' CLUB Page ISO 1921 1 II 1921 Page Ijt II THE IOWA CLUB Emmett Sweeney Walter Klauer Joseph Rhomberg Edmund Tschudi President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Page ij2 i9Zl THE NEW ENGLAND CLUB James Murphy Cletus Lynch President Treasurer I 1921 1 1- Page 133 INDIANAPOLIS CLUB Arthur C. Shea Robert Rink Edward Doyle President Secretary Treasurer Page IS4 THE PHARMACEUTICS 1921 p f 155 rr-i KENTUCKY CLUB Frank Bloemer President Page Ij6 I THE SURVEYORS i9Zi I ' age ts7 THE MICHIGAN CLUB Alfred N. Slaggert Henry J. Rusche President Secretary {S. A. C. Continued from page 124) promote the interests of the University, and steered them through proper channels to realization. The following is typical of activity in this line. 1. .New light at car line. 2. New Bulletin Boards on campus and in all residence halls with an organized system of posting etc., under the management of a salaried student. 3. Four new tennis courts. 4. ew Swimming pier, and dressing quarters in boat house. 5. W ater in Halls after 10 P. M. 6. Full arrangements for N. D. — Northwestern Football Trip. Advanced date of o,uarterly examinations. Secured R. R. rate less than half regular fare. Arranged post-game entertainment in Chicago; shows, etc. 7. Presented plan for Hall of Fame. DRIVES AND COLLECTIONS An important province of the S. A. C. has been to demand that permission to solicit funds from the students, ' must be authorized by the Committee. Through this centralization of authority Notre Dame men have been saved much nag- ging and many dollars. The general policy followed has been: to encourage every reasonable activity by which Notre Dame or Notre Dame men are bene- fited; to discourage activity and solicitation for those things in which N. D. is but remotely interested. The S. A. C. has itself conducted many worthy cam- paigns, including: Gipp memorial (flowers — funeral expenses); Near East Relief; Holy Cross Mission House; Father Maher, (flowers on ninetieth birthday); Easter (alter flowers). PETITIONS GRANTED 1. Fed Cross Membership Drive. 2. Commerce Department Vaudeville (benefit Chinese Relief). 3. American Committee for Relief in Ireland. Page 158 1921 4- American Association for Recognition of Irish Republic Membership Drive. 5. Indianapolis Club — accepted offer to act as hosts to football team and rooters — Indiana- N. D. game. 6. Flynn and Morgan — Victory Button s Purdue Game. 7. Dacy and New — chances on autographed football. 8. Heiman — arm bands. 9. Henneberry and Klannery — Corona typewriters. lo. Anderson and Larsen — Football Pictures. 11. Berjman — Stationery. 12. Dwyer — publish a ' Who ' s Who . 13. Knights of Columbus — European Relief. PETITIONS REJECTED 14. A South Bend Society — Drive for a Tuberculosis Hospital. 15. An Elkhart man— sell raffles on an automobile. 16. A South Bend man — sell raffles on automobile. 17. Latin-.American Club— conduct three raffles for benefit of a publicity campaign, during Lent. 18.. Jack Dempsey— offered to give N. D. Chicago Club dance at Gold Room, Congress Hotel, Chicago, for benefit Gipp Memorial. Indorsed dance and thanked Dempsey for genercus offer, but rejected benefit because no outside funds are to be solicited for Gipp Memorial. 19. A Student — permission to haul all trunks 10 and from depots at vacation time. N. D. men must have financial protection of a moneyed concern, such as Yellow Taxi. 20. Traveler ' s Protective .Association— solicit funds for a South Bend Park shelter house. MISCELLANEOUS 1. Pledged co-operation to University in raising 3750,oco for Professor ' s Endowment Fund. 2. Decided to send letters of condolence to parents of Notre Dame men who die, and to Notre Dame men whose parents die, during school term. This is in behalf of student body. 4. Promoted good feeling with those who served the Student Body: A. Indiana Electric Company Apologized for damage to equipment on two occasions and paid for same. Settled for 300 unpaid fares after one football celebration and for 500 after the Gipp funeral. Demanded removal of several unsafe cars. Demanded inspection of roadbed, and repairs if needed. B. Oliver Hotel: Gave assurance of N. D. good- will and thanks for use of lobby after football team returned from West Point and during Purdue and other celebrations. 5. Investigated cleaning and pressing agencies on campus, with a view to helping_N. D. men work way through college. Found: exclusive privilege in News Stands. 6. Recommended that head cheer-leader be ex-cfficio member of the S. A. C. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE The S. A. C. has done extensive work in securing summer and permanent positions for Notre Dame men. 1 THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Grand Knight Cusick No cathedral, not ev-en Westminis- ter or Rheims, was constructed with the deliberation that has marked the erection of the Knights of Columbus Social Center Building . This Stu- dents ' Taj Mahal would today com- mand the admiration of the throng were the untiring efforts of the coun- cil ' s officers, present and past, suffic- ient to convert the dream into a reality. Not long after we received our committal papers in September, Grand Knight Cusick and the Build- ing I ' und Committee launched a drive for funds, with the Supreme Council as the objective. For concentration, ' thoroughness, and genuine intensity, this effort was without a parallel in the history of the council. But an effort it was doomed to be, despite the assistance of Father Cavanaugh and Joseph Scott who presented the case to the Supreme Council. Finding itself unsuccessful in its more material aspirations the council turned its attention to the pondering of weighty problems and the initiation of large classes of candidates. It has been a mighty successful year, but before we proceed to the business of describing the work that has been accomplished, we had better call the roll of officers. Grand Knight Cusick filled his predecessor ' s shoes with a proficiency that earned and received the commendation of the Knights. His Now just a word more , and his humor which suggests nothing more than the frisking of elephants have long ago been forgiven him. I ' inancial Sec- retary Eugene Heidleman found it a hard task to equal Cusick ' s admirable record of the preceding year, but Red has qualities which enable him to perform his duties with skill. Lecturer George N. Shuster confronted the council with an array of oratorical, musical, and culinary talent that rendered Recording Secretary Murtaugh ' s meeting notices quite superfluous. The inside and outside guards established attendance records that have never been equalled by former incumbents of those positions. The initiation hall twice resounded with the tread of Notre Dame candidates. Woodmen ' s Hall witnessed the first initiation of the year on December 1 2th, and the Mishawaka Knights of Columbus club rooms were selected as the scene of the distress endured by the second class on April 17th. Both initiations were topped off with banquets. The banquet which followed the first initiation on December 12th was the best-attended one in the council ' s history. On that oc- casion, four hundred Knights listened to the brilliant address of Supreme Director Martin of Green Bay, Wisconsin, who was the guest of the occasion. James J. O ' Brien of Chicago, former State ' s Attorney was to respond to the toastmaster Page 160 19£1 at the banquet of April 1 2th. In his absence, Tim Galvin, (Ph.B. ' i6), oc- cupied the floor and demon- strated what several years of forensic activity at Notre Dame will enable a post-prandial or- ator to do. Cal- vin ' s third de- gree team from Valparaiso offici- ated at both in- itiations with consummate suc- cess. Lecturer Shus- ter is to be con- gratulated on the number and quality of ad- dresses which thecouncil heard within the year. I 1921 Pagf l6i Page 162 i9Zl SOCIETY I ?l — -■■•- • ' --• ' ■' •IMftlltKf CniLLItl DANCE COMMITTEE John M. Montague Percy J. Wilcox August G. Desch Paul Breen J. Stanley Bradbury PROGRAM COMMITTEE Maurice J. Dacy Edward J. Lennon Linus C. Glotzbach Raymond Wegman Leo p. Exright fl 2921 Page i6s 4%%!%  %V DANCE COMMITTEE John P. Hart Ralph Coryn James Murphy FINANCE COMMITTEE John Higgins ' Thomas Keefe James Martin PROGRAM COMMITTEE John Huether James Murtaugh Alfonso Scott Page 164 1921 tf5ll B ftAkb Edward D. DeCourcey, General Chairman of Committees FINANCE COMMITTEE A. N. Slaggert, Chairman Daniel W. Duffy M. Joseph Tierney COMMITTEE ON ARRANGEMENTS Joseph M. Maag, Chairman James A. Culligan Gerald J. Hoar ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE George O ' Brien, Chairman George C. Wittereid William S. Allen 1921 Jr Pagf i6s Closer than ivy on the old school ' s walls Our hearts have stood. Breasting the years through her long, laughing halls In boisterous brotherhood. Noiv Our Lady from a dream has spun The final trysting Ball: May she unite us when life ' s school is done And the last stars fall. The Senior Ball of the Class of ' 21 will long serve as a standard for the efforts of future classes. The Ball this year was more than just that; it was the climax of a week of gay social activity. All the year our class had looked forward to the week of April 24th. For more than three months a committee of ten men, led by Edward DeCourcey and sub-captained by Alfred Slaggert, Joseph Maag and George O ' Brien, toiled every day to make the dance one of which the class might be proud. They succeeded. The class is proud not only of its dance; it is proud of the men whose untiring efforts and devoted zeal brought about the success. Tuesday night of the Ball week, Walter O ' Keefe arranged a vaudeville program which has never been equaled in the annals of the University. About this time the sweetest girls in the world began to flutter in from the forty-eight constit- uencies of the nation. The bells of St. Mary ' s were kept ringing by a score or more of young men anxious to make final arrangements with their belles of St. Mary ' s — for during the past year of extreme laxity many friendships have been made over the line. Thursday afternoon sixty couples gathered in the Oliver dining room for an informal dancing party which served to make everyone acquainted with everyone else. At seven o ' clock the same one hundred and twenty persons lifted the loving cups which served as favors for the occasion in response to a toast to the ladies by Walter O ' Keefe. The banquet courses were interspersed with ex- cellent entertainment. After a half hour ' s intermission, from nine-thirty on, Frank Coughlin and his pride and joy led the grand march from the mezannine into the ballroom. The dance from then on till its inevitable and regrettable conclusion beggars description. Ask any man who went. With the assistance of a drab gentleman named Sweeney everyone succeeded in getting eight hour ' s sleep before the following day, which brought forth trips to the campus, an excellent Glee Club concert at the Oliver and a Glee Club dance to which all seniors were invited with their senior-itas. Sunday afternoon, Coach Halas ' men provided an athletic treat in the form of a baseball game with the Wolverines. Everyone was left to devise his own individual form of pleasure afterward. Monday the farewells were said and the ladies returned to their dungeons or homes while the gentlemen came back to sip again of the pyerrian spring. While, as we have stated before, all due credit must be given to the committeemen who were the essential factors in making this Senior Ball the best that Notre Dame has ever known, yet we feel that it would not, and could not have been half so great a suc- cess had it not been for the spirit of hearty cooperation that has prevailed in every activity of the class of ' 21 in the last four years. Page 166 1921 1921 Page t6j THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE GLEE CLUB DAME OFFICERS OF THE CLUB Rev. James A. Burns, C.S.C, Ph.D. Honorary President Harry E. Denny ...... President Walter M. O ' Keefe .... Vice-President Joseph Maag . . . Secretary and Associate Manager John R. Flynn ...... Librarian SOLOISTS Harry E. Denny Lenihan L. Lally Joseph J. Casasanta Walter M. O ' Keefe HiLLis Bell and James J. Laughlin Violin Baritone Piano Songs and Stories Accompanists Page i68 1921 NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY BAND Charles J. Frank W. Pedrotty James Culugan ROMAINE ReICHERT Michael N. Schwarz HiLLis Bell C. T. BiRKBECK Harold Bowler Joseph Casasaxta William Clancy James Culligan John Daly James Egan Gerald Hassxer Bernard Hennis Ivan Kepner Alvin Koehler Matthias O ' Hara Parreant, Conductor President rice-President Treasurer Secretary and Business Manager Francis O ' Melia John Petrich Frank Pedrotty H. A. Ratchford Ardo Reichert Romaine Reichert Frank Schultz Michael Schwarz Clarence Smith Constantine Tarnava Cyril Toomey Joseph Visconti Richard Volkmann i 1921 Page 169 SUMMER ART STUDENTS Father Gregory, O.S.B., Director Page I O 1921 THE ST. THOMAS GUILD Early in the fall the Architectural Club met and elected officers according to the old custom. Tom Dollard, a senior, was elected President; Peter Pedrotty, a junior, Vice-President; Joe ShaugK- nessy, Secretary; and Wop Berra, Sergeant-at-Arms. Later, Pro- fessor Kervick ' s happy idea of reorganizing the club into a guild was put into practice. This new society was developed along the lines of a medieval guild with warden, vice-warden, secretary and steward as officers; and named in honor of St. Thomas, the patron saint of architects. In this change there seems to be a realization of an ideal of the thirteenth century and an ideal that exists here at Notre Dame; namely, the glorification of God through pride in the craft. It is with this ideal that the Architects of ' 21 leave the Uni- versity, knowing that they have awakened a beautiful thought and hoping that they have established a precedent that will be- come a tradition. 1921 Page lyt ■lHQvE TOFli l YoYTK( C.LMikLvg- Lrtle WiLUt i-.4, YVtC . - ferVLO ' CoHhOi i A Z.AII Politick ' Page 172 1921 1921 f ' agf J73 DEBATING THE GENTLEMEN OF THE AFFIRMATIVE Engels First Speaker Clark Alternate Rhomberg Second Speaker G VLL GHER Third Speaker N. D. Affirmative 4 N. D. Affirmative 4 N. D. Affirmative 3 Goshen College i Manchester i University of Detroit o After three lonesome years during which the echoes of Washington hall did not ring to the stentorian voices of one debate, the argumentative art came back into its own this year. Early in the year Father Bolger slipped noiselessly out of town one day, and came proudly back the same night with the announcement that an Indiana Inter- collegiate Debating League had been formed, that there were twelve colleges in it, and Notre Dame was one of ,them, and that the thing that started the fight was, Resolved: that the United States Government should own and operate the coal mines . Notre Dame ' s first triangular debate was with Goshen and Valparaiso. Our affirmative team met Goshen in Washington hall and won 4 to I ; the negative team met Valparaiso ' s affirmative team at Valparaiso, and won by the same score. Vincent Engels was our star man at home, and James Hogan carried off the honors at Valpo. For the second triangle, both teams went abroad. By a singular rule of the Page 174 1921 DEBATING THE GENTLEMEN OF THE NEGATIVE Cavanaugh First Speaker Valparaiso Wabash . . Ohio Detroit . . . SwiTALSKI Alternate . I ■3 o ■O Ward Third Speaker HOGAN Second Speaker N. D. Negative 4 N. D. Negative 2 N. D. Negative 3 N. D. Negative 3 Indiana Intercollegiate Debating League, a rule to which everyone says he is opposed, but which no one seems able to have repealed, all debates must be held on neutral territory. Wabash and Manchester, therefore, entertained us (five or six of us, we don ' t know which, the figures are not accurate) in Washington hall while our affirmative men met Manchester at Wabash, and our negative team debated Wabash at Manchester. Against Manchester we won, 4 to i, but at Manchester the Wabash team beat us 3 to 2. Our total score for the four debates was 14. The total of Wabash was the same, but, because her teams were undefeated, she got first place in the league, and Notre Dame second. In a post-season debate with Ohio our negative team won 3 to o, and, in a dual debate with Detroit, each team won by that score. The most encouraging thing about the season is that, good as the record is, it was made by sophomores and juniors all of whom will be back at school next year. 4 i 1921 Page sjs ORATORY R. M. Gallagher The four men who survived all the preliminary contests and appeared in Washington hall for the finals were: Michael Joseph Tierney, Raymond M. Gallagher, Stephen Wilson, and Casi- mir Witucki. Gallagher won first place with an oration on The Pan- gers of Unrestricted Immigration ; Tierney took second with Our Com- mercial Opportunity in South Amer- ica ; Wilson took third with an oration titled Lord, That I may See ; and Witucki fourth with a glorification of Paderewski. Gallagher is the first non-senior to win the medal in the last six years, and the first sophomore who has ever won it. The state oratorical contest was held at Notre Dame on February 25. Manchester, Franklin, Butler, Wabash and Earlham colleges, and Notre Dame were represented. On this oc- casion Gallagher ' s oration was given second place after a conference of the judges. On the first ballot it was tied with the winning oration, The Icono- clast of the North , by Carlton Gauld of Wabash. Page iy6 1921 % POLITICS AT NOTRE DAiME REPUBLICAN CLUB OFFICERS John T. Dempsey, Illinois Frank Blasius, Ohio Archibald M. Duncan, Wisconsin Maurice J. Dacy, Kansas Albert Ficks, Ohio President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Alfonso Scott, California Chairman Executive Committee I 1921 Page 177 POLITICS AT NOTRE DAME . The Republican Club was organized by Will H. Hays, Chairman of the Re- publican National Committee, and Earle S. Kinsley, head of the Division of Republican Clubs. The Notre Dame branch is the largest and the most active collegiate political organization in the United States. Through the executive ability of its president, the cooperation of its other officers, and the hard work of its members, the township of Notre Dame was swung Republican for the first time in history; and at the Democratic University of Notre Dame this is achieve- ment. The Club secured speakers of national reputation to address the student body, among them a United States Senator and a Federal Judge. The Repub- lican Club is to be permanent. It was organized not just for one fleeting campaign but to exist and to function as long as people vote at Notre Dame. Nevertheless, the loss of the Notre Dame precinct for the first time in history is no reflection upon the energy of the officers and members of the Notre Dame Democratic Club. In a year in which everything was going so thoroughly Re- publican, and anti-League sentiment was so prevalent among Notre Dame Irish- men, the loss was no disgrace. DEMOCRATIC CLUB OFFICERS Mark Storen, Indiana James Murphy, Connecticut Ralph Coryn, Illinois John Higgins, Indiana President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Page lyS 1921 1921 Page 779 Aside from two vaudevilles, several con- certs by Mr. Michael Nicholas Schwarz ' band, and one very good concert by the Glee Club, we had no student entertainment 1 ' v B this year. The local Players ' Club expressed J S BI HhPHHHPL its sadness at the departure of Delmar Ed- T A . 1 j t mondson, its founder, by wearing the mourn- ing of silence all year. The art of the theater is in a bad way at Notre Dame. Except for one performance last year of three one-act plays by The Notre Dame Portmanteau , we haven ' t had a dramatic performance in four years. The reason why the most human of the arts is not developed at Notre Dame is not easy to discover. It is certain, however, that nothing can be done until the Univer- sity secures the services of an experienced professional director to take charge of the work; and little can be accomplished until the students begin to go into the work for the fun of acting, not for the sake of trips to St. Alary-of-the-Woods. If they do this, they cannot fail to produce shows than can be taken there. It is to be hoped that something will be done. If Cardinal Newman is right when he says that no college may rightly call itself a university unless it teaches all branches of knowledge, then we will not be one until we have a director of dramatics. This does not mean anything like a school of acting; it means simply the oppor- tunity for those who will later try to write plays to learn something about their trade by tinkering with a toy theater. The first student theatrical entertainment of the year 1920-21 was a vaude- ville given by the Chamber of Commerce. The Dome ' s dramatic critic had the good fortune not to be among those present, but he was no more fortunate in this respect than most of the performers. Two days before the Senior Ball of glorious memory, the senior class sponsored a vaudeville in Washington hall that was one of the best and best-attended shows that has been put on in Washington hall in the last four years. An all-star cast in the selection of which none of the best talent of Notre Dame or South Bend was overlooked was spurred on in its efforts by the presence in the audience of many of the fair charmers who had come for the Ball. Walter O ' Keefe managed the affair to the satisfaction of all. Page 180 1921 W ' A SHINGTON HALL Not having any student theatricals, we had to depend for most of our dramatic entertainment on what Father Crumley calls the mushin ' -picture . The best movie we had that was not a mushin ' - picture was Way Down East , which Washington hall got a week before it went to Chicago. Mr. Frederick Paulding made his annual visit and read The School For Scandal , and The Magnifi- cent Ambersons . Two companies of stolling players presented Fine Feath- ers , and The Climax , both of which failed to please us, and Harry Stevenson, the Mr. Hornblower of Notre Dame, who wondered why somebody did not spank the leading lady of the former (the char- acter, we mean, not the lady), and could not understand why the leading lady of the latter insisted on choosing the un- pleasant alternative after she had said, Let me sing my song divine, or let me die! Lectures and concerts filled out the rest of the year. Frederick Ward was delightful in Fifty Years of Make-Be- lieve . Dr. Newman was a skilful and sympathetic guide through distant lands and among strange peoples. I 1921 Page i8l Ill L, Page 182 1921 i ii I 1921 Pagr 1S3 THE SCHOLASTIC HUGUENARD MOONEY HoGAN Sweeney TlER Slaggert Stevenson Page 184. 1921 THE SCHOLASTIC Flannery Wallace Murphy Engels Ward McKee MURCH 1921 Page 185 THE 1921 DOME BOARD Edward B. Doyle, Ph.B. in J. Alfred N. Slaggert, Litt.B. John T. Dempsey, Litt.B. Alexander Colgan, Ph.B. Joseph Tierney, Ph.B. William Foley, Ph.B. in C. Callix E. Miller, B.Arch W. J. Connors Robert O ' Riordan Joseph Heiman, B.S. James L. O ' Toole, LL.B. Walter A. Rice, LL.B. Joseph Delaney, M.E. Edmund Meagher, LL.B. Editor-in-Chief Athletic Editor Associate Editor Assistant Editors Art Editor Assistant Cartoonist Photographer Business Manager Assistant Assistant Assistant Page i86 9Z 12 1921 Pagf 187 ASSOCIATE 1921 Page l8S 1921 WHERE CREDIT IS DUE We owe a heavy debt of gratitude to our contributors, which, in our utter poverty, we are unable properly to repay. For the fullest payment for their kind- ness and care they will have to rely on the satisfaction they get from the contem- plation of their work as it appears in this book. To Professor Vincent O ' Connor we owe our greatest debt. Professor O ' Connor has assisted with every Dome, but never before has he given so much of himself as he has given this year. All our color plates were done by him. With the rest of the work he has assisted as a careful and patient critic. Father Lange ' s help has been scarcely less indispensable than Prof. O ' Connor ' s. Emmett Sweeney, Andrew Wallace, James Culligan, William O ' Rourke, and Raymond Schubmehl have given generously of their time; Eddie Murphy, Walter O ' Keefe, Frank Wallace, and Harold McKee have helped with the literary part of the book, and Raymond Conrad, Alfred Abrams, Joseph Shaughnessy and Wal- ter Iatthes have assisted with the art. To the following we owe, in slightly smaller degree our thanks: James Foren, George Shuster, Clare Morgan, Emmett Burke, Harry Flannery, Eugene Shanahan, Daniel Duffy, David Hayes, Pio Montenegro, George O ' Brien, Anthony Gorman, Joseph Brandy, and Eugene Kennedy. We can scarcely praise too highly the service given us by Mr. Louis Bonsib, of the Indianapolis Engraving Co. Nor can we praise too highly the long-suffering with which Mr. Ted Carmody has endured the hardships to which the publication of the book has put him. Other contributors there are who have been omitted from this necessarily brief expression of gratitude through oversight, not through intention. I 1921 Page 189 Page IQO i9Zl I WONDER MEN The phrase, Miracle Man of 1920 , has become synonymous with Rockne, greatest among the great mentors who have developed wonder gridiron ma- chines since the days way back in the dusty ages when footballs and mole- skins were originated. As a crack end on the field during his student days — those days, of ' 12 and ' 13, when Notre Dame was building a record that has since been a constant source of amaze- ment to all enthusiasts of the fall sport for kings; as a captain embodying all those essential qualifications of leader- ship; as an assistant to Harper and finally as head coach: Rockne ' s years at Notre Dame have been fraught with conspicuous success. The story of Rock- ne ' s great work, especially during the Assistant Coach Halas years when he has had complete charge of athletic aflFairs under the dome, is a story of tireless effort, superhuman energy, and clean sportsmanship. He modestly attributes to the men who fought the fights for the Gold and Blue all the glory of Notre Dame ' s ascent into the bright halls of fame; the players and the fans, however, know full well that Rockmen could never be developed without the matchless coaching of Knute K. Rockne. As assistant to Rockne in moulding the football men and as head coach in basketball and in baseball, Walter Halas has, during his brief residence at the University, demonstrated exceptionally well his fitness for the important post that he holds. Halas came to Notre Dame with a reputation commensurate with the lofty standards established by scores of wearers of the Gold and Blue. C A PTA I N S t P CouGHLiN, Football Kasper, Track 1920-21 Page ig2 1921 • I I I C A PTAI N S Miles, Baseball Meehan, Track, 1919-20 i 1921 Page 193 THE CHEER-LEADERS ECKERLE Asst. Cheer-Leader Burke Asst. Cheer-Leader Slaggert, Cheer-Leader Al Slaggert was referred to by Tommy Hendricks, of the Indianapolis News, as the cheer-leader who is short on eccentric dancing, and long on cheering . Slaggert is, by admission of those who have seen and heard Joe Gargan, the great- est cheer-leader Notre Dame has ever had. The celebration in the Oliver the night before the Purdue game was alone sufficient to win him the distinction. Emmett Burke and Pete Eckerle were elected by the junior class to help Slag- gert this year. Next year one of them will be elected head cheer-leader, and this year ' s sophomores will elect two assistants; and so on. It is to be hoped that this system will always give Notre Dame ' s teams the loud and loyal cheering they ' ve had the last two years. ! Page 194 1921 1921 Page JQS == :: ; r Pajc 796 1921 I SCHEDULE 1920 Knute K. Rockne Walter Halas . Frank Coughlin . . Coach Assistant Coach . Captain N.D. 0pp. Kalamazoo College at Notre Dame 39 Western Normal at Notre Dame 41 Nebraska at Lincoln i6 7 Valparaiso at Notre Dame 28 3 Army at West Point 27 17 Purdue at Notre Dame 28 Indiana at Indianapolis 13 10 Northwestern at Evanston 33 7 Michigan Aggies at Lansing 25 Total Score 250 44 What The Men Did THE OPENER Kalamazoo College, the first machine to buck up against Rockne ' s 1920 warriors, took a 39 to o count. Bursting with confidence over their remarkable early season brush with the Michigan Aggies, the Celery City crowd opened up with a smashing drive at the Rockmen but the ambitious aff ront was in vain. Kalamazoo hopes went soaring far above the Milky Way. Need we tabulate the list of Gold and Blue stars who, Houdini-like, converted the Teachers ' colors to Black and Blue. ' Emphatically no, for we would but be mentioning the personnel of the team. It was pretty to see Wynne and Gipp cut through the visiting outfit like so much paper — to watch Mohardt and Coughlin, Barry, Brandy, and Kasper eat up enough yardage to give ordinary players indigestion. And when Coughlin, Shaw and Tarzan Anderson toyed with the Kazoo line-beef we were completely bereft of an exclama- tory medium. Kalamazoo came, saw and was completely overwhelmed. How They Did It 1921 Page 197 NATIONAL CHAMPIONS RED SALMON WATCHES GAME FROM STANDS ARMY DEFEATED BY M RE DAME , 27-17 Cadets Fight Hard Against Well- Drilled Hoosier Eleven, but to No Avail. NOTRE DAME ROUTS PURDUE SQUAD, 28-0, IRISH USE THREE COMPLETE TEAMS AGAINST NORMAL jNOTRE DAME WINS FROM PURPLE 33-7 Northwestern is Helpless Be- fore Irish— Barry and Anderson Star. Mohardt, Gipp, Castner and Phelan Star in Local Rockne Backs Plunge to 16 to 7 Victory in Brilliant Football Struggle. Backfidd. Capt. Coughlln Proves Towerl of Strength. Against Cadets. Rockne Prepares New Attack For Saturday Clash Record-Breaking Gathering of 10,000 Sees Huskers Go Down to Defeat. WOLVERINES ARE UNABLE TO STOP ROCKNE MACHINE Dan Coughlin Makes Touch. donn From Kick-Off With 90- Yard Run. NOTRE DAME TEAM WALLOPS PURDUE I TYPICAL IRISH CADETS HELPLESS BEFORE TERRIFIC ATTACKOF IRISH LI PRESS GIVES PRAISE I TO SUCCESSFUL TEAM FINISH; MOHARDT AND BARRY STAR Diminutive Halfbacks Lead Attack That Ends in Gold and Blue Victory. HOOIR GRID TEAMS STIEHM PRAISES IRISH. Every Metropolitan Journal in Nation Goes sc.wwn gives n. d For Home Boys ' Team Durirg Season ' ' ' ' ' ™ Picking it For Winner. I a t Irish End | GRIDIRON HEROES IN GREAT GAME AT WASHINGTON PARK Notre Dame Hands Purple Severe 33-to-7 Trouncing Irish Prove Class With Decisive Victory Over the Notre Dame Only Major Team of Indiana to Play Thanksgiving. Kiley, Capt. Coughliii and Ed Anderson AIl-Ameri- can Timber. ROCKNE PEER OF NATION ' S COACHES Make Typical Notre Dame Rally in Last Quarter to Win Game. WIN OVER ARMY i WINS CATHOLICS I EASTERN PRAISEl INOTRE DAME WINNER IRISH PLA Y RESER VES Only Straight Football Used by Notre Dame to Win First Game. EAST GIVES NOTRE DAME GRID TITLE Farrell Says Irish Are Favored as Western Champions in East. Indiana-Notre Dame Strug gle IN HALF OF CONTEST ' ' clrdlll Day ' Valpo Scores Field Goal on Second String Men Coach Stiehm ' s Men Score In WhoStart-Regulars I Jpsct Brown Hopes Sud- . Seconcf and Third Periods, but denly— Gipp, Wynne. Mohardt Star. Catholics Overcome Lead and . Win in Fourth. Greatest Team Of 1920 Footban Year II II iqS 1921 THE WESTERN NORMAL AFFAIR Came another group of Gridiron Gentlemen from the same Michigan village and the score-board registered 41 to o — the season ' s second victory scalp. Heavy penalties and extreme heat prevented the Varsity from sending the score-keeper scurrjing after more chalk. An occasional spurt from the Normalites injected a dash of interest into the tussle. Arcund ' em, through ' cm and over ' em the Rockies gamboled at will and the final tocsin found tie WoUerines waiting for a first aid brijade to carry them to the sidelines. FISTICUFFS WITH NEBRASKA The Irish were at their fightingest . And well they were for the Cornhuskers put up a pigskin argument that was a bit conducive to neurasthenia. Linco ' n was in gala attire for the classic and an enormous crowd surged into every nook and cranny of the Husker field. It was a tilt for Kings! The two teams fought neck and neck down through the minutes of the first half, Gipp, Castncr and Barry slashing the Nebraska defensive like madmen and advancing the ball to the enemy cne yard line where the Westerners buried every attempt to gain. Shaw spilled a punt which was recovered by a Husker behind his goal line and the half ended with a Gold and Blue two-point edge. The Kebraskans jumped to arms with the whistle and a frantic crowd saw them drive over the Gold and Blue trench with a touchdown. The locals needed but this sort of incentive to spur them on and in a twinkling of an eye the riotious followers of the Ped and White were plunged into respectful awe as Wynne, Mohardt, Gipp and Anderson flew with winced heels with the oval. Two yards to fo and over went Brandy. The last touchdown of the game followed a series of scrappy ccunter-skiimishcs, Gipp going through for the score. The final count, 16 to 7, was by no ireans an indication of the true superiority of the Hoosiers over the doughty Westerners. THEN VALPARAISO A bitter spectacular affair was that fracas with the moleskin gentlemen from Valparaiso up to the point when the blond moderator withdrew his Ftserves and released his ace dogs of war for let it be known that the Valps fought grimly during the first frame. In proud possession of a three point edge, the big Brown machine furnished beaucoup thrills to the eight thousand fans in its eiTort to make the lead a substantial one. Need we say that Rockne ' s talk to his fledglings between halves con- tained but few encomiums. ' Up and at ' em with the whistle, the scrappy Gold and Blue seconds churned the gridiron into a billowy sea of Black and Brown arms and legs. The tottering Valps were very much through when Rockne ordered his premier constellation into the lists. Never before have Nctic Dame gridmen marched onward to victory so steadily. Long slashing gallops through wide boule- vards — plunge after plunge into the Valparaiso defensive formations — ccrretlike passes- — in a word every form of defensive strategy concocted for yardage pain was executed by the Rockmcn. First Chet Wynne went over the top followed a few minutes later by Gipp. In the fourth quarter Gipp again found the enemy trench for a counter and Johnny Mohardt tcck the oval over for the fourth touchdown, following Hayes ' scoop of Kercheval ' s wild delivery. THE CADETS We have gleaned the ponderous chronicles of the world ' s greatest lexicographers;we have sounded the depths of Soule and Crabbe for suitable terms; we have torn our hair, bit the dust et cetera, in 1921 Pagf igg attempting fittingly to eulogize that prodigious 27 to 17 victory over the Army. Please believe that it was an inspiration that would tax the ability of a Milton or a Tennyson. Our puerile efforts pale into significance when compared with the words of the metropolitan scribes. Says one in part: It was the struggle of a good team against a great one. Beaten though the Army was by a score of 27 to 17, the glory of a gallant fight against a too powerful foe remains with West Point. Against a machine capable of pounding its way for successive marches of seventy-five and eighty yards the Cadets went down — as any other eleven in the East must have had it faced the Notre Dame eleven that took the field today. Says another: The Notre Dame eleven which played rings around the Army this after- noon, was a big, shifty, well-drilled football machine, which looked as strong as any football team seen on an eastern gridiron this season. The Hoosiers were a better developed and a better trained eleven and plaved the kind of football which sends a crowd of spectators into realms of excitement every minute. The Great Gipp was charging, passing, booting and plunging like a fiend in mole- skins; Mohardt and Wynne cut the Army defensive into infinitesimal bits; Coughlin, Shaw, Kiley, Anderson and Smith sent the effete East into paroxysms with their herculean line-work; in a word. Eastern fans saw a team about thirty points better than the Army and at least one touchdown better than any eleven in the East . THE BOILERMAKER RENCONTRE It was home-coming day at Notre Dame and from all over these United States there came hundreds of old grads who had read the glowing reports of the Gold and Blue wonder eleven and were now to see that machine in action against Purdue. Every square inch of available space was taken long be- fore the opening tocsin. Distinction was lent to the occasion of state by the presence of Red Salmon, all-time Notre Dame fullback, Frank Hering, Red Miller, Tom Shaughnessy and other greats of the glorious past. The Reserves fought Scanlon ' s men on even terms for about a third of the game when Rocknc responded to the incessant clamor of the crowd by injecting his big-timers. Chet Grant richochetted through Purdue on a pretty fifty yard dash to a touchdown; Gipp tore off eighty with a train of Black and Brown tacklers groping blindly for his legs; Kiley and Anderson performed un- erringly in grabbing the oval from the air; Wynne, Barry, Mohardt, Coughlin and Castner, with their invincible charges, contributed materially to the 28 to o victory. Our Interference Broken 1921 Pagf 201 THE INDIANA SCARE The Rockne school of strategetics received its most gruelling test in the argument with Stiehm ' s Reds. For three heartbreaking periods the Bloomington squad held the Varsity scoreless. Stiehm ' s men seemed to sense every Notre Dame play with uncanny consistency. Gipp, who sustained a frac- tured collar bone in the first quarter, was a marked man but despite the combined efforts of his ad- versaries he fought like a Trojan. Late in the third quarter with Indiana ten points to the pood, the Gold and Blue came back as a Notre Dame eleven has never done before. Barry went in for Mohardt who took Gipp ' s position and in a few minutes the Varsity had the opposition groveling on its one yard line. One lunge by Gipp in the first few seconds of the fourth quarter tcck the ball across the Red zero line; the big half rolled ofl another point with his toe. Battered to a frazzle the Indiana line offered but little rebuff to the Gold and Blue backs on the next drive and over went General Brandy for the second touchdown. The stiffest battle of the season ended with the Gold and Blue on the long end of a 13 to 10 count. Said Coach Stiehm anent the game; The Notre Dsme tejm of 1920 is one of the very best teams Notre Dame has ever had, and I have been watching Notre Dame elevens for many years. THE FROLIC AT EVANSTON The mauling given McDeavitt ' s big Purple macl ine by the Varsity was no tournament of roses — for Northwestern. Accompanied by the entire student body the squad traveled to Evanston Field and there proceeded in business-like fashion to run up a 33 to 7 register. Hundreds of Notre Dame followers from all over the middle West witnessed the slaughter of the innocent. The end of the first frame found the Varsity ambitious to triple its fourteen point lead. Andersen took one frcm the ozone and cantered over the Purple goal line; Kiley and Barry both duplicated his feat when Gipp began to warm up after entering in the final quarter. The tussle ended with the Varsity charging dangerous- ly near to the Purple posts. THANKSGIVING Then came the final struggle of some season when the Reserves ran rampant over the Michigan Aggies on Turkey Day. Not once did the Wolverines threaten to change the 25 to o decision. Danny Coughlin took the ball from the kick-off for an eighty yard cross-country lope and buried it in the Aggie backyard. Castner carried the oval over in the third quarter for two touchdowns. Eddie Anderson fist-full of points put over a touchdown in the final heat after recovering a blocked punt. The whistle sounded and Notre Dame had again emerged from an undefeated schedule. Page 202 1921 CoUCHLIN GRIDIRON MEN OF 1920 As leader of the great team of 1920, Captain Frank Coughlin has earned every conceivable word of eulogy; he was the ideal leader — a real Notre Dame man in every sense of the word. Possessed of tact, good sense and an inspir- ing spirit, Coughlin led his mates through a season the results of which have set the football world agog with wonder. That Little Willie had a big job on his hands when he accepted the captaincy goes without saying for the records of those marvelous machines of 1912, ' 13, and ' 19 were practically insurmountable. Despite the high precedent set by former leaders and their crews, Coughlin displayed a brand of gridiron generalship that earned for him laudatory comment by the column from the pens of critics far and wide; a generalship that made him unanimous choice for the All-State and All- Western honors — that placed him high in the esteem of the coaches, the faculty, the alumni and the student body. Walter Kckcrsall subsequent to placing Coughlin on his All-Western aggregation says of the peerless leader: The left tackle position is given to Captain Frank Coughlin of Notre Dame, who piloted his eleven through the season without a defeat. He knows the position thoroughly and at Notre Dame is rated as the best linesman in the history of the institution. The Notre Dame leader was one of the main factors in the victory of his team over the Army. His sterling playing brought forth praise from Eastern critics, some of whom placed him on a par with Keck, the great Princeton tackle. He knows how to do the right thing with the least effort, and like V ' oss mixed in every play. In the Northwestern game it was a frequent occurence to see him run behind his own line and tackle a Pur- ple player who had crossed the scrimmage line, on out-back-in plays. He was also down the field under punts and was a natural leader. This and a score of other equally praiseworthy statements indicate the big valuation placed on the wonder Gold and Blue chief. In the passing of Captain F ' rank Coughlin, Notre Dame loses one of her greatest and most popular gridiron leaders — the peer of Rocknc, of Dorais, and of Bahan. i-flC- ' ' ■GlPP HAS HIM ON HIS KAR 1921 Pagf 203 C A PTA I N - E LE CT ANDERSON E. Anderson Brandy Upon the shoulders of Captain-Elect Eddie Anderson falls the mighty task of sustaining the pro- digious record of the undefeated elevens of recent years. Knowing his brilliant consistency and ability as we do we have every confidence that the husky lad from Iowa, whose work for the Gold and Blue on the field during the past three seasons has been nothing if not remarkable, will prove himself equal to the momentous occasion. The Gipp to Anderson pass was as famous as the Rockne-Dorais combination of former years for many are the times that Eddie hurtled over the zero line for a ringer when it was needed after having grabbed one of Gipp ' s lunges from the ozone. Eddie is a defensive giant; interference means noth- ing to him for he invariably gets his man. With Kiley, the gritty end he shared a reputation that inspired no end of admiration. Ail-American, All-Western and All-State honors were his in abundance and we can conservatively state that Captain-Elect Eddie ' s igzi record will be one that will earn him an enviable place high in the ranks of Notre Dame ' s gridiron greats of history. No better choice for this exalted position could have been made. JOE BRANDY Cool under the heaviest fire, sure to send the right play to the right place, and a clean, inspiring fighter of the unbeatable type. Such is Rockne ' s opinion of Li ' l General Brandy to whom all Notre Dame points with pride as a c|uarterback de luxe. For three years this brainy little helmsman has figured prominently in Gold and Blue grid scraps; four successful jaunts into the East have found Joe calling the plays and tricking each opposing eleven to a frazzle. , Three of these scalps were copped from the Pointers and the fourth from Washington and Jefferson — a contest characterized by critics as being sprinkled with too much Brandy . For eighteen successive times Joe has reeled out the figgers that brought as many victories into the Notre Dame camp. Cool under fire, brainy and concise in his plans of attack. Brandy was always there when needed. A prince of a fellow; a splendid student athlete; a gentleman always; his loss to the Gold and Blue is indeed a great one. NORM BARRY The splendid gridiron career of Norm Barry is over. Barry is a representative Notre Dame product. Up through the Inter-Hall and the Freshman ranks Norm clambered dishing out scuttles of fight until he cinched a position in the Varsity backfield. We could write pages of copy on his work during the past but his 1920 record out-scintillates anything he has formerly accomplished. Yardage was assured when Barry carried the oval. Light, clever and flashy he skirted ends with astonishing ease and richocheted through throngs of tacklers for wide gains. He was a specialist in starting rallies when they were needed most as his work last year against the Army and the Michigan Aggies more than demonstrates. Will Notre Dame ever forget how this crack back aided by Johnny Mohardt injected the needed fight into his bunkies when Indiana threatened to sully the Gold an d Blue laurels last Fall? Then again at Evanston Barry gave his neck-of-the-woods an exhibition that was pretty to watch. Barry passes and his loss will be keenly felt. Our best wishes to Notre Dame ' s great little half-back. I Barry Page 204. 1921 KiLEY i V SulTH KILEY For the second season Rog Kiley has come to the front with a brand of end play whose brilliancy is often lost sight of in the ease with which he ac- complishes it. Kiley achieved for himself the reputa- tion of being one of the best oval grabbers in inter- collegiate competition. His work along with that of Eddie Anderson moved one New York sport writer to the remark; Fast! why they couldn ' t come any faster and be human! Nor is his offensive calibre the only forte of this lightning end for his defensive work is also of the highest order. Besides holding down the end job Rog cavorts around second base for Halas ' diamond crew and plays a crack game on the basketball court. Kiley was chosen for an end position on several .All-State selections and made a second place on the Chicago Daily News All-Western outfit. He has one more year to persuade Mr. Camp that the West has some end material. SHAW Big, modest, unassuming Buck Shaw — gridiron wizard extraordinary; that, in a nutshell, is our opinion of Rock ' s giant tackle despite the fact that press notices concerning his wonderful work on a wonderful machine were painfully lacking. Shaw played a hard consistent game at his post and gave every inch of his great strength every minute of time allotcd him. He is fast for a big man, a deadly tackier, and an elephan- tine charger being not alone satisfied with fulfilling the duties of his job but aiding the entire wing. Truly and wisely put was the statement of one of his mates; An end playing alongside Buck Shaw on defense is a mere observer . Never sensational, never grand- standish, always retiring yet consistently aggressive, Shaw is in every sense a Notre Dame man. Shaw fights one more year for the Gold and Blue. SMITH Morry Is called the biggest little guard in the country. He is also the littlest big guard; that is, he is the lightest of the great guards. That he is one of the great ones, no one doubts; he was on all Ml-State teams, and almost all All-Westerns. Football critics who see them play for the first time look at Smitty and Shaw going down under punts with the amaze- ment of the familiar rustic the first time he saw a giraffe. Eddie .Anderson and Kiley are never far ahead of Smith in the chase. WYNNE Wynne — the hardest hitting fullback of the year said the Eastern critics of our own Chet but, need- less to say, they were imparting nothing new to his Notre Dame enthusiasts. A fighting back — modest, unassuming, gritt — Wynne has established for him- self a reputation that should put him foremost in the front rank of peerless gridders. Wynne loves to plunge and plunge he does each time for yards of turf. He ripped the Cornhusker line to bits and he sent the -Army guards playfully groping for imaginary con- stellations and butterflies. So fleet is this tornado from the Sunflower State that attempts to stop him in the open field or on ihe line of scrimmage are futile. One more year of inter-collegiate competition should make Wynne the outstanding fullback in pigskin circles. Shaw Wynne 1921 Page 20$ I % H. Anderson MOHARDT M H A R D T Alternating with Barry as a running mate for the Great Gipp, John Mohardt demonstrated during the past season that the scribe ' s reference to him as one of the best backs of the year was no mere bit of jour- nalistic flubbery. Johnny is a man of steel as many a would-be tackier has discovered much to his physical discomfiture. He pierced the Army, Indiana, North- western and Purdue lines alike for gains of from five to twenty-five yards with the elusiveness of an eel. Johnny pushes the ten second mark with his gridiron togs on and hence the reason for the aforesaid gains. Next year Johnny will undoubtedly pair up with Danny Coughlin, a duet that should strike terror into any sort of opposition that next October may bring. COUGHLIN Who ' s that streak burning up the ground with a crowd of tacklers hanging on him? Danny Cough- lin — and, by the way, if this same Coughlin chap from the Northlands doesn ' t require a Graflex camera to register his moves towards the opposite goal posts we miss our bet. Coughlin, under the coaching of Rockne and Halas has developed with amazing stri des and bids fare to cause All-American dopsters many a dull headache. He is lightning fast and special- izes in spilling tacklers and all this great work in his first year of eligibility. Not only does Danny get away big on the grassy rectangle but he plays basket- ball and hockey as well. Were we omniscient we might opine to tell of what this great little back will do during the next two years, yet so great is our opinion of him observations would undoubtedly be hyperbolical. Our Danny has a big future. H. ANDERSON I ' ll do the best we can says Anderson and in he goes to fight or leave the game on stretchers for be it known that this mountain of football beef from the Copper Country is a guard sans pareil . Anderson has been a perfect running mate for Smith and the two have carried a lion ' s share of the defensive and offensive work during the past two years. Hunk plays like a demon because he likes the game. To iiim the glory of his school and of his mates means more than personal recognition and for this reason the big guard has been a consistent morale stabilizer. Ander- son will flaunt the Gold and Blue in the face of the opposition for one more year and, barring accident he should make a score of mythical outfits. C A S T N E R Down from St. Paul came Castner to make good in his Freshman year and he did for the rangy fullback was the star of the wonderful yearling eleven. Castner is a great kicker, a natural field runner, a line plunger of formidable prowess and — well, in a word the big fellow is a football player in every sense of the word — one who trains assiduously and takes the game serious- ly. With Wynne and Phelan, Castner was the third link in a trio of fullbacks that kept the fans specula- ting as to a first choice. Shades of Eichen laub and Salmon! Castner with two more years should out- fullback every moleskinner who trots forth in the tow of premier honors. C0UGH1.IN Castner • fi Page 206 Haves DAVE HAYES Honest Dave Hayes is another vet who will leave these parts to take a hand in life ' s tussle — a part that he is well groomed for after three successful years at end. In 1917 Dave shoved off from Connecticut for Indiana and proceeded to display his pigskin wares for the coaches who smiled with much contentment at his ability. The end job was his and the following year the martial tocsin summoned Hayes to tackle a few Germans which he did wi h as much zest as characterized his work on the oval-sward. Dave was badly banged up with shrapnel but this handicap did not keep him from grittily competing for the flank stand upon his return. He was a regular again last year despite stiff competition and succeeded in corraling his third monogram. Notre Dame will al ways be proud of the scrappy little end. GRANT The return of Chet Grant was hailed with loud hurras from the followers of Gold and Blue gridiron fortune. Grant hooked up with his Uncle during the big fracas and upon his return immediately donned the moleskins. Playing under a weight handicap the little champ fielded his position with all the gusto of a Hercules. .As a field general, Chet ranks second to none, his work in the Purdue and the Northwestern game being especially notable. Grant has another year of competition and that he will be sorely needed for the calling post goes without saying. Grant LARSON W ' e name Ojay Larson the best center in the West and call to witness battered Cadets, aching Nebraskans, weary sons of Purdue and the convalescent boys at Bloomington. Ojay corralled his insignia in igi8 and stood head and shoulders above any other candidate last season. In fact he was so far superior that the job was his for keeps after Slip Madigan left to coach the youngsters in the West. Ojay possesses all the qualities of a good center — fight, brains, brawn, and a world of speed. Frequently he smashed through the opposition ' s secondary defense to get his man. Two more years should earn for Larson a reputation equal to that of McKwan of the Army or Peck of Pittsburgh. 1921 Page 207 Mehre M E H R E Harry Mehre, club comedian and best bet for the pivot job on the second squad, played a bang-up game whenever called upon to jump into Larson ' s stall. Harry is a hot tackier and sends them dizzily hunting for Hinkley ' s Bone Liniment whenever he connects, which is quite often. Mehre is beefy, aggressive and speedy,ahard lowgrapplerwho sees but one thing on the field — the man with the ball — and when he makes a lunge for him, it ' s all over. On the offensive Mehre is particularly clever on passing and blocking. Next year, Mehre ' s last, should be a big league one for be it known that Harry possesses real Varsity calibre in great gobs. G AR V E Y Hector is a prodigious youngster as his record in football, basketball and track readily indicates. He excels in the autumn sport, information one could readily gather who looked but for a moment on the Notre Dame forward line when in action. The little fellow took heavy honors during his freshman year and last year being his first in intercollegiate competition he set himself to the task of learning to handle Captain Coughlin ' s job. Needless to say Garvey made a most reliable understudy. Hector likes to break through and toss backfield men for losses. Five consecutive times during the Indiana game he turned this trick. Two more years will undoubtedly make Garvey the Tarzan of tackles. Phelan Walsh WALSH The jinx was after Katie bad all season and had him nursing a floating knee cartilage for the greater part of the time, which was somewhat of a trial for this great back whose stellar work in plunging and tackling called forth gasps of sheer amazement from all who saw him perform last year. He lasted but a few minutes on each occasion that was presented to him and all because of a weakened joint that failed to knit. During the last part of the season, however, Walsh began to dish out flashes of his real ability which should stand him in great stead during the 1921 season. Other things being equal, the stocky back should out- back anything on two feet when the whistles begin to toot next September. PHELAN Gentleman Bob Phelan was the third member of that great trio of Gold and Blue fullbacks upon which critics showered huge bouquets of myrtle and bay. With Castner, Phelan did splendid work in substituting for Chet Wynne, and the fact that this imposing group of battering rams remains intact for next season causes us no little elation. Bob is a furious line- plunger and a punter of no mean ability. For corro- boration of this statement we refer you to the mole- skin gentlemen of Evanston and Lansing who groped around where Bob wasn ' t on more than one charge in the memorable struggle in each of those cities. We ' ll say that Phelan is a fullback of greater prowess than many would expect and this because of his natural disposition of shrinking from anything that borders on the sensational. We ' re with you Bob and we want to see you make a Salmon rep! Garvey Page 20S 1921 h Voss Carberry voss Bill Voss, crack center on last year ' s Frosh group was switched to a tack le position by Rockne who saw in the big boy a great running mate for Garvey. Voss has a real tackle build being big and rangy with worlds of flash. Kspecially accomplished is Voss in offensive tactics and many a backfield gain can be traced to wide boulevards dug up by Bill . On the defense, ' oss is worth his weight in wild cats for he smears a forward wall and catapults through for his man. With Garvey on the other wing, Voss made up the other half of four hundred pounds of the best grappling beef that ever plunged over the yardlines. DOOLE Y Big Jim Dooley knocked ofl: his second pigskin insignia with all the savoir faire of a real knight. Dooley is a great student of the Fall pastime and pos- sesessevery characteristic looked forin a manwhoven- tures to make the Gold and Blue squad, fim is a linesman with avoirdupois, grit, tenacity, and brains, and his development under the blond mentor has been no less than remarkable. We can imagine many far more pleasant tasks than that of attempting to get through this giant from the East for Dooley does noth- ing if he fails in getting his man. One more year should earn for Dooley much calcium. With him on the line Rockne is ever ready to lapse into a really contented smile. CARBERRY Judge Carberry has added his name to that goodly list of Notre Dame wing men by virtue of his valiant work on Kiley ' s end during the first stringer ' s occasional absences. The Judge totes nary a superflous ounce of flesh on his one hundred eighty-five pound frame and when he hits a back — oh! constellations! Car- berry started four games with the second squad and on each try looked mighty good especially when on the defense. His few minutes during the Soldier fracas constituted hours of galling opposition for the Cadets. Two more years under Rockne should assure Carberry a prominent niche in Notre Dame ' s temple of Greats. DEGREE Another DeGree has come through on the local gridiron in his first year of eligibilit — F.ddie — brother of the famous Cy , spiral king of former years. Not only can this second DeGree boot the oval for rods but he is a linesman of the Samson type — a rare combination of brains and brawn. He sees a play quickly and gets into it the minute it is snapped. Truly it ' s pretty to see DeGree hurl his two hundred odd pounds against some ambitious fullback, for he invariably gets his charge. Particularly valuable was his precocious punting ability in the Nonhwrstern game. DeGree has two more years in which he should be able to toy with many a backfield man. 1921 Dooley DeGree Pagf 2og J ■5almo; i Cjii p GIPP ' S PASSES HELP SenMlioniJ Halfback Pla . Final Qaarter Despite Injured Shoulder- GIPP STARRING GIPP AGAIN STARS Hit ' Halfback Works Perfectly Whenever Called on to ALL-AMERICAN CII ' P.STAROF yOTRE DAME TEAM. ILL HERE GIPP HAILED AS WONDER PLAYER OF 1920 SEASON i % GIPP STARS; SPECTACULAR FINISH WINS Page 210 1921 GEORGE GIPP Gipp came to Notre Dame not primarily for athletics. It was really an acci- dent when the ever-diligent Rockne, observing his dexterity as he sported him. self on the Brownson gridiron, signed him for the freshman squad. He was elect- ed captain, and that year he set the record for distance drop-kicking, registering a 62 yard field-goal in the game with Kalamazoo. He was forced out of the game with a broken leg next season and it was not until 1919 that his name appeared again in the headlines. Notre Dame finished the season unconquered and Gipp was picked for All-Western. His na me attached the highest possible honor in the world of sport following the classic contest at West Point this season. They called him Lochinvar of the West, and held him as a demi-god of Football. As he entered the field at Evanston, November 20, twenty thousand persons stood up to greet their idol. But he received his laurels carelessly, and while he was anticipating new fields to conquer the stroke of death cruelly took him off. Yet he was fortunate. He lived as many a man has dreamed of living — for accom- plishment; he died as many a man would be willing to die — in the flush of his fame . 1921 Page 211 M THE RESERVES It takes a scrappy, never-say-down, bunch of second stringers to make a real Varsity gang and what it takes to make this invincible group, the 1920 subs had in great scoops. Battered and banged to a frazzle, this fighting crew took on the big Berthas night after night and to say that they put the first squad in fighting trim would be putting it mildly. Surely this valiant group of fighters, these stout hearted chaps who would give most anything for the coveted monogram, are worthy of some words of recognition. Crashing day after day against heavier odds, eating their hearts out on the sidelines for just one chance to take the field, the Subs were very much there and ready like the minute men of old to jump into the breach at the word. There was Red Shea, a half-back with all the goods whose two remaining years will provide for him ample time to give all he has. And Micky Kane, stocky, small, speedy with the brains of a Brandy. George Prokop was another whose splendid services at end will long be remembered not to speak of good old, Si Seyfrit, comedian and all-round big-time utility man. Si has a smile that is irresistible but accompanying that sign of unfailing good humor is an ambition to make the big league as an end for to him this is an accom- plishment devoutly to be wished . Then there was Bibles Oberst, that happy- go-lucky, six-foot giant from the hills of the Southland, a guard who goes at his heavy work with a vengeance. Happy we are also to chronicle the efforts of Sarge Cowbell Owens, two hundred-weight of brawn who guards like a demon and whose red, cheery face turns to a Dempsey-mug on the grid. Percy Wilcox, halfback, hockey star and gentleman is another who put his husky shoulder to the wheel and helped Rock and Halas startle the world. Quarterbacks there were but none to equal the calibre of Frankie Thomas and Les Logan. That these two callers will be lustily paged next year is a foregone conclusion. Alixon of Texas played a heady game at center and the fact that Rockne had him under close observation during the entire season is a sufficient endorsement of his worth. Danny Culhane not only upset the dope on the Cross-Country course but open- ed many eyes on the sidelines as well on each occasion that he cavorted across the chalk lines. Sas Colgan with all his track prowess did monumental work at the full-back station; Cotton put on a brand of tackling wares that should put the Varsity grapplers on the job defending their laurels; Gene Kennedy was a fighting, dependable man at the pivot position and should distinguish himself quite as brilliantly at that post next season as he has so consistently on the bas- ketball court. Taking them all in, the reserves were a crowd who came within an ace of making the top for the reason that the historic halls of this great old institution housed the country ' s best in the moleskin game. Page 212 1921 THGMAS ■3H A- -Maon- • 5Elf ECT ' LOQAA I i9Zl Page 213 Page 214 1921 h 1 CONCERNING A YOUNG MAN WHO DIED The glory of George Gipp ' s prowess had just begun to be re-echoed throughout the land when the knell of death cut short the swelling paean. Enveloped in the halo of his gridiron renown, the more dazzling if evanescent, he stepped into his grave, leaving but the memory of his flaring fame. Like a pillar of fire, Gipp ' s fame flashed up before the multitudes, and with startling abruptness it was quench- ed. For Gipp the glory came in with the flush of youth and at once passed out in the pallor of death. The recollection of his life is as impressive as the flash of lightning. He is not one of those whose burnt-out renown stands in grim ruin in the hall of fame. His name is one that will always command awe. For him seem to have been written the lines of Housman: The time you won your town the race We chaired you through the market-place; Man and boy came cheering by. And home we brought you shoulder high. To-day, the road all runners come. Shoulder-high we bring you home, And set you at your threshold down, Townsman of a stiller town. Eyes the shady night has shut Cannot see the record cut. And silence sounds no worse than cheers After earth has stopped the ears. Now you will not swell the rout Of lads that wore their honours out. Runners whom renown outran And the name died ere the man. So set, before its echoes fade. The fleet foot on the sill of shade. And hold to the low lintel up The still-defended challenge cup. 1921 Page 2 IS I THE FROSH GRIDDERS To that gang of valorous youngsters who, with the Reserves, daily met the charges of the Varsity we take off our hats; they, too, are deserving of laurels for they had no small part in the phenomenal success of the Rockmen . A number of the first stringers, having com- pleted their days of eligibility, will make way for these ambitious youngsters and then the Fresh will have their day. Three score of these enthusiasts faced Coach Frank Miles when he issued his call and, needless, to say, Rangy had quite some time in culling out the lot. Lieb was elected captain and before we forget it letus say that big Tom is assured of the full-back job next year or we miss our forecast. The Fresh took on Culver and administered a sound trouncing to the Cadets, 13 to 7. Lieb was the big gun of the scrap; Lieb, the man with more drive than any man since the days of Eichenlaub . The Yearlings next trounced the Fort Wayne Friars, 18 to 7. Rockne smiles when he looks over the men who battled during the season for recognition for he knows that such a bevy of work- men will insure him all- sorts of prospects for next season. Bergman, at left-half, Reese at quarter and McGivney at the same post look mighty good. Maher is a crack man at half; there is promise in Shaughnessy, Mayl and Cameron; Murphy, Flynn and Dujardin are promising at the tackles posts; Hogan, Beberich and Hieb make mighty hard men to pass on the line; Regan, Kelly, Burns, Arthur, and Kelley are centers who will give Larson and Mehre a run for honors next season. The Frosh have seen the pace set on the local grid- iron and we are positive that they will do their ut- most to measure up to the ( ' y j ' ' p ' Si ' high pigskin standards that 5Ekay i %„ I have made the Gold and Blue famous in the annals of the fall pastime. I CoAca Miles Pagf 216 1921 1 THE VARSITY IN ACTION Valparaiso Brandy goes around their interference 19Z1 Page 217 ifiraiyiihii.- « On the Plain ' Page 2iS 1921 I 1921 Page 2ig , o w H Pi g S ; — Q Z z e w I ° = 1 K Page 220 19£1 1 THE 1920-21 BASKETBALL SEASON Notre Dame II Detroit Rayls 19 Notre Dame 12 St. John University 19 Notre Dame 27 Mt. Union College 2.S Notre Dame 15 Firestones 20 Notre Dame 21 Huntington American Legion 31 Notre Dame 47 Armour Tech. 28 Notre Dame 21 Valparaiso 17 Notre Dame 49 Kalamazoo College 22 Notre Dame 44 Dayton 19 Notre Dame 36 M. A. C. 23 Notre Dame IS Wabash 30 Notre Dame 25 DePauw 26 Notre Dame 23 Western State Normal 30 Notre Dame 25 M. A. C. 37 Notre Dame 26 DePauw 31 Notre Dame ' 9 Marquette 26 Notre Dame 24 Western State Normal 19 Notre Dame 59 Armour Tech. 15 Notre Dame 20 Creighton 24 Notre Dame 18 Nebraska 25 Notre Dame 21 Nebraska 39 Notre Dame 26 Valparaiso 32 Notre Dame 31 ' abash 30 The final tilt of the year with Wabash was a battle royal. With the count 30 to 29 for the Little Giants in the last ten seconds of play, Kiley made a good long lunge and victory was ours. Halas ' work in his first season as a Gold and Blue mentor is deserving of commendation. I- ' requently he had to shift his men around in order to discover the best scoring combination and the victories of the latter part of the season sufliciently endorse his good judgment. Halas has beaucoup material to show the Court world a few tricks next vear. CAPTAIN xMEHRE Mchre was the ideal captain; the kind that play- ed hard and inspired leadership by his efforts. As a center the big boy from Huntington is without a peer in the State and as an iron-ring hooker — well look up the averages. Again and again Harry turned what appeared to be a certain defeat into victory by his great work under the hoop. One more vear for Peck . CAPTAIN -ELECT KILEY Kiley receives a well-deserved tribute from his mates in being named leader of the next crowd that will make local court history. Rog paired with Eddie Anderson at the guard pests and needless to say these strategic positions were safe at all times. The big boy has the faculty of sensing a play instantly and cavorts with all the vigor of a two year old at a dizzy pace from whistle to whistle. A good shot, a speedy dribbler, game to the core, Kiley should he a leader possessing all the punch required to bring his gang out on top of the heap when the centers begin to jump next winter. 1921 Page 221 fl i m McDERMOTT. McDermott was All-State choice for the right forward office. Mac jumped into the breach rather late but soon made his presence felt. He was the same comet of old with a basket throwing penchant that has become second nature. Mac was shifted to the left forward berth during the last half of the season. GRANT Although Chet did not finish the season owing to unforeseen difficulties he clinched his right to a berth by virtue of his great dribbling, passing, pivoting and basket shooting prowess. Grant, seasoned veteran that he is, will be needed for his last year of eligibility. ANDERSON Eddie the guard — and guard he was. In the old scrap with every fibre of his body the grid hero taught many an opposing dribbler how discouraging real defensive w ' ork frequently happens to be. One more year for Eddie . Kane and I ogan played great basketball during the latter part of the year at the forwards stations and each of these two sparklers well deserves the coveted letters. Danny Coughlin was also much in evidence and well up into the hot center of turmoil on each occasion that he entered the lists. Gene Kennedy who accomplished big things at the pivot post last year did mighty well at his favorite game and filled Mehrc ' s post frequently. Hec-Zube Garvey, the giant of prehistoric proportions from Holyoke helped out in not a few sticky situations and in two more years this baby should be having ' em eating out of his hands. Duffy, Smith, Mulcahy come in for much credit for their efforts in priming the first stringers and their good work whenever called upon to fondle the big sphere. I Page 222 . h 1921 1921 Page 223 V Page 224 1921 BASEBALL 1920 Charles Dorais Frank Miles Coach Captain SCHEDULE AND Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Notre Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame Dame 2 O i8 4 3 3 4 II 2 9 4 12 I 2 3 12 SCORES Wisconsin i Wisconsin 3 Wabash 2 Illinois 7 Illinois 8 Kalamazoo Normal 2 Purdue 8 M. A. C. 10 Valparaiso o Iowa 8 Indiana 3 M. A. C. II Michigan 5 Valparaiso i Iowa 2 Purdue 1 1 1921 Page 22S rJJ Miles MuRPIIV THE BOYS WHO DID IT Captain Frank Rangy Miles, than whom no peppier or cheerier lad ever fielded and socked the apple for Notre Dame, played faultlessly all season. Rangy stood shoulders above the vets left on hand and was very properly elected to lead the 1920 gang. Again and again during his years of competition, has he demon- strated his g reat qualities both of leadership and of play. Many a run has he crashed in; many a hot hit has met his mitt; many a sack has he stolen. Iiles is a finished player, and the close of the 1921 season should find him comtemplating offers from the big leagues. Big George Murphy also took his degree. Murph bore a large share of the respon- sibility of the mound during the trying season and in another year should have made a second Walter Johnson. Lally is another monogram man who leaves the Gold and Blue in a lurch for good pitchers. The big lowan was frequently called upon to take up the burden of fooling ' em with bad curves over the rubber and in each instance acquitted himself with much class. Beau Scofield also finished his term. Scofield is a consistent player and the left garden position was more than safe in his hands when Donovan was out. We will remember for many a moon Beau ' s long distance socks in pinches. Ellie Moore, diminutive keystone sack- er extraordinary, leaves to sell boilers with his Dad. Ellie played ball every minute and rarely missed an assist. Grit, fight, plug, and all the other qualities that go with determina- I.Ai.i.Y tion were Ellie ' s . Moore LL, Pag 226 1921 t BlIEVERNICUT PrOKUP FiTZGERAlD THE BOYS WHO COME BACK Captain-elect Mohardt Immediately after the Purdue victory the Varsity men gathered together to look over the captaincy timber for 192 1, and the choice fell on Johnny Mohardt. We might say that we would have been sadly disappointed had the choice been otherwise, for Mohardt is deserving of this high honor if ever a Gold and Blue man has been. Not only is Johnny a man of steel in ticklish situations, but he can play almost any position with the finish of a Sisler. He possesses huge gobs of all-round ability as a fielder, a pitcher and a sensational clouter of the oval. Without a doubt, Mohardt will be one of the big factors in 1921. Bill Fitzgerald played a wonderful game on the first pillow and proved himself one of the most valuable men on the squad.. Fitz has all jf the finish of a big-leaguer. He possesses ■a keen diamond sense, and coolness in critical H situations, and he is a sure hitter when a bingle ■B Hf is needed. The sack is safe for another year, for Bill will be back. When Barry was injured Dorais looked over his backstop candidates and picked Romeo Blievernicht to fill the gap. Romeo made a knockout hit with the crowd from the moment he stepped into the receiving post. He is a natural catcher and a long distance clouter and an accurate thrower. It would seem that Romeo has the monopoly on this hazardous job for his two remaining years of eligibility. Larry Morgan was a dependable right fielder. At the bat he was a terror to opposing pitchers. Prokup slugged and fielded his wayintothe hearts of Notre Dame fans. His sensational fielding stunts should keep the fans in a flurry of excitement during the season of 1921; not to speak of his cyclopsean clouting propen- MoHARDT sities. Morgan 1921 Pagf 227 Benny Connors took care of the right garden in true knightly fashion and with the bigstick — oh boy! Ben- ny specializes in Babe Ruth affairs at the bat having a hearty disdain for mere singles or doubles. Red Donovan was equally effec- tive as a hitter and as a fielder. In the garden, Red was unbeatable at scooping up seemingly impossible chances. At bat the Alassachusetts genius never failed to connect es- pecially when a hit was needed. Foley, Steinle, and McGarty, whenever given a chance demonstrated with much vigor that they are poten- tial stars who will make a strong bid for positions next year. All three should be important factors in 1921, if work means anything. Connors Donovan DORAIS LEAVES With the close of the season came the news that Coach Dorais had accepted a position with Gonzaga College, news which is not a little depressing both to the men over whom he had jurisdiction and the student body at large. As assistant to Rockne in putting Notre Dame on the gridiron map, and as head coach in basketball and baseball, Dorais had done exceptionally good work. He will long be remembered for his ser- vice ' s. With him go the best of wishes for success. Dorais Page 22S 1921 Foley McGarty Steinle I BASEBALL 1921 The 1921 team has got off to a slow start, mainly on account of the unsteadiness of young pitchers. Coach Halas did not inherit any pitching talent from last year ' s team, and he was forced to build a staff around two of last year ' s Freshmen. From the way he has been going, Castner will be a second Pat Murray, but in his first year of competition he is showing a tendency to lose control in the tight places. Twice he has beaten Michigan for seven or eight innings only to go down before a big rally at the end. Falvey has been less brilliant but more reliable than Cast- ner. Each of them has a world of stuff. Next year and the year after, two runs will be sufficient to win most of our games. Foley has improved his control since last year. When he has tamed his wildness a little more he will be able to turn in many games. That should be before the end of the present season. Steinle ' s slow ball is being used for relief work as it was last year. Blievernicht is the most consistent and hardest hitter on the 1921 team. I ' Wm r Mickey Kane is playing a pretty game at the ■™ hot corner. He Didn ' t Make The Tea.« 1921 Pa%,e 22Q Home Coming Day I ' agf 230 1921 racV 1921 Page 2JI rri THE OLYMPICS Subsequent to the preliminary trials held in June, three Gold and Blue track meteors were billed as qualified entrants in the classic Olympic games. In the trial con- tests held in Philadelphia, Murphy, junior A. A. U. high jump leader easily took the count of Yale ' s best, Landon, with a six foot, four inch climb. At Antwerp, however, Johnny was forced to jump under new conditions and was pushed down to a fourth place, Landon winning the jump with a leap of six feet. Desch pushed Loomis, veteran timber-topper, to a new record in the four- forty high-hurdle event, fin- ishing third a scant two yards behind the world- beater. Bill Hayes, who was expected to show his heels to Paddock, the Gold- en Gate speed merchant, lost out due to a badly injured knee sustained shortly before his departure for Belgium. THE STARS AT THE I N V ITATI ON MEETS Johnny Murphy took the running high jump in the B. A. A. games Feb. jth, this year with a leap of six feet, three and a half inches, and repeated his wonder work by nosing out Landon of Yale in the high-jump event at Madison Square Gardens. In an attempt to smash the world ' s record Murphy barely missed. In the same meet, Gus Desch ran second to Earl Thompson, the Dartmouth star, pushing the Hanoverian to equalling his own indoor record. The relay team, Desch, Hayes, Ras- per and Hoar, took third place in the special invitation run, after leading most of the way. Gus Desch broke into the really greats when he smashed the world ' s record in the four-forty low barriers in 53:4 at the Philly relays. With this mark behind him, it would not surprise us to see the little wonder treat the world timber records as roughly as Paddock has been handling the dash marks. Murphy tied for first place in the high-jump with Os- borne and Alberts of Illinois, and Chamberlain of Virginia. Page 2 2 1921 VARSITY TRACK 1920 k. k. rockne Edward Meehan Coach Captain V w Meeh n Capt. 1920 Outdoor Schedule and Scores April 24 Drake Relays, Notre Dame third in the one- mile relay and the two-mile relay. May I Penn Relays, Notre Dame fifth in the two- mile. May 8 Notre Dame, 59; Freshman, 56. May 15 Notre Dame, 95 1-3; Michigan Agricultural College, 32 2-3. May 23 Notre Dame, 72; Illinois Athletic Club, 54. May 23 State Meet, Notre Dame first with 55 i-io points. June 5 Notre Dame tied Nebraska for fifth, with ten points. Conference Meet, Ann Arbor. 1 The outdoor season got under way when for the fourth successive time the blond mentor sent a bunch of relay artists to peddle Gold and Blue wares at the Drake relays. In the two-mile relay, Burke, Meehan, Sweeney and Ras- per showed eight clean heels to the fliers from Illinois and copped third place. Ames took first place with fifteen yards separating the lowan runners from our representa- tives. The one-mile team, Hoar, Meredith, Kasper, and Meehan also gleaned a third place following Ames and Illinois to the tape. At Penn a week later the two-mile baton exchangers finished in fifth place, the Oxford-Cambridge team knock- ing off honors in the record time of 7:50. Yale, Ames and M. I. T. followed the Varsity relayers to the string. The next exhibition of track work to be staged for the benefit of the dopsters was the Frosh-Varsity meet. This was the first opportunity presented to see the big yearlings in action. Hayes took the dashes with all the ease of a walking champion and Desch was the best man in timber-topping. Murphy, national junior champ in the high-jump cleared the pine with a cracking leap of 6ft., 4 in. setting a new field record. Desmond, Montague, Doran and others demonstrated their prowess much to the pleasure of the coaches. The varsity, however, suc- ceeded in beating out the fast moving frosh by a 59 to 56 score. I ' OWERS • i9Zl Page 233 i The Michigan Aggies came to Cartier Field for the first intercollegiate meet on May 15th and stumbled away nursing a 95 1-3 to 33-2-3 bump. The Gold and Blue took the majority of points in every event, the work of Dant, Wynne, Bailey, Starret, Shaw, Powers, Willet, Kasper, Burke, Mere- dith and Meehan being of exceptionally high calibre. The Illinois Athletic Club furnished the most exciting competition of the season. From the opening gun to the relay the meet was one series of thrills. In this meet five track records were shattered and one was equalled. Hayes was the Hercules of the afternoon taking in the 100-yard dash with ease and breaking the track record in the 220-yard dash. Burke pushed Joie Ray, middle Western Champion, to a new record, 4:25 3-5. Not to be daunted by the time smashing, Gus Desch took the low barriers in new record time of 25 seconds. Murphy cleared the stick with a pretty jump of 6 feet, 3 inches and Knourek, I A. C. polester set a bright shiny mark with a lope of 12 feet, 6 inches. Eddie Meehan took the classic event of the afternoon, the half-mile run from Joie Ray, setting a new mark of 1:57 1-4 for the event. The meet ended with the Gold and Blue hugging a 72 to 54 victory. Sweeney F. Murphy Douglas Burke Page 2J4 1921 Murpiiy finishing the two-mile; k as per winning ' tin;44o; Radcniacher uin (jvcr; Joie Ray; Murphy; Mechan leading the 880 1921 ' « ' • 23s The Varsity experienced but little trouble in taking the State meet held in Lafayette, May 29th. The locals placed heavily in every event and rolled up a 55 i-io score on all competitors. In this meet five long-existing track records were shattered. The pret- tiest brush of the day was the mile run which simmered down to a duel between Burke and Furnas of Purdue. Burke took the run in the record breaking time of 4:21-2 and Kasper clipped two seconds off the State record for the quarter mile. Eddie Meehan again startled the West by a record run in the half setting up a mark of 1 157-3. Rockne sent his best to the Conference meet held in Ann Arbor. Kasper and Meehan took their heats in lightning time and on the next day, Cy running on the outside took fifth in the quarter mile run. Meehan won a tough half-mile against such luminaries as Sprott and Spink in the wonderful time of 1:54-1. Maury Starret took his heat in the tall timbers but was nosed out in the finals. Burke, set back five yards by the officials, finished second to Yates, the Illinois flyer, in the mile canter. The Gold and Blue relay stars — Meredith, Hoar, Kasper, and Meehan pushed Illinois and Michigan to the limit but were forced to lake a third place after a hot fight. Notre Dame tied with Nebraska for fifth position taking ten points. Starret Johnnie Gets Over At 6-3 Page 2j6 1920-21 TRACK With the opening of the school term in 1920, Notre Dame track and field en- thusiasts began to dope out the possibilities of the Gold and Blue performers against the stiff competition provided for them. Back from Europe came that trio of Aces, Murphy and Desch and shortly after big Bill Hayes, national hundred-yard champion, eager for the spiked shoes. This good for- tune was slightly dimmed when it was re- ported that Burke, premier miler, would not be with us, not to speak of the loss by grad- uation of such stars as Eddie leehan, star half-miler, and Walter Sweeney. The loss of these two men was felt keenly es- pecially because of the fact that Rockne had no good distance material on hand. Other stars who were on hand to aid in piling up points were Wynne, Shaw, Mere- dith, Picks, Montague, Hoar and Hogan. Rasper Capt. 192 1 Meredith ) r d s, Shaw Hayes Desch Wynne 1921 Page 2J7 f Cross Country prospects for 1920-21 were good. Twelve men answered the first call and the squad was gradually raised to thirty thinly-clads. Hick Sweeny, distance runner, was given full charge of the squad, and soon the marthoners were loping over the country working out the kinks for the handi- cap runs and the intercollegiate meets. Bardzell running with a three minute handicap easily took the local run. Barnes took second place after a pretty tussle with Hayes. Notre Dame ' s harriers took fifth place in the State Cross-Country meet at Wabash, Purdue winning first place with Furnas in the lineup. M. A. C. won the dual run by fifteen points. The Gold and Blue meet, held in order to instill a sound spirit of competition among the track candidates, uncovered two lights who will stand a lot of watching: McBarnes in the two-mile and Hogan in the pole-vault. With the trio of Bel- gium Aces and a well-balanced squad going like a million, the Gold and Blue Track Team should do big things in making this a real Notre Dame year in athletics. Final score: Gold 65 1-2; Blue 65 1-2. The Illini Meet. The Suckers came up to the local gym heavily laden with four and five entries for every event and therein lies the secret of their success. Hayes, Wynne, Hogan, and Shaw, took firsts in their events. Where Notre Dame was woefully weak was in the distance runs and in this special department the Illini are, perhaps, unbeatable. The most exciting event was the high-jumping duel between Murphy and Alberts which the latter took, setting a new Western Intercollegiate record. The Illinois Relays. Notre Dame sent four entries to Champaign and the locals brought home a first, a second, a third and a fourth, finishing third among the point winners in a field representing 43 schools. Shaw took the shot put with ease; Desch took second in the 75 yard low-hurdles; Chet Wynne took third in the 75 highs following Wright of Nebraska and Anderson of Minnesota to the tape in a razor finish. The Relay men took a fourth place. Hoar ) I Patterson Ba:ley li Grinager WiLLET Page 238 The Badgers trimmed the Varsity by a score of 51 to 35. The cause was the same that Rockne has been attempting to remedy since the begin- ing of the indoor season — the lack of good dis- tance men. In the dashes, the hurdles, the weights, Notre Dame was equal in strength with the Madison boys but when it came to competing with them in the marathons — -not so good! Picks ran a pretty race in the quarter mile and Murphy took his first letter by annexing the high jump. Wynne, Kasper, IcBarnes and Flynn also broke into the point-corraling pastime. The Frosh-Western State Normal Meet. The yearlings sent the Normalites back to Kala- mazoo with a heavy coat of gloom and sadly lamenting the fact that they had eased up after having massed up a goodly number of points early in the meet. Kennedy, Walsh, Kohin, Brady, and Cameron took first in their events. The relay race was particularly thrillin ' and not until the baton was safely in the hands of Walsh did it look secure for the Frosh. i Dant J. Murphy CAPTAIN CYRIL KASPER Cy Kasper was unanimously chosen to lead the 1920-21 tracksters by his mates shortly after the close of the spring season. Cy is the ideal leader — quiet, unassuming, scrappy to the last ditch. As a quarter-miler and a half-miler, the new leader is without a peer i n the middle West. Many a point has Cy cornered for the Gold and Blue. We can never forget his splendid work, when as a running mate with the great Meehan, he invariably paced to the line in time nothing short of remarkable. Especially notable was his exhibition in the memorable I. A. C. meet. That Kasper is due to surpass his already enviable record in 1921 is a foregone conclusion. © f . ) I 1 5 A « The Two-Mile Team: Kasper, Burke, Sweeney, and Meehan 1921 Pagf 239 iii faj II 1 1 : If 2i V I ■L im Page 240 1921 I s ||ocKc7 1921 Page 241 r? w H Pfl f 5 2 I Capt. Castner THE YEAR All the world loves a fighter — and finds a particularly warm spot in its great heart for the fighter who wins. That good-natured section of the people known as the sporting public fairly tingles at the sight of the man who has learned to love to fight for the sake of the game alone; but finds him a rare species in these days of shadowy boxing, crooked baseball, and commercial- ized football. But when he does appear he is all the more refreshing. We nominate for approval the Notre Dame Hockey squad. The ice game functioned in its second year at Notre Dame as an unofficial sport; which means that it was financed by its own returns. It faced the handicap of a warm winter which interfered with practice and caused the cancellation of several games. It fed upon prospects and faith — and blossomed forth as a hockey team ranking with the best in the country and relatively equal to the other branches of Notre Dame sport. Twenty men answered the call of Father Cunningham, manager of the in- formal group, and Paul Castner, captain and coach, for the first practice in January. Trick winter days played havoc with practice on St. Mary ' s lake; and the crew went to work with pick and shovel and constructed a rink on the campus between Walsh and Badin halls. Through most of the season the artificial ice-way bore a closer resemblance to a swimming pool than to a hockey rink; but the squad resorted to the heroic practice of before-breakfast sessions in order to fool the weather man. Before breakfast is very near milkman time at Notre Dame — as all of you old grads know. P ' eltes Gorman 1921 Paie 24i Per se , the season wasn ' t such a much. The boys made a bit of his- tory by staging a practice game on Marion lake on the very campus of St. Mary ' s. Three hundred princesses from the Castle on the Niles braved wintry winds to observe the first Notre Dame athletic team which had ever invaded their estate — and cheered themselves warm when Capt. Castner led the St. Mary ' s seven to victory. On February 3 the team invaded the northland and lost a 7-2 contest to the Houghton School of Mines at Hough- ton. The teams played six-man hockey which is not N. D. style. The next evening the same teams met at Calumet in seven-man hockey and Castner ' s icemen won a 3-2 victory. Capt. Castner starred in both games and was styled by the Calumet press the best man on either team . The performance spread to various sections of the country; and the local group received inquiries from University of Michigan, University of Detroit, University of St. Louis, Carnegie Tech, and Culver. Games were scheduled with Michigan, Culver and Carnegie Tech, but weather conditions caused the cancellation of the first two. On March g, the puck-chasers journeyed to Duquesne Garden in Pittsburg and won from Carnegie Tech 2-0. As a result of the game Capt. Paul Castner was declared by the Pittsburg Gazette-Times to be the equal of any college player in America. Vale and Penn had already performed at the garden; and at the conclusion of the contest the rink manager stated that the Notre Dame team was superior to any team which had appeared in Pittsburg within the year — which is a well-earned tribute for the boys who began their hockey season with picks and shovels. Flinn r ' .■t St. Mary ' s Pagi- 244 1921  . Prospects for next season are bright. An attempt is being made to form a mid-Western league including Michi- gan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Notre Dame, and the Michigan School of Mines. The winner of this quintet would meet the champion Eastern col- lege team and the national college champion would then meet the am- ateur leaders for the hockey champion- ship of the United States. The boys who fed upon prospects and faith ha -e already made their picks and shovels famous. They have carried the honorable name of the school into virgin territory and left it there — more honored. They threaten to do more next season when they all return — and we believe they will do it; they are Notre Dame Men. Rev. W. F. Cunningham, C.S.C., manager of the team for two seasons is the man to whom much of the success can be attributed. Father Cunningham is oblivious to ordinary difficulties and his spirit was the spirit of the squad. Captain and Coach, Paul Castner. Individual star and recognized as one of the premier hockey players of the country by the press wherever he played. The Pittsburg Ca- ' ette-Times says of Capt. Paul : It is doubtful if there is a better college player in Hockey today than Castner. He is big and fast, takes the puck with ease, and works his way through opposing lines. Any team with a man of the ability of Castner will be heard from . Castner hails from St. Thomas college and is a baseball pitcher and football monogram man. . nderson McDonald Eldredce 1921 Page 24S Hartley Anderson, goal. Hunk ' s ability as varsity football guard for two seasons is rivalled by his work in stopping pucks. Performing in his home district of Calumet, Hunk aston- ished the natives by stopping the hard rubber with everything from his face to his heels. Anthony Gorman, wing, a product of Canada. Alichigan School of Mines Wi Wii t accused N. D. of saving their good . - ' ' 2 I M wine until last when Tony broke into X ::? ' the second half with a whirlwind of- fense. Injury prevented the manager of the 1920 team from making the Pittsburg trip. Gorman, Castner and Father Cunningham are the pioneers of Notre Dame hockey. Fred Larson, defense. Ojay , the ' ' big football center who took the pep- - ' ■per from the Army all-American pivot man last year at West Point, used his size to excellent advantage on defense. As his skating improves he is becoming a real star. Percy Wilcox, defense. Another contribution from the frozen north of Cal- umet, who specializes in a one-hand style which opponents find hard to fathom. Neil Flinn, center. Superior, Wisconsin. Flinn played a great game in all con- tests, ranking very close to Castner. His work at Pittsburg was wonderful; and with his captain, he was classed above any man on the ice. Eldridge, wing. Small- est and one of the fastest men on the team. The kid is a speed skater and excels in a clever handling of his stick. He was injured in the Tech tussle after playing a flashy game. Eldridge is a former buddy of Castner at St. Thomas. Feltes, wing. South Bend boy who learned his hockey in Montreal. One of the fastest skaters on the squad who will improve when his stick-work responds to Castner ' s coaching. McDonald, Duluth, Minn. The ace in the hole especially valuable as an all-round man who stepped into any vacant position with ease, and an exceptionally fast skater. Gentles, wing, another Canadian ice-man, who excels in accurate shooting by using a deceptive left hand. II 1921 Pagf 247 THE 1920 INTER-HALL SEASON Brownson ' s Champions Won Lost Tie Brownson S o lOOO Corby 3 • o lOOO Badin 2 2 o .500 Carrol 2 2 o . 1500 Sorin I 2 I ■333 Off-Campus O S I .000 Walsh o 2 o .000 The Inter-hall struggle was one of the ke enest seen hereabouts in years with Brownson coming out on top of the pile and taking the championship honors. Brother Allen ' s men won five clean cut victories and despite the fact that Corby, runner-up in the league, failed to lock horns with the Main building gang in the deciding struggle, practically all the dopesters awarded the Blue and White machine a comfortable edge on all competitors. The Hall crowds took on fifteen outside competitors winning six of the games and tieing one. Brownson put a big, con- sistently drilled, eleven on the field and the fact that Brother Allen ' s proteges were at all times able to cope successfully with stiff competition argues well for the coaching of those who had the Blue jersied bunch in hand. Corby was also well represented and although a good deal of ragged work was much in evidenc.e during the early part of the season, the gang got together during the final games with startling results. Badin ' s work was fairly good and on several occasions, the Freshie-Hall threatened to make things interesting for Corby and Brownson. Carrol entered competition for the first time this year and a notable lack of beef was more than recompensed by loads of fight. Sorin, dear old Sorin, experienced the difficulties of former years; despite the entreaties of Father Haggerty and the tutelage of the best football heads on the grounds. The R. O. T. C. had a rather difficult time weathering the storm but stood up under rough treatment with remarkable gusto. Under the assiduous surveillance of Father Cunningham, the Off-Campus crowd should put a cup winning team on the rectangle next season. Walsh played in hard luck, handicapped by injuries during the entire season. Despite this gloomy condition of affairs, Walsh continued to furnish thrill after thrill especially in the clash with the shifty Carrol outfit. Seyfrit of Badin and Walsh of Carrol were the best ends of the Hallite crews — fast, shifty, tackling demons and brainy lunge grabbers. Sanders of Brownson and Hunsinger of Badin struck out brilliantly and efficiently against every pair of legs below an advancing ball — a pair of husky tackles hard to match. Oberst and Cleary were the trazan bulwarks whose brawny arms were much in evidence in breaking up offensive Page 24S 1921 I Corby Basketball Champs and defensive tactics. Cieary was especially brilliant in breaking through and messing up plays. Mixon of Corby was easily the best center out for All-Hall honors. This rangy Texan plays a pretty roving game at the helm post that frequently sets oncoming chargers at loggerheads. Connel of Carrol, the all- Wisconsin high-school backfield phenom, was the most promising half uncovered and with a bit more experience he should make things hum for back-yard Fresh- man candidates in Fall. Nicholson of Badin was a bloomin ' peach on the other side of the line being a runner, a plunger and a tackier of no mean ability. Wright, pride of Brownson, was the Eichenlaub of the Halls, playing all branches of the game in an exceptionally remarkable way. The quarterback palm goes to Schmitt of Brownson whose great work at the rudder post won for his Hall much of its success. Corby Relay Champs 1921 Page 249 I INTERHALL TRACK Brownson Hall, winner of many championships annexed another by adding the Interhall trophy to the record room collection. The scores by the halls com- peting were as follows: Brownson, 42 1-3; Corby, 32; Carrol, 27 1-5; Badin, 10; Walsh, 9 1-3; Off-Campus, 5 1-3. McGivern who annexed 17 points single handed was the individual star of the meet; Walsh and Johnson pushed him for point honors by great exhibitions in their events. Kohin of Brownson took 13 1-3 points and was the rnain cog in the Hall victory. Kennedy and Bergman were high point-getters, aijd Loesch, Cahill, Coughlin, Barber, Moes, Cameron, Lieb and Geegan were other prominent entrants. Corby Hall annexed the season relay championship with the following team: Bergman, Moore, Lieb, Kelley, Maher, and Kennedy. FRESHMAN PHYSICAL TRAINING I Ever since the military training was abandoned, we have had talk about the introduction of compulsory physical training. This year the system was intro- duced and imposed upon the Freshmen by Father Lange, Barry Holton, and Pat- rick Granfield. Through the enthusiastic efforts of these men and the assistance of Father Burns and Coach Rockne the training has been made a thing of real value to the men. A great deal of des- cription might be written here about the course, but since methods have been changed so frequently during this first experimental year, and since a thorough- going plan will not be introduced until next year, we leave the detail to our suc- cessors, contenting ourselves with the an- nouncement that a good beginning has been made on the five hundred men who were members of the classes this year. Some of them may be seen in action on the next page. 1921 Pagf 2ji J J Page 352 1921 THE N E W PROVINCIAL At the General Chapter of the Con- gregation of the Holy Cross last Sum- mer, Father Charles L. O ' Donnell was elevated to the dignity of Provincial for the United States, to succeed the Very Rev. Andrew Morrisey who was at the same time made Coadjutor to the General of the Congregation. In 1906, when Father O ' Donnell was graduated, he was class poet and editor of the first Dome. Since then he has done much that has added to Notre Dame ' s literary reputation. The Dome rejoices at the honor conferred upon its first editor, and, in extending to him its best wishes, feels some of the pride of a school teacher who sees an old pupil succeed. Father O ' Donnell I ROMANTIC CARROLL HALL IS GONE The breaking up of the prep school at Notre Dame was begun this year when the first two years were abolished. Although it will be another year before we see the last of the preps, Carroll hall has already lost all the romantic atmos- phere that had always been hers. Yes, despite Father P. J. Carroll, who acrimoniously christened the famous Anarchistic Society , Romance once made her couch amid the dead-white bowers of Carroll Hall ' s dormitories, while her brother, Adyenture, leaped from many a page of forbidden lore, thumbed secretively in Carroll study hall. Romance and Adventure were Every Boy ' s companions those mystic years from thirteen to fifteen, when, grammar school behind with its memories of trouble- some female teachers, he stood upon the threshold of Youth ' s Estate, having received from the ever-busy director of studies the magic key labelled F irst year high Carroll Hall . To no one else was the world so wide, so full of beckoning Mystery, as to Every Boy his first year in old Carroll Hall. From the pipe-line channel bored under the main building to the feet of the Virgin upon its dome, he made his way, and like Balboa upon Darien, or Columbus at San Salvador, he thrilled as each new forbidden prospect grew before his eyes. Not only physically irrepressible, the loyalest, longest-hoping rooter Cartier 1921 Pagf 53 Field ever saw; the loudest, most restless, yet often the most appreciative auditor Washington Hall ever housed; but also a dauntless voyager of the infinite realms of Imaginative Mind and Innocent Heart — Every Boy his first year in old Carroll was sometimes the most refreshing student that poor plagued professors ever kindled the Lamp of Knowledge in, and very, very frequently the sincerest, happi- est, most pleasing visitant to that shrine where waits the Holy Brother of all the children of men. Yet now, romantic Carroll Hall is gone. Some day perhaps, old Notre Dame will again find a place upon her ample bosom for her most loyal child — Every Boy of old Carroll; again the tousled head, hot and weary from the restless day, will lie against the understanding heart, to draw therefrom the inspiration for that glowing pageantry of boyhood which put a glamour over every scene, and silvered every passing sorrow. G. D. Haller, ' 19 THE NEW CAFETERIA Students returning to school in September were met with the glad tidings that the Greeks had been overthrown in a battle of words with Mr. 0. A. Clark of South Bend, and that thereafter the responsibility of feeding the hungry public would be borne by a new Kable cafeteria on the campus. Mr. Clark, it was re- ported, won his position as interior decorator by some such words as these: I bid ten thousand a year. Father Maloney gave Clark the decision on figures, and the control of our gastronomic destinies by the Greeks was ended forever. On account of the changes made in the cafeteria, and delays in the shipment of articles of equipment, it did not open at the beginning of the Fall term. For nearly a month, those men who were not eating at the refectory went to town for their meals, and spent part of the time between meals going over to the caf to note progress. On the fourteenth of October, the caf opened for supper. The greatly im- proved appearance of the place justified the long wait. An expenditure of twenty- five thousand dollars had made the bedraggled eating place of the year before into a modern serve-self restaurant. Enamel steam tables trimmed with nickel, nickel-plated railings, and enough knives and forks to go round, were the prin- cipal improvements. As the year wore on, it came about that there were times when we had to stir our coffee with table spoons, but altogether it has been much better than the Greeks. The new caf can serve fifteen men a minute, and it can accommodate at one time two hundred fifty diners. Only for fifteen minutes at noon-time is it badly crowded. Mr. Clark ' s policy is to use as many student employees as possible. Seventeen of this year ' s twenty-four waiters are students. Page 254 I THE LAETARE MEDAL 1921 The Laetare Medal for 1921 was conferred upon Miss Elizabeth Nourse, foremost American woman artist, on account of her excellence in her art, and her tireless efforts to beautify the lives of others. Miss Nourse has produced more than two hundred canvasses. She does best the life of the poor, and mother-and-child pictures. There is no painter , says M. Dubuisson, the French critic, who has reproduced better than Miss Nourse the naivette of the baby ' s attitude, and the tenderness of a mother ' s love . In her first year in Paris, Miss Nourse had the honor of having her Mother and Child accepted by the Salon. It was the first time such an honor had come to a novice. The beautiful spirituality that characterizes the paintings of the artist is a reflection of the woman. Her life in Paris, has been filled with charities to her fellow artists and others in need. Her saintly Catholic life has been a source of inspiration to those about her. Since 1902, Miss Nourse has had at least one painting every year in the Paris Salon. Her most notable paintings on exhibition in the United States are: The Peasant Woman of Borst , in the Cincinnati Museum; Happy Days , in the Detroit Institute of Art; The Fisher Girl of Picardy , in the National Gallery at Washington; Mother and Children in the Chicago Art Institute; and Twi- light , in the Toledo Museum. HOME-COMING Last Fall Notre Dame sent out a call for the first Home-Coming Day on November 6. The attraction was a football game between the greatest football team of all, and the courageous warriors from Purdue. The response to the call was all that could be desired, as is proved by the picture on page 250. Six hundred old students are among the crowd in the stands. On the night before the game a celebration of joint welcoming to the home- comers and the Purdue team was held at and around the Oliver hotel. Later, the proteges of Granfield and Holton put on a boxing and wrestling exhibition. Between halves of Saturday ' game, the old N. D. men, headed by Colonel Hoynes, (who wore a magnificent silk hat, which appears three times on the next page) marched over to the students ' bleachers. The Colonel, Red Salmon, Red Miller, and all the old stars were given fifteen rousing cheers apiece. Informal celebrations were held in the Oliver Saturday night. 1921 Pagf 255 Page 256 1921 The Refirins BiorHK PoiroFFi:E and hi5 Successor The First Scholasticate Men ii 1921 PaSf 257 CALENDAR 1920 May 8 Varsity tracksters beat the Frosh, That Murphy ' s a jumper; he is by gosh. He cleared the bar at six feet four Enough is said, we say no more. The Aggies lost by eleven and ten; The score keeper wore out his Waterman pen. May 9 Corby ups and beats old Sorin, Father Haggerty is still a roarin ' . The boys in Badin win from Brownson, They sure gave ' em a darn good trownsin ' . May 10 The Papal delegate arrives on our campus, We expect a holiday but the faculty tramp us. May II Rained like the deuce for two or three hours. Made the grass green and watered the flowers. The Greeks tried to charge a dime for coffee. The boys showed ' em they couldn ' t get huffy; John found himself in an awful pickle. So the price of his beverage went down to a nickle. .V5 Be May 12 Father McGinn shows up for class. May 13 The Junior Prom, was a swell affair, The collection of beauty exceeding rare. May 14 The Players Club back from Terre Haute, They rendered the plays that Edmonson wrote. Fat McCormick made a hit with the girls — His rosy cheeks and golden curls. May 15 . D. two and Valpo zero, Johnny Mohardi is the hero. A track meet was had with the Michigan Ags. The poor old farmers ran like nags. Bill Lawless stages a murder scene. The Greeks in the Caf. were scared most green. May 16 The lawyers held their annual party. All the guests ate hale and hearty. May 17 St. Mary ' s girls open bazaar. Our bankrolls get a terrible jar. May 18 The bazaar continues to be the thing, The boy with the lucre is sure a king. May 19 Our female neighbors still raffle their wares; -All of us know it and no one cares. iT 1921 Page 2S9 COoKH -LL Mt Kit CacAi t{-i Afc-■c?■A)- OoK UsiU Lovrt Page j6o 1921 May 20 The whole darn thing wound up with a dance; It lasted as late as ten o ' clock, Then the sweet little darlings were tucked in bed. May 21 Many of the boys take to the lake; Some did not want to get their Bathing suits wet, so they did Not wear them. May 22 N. D. and the I. A. C. held a track meet, Some of these boys were fast on their feet. Eddie Meehan beat Ray in the half, Doesn ' t that make an Irisher laugh: May 23 Hayes and Kirk go canoeing. May 24 Father O ' Hara and Joe Thompson off For South America. We will have many students from Those parts next fall. May 25 Badin beats Sorin eleven to two; Lazy Senior, looks bad for you. May 26 If any one can remember what Happened on this day he Can hand it in for next Year ' s Dome. May 27 Jim Murphy and Hank Rusche Go walking about St. Marys. Thev got kicked. Out. ' May 28 Mike and Fritz, the Philippine Boys leave for Manila. May 29 The reporter got mixed up in a poker game and forgot to cover this story. May 30 Decoration Day. 0 K TiTLEp GcwTLtrMA- ; Prait R. PTfrR_ Sept. 16 Back again ' mid paternal bliss; Home was never quite like this. Sept. 17 Hello Jack, when d ' ya get in? Livin ' at school? No, day dodgin ' . Lei ' s go down and shoot some pool. Sept. 18 The first few days are always the same, ' ou see a guy ' s face but don ' t know his name. Sept. 19 .Maurice Starrct, journalist and hurdler Has become assistant athletic manager for the Coming year. Sept. 20 The Democrat boys form a club To elect Cox. Mark Storen, president. The Glee Club elect officers. Sept. 20-30 Judy Shanahan keeps putting off going to class, . nd nothing happens, until ' Jf 1921 Page 261 Page 262 1921 J I Oct. I Prof. Rafter finds a little Boy lost on Notre Dame Avenue, The boy is still lost. Oct. 2 N. D. plays a practice game Kalamazoo the opponent ' s name 39-0 Oct. 3 Not much doin ' around this Place on Sunday. Oct. 4 Rock gets in argument with Hill St. Conny; You better look out, you big plow Johnny. Oct. 5 I wish someone would Do something To keep this Calendar going. Oct. 6 Some of the boys still swim in the lake. An awful cold thcv arc liable to take. Pro Paffzr f rk 3 a : ( mOfcBAN 1921 Page 263 Page 264 1921 Oct. 7 ' The first pep meeting was had for this year The sones and cheers were good to hear. Rock and the players spoke with snap They will put N. D. all over the map. Oct. 8 The Senior class in body assemble The U. S. Congress they did resemble. Coughlin was chosen to lead the gang, He ' s one that can do things with a bang. Oct. 9 Western Normal was beaten right much Some of their players may need a crutch. 41-0 Oct. 10 Sorin was to pla y Brownson in Football; the Soriniies sleep Too much; the game was Called off. Oct. 26 The retreat begins, Many of the boys get rid of their sins. Rained all day and into the night. The Sorin Hall steps were an awful sight. All permissions are slopped for a week. Amusement at home we now must seek. Oct. 27 The boys get up at six and thirty, And hurry to church with their necks all dirty. Slaggert was all set for a Football rally Rock was usmg the gym. For secret practice. Oct. 28 The team leaves town on the twelve forty-eight, The West Point cadets will meet their fate. Wf:3T£12 l 5tAT£-0 ' IoTCE DAM£-fJ. The N. D. boys are betting much money, If Army beats us it won ' t be funny. Father Bolger was late for a class, Good night, fellows, what ' s coming to pass? The mission continues with ginger and pep We all go to church to keep up our rep. Oct. 29 Father Maloney went down to the game. If he bets a nickel we ' ll change his name. .Andy Moynihan is moved to Dorms, The wicked city has too many chawrms. The scribe is weary — the pen is dry. Will see you tomorrow, for today, bye, bye. Oct. 30 This was a day for much celebration, The lads all gather in jollification. N. D. 27-Army 17. Oct. 3 1 We go to church three times a day; Going some. ' well I should say. 1921 At The Valpo Game Page 266 1921 M Wc met the team on the ' leven-five. Some of the boys were forced to skive. The name of Gipp is flashed oe ' r the nation. He ' s all-American; no argumentation. Nov. I We have no classes but plenty of raining A college is nothing without some complaining. The Army game is still ace high, N. D. ' s rep. has reached the sky. Tony Gorman gets back from week-ending , luch of his lucre he has been spending. ELECTION DAY Nov. 2 NOTAKCJ- THE U-fllNE OUT Or VALPO. Zt - i Nov. 3 The Republicans win without any trouble; They stick a pin in the Democrat ' s bubble. The Cox supporters aren ' t saying a word. The Harding men can only be heard. Nov. 4 The Hill and Dalers put on a race; Some of the lads set an awful pace. Nov. 5 . The old boys arrive from the east and the west; Thev tell of their davs as birds in the nest. NoTRLDflMClb Nebraska 7 1921 The gang parades to meet Purdue ' s players. They all make speeches and spread it on by lavers. Page 267 ■Page 268 1921 Notre Dahl riddled Purdue zS-O Nov. 6 The home coming game is a big success — Poor Purdue! This N. D. team ' s too much for you. Nov. 8 Same old wash day With plenty of Classes. Nov. 9 Nothing Happened. Nov. lo Whip Indiana, beat ' em, Lick ' em, Notre Dame. Nov. II Two years ago the Kaiser quit. Gosh, ol ' fishoolcs, how time doth flit! ' l he snow it falls on Sorin Hall, . nd other buildings old in story. The cold wind blows across the Lake, ■And wild Bill Lawless sleep ' s in glory. Moynihan and Carmody go out to shoot ducks -Andy comes back and says, .Aw Shucks . Nov. 12 The team leaves for Indianapolis. Nov. 13 Indians gave us the worst scare in History — ten and nothing at the F.nd of the third quarter. Gipp cracked his shoulder and Hunk had a few ribs caved in. Barry broke some bones in his hand; They fought on and grabbed victory Out of defeat; the best Football team in the Country won the game. t mso mm r yf coMB NAT o Biyr Afor ths mi . f ght 1921 Page 269 Pagf 2J0 Nov. 14 Just go to church. Nov. 15 Some of the boys miss Morning prayers. Northwestern game is all the talk. A thousand are going The Chicago cops will have A hand full. Nov. 16 F2xams. start Tomorrow — .And all our yesterdays have Lighted fools the way to dusty Ruin . .Nov. 17 The horses are all harnessed; We go to our doom with fear And trembling. Some will be Cross eyed before these exams Are over. Nov. 18 The ordeal continues; Nevertheless we are Going to the Northwestern game. Nov. 19 Everybody prepares for the trip, A collar and toothbrush arc put in the grip. Tony Gorman Shaved And put on a White collar. Nov. 20 Everybody hit the deck P2arly to make the Special for the Windy city. The Evanston boys got a bad Beating; the N. D. Cheering Section did nobly. Nov. 20 Nothing to do but sleep. Nov. 22 The exam, marks are coming in; Some of us weep and some of us grin. The hard hearted profs don ' t blink an eye They snap their fingers at flunking a guy. Then father writes a scorching letter — Get out of school or else do better. Football Banquet Nov. 23 Sotith Bend News Times Picks .■MI-.American N. D. is Unanimous. Nov. 24 Thanksgiving vacation begins In the afternoon. Thanksgiving. N. D. 25-M. A. C. o Nothing to it. Nov. 25 Mich. A«eie 1921 Page 271 Page 2J2 1921 Nov. 26 Classes start in the Afternoon Some of the boys who Went home must have Missed their train. Nov. 27 Same old Saturday. Nov. 28 Sunday as usual and plenty of prayers. To give us a chance to pet rid of our cares. Nov. 29 This is a blank Nov. 30 Gipp is in a critical condition. ' iPPf c? ' fi Dec. I The que tion on every students lips ' How ' s Gipp. ' Dec. 2 Gipp slightly better. .Many of the students go To Communion for big George. Dec. 3 Friday and Gipp about the same. We ate fish and beans L ' nless we had jack in our jeans. Dec. 4 Raining again; George is worse. Dec. 5 Sunday again and a good one. Cold, clear weather. The only thing around N. D. On Sunday is weither. Andy Moynihan is writing a thesis. Dix. 7 Gipp is better. Big George may be able to Play the old ramc ai;ain. 1921 ' « ' 73 L Page 374 Today a purple letter came And on it we all read the name. In rlish hand so trim and neat. Of Mr. Eckerle ' s boy Pete. Klondike Cleary makes all inter-hall, He ' s a rip-snortin ' guard and that ain ' t all; He makes all the dances at dear old St. Marys Believe me, kid, the lad knows his Berries ' . Ml Dec. 8 Gipp a little better. Classes called off for one whole day But we go to church in the usual way. Tony Gorman got his mitts on some money. It ' s the down right truth if it does sound funny. Dec. 9 (Gipp worse again) The carpenters put the storm Windows on Sorin. The boys are thinking of the Christmas vacation. In the old home towns there ' ll be much gyration. The girl left behind and the pool room corner Will be worked to death for two weeks or longer. Dec io The K. of C ' s. put on first degree, P or candidates numbering eighty-three. The . ll-. merican is picked by Walter, .And loud cries fandom for a halter. Dec II Way Down Kast was the best in years Even Wop Berra shed copious tears. Dec. 12 The K. of C ' s. a banquet give To all who take their decrees and live. There were speeches, and dances, . nd funny jokes told; There were songs that delighted -And knocked the crowd cold. ' ftSfOf ' Dec 14 O Lady! you have taken of our best To make a playmate for the Seraphim; There on the wide, sweet, campus of the blest Be good to him. ' Dec 15 A requiem Mass for Gipp and every student in the university marched as an escort when his body was taken to the station. Dec 17 Somebody started a rumor That Christmas might commence Today. The S. A. C. could not put it Over. Dec 18 A few pack up and beat it early In haste to see the home town girlie. The faculty holds big inquisitions For those who have many conditions. Dec 19 Sunday again and not much ado. 1921 Pagf 275 Page 276 Dec. 20 Tomorrow vacation is ready to start To bring joy and gladness to every heart. Dec. 21 The big day at last is here. Away all sorrow — a collich cheer. The boys rush to catch the ten-twenty-cight; Sad is he who arrives too late. Jan. 6 The boys come in by ones and twos; The popular ones are the lads with the- Classes take up at one fifteen; An awful jar after two weeks serene. There ' s many a talc in the sacred walls Of the brand new girl and how the car stalls. The tracksters start working for the indoor season; We ' ll have some team or know the reason. JAN. 7 Something ' s wrong with Doyle ' s brain; He comes back after Christmas wearing a cane. The lake is frozen and the skaters get busy The hockey players chase themselves dizzy. Jan. 8 The Bell Ringing Singers put on a show; Colonel Hoynes still takes the first row. More of the boys are schoolward creeping; The girl back home is loudly weeping. Jan. 9 Four boys in Sorin made morning devotion None of the rest could get in the notion. A fine lot of lads we have in this hall. The chapel will soon be of no use a ' tall. Jan. 10 Wild Bill Lawless moves out from town. The rep of the hall is going down. Jan. 1 1 The Hill street car knocked over a horse; The conductor was thoroughly full of remorse; The K. C ' s. hold their Tuesday night meeting Father Crumley with ghost was competing Departed spirits were the talk of the evening Some of the stories were hard for believing. 19Z1 Page 277 Page 2y8 1921 1 I . Jan. 12 Same old story in the same old way Nothing unusual happened today. Jan. 13 Kirst day on the lake to skate, S. A. C. gives permission with pomp and state. Jan. 14 Fish day Hockey team take Their first workout. Jan. 15 Much snow More snow The ice is ruined. Jan. i6 Nothing much but Church; Perhaps St. Marys in the Afternoon — perhaps — Jan. 17 Two months from now Will be St. Pat ' s day We ' ll have a Holiday; that ' s nice. Jan. i8 First Basketball game of the season. Our basketeers come through with a Victory. Jan. 19 Not much to this day; Wednesdays do not seem to Amount to much. We ' ll try later to find some Nice Wednesdays. Charity Ball at the Oliver. Jan. 20 The boys on the third floor Sorin buy a victrola. Much noise. Jan. 21 The N. D. cagers score a victory- Over the M. A. C. basket throwers. A quartet sang in Washington Hall; They had nice clothes. Jan. 23 Time goes quickly; Soon those exams, will be Here again. Darn college, anyway. Blue Monday; It was a nice day After all. Jan. 24 Jan. Lawless breaks the third floor Soring victrola. 1921 Page 279 Page 280 1921 . Jan. 26 Much gloom o ' er spread the campus The exams, start tomorrow. On, on brief candle. Jan. 27 Ponies and books are put into use; If some don ' t pass there . in ' t no excuse. Jan. 28 The second day of the Battle; The latest bulletin reports that the Profs, have attained a slight advantage. Jan. 29 The Handicap meet is staged in the gym; The tracksters tare ' round displaying their vim. Jan. 30 .• s usual Sunday does not hold Forth much excitement. Jan. 31 The big registration Day for the Second scnicslcr. f DOC ONIT. ' CflN ' T «J(JG6 LE- _ WELL -• BRERKS T HE VIC I I ' tB. I The first half is over, So far so good; Many sought Father Burke To see where they stood . F ' eb. 2 Ralph Lee comes back with his usual line. Father Maloney tells the day dogs where to dine. Feb. 3 Fisher and Gaffney, Walsh Hall ' s elite Say the Illinois co-eds can ' t be beat. Sweeney posts a photo of Eddie Doyle When Eddie saw where — oh boy did he boil ! Feb. 4 A very sad movie in Washington Hall The hero dies. but that isn ' t all While he is dicing, the orchestra with all it has Plays the latest, raggiest, snappiest jazz. Feb. 5 Old Sorin turns out to send Tony off Who is going away to play winter golf. Cusick at society takes a whirl . nd dates up a Midnight Century Girl . F ' eb. 6 The New Idea goofs Candy Perschell And Honey boy for the goofing fell .And thought that it would be good and well To send some copies to his friends so they could tell How much he was a college swell He skived his classes to do it and then caught — the deuce. Feb. 7 Doyle and Sweeney appear with their canes The Sorin Subway bellows, No brains . Feb. 8 The sociology class in the penitentiary, a few hours spend .- nd while there Earl Dugan meets a warm bosom friend. Do |rtM MEETy WfitKn Ol-D FRItrtD 1921 Page 281 Page 282 1921 Feb. 9 Woof Dwyer in Prof. Mines history: I can ' t read prof, they ' re laughing at me. Feb. io letters from Waukon, Iowa, finally arrive .And Jimmy .Murphy says its great to be alive. The Normal quintette get nine baskets and a half We got thirteen, so far we can laugh. Feb. 1 1 On this day it came to pass That Corby subway got up for Mass. Feb. 12 Hurrah for . be Lincoln the brave old guy He ' s a better man than Fourth of July. Feb. 13 Pete Champion the Walsh Hall go getter Fails this morning to get a letter Pete, if things don ' t change for the better. Maybe you had better go get ' er. Feb. 14 First call for baseball, sure sign of spring. Frank Wallace says he wants to be king. Feb. 15 William .Asia Miner better known as Bill Says he ' ll tell something if we ' ll keep it still; That Mark Foote told him the other noon He wants his side burns to meet by June. Feb. 17 Bruce Holmberg dons his tuxedos and combs his hair Then goes down stairs to evening prayer. Feb. 18 Magevny, the freshman star quarterback Dons a suit and goes out for track But Rock says, Red there ' s something you lack For ' ou run as if ' ()U were in a sack . Feb. 19 Joe Kundtz did not get up for prayer at all So he moved from Walsh to Brownson Hal! Feb. 20 Cy Meersman trys to charge admission To all skivers who take permission F.very night to make a transition Through his window. Cy failed. Too n competition. Feb. Tony Schiavone all over did roam He heard Castellini got some garlic from home. I II ' C ' A iU Page 2S4 1921 The seniors who I! Feb. 3 Washington ' s birthday. % worked hard are i lad The others who didn ' t now wish they had. Corby tries to set the fad, By skiving, but get in bad. -Cy ' R- I ' EB. 23 Bruz Ruckelshans, Oh dear readers take heed. Denies a resemblance to VV ' ally Reid But Bruz, for your denial there was no need. Feb. 24 Hirschbuhl celebrates by going to town The second time this year that he ' s been down He gets the derby painted brown. Feb. 25 Red McCarthy, self alleged tennis shark. Borrows a derby to go out on a lark The party got rash, the derby went smash But Red said to keep the rest of it dark. Feb. 26 The Varsity five made too many baskets And put Wabash hopes away in caskets But in oratory Wabash just couldn ' t be beat So poor Old N. D. took a back scat. Feb. 27 Dacy, a last years promising frosh Once said that demerits were simply all bosh But from his pedestal he soon fell down .• nd now is day dogging, living in town. .March i Peter Cray of Badin raffles off a shirt. Doc Hussy ' s derby gets very badly hurt. The fire extinguisher in Badin Is turned upside down. Now the freshie who did that awful thing Can never go up town. . e v e- iky feXW m 1921 Pagr 28$ Pa e 2S6 1921 f m N.D. Po5V omCK- M RCH 2 The Juniors held a meeting To plan their promenade They argued many an hour But not a plan was laid. At last they all agreed that It should be held in May. No one wanted it formal; No one but Arthur Shea. March 3 Some playful frosh put a dog In a Badin Mailer ' s bed It wouldn ' t have been so bad But the darn old dog was dead. A l-me tmMHXit.: J  [KiEt gc i - L T O ii: :ia Ht Dwelt xNO«. t A Am - 1921 Page 287 Page 2SS 1921 March 4 Clark fell off a speeding truck, And his face on the pavement struck. He had to call off a date and stay at home Because the skin on his nose was gone. March 5 Al and Gene were Goshen bent But in primping too much time they spent And when they finally did come out Their friends and car had went. March 6 Cause Brown and Noll are campused And cant go to MLshawak Their friends from Mishawak Come here to have their talk. March 7 The philosophers held their banquet (Oh twas a royal sjjread) .And in the talks between each course Many witty things were said. March S Janitor Charlie the minute man On the second floor of Sorin Had to rub off sketches from the walls And now he ' s got a sore on. March 9 Twas down there by the gate That Bill Hayes met hLs match Big Bill ' s eyes were blackened His ' friend ' got nary a scratch. March 10 Brown.son wins the track meet The track meet inter-hall While poor old sleepy Sorin Doesn ' t get a point at all. March 11 The debaters go to Goshen Lots of trips they ' re makin ' But let them go where ' er they please They ' re bringing home the bacon. March 12 Our track team met the Badgers; We didn ' t have the drive. The i)oints they scored were fifty-one We got just thirty-five. March 13 Judy sees another dog today And takes the brute in tow Now Judy says he ' s going to teach Him to play the old banjo. March 14 They ' re tearing down the hockey rink For Sjiring will soon be here Old Gorman tries his level best To check the salty tear. March 15 Frederick Paulding is here again; Ibsen he dearly loves; The weather ' s warm, we wonder why He wears those heavy gloves. March 16 The student body take a trip To a foreign clime With Newman who lectures here Today for the first time. March 17 That this is St. Patricks Day Very plainly can be seen For everybody at the school Is wearing of the green. March 18 Pio .speaks to a South Bend Club About the Phillipines. We hear that he is deep in love With one of Zolo ' s queens. March 19 Jim Foren bets Charles Hirschbuhl that A block ' s a hundred yards Jimmy measured one before he bet We ' ll say he played his cards. 1921 Page 28q Page 2go 1921 4 THE DIZZY DOME i ■I SENIORS The modest and unassuming young man whom you see pictured above is one of the best students in our class. He came to Notre Dame seven years ago from Podunkvilie, Iowa, and he leaves us now a real Notre Dame man in every sense of the word. In athletics he was a wonder; as a social lion, he was in demand everywhere; as a student, he was splendid in arithmetic. Yet despite all this, he was always modest and unassuming. When someone congratulated him on his prize-winning oration this year, he blushed and said, Oh, that is nothing to what I can do! Always modest and unassuming, always willing to help, always wear- ing a cheery smile, he is the real Notre Dame man. Notre Dame is sorry to lose him. He is a real Notre Dame man. We will always remember him. That he will make a success of life no one doubts, for truly he typifies the real Notre Dame man. 19£1 Pagi 291 II ACTIVITIES CLUBS THE SORIN ALLEY CLUB SHOOTS STUDENT AT CLOSE RANGE Notre Dame Cafeteria Diners Get Thrill Saturday Evening Urandishing a smoking revolver in his hand, an imidentifipd man, thought to be a student at Notri; Dame, dashed across the university campus about 6 o ' clock Saturday afternoon and made his escape, while on the floor of the university cafe- teria lay another imidentified man, face smeare(l with blood. The cafeteria was crowded with stud- ents, some of whom took up the chase of the assassin, while others carried the bleed- ing victim to a nearby room to render first aid. Hard Words According to witnesses of the affair, the two men entered the cafeteria at the same time. After the interchange of the few words, one of the men struck the other, the latter, who pulled a revolver and shot at close range. He stepped back and fired another shot at the figure on the floor. One stvident who intended to call the police was prevented from doing so by friends of the man who did the shooting. The explanation given by the friends of the gunman was that the affair was not a tragedy, but a ligh comedy staged by some m the Notre E)ame the benefit The Sorin Alley club is one of the most influential clubs at the Univer- sity. Many of the school ' s livest wires are members of it. Though founded for the sole purpose of combating the menace of paternal discipline, it has developed many new interests. Its members are the most versatile men on the campus. Gorman, the hockey star, and Echerle, assistant cheer- leader, are members. While not entirely successful at all times in its fight against paternal discipline, the club has accomplished something. In other lines, success has been without alloy. Our most notable accomplishment was the great mur- der in the cafeteria, an account of which we clip from the News-Times to give to you. Page 21)2 1921 n L i£ ' 1921 Page 293 THE CAMPUSSED CLUB The Campussed Club is made up of Notre Dame men who, for one reason or another, have been deprived of the privilege of leaving the campus to go to South Bend, St. Mary ' s, or Niles. Although the club is very exclusive in its mem- bership, admitting no members who do not stand the test, nevertheless it has a much larger membership than is indicated by the picture. The picture would have been much larger, but unfortunately most of the members were down town when it was taken. Moynihan and Mooney were talking together which means that they were arguing. Say Mooney , asked Moynihan, when you gonna work off that Logic ' con- dition ' .? What you talking about, Moynihan? , said Mooney, 1 ain ' t got no Logic ' condition ' . Well, you ought to have , rejoined the Shrimp. Yes, this is the same Mooney that is an editor of the Scholastic. Page 294 1921 1:5 1921 Page 2g} SOCIETY THE SENIOR BALL There is no time in the Senior year when the roll-call of the Class is so com- prehensive as at the time for the Ball. If a man has not been a fully accredited Senior on Washington ' s Birthday, he certainly rates the cap and gown when the week for the swan song of collegiate social life is to be sung maxima cum expenses. Are you a Senior. ' This question, when poked at him by a committee man, evokes nothing but the most emphatic and absolute of affirmatives. During Senior week, if at no other time, every individual who has served a term of four years publishes abroad the word, clad in full dress supported by a pair of suspenders and a bank-roll. The ingredients that enter into the composition of a Senior Ball are many and mixed. To begin with you must have spent four years in the classroom and must have subscribed for the uniform allotment of book-bill. Then too, you do not manifest the symptoms of senior success unless that girl from the home town is the most wonderful little girl in the world . She may be knock-kneed, hair- lipped, and plastered with a french pastry complexion, but to you she typifies the infinite; which is to say that she is perfection a la carte. In mixing your Senior Ball you now have, as ingredients, a sentence of four years, and that ob- jective end somewhere along the New York Central. You now proceed to collect a dress-suit. If your roommate is healthy, wealthy, and generous, you may rely on him to furnish the embellishments that must needs go with a 25 ticket. Granted that he wears your style of collar is granting too much. That were idyllic. Custom and lack of fitness in arranging the scheme of things always manage to couple you up with a fellow who has Arbucklesque rotundity or the height of a cyclops. Being a provident individual you plan to scoop the crowd by shaking hands with some social sophomore whose name on the Glee Club roster points toward the end to be desired. Finding out that he has the suit, pride restrains you from asking for the shirt and other equipment that are inevitable. So you seek one of the debaters and ask for a stiff-bosom chest-protector a la studs and collar. Why is it that we usually associate a stiff- bosom with a. debater. ' ' Having taken on the suit, vest, and linen which is to make your girl so proud of you, pride again intervenes an ' d dictates that you seek elsewhere for the gloves. Hearing of your lack of equipment a big fellow in the crowd, dying to please you, suggests that you take his blanched mittens. They fit you like a first-baseman ' s glove, but rather than offend his charity you take them to be filed away until after the Ball. To make the ball successful there are innumerable meetings, committees, and motions. You ' ll find more motions at a Senior Class meeting than you will in the Follies in five years. It is with a tremor of insufficiency that you wait the Page 2g6 i921 r train that carries its load of sweetness, charm, and expense to you. I say in- sufficiency because you hardly ever feel all there. After protesting devotion on a platform you whisk your lady off to the Oliver and secretly wish that she, like you, could stay below decks in the lobby. You dump her and her trunks into the elevator and then turn around to see who there is from the school to applaud you. Strange to say, there is nobody from N. D. in the lobby and your heroism goes unsung and unheard of. Then the day of the Ball! You spring to the tape with your partner at two- thirty sharp, — sharp meaning three-fifteen. During the next two hours you do more handshaking than Cox ever did and after meeting every fellow ' s side-kick you check out to go through the ordeal of dressing. With the aid of five stout friends and true, you get strapped into your chest-protector without giving up your membership in the Holy Name and feeling about as comfortable as a private in an officer ' s mess you step out of the hall mid a flourish of trumpets, huzzas, and generous protracted razberries . Then you go down and look over your opponent. You give her Inspection Arms and rub the liquid powder off, so that she won ' t plaster up the borrowed suit in Santy Claus whiteness, and, with your shoes squeaking, you swallow your- self in a cloak of nonchalance and enter. To the right of your plate you find a goblet with two handles, — one on each side, — and all during the toast you are trying to remember the theory of etiquette on picking up a loving cup. Is it with the right or the left handle. The toaster winds up with a relieved air and you drink the wine in the cups — mindful of the glories of that Freshman banquet four years ago. Carefully taking all your cues from your opponent you finish the banquet one spoon ahead of the rest of the table and you resolve that at the next affair of this kind you ' ll have a vest-pocket blueprint of each approved move. The Class President dispels the revelers for a half-hour and this is the calm before the storm. You plaster down the patent leather hair, yank nervously at the white halter around your neck; and, wondering if your bottom stud shows, tight your way to the only mirror where some bird, in the excitement, mistakes your bow-tie for his and pulls it out of its groove. You shut your eyes and try by the touch system; you open them and glare into the mirror; and finally you turn to an alleged friend, but after viewing the result of his efforts you heartily hope that he winds up in Brownson. The bow looks like Sister Mary ' s sash when she graduated from gram mar school. Driven to desperation by your faulty attire you rush to the mez floor where your opponent knots it up for the first time. And she smiles! She remarks that the music is just perfectly wonderful; and, gently prod- ding your right arm, she marshals you towards the arena. All the confidence that your $5 course in dancing inspired in you vanishes at the sight of the trick steps and insidious toddle that your friends, possessed of the parlor graces, are airing. You feel that you could whine in tune with the saxaphone as your girl 1921 Page 297 lightly lights her hand on your quaking shoulder. With the air of We who are about to die, salute you, you leave the safe harbor of the mez floor and are launched out in the current of those who seem to know what they are doing. With an apologetic smile you steer your cargo into somebody ' s back, and, whil e the aggrieved one is giving you thirty days, you play billiards off another couple, and wish to yourself that a traffic cop would show you the right of way. During all this, of course, your opponent wears a martyr ' s smile and a damaged shoe, but, with the long-suffering 6f a saint, she tries to convince herself that otherwise you ' re a very nice fellow. But still she didn ' t know before that you wore a triple EEE, — size ten!! With the air of one jumping from the frying pan into the electric chair you pair off for the first dance that you have given away. Your friend ' s girl has just gurgled her delight at meeting you and you so wish that you didn ' t have to go out there. And so on and so forth and etcetera. Three o ' clock finds you a sadder and a wiser man. After the Ball is over, no bitter regret, or desire that it could go on, comes from your battered sole, — you groan for that straw bunk in Sorin and feel d d glad that the game has been called on account of darkness. John Dean Fitzgerald got on the Hill St. car one night in a state of great sat- isfaction with the world. Having no one with him to talk to, he turned to the man sitting next to him, and said, What ' s your name. ' Mudd , replied the man. A look of tender pity covered John ' s face. What ' s your first name.? he asked. Fabian . . The tragedy was almost too much for Fitz. But he held back the tears while he tried the last hope. Have yu ' got a middle name. ' ' Yes. ' What ' s it.? Thurman. Well, I guess I ' ll call you Mudd. Page 2gS 1921 ' , 1921 Page 2Q9 ORATORY One day early in the campaign of last Fall, Red McCarthy received the fol- lowing letter: Mr. Edwin J. McCarthy, Notre Dame, Ind. Honorable Sir: The Democratic Club of Women Voters of Buchanan have asked me to obtain a speaker on the League of Nations to address them on Saturday afternoon. The Democrats of South Bend tell me that you are a noted organizer and an authority on the League of Nations. If you can address them leave South Bend on the I :oo p. m; car on Saturday afternoon. One of the women members of the club will meet the car at Niles and take you to Buchanan. Make arrange- ments at the University to stay at Buchanan for the banquet which will be held at 7:00 p. m. Sincerely yours, Democratic Club of Buchanan. The letter was on the stationery of the Oliver hotel. Red took the car to Niles at the time appointed, and gofback late that even- ing. I spread ' em a line , he said, and they fell for it. He was loud in praise of the banquet that followed his address. Naturally, all of his friends were impressed at his triumph. The Dome has great pleasure in being first to inform Mr. McCarthy that it was these friends who sent him the letter. HOW HE FOOLED FATHER BOLGER The business manager of a humorous monthly is a busy man. n going over the papers of his Economics class for December 10, Father Bolger found this one: This is to certify that I read the two chapters assigned, although I was un- able to prepare written summary. (Signed) Arthur C. Shea Page 300 1921 ; V KP0 1921 Page jor ATHLETES Monograms are awarded to: Daniel W. Duffy, for his consistent contribution to the morale of the Athletics in the regular Dome. Gerald J. Cleary, for his social prowess, to which we canno t pay a higher tribute than did Tony Gorman in presenting to Mr. Cleary the Valentine offering on behalf of Sorin Alley: Whereas, we the inmates of the incurable ward, Sorin Hall, having lived In close companionship and intimacy with the famous social light and parlor Appolo, Mr. Gerald Cleary, thereby have become acquainted with his many beauti- ful traits of character; And whereas we have followed with frenzied interest the carrying to a suc- cessful conclusion of his numerous affairs of the heart, applauding with augmented vigor and enthusiasm each fresh triumph among the exponents of the powder puff and lip-stick; And whereas we realize that the aforementioned Mr. Cleary is the one best fitted to be entrusted with upholding the honor of Notre Dame not only among the delicately nurtured maidens of the institution to the west of us, but also among the less aesthetic but more affectionate damsels of the village; Now therefore in token of the mighty deeds he has wrought beneath the dimmed lamp of many a parlor, and in cognizance of the many female hearts broken amid the din of tea-cups, we do desire to acknowledge the supremacy of Mr. Cleary in his chosen field by the presentation of this fitting acknowledgment of his prowess. We wish to convey our best wishes for the continued success of our Napoleon of the dance hall, wherefore we humbly present this, our insufficient offering. DO YOU REMEMBER ' WAY BACK WHEN: Abrams sold pictures of Lieutenant Young around the campus for ten cents . Tony Gorman first came to Notre Dame and used to run up an alley every time he saw one of Studebaker ' s band men coming up Michigan Street. Page 302 19£1 There ain ' t no more Gorman — Sign on the Sorin bulletin board, March 23, 1921. Great-hearted man, the tempest can- not shake Of jealous profs your lofty soul ' s re- pose; Rancor high mounting ' gainst him can- not make Man shave against his will beneath his nose. And Gorman shall not yield to any prof, Nor heed the Alley ' s cry of, Wipe it off! 1921 Page 303 THE WASHINGTON HALL GHOST Shortly before Christmas, the residents of Washinicton hall Ijegan to be bothered by night-time visits from a ghost who, though he difl not Ixmt u drum, blew a French horn with much vi lenre. A the dead of night he would wake the hall ' s eight intellectuals from slumber with a jirodigious blast, and when they went fearfully to investigate he would be gone; he would slip pieces of paper under John Buckley ' s door, and then take them away Wfnre John could get them; he would be on the stairs when you went up, moaning right at your shoulder, but if you turned around he would l gone; he would swish around the corner at one end of the corridor when you entered at the other; and once he scared Harry Stevenson almost to d?ath. The ghost beramc a most-talked- about thing on the campus. Men were W)rked nto such a state that they would jump at the slightest sound. Delegations would go to V a.shington Hall to sleep there, and they w.iuld com? back pale and convinced. Kddie Schmidt went, and when he came back he was persuaded that there are more things in Heaven and earth, Horatio than are dreampt of in youi philcsophy . The ghost was the only t )i)ic of discussion at one meet- ing of the Knights of Columbus. Finally, the visiting investigating committees that went to Wa.shington hall at night became so noisy that the faculty forbade them. Less and less was heard of the j?host until it was forgotten. We cannot finish the story be- cause Carr and Manion have never told us how they did it. ' Some have mistaken block.s and posts For spectres, apparitions, ghosts. With saucer-eyes and horns; and some Have heard the devil beat a drum. Men would jump at the slightest sound i 1921 Pag,- 305 THE DOME ' S EYEBROW BEAUTY CONTEST First place to Eugene Kennedy because his is the longest. Mr. Kennedy has sold the use of his name for advertising to the Wam- pler Chemical Co. Second place to Harry Denny because his has the neatest trim. JJ L One way to do it. Third place to James Murphy because Kenne- dy and Denny got more votes. Page 306 1921 A MODEL EXAM FOR FATHER HAGERTY ' S PHILOSOPHY 1. What does Mr. Penner consider the primary attribute of God? 2. What is Mr. Schmitt ' s argument against the creation of the world from eternity? 3. Give Mr. Mooney ' s argument for the immortality of the soul. 4. Why does Mr. Mehre insist that there is a real distinction between essence and existence? 5. What does Mr. Smartbird say about the paltation theory? Carmody was accusing DeCourcey of trying to get a drag with Father McGinn so he could pass Ethics. Why, I never talk to him, said DeCourcey. Talk to him! Carmody exclaimed. Why I ' ll bet you ' ve worn out three pairs of gloves talking to him. IN APOLOGETICS Fr. Hagerty: Are there any questions? Moynihan: What time is it? EPILOGUE When the producer addressed his audience just before the rise of the curtain, he promised to see them again after the show was over. He is now behind the scenes rubbing off the grease paint, and doff- ing the makeup of Punchinello, in preparation for the fulfillment of his promise In a moment he will be waiting on the other side of the page, to receive your verdict on the show. 19Z1 Pag ' 307 Page 308 1921 Ads 19Z1 Page 30Q J o. . SofiftjJ Urand Oriothra Exclusively at Adler Brothers South Bend, Ind. Branch Store on the Campus at Notre Dame Hanry E. Poulin, Mgr. i FOR YOUNG MEN AND MEN WHO STAY YOUNG Page 310 What can we do for you? The main idea of this store is conveyed in the question, — what can we do for our customers? This store gives you more than simply an equivalent for the money you pay. Our more is in the merchandise; a low price consider- ing the quality and value you receive; the advantage of a big stock from which to select and the assurance of satis- faction, based on your estimate of satisfaction. We can ' t emphasize too strongly the marked superiority of Spiro clothes at their very moderate price. Hart, Schaff- ner and Marx made them of beautiful, all-wool worsteds, cassimers and cheviots, tailored them perfectly in the lat- est correct styles. They ' re the kind of clothes that give you the most service and satisfaction for the money you pay; that is why they are the most economical for you to buy. Sam ' l Spiro : Co. 119-121 S. Michigan St., South Bend The Home of Hart, Scbaffner and Marx all wool clothes for men and boys. Page 311 If it comes from Berman ' s it must be good Berman ' s HIGH GRADE SPORTING GOODS Lincoln 2230 126 N. Michigan St. South Bend, Ind. A. Berman, Prop. Joe Claffey, Mgr. N. D. Boosters Go Home with an INDESTRUCTO TRUNK from the DAYLIGHT BASEMENT LUGGAGE SHOP GEORGE WYMAN CO. Come and see us South Bend, Ind. 6=: = FASHION PARK CLOTHES Max Adler Co. Nowhere else in South Bend will you find the quality of Ice Cream and Candy, the service and cordiality, that you do at The Philadelphia Our dinners and lunches are not equalled in the city. NOTRE DAME MEN ARE ALWAYS WELCOME Page 312 Hullie Mike WE EXTEND TO OUR MANY NOTRE DAME FRIENDS- PAST AND PRESENT Greetings DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE 112 S. Michigan Phone 38 Page 313 Recent U. S. Government tests have proven conclu- sively that Cedar Chests if properly con- structed are moth-proof. The popular and attractive pat- terns in our line are a necessity to complete our bed room suite. Acme Chests are made in all the period pat- terns. To be properly constructed your cedar chest must be manufactured by a responsible concern. Our trade-mark on every Acme chest is your guarantee. Look for it under the lid. AJi?5U Manufactured by ACME MANUFACTURING CO. South Bend, World Famed , Ind. A Catholic Institution for the Higher Education of Women College of Mount St. Vincent ON HUDSON, CITY OF NEW YORK Day, Pupils and Boarders Location Unsurpassed for Convenience, Healthfulness and Beauty One-half Hour from Grand Central Station PROFESSORS OF DISTINCTION EQUIPMENT OF THE BEST COLLEGE— Four year Courses leading to the Degree of A. B. or B. S. PEDAGOGICAL AND SECRETARIAL COURSES Open to Junior and Senior Students WRITE FOR PROSPECTUS PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT ACADEMY MOUNT ST. VINCENT ON HUDSON CITY OF NEW YORK 11 Pas 314 KABLE ' S CAMPUS CAFETERIA Our Ideals GOOD FOODS FAIR PRICES QUICK SERVICE Student ' s commutation tickets bought at cafeteria can be used at all Kable ' s and Clark ' s lunch rooms in South Bend 104 N. Michigan St. 206 S. Michigan St. Gary, Ind. O. A. Clark, Proprietor i Pagt 3 ' 5 I .,s Compliments of the GEORGE ZIEGLER CO. Manufacturing Confectioners Milwaukee, Wis. IMPERIAL This is the copyrighted name of our product. It is applied to each of our patterns, whether the Imperial Spanish, the Im- perial Closed Shingle, the Imperial French, the Imperial Mission, the Imperial Roman, the Imperial Slab Shingle, or any other of the shapes we make. It. was our intention to apply to this product a name which would be as distinctive as the charac- ter and quality of the material itself. Therefore, all that it is necessary to state in order to define the selection of our material is to use the words Imperial Roofing Tile with a statement as to whether these are to be of Spanish, Mission, Roman or Shingle types. Any offering of tile as Imperial which is not our ])roduct would be hazardous on the part of another Manufacturer or his representatives. Ludowici-Celadon Company 104 South Michigan Ave. Chicago, Illinois Page 316 f What Is Research? SUPPOSE that a stove bums too much coal for the amount of heat that it radiates. The manufacturer hires a man famihar with the principles of combustion and heat radiation to make experiments which will indicate desirable changes in design. The stove selected as the most efficient is the result of research. Suppose that you want to make a ruby in a factory — not a mere imitation, but a real ruby, indistinguish- able by any chemical or physical test from the natural stone. You begin by analyzing rubies chemically and physically. Then you try to make rubies just as nature did, with the same chemicals and under similar conditions. Your rubies are the result of research — research of a different type from that required to improve the stove. Suppose, as you melted up your chemicals to pro- dace rubies and experimented with high temperatures, you began to wonder how hot the earth must have been millions of years ago when rubies were first crystallized, and what were the forces at play that made this planet what it is. You begin an investigation that leads you far from rubies and causes you to formulate theories to explain hoiv the earth, and, for that matter, how the whole solar system was created. That would be research of a still different type — pioneering into the unknown to satisfy an insatiable curiosity. ResearchofallthreetypesisconductedintheLaboratoriesofthe General Electric Company. But it is the third type of research — pioneering into the unknown — that means most, in the long run, even though it is undertaken with no practical benefit in view. At the present time, for example, the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Company are exploring matter with X-rays in order to discover not only how the atoms in different sub- stances are arranged but how the atoms themselves are built up. The more you know about a substance, the more you can do with it. Some day this X-ray work will enable scientists to answer more definitely than they can now the question: Why is iron magnetic? And then the electrical industry will take a great step forward, and more real progress will be made in five years than can be made in a century of experimenting with existing electrical apparatus. You can add wings and stories to an old house. But to build a new house, you must begin with the foundation. Geimeral EIecitric General Office COHiPSiny Schenectady, N.Y. 95-379-J Ph ' ' 317 TouriiiK Car-$148o Landau- Uoadster . . $10. )0 Sedan $21 )0 F.O B. South Bend 8PECIAI-SIX TourinK Car $1750 2-Pass. Roadster. . tl750 4-Paf8. Roadster . . tl750 Coupe $2()o() Sedan $2750 F.O.B. Detroit Page 318 Boys in School frequently Ret broke and then they need a friend. These banks nuike a six ' cialty f eaterint? to the Knaneial troubles cf the boys who are far away from home and in school at Notre Dame University, which we regard as the best school for boys in the I ' nited States. This is an invitation to any of the boys who are broke and in financial distress to call and see us so we may have an opjx-r- tun ity of trying to help them out. ST. JOSEPH LOAN TRUST COMPANY ST. JOSEPH COUNTY SAVINGS BANK TO BE DIFFERENT Thats the aim of every collegian. Exiicrience has taught us that this applies to dress. Our stuff is different. We nm the newest s[)eeialt v shop in South Bend. We welcome the men of Notre Dame. Our stock, from overcoats to collars is complete. And it ' s different. Drop in! , L. PERKEY FASHION CLOTHES SHOP 120 W. Washington Opposite the Diana ORPHEUM BOWLING ALLEYS E. J. Waters, Mgr. 16 Alleys 5 Tables Cigars and Soft Drinks Bowlers never get Appendicitis Try bowling as a tonic for mus- I l s and nerves Next To Orpheum Theater Drop .In and See Us Compliments of R. J. SACKLEY Ph.B. in J., ' 17 i Page JIQ Official Dome Photographers THE McDonald STUDIO J. A. RODE Page 320 For Juicy Steaks and Chops THE GRILL 125 W. Washington St. MIKE ' S RESTAURANT 105 E. Jefferson Blvd. WE RECOMMEND HOOSIER POET 10 and LINCOLN HIGHWAY CIGARS The Dailey Cigar Company SOUTH BEND, IND. WALK-OVERS The All-Star Student ' s Shoe Boys! Watch our windows for New Shoes that will ap- peal to you. WK wwRfeu worr CLOUSE ' S Walk- Over Boot Shop lis So. Michigan St. South Bend, Ind. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK (Oliver Hotel Bldg.) South Bend, Ir diana CAPITAL $600,000 SURPLUS and PROFITS.. 178,350 A. L. Hubbard, Pres. J. M. Stl ' debaker, Jr., Vice-Pres. Chas. L. Zigler, Cashier C. J. Whitmere, Asst. Cashier J. H. BuzBy, Asst. Cashier Safety Deposit Boxes for Rent at Reasonable Prices Try Our Travelers ' Cheques Page 321 THE UNIVERSAl. CAR, BUY YOUR FORD NOW WHILE DELIVERIES ARE POSSIBLE Sedan $795.00 Touring $510.00 Couplete $745.00 Roadster $465.00 Ton Truck Chassis $545.00 F. O. B. Detroit W. R. HINKLE, Inc. Sales Rooms and Service Stations 227-229 N. Lafayette Blvd. 144-148 Lincoln Way West Mishawaka BRANCHES North Liberty South Bend Lathes A Size for Every Shop Send for book entitled Machine Shop Equip- ment for Vocational and Industrial Schools which shows the inter- ior views of some practical school machine shops. This Book is Free to Educators 800 E. Madison No. 54— 24-inch South Bend Lathe South Bend Lathes are in use in manufacturing, in the general machine shop, and in industrial work throughout the world. The lathe that is practical in commercial indus- try is also practical for the school machine shop. SOUTH BEND LATHE WORKS Street SOUTH BEND, IND Revised edition of book How to Run a Lathe Postpaid, to any ad- dress for 10 cents, Sil- ver or stamps accepted New Catalog No. 60 Free to Any Address Page 322 Guarantee Shoe Company Business 125 So. Michigan St. South Bend, Indiana and Friendship Easy to Find and Worth Finding When the spirit of a store reflects the tem- perament of it ' s chen- tele, true friendship Jas. McDermott finds birth from busi- ness associations. The friendly hand- A k clasp of legions of w Notre Dame Men have [ been and inspiration to . 1 this store in it ' s efforts x. to combine true friend- BUY HER ship with business. THAT DIAMOND At Clauers big three floor estabhshment, where only jewelry of the highest qual- ity is carried — where prices are always reasonable. CLAUERS Geo.M.Platner J. M. Studebaker Building South Bend, Indiana Jewelers Silversmiths Diamond Merchants Page 323 Try :Mxy M ir rrt bdto For TIES COLLARS UNDERWEAR RUGS FOR STUDENTS ROOMS EASY CHAIRS M €M4 t rrC .M 111-113-115-117 North Michigan Street South Bend, Ind. Lower ' s PICTURE FRAMING Compliments of WALL DECORATIONS BIG CREEK COALS, INC. PAINTS 120 So. Mich. St. Pa%e 24 The Union Trust Company Caters to the Good Will and Patronage of the BOYS OF NOTRE DAME We are always glad of an opportunity to be useful to you. Let the Union Trust Company be your Bank COME IN AND GET ACQUAINTED HOTEL PLANTERS and CAFETERIA 19 No. Clark Street Chicago, III. Absolutely Fireproof and Modern Rates, $2.00 and up. JOHN P. HARDING ' S Coffee Shops and Cafeterias in the Loop The Home of the Famous Corned Beef Sandwiches U) No. Clark Street 131 No. Clark Street John P. Hardino, Pres. 72 W. Madison Street 132 W. Van Buren Sireet Page 32S t COMPLIMENTS OF Chicago, South Bend CSb Northern Indiana Ry. Co. Page 326 Auditorium Hotel Michigan Blvd. and Congress St. CHICAGO Situated on Chicago ' s most fashionable Boulevard. Unobstructed view of Grant Park and Lake Michigan. Unrivaled as a Summer and Winter Hotel. Within five minutes walk of the Post Office, the leading theatres and business centers. Recent improvements made at a cost of $300,000. Cuisine and Service Unexcelled Rates per day; S2.00 and $3.00 single; $4.00 and $5.00 double With private bath; $4.00 and $5.00 single; $6.00 and $7.00 double. J. J. Calve Y, Manager HEADQUARTERS UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME ASK THE ALUMNI They ' re Unanimous You will find that the old men of the Uni- versity recommend this bank for courteous. Satisfactory Service. You can ' t foresee the occasion which will necessitate your seeking advice on some finan- cial matter. That ' s not the only time, however. Call on us at any time. You will receive exper- ienced personal attention. THINK IT OVER! The American Trust Co, At the Sign of The Clock Page 327 D. B. Scully Syrup Company Maple Syrup Maple Sugar Rock Candy Syrup SYRUPS Rock Candy Fancy Table Syrups AND Jellies Cane Syrups MOLASSES Preserve s Com Syrups Sorghum 319-333 Illinois St. CHICAGO KLINGEL KUEHN The Stetson Shop for Men 112 N. Main St. Compliments of FREUH AND THOMAS Drugs Cor. Michigan and Washington BEYER FLORAL SHOP UNION TRUST BUILDING Flowers for All Occasions Lincoln 1951— Telephones — Main 894 THE BURKE SYSTEM of Vapor and Modulation Heat- ing and Tank in the Basement Method of Hot Water Heating. Plumbing in all its branches Before placing your order Call and get my prices W. H. BURKE 201 E. Jefferson Blvd. WHITE EAGLE FLOUR is carefully and well made and this character keeps always uniform in qual- ity and sells at a business mans price. Try It STARR MILLS BASTIAN ' S BIG CUT RATE DRUG STORE EASTMAN KODAKS AND CAMERAS DEVELOPING, PRINTING AND ENLARG- ING A SPECIALTY OTTO C. BASTIAN 209 N. MICHIGAN ST. First Door South of the Auditorium Theatre When in Town for t he Night Stop at THE NEW NICKEL HOTEL 119-23 S. Main St. Wm. Clyman, Mgr. Page 32S DURKASCO FOOD PRODUCTS Pure Fruit Preserves Gelatine Desserts Baking Powder Flavoring Extracts Canned Fruits, Etc. WHITE BEAR COFFEE STEEL CUT Durand Kasper Importers, Preservers, Manufacturers, Coffee Roasters and Wholesale Grocers Chicago, ni. Established 1855 Will Baumer Candle Co., Inc. THE PIONEER CHURCH CANDLE MANUFACTURER OF AMERICA Syracuse, N. Y. Candles of Every Grade, Size, Color and Style Chicago Branch 322 W. Washington St. LIGHTHOUSE PATHFINDER AND TABLETALK QUALITY COFFEES National Grocer Company The Merchants National Bank 229 South Michigan Street We appreciate the accounts of Students attending Notre Dame. Courteous treatment to those having small accounts as well as those with large ones. A modem New Banking Room with equip- ment for your convenience. Telephone in front of Lobby, Rooms for irivate business, and other Safety Deposit ioxes. Call and Open An Account. THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK Page J2J) WILLIAMS THE FLORIST 138 South Michigan St. Choice Cut Flowers and Potted Plants Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere in U. S. and Canada Telephones — Private Exchange Main 3828 Automatic 20-126 CHAS. W. TRIGGS COMPANY Producers and Distributers of Fresh Fish and Oysters 546 to 552 Fulton St. Chicago, 111. EYES EXAMINED (ilassos properly fitted at moderate prices Satisfaction guaranteed DR. J. BURKE OPTOMETRIST and MANUFACTURING OPTICIAN 230 South Michigan Street Lenses duplicated the same day, no matter who fitted them. Bring the pieces JONES OBENCHAIN 415-416 Union Trust Building South Bend, Indiana Main 31 E. A. AARON BROS. General Commission Merchants Specialties Poultry Game Fruits Vegetables 72 S. Water St., Chicago, 111. H. HALVORSEN CO. Importers and Converters of Tailors ' Trimmings and Silks 34-42 S. Fifth Avenue CHICAGO CHARLES B. SAX AND COMPANY Dry Goods Millinery Ready-to-Wear Garments 114 South Michigan Street Near Washington Avenue SOUTH BEND, INDIANA DR. THOMAS A. OLNEY SOUTH BEND, INDIANA 415 Farmers Trust Bldg. Corner Main and Jefferson Telephone: Bell 513 Hours: 2 to 4 P. M. 7 to 8 P. M. Page 330 WHERE YOU SEE THE GOOD ONES lackstone THEATRE THE PRIDE OF SOUTH BEND Seventeen Piece SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Where you will always see the Best in Pictures and Hear the Finest Music Twenty-Five Hundred Comfortable Seats COMPLIMENTS OF J. B. WEBER i I ' age jji The Mark that Signifies Quality Mecca and Vellum Tracing Paper All paper used in the engineering department at Notre Dame, furnished by U. S. Blue Print Paper Co. UNITED STATES BLUE PRINT PAPER CO. Chicago, 111. Upright Drilling Machines Manufactured in 16 to 30 swing with stationary, slid- ing and traveling head types, high speed and sen- sitive. Write for Catalog Sibley Machine Co. 220 E. Tutt St. South Bend, Ind. Pagi- 332 r Would you be surprised If you were told that you can talk Long Distance at half rate after 8:30 P. M. or at one-fourth rate after 12:00 midnight? For example: A Long Distance Station to Station call between South Bend and Indianapolis costs only 45 cents for 3 minutes after 8:30 P.M. and 25 cents for 5 minutes after 12:00 midnight. Ask the Long Distance operator for Station to Station night rates to other points. Indiana Bell Telephone Company You ' ll Like This Bank It has been built up on friendly service, in per- sonal interest in our customers. Students are freely welcome to avail themselves of our facilities — to become better acquainted with our plans and suggestions for savings. We endeavor to guard their interests as carefully as we do our own. till JEPPfRSON BLV D. SERVICE - STABILITY NATIONAL TKU5T SAVINGS JB IHMIC ' NeXT TO POST OPTIC e ' if 333 GAS for Cooking Lighting Heating Hot Water NORTHERN INDIANA GAS ELECTRIC CO. 219 N. Michigan St. 3AG§y FOR PHOTOS OF DISTINCTION FOR ARTISTIC FRAMING AND HIGH CLASS KODAK FINISHING Bagby Photo Co. 138 N. Michigan St. Notre Dame Students are our friends and We are theirs! Visit us and let us convince you that we sell the best cigars and smokers supplies on the market. A first class soda fountain and the best pool and billiard tables in South Bend. Mclnerny Warner 126 W. Washington St. Livingston ' s Washington Ave. THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHES For Young Men Dunlap Hats and Caps Excello Shirts Something new to show you Every Week I ' l i ' 334 ilf Yellow laxicab and 1 ransfer Company Quick Service Courteous Chauffeurs Take n Yellow Taxi or a black one. We have both. CALL ON ONE OF YOUR BEST FRIENDS CIGARS LUNCH SODA GRILL Headquarters for all Sporting Dope GOAT ' S 107 E. Washington Ave. I ' he Auditorium I ' heatre SHOWING A PICKED PRO- GRAM OF THE VERY BEST IN MOTION PICTURES Continuous 11 A. M. to 11 P. M. Whiteman Bros. Company WHOLESALE GROCERS AND CONFECTIONERS Agents for Sugar Loaf Canned Goods and Puritan Flour 702-714 South Michigan Street Pagf 33S A Glance At rhe Dean-Spicker I ' he Dome Will bring back many memories of happy school days. Co. - i7 . . We will feel proud, in- deed, if we have been able to contribute in any measure to your happiness or comfort while attending the University Manufacturers of VENEERS and LUMBER Mahogany - Oak - Walnut VERNON ' S South Bend, Indiana T A QUALITY PRODUCT 1IM V ELVET ICE CREAlfl 22nd Street and S. Crawford Ave. Chicago Made by . f HOLLINGSWORTH- TURNER COMPANY John R. Dean J. T. Spicker Bell 531 Lincoln 5531 Page Jj6 i o say canyau see? We can duplicate any pair of Lenses. No matter where they were made Phone Lincoln 6504 OH STIY eaisi YOU SEE ? IF NOT CONSULT ME H. Lemontree South Bend ' s Leading Opto- metrist and Manufacturing Optician 222H S. Michigan St. EYES EXAMINED and headaches re- lieved without the Use of Drugs Open till 6 P.M. !i 1 Office Hottrs: 2 to 4 P. M., Daily; 7 to 8 P. M. Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays DR. J. B. BERTELING Office, Cor. Colfax Ave. and Lafayette St. Residence, 215 So. Taylor St. Telephones: Office: Bell, Main 675 Home: Hell, Main 636 South Bend, lad. Office-Main 886 Res.-Main 3561 DR. JOHN A. STOECKLEY Dentistry, Extracting and Oral Surgery 511 JMS BUILDING South Bend, Ind. Geo. Sands Lawyer 210-11 Conservative Life Bldg. South Bend, Indiana FLOYD 0. JELLISON Lawyer (Prosecuting Attorney) Farmers Trust Bldg. South Bend, Indiana McINERNY ' S, YEAGLEY AND McVICKER Attorneys at Law W. A. MclNERNV, N.D., ' 01 J. W. McInerny, X.D., ' 06 Jno. G. Yeaolev Hugh B. McVickeb Summers BuildinR, South Bend. Indiana Compliments of W. GIBBONS UFFENDELL Architect fogf 337 Furnas Go WestAvard For Your Summer Vacation ICE CREAM Appropriate designs and flavors for all occasions The Union Pacific reaches all the great National play- grounds of the west — Yellowstone National Park, Rocky Mountain National Park, Mt. Ranier Yosemite g Sequoia W General Grant R BBTV i oioraao ana utan Kockies 01 k Great Salt Lake Ps Puget Sound jn California - Alaska Write for free descriptive booklets and folders. Infor- mation cheerfully given. Ask Geo. R. Beerman, Gen. Agent 1416 Garland Bldv. Chicago, 111. Union Pacific System Automatic Saf ety Signals — Double Track Robertson Pipe Til Steam Pumps Bros. Co. ;: South - • Fittings Shafting Pipe Tools Bend Belting Machinists ' « i Supplies Supply SOUTH BEND, INDIANA QUALITY is our FIRST steam ft Specialties ,0, Hose Consideration when in the markets selecting our complete stocks of 324-326 So. St. Joseph Street South Bend, Indiana Men ' s Furnishings, Boy ' s Cloth- ing, Luggage and Ladies Apparel Pag ' 338 I B. B. Cleaners R. N. Beebe, Prop. Service Supreme Cleaners of Garments, Rugs, Draperies, Curtains, etc. Office, 108 West Colfax Avenue Works, 231 East Tutt Street Phones, B. 1444; H. 1446 IF THE HOPE CHEST YOU GIVE HER IS A •MOUNTAIN MAID SHE ' LL BE PROUD OF IT— AND YOU, TOO Hill-Hoel Mfg. Co. Makers of Tennessee RED CEDAR CHESTS South Bend, Ind. If it ' s from the you know it ' s good FOLLOW THE TEAM It ' s easy if you read our sport page. Notre Dame news is an interesting feat- ure of the South Bend News-Times PERMANENT BUILDING MATERIALS FACING BRICK STAPLES- HILDEBRAND COMPANY i I ' age 339 COMPLIMENTS OF E. A. ROACH COMPLIMENTS OF PAT MALLOY South Bend Lumber Co. LaSalle Avenue at Emerick Phone Main 566 Lumber and Mill Work We desire particularly to serve our former class- mates and all Notre Dame men located perma- nently in this territory, whether home builders, Manufacturers or users of Lumber in any form, One or A Million Feet. Wholesale and Retail G. W. ZiEGLER, President K. II. DowNKY, ■ioe-President, ' 16 John U. Riley, Treasurer, ' 17 r. .1. Hiss, Seoietiiry Phil G. Downey, Estimator, E. - ' 18 Page 34U i G. E. Meyer CS, Son LEADING HARDWARE MERCHANTS Sporting Goods Golf, Tennis Guns and Tackle High Grade Cutlery The Finest Assortment to be found anywhere 115-17 W. Jefferson Blvd. Established 1864 SOUTH BEND, IND. Opposite Post Office The National Lumber Co. LUMBER AND MILLWORK Main St. at Indiana Ave. Page 341 I ' he Oliver INDIANA ' S FINEST HOTEL 300 Rooms FIRE PROOF High Class D elicatessens in connection with our Cafeteria LEONARD H. LANG Drugs Candies Photo Supplies Quality is Our Motto Cor. Hill and South Bend Ave. WE LIKE TO HAVE PEOPLE SAY Can you clean, press and repair my suit in a hurry? We can, and give you service that ' s worth while. Even in haste we arc pjiiustaliinK and thorough. Emergency calls please us 228 N. Main St. 3rcl door North of City Hall Phone Lincoln 6474 243 Tutt St. Both Phones 2080 BUILDERS ' SUPPLY AND SPECIALTY CO. Dealers in Cement, Lime, Plaster, Sewer Pipe, Flue Linings, Chimney Tops, Facing and Common Brick, All Masons ' Ma- terials and Specialties REAL ESTATE LEO L. COOK Attorney at Law 401 UNION TRUST BLDG. Office: Bell Phone 4999 Residknce : Harrison 23F6 SOUTH BEND, INDIANA Phone Lincoln 6237 Dr. George F. Brand Dentist 407 Citizens Bank Bldg. South Bend, Ind. DR. W. A. WICKHAM Eye, Nose, Ear and Throat Specialist Telephone Main 2857 Res. Telephone Lincoln 6471 .507-08 J. M. S. Bldg. South Bend, Indiana Page 342 Ill ' t IM DIANAUlMBER MFaCO. j Furnished by Indiana Lumber Mfg. Co. West Side Lumber Yard North Side Lumber Yard South Bend, Ind. Mishawaka Lumber Yard Mishawaka, Ind. OUR FIVE PLANTS— Four Hydraulic on the St. Joseph River and a Steam Plant at South Bend — all inter-connected and operating as a unit, supply ELECTRIC CURRENT to the University of Notre Dame and 16,000 other Light and Power Customers in the St. Joseph Valley. In fact, one of the many advantages of this Valley for Manufacturing is its supply of dependable ELECTRIC POWER. Indiana Michigan Electric Company South Bend, Indiana i ' «« • J43 DO YOU LIVE IN THE EAST OR ARE YOU THINKING W OF GOING EAST? A The Wabash in connection with the N. J., Ind. and Ills. Ry. now operates through Sleeping Car Service between ji Detroit and South Bend. A S H Leaves South Bend, Daily, 12 :30 A. M. Arrive Detroit Tickets and Reservations at 1508 W. Division St., or City Office 512 Dean Bldg. COMPLIMENTS OF IDEAL LAUNDRY CO. f S ' 344 Phone Lincoln 1680 JOE A. LUTHER PLUMBING AND HEATING 118 W. Colfax Ave. South Bend, Ind. i Firestone Tires CANDY SODA Expert J Vulcanizing W ' W ll 1 Zip Service M M Brand of Purity 102 N. Mich. St. K C, S. B. X. L Ry. Depot Taylor s Tire Shops 132 E. Jefferson 731 Lincoln Wa) Blvd. r West Phone Main 610 Phone Lincoln 5344 CIGARS CIGARETTES a ' 34S Phone Main 95 L.W.McGannCo. UNDERTAKERS 333 North Michigan Street South Bend, Ind. KODAKS PHOTO SUPPLIES Kodak by Mail We give BEST quality and EIGHT hour SERVICE on Developing and Printing AULT ' S CAMERA SHOP 122 S. Main St. South Bend, Indiana Quality Printing CALENDARS and PROGRAMS A Specialty The Albertype Company Brooklyn, New York Things Men Wear LIGHT CLOTHING, waistcoats, ties, gloves all are easily soiled and call for expert clean- ing to keep them in presentable condition. CERTAINLY, we do Dry Cleaning. Our modernly equipped plant takes care cf this sort of work prcmptly and fffciently. SHIRTS, Collars, Underwear and Hose come back from our Laundry fresh and clean. And we give the added service cf darning SOX and sewing on buttons with no extra charge. Send Your Next Bundle To DAVIES LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING COMPANY 117-119 So. LaFayette St. South Bend and Chicago Phones Main 597-598 Page 346 ih VARNISHES, STAINS, ENAMELS have been Standard For Half A Century Made in South Bend O ' BRIEN VARNISH COMPANY THE wazNfiwa: folks Smoger Lumber Co. LUMBER AND MILLWORK 407 Laurel St. South Bend, Ind. fig ' 347 t, iEar fi (Enlbg? anb Arab mg St. Joseph County, Notre Dame, Indiana RECOGNITION BY THE INDIANA STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION College — Standard Normal Department — Accredited Academy (High School) — Commissioned Credits Accepted by the Leading Universities An institution where your daughter is assured of all the benefits of an exclusive school, while surrounded with all the comforts and protection of home life. St. Mary ' s is devoted to the development of the highest type of womanhood in the girls entrusted to her care. Many features of this school of high ideals, its broad campus and well equipped commodious buildings, cannot be touched upon in the limited space of this announcement. The President, therefore, cordially invites correspondence from parents having daughters to educate, and will take great pleasure in mailing an illustrated cata- log and descriptive literature. Address: The President St. Mary ' s College and Academy St. Joseph ' County Notre Dame P. O., Indiana Pagi- 348 ' Your A nnual is splendid! You ha ve done a fine thing for your University, Will the President say this to You ? If you get out a really fine Annual you will win the compliments and admiration of your classmates, and the respect of the officers of your School. For years afterward your book will be referred to as the best book ever issued — if you give the work your best. Make sure you will work along the best lines by get- ting the advice of the Service Department of the INDIANAPOLIS ENGRAVING ELECTROTYPING CO. College Annual Engravings Commencement Invitations Write for this frtt boot. It will htlH you gf ' t out a ' snappy Annual 222 E. Ohio St. Indianapolis, Indiana Page 34Q This Book is a product of the Year Book De- partment of the Rogers Printing Company Dixon, and Chicago, Illinois
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