commencement pair of star twirlers

8
ro VOL. I GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D. C, APRIL 15, 1920 No. 12 COMMENCEMENT DATE ANNOUNCED Lower Classes Will Remain to Witness Graduation Scenes, According to New Schedule. An important change is to be made this year in the order of Commence- ment exercises. By the present ar- rangement, the Seniors will be the first to leave the College, Commencement being held on June 8, while the under- graduates will be held over five days longer for examinations The Dean announces the following schedule for the ending of the school year: May. Monday, 3, General Repetition begins. Thursday, 6, Rector's Day. Friday, 7, Public Disputation. Sunday, 9, Mallory Essay. Contest closes. Competition for Horace Medal, 1 P. M. Hamilton-Philodemic Debate. Friday, 14, Sociology and Electives' Examinations. Organic Chemistry. Saturday, 15, English Composition Exam. Geology Papers close. Sunday, 16, Gaston-White Debate. Monday, 24, Latin Composition Ex- aminations. Friday, 28, Metaphysics Examina- tions. Saturday, 29, Ethics Examinations. Monday, 31, Memorial Day. June. Tuesday, 1, Economics, Mechanics and Mathematics Examinations. Com- petition in Calculus, 7:30 P. M. Wednesday, 2, Modern Languages Exams. Greek Exams. (Soph. A. B.) Military Science Exams. Thursday, 3, Greek Exams. (Fresh- men.) Friday, 4, English Literature and Precepts. Saturday, 5, Apologetics Exams. Sunday, 6, Baccalaureate Sermon. Reception and Concert. Meeting of Regents. Monday, 7, Class Day Exercises. Tuesday, 8, Commencement. Wednesday, 9, Exams, as follows: History, Organic Chemistry, Biology. Thursday, 10, Philosophy. . Latin. Friday, Saturday, Monday, Oral Ex- aminations. SOPHOMORE TEA DANCE The Sophomore tea dance, held Tues- day afternoon at Rauscher's, proved the usual source of enjoyment to those who indulge in that form o.f entertain- ment. The frolics went off with cus- tomary eclat, proving that the upper classes are not the only ones who can throw a successful party. A new or- chestra, known as the Nichols Four (Twenty Cents'?) played sweet music. Those who perpetrated the affair were headed by Charlie Daly, with Joe O'Connell, Tom Conway. John O'Brien and others acting as his partners in crime. GEORGETOWN HAS UNBEATABLE PAIR OF STAR TWIRLERS Reynolds and Hyman Sweeping Everything Before Them—Victories Over Leading College Teams, Including Yale, and Holy Cross, Last Year's Champs, Placing Georgetown High Up in College Baseball Circles. Sweeping victories over Holy Cross, last year rated as college champions; Fordham, Boston College, Yale, Lehigh, and other of the strongest baseball teams in the country, finds Georgetown after the first month of the 1920 season rolling merrily on toward the intercollegiate championship. With two of the greatest college pitchers in the game, Reynolds and Hyman, toying with their oppon- ents, the Blue and Gray team last week drove the far-famed Fitz- patrick of Boston College from the mound on Thursday,, 12—2, bumped Culloton, the Fordham youngster who held Vermont to two hits, 4—0, on Friday, and after a bit of faltering in the earlier stages of the game, defeated Lehigh Saturday, 8—7. At the time of THE HOYA'S going to press, the powerful Blue and Gray ma- chine, captained by Jimmy Sullivan, had defeated a host of the leading teams of the country, dropping- but three games, each by a single tally. Clyde Engle's . brilliant .'Green and Gold combination, taking advantage of ten Georgetown errors, nosed out Coach O'Reilly's club in the 13th inning, 5—4. It was a hard game to lose, with recruit third base- men throwing the ball into the bleach- ers for the Vermont runs. The North- erners, however, had a clever ball club with several veterans, and while they would not have won but for errors, they played a finished game and look like one of the best aggregations in the East. Art Reynolds had the Maryland State game safely tucked away, 2—0, when another recruit infielder booted away the chances for victory. In the Cornell game Georgetown outbatted the lads from Ithaca, but wabbly fielding gave the Blue and Gray the short end of a 5—4 score. Aside from the few dark patches, however, the baseball firmament has been, and is, pretty bright for George- town. The infield has been strength- ened and the fielding and hitting of the entire team is improving daily. The decisive 8—1 victory over Yale found the team breaking into its proper stride, and when twelve hits, including Kenyon's home run, drove McLough- lin from the box, and left the great and doughty Holy Cross team trailing far behind, the last little black cloud on the baseball horizon went up in smoke, and the Georgetown sluggers stood out as one of the fastest combinations in the college world. Looking over the records, only one pitcher in the country has a look-in with O'Reilly's two star slabmen, and that is Kibbee, the big righthander whom Engle, the old Red Sox star, has developed up at the University of Ver- mont. Engle, who has had wonderful success as a coach, found Kibbee, a raw youngster, on a New Hampshire farm and has made him into a truly great pitcher. He is a good fielder and handles the stick well, but lacks Rey- nolds' coolness and ranks far below Georgetown's Babe Ruth when it comes to poling out the long ones. He has yet to equal Hyman's wonderful record of last year. Reynolds won the Lehigh game with a homer, and in every other contest has hit the ball harder than any of the outfielders. PRES. EAMON DE VAI,ERA, of the Irish Republic, telling a Hoya reporter that we have a great team. With what looks like the greatest pitching staff in the country, and a catcher that calls to mind the greatest names among the past and present col- lege backstops, such as Wanamaker of Dartmouth, Spillaine of Vermont, Mar- tin'of Holy Cross, and Urban of Bos- ton College, the Blue and Gray team is well started on a great season. In Harry Sullivan Georgetown has one of the cleverest first basemen in the game. The rest of the team, while not stars, can hold their own with their college op- ponents and present a wellnigh unbeat- able combination. GRIFFITH SECOND IN "CASEY" 600 Loses to Driscoll of Boston By Inches—Certain to Go to Olympics. Running his first 600-yard race, Dor- sey Griffith finished second to Jake Driscoll last Saturday night at the Knights of Columbus games in New York City. The statement fails to do justice to Griffith, who easily outclassed Driscoll, and lost only through his in- experience at the distance. Track au- thorities who witnessed the event de- clare that the Georgetown runner gives promise of being a world-beater at six hundred yards, and needs only a little more experience in this distance to reach top form. In saying this, how- ever, it must not be overlooked that Driscoll, the winner, is a great man for the distance, and is always to be reck- oned on when six-hundred-yard men get together. Until Griffith's entry into the distance last Saturday night, Dris- coll-held, the distinction of being the greatest six-hundred man in the coun- try. In the event, known as the "Casey 600," six men faced the starter, the oth- er entrants being Jimmy O'Brien, of the Loughlin Lyceum, national quarter mile champion; Eliot Balestier, unattached ; Harry Wigger, Paulist A. C.; T. J. King, Holy Cross College. Griffith was pacemaker throughout the entire race, until Driscoll forced the issue in the last fifty yards. It was eas- ily seen that the going was strange to Dorsey, who sprinted four different times during the course. Finally Dris- coll drew up alongside in the last fifty yards and the two fought it out to the tape. It was Driscoll's race by a mat- ter of inches. Time, 1 minute, 16 3-5 seconds. The race put an end to the rather widespread belief that Griffith was a sprint man and nothing more. There are few men who are Griffith's equal in the short distances, and it took only his performance Saturday night to reveal that fact that he has a wonderful future over the longer courses as well. There is now little doubt but that he will ac- company the American team when it goes to the Olympic games in Belgium next August. It has become impossible to overlook his performances, both in the sprints and in the longer distances, and newspapers all over the country are enthusiastic over his possibilities. It is not generally known, though nevertheless true, that Griffith has run against Schloz, of Missouri, and beaten him in the two-twenty. The race took place when both men were in the serv- ice, during an athletic meet held in Miami, Fla., in 1918. Griffith beat out Scholz with a vard to spare. Though Scholz likes the hundred-yard going better, he is nevertheless a dangerous man at any of the short distances, and a victory over him is a distinction for any runner. Scholz is ticketed as the fastest century man in the country.

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VOL. I GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY, WASHINGTON, D. C, APRIL 15, 1920 No. 12

COMMENCEMENT DATE ANNOUNCED

Lower Classes Will Remain to Witness Graduation Scenes, According to New Schedule.

An important change is to be made this year in the order of Commence- ment exercises. By the present ar- rangement, the Seniors will be the first to leave the College, Commencement being held on June 8, while the under- graduates will be held over five days longer for examinations The Dean announces the following schedule for the ending of the school year:

May.

Monday, 3, General Repetition begins. Thursday, 6, Rector's Day. Friday, 7, Public Disputation. Sunday, 9, Mallory Essay. Contest

closes. Competition for Horace Medal, 1 P. M. Hamilton-Philodemic Debate.

Friday, 14, Sociology and Electives' Examinations. Organic Chemistry.

Saturday, 15, English Composition Exam. Geology Papers close.

Sunday, 16, Gaston-White Debate. Monday, 24, Latin Composition Ex-

aminations. Friday, 28, Metaphysics Examina-

tions. Saturday, 29, Ethics Examinations. Monday, 31, Memorial Day.

June.

Tuesday, 1, Economics, Mechanics and Mathematics Examinations. Com- petition in Calculus, 7:30 P. M.

Wednesday, 2, Modern Languages Exams. Greek Exams. (Soph. A. B.) Military Science Exams.

Thursday, 3, Greek Exams. (Fresh- men.)

Friday, 4, English Literature and Precepts.

Saturday, 5, Apologetics Exams. Sunday, 6, Baccalaureate Sermon.

Reception and Concert. Meeting of Regents.

Monday, 7, Class Day Exercises. Tuesday, 8, Commencement. Wednesday, 9, Exams, as follows:

History, Organic Chemistry, Biology. Thursday, 10, Philosophy. . Latin. Friday, Saturday, Monday, Oral Ex-

aminations.

SOPHOMORE TEA DANCE

The Sophomore tea dance, held Tues- day afternoon at Rauscher's, proved the usual source of enjoyment to those who indulge in that form o.f entertain- ment. The frolics went off with cus- tomary eclat, proving that the upper classes are not the only ones who can throw a successful party. A new or- chestra, known as the Nichols Four (Twenty Cents'?) played sweet music.

Those who perpetrated the affair were headed by Charlie Daly, with Joe O'Connell, Tom Conway. John O'Brien and others acting as his partners in crime.

GEORGETOWN HAS UNBEATABLE PAIR OF STAR TWIRLERS

Reynolds and Hyman Sweeping Everything Before Them—Victories Over Leading College Teams, Including Yale, and Holy Cross, Last Year's Champs, Placing Georgetown High Up in College

Baseball Circles.

Sweeping victories over Holy Cross, last year rated as college champions; Fordham, Boston College, Yale, Lehigh, and other of the strongest baseball teams in the country, finds Georgetown after the first month of the 1920 season rolling merrily on toward the intercollegiate championship. With two of the greatest college pitchers in the game, Reynolds and Hyman, toying with their oppon- ents, the Blue and Gray team last week drove the far-famed Fitz- patrick of Boston College from the mound on Thursday,, 12—2, bumped Culloton, the Fordham youngster who held Vermont to two hits, 4—0, on Friday, and after a bit of faltering in the earlier stages of the game, defeated Lehigh Saturday, 8—7.

At the time of THE HOYA'S going to press, the powerful Blue and Gray ma- chine, captained by Jimmy Sullivan, had defeated a host of the leading teams of the country, dropping- but three games, each by a single tally. Clyde Engle's

. brilliant .'Green and Gold combination, taking advantage of ten Georgetown errors, nosed out Coach O'Reilly's club in the 13th inning, 5—4. It was a hard game to lose, with recruit third base- men throwing the ball into the bleach- ers for the Vermont runs. The North- erners, however, had a clever ball club with several veterans, and while they would not have won but for errors, they played a finished game and look like one of the best aggregations in the East.

Art Reynolds had the Maryland State game safely tucked away, 2—0, when another recruit infielder booted away the chances for victory. In the Cornell game Georgetown outbatted the lads from Ithaca, but wabbly fielding gave the Blue and Gray the short end of a 5—4 score.

Aside from the few dark patches, however, the baseball firmament has been, and is, pretty bright for George- town. The infield has been strength- ened and the fielding and hitting of the entire team is improving daily.

The decisive 8—1 victory over Yale found the team breaking into its proper stride, and when twelve hits, including Kenyon's home run, drove McLough- lin from the box, and left the great and doughty Holy Cross team trailing far behind, the last little black cloud on the baseball horizon went up in smoke, and the Georgetown sluggers stood out as one of the fastest combinations in the college world.

Looking over the records, only one pitcher in the country has a look-in with O'Reilly's two star slabmen, and that is Kibbee, the big righthander whom Engle, the old Red Sox star, has developed up at the University of Ver- mont. Engle, who has had wonderful success as a coach, found Kibbee, a

raw youngster, on a New Hampshire farm and has made him into a truly great pitcher. He is a good fielder and handles the stick well, but lacks Rey- nolds' coolness and ranks far below Georgetown's Babe Ruth when it comes to poling out the long ones. He has yet to equal Hyman's wonderful record of last year. Reynolds won the Lehigh game with a homer, and in every other contest has hit the ball harder than any of the outfielders.

PRES. EAMON DE VAI,ERA, of the Irish Republic, telling a Hoya reporter that we have a great team.

With what looks like the greatest pitching staff in the country, and a catcher that calls to mind the greatest names among the past and present col- lege backstops, such as Wanamaker of Dartmouth, Spillaine of Vermont, Mar- tin'of Holy Cross, and Urban of Bos- ton College, the Blue and Gray team is well started on a great season. In Harry Sullivan Georgetown has one of the cleverest first basemen in the game. The rest of the team, while not stars, can hold their own with their college op- ponents and present a wellnigh unbeat- able combination.

GRIFFITH SECOND IN "CASEY" 600

Loses to Driscoll of Boston By Inches—Certain to Go

to Olympics.

Running his first 600-yard race, Dor- sey Griffith finished second to Jake Driscoll last Saturday night at the Knights of Columbus games in New York City. The statement fails to do justice to Griffith, who easily outclassed Driscoll, and lost only through his in- experience at the distance. Track au- thorities who witnessed the event de- clare that the Georgetown runner gives promise of being a world-beater at six hundred yards, and needs only a little more experience in this distance to reach top form. In saying this, how- ever, it must not be overlooked that Driscoll, the winner, is a great man for the distance, and is always to be reck- oned on when six-hundred-yard men get together. Until Griffith's entry into the distance last Saturday night, Dris- coll-held, the distinction of being the greatest six-hundred man in the coun- try.

In the event, known as the "Casey 600," six men faced the starter, the oth- er entrants being Jimmy O'Brien, of the Loughlin Lyceum, national quarter mile champion; Eliot Balestier, unattached ; Harry Wigger, Paulist A. C.; T. J. King, Holy Cross College.

Griffith was pacemaker throughout the entire race, until Driscoll forced the issue in the last fifty yards. It was eas- ily seen that the going was strange to Dorsey, who sprinted four different times during the course. Finally Dris- coll drew up alongside in the last fifty yards and the two fought it out to the tape. It was Driscoll's race by a mat- ter of inches. Time, 1 minute, 16 3-5 seconds.

The race put an end to the rather widespread belief that Griffith was a sprint man and nothing more. There are few men who are Griffith's equal in the short distances, and it took only his performance Saturday night to reveal that fact that he has a wonderful future over the longer courses as well. There is now little doubt but that he will ac- company the American team when it goes to the Olympic games in Belgium next August. It has become impossible to overlook his performances, both in the sprints and in the longer distances, and newspapers all over the country are enthusiastic over his possibilities.

It is not generally known, though nevertheless true, that Griffith has run against Schloz, of Missouri, and beaten him in the two-twenty. The race took place when both men were in the serv- ice, during an athletic meet held in Miami, Fla., in 1918. Griffith beat out Scholz with a vard to spare. Though Scholz likes the hundred-yard going better, he is nevertheless a dangerous man at any of the short distances, and a victory over him is a distinction for any runner. Scholz is ticketed as the fastest century man in the country.

THE HOYA

JOHN J. O'DAY WINS FOURTH LAW DEBATE

Chief Justice McCoy, Chairman of

Judges for Prize Contest

at Law School.

On the evening of April 6th, the fourth Prize Debate of the year was held at the Law School and one of the largest audiences ever present for an af- fair of that kind was well entertained by the speakers of the evening. John J. Day won first honors and Joseph C. Cantrel honorable mention.

The question debated, Resolved: That the United States Government sho'uld subsidize the American Merchant Ma- rine, being of great importance at this time, naturally controlled the interest of all present.

Under the supervision of Joel B. Eg- gleston, Chairman for the evening, the following debaters presented their argu- ments : For the Affirmative, Edward Francis Barry, '20, of Tennessee; John Joseph O'Day, '20, of the District of Columbia, and for the Negative, Joseph Antoine Cantrel, '22, of New Jersey; Howard Fletcher Brecht, '22, of Wash- ington.

The following prominent executive and judicial experts presided as judges: Honorable Walter I. McCoy, Chief Jus- tice, Supreme Court of the District of Columbia; Honorable Cornelius A. Mc- Glennon, Representative from New Jer- sey ; Honorable Wayne Johnson, Solici- tor of Internal Revenue; Honorable Robert T. Scott, Assistant to the Attor- ney General, and Percival S. Ridsdale, Esquire, Executive Secretary, American Forestry Association. The excellent corps of Judges was typical of the pre- vious debates and their presence was ap- preciated not only by the Law School but by all present.

After well prepared arguments were expounded by the four debaters and re- buttal of exceptional spirit was indulged in, the Judges retired for their decision. During the recess T. Austin Gavin, '20, held the interest and undivided attention of all with his artistic and vivid rendi- tion of "The Sicilian," from "Tales of a Wayside Inn."

The following committeemen tendered their aid to the affair to make it a suc- cess : Joseph L. Hurley, '20; T. Austin Gavin, '20; Nelson R. Durant, '20; Rob- ert A. Burns, '20; Thomas F. Cullen, '20; Archie K. Shipe, '22; W. Dyer Hayes, '21; Maurice J. Mulvahill, '21; Walton E. Cronan, 22; Guy H. Bird- sail, '22.

Jerry McDonald, of the Foreign Service School, says that all the fellows in the country are his brothers, in some manner, shape or form. "I've got them coming and going," says Jerry. "I be- long to the Kappa Alpha Phis, the Kay- sees, the A. O. H. and the American Legion, and show me a guy that doesn't belong to some one of these. And to top it off," adds Jerry, "I look just like Eugene O'Brien."

We would like to know why Phil Sul- livan, of the Foreign Service School, always insists on telling the old cocoa- nut gag every time he goes out with the boys. Can't you get a new one, Phil?

Dr. Richard C. Harvey, professor of "History of Commerce" in the Foreign Service School, was presented with a life size portrait of himself by his stu- dents in the Knights of Columbus group of the school just before the hol- idays. The presentation was a com- plete surprise to the popular professor, who has won the esteem of all the stu- dents of the school despite the fact that they are not all in his class.

A GRADUATE MANAGER'S DREAM

I was reclining one evening in John Carroll's lap. The sun had just kissed its mother good-bye behind the hill. I parked mv brown derby (a generous gift from the boys). After shoveling Hydrox all day I was fatigued. Far down the canyon I could hear the cliff-dwellers calling their dogs to twilight chow; and yet tomorrow was "tag day" for the benefit of the starving babies of the Georgetown Alumni. What a world!

Ah ! An automovebile fighting its way up the slope. Now she passes the Hell- gate an on to the statue of no liberty, but no guiding torch burns here—what? A voice hails from within the secret chamber: "Where is the splinter of the athletic board—the coxswain of the tug- boat Athleta?"

"Aye! Aye!" I screamed and ran up three wrinkles on my brow. Without warning eleven strong Mexican athletes, fresh from Very Crude, tossed out their ditty boxes and gave a long locomotive for the team.

"We're the famous All-Georgetown South Atlantic Championship team that the papers have been looking for ever since Louie Dougher needed dough. The original team of work horses here at last —a life's ambition realized!!! Eleven shinning satellites from the sunny south —seven linemen and a backfield. Nine of us are foul ball players, while Na- bisco, son of Burnt Wafers, can throw more clinkers in a ten-second bout than the creamiest Georgia Cracker or any other Virginia Snap."

I have always prided myself on my ability to refrain from giving vent to harsh sarcasms that are wont to burst forth occasionally; but I will confess that the tempest within me had by this time assumed tidal wave proportions. Calling forth all the reserve and dignity that a Georgetown graduate should have, I expectorated as follows: "Your words are golden, very golden, but do you im- agine for one instant that we want only athletes at this institution of yearning— we want students—and besides youse guys don't come from Boston??"

"Ah! There is where you sold a Rockwood Bar too quickly," sang out

a Very Crude citizen. "Although we're all-round athletes we are sometimes square. The Hearts and Science course is not over difficult if one uses discretion. I feel sure that we can pass any examin- ation by—by at least 2^4 per cent. Why, whats the matter, man, Mexican athletes are never penniless. All our Papas are Back Bay millionaires (you have to come from Boston). We'll buy Charlie Smackem an alarm clock and 365 clean towels if you'll only let us come to Georgetown and live at the Mad-house— Oh, please, Mr. Coxswain, can't we live at the Mad-house? I am just as crazy as Alec Anderson and he's been there four years Pst! Pst! Yes, roses, sure two twos are—4— Quoth the Raven 'Never more.'" And then the eleven wept bitterly and shouted, "No! No! Monkeys!!"

I am not a man to be won by sympathy or more viscious motives (never let an athlete think you trust him). "Of course, our athletic teams are infallible and there is no chance for you'se fellows to horn in, but I'll talk it over with 'Al' over in North." Just then the president of the back yard came in the gate, so I left the pride-fighters with Mr. Carroll swinging their sombreros in nervous ex- citement, while I gushed forth the news to the President of the yardstick. Even the cheer-pleader can be normal at times and he listened with surprising intelli- gence. "Say, I've got the greatest team of all-round truck-horses that ever roamed the Boston Commons. Say, they ain't any shirking one-sport athletes either—sweet garlic—think of it, eleven Mexican Acrobats all doing ten flat, crying for the Mad-house and only an- swering one mess call in twenty-four hours. Them's the first regular athletes T've seen in these parts since Johnie Campbell run in 30 events for us one night down in Convention Hall. Come to your papa!!" and then I seemed to her a familiar voice:—lift the knees follow through reach! ! 1 woke up and rubbed my eyes. Who is that out on the Klincoln Highway? Why, it's Frank Kelly finishing his mile!!!!! Too bad—too bad ! It was all a dream ! !

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Arthur Hirst has been traveling around lately with a little fellow, a nephew of his, he says. The little chap is much smaller than his portly uncle.

Jim Maguire, of THE HOYA staff, has left College to go into the motion pic- ture developing business. It is to be hoped that he will develop into some- thing himself.

Meredith Reid, '21, who has been out of college for six months on account of illness, returned at the conclusion of the late holidays, and has been greeting old friends about the place for the last few days.

Bill Donovan has returned to the Senior Class after an absence of sev- eral months due to illness. He has been recuperating at Coronado Beach, Cal., and announces that he is now well and strong enough to take up the old grind at metaphysics.

Mickie Livers has a perfect record for attendance at the baseball games to date. He rolls up to the grounds in a large Packard with a little girl, and— ask the man who owns one—he seems to enjoy both equally well. Pretty, Mickie!

Tom Kennedy, of the Foreign Serv- ice School, made the startling announce- ment at the beginning of the last term of school last week that now that the war is over, Paris will return to its former occupation of trimming hats and American tourists. It is to laugh.

Jim Sweeney and Ed Harden re- turned to College after Easter with a suspicious blueness under the left eye of each of them. It seems that indis- creet behavior at a famous tavern in Greenwich Village is responsible for the shiners.

Dick Anderson, Dick Cooney, and "Bud" Fisher, three promising young medicos, who were formerly of the College when the present Senior Class was cutting its eye teeth, were among the fans who witnessed the Boston Col- lege game. They asked for a little pub- licity. This is it.

Tommie Dean spent his Easter vaca- tion down in Florida, at Useppa Island. According to the advertisements, this place boasts of the sportiest nine-hole golf course in America, and the cuisine is excellent. Two very good reasons for going there, indeed.

Gene Finnegan, a graduate of 1919, and a former star hurler for the Blue and Gray, is back in town for a few days. He is with an athletic club some- where up North, and has been sent South for a short training trip. They picked a bad place for Gene to do any training when they sent him to Wash- ington.

When Dorsey Griffith's mother closed up the Griffith homestead for the Eas- ter holidays and then left the city, she did not remember the old proverb about mice playing in the absence of the kitty. But the mice will play, every time, and Dorsey, aided and abetted by Claydon and Mickler, is said to have kept open house. The three of them were busy for days carting pillows and phono- graphs out of the college. And when the pillows came back they smelled strongly of ificense—as though the boys had taken them on a trip to the Orient.

G. U. MAN MAKES PERPETUAL CALENDAR

THE H O Y A

Young Man Produces Type Which is Declared Superior

to That Reported from Italy.

To Georgetown falls the distinction of having the inventor of a perpetual calendar.

The patent was granted some weeks ago, and the product is being made ready for the market -by the inventor, Mitchell J. Friedman, a graduate of Georgetown University, who was spe- cial accountant for the Wilson inaugu- ral committee.

A dispatch yesterday from Rome credited an Italian priest, Francesco Scatigna, with the invention of a per- petual calendar. But in that invention the 29th day of February causes trouble, it is declared, on account of the neces- sity of moving the disc up one day for the month, as if starting a new year on the 1st of March of leap year.

Mr. Friedman's calendar is a simple little vest pocket cardboard with a few slides for the captions of week days, which move simultaneously with the ad- vancing years. The 29th of February is provided for by a special slide which automatically sets the week-day cap- tions.

This differs from the Italian type of calendar in its simplicity. The latter consists of a checkerboard of forty-nine squares. The Washington invention has only two blank month spaces, January and February, and the remainder in per- manent print.

Mr. Friedman is but twenty-two years of age. He invented the calendar four years ago, but spent two years perfect- ing it, filed his application in 1918 and secured the patent last month.

Cards accompanying the calendar al- low the computation of any day of any year of the past, present or future.

It's a hard question to decide which is the more dangerous to opposing teams,

■ Art Reynolds' powerful right arm or his big bat. It seems too bad that such a heavy sticker cannot take part in every game.

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THROUGH THE SENATE LOOKING GLASS

The Washington Herald has a bit of verse, authorship unknown, which for sheer excellence merits a position on these pages. It is at once a take-off on Lewis Carroll's famous Jabberwocky, and a satire on the United States Senate. The original verse may be found in the story of Alice's adventures Through the Looking Glass, while the new version may be witnessed any afternoon from the Senate gallery.

THE TREATYWOCKY.

'Twas hiram and the dillingham. Did hale and harding on the reed,

All Sherman was the poindexter, And the lodge was brandegeed.

Beware the Treatywock, my son, The underwood, the williams mean,

Beware the hitchcock bird, and shun The lenroot, pomerene.

He took his cabot sword in hand, , Long time the nugent foe he sought,

So rested he by the woodrow tree, And stood four months in thought.

And as in knoxish thought he stood. The Treatywock. with eyes of flame,

Came walshing through the walcott wood,

And swansoned as it came.

One, two! One, two! and through and through,

The cabot blade went snicker-snack. He left it dead, and with its head

He frelinghuysened back.

"And hast thou slain the Treatywock? Come to my arms, my smootish boy!

Oh, me! Oh, my! Oh, sine die!" He borahed in his joy.

'Twas hiram and the dillingham, Did hale and harding on the reed,

All Sherman was the poindexter, And the lodge was brandegeed.

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you'd be surprised— At those knitted Sport Coats we are selling these days. Just the thing for summer wear.

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Will Exhibit in Senior Hall, Monday, April 19.

RAUSCHER'S CATERERS — CONFECTIONERS—RESTAURANT

1036 CONNECTICUT AVENUE

Luncheons and Dinners Served Daily (except Sunday)

Table d'Hote and a la Carte Service

ANNOUNCEMENT Fr-ear-iLcliiri Sqt-aeai-e Hotel

Begs to call the attention of the Georgetown Students to the excellent facilities of the hotel fo Tea Dances, Banquets, and Formal Gatherings.

FOURTEENTH STREET AT K NORTHWEST

THE CATHOLIC BOOK STORE

RELIGIOUS ARTICI/BS

PRAYER BOOKS

Catholic Novels and Books on Timely Subjects

WM. d. GALLERY & COMPANY 925 G St. N. W. Oppofite St. Patrick's School

DONAHUE'S PHARMACY Cor. Wisconsin Ave. and O St. N. W.

DRUGS—CANDY— CIGARS

CIGARETTES AND SODA

Phone W.I963 "Donnie'' wants to see you

OFFICIAL TAILOR DELTA THETA PHI Phone North 6263

2147 P STREET NORTHWEST

WILSON CAFE Service Table d'Hote

and a la Carte

1355 Wisconsi n Avenue

EDWARD C. WOLENTY Agent for Leopold Morse Co.

ACADEMY CLOTHES 1600 R. I. Ave. N. W.

Phone Georgetown Student

B. REFF Cleaning and Pressing

REPAIRING

3400 O STREET

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WASHINGTON, D. C.

'

THE H O Y A

Published Weekly at GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY,

Washington, D. C.

Entered as second class matter Jan 31, 1920, at the post office at Washington D. C. under the Act of March 3. 1879. "Acceptance for mailing- at special rateof postage provided for in sec. 1103, Act of Oct. 3.1917. authorized Feb. 17, 1920."

Subscription ...$2.00 per year.

Editor-in-Chief JOSEPH R. MICKLER, JR., '20.

Managing Editor LEO J. CASEY, '21.

Business Manager. JAMES A. BUTLER, '21. Advertising Manager JOHN F. O'HARE, '22. Circulation Manager. ALBERT D. LEARY, '22.

Asst. Circulation Manager EUGENE P. MCCAHILL, Law, '22.

Staff Artist ALERED D. REID, '21.

Associate Editors Dorsey J. Griffith, '2u. EDWARD MACK, '20. JOSEPH L. HURLEY, Law, '20. GLENN V. GOETZ, '21. CHARLES F. REGAN, '21. John J. Mullen, F. S., '21.

Reporters JAMES J. SWEENEY, '22 BRIAN J. DUCEY, '23. ARTHUR F. LYNCH, '22 DONALD E. MCGUIRE, '23. JOHN F. DAILEY

GOOD SPIRIT

They are pounding hard and well, these newly installed denizens of the track, and are showing their class pa- triotism in a real way. The track meet tomorrow for Class superiority in sprint and jump should prove a success if we are to predict—as the stale saying goes —by the preliminary efforts of the con- testants.

The Senior Class needs to be congrat- ulated for their fine work in instigating the idea and in sending their men out to uphold their honor.

The hearty men and true who will contest tomorrow, many of whom have never traveled faster than a slow saun- ter, are proving themselves in accord with the plan by sacrificing their play- time to make the meet a grand success.

Special honors are of course due to Tommy Dean, as we believe he was the one who thought up the splendid idea. The prizes are worth winning as, for that matter, every prize is.

If you don't think anything of this ■editorial, neither do we, and we are doing it to fill up space.

1 f you can find any sense or meaning in it, you are more than a cipher-solver, you have an imagination.

GOETZ.

DISSOCIATED NEWS By R. F. C.

A collection was recently taken up for baseball's blind outfielders. It was decided to canvass the charitable organ- izations first in as much as the inmates appreciate what charity really means. The returns show that the consumptives coughed up more jack from their cof- fers than all the others put together. Congratulations are in order with em- phasis on the con.

The athletics have the labor unions stopped when it comes to going out on strikes.

The daylight saving plan is making light of many of New York's^ difficul- ties, but it is about as easy to convince the electric light people that they are saving anything as it would be to get an embassy picket to sing "God Save the King."

To whom it may concern: The New York operators are still giving phony service.

Friends of "Jack" Hunt are glad to hear of his new appointment as special assistant to Attorney General Palmer. Hunt graduated with the class of '17, members of which class contributed more to Georgetown's Service RofT than any other class. On his graduation Hunt was commissioned a first lieuten- ant in the Army and saw two years of service with the colors in France. When the war ended he returned to his home town of Tulsa and was admitted to the bar of the State of Oklahoma. His ap- pointment as special assistant to At- torney General Palmer followed. He is aiding in the vigorous campaign the Attorney General is conducting against the Reds.

What's in a name—but did you ever notice how many runners scowl that belong to cross-country teams.

With rhubarb ready to take the place of apple sauce and garlic beginning to flavor the milk, it looks like a big sea- son for the fellows with sour dispo- sitions.

England is still throwing ole John Bull at the Irish. As an Easter present they sent down some fine eggs to keep peace, but they forgot that most eggs are chicken hearted and none so hard that they can't be beaten.

A rumor comes from the spring training camps that the Brooklyn pitch- ers are intoxicating Babe Ruth with highballs. But then it is only the best of us that even get a whiff of a high- ball.

Here it isn't: Mr. Wood, the car- penter, hit the nail right on the finger when he said that you didn't have to be a locksmith to be all keyed up.

Today's personal: The suspended students spent Saturday night at the college.

It looks as if Sweeney and Harden had better stick to three fingers. Fives don't even go in a poker game.

The Sophomore rabbits or track team have gotten under way at last. Mc- Donough is out for the discuss, Lynch is out for the dablin. Sheridan for the stammer throw and Strouthers for the Refectory Dash.

G"a» "CAIRO ^VISITED

S T" I N B M B"T5C

F STREET CORNER 12th

KNOX HATS—TOP COATS—MEN'S FURNISHINGS

OLD IN YEARS—YOUNG IN IDEAS

Jumbles Like all the others who preferred to break the festal yolk near the home hearts i buttoned my coat and went and i can assure you that the time was nut wasted or disagreeable to begin with i saw the girl whose picture hides the crack in the mirror and she sure re- minds me of a butcher always cuttin up hot dog it certainly was great to come home late for dinner and then be able to do some victual teasing without mis- sing anything while i was home my uncle who does not come to see us very often pulled this one when booker t Washington opened his famous college he said to those gathered there keep it dark you can easily see why the uncle doesnt come to see us often so when the man with the pink necktie kissed the lady with the short stop watch the lit- tle newsboy died of cracked ice and the clergy man said at the funeral there is a pun in punish but its no joke to laugh at.

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THE H O Y A

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Utilizing Nature's Power ELECTRICAL energy generated by water

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SECOND LECTURE ON VIVISECTION

Col. Arthur, U. S. A., and Father Tierney Are the Speakers.

The second of the series of lectures on Animal Experimentation was given on Sunday, April 11, by Colonel Arthur, U. S. Army Surgeon, and Fr. Richard H. Tierney, S. J., Editor of America. Colonel Arthur read an interesting pa- per in refutation of the Antivivisection- ists, and aptly showed the inconsistency of these people by pointing out that in one day's game hunt there. is more cruelty inflicted on the dumb animal kingdom than is inflicted in years of animal experimenting, yet there has been no hue and cry raised against hunting, which is of no benefit to dumb animals, while vivisection, by reason of the medical knowledge gained there- from, does benefit them. The Colonel told of his experiences in Manila where the hospital lists had been reduced startlingly as a direct result of experi- menting on animals.

After overcoming innumerable diffi- culties Fr. Tierney arrived in time to deliver his talk on the ethical aspect of vivisection. A hard day with the strike- crippled railroads didn't dull Fr. Tier- ney's wit nor did it wilt his fresh, brac- ing manner of addressing an audience. What he set out to explain and make evident to his audience was that it is right for a skilled physician to inflict pain on an animal if by so doing man- kind benefits by his action. He brought up the question of the ethical rights of animals and showed that animals have no ethical rights. It was a pleasure to listen to his clear and sparkling manner of presenting truths.

FOREIGN SERVICE PROM SUCCESSFUL

Affair Last Friday Gets Large Attendance.

One of the most successful proms in the history of Georgetown was held last Friday evening at the Wardman Park Inn when the Foreign Service School held its first annual formal prom. The affair marked the advent of the infant school into the social activities of the University.

The ballroom was beautifully deco- rated for the occasion with flowers, ferns, Georgetown streamers, etc., and everything that goes to make a prom, a successful event was on hand last Fri- day night.

Much credit is due the committee in charge of the prom, because of their untiring efforts to make it a success. From the very minute President Jacobs appointed the committee, the machinery for making the affair one of the lead- ing social events in Washington was put into operation.

Edward P. Walsh was chairman of the committee. He was ably assisted by Ralph Driscoll, Philip D. Sullivan and Fred O. Arseneau.

Several notable women of national and international prominence acted as patronesses for the prom. Rev. Ed- mund A. Walsh, regent of the Foreign Service School, was present, as were many of the professors of the school and their wives.

The list of patronesses included Senora Juan Riano y Gayangos, Senora J. E. LeFevre, Princess Casimir Lubo- mirski, Mrs. Newton D. Baker, Mrs. A. Mitchell Palmer, Mrs. Thomas H. Car- ter, Mrs. Joseph Walsh, Mrs. George E. Hamilton, Mrs. William S. Culbertson, Mrs. Wesley Frost, Mrs. Loren John- son, Mrs. William Kearny Carr and Mrs. Richard C. Harvey.

THE H O Y A

G. U. BIG BATS BADLY MANGLE HOLY CROSS

GEORGETOWN GIVES B. C. BAD BEATING

HYMAN HOLDS FORDHAM SCORELESS

G. U. "BABE RUTH" CONNECTS FOR HOMER

Far-Famed Ball Tossers Decis- ively Routed by George-

town Sluggers.

The far-famed aggregation of ball tossers from Holy Cross invaded the South not long ago with a team confi- dent of cleaning up all comers. After slaughtering C. U., the Purple tackled Georgetown, and for only the second time in two years the great team was de- feated. Georgetown maoe good work of it, too, the Hilltoppers knocking Mc- Laughlin from the box in three innings after scoring six runs. When the smoke cleared the score read George- town 7, Holy Cross 3.

McLaughlin was relieved by Gill, who showed better form, but was scored on in the eighth and found himself in tight places in all the other innings except the sixth. ■ The Georgetown twirler showed great form, allowing only 5 hits and striking out eight. Four of the hits off him came in the third and fourth sessions, the visitors' scoring periods, and were the only times he found himself in difficulty. In five of the innings the Holy Cross players found themselves retired in order.

An error, a sacrifice by Jimmie Sul- livan and singles by Harry Sullivan and Ormsby, a pass and Kenyon's double gave the Hilltoppers a pair of runs in the opening inning and left the sacks loaded when the side retired. A pass, Gilhooley's sacrifice, a wild throw and a sacrifice fly added one more in the sec- ond. In the third Kenyon opened up with a homer across the cinder path in center which led to showers for Mc- Laughlin. Afterwards a pass for Ma' loney, sacrifices by Dudaqk and Walsh and singles by Ormsby and Reynolds ran the total up to three for the third. Georgetown filled the sacks, in . the fourth, left two on in the fifth, put a man on with two down in the sixth, and another pair on the paths in the seventh without getting one across.' In the eighth they broke the spell on Gill by a pass, a double, two errors and a single, netting a lone run.

Three triples, at least one of which was due to poor fielding, a single and an error gave Holy Cross their runs in the third and fourth.

Fifteen were left on the sacks by Georgetown. The summary :

GEORGETOWN AB R H Po A Gilhooley, rf 4 1 2 1 0 J. Sullivan, If 2 (I (I 1 0 H. Sullivan, lb 4 1 1 12 2 Kenyon, c 4 1 2 8 2 Maloney, ss.... 3 2 2 1 2 Dudack, cf ' 4 1 () :: o Ormsby, 2b 4 0 3 0 2 Walsh, 3b 4 0 0 0 3 Reynolds, p 4 1 1 1 3

Total 33 7 12 27 14

HOLY CROSS AB R H Po A Leo Dugan, If 4 0 0 3 0 Gagnon, ss 4 0 0 2 1 L. Dugan, cf 4 0 1 1 1 Daly, rf 4 0 0 0 0 O'Connor, lb 4 117 0 Santoro, 3b 4 0 0 1 0 Maguire, 2b 4 2 2 2 2 Walsh, c .'! 0 1 4 2 McLaughlin, p I u 0 0 3 Gill, p 2 0 0 1 2

Total 34 3 5 14 11

:etown 2 I :; () o I) () 1 *—7 Holy Cross on 1 2 0 0 0 0 0—3

Errors—rGagnon (2), Santoro (2), ('.ill. Malo'ney (2); Dudack,- Ormsby, Walsh.

Fitzpatrick Driven to Showers in Fifth Frame After Onslaught

of G. U. Sluggers.

Last Thursday O'Reilly's nine feasted at the expense of the Boston College pitchers in a routing 12—2 victory over the New England team. Fitzpatrick, B. C.'s star twirler, was driven from the box in the fifth inning. Maloney, who followed him, allowed the Hilltoppers only 2 hits but was wild.

Reynolds performed for Georgetown and pitched a steady game throughout, keeping the seven hits which he allowed them well scattered except in the third when two singles and a double gave the Boston lads two runs.

Georgetown came across with two five-run innings during the game. In the second session singles by Maloney, Dudack, Ormsby and Harry Sullivan, a double by Reynolds over the right field stands and two errors netted five scores at the expense of Fitzpatrick. In the sixth five more came home off Maloney on four passes, a wild pitch, four stolen bases, two errors and singles by Rey- nolds and Gilhooley.

Maloney, the Georgetown shortstop, stopped eight hot ones without an er- ror, and in five trips to the plate scored four runs, made three hits, walked twice and wound up by stealing a base. The summary: BOSTON C. Ab H O. A Corrigan, If ..4 0 2 0 Bond, ss 3 0 0 2 Palmer, ss 4 0 1 () Dempsey, cf 4 2 3 0 Urban, c 4 0 4 2 Halligan, lb 3 1 12 (i Comerford, 3b 4 0 0 1 Haley, 2b 4 2 2 4 Madden, rf 3 1 o o Swann, rf 2 0 0 0 Fitzpatrick, p 2 1 () 2 Maloney, p l o p :J

Total ..35 7 21 13

GEORGETOWN Ab H O A Gilhooley, rf 5 1 1 0 J. Sullivan, If 4 0 1 0 H. Sullivan, lb \. 5 1 io o Kenyon, c 5 0 !) 0 J. Maloney, ss 3 3 ."> 3 Dudack, cf 2 .1 i o Ormsby, 2b 4 2 0 0 Walsh, 3b 3 (i o 2 Reynolds, p 4 2 o l

Totals ,..35 10 27 B Boston College.. 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 o— 2 Georgetown 0 5 10 15 0 0 x—12,

Runs—Madden, Fitzpatrick, Gilhooley, J. Sullivan, J. Maloney (4), Dudack (2), Ormsby (2), Walsh, Reynolds. Kr- rors—Bond, Palmer, Urban, Comer- ford, Fitzpatrick, Walsh. Two-base hits —Fitzpatrick, Ormsby. Three-base hit —Halligan. Stolen bases—Gilhooley (2), J. Sullivan, Maloney, Dudack. .Sac- rifice hits—Dudack (3). Double plays— Maloney to H. Sullivan. Left on bases —Boston College, 6; Georgetown, 8. First base on balls—Off Malonev. .".. Hits—Off Fitzpatrick, 8 to 5 innings; off Maloney, 2 in 3 innings. Hit by pitcher—By Reynolds (Halligan). Balk —Fitzpatrick. Struck out—By Rey- nolds, 7; by Fitzpatrick, 1; by Maloney, 1. Wild pitch—Maloney. Passed ball —Urban.

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Teammates Give Brilliant Support and Georgetown Chalks Up

Four Counters.

Last Saturday, on the 'varsity dia- mond, the Georgetown nine handed a 4—0 trimming to the Fordham team. The game proved one of the most inter- esting witnessed on the Hilltop this sea- son. With Sam Hyman on the mound for Geoigetown and Coulton twirling for the Gothamites it was a pitcher's battle throughout.

The scoring started when in the sixth inning Georgetown got a man on first with a base on balls. This was followed by two hits and an error and the inning finished with Georgetown three runs to the good. The fourth run came across the plate in the eighth when Gilhooley took advantage of a sacrifice.

O'Reilly's men went one better than their opponents in the line of hits, get- ting five to Fordham's four. Fordham lost its only chance when in the fourth inning, after getting the bases packed with only one down Georgetown came through with a double play. The score: GEORGETOWN Ab II O \ Gilhooley, rf 3 1 I o J. Sullivan, If 4 0 1 o H. Sullivan, 3b 3 1 11 () Kenyon, c : 4 1 8 :;

. Maloney, ss. . . 4 1 l 1 Dudack, cf 3 1 2 0 Ormsby, 2b 2 0 1 3 Walsh, 3b 3 0 1 1 Hyman, p 3 0 1 :.'

Total 29 ."> 2? 10 FORDHAM Ab H O A McLoughfin, lb 4 i 7 0 Halloron, rf 4 1 1 0 Keough, If.. 4 1 0 0 Buckley, cf 2 1 5 0 Ueferve, 3b 3 0 2 4 Fay, 2b 3 0 0 0 Start, ss ;i 0 5 0 Cousiveau, c 3 0 4 2 Coulton, p ; 3 0 0 3

Total 2!) 4 24 9 Georgetown 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 1 x—4 Fordham 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0—0

Runs—Gilhooley, H. Sullivan, J. Sul- livan, Maloney. Errors—McLoughlin, Keough, Leferve. Left on bases— Georgetown, 4, Fordham, 3. Stolen bases—Maloney (2). Double plavs— Hyman to Kenyon, Kenyon to H. Sulli- van. Sacrifice hit—Gilhooley. Sacrifice fly—H. Sullivan. Struck out—By Hy- man, 5; Coulloton, 4. Bases on balls- Off Hyman, 0; Coulloton, 2. Hits—Off Hyman, 4; Coulloton. 5. Hit by pitched ball—By Hyman (Buckley).

Diminutive Jimmy Grove, the kid outfielder from Frederick, Md., han- dles himself like a big leaguer. He can give the regulars points on gathering in the sky scrapers and doesn't look bad at the plate. He made a pretty catch in the one game he appeared and should do more than keep a spot warm on the bench.

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Art Reynolds, Great College Pitcher, Saves Day Against

Lehigh With Circuit Clout.

The Georgetown nine found itself forced to go ten innings to beat Le- high, 8—7, on the 'varsity field last Sat- urday. The Hilltoppers trailed along on the short end of the score until the eighth inning, when O'Reilly put in some pinch hitters who delivered the goods. Reynolds saved his own game with a homer.

In the first, the Hilltoppers got two across, but Lehigh came back with as many in the fourth. In the fifth, Fitz- gerald, who held the mound for George- town, slipped, and four came across for Lehigh before the side was retired. Johnson, who was greasing the horse- hide for Lehigh, in his half of the ses- sion lost all sense of direction and staged a free-for-all parade to first base and other circuit points for the George- town batters. When the sponge was finally tossed in the Hilltoppers had an- nexed three runs to their score.

In the seventh, Georgetown started a : ally which was checked in its youth. In the eighth came the pinch hitters. Hyman missed, but Longshak walked into it for a single. Next came Rey- nolds, who began to wind up before he reached the pan, and unleashed a hot one which passed over the right field bleachers in the general direction of the swimming pool. All four sacks were awarded to him without a whimper and the eighth finished neck and neck.

Two ciphers tell the story of the ninth, and Lehigh led off with another far (heir part of the tenth. The Hill- toppers failed to pass the buck, how- ever, and a double by Dooley followed

single by Captain Sullivan was the signal to seek the showers

CORNELL NOSES OUT GEORGETOWN BY 5-4

Ithacans Are Outhit But Manage to Squeeze a Victory by

Bunching Hits.

A few timely bingles in the first and sixth innings enabled the Cornell nine to hand a 5—4 defeat to O'Reilly's dia- mond performers on the 'varsity field in the secohd game of a double header on April 1st. Georgetown hit Rickard, Cornell's pitcher, freely, but he proved effective in the tight pinches.

The Ithacans stepped to the fore in the first inning, when Bonagura's walk was followed by singles by Murphy, Davies and Cross, accounting for two runs. In the fourth they put another across after a three-sacker by Cross and an error by Gilhooley. In the sixth session a second walk for Cross, a triple by Meyer and a double by Spiers earned two more markers for the visi- tors.

Georgetown made a good attempt to come back in the eighth but w^as checked by Rickard after two men had tallied.

A clipping from a New Britain (Conn.) newspaper reveals some inter- esting news about "Tubby" McMahon, ";ie 01 last year's graduates. It seems that "Tubby" is on trial in New Britain for cruelty to animals. The Connecticut lad. whose name has been connected with those animals before, was recent- ly baled into court for throwing a bull. "Tubby" tied the animal to the back of hi- automobile, and dragged it along the mad on its knees, until an officer <>• the S. P. C, A. put an end t.i the tun.

THE H O Y A

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INTERCLASS MEET FRIDAY AFTERNOON

All Is Ready For Big Event On the Cinders.

The plan for the interclass track meet, advance notice of which was giv- en in the last issue of THE HOYA, is now well under way. From all indica- tions, it seems safe to assert that this will far outstrip anything of the kind ever held at the College. Prizes in the shape of medals will be awarded to all those who place in any event. These medals will be on exhibition in the 'College Store," so we'll not make any

attempt to praise them, but let quality speak for itself. The class scoring the highest number of points will receive a handsome silver cup which the Presi- dent of the University has very kindly contributed. This cup will be known as the 'Rector's Cup." and will be a permanent trophy, with the numerals of the winning class inscribed on it each year. Mr. John D. O'Reilly, the ath- letic director of the institution, has do- nated the cup for the championship in- terclass relay. The individual high point scorer will be awarded a cup which is the gift of the Dean of the Arts anci Science " department of the University.

The events will be as follows: Fifty and one hundred yard dashes, seventy- five-yard low hurdles, two-twenty and tour-forty-yard dashes, and the eight- eighty-yard run. The three field events will consist of the high jump, the run- ning broad jump, and the twelve-pound shot put. The final and crowning event of the day will be the championship one-half mile interclass relay for per- manent possession of the John D O Reilly Cup. Each man will run two hundred and twenty yards. This race promises to show some of the prettiest and fastest running of the day.

It is quite possible that in addition to the above-mentioned events there will be a couple of special races, which are yet to be determined by the committee. All the classes have been training in earnest, and there will be a lot of rival- ry let loose on the varsity field next Friday afternoon. The coaches of the different squads have different, but none the less decided views as to which class will be the proud possessor of that cup next Friday evening. How- ever, time will tell, so do your best to bribe the timekeepers.

SEVEN INNINGS ARE ENOUGH FOR YALE

Swamped in Short Contest—G. U. Sluggers Batter Old Eli

for Twelve Hits.

It took the Georgetown team just seven innings to beat the Yale team 8—1 in the morning game of April 1st on the 'varsity field. The Hilltoppers found both the Yale pitchers used rath- er easy and battered them for 12 hits.

Yale managed to get a run across in the fifth after singles by Diamond and Flaherty and an error. Georgetown got one in the first on a hit batsman, a sac- rifice, a fielder's choice, a pass and a single. Two hits and a sacrifice gave them another in the fourth, and a pass, sacrifice and a hit added another in the fifth.

In the sixth the Georgetown team held their field day and slammed Coxe for five clean hits and as many runs. Three singles, two doubles, a pass and two errors did the work and left the Yale team far in the rear.

The game was called in the seventh on account of rain.

" ■■■

THE HO Y A

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"Babe" Ormsby looks like a fixture at second. He needs experience and plenty of it, but with the exception of Harry Sullivan none of the infielders handle the ball as neatly as the "Babe."

It's great to have a winner!

The Phi Alpha Delta Fraternity Home on Sixteenth Street was the scene of a very enjoyable tea on Sun- day afternoon, April 4th. The house was beautifully decorated and, as usual, all who were present remember the af- fair as one of pleasure and success.

Member of Florist Telegraph

Delivery Association

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Phone Franklin 3842

Miss Louise W. Daugherty, Proprietress

The EDMONSTON STUDIO Official

Photographers FOR

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ARE C ORRE C T IN

TREATMENT AND OF

THE CHARACTER CON-

SIDERED MOST ESSEN-

TIAL AND DESIRABLE.

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Tomorrow JACK WILKINSON

FINCHLEY REPRESENTATIVE