THE MICHIGAN DAILY IFR 11 i ,, rllll I L.1[ u e r 'ES VIEWS 5I NLIS IN COLLEGEFO0OTBALL, FRANCIS WALLACE, NEW YORK SPORTS MAN, DISCUSSES PRESENT SYSTEM ALUMNI INFLUENCE GAME Article States That Graduates Ask For Spectacular Contests And Players Speaking of the courses open to colIege's to prevent football from tak- ing on too professional an appear- ance, Francis Wallace of the sports department of the New York Evening Post has outlined three policies which might be followed. This article ap- pears in the November issue of Scrib- ner's magazine. In a previous dis- cussion in the Daily a criticism of the methods of scouting of prospective football players was made. The game of football, according to the article, is played by the outposts of the amateur system far beyond the corrals of the college; but sectional titles and championships are dearer to the home-town alumni and depend upon the astuteness of the home-town1 scouttin selecting plbyersfor his pchool. The interesting point is that these preparations go right ahead on a clear track despite the announcements by college presidents of various plans to check the growing menace, of over- emphasis of footballandadespite the code of the Committee of Sixty. A. Lawrence Lowell; president of Harvard, summarized the typal at- titude of the faculty leaders in his annual report to the overseers. He de- clared that the true end of athle,,ic interests is the promotion of physical development and well-being through- out the student body and asserted that intercollegiate contests must not be regarded as entertainment for the alumni and public. He deplored the excesses of spectacular games, which he said, resembled the world series in baseball, and the games in the Coli- seum in' Rome. Most End iere Most of the collegiate announce- ments end at this point. Doctor Low- ell calls attention to the fact that Harvard has courageously moved to reduce the evil by not playing contin- uously with any other college except Yale. Ernest Martin Hopkins, president of Dartmouth, is much more revolu- tionary. "The administrations of the American colleges and universities have, up to date, spent most of their energies in deploring present condi- tions," he said, "and after this have recognized only two alternatives, either a policy of laissez-faire with an occasional grumble from the faculty president, or else a policy of annihila- tion. This latter is a simple and easy solution, but I think that it ignores the fact that intercollegiate football in particular, has certain values in a college community." Dr. Hopkins is advocating a plan to limit the players on Varsity teams to members of the sophomore and junior classes, giving each college two var- sity teams for major games, one to play at home and the other on the rival's gridiron, and would have all coaching done by undergraduates. This is precisely the plan proposed previously by President Clarence Cook Little. West Organized. The opponents. of football vice in the Middle West are much better or- ganized, the article says. The West- ern Conference not only regulates the conduct of its members but serves as a model for other conferences and brings all important schools in the West under its sphere by insisting that every college which engages in contests with members of the Big Ten subscribe to the Big Ten bible. Major John L. Griffith serves as atheltic commissioner. Recently his activities have been supplemented by the 4Com- mission wph b8pues mittee of Sixty, which is made up of/ six men from each college-the presi- dent, chairman of the board of reg- ents, a prominent alumnus, the faculty athletic chairman, the athletic direc- tor, and the football coach. The com- mittee drafted a code o fethics to be followed in the recruiting of prospec- tive athletes and announced that foot- ball canididates will be required to sign and abide by the code. The prac- tices which the code forbids are those which are universally employed in the signing-up of lads who wish to work their way through college with their football talent. The code has five points. The first states that scholarships, loans, and re- mission of tuition should not be awarded by universities on the basis of atheltic skill; it brands as uneth- ical the unofficial granting of aid to athletes by individuals and organiza- tions, alumni or otherwise. It also forbids athletic directors initiating proceedings with prep-school athletes but permitry them to make inquiries and to describe the advantages of their institutes. Faculty Object. The objection to football comes chiefly from faculty members who are in some way or other jealous of the fame the sport has gained. Over-em- phasis of football could be prevented by a simple act of the faculty will in stopping the commercialism of the game. "The one trouble with foot- ball is the hypocrisy of the faculties, not the coaches." MASSACHUSETTS ELECTRICITY PROFESSOR INVENTS !FRESHMAN, ARMY "THINKING MACHINE" TO DO HIGHER MATHEM ATaCS INTELLIGENCE IS -NOTED IN STUDY l NEW YORK, Oct. 26- There is no flattery for the army in the report of ...Dr., W. R. Atkinson, psychology in- ry stiuctor at Southwestern college, that J;Z....~? ~ '- th axerae intelligence ofthe fresh- -0an i~cclass is equivalent to that of a United States army major. Dr. Atkin- scn announces further that two years go the freshman was equal to to a 1, iarmy sergeant in mental acuity, last ,rear equal to that of a captain, and this year to a major. This indicates he says, that the present class rates above the average. However, there is a question involved. Inasmuch as the army is th* normal, there is some doubt about the compliment awarded to the freshmen, although the pro- fessor spoke of acuity, not "vacuity" DANA TO ATTEND DETROIT MEETING Samuel T. Dana, dean of the School of Forestry and Conservation, and members of the faculty of the forest b. school will leave today for Detroit to ' ~attend the annual meeting of the Woodturners association. Dean Dana { .\. .: .will give a short talk on the new for- estry school, outlining its purposes °' ,,_ ..... ':.and telling of its plans for the future. ARIZONA-Sophomore men of the An electrical machine with a mechanical mind that solves involved mathematical problems too com plex fo b Uliversity of Arizona will not wear the human brain has been perfected at the Massachusets Institute of Technology, Boston, by Dr. Vannevar lush bla ck h ards dbes professor of electric power transmission, and a staff of research workers. Dr. Bush is shown adjusting the pasne easofrhandoe nger e machine, which is called a product "product integraph. was the reason for abandoning the cap1 an. now Captain SCully is right- uCKes are far Superior OPENINGi Mimes THEATRE WED., NOV.2 Comedy Club will present I ulc I i a. comedy by (l G0 S. Kaufman and WHITNEY THEATRE I Marc, Connelly Photo by V. S. Bent SA TURDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER 29 Ernest Hanes and Charles Allais present V.. if Charles Rann Kennedy's Gireat Dramatic Masterpiece "The ervant in the House" You t00, will find that LUCKY STRIKES give Captain Charles B. Scully, Noted Swimming Coach and Lecturer, writes: "As Dircptor of The Life Saving Service of The N. Y. American Red Cross I am called on to make frequent speeches and to broadcast weekly. I must always have a clear voice-unirritated, with no chance of coughing. Lucky Strikes, my favorite cigarette, permits me to smoke as much as I choose and still keep my voice in perfect condition. Furthermore, because of their fine flavor, I recommend Lucky Strikes to all the champion swimmers whom I coach." aue Glorifying the American Dumbelle with the greatest pleasure- Mild and Mellow, the fin- est cigarettes you ever Dulcy says: CHARLES ALLAIS and a distinguished supporting company including "It's the intention, smoked. Made of the not the ift that Frank Howson Jane Carr Edwin Fulcomer John C. Davis Betty Boice Arthur Jacobson I Production directed by the atithor Settings by Kate Drain Lawson of The Theatre Guild, New York choicest tobaccos, proper- y aged and blended with great skill, and there is an extra process "IT'S TOASTED"-no harsh- ness, not a bit of bite. sayW" counts, always Seats, 75c Mail 'orders now. Box Office sale opens Mon., Oct. 31 The acting was individually artistic and unquestionably the last word in dramatic performance. The company was as one artist." 66 AlE vrdiniAs