r THE HESPERIAN. FOOT HALL EXCHANGE. M I l i The first match game of toot ball ever played at the U. ol N. took place Saturday, November 23, between the elevens of the Senior and Sophomore classes. The elevens met on the campus at 10 o'clock and with A. M. Troycr, '91, as um pire and Professor H. N. Allen as referee, play was called and the game began. The Sophs having secured choice of goal the Seniors kicked off. No brilliant plays were made by cither side, but few iouls and not many real errors, but both sides showed lack of organization in their playing. Downs were of rather too frequent occurence, and the ball was in touch more than was of pdvnntagc to cither side. The Seni ors held an advantage in having the heavier and stronger rush line, and succeeded in charging the line of the Sophs several times, while the Sophs were strong and did some ex ccllcnt work with their half backs. At the end of the first half the score was 4 to 4. The second half was hotly contested but the deciding goal was secured by the Seniors, owing partly to an error by the Sophs. The players were as follows: SENIORS. SOPHS. McClatchic Captain and Quarter Back Troycr Holmes Right Half Back Hyde Marsland Left Half Bace Stockton Tingley Back Yates Peterson Snap Back Dingcs Farmer. Right Guard Wolfe Almy LeftGuard Barklcy Cope Right Tackle Scntcr Taylor Lcft Tackle Sheldon Hcarn Right End Rusher McFarland Stoughton Lett End Rusher Skilcs the score: Seniors: Touch down failing goal 4 Goal by touch down 6 10 Sophs: Touch down failing goal 4 4 notes. "Line up 11!" "Where's Cope?" Let me kick it." Physicoponiacus. Almy caught a slightly blackened eye. Tingley played back because he could kick. Troyer's proboscis looks rather conspicuous for a prohib. "Peter" will invest in another cap before the next game. Wc did not know that Dingcs was so "red-headed" be fore. White had seen the Seniors play "by rule" before and preferred to go hunting. The Freshmen have added to their quasi-dignity by chal lenging the Seniors, to a game of foot ball to be played De cember 7, 1890 (?). We wonder which of the Sigs got to bet on the winning side; but it'made "no difference for it was all in the 'frat' anyway" and they had to "have some fun out of the game somehow." The foot ball committee have accepted the challenge of the University of South Dakota to play us a game of foot ball here, at any time after next Saturday. Now the only proper thing to do is, to practice foot ball, or to pray for cold weather to set in at once. The Su-arthmore Phoenix for November is entertaining and instructive. The cane rush was abolished at Ilavcrford this year by the "action of the college," so says the Iaverordian. Wc would advise the manager of the ChaJdoek to enlarge their paper. It is rather small for n monthly journal. The University Beacon publishes under the head of "Uni versity World" nnd "Society Initiations" a great amount of trash that might better be consigned to the waste basket. The Oxvl from Doanc college has favored us with a visit, so long expected that wc were beginning to think it had for gotten us. However, wc arc pleased to find that it still re members us. We presume it was news, but when wc read for the nine hundred ninety-ninth time in our exchanges that "Michigan university has more students than any other American col lege" wc thought it was a chestnut. Judging by the descriptions of frat banquets given in the Lombard Reviexo, frats in the East arc pretty much like Irals in the West; that is feasting and having a good time in gen eral is by them regarded of more consequence than anything else. The Practical Student publishes a sermon that Dr. Tal magc delivered in Rome not long since. Of course the ser mon U good and instructive but then we advise the Practical Student to practice more with the pen and less with the scissors. The University of Michigan has entirely abolished the marking system. This is the first time, wc think, that the experiment has ever been tried in an American college and the result will be awaited with interest by colleges through out the country. Two features that detract considerably from the merits of the Muhlenberg arc "Among the Poets," and "Thought Gems." We would suggest that the space occupied by the former be devoted to original matter, and that something not quite so suggestive of n last year's almanac be substituted for the latter. The Ottawa Campus, of Ottawa university, exhorts the students to make that institution glow with oratorical enthu siasm for the local contest soon to be held. Brother, we sym pathise with you, and wish you may be able to excite the dc-sired-for enthusiasm, although wc almost despair of accomp lishing a like result here. The fraternities at the Northwestern university are going to publish the college annual this year, apparently having completely ignored the non-fraternity clement of the uni.ver sity. Yet they would have us believe that fraternities do not cause strife and contention. Wc remember well amove that the frats made here not very long since. The Vidette-Reporter contains an interesting and able article on "The Constitutional Relations of ihe State to the University," by cx-Gov. A. J. Kirkwood. After giving some very good reasons for state support of higher education he closes by a plea for "more means to do its work." The whole article could be read with profit by some of our so called legislators. The Blackburnian takes to task some of the Illinois col lege journals because they are dissatisfied with the result of the state contest, and because in expressing their disappoint- ment they insinuate that the judges were incapable. We say