?1je U. otT AT. Wai jj. VOL. II.-No. 37. UNI MUSIC AT THE U. OF M. The Advantages we Have and Those Which are to Come. The untiring zeal of Prof. Stanley and the enthusiasm of the Choral Union will begin to manfest them- selves next Friday evening with the Detroit Philharmonic Club concert. To say that our Choral Union this season will present the finest series of concerts evergiven in the state or any other western university, is but repeating what has been stated many times by the leading state papers, and is by this as good as an axiom in the minds of not a few. The foundation of the above state- ment is not taken from any press notices, nor from any musical critics of limited ability, but comes from such prominent musical critics as Krehbiel, of the New York Tribune; Ison, of the Boston Advertiser; Henderson, of the Times, and Wil- son, of the Traveler. The Boston Musical Review, the most critical musical journal of our country, which is presided over editorially by the men mentioned above, gave a very enthusiastic editorial on the musical work in the U. of M., in which the statement was made that, "So far as public achievement is concerned the situation there is without a parallel in this country." Farther the Musical Herald, of Bos- ton, a standard on musical criti- cisms, gives a long editorial in which the following lines are found: "There is a fine enthusiasm in col- lege circles in Ann Arbor toward music. The University of Michi- gan has established thorough courses in musical sciences, history and msthetics, and the zeal of Albert Stanley has made them popular. There is in connection with the Uni- versity the Choral Union, which stands sponsor for a varied course of concerts, all of a high character, upon which the community relies. Under Mr. Stanley, the standard of taste and execution has advanced until a work like Berlioz's ' Faust ' can be announced without fear of an inadequate performance, While Ann Arbor is the University of Michigan, and the University of Michigan is Ann Arbor, the fact re- mains thatso far as musical advance- ment is concerned, the situation there is on a plane above anything of its kind in the United States." VERSITY OF MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1891. PRIcE, THREE CENTS. Musical advancement has reached such a height in the past few years that with the same hearty co-opera- tion of the students and citizens that has been shown in the past, the U. of M. may and can have as a valua- ble side issue one of the best musical conservatories in the country. Our future achievements and ad- vancement generally rests in the greater part with the hearty support of the students. It is not enough to say that students should be liberal in their purchase of season tickets, but that each and every student should avail himself of so great an opportunity of enlarging his own aesthetical nature, and the building up of so great an undertaking. Communication. Editors U. OF M. DAILY. "Graduate's" communication in Monday's DAILY suggests a more pertinent question: Why did not the Lecture Association reserve seats for the entire course, at the begin- ning, and put an end to the present antiquated custom ? All lecture courses in our larger cities (not to mention scores of towns far smaller than Ann Arbor) adopt the practice, and the purchaser can feel sure that when his seat is once secured he need feel no further anxiety. If it is impossible to recall the tickets already issued, it would not be difficult to furnish each season- ticket holder with an additional card entitling him to the same seat for the seven entertainments remaining. The present system (or lack of it) stands in striking contrast with the enterprise shown by the management of the association along all otherI lines. K. Foot-Ball Scores. Dartmouth 14, Amerhest 14, tie game; Boston A. A. 24, Trinity o; Georgetown 30, Washington and Lee so; Manhattan A. C. s6, New York A. C., o: Yale 76, Wesleyan o, Yale being minus McClung and Heffel- finger; Harvard 44, Stagg's eleven 4; Crescent 28, Orange o; Swarth- more 48, Dickinson o; Rutgers 70, University of New York 4; Bucknell 12, Pennsylvania State ..'Io Penning- ton 42 Hockettstown 6, final in preparatory. championship of New Jersey; Wyom ng ,aehigh second o; Cornell 24, Lehigh o. The Cornell-Lehigh Game. (OF YOUR - Cornell defeated Lehigh on Satur- oURi SOCIETY LADGE day 24 to o. Lehigh is not as WL55 strong this year as last, while Cor- Mailed to You nell has improved. That Lehigh-Through Your has fallen from the high position it NEW held last year is evidenced by the(C lAPTE IF( large score by which the University _ of Pennsylvania defeated her two Upon -:- .. weeks ago, the score being 42 to 6. PRICE APPLICATION. The first touch-down was made byV- Osgood by an end run, at which WRIGHTkIIV & (0 both Osgood and Horton excel. I LIST Cornell's largest gains in the short Manufacturers of Finest Plain and Jewelled Society Badges. rushesare made by Johanson by theDETITd ha-iety H. tackle plays. Horton, left-half made a run of 40 yards around the right end, during the first half. Towards the close of the second half Ordway, of Lehigh, broke through Cornell's line and with a clear field before him made a run of 6 yards, being overtaken, however by Barr, of Cornell, and downed. The first half ended 16 to o. To this Cornell when you want the Latest Metropolitan styles added eight points in the second in Shoes at 50 cto s a pair less than Ann Arbor half. Lehigh was much weakened prices, send for catalogue to by the absence of several of her R H. FYFE & @ strongest players, who had been dss- * * abled in the Pennsylvania and La- DETROIT, MICI. fayette games, played shortly before the Cornell game. Chap. Speller & ,. The teams lined up as follows : University Outfitters, CEL.. . Er 201 SoUTH STATE ST., ANN ARBOR. Fssy----- rght cad -----Walker ___ Barr.---..-....-.-right tackle.---.--- s..-.Blunt Griffith-...........right guard--...-Sheldon Neckwear, Galbreath.--.--..-...-.centre.--- ..-...-Balliet Conon-ci........left guard-.-.....-Wooden Dress Shirts, Gloves, Johnson-------.-.-lefttackle.-.....--.Houston Young ~-------------atend- -BlheUnderwear, White-----s--qarter-back----Mci~lung, Osgood-------------right-half.--s.---.Johnson GENTS' FURNISHINGS of Best Horton--...........left-half.-.........McQueen * , Quality. SCo.........uts-hack.....- .Ordway Medic Sports Postponed. jiILOOODS, Tihe sports which were to take Englia Macklutosies, place Saturday morning between the Athletic and '94 and '95 medics were postponed . Gymnasium Goods on account of bad weather. The OF EVERY DEsCRIPTION. foot-ball game was claimed by the '95 men by default, as the '94 eleven SIYE TIME AND DONE failed to appear. The rest of the By Buying your sports, consisting of soo yards dash, light and middle weight wrestling contests, and sh ot p ut w ill p robablyoc u d ri g t w e k M a Cl occur during the week. Mac Cly- monds '94 and Cooley '95 represent of us while we are here. the classes in the dash. Swanteck and Adams are the '94 wrestlers. CALLAG HAN & CO. '93 vs. Normal. PUBLISHERS The '93 lit. eleven will play ,lthe, eleven of the Normal Athletic As- 114 Monroe St., Chicago. sociation of Ypsilanti, on the Fair Grounds, next Saturday morning.- 50 S.'State St., Ann Arbor.