STake Another's Daily--SubscribeI The Michigan Daily Read the Daily Ad Before Y( XII. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1911. _. ., .. MAKES A SITY SQUAD, klin Goes to Left End, Bogle Tackle, Quinn to Guard nd Craig to Halfback Po- LAN PILOTS THE TEAM tal Drill, Characterized f Dash, Took the Place of a Scrimmage. by TRYOUTS TAKE PLACE THURSDAY Copies of Music for Opera Rehearsals Being Printed. Vocal tryouts for the Michigan Un- ion Opera will take place next Thurs- day afternoon at 4:15 in the Sphinx society rooms in the Ann Arbor Press building. Tryouts for the chorus will be held at the same place Thursday evening at 7:15. All students, who expect to try out for the opera must see Professor Strauss any week day at 11 o'clock in Tappan hall and receive eligibility cards. No student will be given a try- out without showing an eligibility card. No student who is warned or on probation need apply for a card. This applies also to men having conditions against them, unless special permis- sion can be obtained from the dean of their particular departments. Freshmen will not be permitted to participate in the opera this year, as was decided during the rehearsals last year. Students desiring to try out for the vocal parts and also the chorus should bring their music with them. The tryouts for the speaking parts will be definitely announced later, but will probably be held on Monday or Tuesday evening of next week. "The music for the opera is prac- tically complete," said General Chair- man Cox last night, "and professional copies are now being made for rehear- sals. The opera this year will give opportunity for more men than before to participate, and we would urge that all who are eligible come out and try." Y. M. C. A. CONCERT QUARTET ORGANIZES FOR -SEASON. A musical body known as the As- sociation Quartet has been organized for the purpose of providing music at the Sunday Y. M. C. A. meetings and also for concert work in and out of the city. The members of the quartet are C. C. Westerman, first tenor;tL. E. Butterfield, leader and second ten- or; J. R. Hayden, first bass; and E. G. Kemp, second bass. B. E. Mitchel, a graduate student in the oratorical de- partment, will accompany the quartet as reader. WILL CHAMPION MICHIGAN'S CAUSE Saginaw High School PrincipalI Will Try to Bring Inter- scholastic Meet Here FOUND CONDITIONS FAVORABLE. GARRELS ESCAPES INJURY IN TROLLEY COLLISION. Allan Gaitels, member of the varsi- ty football squad, was a passenger on one of the two D. U. R. cars which were wrecked at Smith's crossing on the Orchard Lake division Sunday .ev- ening, but he escaped uninjured. Gar- rels had been spending the afternoon at Cass Lake and was returning to Detroit. He was seated in one of the rear seats of the car when it crashed into another car which had stopped to change crews, He escaped through the rear door. Several of the people in the car were more or less injured. STAND IN FAVOR OF* PRIMARY ELECTIONS PRAISES LATE JUSTICE HARLAN Dean Bates Pays Tribute to Former Teacher and Friend. During the recitations of the sen- ior law class yesterday moriiing, when a case in which Justice Harlan had delivered a dissenting opinion was dis- cussed, Dean Bates took occasion to pay a high tribute to the late Supreme Court. Justice. Dean Bates studied under Judge Harlan at Northwestern University and later formed a part- nership with his son, in which latter relation he came to know the great jurist intimately. "I never knew a man," said the dean, "about whose absolute upright- ness with reference to all standards of conduct more could be said than of Justice Harlan's. The morals of any proposed act came to him at once by intuition. He could not comprehend chicanery and trickery i the practice and administrAtiqn of the law and when he O find it he became pos- sessed by a rage beyond anything I have ever seen. His character was ab- solutely unsullied. Nothing ever led him from the straight and narrow path of duty and honor. "He may not have been a leader in hair splitting and the technical re- finements of the law but the power of his mind and his absolute uprightness cause me to rank him as one of our great judgos. Though many of his opinions may have been by way of dissent they served a purpose and did a great work." . fa NEW COUNCILI ARE ELECTED UPPER CLAS Body Will Meet Toni Make Plans for the Fresh-Soph Rush, to b Saturday. NEW MEMBERS ARE TO A Two Close Contests Yesterd Victor in Each Case Win] by One Vote. Ten classes elected Studen cilmen yesterday. In the juni ic and junior law classes the v very close, in each instance th winning by a majority of on results of the elections follow Senior lits-Edward Kemp, Siple, and Robert McKisson. Senior engineers--H. H. Steil and Rudolph Van Dyke. st pulled off the shift that has pending for the past week when nt Conklin to left end in yester- practice and moved Bogle from d to the tackle position left va- by the shift of the captain. Quinn' put in at left guard, where Bogle een playing and Almendinger got >b at the right side of the center, Li still and will be for some time, ast, "Bubbles" Paterson. Pontius d good to the coach at right tack- d "Stan" Wells has not lost his t right end. "Shorty" McMillan .n charge of the team at quarter- rday and the way he handled the looked good. Of course there was ,rimmage but the coach put the n through a long signal drill and was more snap and pep display- an has been seen on Ferry Field e past week. ig was in at left half, as the . said he would be after he had how well he played in the M. A. me. He starred there in return- unts and in advancing the ball e will be a good running mate arpell, who looks to be the best t the right side of "Bottles" son, who of course was not'shift- Candidates For Senior Law Presidency Advocate Daily's Suggestion "WOULD DETERMINE SENTIENT" PrincipalW. W. Warner of the Sag- inaw high school will champion Mich- igan's cause at the meeting of. the State Teachers' Association at Detropit November 1 and 2, when it comes to a discussion of the advisability of holding the annual interscholastic FRESHMEN CORRECT FAULTS SHOWN LAST SATURDAY, Coach "Hi" Cole put his freshmen through a strenuous workout yester- day afternoon. The coach directed a lot of his attention to correcting the faults shown in Saturday's game with Mt. Union. Most of the practice con- sisted of signal drill, UNION MEMBERSHIP DINNIR, WILL BE GIVEN TRURKPAY. { 1 j _f l l i meet at Ann Arbor or some other place, Principal Warner was appointed to make a personal investigation of con- ditions at the last interscholastic meet, after the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club had made complaint against the conduct of Michigan students in enter- taining high school athletes after the previous meets. Mr. Warner found conditions all right in every particular and now will fight to see the. inter- scholastic remain a Michigan event. He proposes to put the 14ichigan Ath- letic Association in cpntrol, if it will submit t pertain regulations cover- ing the grounds Pn which complaint was made. The system of primary class lc- tions, advocated in The Daily for Sat- urday, Is meeting with decided favor on the campus. By this system an in- itial election would be held to vote on all candidates in the field, just as formerly. The two men receiving the highest number of Ygte would later be balloteg4 upon in a second and final election. "The proposed system is a good one, I believe," said Roscoe Bonste, t one of the candidates for senior law pres- ident. "It sems pretty late to act on the matter this year, but no one appears to be opposed to its adgption." Harold Curtis, another. candidate for the senior lw presidency, favors the proposed primaries. "The new method would result in a much more representative choice of neu" said Curtis yesterday. "The new pAnary election proposal is pretty certain to be adopted by the senior law class next Frida." said J. W. LaPlont, last year's president.r "The system under consideration will surely determine the sentiment of the class as no other method could"' "I am in favor of anything that will insure the eleetio of the right man," said I. H. Reck, another candidate for' senior law honors, "Hewever, the preferential ballot, ln which every vot-. er e;.sPes. a second ehote*, would bea even more et'eetive, I believe."1 Robert Tipping, another aspirant for the router law presidency, is hiobly int favor of the contemplated system. "It will secure tbe election of the man I This will give the full strength of the squad, as Quinn has been playing a mighty good game and Almendinger and Bogle were going too well to be displaced from the line. "Conk' ought to be .a big success at the end job. Two years ago Shevlin of Yale saw him play in the Minnesota game at Minneapolis and he said then that if Conklin were kept at the end of the line he would be one of the best that football has ever seen. That was, no idle praise coming from a man who is one of the greatest ends that Yale has ever turned out and the Wolver- ine's captain seems to be going in better shape right now than he was last year. Bogle was used at kicking off and he showed great form. He was placing the oval wherever he wanted to and this change ought also to work for the better, as Conklin is one of the best men on the squad in getting down under punts and on the kick off. Garrels was out at the field, but his knee is still bothering him too much for him to play. Torbet is also out of the game with a bad foot and it looks as though he might lose the greater part of the week before he is again in shape. "Varsity" On Sale This Week. "Varsity," the new Michigan field song, by Moore and Lawton, will go on sale Friday of this week. The title page is being printed by a local pub- lishing house. The Majestic orches- tra is featuring the selection. . The first of the series of monthly membership dinners to be given by the Michigan Union this year will be held on Thursday evening. Dean Reed will be the guest of honor and will deliver the chief address of the evening. A musical program has been ar- ranged by Tarl Moore, who has been appointed musical director of these affairs. "Billy" Shafroth, who was un- able to preside as "Fresh" toastmaster as had been planned for the last din- ner of last year, will act in that ca, pacity at Thursday's affair in the guise of ex-Fresh. The price of the dinners this year has been lowered to thirty-hve pents in the hope that mere members will take advantage of them. Tickets may be secured from Chairman Sealby, Francis Murphy, Francis Riordan, Ru- dolph Van Dyke and Richard Sim- mons. Campus Trees Present Problem. It is no small task to care for the several hundred trees on the campus. The job of trimming the more ragged ones was given to a gang of workmen some time befpre school esume& but the men proved to be Inexpert and the work was discntined Phoenix Club Dined at Union. The Phoenix Club, composed of graduates of Detroit Western High school attending the university, gave a dinner last night at the Union. Senior Senior Senior Senior ing. ' Junior Saier. J'unior laws-Arthur Daver medics--William Ed homeops-Lucas HE pharmics--Arthur lits--Fred Gould and engineers--Frank PRESIIENT HUTCHINS GOES TO VINCENT INAUGURAL. President Harry B. Hutchins left for Minneapolis last night Where he will attend the inaugural exercises of President Vincent of the University of Minnesota, President Hutchins will speak at the inaugural dinner and. later befre the Association of atate Universities on "The Curricula of See- ondary Schools." He will return Wed- nesday nl&ht, 4Aliltects Smoke at Union. A smoker for the first year men iA the department of archite ture was held at the Michigan Union last night under the auspices of the Avchi- tectural Society. Must Register for Ohio Bar. Candidates for admission to the Oho bar are required to file a notice atthh, time they commence the ree .t lay. This notice must lge tiled three yea s STUDENTS MANUFACTURE BOATS. Junior Engineers are Constructing, Various Types of Motor Craft. H. B. Pickering and Company is the name of a new firm organized by three engineering students for the purpose of manufacturing motor boats. The officers and members of the company are R. B. Pickering, '13 E, president and manager; J. A. Woodard, 13 E, secretary; and A. F. McFarland, '13 E, treasurer. The company's first product, a boat eighteen feet long, was built last sum- mer on the Huron river. Later on, more elaborate designing was intro- duced, and boats are now being con- structed which retail from $400 to $4,000. The company specializes. in a feature boat of the high speed type. The. factory, which at present em- ploys eight men, is a small wooden building located on the Huron in the vicinity of the Toledo and Ann Arbor railroad bridge. If sufficient orders for spring delivery are received, the eompany will move into larger quar- ters. Prof. Knowlton is Slightly Ill. Prof. J. C. Khowlton of the law de- partment did not meet his classes yes- terday because of a severe cold. Prof. Knowlton has been suffering from a cold ever since he returned from Bos- ton last week, and in consequence the doctor has ordered him to stay at home for a few days. Prof. Knowlton will not meet his classes today, but he hopes to be on duty Wednesday. Jacob Crane. Junior laws-L. H. Barringer. Junior medics--Carleton Woo The Student Council will me night in room D of the Law build 7 o'clock to perfect plans for th nual Fresh-Soph rush which w held Saturday morning on Soutl ry field. All newly elected me of the Student Council are to this meeting and to bring with certificates of election from class presidents. Will Address University Gir Dr. D. J. Sloane of John Ho University will address the girls university at 5 o'clock this afte in Newberry hall. His subject w A New Profession for Women. Union Members Should Get C Members of the Michigan Unio: have not exchanged the receipts them by solicitors for membe cards are requested to do so : dlately. These constitute the res tificates of membership and m obtained at the clubhouse. NEW ATTRACTIONS ON S.L.A. William J. Burns and Harry J. IH Placed on Program. Detective William J. Burns, has been secured by the S. L. . this year's program, will sper "Municipal Graft." He may give thing new. on the McNamara ca which he has taken a prominent It is hoped that he may be. al open the course on October 3( it is possible that he will not be until the latter part of the year. The association has also se Henry J. Hatfield, an interpret national note, to appear on Dece 13. He will give interpretatio Kipling in two parts, one on "To Atkins" and the other on the Indian." Mr. Hatfield has been C stage a number of years recentl appeared with George Hawtrey i "Messenger -from Mars." most desirable to all," is the way Tip-. ping puts it. "The primary election scheme would result in a much more representative choice of men to fill offices," said Raymond H. Fryberger, a fiXth nom- inee for the presidencyo t the senior law class. IF' YOU HAVE MOVED NOTIFY DIRECTORY EDITOR. before the lar, examinations are ta;- fAll changes of- address or informa- en. tion suck as name, address, and phone Any Ohiq students who have r numbers for the Students' Directory yet filed this notice shouV seet ", must be mailed to the editor of that secretary of the law deparufmen A. publication before October 20, or they once. will appear as they were written on :he registration blanks. Two hundred men reported at the The editor and business; manager tryouts for the Syracuse Dunior Week pxpect to have the directory ready for play. ale about the middle of November. Changes Made in Homeop Faculty. The following changes have been made in the Homeopathic faculty: Dr.. Grover Verplanck has been appointed assistant to the chair of surgery; Dr. Ernst assistant to the chair of inter- nal medicine.; Dr. F, B. McMullen will assist the eye, ear, nose and throat chair and Dr. Hildebrandt will assist in electro-therapeutics. I. U More people are seeking S. L. A. Tickets this year than there have been for years. We want Freshmen to sell Buy Your S. L. A. I ckt This-Wook Tickets for sale at S. L. A. wind w in U. Hai from 8 a, m. until 4 p. m. daily, all this week. After 4 p. m. they Iay be had in Treasurers office (Gras uate School room.) Buy Tha,.t iktTdy All men now selling tickets report with tickets. We have very few money today. Those men who are can; sing certain streets are quired to make a report. rst year men and we need y. I.