Michigan Daily ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1912 THREE MANAGERS an-Democrat n room B of liately after ring. Several ers will ad- NAMED BY BOARD Jos. Fouchard to Guide the Business Destinies of Michigan Daily Next Year. EXAM SCHEDULES ARE ANNOUNCED "Blue Book" Program for Lits and En- gineers Practically Same As Last Semester. (GRANDRAPIDS MEN MEET TO DISCUSS NEXT YEAR'S tA l__~ .g men will take part: t, temporary chairman; iairman of the national e; Arthur Otto, perma- ; John H. Payne, Re- er; and Charles E. Mis- c speaker. Students from Grand Rapids held a dinner at the Union last evening, un- der the auspices of the Grand Rapids club. Plans and suggestions for the work of the club next year were dis- cussed. It is the intention of the society to join with , the Grand Rapids alumni and hold a picnic sometime during the summer, in order to interest prospect- ive college students in the University of Michigan. SCHOEFFEL AND CLARK CHOSEN. SECOND WEEK LIST IS LARGE. At a meeting of the Board in Con- trol of Student Publications, held yes- LITS FUNDS UNION )R UNION LIFE MEM- IS GREAT SUCCESS. IMEN WILL AP. L SENIORS. terday afternoon in West hall, three men were elected to manage the bus- iness 'affairs of three 1912-13 student publications. Joseph :v. Fouchard, '12, '14 L, of Munising, was chosen bus- iness manager of The Michigan Daily; Carl G. Schoeffel, '13, '15 L, of Free- port, Ill., was elected to take charge of the finances of the 1913 Michigan- ensian; and William E. Clark, '12, '14 L, of Munising, was selected as busi- ness manager of next fall's Students' Directory. Fouchard will take full charge of the accounts of The Michigan Daily next fall, succeeding "Rom." Dilley, the present manager. The former has worked on the business staff of the paper for two years, and during the current year acted as assistant to the business manager. Schoeffel will commence his duties immediately toward making prepara- tions for the publication of the 1913 Michiganensian. He has served on the year-book staff for two years. Dur- ing the illness of Frank E.Shaw,Jr.,the present manager,Schoeffel took charge of the business affairs of this year's Michiganensian. Clark succeeds Glen Alcorn who was business manager of the 1911 Students' Directory. Schedules of examinations for the literary and engineering departments for this semester were announced yes- terday. The program differs only slightly from that of last semester. The schedule of examinations is as follows: Courses with first recitation of the week on Af SORF-THROAT kY FEES NEXT FALLI I, wuin U11l l ! I AW CLAIMS MANY.. Monday or Wednesday. At 8--First Wednesday morning. At 9-Second Wednesday afternoon. At 10-First Monday morning. At 1-First Thursday afternoon. At 2-First Thursday morning. At 3-Second Tuesday morning. First recitation on Monday. At 11-Second Tuesday afternoon. First recitation on Wednesday. At 11-First Tuesday morn-ing. First recitation on Tuesday or Thursday. At 8-First Monday afternoon. At 9-Second Monday morning. At 10-First Tuesday afternoon. At 11-First Friday morning. At 1-Second Thursday afternoon. At 2-First Wednesday afternoon. At 3-First Saturday morning. First recitation on Friday. Any hour-Second Wednesday morn- Look With the VICTIMS HERE HOSPITALS AND DOCTORS BUSY CIRING FOR THOSE AFFECTED WITH PECULIAR DISEASE OF T lE TIIR()AT, MALADY IS NOT DANGEROUS Disease, Said to Be Angina, Prevalent Recently in Several Large Eastern Cities. stander. The ti lishment and the associati the butt to the number of thirty- Lready pledged their life e Michigan Union, in the A has been instituted to erships. The twenty com- ho are conducting the Iging by the partial re- rere received yesterday, g memberships from ery three men approach- lie majority of the class canvassed, but every sen- proached within the next I I ) mnlent and December of this year. The cam- paign will be continued until' May 31 among all the departments. The fol- lowing is a list of the senior literary students who had taken out the life memberships up to last night: Max Howell, Warren Crane, Harry Folz, Paul Schick, Joseph Fouchard, T Clarence Dean, John L. Cox, Earl d Wightman, Leslie Bell, Morris Houser, D Arnold Houser, Lorenzo Wood, Robert t Shaw, Rowland Fixel, Sylvan Grosner, George Beis, David Vesey, Emmett - Taylor, Arthur Moehlman, Herbert t Watkins, Mark Finley, Edward Kemp, t Louis Stern, Walter Pritz, Kenneth Osborn, William Restrick, Frank Pen- nell, Reginald Collins, Clair Hughes, t Mack Ryan, Lawrence ,Abrams, Will- iam McCormick, Maurice Toulme. Er- win Bosworth, '13, and Leonard Reis- er, '14, have also taken out member- ships. TEN JUNIOR LAWS INITIATED INTO FOLD OF BARRISTERS Senior Law Society Holds Initiation Banquet at Mack's Tea-Room. GAME WILL DECIDE CHAMPS OF INTER-CLASS DIAMOND. Fresh Engineers and '13 Laws Will Probably Struggle for Final Honors Tomorrow. The final game in the inter-class se- ries will be played tomorrow after- noon on the Varsity diamond, and the result' will determine the champion- ship of the campus for this season. It is now an assured fact that the fresh engineers will be one of the partici- pants, and according to the showings of the other runners-up, the J-laws will probably be the team to cross bats with them. The class of ball displayed by the fresh engineers this spring has been of an exceptional order for a class team, and the fact that the junior laws were able to overcome last year's champs, the senior lits, speaks for their strength. The game is expected to be the closest and most exciting of the inter-class season and the fact that Sisler, the freshman phenom, and Lan- igan, whom the laws have been saving especially for this game, are slated to do the twirling for their respective teams, makes the contest of interest to all. A charge of twenty-five cents will be made in order to help defray the expense of the sweaters that will be given to the new champs. Editor of Joy Book Visits Ann Arbor. Donald Kahn, former Michigan man, and now editor of the Joy Book, of South Bend, Indiana, was an Ann Ar- bor visitor yesterday, leaving last night for Detroit on business. Alumnus Gets Responsible Position., According to a report from Illinois, ,received by the Alumni association, Robert McMurdy, '80 L, has been elect- ed vice-president of the Illinois State Bar Association. ing. First recitation on Saturday. Any hour-Second Thursday after- noon. First recitation on Any Day At 4-6-Second Thursday morning. . I Drawing 4, 4a, 5a. First Wednesday afternoon. Irregular Courses. First Friday afternoon. First Saturday afternoon. Second Monday afternoon. The sore-throat epidemic is still given pushing its way through Ann Arbor. ation Despite the efforts of the medical au- noni to ha thorities to check the spread of this an al peculiar malady, many have come in The contact with the disease. The Uni- ciatio versity hospital and local- physicians issuir received many patients for treatment sertir yesterday and many were so severe in izatio character that confinement was rec- claim ommended. that I The sore-throat has been diagnosed rectic as angina, and is the same disease that betto: visited New York, Baltimore, Chicago, years and other large cities a few weeks ago. The As has been previously reported, the ent t: sore-throat is so contagious that it af- to ha fects all who come in contact with the A those already afflicted with it. For this organi reason, the authorities advise that ev- to th eryone should use precaution and keep scrib away from those already affected. memi The disease, however, is not serious, The and will not develop into diphtheria or discu: any other malady commonly inciden- at its tal to sore-throat. Cultures of the next germs have been prepared in the bac- letic1 teriological laboratory, and, the hos- favor pital authorities are in a position to grant give proper treatment. hand, ose 0 to .A ,Despite the protestations of the counselors that there were none in the 1913 law class fit to become Bar- risters, ten juniors were admitted to the senior legal organization yester- day afternoon. This decision was reached only after those seeking., ad mission had been marched about the campus, and told of the evils of the dents, engineers, medics and lits,whose dens were pointed out, to them. Those who were admitted after hear- ing the warnings, and promising to respect nothing but the law, follow: Burke Shartel, Dion Birney, Stanfield Wells, John Gutknecht, Hector Young, Peter Balkema, James Cleary, George Burgess, Robert Mayall, GeorgQ Thom- MICIIIGAMUA WIGWAMS OPEN FOR NINE MORE PALEFACES. Senior Society of Lit and Engineer- ing Departments Holds Second Initiation. With the setting of the sun last ev- ening, the Tribe of Michigamua set out upon the war-path for its second spring rampage and captured nine palefaces from the literary and en- gineering departments. The men who smoked the peace pipe for the first time were: John Coolidge, W. C. Trib- le, Carroll Haff, Godfrey Strelinger, James E. Hancock, Walter Hopkins, Frank Gibbs, Selden Dickinson and Edward Saler. IIOMEOPS GARNER EASY VICTORY Fresh Medics are Defeated 9-0; Id- son Stars for. Homeops. Pounding the horsehide all over the lot yesterday afternoon, the homeops carried away a 9-0 game from the '15 medics, without giving the young- sters half a chance to become danger- ous at any time. Idson was stingy with the number of safeties that he yielded and proved powerful in the pinches, striking out nine men. Batteries: Homeops-Idson and Smith; '15 medics, Koebbe and Goeh- ring; umpire-Baker. "FREDDIE" GOULD FORCED TO, UNDERGO SERIOUS OPERATION "Freddie" Gould, '13, who has been confined with a severe attack of pneu- monia, was forced to undergo a seri- ous operation Wednesday night. The attending physicians reported his con- dition as much improved last evening. DEDICATE SMOKER TO PROF. HILL Foresters Bid Farewell to Member of Forestry Faculty. "I am more grateful than I can ex- press, to you men here tonight who' have opened your hearts to me and stretched your imagination a bit en- deavoring to assure me that I have had some small part in the success of Michigan's forestry school," saidiProf. C. L. Hill, of the forestry department, at the Forestry club smoker at the Union last evening, in response to the presentation of a pair of field glasses to him by the students in his classes. The smoker, the fifth and last of the year given by the Forestry club, was held in honor of'Prof. Hill, who leav- es Michigan in June to go into private worlY. SIGMA XI WILL HEAR COMSTOCK. Wisconsin Professor to Speak Before Scientists This Evening Prof. George C. Comstock, of the University of Wisconsin, will deliver the annual Sigma Xi lecture in Sarah Caswell Angell hall tonight at eight. The subject of his address is "The Vis- ible Universe as a Subject of Current Speculation." It is open to the pub- lic. After the talk, the members will in- itiate the fifty-one men recently elect- ed to membership, and hold their an- nual banquet in Barbour gymnasium. Wives ( culty Men I ics Courses composed 'o '- - l A : members of the faculty Lansing yesterday, afte ed the home economics M. A. C. The trip, whit cial, was made at the tion of President Snyd sing institution. All the members of pressed themselves as with the department a opinion that. similar co gan would be successi was presented to the Bo some time ago for the such a department at matter was referred I under Regent Beal, wh sidering the project. Death of Mother Calls I Harry C. Rood, Jr., a has been called to his h gon; on account of tih mother. He is undecid er he will return to sch ening Boar ment. Th sition have uate by th week. One m+ board has exp ing the entire to the Union the Alumni as. to carry the d of Regents f e Union has ta z, at the same the right to iss button that ho e Athletic asso( Plans for the new building of the Pulitzer School of Journalism, at Co- lumbia University, are now completed and in the hands of the officials for approval. The structure, of limestone and granite, will be six stories high. "Stover atL Yale" has had the larg- est circulation of any recent book dealing with college life. n banqueted at Mack's ean H. M. Bates, Prof. and Barristers Veder, delivered the toasts.