I DAY, JUNE 7, 1912. NEW TRAINER WILL COME HANDICAPPED 3 NEW RULES tution Allows Students Departments. to Con- e for Contests, "Steve" Farrell, Formerly of 0. S. U., Who is Unknown Isere, Will La- bor Under Difficulties., ui T: tic GEOLOGY STUDE VISIT TO Professor W. H. logy will take its rday, a trip to th Trenton, Mich., for erving the remarb he surface of the Is located there. hought possible to ions secured for ti * I PROGRAM Is ENLARGED.! PAST RECORD ASSURES SUCCESS ting * ---- Cott,. * The Oratorical Board, at its last r to meeting of the year held Wednesday afternoon, adopted a new constitution * for the government of the Oratorical Association, and discussed plans for the extension of its program during the coming year. The new constitu- tion is radically different from the bld one in that it allows the orator .representing Michigan in the Northern Oratorical League to be chosen from E D t'le three upper classes of all depart- D mients in the University, instead of o, ly from the literary and law classes. TNs change will allow many students w ho were unable to compete under the SLING 01 l plan, to try out for the contest, SIDER bu before the new constitution can CTING take effect it must be ratified by the whole association No attempt will be made td have this done until next year. EAST The program which has formerly been offered by the association will tsed o be enlarged and will probably include se oabout eight numbers. Among those numbers which have already been scheduled are, a reading of Shakes- hat thepeare's Julius Caesar by Prof. T. C. Trueblood; the varsity oratorical con- varsity test; the annual play presented at the es of Whitney theater by the Oratorical as- Sa sociation; and the varsity debate with expen When "Steve" Farrell, the man who the l( is to train Wolverine athletes next will 1 year, takes up his work at the Uni- for De versity of Michigan, he will work un- in the der a handicap. He will come to Ann Arior practically unknown to the stu-SE dent body, and with the student body unknown to him. "Steve" Farrell is a "good scout," however, and those who know him and know of his work at Ohio State claim that it will not br long before he will find a warm place in the hearts of Michigan athletes and Mj(higan students. When Farrell left O. S. U. to take charge of the Montreal Athletic club TREA for the summer, the athletes at the STU Ohio institution presented him with a loving cup. To a man, the athletes CES like "Steve." To quote one of the Ohio men who trained under Farrell, "Mich- igan students will find him one of the CLAS most lovable and picturesque charac- ters and at the same time one of the Asses best coaches that the Wolverine insti- tution has ever had. He is a man through and through, pleasant, talka- tive, and a man who is only too wil- Frar ling to do everything for.his athletes." dent C su SSES SLOW sments "ust be or Payment of Debts will be nk C. Gibbs, Council, has COEDY CLUB TO PRESENT SHOW DURING CELEBRaTION addition to t" ese public presenta- , negotiations have already been ed into with several of the most _modern readers, and although efinite dates have been arranged them as yet, it is certain that at one will appear here during the The Playlet "One Tolo Many" to Given in Connection With Un- Ion Vaudeville Show. be As a special feature of the vaudeville performance to be given June 25 under the auspices of the Michigan Union, it Crn- d'i, 1 bwll r esnt n. a onP act the next r of ap- for any, is power ody. The then be- mne, the varsity cap-. nittee and from that s two men to run ough anybody else, . The scheme has its. is the opinion of d best, be abolished. -is entirely dfferent as in vogue in many t is in short as fol- I election ten men om the sophomore of sport, and these committe'a. At the year, one man will as assistant mana- make this selection aut probably it coach, the cap- or of athletics, Then in. his senior omatica1lAy becomes; e ES y x, ? t= n t year. Another number which the pro- I posed program will include is an ad- 1paylet, "One Too :Many," by D. C. Ry- dress by either Senator Beveridge or an. The playlet will be a repetition Ex-Governor Hughes. of the skit as given a month ago in A committee of twenty men has been Sarah Caswell Angell hall in an in- appointed to make a canvass for mem-' formal fashion before guests of the bers for the association next fall, and, club. The cast as then grouped in- the same men will sell season tick-; cluded Misses Mildred Guilford, and ets for the course at that time. A Bessie Smurthwaite, Messrs. D. C. Nut- prospectus wll be published early th ting, W. W. Campbell, H,. B. Schuer- summer as soon as the final arrange- man, and Clay Wilber. Two changes sumers sfoas the fnarravngem-will be made in this cast due to. the uients for the program have been com- fact that all the members are not- go- d ing to remain through Celebration' Week. Miss Harriet Carrol will re- Dean Bates Leaves for Chicago, place Miss Guilford, and David Cohn Dean Henry M. Bates left yesterday will take the role played by D, C. Nut- for Chicago with the body of his fath- ting. er-in-law, Henry Holmes Belfield, who This performance in conjunction died here a few days ago. Mr. Belfield with skits to be produced by other dra- was one of the earliest advocates of matic organizations will be held in manual training, and at the time of the tent on Medic Green. According his death was director of the Chicago to the calendar, the performance will Manual Training school. . begin at 3:30 p. m. annual financial report of that The figures show a comtfortab ance on hand, but there are small debts incidental to the contests and cap night celebrati outstanding. A number of the assessmer cently levied on the various have not yet been settled,. flue inability of the class treasu' collect the necessary funds. It pected, however, that these w turned in soon, leaving the ( treasury in good condition for year. The report, dated June 6, foll Receipts. Balance from preceding treas- urer................... Rent of push ball........... Class taxes ............. Total D)isbursements Printing................... .8.5 Postage .................... .. 4.° Equipment............... ..1'.' Drayage and labor ...........15.7 Stationery................. 8. Spring contests .............. 12.4 Total ...................... 51. Receipts .............$65.22 Disbursements ........ 51.21 Balance on hand ......14.01 14 C nar -^- e will of 'course require t to the constitution, and 11 prooably be thorough- ut before any definite ac- but this plan has work- sfully in other colleges >ion, is favored by the rrnittee has been ap- ,rne the plan and present HOW CAN THEY GET ALONG WITHOUT US How we love our landladies. How sciences of the peccatum of forgetting many "odes" they indite us. E'en as a lady's due, more especially that of of yore they are manifesting their af- a land-lady. When we would fain re- fection. We are lulled to sleep to the lieve our minds of the daily grind, she minor strain of the vacuum cleaner, reminds us, if not the "powers that lest perchance we should hear the be," of the deteriorating influence of wakeful clamor of the feline or hu- playing pitch for sundaes. It is for man serenade, and awakened at dawn these things, and not in spite of them, by the merry ditty of the lawn mower. that we love her. May she live long As we stealthily gather our mandolins, and wax wealthy. Meantime, for the +nicroscopes, and art galleries into our summer at least, we cry with the poet .biulging trunks, hers are the "lunch- of old, "Ave atque vale." (Try this on h Woks" stretched out to ease our con- your piano-player). About fifty senior laws dined for the the summE last time as undergraduates t the - Michigan Union last evening. Prof. Seniors I] E. R. Sunderland delivered the princi- Three h pal address on "What Is the Matter and gown with the Judiciary?" touching on the Memorial inefficiency and delay of the law. I, the last s E. Ludwig and Julius Wuerthner also complete i took part in the short program which interspers was held before the diners left to join was prese in the all-senior sing at Memorial hall. audience. FIFTY SENIOR LAWS DINE FOR LAST TIME AT UNION. Combined Glee Clubs assisted by Mandolin Club Quartette I I Urniversity Hall o C e r ri.,June 7, 8 P.M. of It , Admission 25c k