75th Anniversary Souvenir Edition Y 5- The Micl gan wily Latest Happening 'anniversary Cefel ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1912. f PRICE FIVE Cl PRIC FIE c n UNIVERSITY IS COMMEMORATED THE hOME OF TIlE Almi MI. * *' * * * * * * * * K NIWR UN 'Il FOR BENEFIT emic Procession Was a Feature of the Mornings Ex- ercises. e climax of all the public festivi- if the week was reached last ev- when an all-senior sing,, a con- by the 26th Infantry band, and senior promenade were given. the completion of these practi- everything concerned with the ity-fifth Anniversary Celebration t the Commencement Day exer- comes to an end. campus was beautifully lighted many hundreds of Japanese lan- hung in rows above the walks, twined in and out from the li- to the law building on one side to the Memorial hall on the and when viewed from a dis- while gently swaying in the made a decoration unsurpassed ne, in both beauty and simplicity. He the band was discoursing its to the several thousand appre- e listeners, a searchlight played the crowd, while the nearby' of both the chemical and med- uildings showed up the scene great brilliance. Several pieces rendered by the musicians, and enthusiastically encored. iior Promenade and Reception. rring at the same time as the t was the senior promenade, part in by many of the near- ates. Forming in front of Me-c hall the line passed through stiy hall, down South University engineering building and down agonal walk, ending finally at OF OLDBGRADS, WOLVERINE NINE VINDICATES IT- SELF BY DEFEATING PENNSYL- VANIA 2-1 IN A MOST THRILL- lNG CONTEST. ADAlf BEQUEATHS UNION $100.00. A bequest of $100 has been made to the Michigan. Union by Carl 1H. 0. Adam, '10, whose la- mented death occurred last Mon- day. Word concerning this one of the last wishes of the well known and well beloved young man, was received at the Michi- gan Daily office last night in the form of a telegram from Victor Jose, '13 L, at Indianapolis. No notice of the gift had been received at the Union last night, and it is not known whether it was made by a will or by verbal request. Adam's bequest is the second ever to have been left to the Michigan Union. Last year a like amount was left to t or- ganization by Logan Cheek, '10 L, of Kentucky. The sum was made a part of the building fund, and Manager Heath ex- pressed the belief last night that a like disposition would be made with the amount lately acquir- ed. : * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * k c c z RANKS TOOI SIXTY-EIGHTH ANNUAL MENCEMENT CLOSES JUB WEEK AND THE UNIVEB LIFE OF 947 STUDENTS. Prof. Jeremiah W. Jenks, '78, 1V Principal Speaker at the Exercises. SENIORS WILL JOIN ALUMN J ALUMNI MEET IN ANNUAL SESSION Alumni Were Out in Bunches Furnished Much Pepper and Features, and Nine years of persistent and consci- The Michigan worm turned, and a entious service for the good of Michi- 2 to 1 victory over the Quaker visit- ors is the story of the turning. The contest was a thriller and so was the' crowd of old boys that packed the Ferry field stands. To Baribeau must be given a large portion of the credit for the much ap- preciated and much needed victory. But two clean hits were made off'his delivery during the ten fiercely con- tested rounds that it took to decide the issue. Those two hits fell together but even at that he might not have been scored on had his support been perfect. A single, immaterial pass, is- sued after two had expired in the tenth, speaks for his control. Alumni Furnish Pepper and Features. The "old boys" did as much to make the afternoon a banner one as the ball players. They turned out in bunches and yelled and sang as fans ought to. The '02 parade, much in ev- idence on the campusallday, appear- ed on ,the diamond just after the game (Continued on page 3.) gan came to a close yesterday when the Alumni Memorial Hall Committee of the alumni association was given a vote of thanks, accorded three lusty, cheers, and formally discharged at the annual meeting of the association. The association accepted the offer of a De- troit alumnus, whose name is not an- nounced, to provide funds for a bronze .tablet bearing the names of the com- mittee, to be placed in the building J to commemorate their work. The members of the committee are: Claud- ius B. Grant, '59, Victor C. Vaughan, '75, Edward W. Pendleton, '72, Charles B. Warren, '91, Charles M. Burton, '73, F. H. Walker, '73, Martin L. D'Ooge, '62, and William N. Brown, '70 L. Names were adopted for four of the rooms in Memorial Hall as follows: "Ezra Rust Room," for, the lecture room on the second floor; "Arthur Hill Room," for the reading room on the north side of the main floor; "Dexter Mason Ferry Room" for the north gal- (Continued on page 2.) 4 r i MORE SPIRIT IS Led by their class president, Fred Dewey of Detroit, fifty loyal wearers of the crimson '02 marched the streets of Ann Arbor yesterday to the melo- dious strains of an imported hurdy- gurdy, loudly accented by the mellow but noisome tones of fifty ancient cow bells. Each member of the class was costumed in "purple and fine linen duster," and a white slouch hat bear- ing the class numerals in brilliant red. * * * * * * * * * * UNION AGENCY DOES GOOD WORK IN SECURING ROOMS. The rooming agency installed by the From morning till night the class- Michigan Union for the purpose of mates stuck together, in one grand providing accommodations to visiting celebration of their tenth anniversary. alumni has had no difficulty to date When there was nothing else sched- in finding places for all who applied. uled-such as the class meeting, the At no time was there a rush'at the class- picture, the baseball game, the desk, and the number of applicants class smoker at the Hotel Allenel, or was far less than expected. It is sup- the fire-works display in the evening- posed that the list of rooming houses they simply paraded the streets in to- published by the Union some time ago, ken of their claim that they are as and sent out to all prospective visitors, much "alive" now as ten years ago ( enabled many to engage accommoda- when they applied a pail of red paint to tions in advance. the law building, which, they say, is The Union authorities say that nev- still in evidence. er before has the attituae of the alum- "Pep" in '07 E, Too, ni been better providenced toward the (Continued on page 2.) institution. The seniors today are the chief ob jects of attention and the "old grads will sit back and watch the youin blood pass before the platform of the big tent and receive the coveted sheep skins. Nine hundred and forty-sevei diplomas will be presented this morn ing at the sixty-eighth annual com mencement of the university. Prof. Jeremiah: Whipple Jenks, '78, LL.D. '03, of Cornell University, wil deliver the principal address at the exercises. Prof. Jenks took his mas ter's degree here in 1879 and received his Ph.D from the University of Halb in 1885. He was professor of socia science and economics at the Univer- sity of Indiana from 1889 to 1891 and since that time has been professor of political science at Cornell University Prof. Jenks was also an expert agent of the United States Industrial Com- mission and has been a consulting agent to the United States Department of Labor. The order of march will be similar to that of yesterday. All of the sec- tions will assemble at 8:30 at the same places as yesterday morning. As it is the big day for the class of 1912, they will head the procession and will open ranks at the tent for the Guard of Honor section to pass through and then countermarch into the pavilion. "Colors" will be sounded by trump- eters at 8:15 a. m. and the procession will start at 8:45. After the addresses the bachelor's degree will be conferred and then the advanced degreesand the honorary degrees. At 1:15 p. m. those attending the commencement dinner in Waterman gymnasium will assemble under Tap- pan Oak and march to Barbour gym- nasium. The Wolverine Appears July 2. The first regular issue of The Wol- verine will appear July 2, and assign- ments will be given out July 1 at 1 p. m. The staff is as yet but meagrely filled, and there is much room for summer students who desire to dab- ble in journalism. starting point. Following shortly after this was the nate reception, given to delegates, 'ited guests, graduates and seniors, the UniversitySenate. It was large- attended, nearly twenty-five hun- d guests being present. Music was 'nished by the military band. Campus "Cops" on Duty. ro do away with small boys appro- ating the Japanese lanterns and to serve general order, Chief of Police fel officially swore in sixty under- duates to act as a vigilance com- tee. No trouble, however, was ex- ienced, as all the small boys were mingly not desirous -of "starting" rthing. Academic Procession Unique. )ver five thousand people lined the lks of the campus in the morn- to witness one of the most unique ctacles ever seen in this city, when rly two hundred academic guests i faculty members, accompanied by r a thousand alumni and five hun- d seniors, marched in stately pro- sion from Memorial hall to the big vas pavilion. The visiting dele- es from other schools presented a rel and impressive appearance in ir vari-colored academic robes, Hle the new Michigan colors were ch in evidence on the costumes of ulty members of the university. 'he procession was headed by the h1 United States infantry band, and owing were the alumni of the uni- sity. Next in the line of march THE OLD BOYS C§IV STILL TELL 'EN. Geo. M. Lane, '53, a former secretary of the Detroit Board of Commerce, found a comfortable chair in Memorial hall and proceeded to tell about some! of the stunts that happened while he was in college. "Back in those days they made us go to chapel every morning," he said. "The boys didn't like the idea so nat- urally they concocted many little schemes to give their absence a plaus- ible appearance. There was a large bell on the campus and when we heard it ringing we knew that it was time for the chapel services to begin. "One cold morning in the middle of winter a number of students jumped out of their beds before daylight with a fixed determination to stop the old bell from sending out its daily sum- mons. They made their way to the little belfry each carrying a bucket of water. The old bell was turned upside down and filled with the contents of their pails. In a half hour the water had become a solid mass of ice, the clapper could not perform its ser- vices and there was no call to chapel that morning." E. Bancker, '60 L, who has practiced law for the last twenty years in Jack- son, tells this one: "One of our pro- fessors insisted on delivering long and prosy lectures and they were so dull that we determined to take some dras- tic measures to suppress them. At that time an old donkey was roaming about the campus so the boys captur- ed him one morning, lead him into the lecture room, and gave him the place usually occupied by our instructor. "When the professor arrived and found the platform occupied he was exceedingly abashed but recovered sufficiently to say to the class: "Gen- tlemen, I find that you have chosen one of your own number to address you this morning so I shall postpone my lecture for the present." '76 Was a Live Class! Out in front of the museum enjoying the shade of the tall maples, a reporter found a number of alumni wearing badges of the seventies. "Why .the class of '76 was the live- liest bunch that ever left our Alma Mater,' they said. "Forepaws circus came to town one day, and all the boys went and sat to- gether," said one of the veterans. "Whenever a clown came out and cracked a bum joke we showed our disapproval. Then Forepaw himself made us a littte speech and said he wanted the disturbance stopped. If they wouldn't let us enjoy their fun in the tent we decided to have our own outside so we left the place and proceeded to play havoc with the show. "The nuts on the wagon axles were taken off and carried away, bottles of sulphuric acid were thrown on top of the tent after the corks had been taken out and then the acid ran down and ate the canvass. When the tents of youth eternal, and years have only were taken down and placed in boxes, served to increase the sprightliness the boys got several gallon bottles of acquired by classroom contact with acid from the laboratories and poured the huskier sex. them over the folded canvass. Medics of '62 Are Steadfast. "Finally the old circus wagons be- Five members of the seven living gan to move but they all stopped when graduates in the medic class of '62 at- the wheels started to come off. Other tended the fiftieth reunion of the class nuts were obtained and they got on yesterday. They are Benjamin-Harri- the road again. They were going to son, Dunkirk, N. Y.;- Samuel Perkey, Ypsi but we burned the bridge down Chicago; Preston Rose, Ann Arbor; before they could cross the streams Norman Johnson, Ionia; and Peter and there was no show the next af- Schuyler, Evansville, Ind. ternoon." One Roosevelt Responds From Cuba. Who were these men? Well, all John B. Roosevelt, '72, "oh! yes, they would say was: "The men who quite a distant cousin of T. R." who told this story are the men who did hails from Scuntias Stritis, Cuba, has the stunt. We wouldn't give our nam- journeyed from that southern clime es to the faculty then and we can't: to reunite and jubilate in Ann Arbor. give our names to the public now." First Girl Grad Back Too. IFats off, ye grads of early days. Hats off, ye stripling undergrads, for back to the old town has come one of whom you speak with deference. The first girl graduate of this univer- sity has returned for the reunion of the class of '72. And the name Made- line Stockwell Turner is by no means a forgotten one, for this Kalamazoo graduate, after braving the sensations of being a co-educational lassie before the advent of the turkey-trot, is fam- ous throughout the country as a club woman and authoress-of no little note. Like many of those returning Mrs. Turner seems to have found the spring "The revolution," says he," amounts to no revolution at all. It's mostly newspaper (?) talk." . Four Regents Graduated in '82. The class of '82 deserves to be en- titled the "Regents' class." Regents Beal of Ann Arbor, Clements, of Bay City, Leland, of Detroit, and Grant, of Manistee, all left the university at one Commencement to go out and win for Michigan dignity and prestige. Regent Beal entertained his class- mates at a reunion dinner last even- ing. During the afternoon the august persons of the class of''82 were watch- ed by an interested crowd, as they cake-walked up University hall cor- ridor by way of celebration. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * 4' TAKE THEM HOME. 4~ * * * * * * * * X--* This is the last of three color-.. * ed souvenir issues which The * Michigan Daily has offered dur. * ing Commemoration :Week. All * three-red, green and yellow- * may be purchased at news- * stands, book stores, and drug * stores, as well as on the street. * The three contain a complete * record of the week's events with * biographical and other items of * interest when combined, and * make an attractive souvenir of * the occasion. Don't fail to take * them home with you. * I, * * ... i " w Gti _.__ I y the 1912 lCmtICA IA Bound in full leather Buy at Michiganensian Office Press Building 650 pages Wahr's Book Store F. J. Schleede Special Jubilee feature; Sheehan's Book Store L. C. Schleede Tae the University home with you