le Michigan Dai I y I-- FAIRNESS INELEUTI REQ1IRES EQUAL LWBI I y XIV, No. 13. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1913. PRICE FIVE PRICE FIVE x 1 .. . ,___ . _ __.._____ _-_ . ___.._ f VARSITY MEN SCORE THRICE. IN HARD TILT Mead leturns to Scrimmage, Playing Fulback For Regulars Who Have Tussle With Reserves. SCRUB! NEARLY SCORE ON FO]WARD PASSES OVER GOAL Gault NlH Be Out of Rough Work For Or a Week, Being Badly Injured. Scrinnage on Monday, a rare oc- currenc at Ferry field, was yester- day's pgram in which the Varsity second Arng men scored three touch- FRESHMAN TENNIS PLAYERS PLAN FOR SPRING PRACTICE More than 50 tennis racquet wield- ers met last night in the trophy room of Waterman gymnasium for the pur- pose of organizing and laying plans for the spring session. In short talksĀ° given by Ex-Captain Andrews, Dr. Lee, John Switzer and Director Rowe, the youngsters were urged to take advantage of, the fall weather and make use of the two courts that have been set aside for them. Willis Broadhead was elected manager but it was decided not to choose a captain until the caliber of the players could be more accurately determined. The spring tryouts are to be con- ducted in the form of an elimination tournament, and of the last six re- maining, Dr. Lee will pick four as a representative team. BASEBALL COACH VISITS ANN ARBOR, Carl L. Lundgren, Rickey's Successor, Stops Over to Look up Team's j Prospects. RECOMMENDED BY FITZPATRICK, PADEREWSKI TO nPEN PHnRAI SUNION CONCERT Famous Pianist to Appear Next Week, Matzenauer and Philadelphia Orchestra to Follow Before Holidays. RESERVED SEATS WILL BE PUT ON SALE THIS MORNING Concert on January 23, Will Include Choral Union and Two Noted Soloists. The Choral Union series will be opened on October 22 by Ignace Pader- ewski, the famous pianist, who has oc- cupied a unique place in the musical world and continues to fill it with ac- customed brilliancy. He is the one pianist who, like Patti in the vocal world, seemed to obtain an extraordi- nary hold on the masses. As Pader- ewski has not been heard in Ann Ar- bor for twenty years,his coming should be a particular treat. The second concert, November 12; ANNOUNCE MEN MANAGERSHIPS Candidates Appointed to Run for Ath- letic Association Offices Are to Refrain From Electioneering. BRUCE-HULBERT PLAN OF CAMPAIGNING TO BE USED Baseball, Track Managers and Assist- ants to Be Chosen on Saturday. Nominations for the posts of 1914 Facts Concerning 11 1. Offices for men-Dr.H.H.Cum- inings, 723 Church street, tel- ephone 1349-L. Dr. C. B. Stouffer, old homeopathic building, university exchange telephone. 2. Office for women-Dr. L. C. Pratt, telephone 233-J, hours by appointment in Barbour gymnasium. 3. All services free. * * * * * * * , ,* nfirmary. It * * * * * * t , BAND PROBLEM TO BE SETTLED THIS MORNIN lirector Bairtelnie, Professor Whiti and a Student Council Member to Decide Fate of Organiza- tion Today. QUESTION OF CONTROL STILL OFFERS MOST DIFFICULTI Club to Consist of 40 Pieces, Thi] Receiving Moietary Rewlard, Ten to Remain Tryouts. A committee of three men, with f powers to act, consisting of Direci P.G. Bartelme, Prof. A.S. Whitney ani member of the student council, to appointed, will meet this morning Twelve Students Take Rhodes Exam. Twelve students, including four from Hope College, Holland, Mich., will take the examinations for the Rhodes scholarship which will be con- ducted by Professor Winters, at 10:00 o'clock this morning, in room 102 uni- versity hall. downs a the scrubs. Mead' return to scrimmage for the first tim since he fractured his ankle precedig the Case game was the fea- ture of tie afternoon. His return was doubly velcome since Gault's injury has prced more serious than at first supposd. Gault will be unable to return o rough work until after the M. A. t game. The oach did not send in a single man wo took part in the ,Mount Un- ion gale, merely giving them the us- ual wckout and chasing them to the clubhase. As the scrubs put up a great .ght the coach had an excellent opporinity to look over the men who are figting for a regular place on the Varsit. The scrubs started out to make troub3, rushing the 'ball to the two yard ine in five minutes. End runs by Lvidson and Cohan, and a for- ward pass from Davidson to Staatz gavethe scrubs the ball on the five yardline but a fumble on the two yard linegave Mead an opportunity to punt out 'lie kick was high and short and Cohn fell on it on the two yard line, bu a forward pass from Davidson wd* dropped on the Varsity goal line, ani the scrubs were on the defensive fren then on. recovering from their stage fright, (Continued on page 4.) XN-RBER OF LIFE MEMBERS GROWS IN UNION CAMPAIGN Life members of the Michigan Union -imber 343. Of these 91 have complet- ,d the payment of the membership lee, while 252 are participating life members. The life roll includes 14 students who are in school at present. Patrick Duffy Koontz, '14, is the only life member who has signed up this year. Active membership reached 2,540 last night while at this time last year but 2,030 men were registered. TO HOLD WELCOME DINNER' TOMORROW, r t 1 Carl L. Lundgren, who will succeed Branch Rickey as Varsity baseball coach, was on Ferry field yesterday afternoon looking over the Wolver- ine prospects on his way to Detroit. Lundgren is a football man as well as a baseball player, having occupied the positions of half and fullback on the University of Illinois eleven. How- ever, it is as a pitcher for the Illinois school that the new coach is best known here. Entering that institution in 1898, Lundgren pitched for four years dur- ing the period when baseball rivalry between his school and Michigan was at its height. Lundgren has pitched several games on Feryr field and was favorably impressed with the many improvements which have since been made on the Wolverine battlefield. Lundgren captained the team in 1902, his last year; and was recom- mended to the Chicago National League team by Coach Huff. For sev- en seasons the new Michigan coach was with the Cubs, pitching for them in the days when the Chicago aggre- gation reached its greatest perfection, and won two world championship ti- ties., Since then Lundgren has coached the Princeton All-Fresh two years, and it was oni the recommendation of Keene Fitzpatrick, the old Wolverine trainer, that the Illinois star was se- cured to take Rickey's place. Lundgren merely stopped over in Ann Arbor yesterday, and will not re- turn until some time in February, when indoor baseball work will begin. Meanwhile he will remain at his home in Marengo, Illinois. WILSON VICTOR IN CUP TOURNAMENTl will introduce Margeurite Matzenaeur, one of the greatest contraltos in the world. , For years Matzenauer was looked upon as one of Europe's best, and it was not until two years ago that the Metropolitan Opera Company was able to engage her for New Yoik,where she made an instantaneous success. The directors of the University Musical Society were at once anxious to have Matzenauer appear in Ann Arbor, but it was not until this summer that it was found possible to make satisfac- tory arrangements. On December 9 the Philadelphia Or- chestra of 95 men under the leader- ship of Leopold SBokowski will ap- pear. This organization ranks as one of the few really great orchestras in the United States, while its leader, though still a young man, is recognized as an eminent conductor. Of unusual interest will be the con- cert to be given January 23, involving, as it does, the combined efforts of the Choral Union, two soloists of note, Madame Lucile Stevenson, soprano, and Marion Green, baritone, and the use of the great organ in Hill Auditori- um. ' The last of the pre-festival series will take place February 18, when Carl Flesch, the distinguished Hungarian violinist will appear. Mr. Flesch has never appeared before in America, but in Europe he has been recognized as one of the two or three great violinists -in fact many consider him equal to the celebrated Ysaye. The sale of reserved seat tickets for the Choral Union concerts will be- gin this morning at the university school of music. At that time choice of seats in Hlil auditorium will be of- fered to the public by exchanging their course tickets,'and paying a res- ervation fee of $1.00. On Thursday the price will be reduced to 75 cents; on Saturday the reduction will be to 50 cents;. and on and after Monday, October 20, the price will be further reduced to 25 cents. These tickets are not reserved for the May Festival,< but must be exchanged for other tick-1 ets later in the year, in accordancea with the usual plan.I baseball and track managers and as- sistants, made by the board of direc- tors of the athletic association at a session held Saturday morning, were made public yesterday afternoon fol- lowing another meeting at which the final arrangements to govern the elec- tion were determined upon. Under the new system which has been adopted, four men have been chosen as candidates for the positions of assistants to the two managers. Besides choosing the manager two assistants are to be elected, each voter being instructed to cast his ballot for two assistants to both the baseball and track manager. The election for manager next year will be held with these two assistants as the candidates. It is the opinion expressed by mem- bers of the association directorate that under this 'system a more competent man will eventually be chosen and that more effective work can be done by the -men themselves. The members of the board of direc- tors last night stated that the new sys- tein had been adopted primarily for the purpose of making the positions competitive in nature. They also stat- ed that should any of the candidates be found guilty of participation in active political solicitation, for votes that such action would lay them open, to disbarment by the directorate. The annual election of the baseball and track managers and their assist- ants is to be held on Saturday in room 18 of University hall between the hours of 8:00 o'clock in the morning and 2:00 o'clock in the afternoon. Ac- cording to the regulations for the election, issued last night by athlet- ic association officials, every student on the campus is eligible to vote. Bal- lots are to be cast following the pre- sentation of the proper slip, to be designated soon by the athletic asso- ciation, clipped from the year book. According to an announcementl made last night by former president Harold Hulbert of the student coun- cil, the four candidates for the posi- tions of managers are to meet with the elections committee of the council at the Michigan Union on Tuesday even- ign at 7:00 o'clock. At that time the question of the publication of plat- forms under the new Bruce-Hulbert plan of election campaigns will be dis- cussed. Nominations are as follows: For baseball manager: Walter Em- mons, Herbert Muckley; assistants: Chester H. Lang, Ralph F. Khuen Percy .Crane, E. R. Hazen; track man- ager: Gordon Eldredge, Charles Ar- thur Crowe; assistants: Victor Pin- nell, Beresford Palmer, Lyle Harris, Emmett F. Connely. TO LIMIT OUTSIDE WORK OF WOMEN Campus Activites to Be Restricted According to a System of Points. LOW STANDINGS REDUCE RIGHTS Beginning this semester women will be restricted in the number of campus activities in which they participate.. All activities are tabulated,each count- ing a specific numbei of points, of which no woman may carry more than 10 at one time or more than 12 points a semester. Card index files will be kept of all the women taking part in campus affairs, so that no infringe- ment of rules will occur. No women who has received two D's or one E the preceding semester may carry over five points of outside work. A standing lower than this will allow the student to carry one point. Al- though eligible women may carry 12 points a semester, no one is allowed more than 22 points for one scholas- tic year. Activities once undertaken and re- corded may be exchanged for others; with the permission of Dean Myra B. Jordan and the organization from which the woman wishes to resign. The card index record is to be in charge of three women students and a member of the non-athletic commit- tee, and shall be under the direct al-- thority of the entire non-athletic com- mittee. The object oif the women's league in adopting this plan is threefold: to more evenly distribute' the honors of the campus, to more efficiently fill the offices, and to raise the scholarship average of league members. Listed at the top of the scheme is the presidency of the women's league, which counts seven points, followed by the class vice-presidencies at six points. The leading woman's part in the Comedy club is rated at four points, other activities decreasing in proportionate value. BIG Y.I. C. A. MAN TO SPEAK TO WOMEN THIS AFTERNOON A. J. Elliott, international secretary of the middle-western section of the Y. M. C. A., familiarly known as "Dad" will speak to the women of the uni- versity in Newberry hall at 5:00 o'clock this afternoon. His address, "The College Quitter," delivered at; the University of Iowa and the Uni- versity of Kansas recently, was en- thusiastically received."" Members of the Y. M. C. cabinet and specially invited guests will attend a banquet in his honor at 7:00 o'clock. 1 settle once for all the fate of the uni- versity band. In brief the plan submitted by the student council provides for a paid and uniformed band. which will attend every Saturday afternoon athletic con- test on Ferry field, every indoor track meet at which any other college is a contestant and all mass meetings pre- ceding such contests. The band will consist of 40 pieces, thirty receiving actual monetary remuneration and the remaining ten to be kept as tryouts. The forty men will be chosen by a committee consisting of two council- men, one member.of the old band and the band director. The mpst radical change, 'however, lies in the attempt to secure a direct control of the band. It is proposed that a student "who will be in no other way connected with the band, be appointed as manager, and whose duties will be to have charge of all funds, engage a director, manage the activities of the band and make a financial report to the auditor and comptroller of university organiza- tions." This step is opposed most strongly by Ike Fisher the contemplated direct- or of the reorganized band. According to Mr. Fisher the new plan will only serve to keep alive the inefficiency which has marked the control of the band in former years. Real control he says should be centered in one man who will take up the work year after year and who can devote his whole time to the work. To have an under- graduate in charge, who would hold office only for one year, would keep the organization in a state of contin- ual unrest. Aside from this he fears that the position, when once obtained, would be looked upon solely as a col- lege honor, and receive the accompa- nying lack of attention and work. His remedy for this is to have a res- ident faculty member appointed, who will sign binding contracts with the men who are appointed to the band, and who will take personal charge of (Continued on page 4.) UNION BOAT CLUB PICKS OFFICERS Officers and committeemen of the Michigan Union Boat club for 1913-14 were chosen at a meeting at the Union Sunday morning. Henry S. Parsons, '15E, was picked for commodore, the chief executive office. The following men were appointed on the, commo- dore's committee which directs the administratiion of the club: Harold S. Hulbert, '14M, K. S. Baxter, '15E, C. C Mills, '14, . S. Dickinson, '13'15L, E. G. Kemp, '12-'14L, and E. H. Saer,' '1 3-15L. The other officers and committees were chosen as follows: vice commo- dore, W. S. Davidson, '15; vice-com- modore's committed, H. B. Little, '15E, G. A. Webber, '16, Gleed Miller, '14, A. R. Griffes, '15E R. A. Hill, '14E, and D. H. Willia is, '16; secretary, P. H. Middleditch, '15E; secretary's committee, D. R. Ballentine, and J. R. Darnell, '16; treasurer, H. G. Gault, '15; treasurer's committee, W. EReid '16E, and Edmund Marth, '17E; first ensign, J. C. Abbott, '15E; first en- (Continued on page 4.) Tickets for the first Michigan Union- membership dinner to be held at 5:30 Under ideal weather conditions and tomorrow night are being rapidly dis. with Ferry field courts in splendid posed of. The .committee plans to shape, E. C. Wilson, captain of the accommodate 200 in the large dining tennis team, yesterday won the varsity room. The remaining tickets may be championship and the honor of having obtained at the Union desk or from his name engraved first on the silver members of the committee. loving cup recently presented by Re- The function will be called a "Wel- gent Comstock to the athletic associ- come Dinner" and has been planned ation. especially for first yearbmen. Presi- The final match brought out the dent Harry B. Hutchins will be the best tennis pf the toprnament. Both principal speaker and Selden Dickin- men started in top form and the first son, president of the Union will act as eight games were evenly contested, toastmaster. nearly a11 going to deuce. By rushing Prof. James P. Bird and Harold S. to the net and placing his overhead Hulbert, '14M, will give short talks shots well, Shafroth out-generaled the and Arthur Cohen, '14L, has promised captain and finally broke through his a monologue. Mr. J. R. Hayden, in- service, taking the set at 6-4. structor in the political science de- In the second set matters were re- partment, will furnish the vocal mu- versed. Shafroth fought gamely and sic. made some seemingly impossible re- The dinner will celebrate "Michigan turns, but was unable to handle con=. Day" which Capt. Inman Sealby, '12E sistently Wilson's speedy shots. He, is trying to establish. Many alumni lost the set 6-4, organizations already hold their reg- The third set was a long drawn out ular Wednesday luncheons and by affair and was finally won by Wilsoni holding the membership diners on at 11-9. Shafroth's vain efforts to Wednesday, Capt. Sealby believes that handle Wilson's clever service in this the custom may he more quickly set tired him greatly, and Wilson had] founded. no trouble in taking the final set, 6-1. YPSI THROWS OUT CLUTCH & HOLDS SPEED AT NORMAL No more will the fair damsels of normal authorities, believing that the Ypsilanti trip the fantastic steps un- known to the eagle eyed chaperones. No more will they shake the festive foot and the erstwhile pensive pedal extremity to the seductive strains of a hidden orchestra with the knowledge that their revolutions. convolutions, and fantastic gyrations are creating a whirl of obfuscity in the minds of the watchers. No more will the perspir- ing and eager student expostulate, "Oh, but we were dancing it correctly. It was danced just that way. at Big Harbor and Newport." The drastic blow has fallen. The chaperones, ignorant of the proper steps which compose the modish danc- es, are unable to decide when they are being danced within the limiting bonds, have engaged a profesio al tango teacher to instruct them in the maze of slides, glides, hops and stran- gle holds. I Perhaps, when the course of in-J struction is finished and the chap- erones have learned to evade the full nelson and clutch hold, there will arise from the deserted partners of the feminine sex, the cry, "Chaperon,, chaperone; who's got the chaperone?" DAMM SALOON CASE WILL BE BROUGHT TO TRIAL TOMORROW The case of Lawrence J. Damm vs. People, which was continued over from last Tuesday, will come up for trial in the circuit court before Judge Kinne, tomorrow morning at 9:00 o'clock. Damm was arrested last May for selling liquor to James H. Minzey, '16, in violation of the state law against selling liquor to students. Colonel Kirk, of Ypsilanti will rep- resent the defendant and Prosecutor George Burke will appear for the state.