ie Michigan Daily ..:.. Vol. XXIV, No.-152. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1914. PRIG FIVB PRICE FIVE ... SHIFTED TEAM BESTS LAVANS SQUAD 9 TO 2 Varsity Men Swap Positions, Use Sub- stitutes and Still Romp Away With Easy Victory COACH AND CAPTAIN ABSENT; BAKER DIRECTS ACTIVITIES McNamara and Payette Do Slab Duty For Youngsters But Fail to Fool Batters Sans coach, sans captain, with two substitutes in the lineup, and right fielder Benton appearing behind the bat for the first time since the squad was indoors, the Varsity had no trouble in defeating the All-Fresh team 9 to 2 yesterday afternoon, in a contest which went six rounds. Short stop Baker was in charge of the nine, and sent Waltz in at Hugh- itt's corn, and Shivel into Labadie's berth in left field. Hippler, of the catching staff, traded places with Ben- ton, and all of the men acquitted them- selves without misplays.- A hit by Benton, and errors by Gray and Thomas gave the Varsity a two run lead in the first inning. In the fourth, however, the regulars began to find McNamara, and hits by Hippler, Howard and McQueen, a hit batter and two passed balls, gave the Varsity four runs. Shivel's double in the fifth, following Hippler's walk, netted a run at the ex- pense of Payette; and in the sixth Sheehy and. Howard scored when Kraus dropped the third strike on Ben-. ton, and threw to first. The freshmen collected two runs off+ Davidson in the third round. McNa- mara walked, and Brandel hit him home. Nieman's single scored Bran- del. Ferguson, who threw the lasti three innings for the Varsity, held the+ freshmen safe without a run. The Varsity lined up and batted as follows: Sheehy cf; Howard 1b; Mc-I Queen2b; Benton c; Baker ss; Waltz: 3b; Hippler rf; Shivel If; Davidson p; and Ferguson p. All fresh: Thomas 3b; Brandel lf;I Nieman cf; Maltby lb; Kraus c; Gray! ss; Patterson rf; Barterlo 2b; McNa- mara p; and Payette p. CAP AND GOWN COMPANIES MAKE DELIVERIES THIS WEEK Caps and gowns were received by Henry & Co. yesterday, and are ready for distribution today to those who have ordered them. Mack & Co., andI Kyer will be ready to make deliveriesA either tomorrow or Friday. Orders1 will be received by all the contracting firms until Saturday night. A deposit of $5.00 is required when the gowns are delivered, of which $3.00 will be refunded when the outfits are return- ed. Reports indicate that nearly every senior will be in the swing-out paradew next Tuesday.E SEVEN SENIORS ARE PLACED BY APPOINTMENT COMMITTEEI EVENTS FOR TODAY Tau Beta Pi dinner, Michigan Union, 6:00 o'clock. Round-Up club smoker, Michigan Un- ion, 8:30 o'clock. Student's recital, School of Music hall, 4:15 o'clock. Graduation recital by Miss Katherine Darby, pianist, School of Music hall, 8:00 o'clock. Try-outs for Soph relay obstacle race, fair grounds, 3:00 o'clock. EVENTS OF TOMORROW Varsity band concert, Hill auditorium, 8:00 o'clock. President Harry B.. Hutchins speaks at Harris hall, 6:30 o'clock. Prof: John Allen speaks at Graduate club dinner dance, Michigan Union, 6:15 o'clock. Graduating exercises for nurses, Sar- ah Caswell Angell hall, 8:00 o'clock. Soph engineer class dance, Michigan Union, 8:00 o'clock. Michigan-Syracuse baseball game, Fer- ry field, 4:05 o'clock. George S. Shelton gives public address in University hall, 4:15 o'clock. Canadian club smoker, Barrister's rooms, 8:00 o'clock. PLACE NO LIMITS ON ENTRY ROSTER Farrell to Allow All Eligible Track Mein to Compete in Varsity Meet CHOOSE 15 JUNIORS FRESHMEN SHOW LITTLE CLASS PEP FOR LAW REVIEW! - - -- - Board Picks Men for Staff From Elected by Whole Class List I Only 12 Men at Fair Grounds Yester- day for Tryouts in Annual Obstacle Races ALMA GLUCK TO OPEN FESTIVAL Won Great Favor Last Year; Initial Concert Mlay 13 Alma Gluck found a warm place in the hearts of Festival patrons when she appeared at the May festival in University Hall two years ago. En- dowed with charm, radiant health and a wonderfully beautiful voice, this COUNCIL PLANS J .YOF 6MEMBER Special Meeting Passes Resolution] Delegation of. Judicial Powers to Small Body PICK FROM LIST NAMED BY PRESIDENTS OF UPPER CLASS WILL HOLD ANOTHER ELECTION Fifteen junior laws were elected to the board of editorial assistants of the Michigan Law Review for "the coming year, at a meeting of the Board of Con- trol of the Review yesterday afternoon. .he elections were based upon scholas- tic standings, from a list elected by the class as a whole. Those elected were-W. F. Black, H. C. Bogle, M. K. Brown, L. M. Hall, V. H. Hampton, F. J. Kennedy, W. I. Mc- Kenzie, S. W. Marx, R. B. O'Harra, A. M. Reed, W. R. Roberts, Saverio Ro- sato, C. G. Schoeffel, E. R. Thurston and J. G. Tucker. A second election will be held just after the June examinations. The num- ber to be elected at that time will de- pend upon whether or not all the can- didates who are elected at the meeting yesterday accept. However, at least six additional men will be placed on the staff. NEW APPARATUS WILL MAKE AUTO LAB BEST IN COUNTRY A $2,000 dynamometer is being test- ed by the Diehl manufacturing com- pany, and on completion will be sent to the automobile laboratory. The ad- dition of this equipment will make the Michigan laboratory superior to any college automobile laboratory in the country, and equal to the great testing rooms of the leading automobile fac- I TRIALS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY First freshman tryouts held yester- day afternoon at the. Fair grounds, for the relay obstacle races, indicated that the yearlings are lacking the necessa- ry pep, in that only 12 aspirants sum- moned up enough energy to run trial heats. As 48 men will have to be se- lected from each class to fill out the three 16-man teams, the student coun- cil urges the first and second year men to turn out in larger numbers. Owing to the non-arrival of the obstacles and barrels, the soph tryouts scheduled for this afternoon, have been postponed. Instead both freshmen and sophomores will be given final opportunities to land places on the teams Friday after- noon from 3:00 to 5:30 o'clock, and Saturday morning from "9:00 to 12:00 o'clock. In accordance with the plan of elect- ing captains for the various contests, as adopted last year, Waldo Fellows, '14, Spencer Scott, '14P, and H. G. Tait, '15, chairmen of the contest com- mittees have apportioned the election of .captains among the classes in the following way: Freshmen engineers will elect cap- tains for the lightweight tug-of-war team, the second relay and the push- ball contest. Freshman lits will choose the heavy-weight tug-of-war team, the middleweight team and the first relay team. The combined department fresh- man homeop, dents and pharmics will elect a leader for the third relay team. Sophomore engineers will select the heavyweight tug captain, and first and second relay team leaders. Soph lits will elect a middleweight tug-of-war captain, and a leader for the first relay team. Fresh laws will elect the push- ball leader, and the combined depart- ment sophs will choose the lightweight tug-of-war captain. The elections will be made by the va- rious classes at meetings neld next Monday afternoon, and will probably meet Monday night at the Union to make final plans for the contests. PAGEANT CHORUS HAS BEGUN WORK American soprano has won for herself an enviable position throughout the musical world. Her appearance in Hill auditorium, therefore, as soloist with the Chicago Symphony orchestra will be awaited eagerly. This concert, which takes place Wednesday, May 13, will open the 21st annual May festival. Roth Will Attend Cornell Exercises Prof. Filibert Roth will represent the university at the dedicatory exercises of th'e new forestry building at Cor- nell May 13. PLAY. TWO GAMES IN CLASS LEAGUE. Senior Engineers and Junior' Win Easy Victories on Ferry Field Laws Constitutional Provision Regarding "Disorderly Conduct" Limited by New Clause With the adoption of a resolution providing for the delegating of the judicial powers of the student council to a jury of 6, selected from 15 men appointed by upperclass presldentsthe council at a special meeting last night, finished the work of revising the pres- ent constitution. The radical change is embodied in the following resolution. "Resolved, That when a case arises, the council will, if it so desires, re- quest each upper class president in the various departments, to appoint one man from his class to serv( t the jury. From this group of 15, th coun- cil will select 6 which will constitute the jury, before which offenders will be tried." The wording of the resolution does not make it imperative that a jury be chosen for each offense, for by the phrase, "if it so desires," the council can use its discretion in calling a spe- cial jury, depending upon whether it deems the offense important enough to warrant such procedure. The action of the'council in provid- ing the special jury for important tri- als, comes as a result of the long trials in the riot charges, resulting from the trouble after the Pennsy game last fall. The many activities of the coun- cilmen made it almost impossible for the members of.the council to devote sufficient time to the trials, and the plan of delegating the jury duties to a selected jury has been the result. The other change made in the con- stitution last night was the limiting of the phrase "preventing disorderly conduct," by which the police duties of the council were defined in the old constitution, by the following resolu- tion: "Resolved, That it is the duty of the council to prevent hazing, rioting and destruction of property. After warn- ingt such offenders, it shall be the duty of the council to bring same to ac- count." The complete changes will be drawn FOX SWITCHES TO SIX TEAMS TO BATTLE TODAY TWO-MILE I Trainer Farrell will throw open the Varsity meet Saturday, to anyone not in scholastic difficulty, departing from the custom in past years of limiting the entries. With the Syracuse meet due on the following week end, the crippled track squad has got to be braced up in a few events, or the Methodists will take a victory. The hurdles, jumps, and weight events are weak, and Farrell is looking to the Varsity meet to partially remedy this trouble. The fair weather yesterday after- noon gave the trainer the chance he has been waiting for to put his men through a hard practice. Several races were held in the short distances. Fox has been switched by Farrell from the mile to the two mile race, and will probably run in this event, Saturday. Ufer has not yet recovered from his ankle injury received Sunday, and probably will be out of the mile in the Varsity meet. Watt, one of the two milers, also on the hospital list is getting back into shape, and may be able to appear Sat- urday. MICHIGAMUA TO ROPE IN 12 BRAVES THIS AFTERNOON Under the historic Tappan Oak, Mich- igamua, all campus senior honorary society, will hold a public initiation at 6:00 o'clock this afternoon, when 12 juniors will be admitted into the se- crets of the society. Following the public initiation the tribe will go to the club rooms on North University avenue, where the formal initiation and banquet will take place. tories. WILKINS WITHDRAWS NAME FROM UNION NOMINATIONS To the editor of The Michigan Daily:- Because of circumstances which make it impossible for me to return to Ann Arbor next year, I regret that I must withdraw my name from nomi- nation for presidency of the Michigan Union. J. HERBERT WILKINS, Jr. BIG DAY PLANNED FOR A LL SENIORS Tickets for the all-senior dinner- dance, to be held at the Union after the Swing-Out, May 12, are being sold rap- idly by the social committeemen of the various senior classes and at the Union desk. Strings of lanterns will deco- rate the scene, and if the weather per- mits, the tables will be set upon the lawn. Immediately after the swing-out, the seniors will go to the Union grounds, where a 6:00 o'clock dinner will be served. At 7:30 the festivities will be transferred to Memorial hall where an all-senior sing will be held. Immedi- ately after the sing at 8:30 o'clock, the dance will begin, lasting until mid- night. Because of the large atendance, it is planned to devise some system of checking so that each person will be enable to dance every other time, The price of the tickets is set at $2.00 and only 250 will be sold. Steam Calliopes Play Yellow and Blue Three special trains, advertising the San Francisco Exposition of 1915, by means of banners and steam calliopes, paid their respects to Michigan yester- day afternoon as they passed through Ann Arbor on the M. C., playing "The Yellow and Blue." Due to the postponement of the soph engineer-fresh medic game, only two matches were played in the interclass baseball series yesterday afternoon. With Wheat in the box, the senior engineers allowed the fresh laws only one run, while they were piling up eight counters for themselves off But- ler's delivery. By winning this game, the engineers eliminated the first year laws, and established their right to entrance into the second round of class baseball. Ex-captain Haff, of the track team, pitched the junior laws to their first victory over the junior dents in a 12 to 4 game. Each team has a game in the series of three, and the deciding bout will probably be staged Friday afternoon. By mutual agreement, the soph engi- neer-fresh medics game was postponed until today. The scheduled games for The first rehearsal of the giant cho- rus for the Jeanne d'Arc pageant was held in Barbour gym Monday after- noon, when Prof. H. A. Kenyon started the chorusites learning the steps to Mozart's minuet, from the opera "Don Giovanni." A large number were on hand for the initial rehearsal, and Pro' fessor Kenyon was pleased. Practice for the main cast will not be held be- fore the last part of this week, and a full dress rehearsal probably not until just preceding the final performance. Individual members of the Varsity band will be used in the pageant but not the entire band as was previously announced, because of the nature of the music. Mr. E. V. Moore, instruc- tor in the school of music, is busy writ- ing some of the melodies. Tickets for the pageant will proba- bly be placed on sale the latter part of this week, the time. to be stated in the Daily. Anthony Appointed to Militia Service B. B. Anthony, '14, has received an appointment from the war department at Washington, D. C., for a position in the constabulary service in the Philip- pine Islands. He sails from San Fran- cisco June 25. this afternoon are as follows-junior ! up by Spencer S. Scott, chairman o engineers vs. soph medics; soph lits vs. fresh lits, fresh dents vs. all-home- ops. PAUL BLANSHARID IS PICKED AS ORATOR BY SENIOR LITS Reconsider Action Abolishing Office; Memorial Committee Makes New Suggestion The election of Paul Blanshard as class day orator, after deciding to re- consider the previous action of abol- ishing the office, featured the business session of the senior lits yesterday af- ternoon. Directly after the election, Blanshard resigned from the office of class toastmaster. The memorial committee reported that the suggestion of a campus bulle- tin board had not met with a favorable reception, and suggested a loan' fund of $500 instead. The matter was laid on the table until the next class meet- ing, to give class members time for considering the question before taking definite action. the revision committee, and will be Adopted in the constitution at the meet- ing next week, after being tabled for one week. NEXT UNION DINNER JUNE 8 TO BE ANNIVERSARY AFFAIR The next Union membership dinner will be held June 3, and will serve as the celebration of the tenth anniver- sary of the founding of the Union as well as an inaugural dinner for the new officers. Plans are being made for a big affair and an exceptional pro- gram will be provided. CAPTAIN TO TELL STUDENTS OF SUMMER TRAINING CAMP Mr. George S. Shelton, Captain of the 29th U. S. Infantry, stationed at Fort Niagara, N. Y., will give a public ad- dress on "The Summer Military Camps for Students, Their Objects and Op- portunities," in University Hall at 4:15 o'clock tomorrow. The camp for 1,is summer is to be situated at LudLgion. The appointment committee has se- cured appointments for the following sniors during the last few days: Fran- ces Green, Crystal Falls, Latin and History; Arthur Wulff, St. Johns, Sci- ence; T. E. Johnson, Coldwater, Super- intendent; F. S. Pierce, Mt. Pleasant, Secretary in the Normal School; Eula Schlack, Fremont, Latin; Harvey Ro- sa, Hancock, History; Myra Collinson, Iron Mountain, Civil Service. Round-Up to Choose Officers Tonight The Round-Up club will hold a smoker and business meeting at 8:30 o'clock tonight at the Union. Election of officers for the coming school year will take place. Plans for the annual banquet and initiation, to be held Fri- day, June 5, will be formulated _--^-, h- FEATURES -40MEN MICHIGAN'S FIRST BAND GIVES A SOLOISTS THURSDAY B - -THURSDAY hMAY 7th 8 P. M. Tickets may be bought at Wahr's, Sheehan's, The University Music House, Goodyear Drug Co., So. University Phar t