le Michigan Vol. XXIV, No. 155. ANN ARBOR, MICrIIGAN, SATURDAY., MAY 9, 1914. VARSITY TEAM FACES STRONG EASTERN NINE Methodists Cross Bats With iSsler's Men at 3:30 O'clock-If Weather Man Permits EVENTS FOR TODAY Girls' Glee club concert, Sarah well Angell hall, 8:00 o'clock. Cas- Junior-freshman girls' lupcheon, Mich- igan Union, 12:00 o'clock. Weekly membership dance, Michigan Union, 9:00 o'clock. Final fresh and soph relay obstacle race tryouts, Fair grounds, 9:00 o'clock. Varsity track meet, Ferry field, 2:00S o'clock.Y Mirhi~rr_'vaxs~ anal m'~r 11 ORANGE AME TO FOLLOW CLOSE OF TRACK EVENTS Syracuse Coach Saves Star Twirler to Stop Michigan's String of Victories The Fates and the weather permit- ting, a baseball game will be staged on Ferry field this afternoon when the Wolverines will clash with the Orange- men from Syracuse in the first really big game of the Michigan home sched- ule. The game is scheduled to start at 3:30 o'clock, or at the close of the Varsity track meet. The Michigan Aggies were success- ful in trouncing the easterners yester- day, afternoon, thus making it all the more imperative that Lundgren's men come through this afternoon with a win. The battle today will at least serve as a mode of comparison be- tween the teams and will give the dopesters a line on what may be ex- pected next Saturday when the Wol- verines meet the Aggies in their first tilt of the 1914 season. The Syracuse coach saved his big star pitcher, Turnure yesterday, send- ing Nichols against the Farmers and preservingg the mainstay of the mound staff for the Wolverines today. Turn- ure has'been doing big things for the Orange nine in the east, and it Is ex- pected that he will make a big at- tempt to repeat against Lundgren's crew. The Michigan coach will send either Captain Sisler or "Doc" Baribeau against the the visitors, the choice fa- voring t e leader. Baer is doped to work behind the bat. The Wolverines still have their eyes on their rapidly- growing shut-out record, and unless the soggy ground makes any kind of play impossible, will endeavor to fat- ten their percentage at the expense of the easterners. ALL FRESH TEAM INVADES DETROIT The Michigan all-fresh baseball team will leave this morning at 9:37 o'clock for Detroit, where they play the Uni- versity of Detroit at Mack Park in the afternoon. The game will be partic- ularly interesting in that the Univer- sity of Detroit has been working un- der the tutorship of George Lawton, an ex-Michigan football star, while La- vans and Cory, of last year's Varsity baseball teamn have had the freshmen in charge. The youngsters' team has been some- what weakened through loss of men by eligibility rulings, but if Tuesday's victory over the Varsity may be used as an indication they should have little trouble in tucking away today's game. The lineup is not definitely known but it is expected that the following men will start: Maconahy lf; Nieman ef;Taylor rf; Maltby 1b; Rowan 2b; Schmidt 3b; McNamara p; Krause c. LES VOYAGEURS JOURNEY TO WHITMORE; ADD TWO MEN R. F. Grefe, '16, and Hgrry Gisborn, '16, were initiated last night into Les Voyageurs, a society composed of men who enjoy outdoor life. The annual banquet was held at Whitmore lake w ith 25 members present. Today the woodsmen will go to Lakeland from where they will start a two day trip down the river to Ann Arbor. m ingan-ayracuse aseai gameer- ry field, 3:30 o'clock. Michigan Union Boat club water Mar- athon, starts at Lakeland, 10:00 o'clock. EVENTS OF TOMORROW Dr. George A. Gordon speaks at the Methodist Episcopal church, 7:30 o'clock. 0. 3. Price, Ph.D., speaks at First Bap- tist church, 7:45 o'clock. Rabbi Abraham Cronbach speaks to Jewish Students' Congregation, Or- pheum theatre, 7:00 o'clock. METHODISTS FALL BEFORE FARMERS (Special to The Michigan Daily) EAST LANSING, MICH., May 8.- The Syracuse University baseball nine made a fruitless invasion into the Ag- gies camp here today where they were humiliated to the tune of 5 to 4.in a closely contested fray. Blake Miller was-on the mound for the Farmers and held the Methodistst safe at times when hits meant runs.< Nichols performed for the losers, but4 was not as lucky in the pinches. A soggy field deprived the game oft any fielding features and the game was anybody's until the last. R H E Michigan Agges ,..........5 7 3t Syracuse .....................4 8 3 Batteries-Miller,Bbbins and Adler; Nichols and Farber. FORTUNE TELLERS FORECAST SENIORS' FUTURE TUESDAY Flower Favors and Tete-a-Tetes Giver Diversity to Cap and Gown t Dance Two fortune tellers will camp int tents on the Union lawn at the All-f Senior dinner-dance Tuesday, accord-N ing to the arrangements of the com-t bined committees which met last night and drafted final plans for the cap andI gown event. Novel flower favors will be given to the women at the dinner, and several favor dances will proba- bly be arranged. The party will last until at leastj 1:00 o'clock, instead of midnight, asa previously announced The presenta sale of tickets indicates that the floorc will not be overcrowded, as the for-n tune tellers and tete-a-tete possibil-t ities on the lawn are planned to fur-1 nish proper diversity. In case of rainX arrangements have been made to ac-c commodate the crowd easily by utiliz-a ing the dining room, the loungingt room and other parts of the building. SIGNAL HONORS BESTOWED ON THREE JUNIOR MEDICSt Alpha Omega Alpha, the nationalt honor fraternity of the medical depart-1 ment, has elected to membership fromi the junior medic class, John W. Sher-A rick, B.S.; Albert C. Furstenburg, B.S.; and George B. Sutton, A.B. The elec- tions are made on a basis of scholar- ship by the senior members from as list approved .by the faculty. Half of the membership, for any one year, isr chosen at the end of the junior year, the remainder being elected in Novem-t ber of the senior year.c CLASSESJTO MEET ON CINDERS TODAY Four Teams Will Compete on Ferry Field for Track and Field Honors WILL START AT 2:00 O'CLOCK Entrants -from the four classes will contend for supremacy this afternoon at the Varsity track meet on Ferry field. The first event will be called promptly at 2:00 o'clock, so. that the meet will not interfere with the ball game, starting at 3:30 o'clock. From all indications, a hot clash should take place between the seniors and the freshmen for first place, al- though the sophomores possess a string of athletes that may swing the dope. The juniors are not reckoned as serious contenders, because of the lack of material, and are practically sure of landing on the tail end of the results. Trainer Farrell will use this meet for a double purpose. It will serve as trials to determine the men that will be entered against the Methodists next Saturday, and also to settle the makeup of the all-fresh squad that will be sent to Lansing to meet the Farmers on the same date. The rain of the last two days will probably prevent the athletes from making any good marks on the soft- ened track. The jumpers, polevault- (Continued on page 4) NNOUNCE DETAILS FO R SPRING GAMES If weather permits, fresh-soph relay rials will be held from 9:00 to 12:00 o'clock this morning at the Fair grounds. If it rains today, opportunity vill be given next week to the classes to fill up their 16-man teams for the pring games. Weighing in for the tug-of-war WOMEN WARBLERS CHANGE FESTIVAL PROGRAM 'ANNUAL SWING Aslight change has been made Int TO APPEAR TONIGH T c-- a enmd the arrangement of the May festival Michigan Songs to Feature Season's concerts this year, inasmuch as the First Local Concert of usual organ recital on Saturday noon H ull COM PLE Girls' Glee Club will now take its place in the regular series at no extra expense to holders SING "CASTLES, FAIRY CASTLES" of season tickets. This recital will be Departments Will March In Ord given by Earl V. Moore on May 16, Establishment at University; Michigan songs and "Castles, Fairy with Inez Barbour, soprano and Mar- Are Assigned Castles," written by Helen Malcomson ----Stations for the junior girls' play will be fea-- SPEAKRS TO INCLUDE DR. tured at the Girls' Glee club concertE ANGELL AND PRO. D'0 which will be given in Sarah Caswell A E A___ Angell hall at 8:00 o'clock tonight. The Seniors Dine at Union After Pai club is twice as large as last year, hay' Hold Sing on Steps of Alumi ing 40 members and has been working Memorial under the direction of Miss Nora Hunt of the university school of music. P'omenade plans for the annual Tickets for tonight's concert can be ior "swing-out," to be held Tuesda procured from members of the club or ternoon, are complete. The floc at the door. black robes and mortarboards The program which will be given at then be worn by the near gradu tonight's concert follows: Lail V. Moore for the first time, in the tradit I. (a) Win for Michigan. -__winding___________ (b) Irish Love Song. garet Keyes, contralto as soloists, winding parade. (c) Cupid Made Love to the Moon. Mr. Moore has won for himself-a Seniors r all departments willp (d) A Merry Life position as one of the leading concert at their respective places at Miss Sargent and Club. organists of the Middle West. His nu- into University Hall will start pror II. A Scene from College Life. merous concert appearances have won ly at 3:15 o'clock. (a) When Night Falls. for him many admirers and the series y Sen:or o lir. (b) I'llhe'er N get MColls.e of twilight recitals which he has given SNee Forget M College in Hill auditorium since the rebuilding will meet on the walk between in illauitoiumsice he ebildngMuseum and University hall.; the (c) My Girl at Michigan, of the Frieze Memorial organ, have gine ersiyl all (d) Michigan Goodbye. justified the admiration and respect of ginees Uon the small diagonial v (e) Language of Love.those who have been interested in his getseen ce;sth med on III. Readings from "Huckleberry promising career., welks residence; the medics on walk between University hall and Finn." - library; the 'laws between Univer Miss Ethyl Fox SOCIOLOGY STUDENTS WILL hall and the flag pole; the pharmic IV. Castles, Fairy Castles. SPEND TODAY IN DETROIT the main diagonal walk in front of Misses Alice Lloyd and Romaine Brom- cannon; the homeops at the north well Sociology students will leave this tranen of the ponnnmie sbiling: V. (a) (b) (c) Kerry Dance. Doan yo' Cry. Estudiantina. Girls' Glee Club. CANOEISTS RACE ON HURON TODAY From Lakeland to Ann Arbor, 31 teams, will begin Monday from 4:00 1miles, nine teams of two men each to 6:00 o'clock, at Waterman gymna- sium, for the freshmen, sophomores 'Tuesday. Three weights will be set as the limit of the teams, 135 pounds, and above 160. Meetings have been called by all the class presidents of the two classes for Monday, to elect captains allotted to them by the student council according to the rotation system. Combined mass meetings for both classes have been arranged by 14. B. Carpenter, '14, for Wednesday and Thursday nights, when final plans will be discussed for the three scraps. KEELEY TO COMBINE INTER OCEAN AND RECORD-HERALD James Keeley, editor of the Chicago Tribune, who addressed the class in journalism last fall, has purchased and combined the Chicago Record-Her- ald and the Inter Ocean, two of Chi- cago's leading morning newspapers. Mr. Keeley, who is also the editor of the combined 'publication, will begin his new work Monday, resigning his present position as managing editor, of the Chicago Tribune. Mr. Keeley is an honorary member of the local chap- ter of Sigma Delta Chi. Interscholastic Entries Due Today Entries for the interscholastic meet to be held on Ferry field Friday and Saturday, May 22 and 23, are to be in today. Manager P. D. Koontz, '14, is in receipt of many of the entries al- ready but official announcement will be made in tomorrow's Daily. Noted Rabbi to Address Congregation Rabbi Abraham Cronbach, of South Bend, Ind., will speak on the subject "Morsels of Midrasch" at the weekly meeting of the Jewish Students' Con- gregation to be held at the Orpheum theater, tomorrow evening at 7:00 o'clock, will paddle this morning in Michigan's first water marathon. Beginning at 10:00 o'clock, the canoes will leave at five minute intervals, resting only at the five portages and at Barton dam, where a ten minute stop will be made. To the organization whose team wins first place, .will be given the first leg on a 22-inch cup, donated by the Edi- son company, which must be won three years successively for final possession. The record for the trip, made last year is four hours and 20 minutes. The teams are expected to finish at Tess- mer's between 2:30 and 3:00 o'clock. J. M. Stanley, '14, and C. E. Stone, '16, will represent Sigma Chi; C. W. Royce and J.B. Steere, Les Voyageurs; W. A. Warrick and W A. Reichle, '16E, Trigon; W. W. Harryman, '17, and W. C. David, '17E, Beta Theta Pi; J. R. Wallace, '16E, and Dalby, '14E, Union; J. C. Abbott, '15E, R. A. Hayward, Phi Kappa Sigma; R. A. Hill, '14E, A. V. McIver, '14E, Kappa Beta Psi; K. W. Vance, '16, and E. H. Merritt, '17E, Union; F. H. Saier, '15L, and A. C. Fletcher, '14E, Michigamua. ELIMINATED CLASS TEAMS PLAY CONSOLATION SERIES A consolation series of interclass ball games has been arranged for the teams which were eliminated in the first round of the annual games. In- tramural Director Rowe has prepared the special schedule and games are booked for this morning as follows: All pharmies vs. fresh laws, fresh lits vs. fresh engineers, soph medics vs. soph engineers, and senior medics vs, homeops. Two games still remain on the first round schedule of the championship series due to the continuous rain of the past few days. Weather permitting, the junior dents and junior laws will play off the third of their series, and the fresh dents will oppose the all architects also this morning. 1_W i Wesleyan Guild Lecture "THE CUSSOF DR. GEORGE A. GORDON 'ORACAUSESF PASTOR OF OLD SOVTR CHVRCH, BOSTON AND VICTORY." 11 p__________________________________