PAPER IN T IMA i f Y T t 4 _ ai _... ,., f Jry t 4 Daily 11 READ DAILY BY 5,000 STUDENTS. ARBOR No. 140. 'ANN ARBOR, MICIGOAN, TUESDA Y, APRIL 22, 1913. PRICE FIVE CENTS ND BODY OF RYSORP .Y SUNDAY Weeks Search For Victims of rton Dam Accident Ends When Two Boys Discover Last Body. IMBEDDED Ir SAND 100 r BELOW WHITMORE BRIDGE ers Had Never Stopped Work- g From Time of Drowning Until Sunday. three weeks search for the vic- f the Barton dam canoeing ac- ,THE WEATHER MAN Forecast for Ann Arbor-Cloudy and warmer with possibly showers. University 'Observatory -Monday, 7-:00 p. i., temperature 50.8; naxi- mum temperature 24 hours preceding, 57.7; minimum temperature 24 hours preceding, 29.1; wind velocity 8 miles per hour. COMEDY CLUB TO HOLD FIRST MEETING OF SELESTER TONMORT Every member of the Comedy club intending to try out for a part in the play for next year is urged to attend the meeting of the club this evening at 7:30 o'clock in the Cercle Francais rooms. This is the first assembly of ED r E rE Representalive e O ne [ 17,Fli S ito1'Y 4i l With Snt OPiIMONS 1UFFUR AS TO KN!) 01? SYSTE M )IOST DESi~ 1L Subb &ninte of Vl , Presidenit l Presen pan i&~ Aoptin Representative students in the var> ous dGpartnlts on the campus are al- most unanimous in andorsing the ac- tion of the class presidents in prepar- ing a definite plan of taking examina- tions under the honor system, for the reason that the change contemplated is one which begins with the students themselves, rather than with the fac- ulty. "It must not be foisted on the stu- dents by the professors," said Selden Dickenson, president of the senior lits, ?ast night. "It must come from with- in; it must grow and be cultivated, not built artificially. When the proper high sense of individual honor has been developed, methods of punishing o _en.,ders work out of thir own ac- cord." "The honor system will do more than any one thing toward making the student body ready for self-govern- ment. There will be no need of the so-. r E I AL TEAM AER HANDS V I d~ rthy, '131, Forced to Give iUtside Activities on Ac- count of Press of University Work. STION NOT EFFECTIVE TIL SUCCESSOR IS CHOSEN. Aidorson, 'B;E, Htoward Ford, B, aiid Hubert Muckley, '13L, o 'I T:iding Candidates. Vere L. McCarthy, '13L, manager of the " her neck for four hours and watch- I her companions slip from sight. Since the tragedy a search has been )ntinued that proved baffling for ver two weeks Two divers made at-1 mpts to recover the bodies without iccess and large parties of students orked day after day without locating te three. The university sent profes- ors to direct the work and the entire impus waited in suspense. Rewards ere offered for the recovery of the )dies and last Tuesday afternoon, acon was found. Searching by torch ght the same night, the body of Cran- all was discovered and the efforts ere then directed toward finding iss Rysdorp. By shutting off the ater at the new dam, the river was wered Sunday and the shallow water ade the discovery rather simple. USRAH COMMITTEE CONTINUES ITS CAMPAIGN FOR FUNDS. The University Y. M. C. A. Busrah )mmittee is carrying on an extensive impaign to raise money in addition to at received Sunday evening at the .th annual S. C. A. meeting for the edical and industrial project in Bus- ,h, Arabia. It is estimated that the st of supporting the mission during e year 1913 will approximate $2,600, bicb,, with the notes outstanding, ings the total needed to $4,000. Of is amount, $980.50 has already been ,ised. By means of a systematic campaign e committee expects to reach every te in the university and to raise the eded amount of money by the end' the -week. Each department has general chairman as follows: dental, ',E. Brown, '13; medical, W. E. For- the, '13; engineering, Edward How- 1, '13; homeopathic, Harold L. Mor- s, '13; literary, Clare Searls, '13; id law, O. L. Smith, '13. There are 5 committeemen and each have been signed 20 men for personal inter- all members turn out Plans for the next year's production will be discuss- ed, and only those members present will be allowed to try -ut for the play. BLANS-HARD TO'. SPEAKAT GO6SHEN Represents Michigan in Inter-state Peace Contest to Be Held Friday Night. FIVE OTHER STATES+ COMPEFE. Michigan will be represented in the Central Inter-state Peace contest at Goshen, Indiana, Friday,, April 25, by Paul Blanshard, '14, who won the Michigan State Peace contest at Ypsi- lanti last month. There will be representatives of five states competing in this contest, and the winner will go into the national contest against the winners of the western and eastern inter-state con- tests. Last year there were only two inter-state contests, and the year be- fore, only one, which was the national contest; but this year so many more colleges are represented that three divisions have been made. Ray B. Weavr, of Carroll College, will represent Wisconsin, and E. A. Hollowell, of Earlham College, is the speaker for Indiana; but the Ohio State contest was not held last Fri- day, and it is not yet known here who won. Pennsylvania will probably also be in this group, rather than in the eastern section. The western contest will be held in St. Louis May 3, Illinois, Iowa, Missou- ri, Nebraska, and South Dakota being the states represented. New York, New England, Virginia, and the Caro- linas comprise the eastern section. Blanshard will deliver his oration, "The Evolution of Patriotism," in Uni- versity Hall Thursday morning at 10:30 o'clock; and will leave that af- ternoon, accompanied by Pro'. T. C. Trueblood, for Goshen. COUNCIL TO RECEIVE REPORT OF DISCIPLINARY COMMITTEE The student council committee on disciplinary measures will report back to the council at a meeting which will be held to-night in room 302 N. W. at 7:00 o'clock. This com- mittee has had. charge of deciding on the punishment to be meted out to any who may he found guilty in the council investigation of the J hop trouble. A committee on cheer leaders, which has been conferring with the athletic association, will also report back to- night. Dates for cap night and the spring contests will probably be set at tonight's meeting. called paternalism if there be a finely or was taken by the board of direct- sharpened student conscience. The ors at yesterday afternoon's meeting The personal responsibility engender- other than to agree that the resigna- ed by putting a man on his honor and tion should not be accepted until a suc- trusting to his word as a gentleman cesso ; is appointed. Under the con-! cannot help but operate strongly in stitution the right of appointing a new the moulding of better citizens for the' baseball manager lies with the boardj university republic." of directors, and it is believed that a erner W. Schroeder, '14, declared successor will be chosen at this af- that the main trouble with the present ternoon's ieeting. systm is that few faculty men care to As has been the case in other in- make themselves policemen. As a re- stncos of this kind, the successor to suit, this puts a premium on cheating, the resigning manager may be chosen he said, because no student will volun- from among the men who ran against tarily appoint himself inspector of his him in the election by which he receiv- neighbor's conduct, however much ed his office. Bruce E. Anderson, '13E, theating he may see. As to a reform, and Howard Ford, '13, were McCar- he says: thy's opponents last fall and it is prob- "This can be remedied by an honor able one of them may be chosen to fill system which -laces the responsibili- ihe position. It is also possible that ty with a man's fellow student's where the board will appoint Herbert Muck- it belongs, and not with the instructor. ley, '13L, who has served as a mem- We want to arouse public opinion on erb of the 1912 baseball committee ahis to such an extent that'cribbing' and has been working with Manager will be looked upon as an offense McCarthy this year. It is conceded against tradition and public morals. however, that the choice lies between A strong sentiment can be created these' three men. here, and it will do the work." j "Bubbles" Paterson, '14E, Frank C. MICHIGAN INTERSCIIOLASTIC Gibbs, '131 , and other engineers do MEET TO BE HELD MAY 23-24. not believe that conditions -in their de- - partment arc bad enough' to warrant About 25 Inquiries Have Already Been CANDIDATES ARE ANNOUNCED FOR ENGINEERING ELECTION. Polls Will Open at 7:30 A. M. April 29, Members Must Show Tickets in Ordert o Tote Engineering society will hold their annual election in room 311 of the En- gineering building April 29 at 7:30 o'clock. Members must present mem- bership tickets in order to vote. The candidates are: Pres. R. H. Braun, C. B. Pfeifer; Vice Pres. Leslie Del, A. T. Ricketts; Cor. Sec. W. H. Schom- berg; Rec. Sec. Fred Van de Laere, S. B. Douglas; Treas. B. C. Budd, D. W. Taylor; Lib. A. B. Frederick, C. J. Tay- lor; Registrar W. C. Case, H. F. Hut- zel; Membership Co. T. G. Abrams, C. W. Howell, T. N. Noble, George Wiley; Member executive com. 0. W. Hall, S. R. Wilson. An effort is being made to obtain an out-of-town speaker for the ban- quet which will be held on April 30. Talks will also be given by several of the faculty. Tickets are 75 cents, and may be obtained in the Engineering society room any time today. CANE WEARERS TO HOLD FESTIVITIES First Annual Walking Stick 'Assump- tion Day to Be Held Tomorrow. FOUR CLASSES TO PARTICIPATE. Senior lits, engineers, laws and dents will combine tomorrow after- noon and evening in the celebration of the first cane day in the history of the university. The main features of the day will be the attending of the Mich- igan-Georgia game, an entertainment' by the musical clubs, and the first all senior sing of the season. The entire celebration will be informal. Seniors of the four departments, who proudly swing their canes on sun-, ny afternoons, will assemble at the Ferry field gates before the game at 4:05 o'clock. They will then enter, the grandstand in a body, where a spe- cial block of seats will be reserved for them. After the game the seniors will advance up State street in an informal group, after which they will disband temporarily. At 7:15 the seniors and their walk- ing sticks will again assemble at thet campus band-stand, where the musical clubs will be ready to entertain them with an open-air concert. After the close of the entertainment by the mu- sical clubs, the senior cane wearers will join in the first all senior sing of this season. It is expected that this informal cel-i ebration will establish the custom of; wearing canes as a senior emblem as a Michigan tradition on a firm basis as well as set a precedent for future classes. JUNIOR LIT WOMEN TO HOLD FINAL LUNCHEON SATURDAY Junior lit women will hold the last of their luncheons at the Union Sat- urday noon A program of toasts is being prepared and special musical numbers will be featured. Mrs. J. R. Effinger and Mrs. Mortimer E. Cooley are to act as chaperones. A dance will follow the lunch. Tickets can be pro- cured from the committee before Fri- day. Speaks-to Y. W. C. A. Members Today. Members of the Y. W. C. . will hear Miss Lucy Pierson speak this after- noon at 5:00 o'clock in Newberry hall on her w ork in the large cities. She is field secretary of the national board of Y. W. C. A. directors. After three months of vacillating ex- ile, the tango came into its own- at the hands of the Michigan Union dance committee at its meeting' Sunday af ternoon. Hereafter five numbers will be devoted to the tango every Saturday night. Tango music will be played for these dances, and on these occasions only,, the committeemen and chaperones will look on in an uncon- cerned manner, while the joysome frolic goes on unabated. All except the stipulated dances will be waltzes and two-steps. No tan- going will be allowed at these times, but the rule will not work vice versa, as other dances will be permitted dur- ing the numbers reserved for tangoes. The ban on the so-called "clutch- hold" has not been removed. Danc- ing of this kind will be frowned upon even more vigorously than in the past, and radical efforts will be exerted to eliminate any dances listed as objec- tionable in any way. According to the men in charge of the Union dances, the change of atti- tude in regard to the tango came about as a natural result of altered student sentiment. , It is pointed out that where this dance was only an inno'a- tion when it was barred, and conse- quently not practiced by the majority of those attending the weekly affairs, it has come to be a more or less estab- lished institution, and as such deserv- es recognition. The dance committeemen assert that the tango was never disbarred for any moral scruples, but rather on account of the inconvenience it entailed to the other dancers on the floor. With the present compromise, it is expected that both the tangoers and those not so affected will have the largest amount of enjoyment. NOTED ENGINEERING GRAD TO TALK HERE THIS AFTERNOON. "Confiagratins and Means of Their Prevention" will bethe subject of a talk by Mr. J. K. Freitag, '90E, this afternoon at 4:00 o'clock in room 348 of the engineering building. Mr. Frei- tag, who was formerly assistant engi- neer at the World's exposition in Chi- cago, is now with the A. B. Robbins Iron company of Boston. He is also the author of the books, "Fireproof- ing of Steel Buildings" and "On Fire Protection". The lecture, which will be illustrated, will be open to the pub- lic. League Plays Postponed Until May 25 Tennyson's "Falcon" and Juliet Tompkins' "For the First Time" will not be offered at the meeting. of the Women's League this week as schedul- ed. The plays will be presented at the annual election of officers to be held May 25. J Engineers Still Collect Dues. Junior engineers will collect class dues tomorrow from 8:00 to 12:00 o'clock in the Engineering society rooms. At the "pay day" last week nearly $60.00 was collected. POPULAR TANGO GIVEN LIFE BY UNIONCENSORS, Committee Decides to Devote Five Numbers to the Erstwhile Barred Amusement at Saturday Parties ALTERED STUDENT SENTIMENT CAUSES CHANGE OF ATTITUDE. "Clutch-hold" is Still on List Strongly Forbidden Things. of a change. "There is no pressing need over here, except possibly in a very few classes," said Gibbs, "and I don't believe an honor system in exams is' necessary . I am, 'however, in favor of a universally applied honor system such as that at Leland Stanford, where honor is in the very atmosphere, and the absolute trust which is placed in each student no one ever thinks of violating." J. J. Kennedy, president of the sen- Received ro State High Schools. Michigan's interscholastic track and field meet will be held May 23 and 24. These dates have been made final and arrangements are being rapidly com- pleted for the holding of the meet on these dates. "We.have already received about 25 nquiries concerning the meet," said interscholastic Manager Carpenter ior laws, and J. L. Crane, '13E, think last evening. "Our prospectuses will he system should be of a repressive be ready to send out this week, and nature and a pledge required as well j after that time we expect the entries as the reporting of violations to a stu- to begin coming in. The entry lists dent honor columitece. "This is ady nill be open until May 13, ten days an honor system," admitted Kennedy, prer ic the meet. "rut more lie student ontrl and - that is jut how the exa:s should be Lr a (et Foroign Position, conducted. If exams are for the good '. .:. B.S., '97P, was recently of the students, they should be allwed oint'd chief chemist with the "As- to control them so as they shall b 1- sc: acion Productores de Azucar" of (Continued on page 4.) Rio Pieras, Porto Rico. ..._ _,..... ..w....- . ,.._....... .... ,.. .. ,. ,., ...,..,. ,. ' SALE I Wednesday, Window in Annme.1 P1ay oii *tC Cercic Freencais a IN New "hitney Theare. Friday, April 25 SEAT SALE Thursday and Friday at Theatre Box Office Prices, : 50e, 75c, $1.0 .H.--10-12; 2-4 75c, $1.00 .s