Ai~ j3 MORNING PAPER IN ANN ARBOR W ' i ' higan Daily M READ DAILY BY 5,000 STUDENTS. i KIIL, No. 159 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1913. PRICE FIVE CENTS IRNELL WILL ACE WEAKENED MICHIGAN NINE ( I THE WEATHER MAN s 1 rai Forecast for Ann Arbor-Wednesday Lill. rines Will Take Field For Home Game Before Trip Withl Much Battered Lineup. Last ACH RICKEY MAY SEND SISLER TO WORK ON MOUMD ained Tendon Will Probably Keep Captain Joe Bell on Bench. [ichigan has one more home base- 1 game before starting the trip that 1 take the Varsity first to M. A. C. Saturday, and then on a week's trip )ugh the east. Cornell's baseball s will furnish the opposition for Wolverines, and the game will be ;ed on the Ferry field diamond at 5 o'clock this afternoon. he Varsity will go into the game h a battle front bearing many med and wounded. In fact it is emely improbable that anything the full strength of the Wolver- nine will be represented when key's proteges take the field pre- atory to entertaining the Cornell' amen in the first inning. bout the only piece of joyful news nected with the game is the strong icion that Sisler will pitch. Mich- 1 is out to defeat Cornell to avenge track beating administered by the Uiverit bse rvato--Tuesday, 7:00 p.in., temperature 56.0; maxi- mum temperature 24 hours preceding, 72.8; minimum temperature 24 hours' preceding, 50.2; average wind velocity, 9 miles per hour. MICIIAMUIA WILL HIT TRAIL IN ANNUAL "ROPE IN,'TOIDAY. As the pale face time keeper strikes six-times, near the setting of today's sun, Michigamua, the ancient and most noble tribe, will leave the wig- wam on the eleventh annual hunt among the white men on the campus. Painted, smeared and blanketed the eighteen Michigamua's will make a war trail around the campus, first to sing the war song and give the battle cry before the lodging of the former chief of the white men, then to ad- vance to Tappan Oak and there to hunt out the chosen from the junior pale- faces, smoke the pipe and lead back to the nation's lodge the bucks that will keep alive the customs of the tribe.' LEAGUE REST ICTS CAMPUS ACTIVITIES By New Ruling, Undergraduate Worn- en Can Carry Only 12 Points of Outside Work. EACH HONOR WILL BE LISTED. The extent of non-academic activi- 3ig Red" squad at Ithaca, and Sisler the one best bet to turn the trick, ties which each university woman pecially as the remainder of the may carry will be restricted under the ieup is liable to be weak. . new point system adopted by the Wom- Webber is slated to go behind the en's League to go into effect at the ate in the game against the Itha- ,s. Baier, it is said, is nursing an opening of the fall term in Septem- lured hand, owing to his efforts in ber. Each campus honor is listed in ceiving Sisler for the first time in an official record and a card index ,turday's game with Syracuse. will be kept of all women who attain In the infield it is probable that the me will see Pontius on firs't, becausewt h o o ish >ward's knee is still bothering him, they occupy. No woman will be allow- cQueen on second, Baker on short ( ed to carry more than ten honor points d Hughitt guarding the far corner at one time and not more than 12 the diamond. It is said that Mc- points a semester. This plan has teen is the only man on the infield been accepted by the Women's League, Wo is not going into the game with having been approved by the non-ath-' bruised hand. letic committee. But this is not all the hard luck The object of the League is three- at the Michigan nine is up against, fold; to more evenly distribute the ptain Joe Bell may not appear in campus honors, to raise the scholar- accustomed place in center field ship of the women in general, and to ing to a strained tendon. Rickey do more efficient work. These non-ac- .nts him to be at his best on the ademic activities have been rated with stern trip, and it is -possible that regard to the time required by the e Michigan leader may not be called office and the regard in which it is on to participate in today's contest. held on the campus. No one who has .th Bell out of the running, Duncan- received an E or two D's in the pre- n, Cory and Quaintance will prob- ceding semestcr may carry more than ly appear in the gardens. five- points of outside work. A stand- What Michigan's batting order will ing lower than this will allow the is a question that even Coach Rick- student to carry only one point of is undecided about. The change credit. Although eligible women may the lineup occasioned by the in= carry 12 hours a semester, no one is ies that the men on the team are entitled to more than 22 hours a year. rsing, will probably mean an exten-' The card index of those bolding e change in the batting order. How listed honors will be in charge of a s change will be worked out is a committee of three women and a memt- estion. ber of the non-athletic committee, und shall be under the direct authority of C 0 MM U N I C A TION, the entire non-athletic board. Activi- ties once undertaken and recorded We, the law class of nineteen hun- may be exchanged for others with the ed and thirteen, of the University permission of Dean Myra B. Jordan Michigan, having learned with the and the organization from which the enest sorrow, of the untimely death woman wishes to resign. our classmate, Alan W. Tull, do In the wake of the presidency of refore resolve, the Women's League, which heads the rbat, We bear testimony to his char- list with a count of seven lpoints, are ;er and loyalty as a class-mate an the vice-presidencies of the classes, end and we deplore this sudden and valued at six points. The leading expected bereavement as a distinct woman's part in the Comedy 'club s to our class and to the universi- counts four points. WORK OVERTIME PREPARING FOR ANNUALEXHIBIT Conruittees in Charge of Exhibition Will Complete Arrangementt of Display Booth Today. WHISTLES WILL ANNOUNCE OPENING TOMORRO 1V MORING Guides Will le on Hand to Explain Working of Exhibits to Visitors. Hammering and sawing is making the halls of the engineering building ring with the noise of preparation, as the committees of the engineering ex- hibit work overtime in an endeavor to get all the displays set up on sched- ule time. Most of the features are constructed and ready to put in place, but the actual arrangement of the dis- play booths has not yet been complet- ed. Everything will be in place to- inorrow at 10:00 o'clock, when a series of blasts from the set of nine whistles will announce the opening of the first annual exhibit of the engineering, ar- chitecture, and forestry departments. The committees and guides ar pre- pared to receive and explain the mys- teries of the different processes to thousands of visitors. Five thousand 20-page descriptive booklets, explain- ing the displays and giving a brief history of the engineering department will be given to visitors as souvenirs. Everything is being arranged to give visitors from out of town, and stu- dents and members of the faculty from other departments, a definite idea of the work accomplished by the engi- neering department, and at the same time to give sightseers valuable in- struction on practical, everyday prob- lems. A continuous illustrated lecture on lumbering and logging will be given by the forestry department. The chem- istry department will show a cement plant in operation, and the whole pro- cess of making the finished product will be reproduced, The architecture exhibit will be replete with sketches and drawings by different members of the department; plans of famous sky- scraffers of the country are promised, by a New York architectural firm, and Prof. C. S. Denison's collection of pho- tographs of wonderful engineering works will also be on display. The exposition will run continu- ously from 10:00 o'clock tomorrow morning until 10:00 o'clock at night, if the number of visitors warrant. The features needing power will not be run Friday, but the standing features will be on exhibition until Saturday afternoon.7 JUNIOR LITS WIN PRIZES OFFEREID FOR ESSAY CONTEST Paul B. Blanshard, '14, and Lois Spraker, '14, received the first and sec- ond prizes, respectively, offered byt the Detroit branch of the Colonial Dames of America, for the best essays on the attitude of England toward the African slave trade in 1776. Members of the junior and senior classes were eligible for the contest. The prizes1 carried with them awards of $50 and, $25. Junior Lits to Hold Arcadia Party. Junior lits will feature for their last social .event of the year an "Arcadia Party" at Barbour gym next Wednes- day evening from 7:30 to 10:30 o'clock.. The tango will be allowed and in near- ly every respect the dance will be a' miniature of the famous Detroit acad- emy. Tickets will go on sale tomorrow at, 35 cents each. Pet Date for Rhodes Examinations. The next qualifying examinations for the Rhodes scholarship from Mich- igan will be held here on Oct. 14 and; and 15, and will be open to all colleges { and universities in the state. Those I w ishing to compete should see Presi-1 lent Harry B. Hutchins. ' PROVIDES PLAN FOR CHOOSING CHEERLEADE RS Student Council Will Issue Call For Candidates at Once in Order to Start System This Year. FOUR MEN WILL BE CHOSEN EACH SPRING FROM TRYOUTS MEN NOMINATED FOR MICH- IWAN UNION OFFICE S. Election, Saturday, May 17. --0- President Selden S. Dickenson, '13-'15L. Louis F. H~aller, '11,'14L. Maurice C. Myers, '11-'14L. Vice-President-Lit Dept, Cyril Quinn, '14. Robert Sturtevant, '14. Charles Webber, '14. Vice-Pres.-Engineering Dept. Charles A. Crowe, '14E. George B. Duffield, '14E. Albert Fletcher, '14E. Vice-Pres.-Law Dept. Frank Murphy, '12-'14L. Maurice Toulirs, '12-'14L. Vice-Pres.-Medic Dept. Carl Eberbach, '16M. Maurice Lohman, '15M. Vice-Pres.-Combined Dept. S. Spencer Scott, '14P. Recording Secretary Fred Gould, '14. Werner Schroeder, '14. Edwin Thurston, '13-'15L. Faculty Advisers H. M. Bates. H. C. Adams. Reuben Peterson. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Approved System Resembles Now in Use at Other Schools. Those Thomas Orchestra Will Arrive Morning to Hold Rehea'sal. This The proposed plan for the choosing of student cheer leaders was passed by the student council at a meeting last night. The details of the plan are similar to systems in use in various universities throughout the country and are intended to select men as lead- ers, who not only have ability, but who are also popular wih the student body.'- According to the details of the plan, two weeks before spring vacation, the secretary of the council will publish in The Michigan Daily a call for vol- unteers from the junior classes for cheer leader aspirants. These tryouts will be instructed in cheer leading methods for an hour a day for two weeks by the present cheer leaders. At the end of this time, a board con- sisting of the present yell-leaders and the managers of the various sports, will'select eight of the candidates to try out by leading cheers at the base- ball games and track meets during the spring. Four of these eight men will be chosen as cheer leaders at a general student election to be held at the same time as the election of student mem- bers of the board in control of publi- cations. The four men chosen will elect one of their number as head cheer leader, and the other three will act as his assistants during the year. In order to get the new system started this year, the secretary of the council has issued a call for candi- dates to meet this evening at the Un- ion at 7:00 o'clock The 'nen who will instruct the aspiring cheer leaders' this season are Professors Thomas Trueblood and Richard HollistQr, and L. M. Otis, '13M. ANNOUNCE EXAM SCHEDULE l FOR LITS AND ENGINEERS.1 Program Practically the Same as Last1 Semester; Period to Begin June 9. Schedules of examinations for thet literary and engineering departmentsI were announced yesterday. The ex- amination period will begin on Mon- day, June 9. The program varies1 slightly from that of last semester. The schedule is as follows:c Courses with the first recitation of the week on3 1Monday or Wednesday At 8 First Wednesday...........9-12f At 9 Second Wednesday.........2-51 At 10 First Monday.............9-121 At 1 First Thursday...........2-5i At 2 First Thursday .......... 9-12 At 3 Second Tuesday ....:......9-12I Monday. At 11 Second Tuesday ..........2-51 Wednesday.1 At 11 First Tuesday ... . .......9-121 Tuesday or Thursday. At 8 First Monday.............2-51 At 9 Second Monday .......... 9-12 At 10 First Tuesday.............2-5 At 11 First Friday ............ 9-12 At 1 Second Monday..........2-5 At 2 First Wednesday...........2-5 At 3 First Saturday...........9-12 Friday any hour and E. M. 3. Second Wednesday ........ 9-121 Saturday any hour1 Second Thursday ..,.........2-5 Any day at 4-6 Second Thursday..9-12i Drawing 4, 4a, 5a, First Wednesday 2-51 Irregular< This evening, with the opening con- cert of the biggest May festival Ann Arbor has ever witnessed, the doors of the new Hill auditorium will be open- ed to first time the public for the e. The two combin- * * * FEW CONTESTANTS, TRYOUT FOR TEAM Enough Underclassmen Do Not Turn Out For AnIual Spring Struggles. CLASSES HOLD "PE" MEETINGS. At yesterday's weighing-in more than 100 underclassmen signed up for the tug-of-war events to be staged Friday, making a total of more than 500 who will fight across the Huron. Today is the last day for weighing-in and more heavyweights are needed to complete the team. Scarcely half enough men turned out for the relay teams at yesterday's tryouts. A large number of runners are needed from both freshman and sophomore classes and Robert L. Mayall who has charge of the events urges all men of running ability to be out at the final try-outs at the fair grounds tomorrow after- noon from 2:00 to 5:30 o'clock. Freshmen will hold a mass meet- ing at 7:00 o'clock tonight in the west physics lecture room. The meet- ing will serve as a final "pep" gener- ator for the struggles and directions will be given by student councilmen, Hulbert, Brown, Mayall and Spinning. Members of upperclasses will be pres- ent to tell the first year men how con- tests of the past have been won, and yells will be practiced. Sophomores will hold a similar meeting tomorrow night at the same time and place. The sophomore motto of "veni, vidi, vici," circulated on handbills, will be impressed on class members. In the tug-of-war the lightweight teams will average 135 while the mid- dleweight team will have an average of 159 or 160 pounds The heavyweight class will be comprised of 175-pound men and heavier. In this year's con-+ test only steady pulling will be allow- ed and the teams will not be permit- ted to give a series of jerks and then, lay down as in previous years. A meet- ing of the captains will be held at the Tau Beta Pi house tonight and the personnel of the teams will be named. The contests, which were to have been begun at 3:30 o'clock, have been post- poned until 4:15 p. m. because of ob- jection of the faculty. EXPLANATION OF ACCIDENT DOES NOT SATISFY CORONER, ed events .make an epoch in university history, and from all indications every one of the five thousand seats will be occupied. With the exception of the grading, the new building and grounds are com- plete. Evergreens were planted in groups yesterday at the- sides of the main entrance, and make a contrast with th~e imposing white facade, while within, all is in readiness. For the festival too, everything is ready. The Thomas orchestra arrives this morn- ing, and will rehearse this afternoon with the Choral Union The artists will arrive during the day, and visitors from all over the state are already coming in numbers. The present year marks the twenty- fifth anniversary of Albert A. Stanley's coming tow the university. In com- memoration of the event, the Choral Union will present to the university a portrait in oil of Mr. Stanley by Percy Ives. The ceremony will take place immediately after the "Laus Deo" for Chorus and orchestra, which Mr. Stanley has written for the festi- val. The presentation will be made by Mr. Hoexter of the engineering de- partment, a member of the Choral Un- ion, and Pres. Hutchins will accept for the university. The portrait will be hung in the Stearns room of the auditorium during the festival. Fol- lowing the ceremony of presentation, a flashlight picture will be taken from the stage of the entire audience. For the concert this evening, Fred- erick Stock and Albert A. Stanley will be the conductors, and Mme. Marie Rappold, of Metropolitan opera fame, the soloist. The program will be as follows: Huldigung's March .......... Wagner Vorspiel "Meistersinger" .... Wagner Aria-"Dich Theure Halle" (Tann- hauser)............... Wagner Mme. Rappold Symphony No. 5, C minor, Op. 67.. .................... ,. Beethoven Allegro con brio; Andante con moto; Allegro; Finale Intermission "Laus Deo" for Chorus and Orches- tra ............ .. ..A. A. Stanley Aria-"Ave Maria"........... Brph Mme. Rappold Overture-"Academic Festival," Op. 80 ...................... Brahms LAWS CONSIDER HONOR SYSTEM. OPEN DOORS OF AUDITORIUMFOR MAY FESTIVAL Oil Painting of Albert A. Stanley to Ie Presented to University by Choral Union This Evening. M)LE. IIARIE RAPPOLD WILL APPEAR TOINIGHT AS SOLOIST Modified Plan Will be Voted on This Week. most respectfully tender t sympathy to his parents embers of his family, with iare a common sorrow, ase resolutions be spread ermanent records of our ublished in The Michigan at a copy thereof be trans- e family of the deceased. E. B. Chaffee. Catholic Students Give tAiual Iance Encouraged by the demand for tick- ets for the annual dance of the Catho- lic Student's club which will be held at the Michigan Union Friday May 16, the committee in charge has decided to add six feature dances to the pro- gram. Tickets sell for $2.00, and may be obtained from C. H. Hippler, '14L, S. St. Amour, '14E, G. Sewell, '14E, or at Quarry's. The chaperones are Mr. W. A. McLaughlin, of the FrenchI denartient, and Mr. and Mrs. William Jury is Impaneled and Police Carry on a Further Investigation. Will Honor committees of the three classes in the law department at their meeting yesterday afternoon voted to give all possible publicity to the de- partmental plan of honor system which they expect to present to their* classes next week for ratification. Copies of the plan will be printed and distributed to the different sections early next week, and a vote will be taken on it in class meetings the lat- ter part of the week. A sub-committee was appointed which will draw up proposed modifications of the plan sub- mitted by the boards of class presidents, and change ' it to fit the needs of the law department. The outline will then be submitted to the clasess as adopted by the committees. This will be its final form, which will be printed for general distribution. "In spite of the assertion of Frank Landrey who claims to have seen Alan W. Tull killed, we are not certain as to the exact nature of the death. The theory does not explain the missing purse," said Coroner J. W. Rothacher of Wayne county last night. He im- paneled a: jury yesterday and further investigation is in charge of the High- (Continued on page 2.) First Friday ....... ........... First Saturday............... Second Thursday ........ 2-5 2-5 2-5