THE WEATHER MAN EXAMS WE SHO ULI) WORRY! The' hl a ' : F - i , y s . ; , TLAST EDITION. No. 180. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1913, PRICE FIVE ( w --- ]KEY IS BACK OR TILT WITH STARS'OF OLD MUTUAL JOV 1' 1' r MC>REI ' f ' 43 -114 9T F P) Coach Surprises Team by Suddenly JIetur'ig for Last Gaime of Season and Will Be on Bench Today. BARIBEA U TO IL1L A AINST CAMPBELL, '11, AND ITLEY,' 04 Regular Season Ends Today, But Quakes Will Be Met Twice After Exams. Branch Rickey, fearful lest the he-, roes of old treat his pets rndely, sneak- ed back to Ann Arbor yesterday, and the varsity were given a hard prac- tice session in the afternoon. The return of the coach was unex- pected here, as it was supposed he had left for good, but nevertheless he will direct the efforts of the present day Wolverine diamond artists in this afternoon's fray with the stars of old- en days. Baribeau will probably hurl for the varsity while "Red" Campbell, '11, and "Jerrey" Utley, '04, will be the alumni tossers. Today's game will wind up the reg- ular season, as the team will disband until after examinations: the Pennsyl- vania games commencement week be- ing regarded as post-season affairs. Assistant Coach Douglas and Captain Bell will have charge of the team for these games, as Rickey will not then be here.J The game today will begin at 2:30 o'clock, and is probably the last event for which the student admission books will be used, as some other means willt be devised for caring for students re- maining in Ann Arbor for the Quaker contests commencement week.I EDAP ""AURUS WARE r A PROFESSOR IS AFTER YOU 411 J7 l r«<777/ A 7 7 77 COMNvENCE ENT EXERCISES TO RIVALJUBILEE Program 1u'll of Interesting Meetings, E xercdsesA d Sociai Functions, Which Rival Famous 1912 Celebration., HILL AUI)ITORLUM WILL BE DEDICA Til) ON AI U3IN DAY I 914 OPERA W.MELTON IS WRITER OF sylvan S. Crosner Will Write L W. A. Diekema and D. F. Ganim Are to Write the Music. 110' TO DEPICT MODERN LIFE IN EUROPEAN '7\ ,7' 7 7--, Senior Will iie Allowed Two Tickets For Coniiueiceiment Exercises This Year. If anyone's gladder n you-that's s! GRADUATES FATHER SENDS UNION $100 C. H. Adams, of Indianapolis, Makes Gift For Furnishing Room in New Club House. SON DIED ON COMMENCEMENT DAY C. H. Adams, of Indianapolis, has sent a draft for $100 to Prof. J. H. Drake with a request that ,it be used to furnish a room in the Michigan Un- ion clubhouse. The gift is to serve as a memorial to his son Carl, who grad- uated from the lit department in 1910, and was buried on commencement day. last year, when, if he had lived he would have graduated-from the law department. It is the desire of Adams that the gift be made in the name of the Mich- igan chapter of Delta Upsilon, of which his son was a member. He was inter- ested in having the fraternities take an active part in building up the uni- versity and its institutions. During his undergraduate life Carl Adams was active in student undertak- ings. In 1909-1910 he was business; manager of The Michigan Daily. He, was also a member of Druids and, Griffins. FSMNRIDING A FREIGHT Gilbert Ebert Has Legs Badly Crushed When Michigan Central Cars Crash Near Detroit. HE WILL RETURN TO SCHOOL. While Gilbert S. Ebert, '16, was going into Detroit on a Michigan Cen- tral freight train Thursday night, the, car on which he was riding collided with another car and Ebert was caught between the two and held there for over an hour before being removed. It was found that the upper part of his legs were badly crushed, and as the accident occurred outside the city limits there was some difficulty in se- curing the proper attendance. He was finally taken to the Woodward hospit- al where it was at first believed that he was seriously injured. After the surgeons had thoroughly examined his wounds they stated that no bones were broken and that there was no question about his regainingj the use of his legs. As soon as the ac- cident became known several of Eb- ert's friends and classmates went to Detroit at once. On their return to Ann Arbor they stated that Ebert would be able to return to Ann Arbor about the first part of next week. NEW FRATERNITY IS E S T A B L IS H EDl;j ir of ' 'm D ta s g ' q .1 pha Chapter of Tan lDelta Sigma, Honoi'a ry Ar'cliitectural Society, Organized here. STATE VTAkliRTER APPLIED FOR, Alpha chapter of Tau Delta Sigma, honorary fraternity in architecture and landscape designing, has been es'- tablished on the campus. This is the first chapter of its kind in this country and its aim is to further the creation of artistic standards in architecture and designing. Elections to the soci- ety will be based pn good scholarship and recommendations fron the facul- ty. The first initiates are: Herbert L. Burgess, '13E, Harry F. Weeks, Spe. Arch., Harold M. Penny, '13E, Fred. B. Klein, '13E, John C. Thorton, .'13E, Dorothy E. Adams, '14, James E. New- man, '14E, Franz A. Aust, grad, and J. E. Deal, '14. Profs. L. H. Boynton, E. Lorch, and A. Tealdi are sponsors of the society. Plans are being formulated to nation- alize the fraternity, and a state char- ter will be applied for. FUNNY AMPHIBIANS FOUND I)Y STUDNTS NEAR ODIN, ILL. Helen and Crystal Thompson, of the1 museum, returned recently from an expedition to southern Illinois, where they secured valuable information on a certain rare species of frog, of pe- culiar habits, of which little was known. . The expedition was made upon in- formation furnished by Dr. G. R. La- Rue, of the zoology department, who1 liscovered the new creature. A good series of photos, casts, and specimens1 were obtained; together with the do-) tailed notes on the habits of the frog, a report of which will be published in :he near future. Opening with the baccalaureate ad. ress on the evening of June 22, com mnencemut week this year promise; to almost equal in events last year'. seventy-fifth anniversary celebration The address will be presented by Pres- ident H arry B.Hutchins at 8:00 o'clock in University hall. A. few remarks will also be given by President Emeri- tus James B. Angell. Class day exercises of the senior law class will be held in University Hall monday afternoon June 23, at 2:00 o'clock. JPresidnt J. J. Kennedy, of the class, will preside and the oration will be given by . B. Chaffee. Hector S. Young will present the class me- morial and Charles H. Avery will give the valedictory address. Alfred J. Murphy judge of the Wayne county circuit court, will address the gradu- ating barristers. The senior promenade will be held on the campus on Monday evening at 8:30 o'clock, and the senior girls will p;resent "The School for Scandal" in University Hall at 9:00 o'clock. The admission price will be 50 cents and no seats will be reserved. On Tuesday morning at 10:00 ''clock the 1913 literary class will hold their class day exercises under Tappan Oak. Solden S. Dickinson, class president, will give an address and Agnes Parks will read the class history, Howard Devree the class poem, Amy Barnum the class prophecy, and Carl G. Scho- effel will present the memorial. On the same morning at 10:00 o'clock the senior engineers will hold their class day festivities in Universi- ty Hall. The presidential address will be given by Edward Lazear. H. B. Pickering will read the class poem,. and E. M. Howell the class prophecy. Dean M. , Cooley will give a farewell address., The senior reception will be held in the gymnasium Tuesday evening at 8:00 o'clock. All of the graduating classes will combine for the affair and Author and Music and Lyric Writer Will Meet at Once to Plan Summer Work. .W. Ray Melton, '13, is the author o the winning book for the 1914 Michi gan Union opera. S. S. Grosner, '14L has been selected to write the lyric: and W. A. Diekema, '14, and D. F Ganiard, '14E, will write the major part of the music. This announcemen was given out last night by Genera Chairman Karl B. Hoch, '14. Gordon Eldredge, '14, gets honora- ble mention for the book which he sub- mitted. The competition was especi- ally keen this year and contrary to the 1913 plan the lyrics will not be writ- ten by the author .of the book. The name of the 1914 show will not be given out until next year. As far as could be learned the play will depict modern life, in some large city of Eu- rope. Further than this no informa- tion could be obtained as to its nature. The author and writers of 'the lyr- ics and music have planned to meet before college closes to perfect ar- rangements for working on the opera during the summer vacation. It is in- tended to have everything practically complete when school opens.,next fall and to be ready for active work on the parts and chorus work by Thanksgiv- ing. 'APT. ROALD AMUNDSEN TELLS AUDIENCE OF DASH TO POLE. Explorer's Talk on Expedition is Illustrated With Motion Pictures and Stereoptican. Prof. E. C. Case, of the geology de- partment, will spend the summer in various parts of the country, complet- ing his collections of fossils of the Permian age. He will be assisted in his work by W. R. Robinson, of the graduate school. Prof. Case will leave early in the summer for north-central Texas,where he will clean up a valuable bone bed in which he secured some rare speci- mens last summer. He brought back with him, last fall, a collection of about 150 specimens of fossils of rep- tiles and amphibians, among which are the complete vertebral column and a large part of the other bones of the rare historic beast known as the eda- phosaurus. Only two other fossils of this beast are in existence, they being housed by the Anierican Museum of Natural History, at New York. After returning from Texas, Prof. Case will go to New Bruswick, Prince Edward Isle, and then to the Black Hills and Big Horn. Mountains, where he will complete his work on the Per- mian Red Beds, for the Carnegie In- stitution at Washington. Painting in vivid colors the tale of his wonderful journey, Captain Roald Amundsen, discoverer of the south pole, addressed a large crowd in Uni- versity ilall last night. The lecture was illustrated by stereoptican views and motion pictures. The -explorer tells how his expedi- tion, starting from Norway equipped with a pack of 97 Eskimo dogs and provisions for two years, encountered no difficulties until reaching its win- YPSILANTI CARNIVAL AN EXAMINATION State street and its hall meat, the campus and li Huron and the boulevards the "movies" are deserted this week, for Ypsilanti is i of its annual street fair. The D, U. R. lines are ta capacity by the crowds wh elude the bugaboo of appr ams by the delights of the fi merry-go-rounds, and gene .Even a professor was night, armed with a "thre at the "nigger baby" show ing the fair inhabitants of boring village with handfu confetti- PROVES K AS N US SOCIETIES WILL HOLD OUTING AT WHITMORE LAKE. s of amuse- braries, the Vulcans, Druids, Sphinx, and Tri- s, yea, even angles, will go to Whitmore Lake this by students morning for an all day outing. Each n the height society will be represented on the dia- mond by an all-star baseball team, and .xed to their a warm battle is expected before the hich seek to championship is decided. Swimming, oaching ex- boating, and other similar sports will Ferris wheel, make up the remainder of the pro- ral hilarity. gram. seen last. The members of the =societies will ee-for" won leave for Whitmore on the early morn- u, bombard- lng and noon trains, and will return on the neigh- the evening train. ls of deadly Adelphi Elects New Officers. - Adelphi elected the following ofi- Graduate, cers for next semester, at a meeting een recent- last night: president, Paul B. Blan- Wai-hing, shard,,'14; vice-president, R. R. Fel- who is rec-! lers, '15; secretary, IHJ. D. Parker, '15; the admission price will be $4.00 per ter quarters after a five month's jour- couple. ney of 16,000 miles in the "Fram," the Alumni day, June 26, will open with vessel especially built for the explo- a bugle call at 8:15 o'clock for the (ration. academic procession which will form After leaving winter quarters they preparatory, to the dedication of the began their march to the pole and on Hill auditorium. The dedicatory exer- December 14, 1911, planted the flag of cises will commence at 10:00 o'clock Norway on the southermost point of and admission can only be gained by the earth. tickets which can be obtained from the secretary's office. The invocation will SENIOR GIRLS PREPARE FOR be given by the Right Reverend Charl- ANNUAL COMMENCEMENT PLAY es Davis Williams, bishop of Michi an; President-Emeritus James B. Angell Edel Ehrhorn has been assigned the will present the building to the uni_ role of Sir Joseph Surface in the sen- (Continued on page 4.) for play, "The School for Scandal," to on. Company. Offers Employment. e MVlaxwell Motor Car company, ayton, Ohio, manufacturers of au- biles, is offering profitable and :ical shop work to a limited num- of engineering sttudents for the ner. Those desiring to take ad- age of the opportunity may. secure mation by writing the employ- department of the company. J 1 Cupid Captures Chinese Jick G. Wang, '11E, has b ly married to Miss Chim daughter of Chim Tien-yu, SUBSCRIBE NOW FOR THE THE SUMMER SCHOOL PAPER. $1.00 Mailed to you s ome 75 Cents delivered to you here be given in University Hall Monday evening of Commencement week at 8:00 o'clock. The second full cast re- hearsal will be held in University Hall this morning at 9:00 o'clock. This year a special arrangement of seats will be provided whereby the seniors and faculty members will have a particular section of the hall reserv- ed for their use. Tickets will soon be on sale at 50 cents each. The costuming this season will be done by a Detroit firm and will be ex- ceptionally elaborate. ognized in China as the "Father of; treasurer, I. Becker, '15; Railroads." Wang is now city survey- delegate, N. H. Goldstick, or of Canton, China. geant-at-arms H. M. Rose oratorical '15L; ser- '14 , .a , au . T" Y Ui 1x i a OR THE. LIGHTEST FR.OTH OF SOTEATEREADING, ~wuE' I %A JL;d A ,y , r : . ® - esr a zi Ca .rgoyle OIVT DVRING EXCAMS. 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