r._ ICULTY MEN ARE ISSUED E ESSRS F N(mA('EI i Ohs ANI) WO{RKS loll L VOLUME ON ANNIVERSARY Committee athers Speeches mt Other 3literil Relating to ele- bralion Last June. Various member. of the university faculty are engaged at present in writ- ing or editing manuscripts dealing with subjects connected with their special line of work. When published, some of these books will be used as texts, while others are intended prim- arily for the general reader.' A memorial volume of the Seventy- fifth Anniversary Celebration, held last June, is being prepared by a commit- tee consisting of Professors Fred N. Scott, Louis A. Strauss, and Thomas E. Rankin. It will contain all the speeches delivered on that occasion, and also an historical account of the university from 1887 to the present time. The first volume of Prof. C. H. Van Tyne's History of the American Revo- lution, is expected to make its ap- pearance some time within the text, two or three months. The New Market campaign of the Civil war forms the subject of a book recently written by Prof. Edward R. Turner. Prof. Turner is now working, on a manuscript dealing with the de- velopment of the English cabinet be- tween 1660 and 1760. "The Life of Robert Tooms," a man who was once regarded as a possible president of the Confederate states, is the title of a book soon to be pub- lished by Prof. Ulrich B. Phillips. The correspondence of Alexander H. Stev- ers, Howell Cobb, and Robert Tooms will be edited by Prof. Phillips, and published as a report of the Histor- ical Manuscript Commission of the American Historical Association. Prof. Egbert T. Loeffler, of the den- TO TEACH lHEIi 1o1W TO YELL. Yearlings Arouse Animosity of Upper- j llassmen by eekiI:g JOs A: Chieerleaiders. Much discussion has been going the rounds of the big university dailies regarding the appointment of "yell- masters" and just whati they should do. At the University of llinois, when th call was sent out for cheer leaders, but o[ upperclassman, a junor, re- sl)onded. However, six freshmen were very anxious for the job, and were only deprived of it by the hostil comment aroused, it being held that it was "al- together contrary to university tradi- tions." To add to the excitement, a senior declared that "it was the duty of cheer-leader merely to anlnounce the yells and.lead the cheering, and not to cavort in unusual gyrations and antics. In this connection, the Indiana Stu- dent says: "The most successful yell- leaders have been constantly before the crowd, keeping the rooters in good spirits, and at high tension froi the time the whistle is blown until the game is over. To cite a specific illus- tiation, 'Rusty Parker, of Wisconsin, one of the most famous cheer-leaders of all time, was before the bleachers constantly, never, for a minute, allow- ing the rooters' enthusiasm to die. As soon as spirits began to lag, he re- sorted to eccentric dancing and vaude- ville 'stunts' to bolster them up, and, as a result Wisconsin was famous for its organized rooting." At the University of Colorado, much interest is taken in choosing the yell- master, who is allowed two assistants. tal department, and Dr. Herman Printz, of George Washington Univer- sity are writing a book on Materia Medica, Pharmacology and Practical Therapeutics. When published it will be used as a text in Dr. Loeffler's classes. A new case book on agency is being compiled by Prof. Edwin C. Goddard of the law department. It will be put out by the West Publishing Co., of St. Paul, Minnesota, in connection with its American case book series, and will probably be used in the univer- sity next semester., Prof. Warren W. Florer, of the Ger- man department, and Prof. Jessen of (Continued on page 4.) NEW MICHIGAN GAME IS AN ANCIENT ONE Soccer Can be Traced Back to Time of the Roman Conquest of England. the COLOMBIAN ORGAN TO BE SUPPLANTED New Instrument Is Being Constructed and Will Be Placed in Hill Auditorium. Because the advent of soccer has met with much favor at the hands of i higan students, facts, dealing with its history and evolution, have been collected. All forms of football can be traced to the one source, a game brought to- England by the conquering Romans, r d learned by them from the Greeks. Nothing definite was recorded until several hundred years later when men- tion is. made of a game held yearly on, Shrove Tuesday at Chester, in com- memoration of the kicking about of the head of a captured Dane. At this same time writings tell of a similar game on the same date at Derby in annual celebration of a victory over the Romans. During the reign of Edward III, fottball became a very popular sport among the middle and lower classes. It never seems to have been taken up by the aristocracy, as were the later games, cricket, golf and ten- nis. In 1349, a public edict was issued, prohibiting it as interfering with the progress of archery, which was ne- glected for the sake of the more ex- citing football. The popularity of the game gradual- ly waned, until the first part of the nineteenth century, when it was re- vived by adoption in the schools. So many different ways of playing sprang up in this century, that in 1863, a commission was formed to classify and make rules for them. The chief result of their work wAs to separate the game into rugby and association football. The game played generally in the United States is only a modification of the first division and soccer is merely another name for the second. Soccer first assumed importance in this country in 1905, when a crack English team toured Canada and the States. Now it is played in many of our cities and by the Eastern and Western universities. Critics of sport have ventured to predict that the time is not far distant when it will battle with bazeball and football for supra- macy in the public interest. With the passing of University Hall as the scene of the larger campus as- semblages, the historic. Columbian or- gan will also go. For 20 years the present organ has been a source of pleasure to the uni- versity and Ann Arbor public, being brought here in 1893 from the World's Fair. At that time it was the finest organ in existence, but two decades have seen rapid changes in the art of organ construction; and it is to take advantage of these recent improve- ments that the board of regents has decided to install in Hill Auditorium a new instrument. The Columbian organ is not to pass entirely out of exjstence, however, as certain parts of it will be used in theconstructionof the new instrument, which is to be built by the Hutchings Organ Company, of Boston, Mass. This concern has constructed some of the' finest organs in the country, among which those in Symphony Hall, Boston, and Woolsey Hall, at Yale University. Some of the important features of the specifications for the new organ, decided upon by' Prof. A. A. Stanley, are radical changes from the older organ. There will be six distinct divi- sions, viz., great, swell, choir, solo, echo, and pedal. The key-desk, or console, which will be movable, will. be connected with the pipes by an electric cable. The pipes will number 4008, and will, vary from 32 feet to a fraction of an inch in length. There will be 70 stops, but 32 couplers will increase the number, of combinations. Twenty-eight push- buttons and 12 adjustable pedal com- binations will make easy the manipula- tion. A complete set of cathedral chimes, a harp, and two vox humanas are the most noteworthy stops. The echo organ will be placed in a remote part of the auditorium to give the distance effect. The action will be electro-pneumatic, and a large fan blower will furnish the wind, under heavy pressure. Every invention and improvement of Siply Tiike the iroubie to Itin- guish Poisonous From Edible Varieties. Death resulting from eating mush- rooms is easily avoidable, if the mush- roon eaters take care to know the 30 deadly poisonous varieties. The cause of poisoning lies in the fact that those who .eat them know only a few non- poisonous species. According to Prof. C. H. Kauffman, of the botanical department, there are 700 species of mushrooms in Michigan of the common type having cap, gills, and stem; not including the puff-balls and other fungi. It is therefore im- practical for the amateur to attempt to become familiar with the edible species, but he might easily learn to recognize the deadly poisonous ones which make all the trouble. Prof. Kauffman has been working for the past five years on a monograph for the state biological survey upon the mushroons of Michigan. The re- sults of :his work are as applicable to the section of the country north of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi rivers, as to Michigan. PERFECTS A. THINCI I MACHINE. C. L. Hull, '13, Invents Contrivance that Reasons Mechanically,. Logical reasoning reduced to me- chanical accuracy is the result claim- ed for a contrivance recently invented by C. L. Hull, '13. The machine is so devised that it will check one's major and minorpremises in a syllogism, and obtain the inevitable conclusion. The. operator, so to speak, drops his prem- ises into the machine, adjusts certain elements of the mechanism, and out comes the result, as nice as you please. And you haven't had to rack your brain for an hour or two to get it.' Not only can a logical conclusion be obtained, but a fallacy can be detected with ease. This is due to the fact that the machine will not illustrate an il- logical conclusion, or, in other words, (Contitued on page 4.) modern art and science has been in- corporated in the plans of the new or- gan, and when its construction is com- pleted, Michigan will again have the finest pipe organ in the country. 1=1 l Ui 1 1 S RECEIVE N FACULTY NOTABLE MEN WILL AT RECEPTION TO BE TENi FORTY-TWO MEMBERS TEACHING FORCE APPO THIS YEAR. a BE CAREFUL, END YOU ME .FROM EFAFIGII . Regents Promote T ,Junior, and Ass Forty-two new members of th versity faculty will be guests of at the senate reception to be in Barbour gymnasium Tuesday ing. Among the new professo instructors are several men markable reputations who are throughout the country as lead their profession. Among the most prominent o is Horace W. King, profess hydraulic engineering. For years Mr. King has been an en of the United States gov~ernme: 1895 he was appointed draugh for the U. S, surveyor general a son, Ariz. Three years later h charge of the surveying of th posed Nicaraugua canal site. I he worked on the construction i bors in the Philippines as a m of the provincial board. As ri tial engineer, he served the C Honkow railroad in China frox to 1903. After giving up his w China, he held the position of ant engineer in Manilla and wa put in charge of reclamation w the western part of the United WIlliam C. Hoad, professor o tary engineering, had charge reconstruction of the sewage sys Flint during the past year. Pi to that time he was engineer Kansas state board of health more than a year he studied s problems in Boston as guest Massachusetts .Institute of Te ogy. Lewis M. Gram, tural engineering, (Continued professor o recently d on page 4.) _ _ . . I 0 hZb u b 111111 1 mummum Oct. 28, 29, 30, 31 Nov. 1 and 2 Old ArmoryWe Huron St. Next to Waiting Room TO BE GIVEN AWAY FREE WITH 10e ADMISSION TICKET 1913-FO -5 Passenger Touring Car Zhe Fair will open tomorrow evenifl Free concerts every night--Shows of all descriptions--Something doing all the time COME AND H A V E A G O O D T I ME No.hn Over Ten Cent