THE MICHIGAN DAILY. INCREASED FAC LITIES NEED OF MAY FESTIVAL Steady Growth of Musical Event Re- sults in Use of Much Adver- tising Matter With the coming of spring, the an- nual May Festival, "Michigan's great- est musical event," looms up as the biggest attraction of the season. Such is the prestige of Ann Arbor's festival that the prominent musical journals of both Chicago and New York detail spe- cial representatives to attend the re- citals and report on the work of the artists present. The steady growth in magnitude of the festival, has necessitated a corre- sponding increase in the facilities for disposing of seats and the carrying on of the work of the publicity committee. A visit to the mailing and storage rooms in the basement of the Univer- sity School of Music will convince the most doubtful that the event has long since outgrown its swaddling clothes, and that it is an occasion of more than local or community interest. At the present time immense quan- tities of printed matter are being clas- sified and labeled preparatory to be- ing sent out as advertising to various portions of the <: 1ntry. Some idea of the magnitude )f the task may be gained from the following figures re- garding matter now ready for distri- bution: 3,000 window card pictures of the prominent artists; 30,000 small descriptive circulars; 10,000 railway hangers; 1,000 single sheet posters; 500 3-sheet posters; ani 100 20-sheet stands. In addition, there are 30,000 special 12-page announcements con- taining the program of the festival, short sketches of the artists, with photographs, and a large mass of gen- eral information. Newspaper cuts and pictures of the celebrities are furnish- ed in large quantities to the newspa- pers throughout the state in order that their public may be informed as to the names of those participating inl the program and the dates of their ap- pearance. In accordance with announcement previously made, the seat sale for all seats in Block A will take place at the box office in Hill Auditorium Saturday morning, beginning at 8:00 o'clock. WANT OFFICIAL SCORER SOCIETY THINKS I SOLVED ARMYf I Defense Body Has Plan to Combine Military Training With Con- structive Work One of the most serious obstacles to an increase in the United States army has been the difficulty of obtaining satisfactory recruits. This difficulty was admitted. by the ex-secretary of war in his report for 1915. Recent experiments carried on un- der the direction of the Society for Constructive Defense have thrown an interesting light upon this matter, and the society feels that it has solved the problem by its plan, which is to com- bine intensive military training during part of the soldier's enlisted time with constructive work on roads, rivers, and other public works under the super- vision of army engineers. Recently an advertisement was in- serted in a New York newspaper ask- ing for men to sign for several years of military service requiring hard out- door work and taking three months' preliminary training with five hours weekly drilling thereafter, as suggest- ed by army officers. From this one advertisement there were received 533 written applications. . The handwriting, neatness and char- acter of the letters received caused employers of wide experience to say that they had'never seen a better class of applications. Over one-fourth as many more applications were the re- sult of this advertisement for a con- structive army, as were received for the existing army system from news- paper advertising during the year 1915. The reason for the exceptionally high grade of the applicants is that many of the applications came from young men who had studied surveying, civil engineering, or some other technical line. ~At The Tetr "The Yellow Jacket," that much-dis- cussed play, will have its first appear- ance here on Saturday, March 25, at the Whitney Theatre. "The Yellow Jacket" is one of those plays that win favor partly because of their novelty and partly on account of their own inherent charm. It is a Chinese play; to be accurate, a compo- site of several Chinese plays, and it is presented "in the Chinese manner." Yet it makes little difference wheth- er it is the Hazelton and Benrimo ADVANCE PROTEST PRESENT SYSTEM TERCLASS GAMES CONCERNING USED IN IN- Editor, The Michigan Daily:-- Factional interest runs so high no- where on the campus as in the inter- class contests. This fact makes it im- perative that the refereeing, time- keeping and scoring in such events be as impartial as humanly possible. We submit the following performance as an argument in favor of an official score-keeper for interclass basketball games. In the soph lit-architect game of Tuesday, March 21, there was a dis- pute over the score. At the end of the game no one knew what the score was. Scores were kept by the following: Lambert, soph-lit manager, represent- ing the soph lits, a soph engineer, ap- pointed by Kruger, the architect man- ager, representing the architects, and a Daily reporter. The first and last named turned in a tie, 17-17. The architects' represen- tative turned in the result 17-16, in favor of the architects. McGinnis at- tested the 17-17 score. The point lies here. There was no official score-keeper. Intramural Di- rector Rowe held that in a case of this sort he would accept The Daily man's score, over any kept by interested par- ties.1 To settle the dispute, Director Rowe took into Dr. May's office two scores-the 17-17 tie kept by The Daily reporter and the 17-16 score kept by the architect's score-keeper, exclud- ing from the conference the score of the soph lit representative, which checked with that of the reporter. Something happened in the office. The final score announced was 18-16 in favor of the architects. It was ap- parently reached by a compromise between The Daily reporter and the architect's score-keeper. We submit the following facts: 1. No one knows what the score actually was. 2. Of those kept, the 17-17 score was attested by three out of four. 3. No one turned in an 18-16 score. It was, from all appearances, the re- sult of a compromise at which all in- terested were not represented. If a series of this sort is to mean anything, there can be no doubt about final scores. Intramural Director Rowe intimated after the game that he wohld accept the reporter's score. But the' score he gave out as official was not the reporter's score. It was some- OU'LL find many smart overcoat styles in our store this spring; in them you'll find the Hart Schaffner & Marx label; it means that the style is igt. Alice Haynes in "The Yellow Jacket," at the Whitney Saturday, March 25 manner, or the strictly Celestial man- ner. The audience sometimes laughs at it and sometimes is thrilled by it, which is proof that it creates the de- sired impression. And from be- ginning to end the production is satu- rated with that elusive something which is designated by the word "at- mosphere." It is evident in the set- ting, the writing, the costuming and the acting. thing different. In the opinion of the undersigned the whole situation can be considerably cleared by the ap- pointment of an official .score-keeper whose score will stand. Lester E. Waterbury, '17. R. W. Rose, '17E.