'HER RNER rp hbI 111t43&rn ~1Ia4j ASOCIATEO PRESS DAPY AND) NIGJIT 1U1 SERV ICE TODAY r rr i r VOL. XXXI. No. 1484ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1921. PRICE FIVE e _ 7 1 MIDDLE WESTERN CITIES WILL BE VISITED BY OPERA BASEBALL TICKER INSTALLED IN UNION TAP ROOM; SCORE BOARDS COMING WOiLVERINES I 1922 SLOW TO PLAY HERE OND WEEK OF DECEM- BER SEC- AMBITIOUS ITINERARY PROJECTED BY UNION Road trip to Twice Take Fourteen Length of Old Tours Days, Permission to give next year's Uni- ion opera here the second week in December was extended to the Union by the Committee on Student Affairs yesterday afternoon. A request will be made of the Senate council next Monday for permissioA to hold the an- nual trip to mid-Western cities, which is planned to be the largest in the Union's history, during the Christmas vacation. The itinerary includes the follow- ing cities: Detroit, Port Huron, Flint, Saginaw, By City, Lansing, Grand Rapids, Chicago, Milwaukee, South Bend and Toledo. The proposed tour will have more, cities on its schedule than have ever before been visited by the opera in a single year. Two Shows for Detroit The trip will require 14 days, which is almost twice as long as most past operas have been on the road. Two performances are scheduled for be- troit, but single shows will be the rule at all other points.. Lent and Holy week come at the time of spring vacation, and for that reason the change was made to De- cember. The opera would have had to play in Ann Arbor during Lent, and, the trip would have been taken during Holy week. Past experience proved' that the crowds were not nearly so, large during that period in former years, and fear was felt that the tic- ket sale would be seriously hurt. Many cities never before visited by the opera will be given an opportunity to see next year's production. Six additional cities not included in this year's trip are Chicago, Milwaukee, Grand Rapids, South Bend, Toledo and Lansing.' To Start Dec. 16 It is planned to take the show on the road on Dec. 16, playing in Detroit Friday and Saturday nights of the week that school ceases. Eligibility for places in the cast, chorus and committees will be based on marks made by men this semester, a situation which has not existed for a number of years. The marks for the first semester have been used Reports of the major league base- tional leagues. As the eight games L Y ball games were received inning by progressed, the up-to-the-minute score n g sdUo iUbn sa vLe e inning yesterday afternoon in the~tap by innings was given at the close of II l - room of the Union through the ticker each inning as the games were playedE which was installed by the Western in the various cities. Reports came Union. The service will be maintained in evenly and quickly and the crowd during the spring months and possi- was entertained almost continuously MICIGAN AIDED BY bly throughout the summer. in watching the strip of paper as It KAZOO INFIELD Score boards have been ordered ground itself out. SIXTH from Chicago, and are expected here tomorrow. , One will be placed in the I tap room and the other in the billiard ELECTION CANDIDATES VAN BOVEN CON] room. They will be complete in every FOR TIMELY B particular. The Daily will devote next The ticker, which works like a stock Sunday's Supplementdtothe All- Rzicka, Though Wild, Ho ticker, started at a little after 3 campus election and the records to One Lonseso o'clock and gave, first, the batteries of all candidates will be printed Hit in each game in the American and Na- to assist the voters in naming their choices. In nine innings that co Every candidate is requested best and the worst in bas' to mail to the Sunday editor of gan defeated Western St The Daily a statement of his col- Wednesday 8 to0, and in s lege activities and his qual- revenged for the defeat o Ifications for office. These state- when the Normalites won - ments must be in not later than Wolverines 3 to 0, though Wednesday afternoon. not a hit off the delivery C Son and Dance Acts Head Program in those cases where candi- Big Ed. pitched a grand g of Annual Band dates have not yet been named, game against his old riv Concert the men who expect nomination them down with but one hi are requested to send in their ness was the only thingv ALL WEARERS OF ""statements. red the game for Michig AL E ADM"TTED FREE The Daily desires to have the hurler passing seven me TO RE ADMITTED FREE record of every candidate in or- necting with another tog der that no partiality may be free ticket to the initial s Final arrangements have been com- shown, but will take no respon- he walked seven he more pleted for the Band Bounce which is sibility if any candidate fails to up for it by sending eight to be held tonight in Hill auditorium. furnish his record. ture teachers back to the One new act has been secured by the the three-strike route. committee in charge. Jack Gardner, Genebach Cdunts F '21, will entertain the audience with Michigan's first run jour his melodies on the saxophone. 1 ward in the second after Though this is Gardner's first public d .Oremn wo appearance as a soloist, he has played i dIN down. Freeman, who, a in Phil Diamond's orchestra for the Genebacl, who took sec past two or three years and is consid- -eba, whostorkdseco arst f nnAbo.. TITLE, 21 passed ball and scored on ered one of the leading saxophone D Miller. Simmons made th arthis season's Band Bounce will also amazo hit in the fourth, herald the initial appearance of the Discussion Closely Contested Be. singled cleanly between s Darling our-tette, a vocal quartet tween Speakers of Both short. presenting the latest songs. Diamond's Sides It was Joe Karpus who -s smatch to the gun powder Syncopaters will be next on the pro- -E sixth. Joe singled gram and will offer a riot of captivat- H3IAYEE, OF NORMAL TEAM, IS posive sxh o ige ngr Ja. r tMOST FLUENT OF DEBATERS took second on a passedb g jazz. nan ambled on a free ma "Watch Our Step" promises to be r The two Wolverine leader one of the best acts on the program Western Normal high school of _Kal- a sack when Genebach we with Lauver and Powers, "Old Time amazoo, won first place in the state ing to beat out a fast driv Favorites". The act will consist of a high school championship debate in Vick drew a pass, filling number of clever soft shoe dances. Sarah Caswell Angell hall when it de- Ruzicka drove a slow boun Last but not least the Varsity band, feated East Jordan high in a closely ley at short, who failed under the leadership of Capt. Wilfred contested discussion last night. The ball home in time to cu B. Wilson, will present a 40 minute former upheld the negative side of bach's score. But that w concert which will be both varied and the question. A high degree of inter- beginning of the para distinctive. est was manifested throughout the en- whiffed, but Van Boven si Joyce Steadman, '23, has charge of tire meeting which spoke well for the ing Ronan. Perrin came the programs, and tickets will be on ability of all of the speakers. drove out such a hot grass- sale tomorrow for 50 cents at various As winner of first place We'stern the Normal first baseman, w points on the campus as well as at all State Normal was awarded a large si- it, gave it up as a bad jo of the bookstores. The doors will open ver sup and East Jordan received a Ruzicka scoring. Shackle at 7:30 o'clock, the entertainment be- smaller one of the same general style, center and scored Van B ginning at 8 o'clock. both of which were presented by the stopping at first. Karpu With the purpose of encouring the Oratorical association. at first when the visiting wearing of "M" sweaters and hats, and The debate last nigth was the ninth catcher watched his popf establishing the custom of showing in which each team has participated between them midway to t preference to men in Varsity athlet- this year and an unusual amount of mound. ics, the committee in charge has de- preparation and composure was dis- Karpus Ends Inni cided to allow men wearing "M's" into played by every speaker. Allen May- Perrin and Shackleford s the performance free of charge. bee of Western State was the most Gill found R9nan's drive UNION WILL NOT PUBLISH fluent and cotposed speaker of the handle. Karpus ended the i 1921 FRESHMAN ;HANDBOOK.occasion although this is probably ac- he was caught at the plat counted for by the fact that this is his play on Ronan, who went t Phsecond year in a championship con- Western's team had thr Publishing of the 'freshmanhand- test. ing features, Bennett in ti book for next year will not be done Miss Winifred AxtelI of the same dens Howe in the right, an by the Union, according to a decision team showed that women are cap- thid Th espectala reached by officers yesterday. It wastamswdthtw en reap third. Three spectacular e rphed by ohers yeteray. t asby able of competing successfully with the first named robbed Mic proposed by the upperclass assembly the men in debate contests. Donald mn xr aehtwi last Sunday that the Union and the th e ndbt otss oadmany extra base hits, whi st Scouncil hat t e oa the Gorham the third member showed up ful submarine dive by H Student ou Jointly get out the to particular advantage in rebuttal,.T'r first kept a clean binglef tion has thad supervision of the work Arthur Secord, Floyd Liscum, and kleford's summary. Mill tior a hadbr suyerisnd of the work Paul Franseth, of East Jordan, all his position in good style. was felt by the Union to take over the gave logical and well delivered Captain Van Boven had book. -speeches' day at bat, making four four trips to the plate, th PHI LAMBDA UPSILON TAKES PH1 ufverine to make more than MEN ATSPRINGELECTION TKPPAHOU.., Freeman's puzzling del Normal gunner whiffed liv Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary ed four. One Mdanlge chemical fraternity, held ,its spring UU I U I UlI II made in the Michigan lin initiation last night in the Union with kleford replacing Johnson the following men being taken into Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary where he looked like the the society: George W. Collins., grad., scholastic fraternity, will initiate 57 million dollars. Klein a Garrit Van Zyl, grad., John O. Arrow- members of the senior literary class who traded off in righti smith, '21E, Charles M. Green, '22E, and 2. graduates at its annual ban- Shack, both looked well,v Albert MacLeod, '21E, John Gard- quet this evening at the Union. El- perhaps a trifle the supe ner, grad., Joseph P. Woolsendeen, ery Sedgwick, editor of the Atlantic . (Continued on PageI '22E, and Lee W. McCabe, '22E. Monthly, will be the principal speaker. , of the evening. His address will be Dean Vaughan Goes to 1!i SocIology Class to Lapeer Saturday entitled, "The Editorial Bay". Dr. Victor C. Vaughan,d Students of Sociology 30 will make Prof. William A. Frayer, of the his- Medical school, left Monda a trip under the direction of Prof. A. tory department, will speak to the neapolis, Minn., to stay f E. Wood to the Lapeer Training school initiates only, at 6:10 o'clock. The Dr. Vaughan was asked, to for the feeble-minded this Saturday banquet willegin at 7 o'clock. Dr. Billings of the Ru morning, leaving the Michigan Cen- Prof. Campbell P. Bonner, presi- school of Chicago, and Dr tral station in Detroit at 7:55 o'clock, dent of the chapter, will act as toast- Johns Hopkins universit railroad time. They will be able to master, introduicing Mildred P. Sher- advice on the reorganiza make connections by leaving Ann Ar- man, '21, and Albert C. Jacobs, '21, Medicar school of the Un bor on the Michigan Central or in- who will speak in behalf of the new Minnesota, which is now tuphot, b.y Rn. - r.1r member .ied on. WMAY 13 SET FORT W ANNU AL*'22E STEP Junior engineers have announced 'DOM the date of their annual step as Fri- day evening, May 13. This affair is 0 aan annual occurence being held in On tM the freshman and sophomore years of the class. The committee has decided that the SLIPS OF dance will be semi-formal, the tickets# IN being priced at $3, no war tax. Tick-I eis o will go on sale Friday, May 6' above the engineering arch, according NECTS to Paul Ackerman, '22E, chairman of. 3INGLES the social committee. The committee in charge requests that all tickets be 1 purchased as soon as possible in or- yds Visitors( der that it may know how many toj ac prepare for. Rhodes eight-piece or chestra has been engaged. mbined the 3ball Michi. C i ate Normal O o doing wasf f last year over the 0 of Ruzicka.t and glorious "Fundamentals of the Social Order"b als, letting Topic of Afternoono it. His.wild- Talk which mar- an, the big 10 MEN TAKEN INTO NA.- n and con- TIONAL LEGAL FRATERNITY t give ~him a i ack. But if Initiates to the brder of the Coif, than made national legal scholarship society,P t of the fu- were entertained at a banquet in theirĀ¢ bench via honor last night in the Union. In thed afternoon they also attended a lec-s 'irst ture given by Mr. Albert M. Kales, ofe neyed home- Chicago, an "The Fundamentals of the3 two were Social Order", in room C of the Law y the way, building. me, walked The basis of the present-day social and on a system, as outlined by Mr. Kales in an error by his afternoon lecture, consists ofj e only Kal- leadership by the managerial type of , when he men, property ownership, the force econd and that gives their authority real basis, and an arrangement of surplus capi- touched the tal in our banking system. Without in the ex- any one of these elements, said Mr. to left and!Kales, the order would collapse, and ball as Ro- whatever criticism exists among rad-E rch to first. ical classes is aimed, as a rule, not atr s moved on these fundamentals but at the partic- nt out try- alar evils that are to be found as in- e to second. dividual outcrops. the bases. He then went on to discuss the crit- der to Shee- icisms that are generally leveled to get the aginst the system, such as the charge t off Gene- of stupidity and selfishness of mana- as only +be gers and objections to large accumu- de. Uteritz lations of wealth among the few. In ngled, scor- conclusion, he outlined the dangers to next, and the system if laboring men refuse top clipper that work, this being the point where all 'ho tried for great civilizations have decayed. b. Vick and At the banquet in the evening Mr. ford hit to Kales was the principal speaker, his ven, Shack subject being .a definition of the s" was safe qualities that constitute a good ad- pitcher and vocate. He must have, he said, the fly doscend analytical ability that it is the par- he pitcher's ticular function of the Law school *to b inculcate, an ability to react to emo- S ng tional situations in the court room, p cored when and a willingness to overcome per- too hot to sonal feelings in arriving at the facts d nning when in each case. t e fater the Prof. E. C. Goddard, who spoke in ' o second. place of President-emeritus Harry B. F ee redeem- Hutchins, showed how the qualities of he left gar- leadership distinguish the lawyer in c id Miller at our social system.n SWING-OUTTOA vp FIRST OF ANN11AL GRADUATE EVENTS CLASSES GATHER BEFORE LI- BRARY FOR MARCH TO AUDITORIUM TIME OF ASSEMBLY IS CHANGED FROM 3 TO 4 All Seniors Excused from 4 O'clock Classes, But No Others Seniors will assemble at 4 o'clock today in their proper places on the campus, in readiness for the annual Swing-out of graduating classes, an institution that marks their first step toward Commencement. The Varsity band will start playing at 4:10 o'clock on the steps of Hill auditorium, this being the signal for the first class to turn and march in column of fours to Hill auditorium, where-the 'exer- cises will be held. The time of assembly as announced previously was changed yesterday tp 4 o'clock, due to an order of Presi- dent Marion L. Burton excusing all seniors from 4 o'clock classes but not extending the privilege to those with 3 o'clock classes. SENIORS ATTENTION Classes will assemble lit caps and gowns in the following plat. es: Lit women on the walk leading from the Library west j to University hall; lit menw0 the walk leading to Tappan hall;'. engineers and architects on the diagoRal from the Library to the Engineering arch; medies on the end of the .other diagonal near- est Witerman gymnasium; laws on the walk from the Library to the Law building; dents on the walk leading north from the medallion past the Chemistry building; pharmles near their I building on the walk leading east from the Library; and gradu- ates immediately in front of the i Library. The order of march will be as { follows:. Lit women, lit men, engineers, and architects, med- ies, laws, dents and homoeops, pharmies, and graduates. j heretofore, as operas have been during the second semester number of years. given for a MU'ST BE ELIGIBLE TO 0E "CAMPUS NOMINEE At a meeting of the University Sen- ate committee on Student Affairs held yesterday afternoon in the office of J. A. Bursley, Dean of Students, per- mission was granted for the annual Union opera trip to be held during the December vacation next year instead of during the spring vacation as for- merly. Due to a change in the University calendar, the spring vacation will come earlier than usual next year, and the action of the committee was tak- en so that it will not be necessary for the opera trip to be made in the period of Lent. The question of eligibility for par- ticipation in student activities was considered by the committee, and in view of the approaching All-campus election, a resolution was adopted to the effect that it has always been the opinion of the committee that candi- dacy for office constitutes participa- tion in student affairs within the meaning of the eligibility rules. This resolution makes it clear that a stu- dent must be eligible to become a can- didate for office just as he must be eligible before he is permitted to hold office.. BASEBALL SCORES catches by higan of as le a beauti- owe in the from Shac- er handled a perfect singles in e only Wol- one hit from ivery. TheI e and walk-: s shift was e-up, Shac- at first, proverbial nd Ronan, in place of with Ronan rior. Klein, Eight) SHERWOOD NOMINAT TD PRESIDENCY OF COUNCIL Renaud Sherwood, '22, was nominat- ed for president of the Student coun- cil in place of John C. Cary, '22L, who has withdrawn his name, at a meeting of the council last night. Angus G. Goetz, '22M, the other nominee for the office, was nominated some time ago along with Cary. All lits will vote at three tables which will be placed in front of the Library, divided alphabetically. Two. tables will be placed under the engi- neering arch for engineers, with a similar =arrangement. Laws will vote at one table at the law building, med- ics at one table at the medical build- ing, and dents, pharmics, and homoe- ops will have one table at Waterman gymnasium. A list of students eligible to vote will be provided at each table. Each voter will be required to give his name to the teller, who will ascertain whether his name is on the list. It the student is eligible, he will sign his name opposite name printed on the list, together with the number of his ballot. He may then vote. ti e t tl It N o; C b. A U d tl The benediction at the exercises will be delivered by the Rev. Arthur W. Stalker, of the Methodist church. The principal speech will be given by President Marion L. Burton, his ad- dress being particularly directed to he seniors. Robert J. McCanliss, 21M, will give a solo, "Even Bravest Heart", by Gounod. Fred J. Petty, 21, president of the senior literary class, who acts as master of cere- monies, will then give the speech for he seniors. Following the ceremonies the class- es will march out of the auditorium in he same order, forming an "1V" in heir swing around the campus. The ine of march will be out of Hill and- toriunĀ± and across the street, west on North University avenue to the diag- onal, down the diagonal to the Li- brary, along the other diagonal to Alumni Memorial hall, east on South University avenue past the Presi- dent's house, turning north to the rear of the Library, east to the diag- onal and then down the diagonal to the Library. To Take Group Picture On the steps of the Library a group picture will 'be taken of each class. Seniors are requested by the commit- tee in charge not to break away from the column daring the march, as this will be the last opportunity afforded them to have their pictures taken in a group. Representatives of the Pathe and Free Press organizations will be placed along the line of march to take pictures of the classes. Arrangements have also been made for motion pic- tures to be taken from the, medallion in front of the Library, of the sen- iors before starting their march to Hill auditorium. The lit men will be led by LeGrand (Continued on Page Fight) [inneapolls dean of the ay for Min- or a week. gether with sh Medical r. Welch of y, to give tion of the rniversity of being car-