THE WEATHER UNSETTLEI)PROBABLY SHOWERS TODAYA , HU ,B , VOL. XXXIII. No. 49 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1922 Section One PRICE FIVE CE DEFE TS S - TICKET SCALPER RRESTED, FINE Detroit Aan Fined $100 and Costs Justice Thomas; Is First Local Case by I I l 1 c ( I i, DEBATING TEAMS CHOSEN"YESTERDAY Both the affirmative and negative Central league Varsity debating teams were selected by the department of public seaking yesterday morning after the final tryouts in Mason hall. The following men were chosen for the affirmative team: J. K. Dunn, '24, Donald Cook, '24, Charles Hodgman, 24, and Melvin Specter, 25, alternate. LAPOLLETTEI AND HUDDLESTON PROPOSE NATIONAL COUNCIL ' PLAN MAKES PROVISION *.* FOR MEETTING DEC.1 Notices of Convention Sent to Nost t ROF Influential People In :.. I1E PartyLI (By Associated Press) Washington, Nov. 18.-A call for a national conference of Progressivesr to meet here Dec. 1 and 2 and to or- ganize a Progressive group in con- gress was issued tonight by Senator Lafollette, Wisconsin, and Represen-" tative Huddleston, Democrat, Ala- z bama, chairman and vice-chairman, respectively, of the people's legislative (R service. Formation of not only a cohesive Progressive block in the senate andz house but also a national council of '.: Progressives without regard to party " was the apparent object of the move OVEULDA ment. GOtLDE Ct, There was no mention of a third 'RUH SER political party, and before the class ... call went out Senator Lafollette de- With an unusually strong cast, al- Elizabeth Pike, '24, plays. She was clared a new party must be a matter most all the members of which are one of the gentlemen of "The Yellow of evolution and could not be estab- ' Jacket" last spring. Helen Elliott, lished through meeting of any group! known to campus audiences Masques '23, the spit-fire wife, has been in of wen. will present "The Knight of The; many Players' club productions as The call proposed a meeting of Pro- Burning Pestle" at 8 o'clock Wednes- well as in another Masques' play. gressive members of congress Dec. 1, day night in Hill auditorium. Elzabeth Rigby, '23, Ruth Rost, '25, and a gathering of Progressive lead- As a source of contrast to the re- Dorothy Jeffrey, '24, Esther Welty, ers generally on Dec. 2. Invitations fined, over-elegant conventions ci the '23, Beatrice Champion, '23, Laurella to the latter meeting were sent, it was Elizabethan stage it is the represei- Hollis, '24, Dorothy Spenser, '25, Con- announced, to a representative groupI tation of the vital realism of the com- stapce Baldwin, '23, Hortense Miller, of influential Progressive men and mons. The eement bringing out the '24 Mattie Proudfoot, '23, Gadys D. women throughout the country whose; popular taste and introd ucn, much Saunders, '24, and Dorothy Campbell, names were not divulged. of the humor of the play is 4.und in '24 are some of the others included the characters of the Grocer and his I in te play. Re nke '26, H. wife. These parts are played by Por- einke', , W2jtia Goulder, "23, and Catherine Green- ough, '23, respectively, both of whom Conference Stan Fresh X-C1 untry I have had experience iin dramnathcs.feS efMiss 'Goulder played the comedy roll L eaders Win Ha Reinke, '26, finished first in the fresh- in the Junior Girls' play of last yeaL men cross-country meet that was held as well as having appeared n several yesterday morning. He ran a fine race Masques' productions. Miss Green-I over the course but was unable to ough is known for her character in- Supremacy in Western Conference equal the time that he made last Sat- terpretations in both Players' and football this season remains the same, urday, as- the roads were in bad con- Comedy club productions. ' after yesterday's games, as it has dition. His time for the course was In the play within the play, the been for the last week, in spite of the 15 minutes and 22 seconds. parts are.taken by people well known Fingerle came in second, turning in in amateur presentations. The Knight fact that Michigan, Iowa and Chicago, 15 minutes and 54 seconds for his is played by Velma Carter, '24, a part the present leaders in Big Ten stand- time. Murray ran a close third, fin- very different but as well cast as the ing, all had powerful opponents. The ishing three seconds behind Fin- Daffodil of "The Yellow Jacket." final scores are significant in show- gerne. The rest of the men to finish Anne Mushkin, '23, the scheming ing how near every one of the three among the first 10 came in as follows: father in old English times was the came to being spilled in their tracks, Mason, Callahan, Richards, Nicks, "Magus" of l'ke last Junior Girls Michigan's victory over her .oppon-j Stevens, Green and Graves. play. ents probably being the most decis-, All of the men were in splendid Shirley Salisbury, .'24, princess of ive. condition at the end of the race, "The Yellow Jacket," is the heroine Iowa may thanks to the careful training that of the play. Her lover is played by ly fortunate in winning her game from! Coach Sullivan has given them. There Vrginia Brodel, '23, who took one of Ohio State, 12-9. The Buckeyes start- was no fainting at the tape this year the men's rolls in the Junior Girls' ed the scoring with a touchdown in as has been the case in former play. And against these two, the fop the first half, failing to gain the ex- meets. The first three men to finis Humphrey, is working. This part is tra point by kick from placement. Atj were awarded silver loving cups, and taken by Ruth Christensen, '24. the end of the second period the Corn-' the first six received 1926 jerseys. Another Falstaff is the part which huskers were at the wrong end of the score, but in the third and fourth quarters they staged a comeback that brought two touchdowns, as against a kick from pacement by Ohio. O ; Chicago found quite a bit of diffli ' culty with the Indians, especially in - -" the first half, which ended with the Maroons at the large end of a pal-1 try 3-0 score. In the second half things went a bit better, but th' game was not cinched until the final' whistle blew. The smashing defeat which the Midway team intended to CONFEENCE STANDING Creighton 9, M. A. C. 0. hand the Illini failed to materialize. Ohio Wesleyan 65, Case 0. Passes failed for the most part and' P W L T Pet. Northwestern 58, Monmouth 0. the wearers of the Orange and Blacle1 Iowa........... 4 4 0 0 1.000 Notre Dame 32, Butler 3. seemed to be able to break up almost' Michigan .. .....3 3 0 0 1.000 Nebraska 21, Kansas Aggies 0. anything that the Maroons cared to Chicago.......3 3 0 0 1.000 Kansas 39, Colorado 6. offer. Wisconsin ......4 2 2 0 603 Western Reserve 19, Kenyon 13.' Michigan's victory over Wisconsin Minnesota .. 5 2 2 1 .500 Oberlin 3, Miami 0. speaks for itself. Wisconsin, after Illinois..>.......5 2 0 400 Wooster 19, Mt. Union 3. breaking her stride in the Illinois ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION WILL HUNT STUDENT COUPON OWNER Harold Briskman, of Detroit, plead-1 ed guilty to a charge of ticket-scalp-1 ing at 7:30 o'clock last night before Justice J. D. Thomas, and was fined $100 and $5.05 costs, with the alter- native of spending 60 days in the Washtenaw county jail. Briskman was apprehended by of- ficers, it was charged, while disposing! of two tickets for yesteray's Michi-; Ross McFarlane, '23, K. F. Clardy, '25L, Frank Backstrom, '24, and Ly- man Glasgow, '25, alternate, will' support the negative. IN DRIZZLING RAI'N Sophomores, Though in Minority, Win Annual Class Games gan-Wisconsin football game for $5 2 to 1 each. Birskman claimed that he was! not' selling the tickets at a profit, but' FRESHMAN FLAGS EASY PREY ,hat he had paid the same price at OF SECOND YEAR STUDENTS which he was later said to have been selling them, and that he had sold Greatly outnumbered, the class of them only because he met a friend '25 nevertheless established their su-j who gave him two other tickets. premacy over the class of '26 yester- Justice Thomas, however, question- day by winning the fall games two' ed Briskman's story, and declared points to one. The flag rush and' that he had been determined to deal severely with the first case of the the pillow fight ended in victory for kind that came to his attention. the sophomores, while the fleet-footed Briskman was taken to the county freshman runners won the relay jail and expected to wire to Detroit race, each event counting one point. later for money to pay his fine. The fine shower of rain which fell One of the tickets sold was a fresh- all morning and ths accompanying man student ticket, which was allot- chilling wind did not dampen the, ted to the yearling on his student enthusiasm of the rival classes ,al- coupon, and as soon as the Athletic though the wet ground made it difl- association is able to check up its cult to secure a foothold. lists, the case will be referred to the The freshmen, decked in their war faculty for discipline. paint of green and led by their band, No other cases of scalping have left their meeting place in front of been reported to the police, although the Union at 9:30 o'clock and march-I Briskman stated that there were nu- ed down State street to Ferry field. merous scalpers at the local hotel The sophomores, who assembled at where he was sta ing. Waterman gymnasium, followed 15 minutes later, in red battle paint and headed by their band under the di- dings Unchanged rection of their drum major, wearing i an impressive red shako. At Ferry[ rd FOught Battles field the classes lined up on opposite sides of the battle ground. Freshmen Win Relay cgo drops the game next week, the The relay race, in which three titledwil rest with Michigan and Iowasquads, each composed of 10 men trovied of course that Michigan and from each of the classes, participat- Iowa win their battles this week end. ed ,opened the games. In the first heat the freshmen won by several yards after overcoming a strong sophomore{ lead, and in the second won even T UDH[ more decisively. The third was not, MIchi Kirk Muir Steel Blott Slaug Rosat ,Goebe Uterit Kipke Stege Cappo Sub Stege Rosal Irish, Tebel Sco Kipke down down Offl weste judge man,l Y Vi C( The Conce clock ium b tra u lar. Frenc ist on bers tastes Vid debut uled b last m engag place anist, scribe able come excep sian 1 violin The Overt' Conce ',Die (a) S (b) D 1 C f THE LINEUP WISCONSIN TOUCHDOWN IS FIRS gan Position Wisconsin SCORE AGAINST VARSITY IN ..........L.E.............Irish SIX GAMES head .....L.T............Below e .........L.G........Hohlfeld WOLVERINES, BADGERS ..........C.............Nichols BOTH WORK PASSES hter .....R.G............Sykes tti ........R.ET..........eth Williams Makes Strong Bid For Berth tz .......Q.B...........Barr On All-Conference Team, Out. e ..........R.H..........Williams piaylng Klpke r .... ...L.H.....Eagleberger on ........RB...........Taft Two great football teams raised tc the highest degree of development stitutions: Michigan, Keefer for one battling for a right to the chain.- r, Niesch for Goebel, Garfield for pionship of the West, the other tc tti. Wisconsin, Pulaski for vindicate itself for a humiliating de Miller for Hoblfield, Irish for feat sustained at the hands of a weak- 1, Pearse for Nichols. er opponent last week, met when ring: Michigan, touchdowns, Michigan sent Wisconsin down an- e 1, Cappon 1; goal after touch- other notch in the Big Ten scale by , Goebel 1. Wisconsin, touch- a 13 to 6 defeat yesterday afternoon s, Pulaski 1. at Ferry field. cials: Referee, Masker, North- A greater game of football than the rn; umpire, Haines, Yale; field one displayed by the two, old rival ,Knight, Dartmouth; head lines- yesterday would be impossible. Never Eckersall, Chicago. in the long years of Wolverine grid- iron history have two elevens battl. ed on more even terms. Although das Soloist In sent down in defeat before some 5,00C adherents and twice as many sympa- Oncertl onday thizers Captain Rollie Williams and his men must be given only a shade -- less glory than the conquerors. second concert in the Extra Witnessed by 44,000 rt series will be given at 8 o'- It was such a crowd as such a con- tomorrow night in Hill auditor- test deserved that greeted the two y the Detroit Symphony orches- elevens as they lined up for the kick- nder the direction of Victor Ko- off, fully 44,000 spectators being jam- Raoul Vidas, the distinguished med into the stands. Rain that be- :h violinist, will appear as solo- gan at 9 o'clock Friday evening and n a program made up of num- continued except for short intervals designed to appeal to popular until game time seemed to have nd . effect what ever on the size of th as will make his Ann Arbor crowd that settled down to watch the on this occasion. He was sched- gridiron battle of the decade. Any to appear last season, but at the kind of reserved seats were at a prem- noment was forced to cancel his imm hours before game time and the ement because of illness. His hundreds' who were disappointed took was taken by the Hungarian pi- up posts on every neighboring tree Erwin Nyireghazi. Vidas is de and housetop. It was a giala day on d as one of the most remark- a scale that Ann Arbor has never of the viocin virtuosi who have witnessed before. to America in recent years, and Alumni, attracted by the record tional in that he is not of Rus- made so far this year by Yost's great birth, as are most of our great eleven, returned by thousands, begin- ists. ning as early as Thursday morning, program is as follows: and were carried back to the days o' ure to "Le Roi d'Ys'.......Lalo 1905 and 1906 by the powerful rto for Violin and Orchestra, in smooth running machine displayed A major ........Saint-Saens for the:r approval. Power without Gotterdammerung-Siegfried's any seeming limit and fighting spirit Rhine Journey......Wagner that never waned were what they saw Intermission and they have left, satisfied that econd Symphony-allegretto.... Michigan athletics are back once .... Mahler again on a sound basis. ance of the Nymphs and Satyrs Fate Unkind to Wisconsin ...............G. Schumann It was the kind of a game in which kian Rhapsody ....Victor Kolar the loser might justly feel that the (First time In Ann Arbor)' fates ha dealt unkindly with it, that a valiant effort had been spurned, and * |lathat a fighting spirit burning with DenppI sufficient fire to push over a touch- Admits Nine Men down in the final two minutes of play had been wasted. On the other hand ,the victors may feel proud of their Delta Kappa, national honor- achievement, exult in the knowledge ducational fraternity, held its I that they have mastered a rival who, LI initiation ceremonies Fri- Ion the form shown yesterday, is the 'ternoon at the Union, nine men equal of all but two or three elevens initiated, in the country. the initiates, three were from It is not making too broad a state- culty, two from the senior class nent to say that the margin of su- University, and four from the periority is represented by one man, ate school. They are: Prof. Kipke. It was his brilliant offensive D. Mitchell, of the physical ed- work and punting that kept the Maize n department; Prof. John Sund- and Blue at all times in the coming of the department of hygiene and his brilliant 20 yard dash after ublic health ;Ray Pellett, of the receiving a 2 yard pass from Uteritz I of Education; C. L. Anspach, that gave Michigan the seven point Arthur L. 'Miller, grad.; John I edge in the score. , grad.; James Voorhees, grad.; Uteritz' Strategell Works d C. Hunt, '23Ed.; and Paul Reh- For two quarters the teams snap- '23. ped and snarled at each other between initiation ceremonies commenc- the 20 yard lines, neither abl'e to gain 2 o'clock and lasted until 6 the advantage, neither willing to give k, when the members of the fra- the opponent a chance to get int y adjourned to the banquet room. scoring range by a failure to punt d W. Brown, recording secretary Only once did the rival quarterback e organization, acted as toast- reject the kicking game down the r, and gave the address of wel- field, Uteritz late in the first quarter to the guests. Prof. J. B. Ed- crossing up the Badgers by calling for n, of the School of Education, running plays with the ball on Mich- nded. gan's six yard str.pe. The stratagem n V. A. c. Hemon, of the edu- was successful, as most of the Wolv- al school of Wisconsin univerJ erine general's manouvers are, and ave the principal addres at the the ball was taken 28 yards out of et on the subject of "Limitations the danger zone. ucational Tests." A remarkable feature of the game f. Charles S Berry, of the de- is the fact that so much open play ent of psychology, says, "I was used so successfully considering that this meeting is by all odds the heavy condition of the field at- MATEPRLY A1USMENTEO suM BROUGHT TO LEAGUE SOROSIS STYLE SHOW BOOK SALES, BY Brun. The sophomores far outclassed their opponents from the first in the pil- low fight. Three rounds, in each of which three pairs of men, each com- posed of a representative of each class which were to clash, were sched- uled, but only two were held, since in the first round the sophomores un- seated all three of the yearlingsand Several new enterprises ,have been i 7 , ~ launched upon during the past week in the second two of the first year which have had for their purpose the men fell. This made the five victories Slova] wtIdnecessary to win the event. In the swelling of the Women's League build- I pillow fight, which made ith reappear- ing fund. On Wednesday and Thurs- ance in the games after an absence l day evenings the Sorosis style show\ of a year, each pair of opponents was Ph attracted large numbers of University mounted on a huge sawhorse. Tha women. The show which was prelI players attempted to knock each oth- sented by members of Collegiate So- er off without using any weapon ex- rosis did not derive its profits from cept the pillows with which they were Phi door receipts as no admission was armed. ary e charged. The sorority was paid by Flag Rush Easy annua the Jackson Style Shoppe to display The flag rush fell easily to the day af some of its gowns to the women here, sophomores. At the first pole, the being Orders for similar garments were tak- warriors of '25 overwhelmed the fresh- Off en at the time of the show. men before the latter were started. the fa Members of Adelia Cheever house At the second pole, the first year men, of the have reorganized their sales campaign reinforced by those . of their collea- Gradu for the, selling of cold cream. The gues who had defended the first Elmer cream was sold by the dormitory last pole, put up a somewhat better fight, ucatio year and proved a profitable way of but were unable to hold the attacking wall, earning money for the League. Those forces back, losing their second flag a and pi in charge of the. sales expressed the after a struggle lasting 10 minutes. School hope that with the increased size of Since two were sufficient to decide the grad.;' the house this year the profits would game the third pole was not rushed, Merril increase in the same ratio. and the sophomores marched back up Heroic Members of Kappa Delta sorority State street to the Hill auditorium, mus,= are planning to conduct a book sae where a group picture was taken. The on Dec. 5, 6, and 7, the proceeds of, - ed at which will go to the League. The kid, SCH ERMERHORN at of literature to be offered will include, ternit the seasonal best sellers, selected VISIT PRESS CLUB Arnol lists of children's books and modern I-of the poetry and drama in special gift edi- James Schermerhorn, Sr., of De- maste tions. ktroit, will address the Students' Press come club at its bi-weekly meeting Tues- monso day night at the Michigan Union. Mr. respo NEED HELP? Schermerhorn is a journalist of wide Dea *H Preputation, possessing a fund of var- cation iled newspaper experience, and is said sity, g Have you got something you to be an entertaining speaker. He banqu want"done, and nobody to do it? I was until recently managing editor of Ed Well, there are a lot of people of the Detroit Times, and at present I Pro tround here who want some- is engaged in a syndicating enterprise partm The logical way to bring the with headquarters in that city. think .. - - I Mr Colt frmr h nnrn w.ill onon 'it nn I ki m ' INorthwestern. Purdue . ...... Indiana....... Ohio......... 4 3 3 4 1 0 0 0 3 3 4 I 0 0 0 .333 .000 .00) .000 CONFERENCE Michigan 13, Wisconsin 6. Iowa- State 12, Ohio State 9. Chicago 9, Illinois 0. EASTERN Princeton 3, Yale 0. Brown 3, Harvard 0. Pittsburgh 19, W. & J. 0. Pennsylvania 7, Penn State G. Syracuse 14, Colgate 7. Dartmouth 28, Columbia 7. Cornell 48, Albright 4. Ohio University 20, Otterbein 0. Missouri 27, Washington 0. Colorado Ag. 19, jColorado Mines Denver Univ. 20, Colorado 14. Univ. of Utah 24, Whitman 6. DePauw 24, Hanover 0. Wilmington 3, Dayton Univ. 0. Earlham 25, Transylvania 0. SOUTHERN Auburn 0, Centre 0. Vanderbilt 12, Georgia 0. 0. g'ame, chiefly because of the loss oil Don Murray, was at her best yes- tOrday, and the Wolverine triumph in 'spite' of her crippled line seems to give her an edge over the other teams, 'in the triple tie for the title, evenj though her win' gives 'her no realj claim to the title. Next week's games are unlikely to, change the status of either Michigan1 or Iowa, while Chicago will be in great danger of losing her place in the tie. Iowa will have a ridicufously easy game with Northwestern at Iowa City unless something unexpected turns up. Michigan, with her line strengthened, should have very little trouble ii disposing of the Gophers,1 n urhi'n hnva nn mno rit~ivnlxr weaklteam.E Georgia Tech. 17, North Caroline, State 0. Kentucky 6, Alabama 0. Tennessee 18, Sewanee 7. Florida 27, Tulane 6. Maryland 3, Johns Hopkins 0. I icQ ni A' R.1 M 7 T1 fin qt