I THE WEATHER FAIR; CONTINUED MODERATE - j t ttl ASSOCIATE!) PRESS LEASED WIRE SERVICE WESTERN CONFEtENCE V ITORIAL ASSOCIATION VOL. XXXIV. No. 10 EIGHT PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSIDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1923 EIGHT PAGES PRICE, FIVE CENTS HENDERSON GIVES INSPIRING T ALK( IN IRIIGBEFORE FRESHMEN RIPKE, DONAHUE AND LYNCH ADDRESS YEARLINGS AT UNION ASSEMBLY HALL PACKED AT ANNUAL GATHERING Campus Leaders Advise First Year Men To Become Familiar With Campus Activities Rousing cheers, an address of wel- come and advice by Prof. William D. Henderson of the University Exten- sion department and talks by several leaders in campus activities composed the main part of the program at the freshman smoler given last night at the Union when; another freshman class-the class of '27-learned more about Michigan and of the ideals for which it stands. In speaking before the large group of first year men who almost filled the large assembly hall, Professor Hend- erson emphasized the point that no group of people stand on the thresh- old of opportunities that "you do to- day." He said, "There are neverthe- less many problems of tremendous' import for you to solve in the next 25 years, including that of democra- cy itself, and the thing to be remem- bered'is to play this game according to the rules. It's a great game to play and a wonderful day to play it and it should be started right now." Proceeding, the speaker gave his subject as "How to be happy though a Freshman" and then enumerated cer- tain ideas which should be kept in mind by new students. "In the first place," he pointed out, "be true to yourself, appreciate yourself-have personality. We all have weaknesses and also extraordinary powers and an effort should be made to correct those weaknesses and develop those powers." UrgesReliability. The second point stressed by Pro- fessor Henderson was "to play the game straight with your mind". Under this head, he advised his hearers to plan to do a certain amount of reading every day, delving in many different subjects. "Do not try to just 'get by' but really thoughtfully meditate over the things that you read". The closing words of admonition sounded by the speaker were "be re- liable". In dealing with this idea, Professor Henderson said "The foun- dation of loyalty is reliability. To gain friends one must possess characteris- tics of loyalty and reliability. Be loyal to Michigan, the nation and the world, and above all, be loyal'to the ideals learned In the home, those of truth, justice and fairness. Be true to home". Previous to Professor Henderson's talk, Harry Kipke, '24, captain of this year's football team, spoke to the as- sembled freshmen. He advised them to start In working now and to get Into those lines of endeavor for which they are fitted. "Through campus activities", he said, "you men may learn of the real Michigan spirit". Explains Union The next speaker introduced by Charles Merriam, '25E, chairman of the Uppercass Advisory committee, was Thomas J. Lynch, '25L, president of the Union. He explained that the Union, which, he emphasized, is your building, is an organization which (1) democratized men on the campus, (2) leads in student activities and (3) seeks to aid the student body in any Chimes Flaunts In Introductoi Chimes, campus opinion monthly will maake its first appearance of the year this morning. Due to the large number of subscriptions obtained on- ly a few copies will be on sale in the book stores and but a limited sup- ply will be in the hands of sale. men on the campus. Following a new policy of making the magazine increasingly a medium of expression for campus opinion the editors have laid particular stress upon this, feature in their initial is- sue. Ample opportunity is promised for all individuals to express, through Chimes, their opinions on subjects of SELECT TEMPORARY CHEERLEADER SQUAD )ampus Opinion ry Issue T o d a y eD y IssueRESIGNS; interest to the student body. Some BLL leading campus issues are announced 'n the opening pages as "Chimes: En- terprises".S IAT N Among the leading articles is a mes--I sage from President Marion Leroy EN) OF PASSiVE RESISTAN 'E I Burton and a proposition for the im- ED P SVR1 W S LI mediate completion of the Union swimming pool. "Fraternities at Michigan", by John A. Bacon, '24, edi- tor of the magazine, constitutes a STRESEM ANN ASKED TO brief history of the growth of various ASSEMBLE NEW CABINET fraternal orders here. An extract from one of the works of Calvin Cool- idge receives a prominent position. Sociais Finance IIininistcr Clashes Two pages of football pictures show- th f EIdu'nrialomsliister ing varsity coaches, trainers, stars ofEconomics and candidates will be the contribu- tion of Chimes to the sport subject of Berlin, Oct. 3-(By A. P.)-Dr. Gus- the hour. "Stills" from the leading tave Stresemann and the members of moving pictures to be brought to Ann his ministry resigned from oiic, to- Arbor this month occupy another night. President Ebert then called page. upon the retiring chancellor to form William Warner Bishop, University . librarian, contributes "America !a new cabinet. Through the Ages", characterized as The Strescmann government retiredI the story of our country in original from office with the relinquishment ofc manuscripts. The material was gath- passive resistance in the Ruhr andz ered from papers in William L. Clem- the Rhineland as the only active ac- ents Memorial library. .,, . Fiction is represented by "Poly- complishment to its credit. While cri- gons" written by R. L. Alexander, '26- ticism of its usefulness on this scorej L, and an anonymous contribution would seem to be not entirely fair in "The Masterpiece". A short play, "A view of the hopelessly tangled legacy Picture For the Paper" bears the assumed by it as the successor of the signature of Pauline Benedict Fisher Cuno ministry, the Stresemann coali-I "Lines from a Dainty Pen" by Sue tion in its political compositonl was Grundy Bonner and "The Doubter" by such as to preclude in the long run the edtor constitutes the poetry of any hope of productiveness in the the issue. Styled as little smacks of nature of financial and econonic re- truth about ourselves "Uppercuts". form on account of th conflicting also by the editor, consists of a num- currents which hampered its delibera-i ber of short paragraphs along editor- Wtons. ial lines. With theoretical sociali;1: in thc Slministry of finance and an industrial party man as minister of 'conoinics,. one chronic point of friction was V IIII b ULIL ULUD promptly established. ILL ENiITER PflTST Berlin, Oct. 3.-(13y A. P.)-It is of- ficialy announced that the re;signation1 of the Stresr-mann ministry was clue o LIIIL y to the attitude of the Socialists. TEN COLLEGE CLUBS TO SING __ MIDDLE-WESTERN COM- I PETITION!IAIITpia [ Cabinet Resigns CLASSES WILL [COSEHEADS IN ANN UALELECTITODA l Y: __ i ... Yesterday's Games Detroit 8, Chicago 4. Cleveland 9, St. Louis 2. Philadelphia 13, Washington Brooklyn 8, Boston G. S. ENGI01"'S T( V E N ANDI- FRESHMEN TO HOLD NOMINATIONS LATER RobertT !S. :;mr1e Nmed President of Senior 4'Idiie ; i I Iperclassmen to ledt i Ncwerry Hall Results of the class elections held in the medical school yesterday af- ternoon are as Iollows: seniors, Rob- ert P. Monroe, president, Nona Wyatt, Student Council Takes Action Avoid Confusion at Case Game to STEKETEE AND FOX WILL RUN O.S.U. PEP MEETING Six men were chosen by the Stu- (lent council last night to form a tem- porary Varsity cheerleader squad; which will officiate at the Case game next Saturday, after which another meeting of tryouts wlil be held and r permanent squad selected. These me- are as follows: John A. Bacon, '24, Wil Liam H. Frankhauser, '24L, Lyman J Glascow, '25, Robert L. Leopold, '25 Richard H. Magrath, '24, and James J Weadock, '25. These men were picked by coun. cil members from a group of thirty tryouts gathered in the upper read- ing room of the Union. Each of thes tryouts was given two chances to dis- play his ability as a cheerleader be fore the council by leading the res' of the gathering in Michigan yells They were then voted upon and squad of six selected. According to the council the squad chosen will not be the permanent cheerleader body but has been ap- pointed to take charge of the cheer- ing at the Case game next Saturday afternoon to eliminate the confusion that has resulted in previous years from men trying out at this time. Before the Ohio State game an- other meeting of tryouts will be held At this time all men who attended the meeting last night and any oth- ers desiring to tryout are urged by the council to be 'resent. The men now on the temporary squad will again be tryouts at that time for the permanent Varsity cheerleader squad which will be .ie'ected from tz-e en .ire group present at that meeting. Other work taken up by the counci- at its meeting last night was the ap- pointment.of Donald W. Steketee, '24 and Edward M. Fox, '25E, as a com- mittee to have charge of the Ohic State Pep meeting to be held on Fri day night, Oct. 19, in Hill auditorium Firpo Forsakes Arena For Movies' New York, Oct. 3-(By A.P.)--Luis Angel Firpo has forsaken temporar- ily, the resin area for the silver screen. It was learned today that the "wild bull of the Pampas" has accepted an offer of $100,000 from a Los Angeles mni"rit ifir fnrn.,lent dlra- Dr. Stresema nn Dr. Stresemann, German chancel- lor, whose cabinet resigned yester- duy after the Socialist delegation had rejected the compromise solution pro- posed by the government. He has been charged by President Ebert to form a new cabinet. ,dBEHOBBSREUN FROMJ PACI61FIC TOUR Geology Profesor Delivered Opening Address al Pal-Pacihic Science Congress T ATTEND SCIENCE 'EET Prof. William I. Hobbs, head of the geology department, who has spent the sunmer in Australia and the South Pacific, returned to his home in Ann Arbor last night after 27 days of continuous travelling. Professor Hobbs was one of 14 dole- ANNOUNCE VARSITY BAND TEMPORAY PPOINTET SELLARDS, ''3. WILl1 WIELDI BA- TON, PRESTON, '2sE, TO BE UNDERSTUI)y Temporary appointments to the po-- sitions on the Varsity hand were made at the rehearsal held last night in University Hall auditorium. C. Paul Sellards, '23, was appointed drum major, Charles D. Crawford, '25E, was made assistant drum major, and Lloyd It. Preston, '24E, was made temporary assistant student di-' rectoy. Permanent announcements re- garding the personnel of the band are to be made next week. Uniforms will be issued Friday and the first forma- tion will be on Saturday afternoon, when the band will attend the Case football game. The Kiwanis club of Ann Arbor has invited the University band to ac- company its membership to the state convention of Kiwanis clubs which will be 'held Thursday and Friday of next week at Kalamazoo. The bandl accepted an invitation of the organ- ization a year ago when it attended the International Convention of Ki-1 wanis clubs at Toronto, Canada. CANYON EXPLORERS SAEI t I i ]l V 1 I (3 r i I John M. Russell, '24, manager of the University Glee club, who left for Chicago Monday night in an attempt to have Michigan's Glee club entered in the Intercollegiate Glee club Asso- ciation competitions, succeeded in ob- taining permission for Michigan to VIiL IUI UtLlLHDU ELECTION 1ILL1EA OB'lAF'NS OllIER iElI': R11{ U BOARD FROM ('ETIYIN( RESULTS Ii V i, 1 1 E t 1 l enter. The date of the western con- Oklahoma City, Okla., Oct. 2- (By testntor.eThedatfhicagoeinwch-A. .)-Governor J. C. Walton's at- test to be held at Chicago ane i which tack on the legality off yesterday's ten mid-western schools will partic- election on an amendment to permit ipate has not yet been settled. an impeachment session of the statef Last year eight school clubs sang legislature was in full swing tonight' in the competitions at Chicago and with more than a third of the returns these schools are entered again this not yet tabulated. year. Two new schools have been His first gun in the aft3r election added, one of these being Michigan fight was fired today when he obtained! Last year Wisconsin won the com- in state district court a temporary re- petition and as a result went to New straining order prohibiting tih e Mte York city where the eastern Inter- election bloarId from certifying thle re- collegiate competitions were held. turns to the Secretary of State. George Oscar Bowen, director of the Hearing on the application to makeI Glee club, will continue td meet new the order permanent was set for Oct. men tonight who wish to try out be- 9. Observers on. both sides #nticipat-- tween 7 and 9 o'clock in the upper ed a lull in the contest between the reading room of the Union. About govern;, and the legislavure until 75 men have already reported but all ! then. The order was handed by Juge other men interested in trying out are Chambers, Jr., an appointee of (Go.' urged to see Mr. Bowen as there are Walton. many vacancies in the club this year In his appointment the executive alleged the election was illegal be- cause the proposed constitutional am dmn submitt were ot pr- erly advertised before the election. n c , le-laredl that thousands of armneol spe- t -e REACHES 4ci1BU MARK cial depiuties in the state had nmi ated and, that this combined with al- leged influence exerted by the K. K. K. had eptmor tnmn zu~u' im':uLI' gates from the United States attend- TTIF WIH nL n sns the Pan-Pacific Science Congress w hich was held in Melbourne and Sydney, Australia. Scientists from all nations bordering on the Pacific Washington, Oct. 3-(By A.P.)-A; ocean were present at the Congress. telegram of congrations was sent by Agriculture, Zoology, Botany, Geol- Secretary Work today to C. H. Birds- ogy, Geography and Ihygiene were the eye, and other members of the party sciences discussed at the assembly, sent by the geographical survey which was the second of its kind to through the Grand Canyon of the Col- be held. Professor Hobbs had the orado. The men started Aug. 1 in distinction of delivering the opening boats from Lee Ferry, Arizona, to address at Sydney, and in addition complete a topographic survey of the read three papers on scientific sub- grand Canyon as far as Bounder jects during the session. On his way to Australia, Professor Creek, Arizona, a distance of 10 Hobbs stopped in New Zealand, where miles. Wireless messages were sent he met Professor Case of the geology by them regularly until two weeks i(departmlent, whows there investi- ago when they were caught in a ser- atng tdpstwho was tr t n es1ious flood. They reported their safe- gatbg tile P ermian deposits of the ty from Diamond creek yesterday. islands. The two scientists spent sev-Ij "Arrived Diamond Creek today eral days together in the field, visit-~ (T edy " a mt nd g r eeks od "y ing the geyser district, and other ho- (Tuesday)" a telegram said. "No cations of geological interest. Pro- trouble except three days delay at fessors I-obbs delivered an address in Lava falls due to 20 feet rise in riv- eihington before leaving New Ze- er. All men well and boats uninjur- land. Professor Case was invited to ed. Expect to reach Needles Oct. 15 attend the Congress in Australia, but to 20. Have notified faml'ies of men )as unable to accept. He wrote a of safe arrival." paper describing his study of Permian f deposits which Professor Hobbs read T befome the Congress. When asked for his opinion regard-! in;.; the receeat earthquake in Japan, Professor Ilobbs said: ON YNK CSUALY LIST "It has been known for some time that Tokio and Yokohama were locate ed dangerously as regards earth- New York, Oct. 3--(By A.P.)-Four qiakes. Professor Omori, who is an membYork, t. N-wBY A.Pe)sFonr eminent Japanese authority on earth-members of the New York Yankees in- quakes. bad predicted the catastrophe, eluding Babe Ruth were on the cas-j although he lad not expected that it ualty list today but with a week re-! would occur as soon as it did. It is maining before the opening of the comaraively easy to estimate where world's series all are expected to an earthquake will occur, but to set round into condition. the time with an accuracy is ex- 1 Wally Pipp, whose ankle injury was trenly difficult.". On tihe day before the destruction of reported to be serious, hobbled into the Japanese cities, the delegation the Yankee office today aided by a from that country had extended an in- I cane to announce that he was improv- vitation to the Congress to hold their ing rapidly and would be at first base meeting in Japan. When the news of for the American league champions the cataclysm arrived, the invitation in the opening game. Pipp twisted vice-president, William J. Sheridan, reasurer, Hewitt Smith, secretary; uniors: Oliver l. 1lcGillicuddy, pres- dent, Homer FT. jtryker, vice-presi- dent, T. C. Bliss, treasurer, and Try- phosa Worehester, secretary. Nommiuatim and election of officers n practically every college in the Uni- versity will take place today. The iterary classes will meet as follows: -eniors, at 4:30 o'clock this afternoon mi Newberry hall auditoriupi; juniors at 3 o'clock at the same place; and sophomores t 4 o'clock in room 101 of the Eonomics building. The 'reshman literary class will hold Its election at a later date. TJio Elect Directly Two ballots will be cast for each office. The first will be for nomina- tion. As many names as are pre- sented from the floor may be voted upon in this ballot. The two names receiv'ng the highest number of votes n this ballot will then be voted upon mmediately in the second ballot for election. As the engineering nominations have already been made for the son- iors, soph iore and freshnman classes these nanmes will be voted 'upon for election today. The junior engineers wil meet at 9 o'clock this morning in room 348 of the,:;En'-Ji(eerlug building, to name their camididutes. Voting in all classes in this school will take place from 8 o'clock this morning un- til 2 o'clock this afternoon in the hall above the Engineering arch, Laws to .eet The law classes will all meet at 4 o'clock this afternoon at the following rooms in the Law building: seniors in room .; juniors in room D, and freshmen in room C. Classes in the dental school will imeet as follows: seniors at 5 o'clock in the upper amp'theater of the Den- tal building; juniors at 5 o'clock in the junior lecture room; sophomores at 5 o'clock in the lower amphithea- ter; and freshmen at 4 o'clock in the lower amphitheater. 'lie sol)homuore medics will meet for election at 110 o'