1031 Zl °'. r S rl } 'F" s sr e '1 y 4 r Z f ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1912. FIRE THIS MORNING ROUTS STUDENTS FROM SLUMBERS e pub- 3 to be of the last evenirg when ink tea" in the up- the general libra- re wasn't any tea corn, minits and usion. And not on- nts were lunching+ sedy fashion while bstance of numer- after much sleuth- e" detective work. perclassman was ' Having invested e in the edibles, he g room with the elf down to study. ends entered, and to help consume s, conceived the f treating the en- rdingly he took the ich was nearly as k, and commenced oom. As he hove ivited the studious r, in plain English including several pted and soon the :ing room had ad- imediately theI went into ex- he excited cub rice weredi- ing vio-I A fire, which broke out at one o'clock this morning in the Sugden rooming house at 810 E. Washington street,gave several of the roomers in the dwelling a bad scare, but did little damage ex- cept in the cellar of the house. When the call of "Fire" was heard, most of the roomers ran out into the yard, clad only in pajamas, with books and arti- cles of furniture under their arms. The fire is said to have started from a bar- rel of papers in the basement of the house, SOPH CLASSES TO uNITE FOR D UE New Armorv is to be Scene of Latest Innovation in Class Parties TICKETS GO ON SALE TOMORROW. The soph prom is to be revived. A dance which should prove second only to the Junior Hop, will be given by, the sophomores of the literary and engi- neering departments on the evening of Friday, March 1, at the New Armory This will be as near an approach to the prom that was held by the soph- omores in previous years, as is allow. ed by the university authorities. The last so-called sophomore prom was scheduled to be held in 1908, but the freshmen interfered. This dance is ir no way to be an imitation of former sophomore proms, but is intended on- ly to bring the two departments of th same year closer together. No inter- ference from tire freshmen is antici- pated. The dance will be entirely informal but in 'point of numbers and represen- tation, the partly will probably be one of the most important of the year. The affair is limited to the members of the two 1914 classes. A feature of the ticket sale will b the rivalry between the members of the two departments to show the greater represetation from the respective 1914 classes. Tickets have been printed in two colors to represent each depart- ment and the efforts of the lits and engineers to be present in the greater number should result in a large attend- ance. The ticket sale is lim- ited to 150. Tickets for the dance will be in circulation tomorrow and may be obtained from the social com- mittees of the , two 1914 classes for $1.50. U. OF WASHINGTON DAILY TO PRINT CAMPAIGN STATEMENTS SEATTLE, WASH., Jan. 24.-Cam- paign statements of platforms in stu- dent elections will appear in the Uni- versity of Washinton Daily this spring Campaign cards and electioneering are hereafter to be forbidden to office-as- piring students, who, instead, are giv- en the right to print their "platforms." Regularly nominated candidates will be given 200 words in which to declare themselves, while those who win a place on the ballot by pIetition will have to tell their story in 100 words. University Gets Liquid Air Machine. 'A liquid air machine is the latest gift to the engineering laboratories. The machine was presented by the Brush Co., of Detroit. Mr. Brush is the inventor of the Brush are and the Brush dynamo, and attended the uni- versity for a short time. "The Daily Maroon," published by the students of the University of Chi- cago, issued a special Christmas num- ber of eight pages, with an attractive cover in colors. At a recent vaudeville show present- ed by the University of Wisconsin Un- ion, a skit entitled "The Deserted Mill" made an immense sensation. DR. PARRY IS APPOINTED TQ SERVE ON LABOR COMMITTEE Dr. Carl E. Parry, of the econom ics department, has been appointed by Governor Osborn to represent the State of Michigan at the eighth an- nual conference of the National Child Labor Committee, which will be held at Louisville, Kentucky, next week. Of- ficial notification of the appointment was received yesterday, but Dr. Parry was unable to state last evening whether or not he would accept the position. ENGINEERS WIN A HOCKEY VICTORY Scien'ists are Defeated in an Exciting ti ame Witnessed by Large Crowd er labor organs, have nable than the argu- manufacturers' asso-j de against them, was lecture given by Dr e McNamara case, be- Political Economy I. .oon. Dr. Parry also unionists doubted the 'idence presented by 3, on account of their nce with private de- ther brought out the that the mayor o~f Los, id engaged Burns to dynamiters, withheld of lack of confidence er the trial was over on was assured. COMBINED TEAM TO PLAY LITS. In a game that was exciting and in- teresting from start to finish,the scien- tists went down to defeat last night at Weinberg's rink before the team from the engineering department. The mod- eration of the weather drew a large crowd to the rink and the hockey pen was surrounded by a ring of enthusi- asts. Owing to the fact that the exams are only a few days off and that there is little chance of completing the pro- posed schedule in the few remaining days, the team from the science de- partments will play no more games. A team picked from the engineers, laws, and science team will play a ;ame with the undefeated lits, and the contest promises to be one of unusual interest. King, of the science team, will probably manage the picked team and will choose two men from each of the other teams except the lits. The lineup of last night's game: Eng.- erman, goal; Smith, point; Hughitt, cover point; Ratz, left wing; Vivian, right wing; Crase, center; Ed-. wards, rover. ' S&ientists-Cramley, goal; Stewart,' pint; Shumaker, left wing; Bien, right wing; Morrison, center; King, roVer. Referee-Doyle. Time keeper-Hul- art. Goal umpires, Sweeney and Brown. DI \MOND JUBILEE COMMITTEE COMPLETES DRAFT OF PLANS. A final meeting of the faculty com- mittee in charge of arrangements for the Diamond Jubilee was held in Pres- ident Hutchin's office yesterday after- noon. The final plans for the proposed celebration were gone over care- fully, and a completed draft of the arrangements decided upon will be submitted to the Board of Regents to- morrow. Homeop Alumnus to Practce In East. Mr. Waldo W. Schairer, '11 H, who has been an interne in the homeopath- ic hospital since his graduation last June, has resigned his position and will leave for Rochester, N. Y., in a few days, He will take over the gen- eral practice of Dr. E. G. H. Beck, '03 H, and will be surgical assistant to Dr. J. Mallory Lee, '78 H, at the Lee private hospital. MINNESOTA PLANS TO HELP .STUDENTS PICK LIFE WORK. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., Jan. 24.- Extension work from the outside in, is is the plan of President Vincent of the University of Minnesota, who is bringing in 'business and professional men to give weekly lectures to the students with an aim to help the lat- ter in choosing a life work, The in- novation is the result of the studious- ness President Vincent found in the short courses for farmers and of the investigations by a Columbia man who discovered that the undergraduate who seems to lack ambition is more often merely undecided as to his future plans. 19P2 FOOTIMLL ACI1EDULE TI) BE VIVE~N 01T LAST OF WEEK Board of Control to Consider Request ef iiLsouri 'Vallcy Gra For W _ .r am. Michigan's 1912 football schedule will probably be announced the latter part of this week, as it has practically been completed by Director Bartelie of the Athletic Association, and needs only the ratification CL the 2oard in Control of Aihietics. The schedule will go to the board for approval at a meeting to be held Thursday. At thE " same time, the board will un- doubt dly consider the reo utions of - the MioiAly-lni Associ- tion which requwsts a 1912 Michig~an- Nebraska game. As the schedule is tentatively arranged, and undoubtedly does not include a Nebraska contest. it is doubtful if the bpard will author- ize Diretor Barten to make over. tures to the Cornhusker Institution. SEMOIt Pi'TGS REQUIREI S . Is M.ehiganensi m ,qai. M that Copy be has been offe iIudad in at Once. neering chair There remai7 only six days n which 'annot be al members of the graduating classes may Prof. Moyer have their pictures taken for the Mich- truth. iganensian at the rebat price of one When seen dollar. Manating Editor Hover urg- was non-con es that arrangements for sittings be plans for th made at once to ta c advantage of Cooley, when his price and also to insure the pic- said: "I know tures being turned into the Michigan- it, if Prof. ensian ofice early. handing in hi The business staff of the Michigan- 1s news to me. ensian also reports that the final date "I must re set for the payment o organization about any run dues is February 1. After this time relative to my no organization copy will be published Prof. Moyer l unless space is paid for. There is at deny that I a present a large portion of copy of the action but, fu more mportant o anizations still to' say nothing fo be turned in, and the management of If ,Prof. AMo the annual requests that socvn eties and will be the se orgaizations submit this copy immedi- has lost to th aIy. present schoc - --Prof. Filibert CORNELL NOW 4 AlT Oartment, ai HIRE ON-PRAIUATE COACHES accopting a p ______ It is generall: ITHACA, N. Y., January 24.-In or- ignation of the der to allow the selection of other than tinct loss to M Cornell alumn to each the Cornell Prof. Moyer football team, the ornell athletic Harvard in 1 council has amended its rule covering came an instr football coaching so as to give the From 1904 unt football committee power to rec- with the Gen ommend as coaches Cornell alumni, later entering former under radulutes who lot the lighouse Con football letter, and 'other coaches' years' service It is understood that this means he came to M that in future a Cornell football man ber of the mec will be in charge of football coach- ulty. ing, but that the Itbacans may have Prof. Moyer ;raduates of other colleges as foot- Plant Testing, ball coaches if the committee sees fit. tv - othe lead the co Robbery Hero Becomes Policeman uben Armbruster, the university1 watchman, who' immortalized elf by scaring away the two safe- :ers who attempted to run off some university money last fall, gone to new fields to seek for Since the new year he has wearing the "invisible blue" of' Lnn Arbor police force. ard Co.-p Does Big Business. MBRIDGE, MASS., Jan. 24.-To- sales amounting to $378,170.19 made by the Harvard "Co-Op" during the year of 1910-11, ac- ng to the recently issued. report. is an amount practicaly equal to, ombined sales at Yale, Princeton ell, Missouri and California. Cor- with about $100,000 of sales,comes st to Harvard's record. The Har- Co-Operative, with its branch employs 20 more men than the' )ned five others and has a mem- up of 2,750. presentative men of Harvard and Princeton have gone on rec- as favoring the graduate system otball coaching in preference to Prof.. B ell Enieri ms Graduate. H. S. Sacked, '06, of Chicago, in .harie of the branc_ of wood utiliza- tion in the United States forest ser- vice, was the guest last evening of Prof. Filibert Roth of the forestry de- partment. KEE S (I' NATI N. L FIREST - RE SE1RVE T'LD bY SI'EAKER. -L ( VNl ginE the 0 "There are on the national forest t reserves, sevcn~nd a half million acres that must be reforested," said n Fr'~l{ankW oil,' 12, in speakin1g be- fore teFrsr lbls vnn "The work of raising seedlings for this n immense acreage is not the smallest b part of the task." t] Mr. Merrill spent part of the past t] summer at the nursery of the Colum- r bia national forest in Washington and he gave his listeners a detailed account of the 'work there, illustrating his points with lantern slides. He also showed slides illustrating rodern lum- bering methods in the w~est. E. F. An- t. derson addressed he club briefly on 'I the subject of taking outdoor kodak t: pictures. f th his h'e c ew mester. usying' ion of "ie man e1ied hc IR with in learned gesident IHutcins to Talk at Goshen, characte President H, B. Hutchins will deliver Arthur a lecture at coshen College, Goshen, startlin: Ind., on February 27, Te subject of live fles the President's address will probably Belasco be "Respect for the Law." producw