1 lichi gan Dal 4 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1912. FAOSrFRA~S P OF ' NIA llT Ittend Y.W.C. lor s at RELIGIOUS WORK BEGINS TONIGHT Men and Religion Forward Movement Opens With Mass Meetings MANY RESPOND TO, RICKEY'S SUMMONS Although Eighty - Three Ball Tossers Report, Infielders Are Needed F ITUSSFFRAGIST SPE lERE SATURDAY F IMiss Pankhurst to Appear inl "igh tables, stretched the ie Y. W. C. A. parlors :all, decorated with ers, accompanied the young women who at- W. C. A. banquet, the lie "Big Week" at New- French acted as toast- Angell was slated to Claims of the Scholar- forced to leave early nan responded to the ead. Grace Lockton Claims of Friendship;" on "The Claims of the id Miss Conde, the on "The Claims of Je-, TO HOLD BANUJET TOMORROW. I POST PRACTICE HOURS IN GYM. The next event in the week will be a meeting at Newberry Hall this ev- ening at 6:30 for all university women. Miss Conde will speak on "Four Kinds of College Girls I Have Met." The meeting tomorrow will be at 7:30 at Newberry Hall. Miss Conde will speak on "The University Women's Attitude Towards Faith." Lucile Stowe, '12, and Josephine Davis, '12, will sing a duet. NOMINATE CLASS DAY OFFICERS. Senior Laws Choose Representatives For Commencement Week Senior law officers for class day were nominated at a meeting of the class Friday afternon. Chief interest seemed centered about class prophet, G. M. Humphreys, L. F. Martin, A. R. Dilley, and Victor R. Jose being nom- inated for this place on the program. Considerable enthusiasm was also manifested in proposing candidates - for Class Poet, P. H. Cale, Jack How- ard, and Arthur Blaess receiving the necessary impetus to start the cam- 7 paign. E. C. Middleton was the sole choice of the class for Valedictorian. L Walter K. Towers and Frank Hinks will compete for Class Historian, while the choice for the representative to present the class memorial, lies be- tween Langdon Larwill and 0. K. Krietzberger. A motion was made at the meeting that the pictures of the class team and other pictures that usually went in the Michiganensian should be pub- - lished in the March issue of the Mich- igan Alumnus which is to have a spe- cial supplement devoted to the law d'epartment.. The motion was tabled, however, without discussion. UNMUZZLED CANINE MAY GET XI PSI PHI MEN IN WRONG. Because the bulldog belonging to the Xi Psi Phi house bit g Mail Carrier Kern, all the r members may be arrested. Com- e plaint was made that the dog was run- ning unmuzzled in the streets and a warrant was issue for the owner, but r no one claimed the ownership of the I animal and at present it is for the city attorney to decide whether to en- force the law and arrest all the mem-' e bers or to let the matter drop. The .Men and' Religion Forward Movement commences its campaign today in this city through the coopera- tion of all the churches and both the3 university and city Y. M. C. A. A massI meeting for young men will be held in the Congregational church tonight at# 6:30 at which Rev. J. P. Huget, of De- troit, will be the principal speaker. Dean A. C. Peck, of Denver, will give the chief address at a big mass meet- ing for men at the Whitney theater tonight at 7:30. Music at both mass, meetings will be furnished by the uni- versity Y. M, C. A. quartet. The principal event for tomorrow is a banquet for 500 men in the New Ar- mory building. Men of national repu- tation will speak, among them are Dean A. C. Peck, Bishop C. D. Will-1 iams, of Detroit, and J. A. Van Dis, of Kalamazoo. Prof. H. L. Wilgus, of' the law department, will be in charge of the affair. Every day of the week there will be student worker meetings in McMillan Hall at which students interested in the movement are invited to attend. Programs of the week's campaign will be distributed at all of the churches today. UNION HAS PLANNED ROYAL ENTERTAINMENT FOR TODAY Music loving members of the Michi- gan Union will have ample opportuni- ty to satiate their appetites this after- noon. Instrumental, vocal and string music, by campus bards, will fill the program which will start at 3 o'clock and contniue until 5 o'clock. "Bos" Gage, peer of local players,, and the leader for years in Michigan musical circles, will bid farewell to the campus, at the concert this after- noon. Ernest Kanzler will assist in the program with the violin. Carlisle Ferguson, of Michigan Un- ion Opera fame, will sing a number of the latest solos and also give a number of popular selections from the operas. Don Daren, Irvie Lattimer, and TAeg- inald Leitch will complete the pro- gram with stringed instruments. Ci- gars, cigarettes and cider will be serv- ed as refreshments. "Ike" Fischer with a five piece or- chestra will play at the clubhouse from 6 o'clock to 7 o'clock tonight. Prof. F. N. Scott of the rhetoric de- partment returned yesterday morning from a trip east where he attended the National Conference on Entrance Re- quirements in English. While on his way to New York he stopped off at Poughkeepsie where he addressed the students at Vassar. A grand total of eighty-three aspir- ants responded to the first call for7 baseball candidates at Waterman gym yesterday afternoon, and the prediction that there will be a fight for every po- sition on the team seems verified. Yes- terday's call brought'out some fine ma- terial for practically every position on the team and prospects for the year look bright. The thirty-two battery men who were started to work Friday, were on hand yesterday and are working hard despite the tendency to sore arms. Several of the hurlers are already be- ginning to show class and it should be a pretty fight for road twirlers, and the large number insures at least, plenty of reserve talent for home games. The infield still is the big problem and although some fast men turned out the question is far from settled. Granting that Shorty McMil- lan will perform on third or at short, there are still three places to sbe filled and if the infield is poor, the strength of the team is gone. Outfield May be Broken. It is entirely possible that the out-. field of last year will be broken up' and two of the men moved into the smaller area. In case no new men' qualify for the initial bag, Mitchell may be appointed guardian thereof, and if Jack Walch does not appear i the mask, Munson seems the logical man for that position. This will leave two big .holes in the official outfield and there should be a number of candi- dates to ill them. But the number o fly chasers who turned out yesterday was very slight, many evidently think- ing all the gardens had been awarded and not thinking it worth while to try, out. In view of the proposed change, there seems to be plenty of opportuni- ty for fast fielders and Coach Rickey is anxious that more turn out for these jobs. First Cut Wednesday. The large number of aspirants mak- es it necessary to make the first cut at a record breaking early hour, and Wednesday will see the axe descend for the first time. From now on train- ing and practice starts in earnest and those who do not show any ability will be requested to make room. It is not stated how many will be dropped at this time but it is expected that only a small number will depart. In view of the size of the squad, it has been di- vided into two sections 'and practice hours will be arranged this week so that the floor will not be so overcrowd- ed.. These hours will be posted in the gym and the squad will be divided in- discriminately. School hall as Guest of Local Club. Miss Sylvia Pankhurst, the noted ex- ponent of equal suffrage, will speak at the High School hall next Saturday evening under the auspices of the Equal Suffrage club. Miss Pankhurst is one of the mili- tant suffragists and has spent several terms in English prisons and the hard treatment she received there inspired her to do a great deal to secure prison -reform. in England. She has written much on the industrial condition of women, having worked in English fac- tories to acquaint herself with condi- tions there. In this country Miss Pankhurst has spoken in most of the large cities. She addressed the Massachusetts Ju- diciary committee on "The Social Stat- us of Women." Her subject here will be relative to the suffrage movement. While in Ann Arbor, Miss Pankhurst will be the guest of Mrs. Frederick Waldron. At the meeting of the suffrage club yesterday the following officers were elected: president, Mrs. Sara A. C. Plummer; first vice-president, Mrs. A. S. Warthin; second vice-president, Mrs. V. C. Vaughan; recording secre-. tary, Miss Mary Hinsdale; correspond- ing secretary, Mrs. Maria T. Peel; treasurer, Mrs. C. George, Sr. ADMINISTRATIVE BOARD TO PASS ON ENTRANCE RULES. By special order of the Administra- 'tive Board, that body's ultimatum on the findings of the sub-departmental committees on ,entrance requirements will be considered at the next literary faculty meeting., No authentic data concerning the nature of the proposed hang es will bo vouchsafed by the au- * * * * Y * La Fol Clark Bryan * Jers was pres ing t Thec and vote W to thorities until after the ameeting . is ther held. beenl It has been known for some time pros that the acceptance of vocational sub- chap jects for entrance was being consid- ist 1 ered, and the possible extension of the an c list of academic studies. It is also His likely that the two types of require- ments will be divided into groups of1 which only a limited number of com- binations will be permitted.' MAY RFCEIVE MEMENTO OF SUNKEN BATTLESHIP MAINE. Ann Arbor may be one of the for- tunate cities to receive a piece of the sunken battleship Maine, which is now being raised from its resting place at the bottom of Havana harbor. Con- gressman Wedemeyer at present is making the preliminary efforts and Mayor Walz stated last evening that the souvenir will probably be secured. PROF. BIGELOW PUBLISHES NEW VOLUME ON CHEMISTRY Prof. S. Lawrence Bigelow has re- cently published a work entitled"Theo- retical and Physical Chemistry," which deals with the fundamental principles of general chemistry, from the experi- mental, as well as the theoretical side. The work consists of thirty chapters comprised in about 540 pages, and is published by the Century Company. Junior Lits to Dance March 13. The Junior Lits will give a dancing party at the Packard Academy, Wed- nesday, March 13, 1912. Tickets may be secured from the committee-Hart, Trible, Wilson and Dickinson. the date and ing the c thir vot and then sma Will thre pledge man, '7 the can and although, sev porters worked h they could not co organized operat: cratic competitors L Follette Ca] At the last mom the La Follette ad force and pushed of ffth place. ' tor's vote, was n give him a place a he came strong i the contest. Ca support yesterday day and conseque tion. William Jennin small portion of supporters were (Continued wi I, Prof. Cross Lectures in Detroit. ho Prof. H. B. Cross, of the fine arts de- et partment, will deliver a lecture on at "Idealism in Art" at the first Congre- ee gational church of Detroit this evening. e_ It is one of a series of lectures being given in that church. 11t'rsbtertau Cburch 10:30-Preaching by Dean A. C. Peck, of Denver. 12:05-New Class on Social Service Problems for University Women. Led by Miss INGLIS. m r IM aWM get Will speak to m4 meeting at -the tional Church, 4 There will be no services at the 4 ... e 1