!, ike Another's he Daily-Subscribe -- h Michigan Daily the ANN ARBOR, MICHIGN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1911. DRILL BEHIND TIGHT SATES s Secret Session With to Prepare For Game Farmers in Lansing LL TO BE PUT IN GAME. 00 Rooters Have Bought Tickets to Go to Game on Cheap Excursion. -* * * * * * * * -ters' Special leaves M. C t at 8:45 A. M., arrives Lan- 10:45 A. M. Leaves Lan- 7:30 P. M. Arrives Ann A' - ):30 P. M. Fare, $1.00. Re- d seat, $1.00. * * * * * * * * *_ *, WOMEN TllI1Vi MEN ARE BETTER. Many Opine that Men are Superior as IReporters. Despite the cordial invitation that was extended by- the management of the Daily to the women of the uni- versity, asking them to try for places on the reportorial staff, no women have ventured to announce themselves as candidates for a position. In fact, most of the women, whohave been seen in regard to the matter, declare. that they are not anxious to have a representative of their sex on the sheet, because the men have handled the news in a satisfactory manner. No women can be found who are particularly interested in the news- paper game. There are some who have literary aspirations but they seem to prefer the magazines rather than the daily papers as a means of exercising their talents. Most of them are apparently afraid of the many dif- ificulties that are attendant upon a newspaper woman and have no desire to write the news of the day, prefer- ing to devote their time to the critical essays and short stories. "We have no desire to have a woman representative on the Daily," said Miss Edna Thuner, president of the; Women's League. "While we believe that it is only fair to allow any girl the chance to make a place on the staff, we have no objection to the men handling any of the news connected with the women's affairs on the cam- pus. "In fact, the men seem better able to handle it than the average woman. Of course, there may be some women who are especially fitted for that kind of work but I have not seen any of them who want to work on the Daily. As long as the news is handled as well as it has been, we shall not makeany effort to have a woman represULative placed on the staff." FIVE CANDIDATES TO ENTER RACE FOR LAW PRESIDENCY. FRESHMEN TO MEET EXPERIENCED TEAM Today's Appointments Have Been on Gridiron Since Mid- dle of Last Month INTERCLASS.GAMES WILL STARTOCTI 23 Interclass Football Manager Fixes Dates for Gridiron Clashes COLE ANNOUNCES FRESH LINE-UP [ASSIGNED CURTAIN GAME.I .d closed gates, Yost sent his rough their final drill before A. C. game. No one was ad- and it is altogether likely that -ill be some new dope handed he Farmers when the Wolver-1 Lansing. McMillan and Craig ternated at quarter, and Craig all probability start the ses- ough McMillan is to have a to work. neup will be the same as start- Case game with the exception ell who will go in at right half. ton will be on the side lines here is an opportunity for a k he will b4- put in so that ad- can be taken of his' proven king abilitys son was back in the practice erson was on the job of pass- ball. Almendinger's knee is e so that he can play at least the game. four hundred tickets have been 'eady for the trip to Lansing team will leave on the same at carries the rooters. and Wells will be on the ends;a ad Almendinger, guards;. Pat- enter; Craig, quarter; Thom- 1; Carpell and Torbet, halves; m will return on the special hat carries the rooters and get in here about ten o'clock. r Laws Make Nominations ations for offices in the junior ss were made at a meeting sterday afternoon. The elec- b be held on Monday. ollowing are tentative selec- T. W. Lannigan, Burke Shar- :sident; R. J. Setzer, Stanley ,.vice-president; J. R. Conley, y; M. P. Kuhr, R.'E. Bostick, r; G. D. Kelley, oratorical del- . McCarthy, football manager; Barringer, baseball manager; rcer, track manager; Richard s, sergeant-at-arms. girl choruses are a decidely ature of the students' operaE rniversity of Kansas. irls at the university of Iowa' ining a second annual public show. ton and Syracuse have added ory swimming to their curric- In tackling Mt. Union college this afternoon on Ferry field, the Michigan freshmen meet a team that has al- ready played two games and won them both by decisive scores. The team from Alliance, O., has been in the field since the 'middle of September and the mettle of Coach Cole's proteges is sure to be tested., Coach Bob Dawson of the Mt. Un- ion eleven has succeeded in devel- oping a strong team. In spite of the fact that the Mt. Union scrubs put it over the regulars in the first scrim- mage of the season a few weeks sago. Dawson rounded his men into , uch good shape that they defeated Betha- ny college 46 to 0 on September 30, and Buchtel college 9 to 0 on October 7. The lineup, which the Mt. Union team will use this afternoon is the same which has been used right along and which appeared in yesterday's Daily., Coach Cole has picked the following, men to appear in the All-Fresh line- up: Hadden, Nichol or Tession, L. E.; Raynsford, L. T.; Merritt, Paisley,. L. G.; Leahey, C.; Traphagan, Cole, R. G.; Musser, Tully, R. T.; Lyon, Johnson, R. E.; Kellar, Bushnell, Q.; Collette, R. H. Smith, L. H.; J. M. Smith, Jenks, F. B.; Bell Hughitt, R. H. The officials swill be Edmunds, Ref- eree; and Smith, Umpire. The freshmen appeared before the eligibility committee last night to get squared away for the game. STEAMBOAT MANAGERS HERE TO INSPECT BIG SHIP MODEL. The schedule of inter-class football games has been announced by Inter- Class Football Manager Maurice Toul- me. According to. the schedule the first of the inter-class games will be played Monday, October 23, and the season will close Saturday, November 11, when the campus championship will be decided. Inter-Class Manager Toulme has al- so announced special rules to govern the games. Class team managers are required first to take special note of the schedule, and then within the next three days to make an appointment with Dr. May, director of Waterman gym, to have the members of their respective teams examined. By Wed- nesday, Oct. 18 the managers must hand to the interclass manager a list of men eligible for their respective teams. Each manager must get the qualifications of each of his mean from the faculty. The captains of the class teams must be elected before Saturday, October 21. 'A meeting of the various class team managers was held yesterday after- noon at the Athletic association offices. All the managers did not turn out, however, and they take special heed of the above mentioned rules. The schedule follows: INT , CLASS FOOTBALL SCEDULE First Preliminaries. Junior Lits vs Soph Lits, Monday, Oct. 23. Senior Lits vs winner, Monday, Oct. 30. Junior Medics vs Soph Medics, Fri- day, Oct. 27. Junior Engineers vs Soph Engin- eers, Saturday, Oct. 28. (Morning) Junior Laws vs Senior Laws, Tues- day, Oct. 24; Senior Medics vs winner, Monday, Nov. 1. Dents v Pharmics, Thurday, Oct. 26. Senior Engineers vs winners, Tues- day, Oct. 31. Winners of Dent-Pharmic vs win- ners of Law game, Wednesday, Nov. 3. Semi-Finals. Lits vs Engineers, Saturday, Nov. 6. (Morning.) Medics vs winner Dent-Pharmic- Law, Monday, Nov. 8. Campus Championship, Final game to be played Saturday, Nov. 11 as preliminary to the All- Fresh game on the Varsity gridiron. Cornell Model for Australians. Cornell University is to be the mod- el for a new University at Perth, Aus- tralia. An expert was sent to Cornell from Australia to investigate the Cor- neil methods. A "hum" is the novel term used at, Dartmouth to designate what corres- ponds to the senior sing at Michigan. The student council of the Universi- ty of Kansas has decided on a Stu- dents' Union copied after the club; house at 0. S. U. AXE-WIELDERS IVEN W kROE Forester's Quarters Will Be Moved Into Engineering Building. The forestry department is, to have a new home. Three rooms on the top floor and a laboratory on the ground floor of the engineering building, to- gether with the laboratory in the Eco- nomics building, already in use, will constitute the new quarters for the foresters. Two of the three rooms on the fourth floor of the engineering building will be used as class rooms. One of these will also be used as a meeting place for the Forestry club. The third room on this floor is being fitted up as an office for Professor Filibert Roth, and as a place for the forestry library. The growth of the forestry depart- ment, as well as the demand for class rooms for the literary department, has necessitate'd the - removal of the forestry department from University hall, where it has been located for a number of years. Just when the foresters will- take possession of their new quarters is not certain, although some classes are already meeting in the engineering' building. Some alterations are being made, pending which, most of the classes in forestry are meeting in room 401, N. W. DAMAGE SUIT ARISING FROM "JOY RIDE" IS NOW SETTLED., Parties in the suit brought againsti Wiliam Goetz and Daniel Haas, local saloon keepers, by George Woods,I owner of the automobile which was damaged during a student "joy ride" last winter, affected a settlement of the case out of court yesterday. It is understood that the defendants were compelled to settle for the damages to the machine. Woods alleges that )Goetz and Haas sold liquor to the student who damag- ed the machine. He used the Warner -Crampton law, which prohibits the sale of liquor to -a student, as legal proof to make the defendants settle. ELECTIONS TAKE PLACE Three Men Tie In Nominat By Junior Medic Class. FOR The remaining nominations were h law, senior medic, sE I: in Five men were nominated for pres- ident by the senior law class at the meeting held yesterday afternoon. The nominees were Harold Curtis, Robert Tipping, Roscoe Bonisteel, Raymond Fryberger and C. E. Lewis. The only nominee for first vice-president was John Thomas. C. A. Norris was named for second vice-president with no one in opposition. Secretary George Brand of last year, and treasurer Gil- bert Sanders, were both retained for the ensuing year. P. H. Cole and N. H. Tracy were nominated for sergeant at arms. The nominations for the athletic managers were as follows: Football manager, Robert Burns and. Myer Morgan; baseball manager, Al-, bert Norcop; track manager, Raymond Cooper, Glenn Madison, and A. Kins- bury;. basketball manager, Paul Gay- nor. FLAG PLACED AT HALF MAST IN RESPECT FOR EX-REGENT. The campus flag was at half mast yesterday in respect to the death of Dr. Herman Kiefer of Detroit, former regent of the university and professor emeritus of medicine. Dr. Kiefer, who died on Thursday at his home, was regent from 1889 un- til 1902. Upon his resignation he was appointed professor emeritus of med- icine in recognition of his services. Regent Levi Barbour, President Hutchins and Dean Victor Vaughan were present at the funeral services held in Detroit yesterday. All Demonstrations and experiments are being made in the naval tank IV the engineering: building on a model which is expected to be the largest passenger steamboat ever built in'the United States. The model was de- signed by Frank Kirby, of Detroit, and when the results are tabulated they will be used in the constructions of a steamboat for use on the Hudson riv- er.. Some of the most important steam- boat managers in the country will meet here today for the purpose of viewing the experiments that are be- ing conducted and to inspect the naval tank. To Take Part In Elections. The students of Princeton are pre- paring to take an active part in the coming New Jersey elections. Moving pictures of the Cornell foot-, ball team were made last Thursday. They are the first films of a college team on record. Four hundred fraternity men will attend an inter-fraternity banquet at the University of Minnesota on Octo- ber 27. The sophomores at Indiana hauled down the flag guarded by the fresh- men in less than two minutes, in the annual rush. Bullet Missed Safe Blowers. The bullet, which it was supposed had lodged in the safe-cracker who recently blew up the vault in the see- retary's offee, was found imbedded in the office railing a day or two ago,, when the janitor was dusting out the room. The last signs of the safe' wrecking were obliterated yesterday when a window in the secretary's pri-' vate office and a picture, both damaged by bullets, were repaired. Old Quarters Prove Too Small. As stated in the Daily yesterday morning, the class in Philosophy 1, has been forced to move into. larger quarters because of the inadequacy of the room formerly used. Through the kindness of Dean Bates of -the law department, the class will here-. after meet. on Tuesdays and Thurs- days at 8 in Room G (second floor of the law building).- Woolsack Elects Ten Members. Woolsack elected ten members Thursday night. The following men were elected: John Gutnecht, C. P. Morris, J. G. Kennedy, Hector Young, Charles Wagner, J. M. Butler, James Cleary, W. D. Knight, W. T. Hoffman and Maurice Sugar. Can Get Advance Credit Today. Freshmen applicants for advance credits should consult Registrar Hall. at his office' hours either today or Monday. for law, junior medic, and junior gineer classes yesterday. The se pharmics will nominate Monday af noon. Two men were nominated each office to be filled. The res follow: Senior law-R. E. Metz, Ar Davenport. Senior'Medic-Wm. Edmunds, F cis Loomis. Senior homeop-Lucas He Charles Steinhauser. Junior medic-A tie between 1 Marshall, W. H. McClure, and C Wood. Junior engineer-Wm. T. Schepe Jacob Crane, Merl Taber, and Fr Gibbs. All classes will elect student co cilmen on Monday. POWERFUL SPEAKER BOOKEI TO LECTURE HERE SUND The Rev. Clement G. Clarke, will speak before the Y. M. C. A. S day evening, as well as in the Con gational Church morning and evet comes to the university with a wv earned reputation as a powe speaker with a message for col men! Mr. Clarke is a Kansas . who went to Yale, graduating v the class of 1895 and thereafter sp. ing three years in Yale Grad School, specializing in Mathema and Philosophy, before entering Divinity School of Yale. For the eight years he has been ministe the First Congregational Churci Minneapolis, a church nearby university and numbering Presi Cyrus Northrop among its memi Engineers Make First Trip. Members of the engineering s ety will make a trip of inspection Detroit, Windsor and Walkerville day. This is the first trip of they and will include visits to some of manufacturing plants in the diffe places. Professors C. A. Ellis and E. Greene will accompany the part Soler Called Before Commissio Prof. Herbert Sadler,' of the en eering department, was called to C cago yesterday to testify before Mississippi Waterways Commission regard to a canal construction un consideration. He will return to The New York State club will h its annual smoker Friday night a at the clubhouse, corner Hill State streets. All men from I York are invited. S. L. A. has made two DETECTIVE BURNS one of which is here. These S. L. A's. Latest Scoop There never, was such opportunity for ticketse1 before. Big oommisslo and good prospects. 4 tickets in U. Hall today 4 .olook. Another awnd Bigger On. Coming are going to fill U. BUY THAT T'ICKET NOW' I, 'Ie-