3k 6..Id 1 1C ilgan jai y T ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 1914. P :N WIN IEET IN FASHION n Romp Away With to 22, Lapping Two of the EVENTS FOR TODAY Ar. Frank F. Rogers speaks on weekly Sunday afternoon program, Michigan Union, 2:30 o'clock. iss Frances G. Adams speaks in Round Table room, general library, 3:00 o'clock. Mr. Willard peahan speaks at Majes- tic theater, 6:30 o'clock. Charles Clayton Morrison speaks at the Presbyterian church, at 7:45 o'clock. E ! ° , MORRIS WILL MEET RIVALS NEXT FRIDAY Five Institutions Will Compete For Bight to a Place in Inter. State Peace Oratorical Contest MIC1HRAN HAS EXCELLENT CII ANCE TO CARRY OFF HONORS State Victors to Fight it Out April 2i; With Finals on May 14 at Lake Mohonk The state Peace Oratorical contest, in which Michigan will compete against Albion, Olivet, M. A. C. and FEW TICKETS REMAIN FOR UNION OPERAI Slips For Saturday's Show Will Given Out Today at Union And Special Sale Will Start Tomorrow Be OTBALL RES PROGRAM EVENTS OF TOMORROW I and Grauman Star in Mile, e O'Brien and Corbin Star in the Dashes an's All-Fresh track team de- e Michigan State Normal Col- n, of Ypsilanti, in a one sided WNTaterman gym last night, 551 'he yearlings landed firsts in one event, the half mile; in e youngsters have been weak Carroll and Grauman, the rs, lapped the school teachers ing run; and the pedagogues o lapped in the two lap relay. l-Fresh took the lead in the event, and rapidly increased en kept the gait set by him- .e last two meets and won the lash in 4 2-5 seconds. Corbin hurdles in 5 1-5 seconds, the ever made by a freshman. ig of war between football went to the team led by Pon- r a pull of more than five with Raynsford's squad. The were: Lichtner, Quail, Rein- ardy, Campbell, Millard. The ere: Raynsford, Cochran, Re- mner, Duryea, Wood. mmaries of the meet follow: d dash-O'Brien (M), first; , second; Fontana (M), third. - Un- Kalamazoo club smoker, Michigan' ion, 7:30 o'clock. PUBLIC SEAT SAI E TO BEGIN MONDAY MORNING AT WHITNEY Moritz Still Continues to Improve And Will Probably Appear in Intended Role Nearly all seats for the four per- formances of "A Model Daughter"were disposed of long before the box office SENIOR MEDICS PETITION FOR BREAKFASTS AND LUNCHES Senior medics have moved to peti- tion Dr. Reuben Peterson, medical di- rector of the hospital, for various im- provements to be made in the hospital and laboratories. Among these are the serving of breakfasts and luncheons during the various obstetrical cases, the establishment of smoking and cloak rooms in the hospital, and the placing of mirrors over the operating tables so that the work may be better observed. The senior laboratories are described as small awkward, incon- venient and unsanitary. Penn Has Bad Attack of Measles. The outbreak of measles at the Uni- versity of Pennsylvania has become so serious that the entire fifth floor of the Baldwin dormitory was turned into a temporary infirmary yesterday. Nine students are ill with the disease in the university hospital ana physicians there have sent word there is room for no more cases. UNION CAMPAIGN ENDS WITH 1056 HIM1 Curtis . Dis- I Michigan Trl Meet With l Two Rec iI' FU first; Mr. Arthur Dunn lectures in econom- ics building, 4:15 o'clock. Mr. . St. Elmo Lewis speaks at the Commerce club smoker, Michigan Union, 7:30 o'clock. NOTED MEN WILL MAKE ADDRESSES Honorable Frank F. Rogers, C. E., will speak on "Michigan's Highway System" at 3:00 o'clock this afternoon at the Union. Mr. Rogers is a member of the Michigan State Highway com- mission. The musical program will include a solo by G. P. McMahon, '16, and the Mazda quartette, comprising L. R. Henoch, '14L, E. W. Bell, '14, E. J.'Bushjahn, '15P, and H. K. Curtis, '14L. Majestic Meeting Mr. Willard Beahan, of Cleveland, Ohio, will speak at the Y. M. C. A. meeting in the Majestic theater at 6:30 o'clock tonight. He is chief assistant engineer for the Lake Shoie and Mich- igan Southern Railroad, and a cousin of Dean Mortimer E. Cooley. As alum- ni trustee of Cornell University, and in charge of a Railway Men's Christian association for several years he has taken an active interest in working with men. Union Guild Servces, Dr. Charles Clayton Morrison, of Chicago, Ill., will appear on the Union Guild series in the Presbyterian church at 7:45 o'clock tonight. He is a graduate of Drake University and the Chicago Theological Seminary. His articles as editor of the Christian Cen- tury have received favorable comment in the Literary Digest. DEAN HOFF WILL MAKE VISIT TO WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY Dean N. S. Hoff, of the dental school, will leave next Wednesday for St. Louis, where he will examine the dental department of Washington University, which is applying for ad- mission to the Dental Faculties Asso- ciation of American Universities.From St. Louis Dean Hoff will go to Min- neapolis, where he will attend the an- nual meeting of the dental faculties of state universities, March 20 and 21. From Minneapolis he will go to Chi- cago for a meeting of the Illinois State Dental Society, March 23 to March 26, Married Women Students Meet Today Miss Francis Gurley Adams, of the university library, will speak to a meet- ing of the married women students to- day at 3:00 o'clock in the round table room of the general library. This is the first time in the history of co-education at the university that the students who are married women are to be recognized as a group, and the attendance today will be strictly limited to married women who are stu- dents now in attendance at the univer- sity. the Michigan State Normal school at closed yesterday afternoon. The only Ypsilanti for the privilege of sending remaining tickets are for boxes at a representative to the inter-state con- the Wednesday night performance, a test, will be held next Friday night at few 50 cent seats for Wednesday, Olivet college. Thursday and Saturday, and a scanty Walter E. Morris, '16L, won the lo- number of 75 cent coupons for Friday. cal final and will be the University of The management has decided to give a Michigan delegate. His oration "The Saturday night performance, for the Price of Peace" was recently publish- accommodation of the large numbers. ed. Prof. Thomas C. Trueblood, of the who have been turned away in the Oratory department, who has directed early sale. Morris' preparation for the contest, be- Slips for. the Saturday night lieves that he has an excellent chance show will be given out to Union mem- to carry off the honors Friday night. bers at a table in the front corridor of Following are the orators from the the Union from 3:00 to 5:00 o'clock other colleges entered, who have filed this afternoon. Each slip will entitle orations with Prof. Richard D. T. Hol- the holder to purchase six tickets at a lister, of the oratory department, who !.special sale at the Hill auditorium box is secretary of the State Peace Ora- office from 10:00 to 12:00 o'clock to- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * torical association. Albion: Wm.C.S.Pel- lowe, "The Evolution of Justice,"Mich- igan State Normal School: Lucie L. Mills, "The New Hero"; M.A.C.: Ray- mond M. Rolands, "War For Profit"; Olivet: Scarth Inglis, "The Evolution (Continued on page 6.) morrow morning. The general sale also begins at 10:00 o'clock tomorrow morning at the Whitney theater box' office, but seats for the Saturday night performance will not be open to the public until Union slipholders have (Continued on page 5.). GETTING RESULTS er (M) Participating Life Mem..... 365 Applicants .............691 Total...... ...........1056 Gain Today........ . ..24 *I * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * irst; Skin- (N), third. I (M), first; Straub (N), Grau- third. (N), first; Chase (M), third. Time The local campaign for life member- ships to the Michigan Union closed last night with the addition of 24 men. Although this is 944 short of the 2000, Homer Heath said last night that the campaign was quite satisfactory. Those added today include: H. M. Warner, '16, W. C. Edwards, '17, W. C. Walsh, '17, L. E. Jennings, '17, K. R. Bihlmire, '17, H. D. Barn- ard, '16, E. W. Higgins, '17E, R. C. Ful- lenwider, '17, Gordon Smith, '17E, W. C. Putnam, '16, T. F. Bartlett, '15, H.J. Woessner, '17, C. D. Wiley, '17, A. D. Bromley, '17, A. F. Brown, '17E, E. A.1 Thomas, '17E, H. M. Lacy, '15, E. W. Miller, '14E, W. R. Carpenter, '16, H. M. Slauson, '17, C. A. Coryell, '17, Con- rad Church, '17, Joseph Coyne, '17, G. A. Hyde, '14E. FINAL ELIMINATION ROUNDS FOR BASKETBALL ARRANGED' Drawings were held Friday after the close of the preliminaries in interclass basketball and a schedule for the first round of the final series was arranged. At 7:10 o'clock tomorrow the senior lits will meet the soph lits, and the junior laws and fresh pharmics will also play. The second half of the first round will be played on Tuesday; and the semi-finals will take place Thursday night. The teams which survive the play of Monday and Tuesday night will draw on Wednesday to determine their opponents for the next round. HOLD SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS FOR SCHOOLMASTERS' CLUB. A series of exhibits will be held in connection with the sessions of the Classical Conference and the Michigan Schoolmasters' Club in the basement of the Memorial building April 2. These will consist of facsimiles of manuscripts of the Bible, shown and explained by Prof. H. A. Sanders; recent publica- tions in the field of classical literature and archaeology, in charge of Prof. Campbell Bonner; and archaeological il- lustrative material, including recent charts and plates of interest to students and teachers of the ancient languages and history, to be expalined by Prof. J.' G. Winter and Dr. F. E. Robbins. WOLVERINES TOOK FIVE TO FOUR FOR ORANGE] Each Team Makes Clean Swe Events; Easterners Unp in Dash and Quarte SYRACUSE, N. Y., March: igan defeated Syracuse 42 to dual indoor track meet her when Pope, with a five yar Johnson, dropped his stick lay race, the last and decil of the meet. Michigan took and four seconds and won while Syracuse won four e placed five times in second. By breaking two Archabol ords and tying another, t athletes were but two poin Michigan when the relay called; the score being 37 t the victory hinging on the of the relay. The local speedsters, owin familiarity with the track, pected to win the race and the carelessness of Pope in t relay lost the event. The runner had a five yard lead son when he dropped the stlc Wolverines, with victory in tb were easy winners. Each team scored a swee events; Seward and Bond I the dash, and Jansen and Jo all the points in the quarter igan. In the half mile Ba for Syracuse, with Taylor at setting a new indoor record acuse. Barton, the individu the meet, also won the mile ting another indoor record. high jump Curtis and Co'rt: for first at 5 feet 9 inches, local record. The summaries follow: Shot put-Kohler (M), fir; (S), second. Distance-44 ft 45 yard dash-Seward (1 Bond (M), second. Time-4 45 yard high hurdles-Armst first; Delling (S), second. 5 3-5 seconds. 300 yard dash-Smith ( Floitch (S), second. Time- 440 yard dash-Jansen (1 John (M), second. Time 55ti 880 yard run-Barton (S), for (S), second. Time-2 n (New Syracuse indoor recor Mile run-Barton (S),1rst second. (A new Syracuse ind was made in this event, but could not be verified at th going to press,) Pole valt-Curtis (5 ) fi (M), second. ht-12 (Equals Syracus indoor rec High jump-Curtis (S), right (S), tied for first. He 9 in. 1200 yard relay race-Won igan, (Ufer, Johnson, John a Time-21 3-5 seconds. Buildings Replace Flap Tent Several improvements a planned by the surveying d for Camp Davis, the summe vous of senior civil engine old flap tents used in the pa replaced with steel buildin well equipped hospital will Dr. Stouffer of the Universi Service, who had charge of cal work last summer, has a placed in charge. r.t Time-I en Complete First Round ound in the handball tour- completed yesterday with g scores: Morse beat Rey- and 15-7; Del Valle took three sets from Bonilla, and 15-10; Johnson cap- st two of his frames with , 18-9, and 18-6. Tucker rfeited to Hayes and Stan- ively. Werum won from ult. t Lunch Room of $23.50 d robbery on State street reeks was committed early orning, when the Balti- lunch room was entered )f $23.50. Entrance was eking the lock on the rear noney was stolen from a t had been concealed and ed that the larceny was y someone intimately ac- h the premises. I i Y' DD'EQDVTEDIAM C or. (Division and Huron Sts. REV. LEONARD A. BARRETT, Pastor. Roy HAMILTON, Student Pastor 10;30 A. M.-"Release of Spirtual Power Through Prayer" 12 M.-Young Men's Class, "The Parables of Modern Life" 6:30 -Christian Endeav r ,' r PRESBYTERIAN CHAS. CLAYTON MORRISON UNION CHURCH Am of Chicaego Editor of Christian Century