Local $2.00 Mail $2.50 Th~e Nlichigan Daily I Local $2.00 flail $2.50 VIJI. .&TVTTTLi. i6 N ROR IHGN STRAJNUR i 93 Vol, XXltl, NO. 73. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1913. PRICE FIVE G w a T an %. NOMINATION FOR FOOTBALL MANAGER MADE Morris _. Iilligan, '14, Only Nominee for Office of 1913 Var- wity Football Man. ager. THE WEATHER MAN Forecast for. Ann Arbor-Saturday, cloudy and some snow with about sta- tionary temperature; moderate north- westerly winds. University Observatory-Friday, 7:00 p. m., temperature, 32.8; maximum temperature, 24 hours preceding, 33.4; minimum temperature, 24 hours pre- ceding, 17.4; average wind velocity, 8 miles per hour. I:FELLOWSHIPS 0FFEREI WOWEN l)EAN V.W((HAN ADDRESSES THE BY BALTI WORE ASSO('ATiN. STUDENT BOY ON "EUGENICS." The Baltimore association for the Sarah Caswell Angell hall was promotion of the university education crowvded to its utmost capacity last of women has notified the universiy ni ght to hear' Dean V. C. Vaughan, of of its fellowship of $500 available for study at any American or European the medical department, deliver a lec- university. Preference among cand-I tur on "Eugenics" or "Race Better- dates is given to women from Mary- inent." Dr. Vaughan said in part: land and the south, but the only re- "What an individual is or ought to be' quirement is that candidates must is often very largely dependent upon have done one or two years graduate the traits that he has inherited from work. All applications for the fel- his ancestors and the environment in lowship must be mailed to Dr. Mary which he lives. These traits are not Sherwcod, the Arundel, Baltimore, always manifested physically, but tsd., by March 15. mn etally as well. Some of the traits --are racessive, howevee, and tend to Chinese Studet:s Choose Officers. disappear after a time. The bad traits, At the regular meeting of the Chin- insanity, feeblemindedness, alcoholism I 'oN ELED 1FOR STERN SENIORS CELEBRATE SATURDAY, JANUARY 18. SOCIAL STUNTS TODAY. Coeietilioni for the Offices of Finan. The gala event in senior lit social 6ii Secrelary and Treasurer is Certain. activities for the year will be.held to- day in the form or a combined lunch- Captain '"Bubbles" Paterson nomi- eon and dance at the Michigan Union. nated only one man for the 1913 varsi- -The luncheon will begin at 12:00 .- o'clock and dancing will start at 2:00 ty football manager, the nominee was o'clock and last until 5:30. Tickets Morris A. Milligan, '14, former inter- are being sold rapidly and it is ex- class football manager. The nomina- pected that the greater portion of the tion came as a result of the efficient f class will be in attendance. work of Milligan in guiding the class teams last fall together with the'fact that no other candidates were prom- inently available. All nominations will close this even- ing at 6:00 o'clock, so petitions must be in before this hour in order to have the names appear upon the ballot, Sat- urday, January 18, when the annual election will be held. The polls will be open from 9:00 to 1:00 o'clock and instead of identifying voters by mem- bership cards, all voters will be re- quired to present their athletic ticket book, and event coupon number 12 will entitle each man to cast a ballot. Louis Haller, '11, '14L, presented a petition signed by the required 75 members to have his name appear as a nominee for secretary and the peti- tion was granted. This makes the nominees for offices line up as follows: football manager, Morris A. Milligan, '14; Secretary, R. Renville Wheat, '14, and Louis Haller, '11, '14L; treasurer, Albert Fletcher, '14E. There is a rumor to the effect that a :Petition will be presented before 6:0) o'clock for another man to run against Fletcher for the scribe job. This will make a. total of five names to appear on the ballot next Saturday unless more petitions appear before the eleventh hour. Noted Author-Grad Visits City. Donal Haines, a Michigan man who has made his name famous in the world of letters, is spending a- week in the city as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dickinson Welch. Prof. W. R. Humphreys and Prof. J. A. C. Hildner will be the faculty speakers. Harold Abbott, Elaine Shields, Clem Quinn, Ruth Davis and Rolfe Spinning will also give short talks. It is requested that everyone come singly and a unique system for get- ting acquainted has been arranged. An elaborate program will be present- ed and many feature dances have been provided for. The music for the oc- casion will be given by "Ike" Fischer. Those who have not as yet secured tickets may obtain them at the door for 50 cents. FRESH LIT STUDENT DIES AS RESULT OF OPERATION. Walton M. Goode, '16, died at his home in Port Sheridan, Ill., Sunday. January 5, as the result of an opera- tion for appendicitis. Goode left Ann Arbor for his vacation in apparently good health but was taken critically ill Christmas day. He was a member of the Alpha Delta Phi fraternity and was popular among his class-mates. Women to Hear Dr. Knepper Soon.. Dr. George Knepper, pastor of the Christian church, will speak to the women of the university at Newberry hall at the regular meeting Tuesday afternoon at 4:00 o'clock on "Things Fundamental." As yet no additional -program has been arranged. Oratory Head Presides at Evanston. Professsor T. C. Trueblood of the ese Students' club last night, the fol- lowing officers were elected for the remaining part of the school year: President, 1. .H. Si; Vice-President, V. T. Maw; Recording-Secretary, S. H. Kee; Corresponding-Secretary, C. P. Wang; Treasurer, P. H. Chen: and Auditor, T. F. Chen. PEACE ADVOCATE TO LECTURE HERE E. 1). 3read, Head of The World-Peace Foundation Scheduled For Monday. E DITOR OF SEVERIAL P MPHLETS Edwin D. Mead, who lectures here Monday, is the managing director of the World Peace Foundation, of which President-emeritus James B. Angell is a member of the advisory council. He is the most active advocate of interna- tional peace, spending a large portion4 of his time lecturing in the interest of the cause. In addition to his lecturing engage- ments, Mead edits the International Library and the Old South Leaflets and Studles in History as well as serve ing as an officer of both the interna- tional an'd American peace societies, His scholarly attainments, together with his charm as a public speaker, give his addresses a most entertaining character. The World Peace Foundation is closely connected with the Lake Mo- honk Arbitration Conference, wherej the national peace oratorical contest is held. This is the contest won, by Percival V. Blanshard, '11, last year, who was recently awarded a Rhodes scholarship, and whose brother Paul, will represent Michigan in the peace contests this year. I)ean Schlotterlbeck Ref turns for a IPay Dean J. O. Schlotterbeck of the pharmacy department, who is taking a leave of absence for one year, and is installing a laboratory ot Rochester, N. Y., was here on business yester- day. \ ppoint Grad Examining Psychologist Nellie L. Perkins, 12, has been ap- pointed examining psychologist for the coming summer months at the Indiana State Home for the Feeble-minded.For the past year Miss Perkins has held a fellowship at the University of Chi- cago. and criminality are said to be inherit- able, though it is still a question whether or not alcoholism in a parent leads to th feeblemindeln-ss in the offspring'." Dr. Vaughan will deliver this same lecture to University of Wisconsin and Minnesota audiences next week. KNIGHTS OF MAT TO HOLD TOURNEY Plas for W11r estling Tournament to be held Early Next Semester Nearly Ready. CLOSE IOMIPiETITION IS PROMISED \\restling makes its first move on the checkerboard of indocr sports, the third week after the start of the new semester, hiut already extensive plans are being put under way for the hold- ing of the annual tournament in Wat- erman gymnasium. Dr. G.A. May, who as director of the gymnasium was in- strumental in fathering the plans, has announced that cups will be put up to furnish added incentive to thos,, who would win t ampus fame oa the mat. The utive work of arrange- ments has be'n placed in the hands of J. C. Peterson, '13. . It was decided' yesterday by Dr. MAy and Poterson that there was no partieular or urgent reason for the holding of a general meeting as pre- vious!y announced.. Instead of the de- tails of bouts being explained in meet- ing, a poster has been' placed in the gym wrestling room which sets forth the rules and weights which will gov- ern this winter's tournament. The contenders will be divided into four classes on the grounds of weight. The first class will be for the light-weights, there being no under limit and the upper standing at 133 pounds. Next will be the welter-weights with an up- per limit of 145 pounds. Then comes the middle-weights with an upper lim- it of 145 pounds. Then come the mid- dle-weights who must top not less than 158 pounds on the scales, and above this figure will be the fourth class, the heavy-weights. The only requirement for this class is that the subject weigh in above 158 pounds, the upper limit being removed. The bouts will be wrestled under the Amer- ican amateur rules, and it is under- stood that Dr. May will act as refer- ee. PROGRAM OF "CHINESE NIGHT" TO BE AN UNUAL OFFERING Purely Oriental ;Entertainment Gives Promise of Many New Features. With a program unequalled at any previous event of that nature, the "Chinese Night" to be given at New- berry hall this evening will doubtless be a record-breaker. A playlet written and to be produc- ed especially for the occasion is prom- ised with an exceptional oriental cast and a stage environment of magnifi- cence. One of the Chinese women in the university will take part. Many features of unusual interest will be introduced in picturesque scenes. An illustrated lecture on the Chin- ese revolution will be given for the first time before a public audience. An instrumental quartet will furnish some Chinese music. The shuttle- cock dance-a common game in Chin- ese schools-and slight-of-hand will be featured. The house will be open at 7:30 and an informal reception in the parlors precedes the regular program which begins at 8:00 o'clock. It is expected that the hall will be crowded to the limit. Purely Chinese refreshment will be served. The affair is open to the public, and the entire program will be free of charge. DEAN UTHE IS ELECTED AN EDITOR ON PHYSICAL REVIEW Dean Karl Guthe, of the graduate department, wes recently elected a member of the board of editors of the "Physical Review," a monthly publi- cation devoted to research work in physics. The magazine, formerly pub- lished by Cornell University, will in the future be printed by the physical1 society, of which Dean Guthe is a1 member of the council. Prof. Goddard Lectures on Course.k "The Trained Man" is the title of ant address to be delivered by Prof. E. C.1 Goddard at Centerville this evening. This is a regular number on the uni- versity extension lecture course. F'OIIt CLASSES TO NOMINA TE STUIDENT COUNCILMEN TODAYi Four classes, junior lits, engineers, laws and medics will nominate men for student council positions at meet- ings to be held today. Time and place for the meetings are to be found in the University Notices in another columnt of this issue.l ENROLLMENT AT MICIA Registrar of Columbia University Compiles Statistics That Place Michigan Second. FIGURES ARE BASED ON FAIL ATTENDANCE AND NO ) TAL Columbia Tops All With Over 9,00 ) Students; a Gain of 1,000 in One Year. Michigan ranks second among the universities of the country in enroll- ment exclusive of the summer ses- sion, and fifth including it, according to figures compiled by Registrar Ru- dolf Tombo, of Columbia University, on the twenty-nine leading American universities, and appearing in a recent number of Science. Columbia with 6,153 students leads Michigan's 4,923 in fall attendance, and the Wolverine school's total registration of 5,620 was surpassed by Columbia with 9,007, Cal- ifornia 6,457, Chicago 6,351, and Har- vard 5,729. In the fall of 1911 the order of the universities, exclusive of summer ses- sion, was Columbia first, Cornell sec- ond, Michigan, third, Harvard fourth, and Pennsylvania fifth. Five other uni- versities have more than 4,000 students in fall attendance and are Harvard with 4,828, California 4,721, Cornell 4,605, Pennsylvania 4,290, and New York University 4,063. The largest gains in this registration were made by Indiana with 990, Chicago 700, Cali- fornia 690, and Columbia 484. There are three other universities with a total enrollment of more than 5,000, namely Cornell with 5,412, Wis- consin 5,141 and Minnesota 5,063. The largest gains including the summer sessions were reported by Columbia with an increase of 1,069, California 733, Minnesota 515 and New York University 488. Five show a loss in total registration and are Cornell, Ill- inois, Iowa, Johns Hopkins and Penn- .ylvania, while there were only four in 1911 and three in 1910. The enrollment of the different uni- versities including summer session are as follows: - _ - oratory department was elected pre- Pres> J itefhilu to Speak Sunday. siding officer for the year by the pub- President Harry B. Hutchins will tic speaking conference which met speak at the union service to be held at Evanston December 27 and 28. Sunday evenin ' at the St. Andrews Last night Pdofessor Trueblood church at 7:45. "The Gospel of Ser- gave a recital of Julius Caesar at Bat- vice," will be Pres. Hutchins' subje-t tle Creek on the university extension and the public is invited to attend. lecture course. t PERFIDIOUS STAIRS SLIP ONE OVER Students in economics are facing a Someone has been handin the far weightier problem these days than walking elevator a little dope. Ex- that of the City of New York. Indeed perts are divided as to whether it is the deductive powers and criminal soap or grease but no one, who has catching eyes of William J. Burns walked down, denies the fact that could very well be called into play. there is at present a "banana skin" And its all because the malefactor who surface on the stairs. Consequently put the slip in the stairs of the hall there have been daily catastrophes. where "marginal costs" are taught It is rather amusing, when the spec- must 'be captured ere there is a fatali- 'tator is on terra firma, to see a pair ty. of heels fly up, hear a bump-bump- For the past two or three days the bump and then see a fellow student students, who have classes on the sec- ; sitting ruefully at the bottom of the ond floor of the structure, have lived stairs. This is especially funny if he, in a .,ate of constant terror. There or she, fails to smile. isn't the shii htest danger of the floor From the other point of view, rath- caving in cr of the roof falling about er point of fall, it is not so laughable. their heads but there is a grave chance Furthermore, it is hard on the cloth- in descending the stairs. ing to say nothing of the constitution. - ----------- 'Close competition is bound to de- 1. E. Heineman to Address 'raftsmen velop in. some of the bouts, especially At the regular meeting of the Crafts- in the light-weight evcnts as the chain- men tonight David E. Heineman, of pion of last year is still in school and Detroit, will speak on "A Backward his disgruntled opponents are anxious ook in Masonry." A report of the for the chance to gain redemption. lance committee will be made -at the There is plenty of heavy-weight ma- meeting. terial, this class usually being the ---------- largcst in point of numbers. In the Condition of Xiamtin Judy Improving. two intervening weights, some are The condition of Martin Judy, '13M, now trying to decide whether they who has been suffering for the past will fatten up for the middle-weight three weeks from an attack 1 or work off a little fat and enter into of blood poisonin, was reported yes the light-weight c mpetition, Entries terday as improved. He was able to for the tournament should be made take more nourishment and had a immediately, either with Dr. May or lower temperature. Peterson the student representative. Reed Called Home by Death of Sister. Norman W. Reed, '13L, was called to London, Ont., Wednesday after- noon by a telegram stating that his sister had died. Reed had just re- turned from his holidays and when he left home, his sister was in the best of health. It is expected that he will return to college. Forestry Club Gives Successful Dance More than fifty couples attended the forestry club dance held in Packard Academy last night. This was the first affair of the kind ever attempted by the club and the members were much pleased with the success of the dance. The chaperones were Profes- sor and Mrs. Filibert Roth and Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Young. The music was furnished by "Ike" Fischer and sever- al interesting features were introduc- ed. Engineer Grad Pays Short Visit Here,. Howard Sterns, a 1911 graduate in engineering, is in Ann Arbor for a few days to renew old acquaintances. Mr. Sterns has been in the employ of the Westinghouse Electric Company since leaving college, and is now teaching in the industrial school conducted by the company. i t t 1 I Columbia........ California....... Chicago......... Harvard .......... Michigan ......... Cornell ........... Wisconsin ........ Minnesota......... Pennsylvania ... . New York University....4543 4055 Illinois ................4315 4929 Northwestern...........3632 3438 Ohio State............3608 3567 Syracuse ..............3529 3307 Yale ................3265- 3224 Texas................3016 2539 Missouri ................2871 2780 Nebraska............2811 Kansas...............2403 2265 Tulane...............2249 2040 Indiana .............. ..2234 2154 Iowa................1944 1967 Pittsburgh ........ ....1833' Stanford ................1670 1648 Princeton.............1568 1543 Western Reserve .........1378 1331 Tohns Hopkins.. ......1087 1238 Columbia had the largest summer session with 3,602 in attendance and. Chicago was second with 3,531. Cali- fornia followed with a registration of 2,275, Wisconsin fourth with 1,741 and Michigan fifth with 1,324. Only four other universities reported more than 1,000 and are Cornell, 1,307, Indiana (Continued on page 4.) 1912: .. 9007 6457 ..6351 ..5729 :.....5620 ..5412 ..5141 ..5063 .... 4843 1911 7938 5724 6062 5426 5452 5609 5015 4548 5220 Future Indefinite Present Perfect Past Definite 4 I Ix ms STUDENT DIRECTORY Va - I on r x