THE MICHIGAN DAILY. Tif UUNILHEUL~ NILL DRAW MANY inittee of 100 High School Boys and Hayo-Went-Ha Club Members Will Entertain URE MANY NOTED SPEAKERS OR SESSIONS IN AUDITORIUM ntle Parade Of All Delegates Set For Saturday Morning .n Arbor will welcome 2,000 dele- s from all parts of the state of igan 'to the twelfth annual state conference of the Michigan Y. M. which will be held here Novem- 27, 28 and 29. A committee of hiigh school boys, together with members of the Hayo-Went-Ha composed of university students attend Hays-Went-Ha camp dur- he summer, will have charge of entertainment. e programs for the various meet- have been completed, and a list ell known speakers secured for essions. The principal meetings be held in Hill auditorium, and following will speak: Fred B. h, one of the prominent leaders ae Men and Religion forward' ment, New York; Edgar M Rob- , head of boys' work for the national Y. M. C. A., New York;. dent Harry B. Hutchins; Eugene ster, city secretary for boys, De- Y. M. C. A.; Coach "Dinnie"' n, of Grand Rapids Central High' >f; Arthur Rugh of New York; W. J. Hutchins, of Oberlin Col-l e of the features of the confer- will be a gigantic parade, which een scheduled for Saturday morn- November 28. All of the dele- will be in ine, together with1 iniversity Y. M. C. A. students. Varsity band will also be in the of march. An effort is being to have the annual high school- pionship football game, between pper and lower peninsulas, play- n Saturday afternoon at Ferry1 -.. --Talks on the engineering summer camp, held last vacation, will be giv- en at the regular meeting of the For- estry club tonight in the club rooms in the new engineering building. -Committeemen for the 'Saturday night membership dance at the Union are Horton Keiser, '15, (chairman), Darrel D. Alton, '16E, Walter C. Gernt, '17E, and John W. Codd, '17. Tickets for the dance will be on sale at the Union desk after 5:00 o'clock tomor- row afternoon. .-Among the students enrolled in thet graduate department, is a retired cap- tain of the medical corps of the United States army, George heath, Jr., M. D. Dr. feath has elected courses leading o a M. S. degree in sanitary engineer- ing. Prof. R. 1. Wenley will deliver a lecture, under the auspices of the uni- versity extension lecture service, be- fore the members of the men's club of the Congregational church at Sagi- naw, on Friday, October 23. -All students of the university school of music are cordially invited to be present at the annual reception given by the members of the faculty of the school, from 8:00 to 10:00 o'clock to- morrow evening. -All students interested in gardening or flowers are cordially invited to an exhibition of dahlias, to be held today from 11:00 to ,3:00 o'clock in Harris. hall, under the auspices of the Ann Arbor Garden club. The display has been arranged by Mr. White of J. Breitmeyers' Sons of Detroit. -Prof. A. q. Canfield, of the French department, who has been in ill health' for a number of weeks, has gone to Vermont for a three week's rest. His classes will not meet until after his return. -Prof. E. W. Jones, of the economics department, will deliver an address be- fore the Board of Commerce of De- troit, Friday, November 6, on "Busi- ness Ethics.", o R THEY ARE HERE A E' THE POPULAR N N C DML IMA AAN c 0 In herring bone and . . 0 A Diagonal Scotch Tweed A T $15-00 to $25-00 T GROSS, ON LIBERTY tionists. The Russian government found itself bankrupt. Money was loaned by the Kaiser to prevent the impending danger of Russia's future C t 4b ii 't UNVRIYOWNS LARGE TELESCOPE Michigan's Third Observatory Possesses Biggest Instrument of Its Kind RECORD KEPT OF EARTHQUAKES That the university observatory pos- sesses the third largest reflecting tel- escope in the world, is a fact not gen- erally realized by Michigan students. The instrument, which was coMpleted in 1911, was designed by the directors of the observatory, and was largely constructed in Ann Arbor. Its superi- or optical parts and its convenient mounting make it one of the most powerful instruments of its kind in the world. The diameter of the large mirror is 37 1-2 inches. Since its completion, this telescope has been devoted exclusively to the photographic study of spectra, and for this reason no sensational discoveries have been made. More than three thousand photographs have already been taken with it. The observatory also possesses one of the best installations in the country for registering earthquakes. The in- strument, which is called the seismo- graph, registers every unusual move- ment of the earth during all the 24 hours of the day. It has kept a com- plete record of earthquakes in all parts of the globe for five consecutive years.'1. The observatory houses many other pieces of interesting apparatus. In its equipment are a 12 inch refracting tel- escope, an anemometer, which regis- ters the velocity of the wind, and a transit, which is used in observing the time of the transit of heavenly bodies across the sky. RUSSIAN STUDENT G11IS WAR V IEWS1 L. B. Molseyeff, '15E, Who Took Part In A Russian Uprising, Finds Hope In Conflict DENIES MURDER WAS CAUSE Leonard B. Moiseyeff, '15E, who took an active part in the Russian revolu- tion of 1904-5, and was later exiled by the government, believes that the European war has much hope and promise for the peasant classes in Russia. He is of the conviction that the Kaiser of Germany cooperated with the Russian bureaucracy in the suppression of the Russian people. "I am of the opinion," said Mr. Moiseyeff in speaking of the present European) situation, "that Russia did not gain her liberty at the time of revolution in 1904-1905, because Ger- many, represented by the Kaiser and the military party, supported in every possible way Russian bureaucratic government. The Kaiser does not want to see Russia a free country, be- cause he realizes that Russia's enor- mous population of 71,000,000 would be of great danger to Germany, com- mercially and politically, if the Rus- sian people were made free. "I am not identifying the Kaiser of Germany and the military party, with the brilliant, progressive people. In the time of the . Russian revolution, people withdrew their money from the banks. at the instigation of the revolu- strength. "The' reasons for the present Euro- pean war are many and complicated. The conflict had to come sooner or later. It was commonly stated that the cause of the present war was the murder of Arch-duke Franz Ferdi- nand, the heir to the Austro-Hungar- ian monarchy, by a pan-Servian fana- tic at Saraevo. In other words, war was due to the death of the most hated royal person in Europe. Neither the Kaiser nor the German war party believe this to be the cause. They know, and we know, that Saraevo was the pretext and not the cause. The Kaiser thought it an advantageous time to strike at his political enemies, Russia and France. "It makes no difference who wins the present struggle, for Russia will gain greatly in regard to her liber- ties. The Russian people, as well as the Russian government, see plainly that in order to' withstand the pres- sure from the west, they must be on a level with all Europe. Russia is on the dawn of a new era. Her bureau- cratic government will have to live up to the principles of her republican allies." DOCTOR RICHARDSON TO SPEAK TO "Y" MEETING AT MAJESTIC Dr. Norman E. Richardson, professor' of religious psychology and pedagogy in Boston University, will be the speaker at the next "Y" meeting Sun- day night at 6:30 o'clock at the Majes- tic theater. - Dr. Richardson studied for three years at several German universities, and is considered one of, the leading professors of Boston. Aside from his connection with Boston University, he has 1,200 outside pupils. Y. M. C. A. to Meet in Battle Creek "Relationships" will be the general topic for discussion at a state meeting of city Y. M. C. A. board members, committee men and constituents, to be held at the Battle Creek Sanitari- um, October 28 and 29. The associa- tion's relationship to the schools, to civic affairs, to industry and to the church will be considered. Prof. A. G. Hall, registrar of the university is one of a commission of six to report on the church phase. A PLACE IN THE SUN By Cyril Harcourt (822.8 H26p) The independence of modern youth, intensified by impertinence, gives the playwright an opportunity to con- struct an impolite comedy of the man- ners type. There is, in the first place, one family which -contributes two children to the action, while, on the other hand, there is a second family which offers up two more children and the p a r e n t against whom the essence of present-day youthful disagreeableness is splashed. The four children fall in love in more or less disapproved fashion, the father becomes sputteringly indignant, and there is no end of trouble until the unseeing parent is induced, at the finish, to admit that modern youth are clever. But the reader may not agree with the conclusion extracted for him by Mr. Harcourt. If he is a bit old man- nered, and still thinks that even a gouty parent has his rights, he may climb through the lines, take the mak- ing of the moral into his own hands, and end up by insisting that the father is the victim of a tragedy. In trying to dazzle the beholder with the inci- sively brilliant impertinence of youth, the writer carries his illustration too far, and the result is that his fool is made his hero. Sentimentality is excluded, and the love-making is breezy but determined. Everybody says what he thinks, es- pecially if it happens to be. In the na- ture of an assault on the father's old- styled notions regarding young people. The dialogue is ' sharp, but cruelly sharp, and the farcicial situations get most of their poignancy out of shock- ing the wholesome ideas of propriety still extant. Union Bureau Provides Work for Two Work at ushering has been furnish- ed two students, and a few have been sent out on odd jobs during the last few days by the Michigan Union em- ployment bureau. Jobs at soliciting and canvassing, and a job of waiting table for board with a room-renting proviso remain open. I cy Students' Smoker Postponed ding to the original plan, the for pharmacy students was to en held at the Union Friday October 23, but the Prescott Zder whose auspices the affair e given, was unable to secure on for that time. The future indefinite, because it is feared smoker will have to be post- intil after the Harvard game, of the men in that department g east with the team, and the their departure is not known. -Prof. H. R. Cross, of the literary de- partment, has returned from Brown University, where he was the rep- resentative of the University of Mich- igan at the one hundred and -fiftieth anniversary of Brown. He bore greet- ..ngs and cngratulations to Brown at the official meeting last Thursday where representatives from both the United States and Europe were pre- sent. -Alpha Nu society meets tomorrow qight at 7:30 o'clock in their rooms on the fourth floor of University hall. Talks will be given by R. S. Kidder on Ca' Mail f. "he Michigan Daily To Germany On account of the War "The Cotton Situation in the South," and H. T. Cohn on "The Week's Events," and the Hague Conference will continue its deliberations. -Prof. E. E. Ware, of the chemistry dlepartment, read a paper on "The Re- lations between Chinawood Oil and Modern Varnishes" in the meeting of the Michigan branch of the American Chemical society, which was held yes- terday afternoon ip room 151 of the chemistry building. --Owing to the large number of stu- dents enrolled in the class in Euro- pean history, two divisions were made, one of which is in charge'of Dr. M. B. Garrett, and the other in charge of Dr. J. F. Scott, of the history depart- ment, during the leave of absence of Prof. W. A. Frayer. -Friday night loungers at the Union will be started some time next month. The committee will be appointed soon, and plans are now being made to im- prove them this year. -Norman H. Hill, '11, former business manager of The Michigan Daily, will be married to Miss Zoe Edna Oven, of Petoskey, Michigan, on October 31. They will reside in Detroit. -"The Bodelian Library at Oxford" is the title of an article by Mr. Theodore W. Koch, university librarian, which appeared in a current issue of the Li- brary Journal. The journal also con- tained a report on the summer school session to the effect that 33 had taken the library course. -Prof. R. M. Wenley, of the philoso- phy department, will give a talk about Professor Morris, former professor of However, we can mail THE MICHIGAN DAILY to any place in the United States, Canada, or South America, for $2.50 for the entire college year. If you appreciate the DAILY when you are in school, think how much more those who are out of school will value the news, No matter what line they are interested in, whether Athletics, the Union, Dramatics, Oratory, or anything else, the DAILY covers it. We invite you to see our new offices on the first - floor of the Ann Arbor Press Bldg., on Maynard Street. philosophy in this university, at the meeting of the research club to be held at 8:00 o'clock tonight, in the histo- logical laboratory. -Because the mortar has been washed out from between the bricks in the library towers, the towers are being painted this week. Bids For Michiganensian Called In All printing and engraving bids for the 1915 Michiganensian were called in yesterday by the managers of that publication. Until these contracts are let, little work of arranging and plan- ning the book can be done, but it is expected that both contracts will be let within a few days. Across from the Majestic Michigan Daily Offices Floor Ann Arbor Press Building