ORNTNQ i0 ie I' ichigan Dail I 1' i) W' "so NJO. 33.ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1914. PRICE FIVE .' : TT TEARS UP iBS' DEFENSE TODAY Meeting of the Comedy club in the so- ciety rooms at 4:30 o'clock.I FOOTBALL ADEPTS GET THEIRH PRIZES Fourteen All-Fresh Players Secure Sweaters With Numerals For Service - TO DEICgATE NEW STADIUM SATURDAY Thrice stiaun Judge Day Will Appear in Role Chief Speech-Maker at Cere- mony Before Game of Pharmic smoker, Michigan Union, 7:30 Y o'clock. YEARLINGS MAKE GOOD RECORD DESIGNER CANNOT BE PRESENT NEW BRACE INJURED ARM Triangle dinner, Michigan Union, 8:15 o'clock. Attack Being Altered obability of Using Open Play with Faculty concert, Hill auditorium, 4:15 o'clock. Union membership dinner, Michigan Union, 6:00 o'clock. All-Fresh numeral sweaters were awarded to 14 men on Douglas' squad yesterday. Those who are to receive the 1918 sweaters are as follows: Dunn, H. Schultz, W. Schultz, Smith, Michigan's new $55,000 concrete football stand on Ferry field will be officially introduced to the-public next Saturday afternoon before the Michi- gan-Pennsylvania game. The dedica- SOCCER TEAM PLAYS SATURDAY Battle Creek Normal First Opponent on Ho©me Schedule Battle Creek Normal's soccer elev- en will appear on Ferry field Saturday morning, instead of Friday as original- ly announced, to do battle with Michi- gan's husky soccerites in the first home game. Coach McCall and his men have been out every day this week, and the men seem to show an improvement in their team play over what they displayed in the first game at Ypsilanti. Coach McCall's aggregation will be materially strengthened Saturday with the appearance of a new man in the lineup. Vasil P. Moisides, '17M, a Turk, is the latest addition to Michigan's al- ready cosmopolitan squad, and his ear- ly performances have attracted Mc- Call's attention. Moisides played soc- cer in Turkey. U'NION, LOOKS FOR- CROWD ATDINNER LIVELY EFFUSION FEATURE PROGH Harold R. Schradzki, '15L, Will Forth in Humorous Eloquenc at Mass Meeting Friday FRAK MURPHY, '12-'14L, CAM ORATOR, AIDS ENTERTAINA Ticket Distribution Takes Pla Union Starting This Afternoon Atlett was again the star of in practice yesterday, the oring all three touchdowns second team made on the Ihe coaches had the same n Tuesday, and are care- ing the substitute Varsity ide them in the possible i will be made on the first 5 still at right half on the with Hughitt, Splawn and the other backs. The vet- rback has -a new brace for and expects to be able to all against the eastern in- :he two big home games Raymond, Howe, Hendrickson, Whe- tion exercises will be held at 1:30 TOMORROW Pennsy "pep" meeting, Hill auditori- un, 7:30 o'clock. QUAKER FOE1 READY FOR WESTERN TRTIP Red and' Blue Team Hold Final Prac- icle Before Invading Camp of Wolverines BROOKE TAKES 85 MEN ON TRIP (Special to The Michigan Daily.) PHILADELPHIA, PA., Nov. 4.- nting yesterday assures another capable kicker. erefore be available for ther Saturday, and Yost men instead of two to from scrimmage. attack is being remodel- irst team is busily ab- w plays. It is expected verines will use open sater extent in the two : the coaches have given of what the plans of the '981 EE Barristers Encounter Opposition in ermakers ghting their way against a strong- am yesterday, the senior engineers he second time prevented the sen- aws from scoring, and made nec- ry a third game in which to play he tie. all appearances the engineers outclassed on the line, but their Ig power and stiff fighting ughout the game kept the laws crossing their goal line. At one when Johnston of the boiler- ers had intercepted a forward the engineers got the ball on the five yard line, but the legal line -and the ball went over to the sters without a score. e third game of the senior engi- -senior law series is scheduled omorrow afternoon. The soph en- er-combined soph and fresh med- me is the only tilt scheduled for las Joins Studebaker Forces eshman Coach Prentiss Douglas, has. finished his duties as coach ie All-Fresh, will leave with his for Detroit, where he has a po- n with the Studebaker Corpora- Douglas is not sure as to wheth- e will coach the freshmen next having signed no contract as yet. Elected to Associate Editorship thur H. Rowe, '16, was elected ciate editor of the Michigan For- at the meeting of the Forestry last night. This office was creat- r the purpose of giving experience ianaging editors. The associate r will be managing editor the fol- Pennsylvania's football warriors are about ready for the Western invasion to the lair of the Wolverine, and to- morrow the Red and Blue will have its last practice and start on the long journey. Coach Brooke will take the following 35 players on the trip: Captain Jour- ney, Norwald, Koons, With- erow, Dorizas, Pepper, Harris, Henning, Russell, Hopkins, Moffett, Murdock, Sealack, Merrill, Ir- win, Urquhart, Gotwalls, Vreeland, Rockerfeller, Avery, Tucker, Wray, Mathews, Tighe and Townsend. Car- ter, McBrayer, Price, and Borie, of the hospital squad, will also make the trip. In addition to Brooke, Coaches Dick- son, Dwyer and Wallace, and Train- ers Dee and Morris will be in the Qua- ker party, which is in charge of Man- ager Austin. The lineup which will likely face the Wolverines. is: Urquhart, le; Harris, It; Dorizas, lg; Journey, c; Withierew, rg; Henning, rt; Hopkins, re; Merrill,' qb; Vreeland, lh; Wray, fb; and Tuck- er, rh. CERCLE FRANCAIS ELECTS TEN NEW STUDENTS TO MEMBERSHIP Cercle Francais has elected the fol- lowing students to its membership roll: Neva Creighton, '15, Clara I. Jones, '16, Margaret R. Foote, '15, Al- ice Taylor, '15, Olivia Williams, Mil- dred A. Bachers, '16, Dorothea Thomp- son, '17, Henley Hill, Harold B. Cor- win, '17L, and Charles J. -Frisbie, '16. Formal initiation will take place at the next meeting of the Cercle Monday' night at 8:30 o'clock in the Cercle Francais rooms. A director for the society will probably be chosen by that time. Provide Football Smoker Attractions Committeemen laid plans at the Michigan Union last night for the an- nual football smoker to be held at Waterman gymnasium Tuesday night, November 17. The program of the smoker will include awarding of "M's" to players; selections by the musical clubs, and speeches by faculty and stu- dent representatives and James Scher- merhorn of Detroit. Will Give Lecture on Schiller Tonight Prof. Eugen Kuhnemann will lec- ture on Friedrich Schiller at the high school auditorium at 8:00 o'clock to- night. Graduates of the German gym- nasium and of German universities, residing in Detroit, will come to Ann Arbor in a special car to attend the lecture tonight. lan, Ewert, Pobanz, Romans, Robins, Ingham and Willard. The All-Fresh team closed its sea- son last Saturday, after winning every game on its schedule and running up a total of 213 points in the four con- tests played. The yearlings averaged well over a point a minute for the sea- son, and at the same time kept their opponents from scoring against them. Following the Ypsilanti Normal game, which was played with almost no preparation, and resulted In a 7 to 0 victory, the first year men ran up big scores on Adrian, Alma and the University of Detroit, the last named, being the only team that threatened to score on Douglas' men. The big total rolled up by the youngsters showed that they were worthy sucecssors to the All-Fresh eleven of last year. In fact, one has to go back to the 1910 ag- gregation, to find a freshman team as well balanced as the one developed by Douglas this fall. Of the men receiving letters, several look like Varsity material for next fall, Dunn, in particular, looming up as the most promising successor to Hughitt at quarterback. Smith is a line plunger who has not found a line this fall, that was strong enough to stop him, while Raymond and the tw'o Schultz brothers are all good halves. Raymond should prove especially val- uable, on account of his ability at kicking and passing. In the line, P- banz and Ewert have shown'the most consistent work, though Howe may develop into a Varsity center with an- other year of experience. Robins has shown up well at end, and his added' weight gives him the advantage over Romans. TALKS ON PANAMA EXPOSITION Agent From Frisco Gives Illustrated Travelogue Monday John Clum, representative of the Panama Exposition, will give an il- lustrated lecture on "Picturesque America and Hawaii, In University Hall Monday night at 8:00 o'clock. Mr. Clum is making a tour of all of the universities of the United States in the Interests of the Panama Exposi- tion, and will speak here under the auspices of the Oratorical association.; Part of the travelogue will be devoted to a description of the scenery of Haw- aii, and an interesting parallel will be1 made in the picturesqueness of some parts of the United States. The sev- eral routes by which one can reach the Panama Exposition will be described and illustrated by the aid of stereopti- con views and motion pictures. Seats for this lecture will be re- served until 8:00 o'clock for members: of the Oratorical association, after which time they will be thrown open to the public free of charge. Announces Soph Engineer Committees Pres. George A. Scheibel, of the soph engineers, announced the ap- pointment of the following committees; yesterday: Social, Robert Collins, H.r A. Taylor, E. Huntington, G. Smith, C.1 T. Fishleigh; finance, Howard Taylor, R. Day, and class officers ex officio; auditing, M. W. Patterson, R. R. Gard-i ner, C. E. Wells; publicity, Lemari Kishlar', H. Thompson, B. A. Stenberg. The advisory committee decided at ac recent meeting to appoint a committee of 15 to collect the class dues. o'clock, and the program will be short. Judge William Day of Cleveland will be the principal speaker of the cere- mony. He will be introduced by James Duffy of Bay City, who played on the Varsity football team in 1887, and who is now a member of the athletic board of control. Engineer Weeks, who designed and superintended the building of the mammoth stand, is ill in St. Joseph sanitarium, and will be unable to see the result of his year's work received by the public. A small platform will be built at the east end of the stand, from which the program will be given. It is plan- ned to have the university band on hand for the ceremonies. The crowd is urged to be in seats before the hour of dedication. O'BRIEN NEARS MARK SET BY ROBINSON IN RELAY TRIALS Second Year Men Appear to Have Make-up Determined; Seniors Lack Interest Yesterday's tryouts for positions on the interclass relay teams which are to compete between halves of the Pennsylvania football game, revealed the make-up of the sophomore team, provided that no one lowers the times already made. The members of the freshmen, junior and senior teams are more uncertain. O'Brien's time of 22.4 seconds fea- tured yesterday's trials, the mainstay of the second year team coming within four fifths of a second of Robinson's time the day before. O'Brien, Fontana, Huntington, and Robinson seem like- ly to constitute the quartet that will represent the 1917 class. Two men have their positions cinch- ed on the fresh team, A. Robinson and Scofield standing clearly ahead of the others in' making time. Baer, Ran- dall, Herdell and Wickersham will have to run off the existing tie for the other positions on the team. No juniors reported yesterday, and chances for anyone to make that team are excellent. The seniors have been represented by a single candidate, and as he is unwilling to run four laps alone, the fourth year men may not be represented, unless there is a turn- out today. This is the last afternoon for tryouts and the teams will be pick- ed tonight. The winners of Saturday's race will receive their numerals. Plan Dance for Cornell Game Guests Tickets for the Discount dance to be held at the Michigan Union from 9:00 to 2:00 o'clock on the night before the Cornell-Michigan game, will be placed on sale at the Union desk during the early part of next week. Ninety-nine cents will buy a ticket, and only 101 tickets will be put on sale. The affair will be a special membership dance, designed chiefly to entertain guests in Ann Arbor for the Cornell game. Mu- sic will be furnished by Fischer's spe- cial orchestra, which will present the latest dance hits. Punch served for refreshments, and favors will feature the program. The affair will be in- formal, and special programs will be used. Ralph F. Kuhm, '15, will act as chairman of the committee in charge of the dance. Other committeemen are Waldemar A. John, '16, Louis Hyde, '16E, and Albert J. Gans, '16. Dean Henry 1.Bates Acts as Principal Speaker at First of Monthly Gatherings MEMBERS ONLY SECURE TICKETS Dean Henry M. Bates, of the law de- partment, is the principal speaker on the program of the- first monthly Un- ion membership dinner to be held at 6:00 o'clock tonight at the clubhouse. Earl B. McKinley, '16, the student speaker, will discuss the activities of the Boat club. Karl J. Mohr, '13-'15L, will preside in the capacity of toast- master. George Moritz, '15, who took a lead- ing feminine role in "Contrarie Mary," the 1913 Union opera, will sing a solo, and Russell Mills, '14E, leader of the' Mandolin club has organized a string trio which will render several num- bers. Tickets for the affair which are sell- ing at 50 cents each have been going well. These have been placed in the hands of committeemen, representing1 every class, and may be obtained from them, or at the Union desk. The din- ners, for members only, will be held' every month throughout the-year. They will ordinarily come on Wednesday,, since this is the day on which Michi-' gan gatherings throughout the coun- try, are usually held. UNION DESIRES COMMITTEE MEN' Candidates Requested to Leave Names at Manager's Office All members of the Union who care to work on Union committees, and par- ticularly at this time, on the 1915 opera,- committee, are requested to: leave their names with one of the Un- ion vice-presidents who will be' in the manager's office from 4:30 to 6:00 o'clock today. The opera committee may be appointed tonight, and will be made up largely from those who evince. a desire to work. DIRECTORIES WILL BE BOUND FOR SMALL ADDITIONAL COST Arrangements have been made by the management of the Student Direc- tory to supply bound copies for those wishing a book which will stand more+ wear than the ordinary copies. . Or-. ders for these may be placed with+ the business manager any time before No-; vember 14. To meet the extra expense of binding, 25 cents per copy will be charged. The sales for this year run1 ahead of last, 1,500 of the 2,100 copies printed having been sold.7 Musicians Asked to Secure Souvenirs Men who made the Pacific Coast trip with the Glee and Mandolin club last spring are asked to call at the officel of the club, in the Press building, for souvenir booklets describing the .tour., The pamphlets will be distributed gratis. Preparations for Friday ni mammoth mass meeting neared c pletion when C. H. Lang, '15, and G. Gault, '15, of the program com tee, reported that Harold R. Schra '15L, had consented to burst fort humorous eloquence as the stui speaker of the evening. .It now remains for the committe obtain one other alumnus speaker, the details will all have been arran Prof. C. H. 'Van Tyne, of "the hisi department, will be called upon "Jimmy" Watkins, '09, presiding of of the evening, to set forth the fac viet point. If there is any one n who has been graduated from the' versity in recent years whom cam opinion has stamped as the gem oratorical type, 'he is Frank Mur '12-'14L, who will appear on the p form Friday evening, and the spe which he is expected to give bodes for any "pepless" students in the dience. "With "Hap" Haff present to 1 the cheering, and the band striking Michigan's battle chants, the af promises to be one of the livel: mass meeting held in the histc :y the university. As it will be impu ble to accommodate all who dsire attend, the committee advises that crowd assemble early since "f ,come, first 'served" principles i hold. Admission will be granted only tickets, 'which will be given out at Michigan Union on presentation of student coupon books. The tic committee will keep office hours Thursday from 1:00 to 5:30 o'clc and on Friday from 9:00 to 12 o'clock, and from 12:45 to 7:00 o'clc W. B. Palmer, '15, and J. S. Leoa '16L, of the ticket committee, annou that tickets for the first balcony y be reserved for the women until 4 o'clock Friday afternoon. After t time they will be given out to men. CAPTAIN TRELFA HIKES BACK TO GYMNASIUM WITH RUNN1 Cross-Country Men Hold Handi Race Saturday Which Will De. cide Eastern Trip Lack of sufficient room in the Fe field club houses at this time caused Intramural Director Rowe send the fast squad of the cross-co try candidates back to their fori starting point, Waterman gymnas Captain Trelfa and his band will sume their daily races beginning t afternoon. Whether Michigan is have a team at the intercollegi cross-country event which will be 11 at Yale this year, is to be defini known Saturday, after the handi race' which is scheduled for that me ing is finished: Despite the splendid forms displa by the road runners this season t chances of making the eastern trip pear slim, due to the fact that athletic authorities believe that team ought to be sent until its sh ing against the crack teams of east can be assured. The final w has not been given yet, however, Saturday's race will find the speed exerting themselves to the utmost a desperate effort to make the time quired of them. e 10 Cents ON SALE FRIDAY AT NOON Price 10 Cents OFFICIAL -- uvenir Program @1 Pennsylvania-Michigan Gain Everybody wants one ! Beautiful poster cover In three colors. Full page pictures of the opposing teams. Excellent pictures of Maulbetsch, Hughitt, Raynesford and Splawn. Also statistics, line-ups, etc. FRIDAY at noon on the street and In State Street Stores, and at the Mass Meeting-Also at the Game SATURDAY Price 10