THE DAILY EVERY MORNING $1.50 he Sh igan Daily I SUBSCRIBE 98. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1915. PRICE FIVE CENTS. , ._.... RACK EVENTS HOME SEASON rinceton*Relay Race to be ded by Annual Winter ish Between Sophs and Fresh A OF STARS, N STILL HOPE Arraction Will be the Veteran Tiger Quartette Against the' Untried Wolverines chigan's "at home" track season e launched tonight when a double will be staged in Watermann gym- im, the Wolverine Varsity meeting eton in a two-mile relay race af- he freshmen and sophomores have it it out for supremacy in their al winter clash. e same restrictions which gov- the handling of crowds in Water- gym last year will rule this sea- nd ut 500 rooters will be permit- i the building tonight. e battle between the teams of the lower classes promises to be un- .ly dlose, with both squads boast-. pore than the average number of The sophomores will be ham- Iby the loss of three of their best who have been drafted onto the ty relay squad, lut the winners .st year's fresh-soph meet con- :ly expect victory. e relay race will attract the chief est. with a veteran Princeton ette pitted against a green and rifle quartette. The Var- * the final event on the h the rmen or sophomores wiU ~ipartipate in tonight's dual 1,0dlge in very strenuous outs dy dfteruoon, . mauy o them were in the gym throulgh 'light eercise. hr- f the fresh squad sprad his and will be out of the meet, P of the most closely contested s Rnl tonight's program should be ille. The freshmen trve Dennee, 'y, Gallowy and Meehan, while ops are banking upon :Fihleib Kuivinen. The loss of Carroll, mian and. Donnelley, who are to Sganst Princeton, will serously en the 1917 squad, although both eigh and Kuivinen have shown lent forin. 0. Robinson should be found to e strongly in the 880, if he runs svent, for durng the trials for the :eton relay quartette, R0inson i in a record that surprised Coach all considerably. Siadford, the Arbor high school lad, will com- in the 889, and the local product big contingent of followers, almost looks as though the sophs take as many places in the pole as they have vaulters entered at nt,. for none of the" freshiman I has shown any particular abil- rtel who tied for third place in high Jump in the trials for the team spraine his ankle yester- .ternoon, and will be out of con- on entirely Both Halstead and 4mond beat him a week ago, and "Les" Waterbury and Corbin en- from the sophomore class, it is :ful whether his absence will ma- ly weaken the yearling squad. >field, the freshman sprinter who een sjowing to particular advan in the ,35-yard dash, has entered e quarter mile also. Scofield ran 40 in prep school in Denver, and kay prove a surprise to the en- s in this event, for he has done ttle work over the three and one- lap route. Burby and Robinson, ver, seem destined to fight it out nitial honors, although a dark may figure unexpectedly. TODAY Fresh-Soph track meet and Michigan vs. Princeton relay race, Waterman gymnasium, 8:00 o'clock. Membership dance at Union9 :00 o'clock. Chess and Checker club meets at l- ion, 7:30 o'clock. Highway course luncheon, Barbour gym, 12:00 o'clock. " TOMORROW I. K. Pond will talk on "What Archi- tecture Means to the Everyday Man" at the Union, 3:00 o'clock. Cosmopolitan club meets in Harris hall, 4:00 o'clock. Dr. Max Heller speaks on "Moral Cour- age in its Bearing Upon Modern Con- ditions" at the Union services in Hill auditorium, 7:00 o'clock, Inter-elass Relays to Start Saturday Inter-class relay race plans, now being made by Intramural Director Rowe, schedule the first race for next Saturday night: Prospective candi- dates should report to Director Rowe at once to participate in the try- outs. He is at Waterman gym every day from 3:00 o'clock to 5:00 o'clock in the afternoon, and from 7:00 o'clock to 9:00 o'clock inthe evening. a " TIGER RELAYTEAM. REMANS DUESTION Quartette Arrives This Morning at 8:12 O'clock on Ann Arbor Railroad MEN COMPETED IN PENN RELAYS Princeton's two mile relay team ar- rives in Ann Arbor at 8:12 o'clock this niorning. Just what the exact compo- sition of the team will be is a matter of doubt, but news from the Tiger camp seems to imply that MacKenzie, Hays, Cooley, Abia and Barr are the men who will journey here from the east. These five men, with the addition of Barnett, who is no longer eligible, were the Princeton entries in the 1914 Penn- sylvania relay carnival, and each one is a man who has had experience in intercollegiate competition of the first class. With a team of four, composed froml the gbove five, Princeton finished Offlr in the two mile relay, being bested by Illinois, Michigan, Chicago, and Darnouth, in the given order. Michigan's entries for last year were Haff, Jansen, Murphy, Lamey, and Griest, and from this list not one of the men is eligible for competition this year. Mchign's entries in the relay scheduled for tonight are all. men who have had no intercollegiate competitive experience, with the exception of Car- roll who ran In the medley relays at Buffalo on February 3. Hays, the Princeton star half-miler, has an unoficial record of one minute and 55 seconds in this distance on an outdoor track, and Mackenzie, although his regular distance is the mile, has been running the half lately, and is said to be a close second for his bril- liant teammate. In the face of such odds as these, Coach Farrell preserves a hopeful smile and says that the Mich- igan quartette will acquit itself with (Continued on Page 4) DAWSON TO TALK AT MEETING OF COSMOPOLITANS TOMORROW B: H. Dawson, '16, will give a talk on, 'Some Impressions of South Amer- ica" at a meeting of the Cosmopolitan club tomorrow afternoon at 4:00 o'clock in Harris hall.' Owing to the increased membership of the club the . Sunday afternoon meetings will nowI be given in Harris hall instead of the old club rooms in the Press building. UNION BOA9T CLUB STARTS CAVIPAIGN John S. Leonard Cooses Comnmittees for Work of Securing New Members . ECN6AISIi EN 1EV 4COURSE HIl) John S. Leonard, 'l6L, is completing his lists of men who will take charge pf the Michigan Union Boat club cam- paign for members, which will open fire next wednesday following a mon- ster smoker at the Union. The eligi- bility of men appointed to take charge of the work in the various schools and colleges, has practically been confirm- ed for the whole number. The names will be posted in a day or two. Soliciting will be carried on with the various schools and colleges as bases. A general chairman will han- dle the work in each, and will be as- sisted by 0a chairman for eac'h of the four classes in his department. Each chairman will secure a large number of committeemen to carry on the can- vass over a certain portion of the campus. The schools of Dentistry, Pharmacy and Medicine will be re- garded as a combined department with one general chairman and 11 chairmen to assist him. Special efforts will be made among the faculty men, and students have been appointed to carry on this end of the work. Any student or faculty man may register for $1.50, but all who have paid fees to the Michigan UTnion need pay only one dollar. All who register in the incipient campaign,. will be entitled to participate in con- tests at the Boat club regatta which will be held on the H1uron river in the latter part of May, and will be eligible to attend the club, dances, dinners, smokers and other meetings. Last year between 300 and 400 men enrolled in the campaign held last spring, and a much larger number is expected for this year. Members com- leted laying out a triple English l1en- ley course on 'Barton pond on the (lay of the J-hop, and besides backing the proposed inter-class and.Varsity crew racing, have distributed pamphlets and lectures on resuscitation. R~IFLE TEAM RAISES- TOTAL IN CONTEST Score Against Nebraska Brings Squad Near Top in Intercollegiate Contests ,l. it. UOSER GETS HIGHEST SCORE Michigan's Rifle team shot against Nebraska yesterday afternoon at the Ferry field rifle range, boosting its total 10 points above last week's score against Rhode Island State, the sum of the scores of the five high men being 923. In case of a defeat of Nebraska by the Michigan team this week the av- erage of the latter will increase as the Nebraskan's average decreases, thus placing Michigan in a tie for first place with Yale alone in point of games won, and above Nebraska in point of percentage. J. P. Thompson, a freshman, featur- ed yesterday afternoon's match by tie- ing L. C. Wilcoxen, with a score of 186, for high man among the first five who had significant scores. Thomp- son fell eight points short of a perfect standing score, and six points below a 100 score from prone. Wilcoxen's prone score was only four points be- low the perfect score, but he register- ed only 90 from a standing position. J. R. Moser secured the highest single score with a 97 prone target, but his 82 off-hand cardboard kept his total below the mark, which would put him among the men whose records are counted in the official scoring of the team. G. C. Curtiss also turned in a 97 prone target, but his standing rec- ord fell, when, on his last shot, with a possibility of scoring 188, he missed the target and registered a 178 score. Ann Arbor's armory will be open from 1:00 o'clock to 5:00 o'clock today for the purpose of giving instruction to all inexperienced members of the Rifle club, who will receive lessons from the older men on the team. The live men who turned in the sig- nificant scores together with DR. MAX HELLER PROMINENT IN TULANE UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES Jewish Rabbi to Talk at Union Services in Hill Auditorium Tomorrow at 7:00 O'clock AT FINAL MEETING their Dr. Max Heller, of Tulane Universi- ty, who is to speak at the Union ser- vice to be held in Hill auditorium Sun- day night, on 'Moral Courage in Its Bearing upon Modern Conditions" is one of the most prominent Jewish rab- bis in this country. However, for the past several years his activities have been centered in his work at Tulane University, and the work which he has done in the promotion of Jewish cul- ture and ideals has been aside from the regular position which he is now filling. He is also prominent in the journal- istic field, and for many years he has been editor and associate editor of the American Israelite, the foremost American Jewish periodical. For two terms, he was president of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, the highest honor within the gift of his colleagues, and he is at present a member of the executive board of that organization. The music for the service will be furnished by the choir of Temple Beth El of Detroit and Rabbi Leo M. Frank- lin of Detroit will read the full Jev- ish ritual service. HOCKEY HONORS TO BE STAKETOIGHT Science and Senior Lit Sevens Will Battle in Finals for Puck Championship NEITHER TEAM HAS LOST GAWE Campus hockey honors are at stake in the, final match of the inter-class series to be played at Weinberg's rink at 6:00 o'clock tonight, when the sci- ence seven meets the senior lit puck- chasers In what promises to be the best game of the season. Neither ag- gregation has lost a game to date, and both teams boast some fast skaters. The team that is to receive the sec- ond set of numerals, has not yet been decided, but the three elimination matches will probably be played off next week, if the ice stays. The fresh engineers play the combined senior- junior engineers on Monday night, the winner of this match meeting the law team for the chance to play the losers of Saturday night's game. The science and lit teams will line up as follows for the title match to- night: Science Lits Cochran.......... G .......Springer Waara....... ...... P , .. .iimacher Burrel........... C P .... Kneebone Christianson...... C ..... Cohen Mead ....... ... R . . Wic dnborner Campbell........L W '.. . . Underwood Richards.........R W .......Cobane Mechanical Engineers Will Plan Tour Mechanical engineering students and all others interested in the annual mechanical engineers tour of inspec- tion will meet in room 223, engineer- ing building, Tuesday afternoon at 5:00 o'clock, to lay detailed plans for this year's tour which will take place during Easter vacation. The trip will last ten days, starting from Ann Ar- bor, April 10, and returning April 19, and the itinerary will include Toledo, Pittsburg, Washington, Philadelphia, New York City and Niagara Falls, N. Y. The mechanical engineers' tours have been carried on for over twenty- seven 'years, although omitted last year to make way for the electrical en- gineers' tour, and have carried as high as 40 students, professors fpd others, over the route. Woodbridge N. Ferris Will Address Members of Highway Corse at Luncheon -in Barbour GYM LECTURES ON LAST DAY HAVE VARIED BREADTH OF SUBJECT Enrolled Visitors Draw Up Petition Asking for Repetition of Curriculum Governor Woodbridge N. Ferris will address the members of the highway engineering course at a luncheon given in their honor this noon in Barbour gym. During the morning, the men will be shown various points of interest about the campus, with members of the senior civil engineering class' acting as guides. Frank F. Rogers, state highway com- missioner, closed the fifth'and last day of the university's first highway course last night with a lecture upon the sub- ject of "Michigan's Roads." More than 135 engineers, road commissionersand farmers were enrolled, and in attend- ance at the final meeting of the course. The program for the last day's work opened yesterday morning with class- room work and discussion in room 348 in the engineering building on the sub- ject of "Surveys, Plans and Record Drawings," followed by a paper read by L. C. Smith, deputy state highway commissioner on "The Organization of Road Construction and Maintenance Forces for Townships." The morhing's Xfork was closed with a paper by W. W. Cox, inspecting engineer of the Michi- gan State highway department on "The Organization of Road Construction and Maintenance Forces for Counties," Yes- terday afternoon the course was con- tinued by discussions on the subjects of "The Duties of the Township Road Commissioner" and "The Duties of the County Road Commissioners,' and was closed by a paper read by' E. N. Hines, of the Board of County Road Comnii sloners of Wayne County, Michigan, manr "The Road Plan of Wayne dounty and the Result." The day's program was completed with Rogers' lecture last night. During the course of the afternoon's proceedings a petition, signed by near- ly all of the visitors enrolled in the course, was presented asking the reg-1 ents of the university for a repetition of the course next year, and the pub- lication of the minutes of this year's course. SENIOR LITS DINE WEDNESDAY Dean Cooley and Professor Wenley Are Speakers Dean M. E. Cooley, of the college of engineering, and Prof. R. M. Wenley, of the literary college, will speak at the senior lit banquet to be held at the Michigan 'Union next Wednesday. Louis K. Friedman will be the class speaker, while Emmett Connely will act as toastmaster. This will probably be the last ban-, quet given by the class this year, and the social committee is endeavor- ing to secure a large attendance. Sev- eral musical numbers will be arrang- ed. Tickets may be secured at the Un- ion desk, or from members of the sen- ior lit social committee., The price is 60 cents. Fifty Tickets Still to Be Distributed Tickets to the Princeton relay meet and Fresh-Soph track meet went be- fore the general student body at 3:00 o'clock yesterday afternoon, and when the office closed there were still about fifty of the admission cards left. This limited number will be distributed among applicants this morning begin- ning at 9:00 o'clock. The exchange may be effected by the presentation of the athletic book at the athletic asso- elation office. nina 6 are listed below ; Stgd. .. P. Thompson .... 92 L. C. Wilcoxen .... 90 W. J'. Schoepfle ... 89 R. S. Anderson .. 87 A. C. Simons......88 Prone Total 94 186 96 186 96 185 96 183 95 183 . 923v PRO IlITtON UN FIA9ST U M'ETING TOTAI, Temporary officers appointed yes- terday at the first meeting of the In- tercollegiate Prohibition Association were: President, Everett Judson, '16; Secretary, Rufus'Osborn, '15; Treas- urer, George McDowell, '15. Perma- nent officers will be elected at a meet- ing to be held at McMillan hall at 4:30 o'clock February 27. The original chapter of the Inter- collegiate Prohibition Association was founded at Michigan several years ago but was abandoned. Mr. Crainner of Syracuse, N. Y., the traveling secre- tary of the Association, was in Ann Arbor about two weeks ago and was instrumental in the organization of the present chapter. At present there are about 50 members in the local chapter including many men of promi- nence in campus activities. ARRAN(x' SPECIA tt PRO GRAM S ~AN I MUSIC FOR CMIUI DAN CE Boat club members will hold a duance on Washington's Birthday, at the Un- ion. A five-piece orchestra including a saxophone artist, and F. H. Grover, a tenor soloist, will furnish the music. R. M. McKean, '16, will act as chair- man, and the chaperons will be Prof. W. D: Moriarty and Mrs. Moriarty, and Prof. F, H. Stevens and Mrs. Stevens. 'Tickets at $1.00 now on sale at the Union couniter are selling rapidly, and special programs are on the press. Punch with wafers will be served at the east end of the hall, and surprise features are being planned. hOL SECOND SONGR EHEARSAL OF IPERA CHORUS CANDIDATES Another singing practice was held by the tryouts for the chorus of the opera "All That Glitters" in the big hall at the Union last night. For more than an hour the candidates rehearsed the various songs under the direction of the writers of the music. Candi- dates for the chorus will hold a re- hearsal again today at 1:30 o'clock in McMillan hall, Until a letter comes from Director Sanger, General Chairman K. Baxter, '15E, will be unable to post the list of successful men, It is probable, however, that the names of the chorus will be announced tomorrow, FA CVLTY ADOPTS RESOLUTION A,4fAINST PROBATION STUDENTS At a meeting held on January 11, the faculty of the literary college adopted the following resolution: "Any stu- dent renders himself liable to suspen- sion for a break of discipline, who, while upon probation, engages in any public exhibition, contest, game or other public activity." Although the faculty has always had the power to take such action at its discretion, the above statement was made to show how it stands on the matter. The rule does not apply to students on warning, but the same punishment could be meted out to any violator of the warning regulations if the faculty saw fit to do so. ._... _ - ^^ ' 1I I ,e THE GERMAN IRON CROSS APPEARS IN T1lE PICTURE TO THE LEFT Cross your bridges before you come to them and get your ticket for the .._ t _ ia -< . ; ; , 1 5 .h ,-.;..y .. ,( t1 V ' L r 1, i t ' % _( " f Ban Bounce HUtLL AUDITORIUM S. r t d ' . , r. ' zi'1 ,r 4F ,; : ., FAIDAY, FEBRUARY 20 SAVED THAT QUARTER?