THE' MICHIGAN DAILY --_ - " nL ]RIES in Science very "H WORK zoological in the Un lab- author- designing ries and .e of the is to be .er of the his de- in its e and his associates rk in charge have h every zoological in this country and r countries so that design and accom- be planned for the ent. Not only are Lmulated experience it they themselves m their own exper- any new and here- lities in the way of oratories and room n will be used for the storing of am- nple of some of the ligan will have un- 'his cave will be 10 nd will be provided r, aquaria, and con- facilities. This is one place in the nous laboratory at arest approach to it semi-cave used for ly at the University e Professor La Rue >f the idea for this will be the large >n the first floor of h will be fitted up m of skeletons in ipment will be fur- idlng of large ani- ly adjoining, there room which will be e preparation and s. This room is to ventillation system e the difficulties en- such work in the At present bones either be purchas- mrces or the work F r r ti I' 7A M L7 Y " i/ a " t MIGHEST VAU't FOR YOUNG MEN CLOTHES OF CHARACTER A superior garment makes its presence felt without Challenging undue attention-enhancing the wearer's personality without vying with it. Our complete assortment of models and fib ics make it comparatively easy for a man to obtain individuality in hiQ .personal attire-an individuality that will makz him feel better dressed without thinking it. Our Furnishing and 'Hat Departments will afford you an excellent selection in all the attrib- utes to young mens attire. We invite -your inspection while in Detroit. B AUiMGARTNER' Young Men's Shop GRAND RIVER AVENUE AT WASHINGTON BLVD. - DETROIT SEUM T OOBTAIM LouE cuLlECTON .Case Discovers Large Bone-Bed exas; Senres Over 1,500 single Speceiinen OUNT ONLY 1NE OF SPECIES In the last few years, the Univer ty of Michigan has been especially for- tunate in acquiring specimens of ex- tinct life. Notable among these is a collection nnade by an expedition to the Permuian beds of Texas, in 191 Pr;.'. ,C. Case has been especially >ierested in this particular field, in connection with his work for the Car- 7.gie Institution of Wshington Ile has published for them four moo- graphs on the Permian Vertebr-.os and has a fifth now in press. On one f htrips he discovered a barge bone-bed in Texas, and in the next year, the university sent an expe- dition to recover the material. As a : esult over 1,500 single specimens were brought hak, the largest single collection ever made From the bone collected it has been possible to r- store the cotplete skeletons of sev- eral of the rarest specimens. One of thes, a large lizard-like creature, Dnetrodon Incisivus Cope, is remarkable for an enormous thin crest along tize back, which has led io its being called the "fin-backed lz- ard" This specimen is now in process of preparation by Dr. Troxel, of Yale and will be sent here on its completion. It is over 20,000,000 years old, and will be the only one of its kind on exhi- bition. The labor required in the collection and preparation of the skeletons of ex- tinct form is not generally appreciat- ed. After the specimen has been gath- ered with the utmost care in the field, it is brought to the laboratory where each bone is carefully freed from stony matrix. The bones are then placed in proper positions with studied care and finally mounted, either as a complete skeleton, or in a plastered slab which serves to preserve the fragile members and natural position of the animal. The preparation of this specimen by Dr. Troxel will require three months, and it is hoped that it will be on ex- .iition before Commencement. B ASKETRALLER S TA E ChARGE At as Officials at Union Membership Dance on Saturday Basket Ball is the official title of the Michigan Union membership dance which will be presented at the club- house Saturday night, when committee- men and chaperons interested In bas- ketball will have charge. Howard Warner, '16, will act as <1'airman, and committeemen assist- "ig him will be Charles E. Stone, '16, R. L. Drummond, '18k, and C. Fischer, '1. Chaperons who have been secured to supervise the party are: Prof. R. W. Aigler and Mrs. Aigler, and Mr. W. F. Marsteller, and Mrs. Marsteller. Numerous features applicable to the indoor sport so popular during the. winter will be introduced. Pasteboards go on sale after 5:00 o'clock today at the Union counter at 50 cents each for Union members. DR. MABEL ULRICIIS TO SPEAK AT Y. M. C. A. SUNIAAY MEETINQ Dr. Mabel Ulrichs, of Minneapolis, Minn., has been secured by the univer- sity Y. M. C. A., for next Sunday even- ing. According to the "Y" officials, the place of holding the meeting has not been definitely decided upon, but it will be announced tomorrow, Dr. Ulrichs addressed one of the Majestic Sunday evening meetings last year and she is spending part of this week in a series of meetings among the women at the Ypsilanti Normal co, lege. She will spend Monday and Tues- dey of next week in. Ann Arbor in hold- ing a series of meetings for univer- sity women, Engineers Give "shirt Waist" Iance Banjaurine music will feature the spring "Shirt Waist" party' of the sen ior engineering claNs, which is to be held from 9:00 to 1:00 o'clock tonight at the Union. A sfecial orchestra has been secured to play the dance num- bers. The chaperones will be Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Hughitt and Mr. and Mrs. Allan Ricketts. i Z3 C e 30,000 gallon cistern will :clusively for providing soft the various aquaria which t plans call for. There will uarium rooms, one of which ed for research work, two oom work and one large -h will be used for combined research work. Specifica- call for a miniature fish which. will furnish special the study of embryonic efeature, found in but few oratories in this country, demonstration room. This be furnished with working and will be used as a study onsultation room where the ho are having difficulty may problems cleared up by ual demonstrations on the aestion. BALL TO TAKE PLACE how Quartet, Programs and t Togs Add to Dance y members of the quartet t club mipstrel show, elab- programs'trimmed in red, ummer togs will character- t Cotton Ball billed for the n 9:30 to 2:00 o'clock to- ight. The only damper rations was the with- Walter Niemann, '17, from tee, due to an operation on ed committee now stands: n, '15, general chairman in. all Union dances for the . Ainsworth, '15, chairman on Ball, Karl F. Walker, Nance, '17, W. F. Holmes, R. Schradzki, '15L, and. STUDENT TELLS OF: 4MILITARY CAMPING In Letter, Outlines Methods Employed by Government in Conducting Semi-Cadet School I' Squad RESULS OF SPRENG PRACTICE APPEAR IN WORK OF PILAYEWS Spends Part of TimeIe Watching Varsity Baseball Game Yesterday 9 * David Starr Jordan, Pean Chas. Brown, Dr. eorge A. Gordon Will Be Among Spealkers WESLEYAN GUILTI MAKES KNOWN NNEXT YEAR'S LECTURE PROGRAM I. LORD KI TCHELL LECTURE S ON GLACIER' NATIONAL PARK Says "Scenery in United States Equals Any in Europe;" Many Beauti'ni Slides Are Shown R. Coach Yost's athletes, after one day without the guiding eye of their men-( tor, spent part of their time yesterday in working out, and part in taking occasional glances at the Varsity base- Advance engagements for next year's Wesleyan Giiid lecturers,, show that chc quality of the previous speakers I will be maintained, if not bettered. Six of the speakers have made arrange- ments to appear in Ann Arbor, while. VARIED 1"NSTRIJCTION GIVEN J. R. Darnall, '16-'18M, local secre- tary for the National Reserve corps, who was in attendance last year at the military~ camp held by the Department of War, at Ludington, Mich., has just sent a letter to Prof. L. M. Gram, of the engineering college, in which he outlines the work of the summer camp.' The letter says that last year's camp was the first to be held in the middle west, and that students were present from Illinois, Minnesota, Missouri and Michigan. Although Michigan had only seven students at the camp, she won the rifle contest, defeating Minnesota and Illinois, colleges which have com- pulsory military training. The stu- dents at the camp were placed on a semi-strict cadet basis, and were treat- ed as officers, and not as privates. The food,, according to the letter, was.better than that given to regular soldiers, and far surpassed that offered by any Ann Arbor boarding house. Optional instruction was offered in advanced military tactics, rifle practice, baseball, tennis, swimming, canoeing and riding. Cavalry horses were provided free of charge to students who cared to ride. The camp is located on high ground overlooking Lake Michigan, and is sit- uated between two large summer re- sorts. A number of dances and moon- light parties were given for the stu- dent soldiers by the young ladies of the resorts, according to the letter. The" average cost to students for the five weeks at camp amounted to about $30. ball game. The men are beginning to show the effects of the st!renuous spring practice. To an observor who watched some of the preliminary work- outs and again on yesterday, the change was especially noticeable. The men are putting vim and pepper in to the training in spite of the heat. Their methods of tackling and blocking, for example, have improved to a rather marked degree under the tutelage of the coach. The work of the squad has been comprised, for the most part, of those rudiments of the game which are usu- ally neglected by the majority of prep school coaches. The duty of instruct-I ing the players in this part of the game devolves each year upon the coach and his assistants. Some of the men are versed in these lines, but the majority have had only a year on the freshman squad or upon the inter- class teams. So far, the veterans to appear have been very few. Captain Cochran has appeared regularly, and Bastian has appeared -late at several of the drills, but the remainder of the men have been conspicuous by their absence for the most part. Many of the 'R' men have shown up with considerable reg- ularity, this list including Hildner, Finkbeiner, Cohn, Roehm, Calvin and Millard. The 1918 freshman team has been well represented. Dunn, Ray- mond, the Schultz brothers, along with others have been regular attendants at the daily workouts. It looks now as though 'Germany' Schultz will not come to Ann Arbor to aid Coach Yost. In letters written some time before the opening of the training period, the assistant coach said that he would attempt to get here for at least a portion of the time. Noth-I ing has been heard lately, and it is mnore than likely that he will not show up. the remainder of the lecturers will not be announced until some time next fall as has always been the custom. David Starr Jordan, chancellor of Leland Stanford Junior university, will speak here on October 31. This is one of the special features of the coming lectures. He will discuss peace from a biological standpoint. For November 14, Dr. Thos. Nichol- son, of New York City, a secretary of the board of education of the M. E. Church, has been secured. On November 28, Prof. Edward Steiner, of Grinnell college, Iowa will speak. Professor Steiner is well known as a lecturer on various phases of immigration, having written several notable books on that subject, For January 9, 1916, Dean Chas. R, Brown, of- the Divinity School of Yale university, whom the authorities of the Wesleyan Guild tried to engage last year, has been scheduled. ! April 130, Dr. George A. 'Gordon, of the old South Church of Boston, one of New England's greatest preachers, will make his third visitto AnnArbor, It is expected that the course will be opened on October 17, shortly after college opens, by Bishop, Homer C, Stuntz, of Buenos Aires, Bishop Stuntz has been in Buenos Aires for the last year. ANVNOUN(2E MARRIAGE OF RUTH GRE ATUOUSE TO DIR. LEIGHTON Announcement has just been made of the marriage of Ruth Curtis Great- house, '09, and Frederick Leighton, '09M, on Monday April 26, at the home of the bride, Washington, D. C. Mrs. Leighton also received an M.S. degree from the University of Michigan in '10, while Dr. Leighton secured an A.B. at Aniherst in '06. They will make their home at Niagara Falls, N. Y. Mr. Lord D. Kitchell gave a lect arc in Hill auditorium last night on "A T-eavelogue on Glacier National Park and the Black Feet Indians." The lecture was illustrated with beauti- fully hand colored slides showing var- ious' scenes in the park.. Motion pic- tures depicting the native dances of the Black Feet Indians 'were also shown. Mr. Kitchell said that Glacier Nat- ional Park contains about 1,500 square miles, and is one of the most beautiful bits of scenery which we have in the United States. He said that every summer the park is visited by hun- dreds of tourists some of whom go through in automobiles, some on horse- back while others go on foot. The government is continually expending money for the preservation of the park, and has already built miles of ex- cellent roads all through the' park. Mr.' Kitchell began the illustrated part of his lecture by showing the pic- ture of an American flag above which were the words "See America First," Mr. Kitchell then went on to say that, we have scenery in this country which is equal in every way to that in Europe.] The lecture was very well attended. CANOE MARATHON TO BE RUN AT TIME OF UNION REGATTA, rnett, '17. Several still left at the paste- Union gineers Hold Spring Party engineers will hold their ty from 8:30 to 12:00 o'clock ght at Barbour gym. "Ike" rchestra will play, and the will be a feature of the 'ogram. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. lnformation about the summer camps and application blanks may be secured from Prof. L. M. Gram, 322 engineer- ing building, who has charge of the local application office. Bonisteel Passes Pharmic Examination William J. Bonisteel, phar. spec., re- ceived word today that he had passed the state board examination for reg- istered pharmacist's paper;, , Entries for the water marathon to be staged on the Huron from Lakeland to Barton pond on the day of the Boat club regatta, May 29, are now being received at the Michigan Union club- house. A map showing the course is tacked to the score bulletin in the lobbies, and information can be ob- tained at the office. The water marathon is one of the biggest annual aquatic events, and coupled with the championship race to be held between Grand Rapids and Detroit, will iake the regatta an affair: of unusual interest. Kenneth W. Vance, who is in charge of the endurance water contest, is making arrangements and is desirous of giving information to those who will call number 357. Hobart Guild to Elect Officers Today Officers of the Hobart Guild of the Episcopal church will be elected at the annual meeting of the organization to be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight in Har- ris hall. After the meeting, an informal danc- ing party will occupy the remainder of the evening. . All members are re- quested to be present.