THE DAILY $2.00 NEWS OF THE WORLD AND THE CAMPUS The ~ich igan cllly Phones:-Editorial 2414 Business 960 TELEGRAPH SERVICE BY THE NEW YORK SUN VOL. XXVI. No. 50. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1915. PRICE FIVE CENTS STUDENTSENDORSE MILITARY TRAINING BY SLIGHT MRGIN STRAW BALLOT CONDUCTED BY THE DAILY SHOWS 1040 FOR, 932 AGAINST PROPOSITION FACULTY EXPRESSES OPINION Close Split in Vote Probably Will Have Little lEffect on Regents; Freshman Vote Not Larg'e Compulsory military training re- ceived the endorsement of the campus yesterday when it carried by a slight margin in the straw ballot conducted by The Michigan Daily, under the su- pervision of Francis T. Mack, '16E, Approximately 2,000 students register- ed their opinion upon the question, 1040 voting in favor of the proposal and 932 declarng against it. Owing to the closeness of the vote, it is probable that the ballot will not have any great influence upon the board of regents when it meets to de- cide the proposition today. If the results had shown that student opin- ion was strongly for or against the plan, it might have affected the action of the regents; but as the split was so nearly even, the ballot will doubt- less not be a determining factor in the decision of the board. Considering the limited amount of time which was given the students to vote, the number of votes cast is sur- prising, and indicates that interest was unusually high over the proposed sys- tem. Following is the number of votes cast by departments: Architecture, 69; homeopathic, 4; -literary, 742; en- gineering, 517; special and graduate, 60; law, 189; dental, 205; medical, 153; no department given, 33. The number of votes cast by classes is: Senior, 430; junior, 469; sophomore, 497, freshman, 483; special and gradu- ate, 60; no class given, 33. ' The Daily also conducted a straw ballot among the faculty members. Three questions were submitted to them; "Do you favor military train- ing for Michigan?" "Would you want such training compulsory?" "Would you want such training voluntary?" Out of the 138 replies received, 83 de- clared that they were in favor of the plan, and 55 expressed themselves as opposing it. In reply to the second question, 72 answered "yes" and 55 "no." In regard to voluntary train- ing, 15 favored the system and 75 were against it. Most of the faculty replies are also interesting from the remarks express- ed on the cards. One would not have it compulsory until voluntary drill had been tried. Another would have it elective and give credit for the work. A third would have it the same as gymnasium work while another would give the undergraduates a choice be- tween the two. All graduations from approval to condemnation are expressed. One writer answers the questions with "Unquestionably," "Certainly," "No, voluntary training has been proven useless 'by results." GRIFFINS INITIATE TWELVE Prof. J. 11. Waite Addresses New Men at Banquet of Union Twelve of the elect and highly hon- ored gathered around the campus flag- pole yesterday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock to await performance of the mysterious ceremony that would make them bona-fide members of Griffins, all-campus honor society. The men were led to the Griffin rooms where the initiation was held, after which a banquet was given in their honor at the Union. Prof. J. B. Waite, of the law depart- ment, was the principal speaker of the evening. The names of the men who were ini- tiated into Griffins are as follows: H. Leslie Caroll, '17E, James E. Chenot, '16, Grant H. Cook, Glenn M. Coulter, '16L, Frank W. Grover, '18, Edwin A. Hyman, '17, Edward E. Mack, '17, William K. Neimann, '17, Harold E. O'Brien, '17, N. Earl Pinney, '16 Cedric C. Smith, '18, Thomas P. Soddy, '16E. M i iry T rainia in English Schools Not Complsory WInl ritish Uniersities l.tFear of 0straci in Swells Ranks. In an interview yesterday Prof. Thos. West, ofkMcGill University, Montreal, who spoke on "Structure of Metals" in the chemistry building Monday evening under the auspices of the Phi Lambda Upsilon society, gave some timely remarks on military training in England. He said that Military training was not compulsory in the English universities but that a very large percentage of the students con- sidered it either a duty or a pleasure to take it. In Oxford or Cambridge a student is really ostracized from everything if he is not a militarist. Most of the English universities give three years of military training. During the first year there are forty periods of one hour each besides the experience gained in a fortnight of camp life. Only thirty periods are re- quired the second year but several classes in military maneuvers as well as another fortnight in camp are the pleasures of the would-be soldiers. The students are now prepared to take an examination which will put them in a class about equal to a cap- tain. This examination is a practical one in every detail. The candidate is given problems in military tactics to work out on the spur of the moment and must solve them satisfactorily be- fore he can continue with his third year of military training. By the time he has completed three years he is considered capable of being a commis- sioned officer in the regular army. In times of peace there is not a very large percentage of the graduates who enter the regular territorial or stand- ing army. Each one is, however, ex- pected to be prepared for at least five years after he is out of the university. At present most of the graduates are in the army as commissioned officers. Seniors in the English universities are unknown. All of the students are -young lads of sixteen or seventeen, going to school only because they are of too tender years to shoulder a mus- ket. Military training 'is considered a great success in England. It is not compulsory in any of the schools but no where do the classes suffer for lack of students. It is a question of honor with these fellows and they have shown how nobly they can re- spond in time of need. STEAK INNER TO, BE HELDAUNO Prof. Friday and W. C. Mullendore to Talk; Michigan Concert Quartet to Perform GOOD ATTEN DANCGE AT FACULTY NIGHT Faculty Men From History, Fine Arts and English Departments, Meet Students MEETS BENEFIT TO STUDENTS Many students last night took ad- vantage of the opportunity offered by faculty night at the Union to spend the evening with members of the fac- ulty. The faculty of the history, fine arts and english departments were in- vited. Among those who attended the meeting were the following: Prof. Herbert R. Cross of the department of fine arts; Prof. Edward R. Turner, Prof. William A. Frayer, Mr. Arthur Boak, Mr. Ross McLean, of the history department; Prof. Louis A. Strauss, Prof. Wilbur R. Humphreys, Prof. Morris P. Tilley, Mr. William o. Ray- mond, of the english department. All expressed their satisfaction with the meeting and the hope that they will be held in the future. Faculty meetings are to be con- tinued weekly, the next one being held next Tuesday. The faculty mem- bers of particular departments will be invited each week and students in- terested in these departments are es- pecially welcomed. FORD PEACE DELEGATES ACCEPTANCE DOUBTFUL D. 31. Sarbaugh and I. C. Johnson Both Unable to Go; Lee Joslyn Makes Application Another invitation as an unofficial representative of the university on Henry Ford's peace argosy was re- ceived last night by Irwin C. Johnson, '16. The invitation was extendidd through the influence of a former editor of the Cosmopolitan Student, who will accompany the peace advo- cates on their mission. When interviewed last night, John- son intimated that he probably would be unable to accept the invitation on account of the press, of his work as the Curator of Harris hall, a position which he fills in addition to his col- lege work. Donald M. Sarbaugh, '17L, who has received the official invitation as rep- resentative of the university, also an- nounced last night that after consul- tation with President Harry B. Hutch- ins and Prof. E. C. Goddard, of the Law school, he had decided to decline the appointment because of the loss of a semester's- credit which the ac- ceptance of the honor would entail. A wire was sent to Mr. Ford's sec- retary last night to the effect that both Sarbaugh and Johnson would prob- ably be unable to accept the appoint- ment, and Lee E. Joslyn, '17, has made application to Louis P. Lochner who has charge of the executive arrange- ments of the trip, for the appointment to represent Michigan. ENDORSES FORD PEACE PLAN Wm. J. Bryan in Favor of Project; Will Join Party Later New York, Nov. 30.-William J. Bryan has officially come out strongly in favor of Henry Ford's plan to end the war by taking 200 American peace advocates to Europe Saturday on the peace ship, Oscor II. "I favor the plan," said Mr. Bryan, "and shall probably join the party at a peace conference of neutral nations at The Hague, although I shall be unable to sail on the Oscar II." Hobbs Advances More Arguments Finds Support in System Now Vogue at Illinois and Quotes General Wood Editor, Michigan Daily:- iI C In his article published in the New York Times, which has been re-print- ed in Detroit and University papers; my good friend, Dean Lloyd, refers to the claim that military training tends toward the physical and moral bet- terment of students with the remark, "one has to suspect the intended ar- gument of being made more ad popu- lum than sound and genuine. Among other grounds of such suspicion, the propounders of this argument in most cases have found themselves actively interested in the physical and moral welfare of students very suddenly." It should not be necessary to assure Dean Lloyd that the members of the original senate committee who all subscribed to the claim, had a very solid basis for their belief. Speak- ing for myself, I may say that this belief is based upon the experience of nearly a score of years when upon the faculty of a sister university at which military training was in vogue. In no way can I so well express my views as to cite from a published ad- dress of Professor, formerly Dean, Edward Orton of Ohio State Univer- sity; who by reason of long study of the question, more than any other layman is qualified to speak with authority: Physical advantage. Young men who come to college may be divided into two classes-those who are in earnest and those who are not. Hap- pily the first class greatly predomin- ates. But both classes make the same error, though from different reasons. The dig does not want to drill because it takes too much time. He has a convenient chance to get a laboratory section or something else, and he does not want to quit and put on his uni- form, just when an hour more would finish an experiment or complete a problem. The idler on the other hand finds that drill interferes with his watching or taking part in the col- lege sports or something else, and hence he would like to be excused. An hour of brisk marching in the open air, with head up, shoulders square, and with every sense alert, under the inspiring influence of mass action, team work and military music, is a grand finish for the day of a col- lege student, and a grand preface to the evening meal. In college or out, humankind are prone to neglect the simple laws of health and fail to take exercise. The drill would be worth ten times over if it did no other thing then to force students to exercise regularly in the open air. One of its great merits is that it catches the very fellow who would not get the exercise except upon compulsion. Intellectual benefit. As a purely in- tellectual exercise, military drill is in one respect the equal of any course in college, viz., power of concentration. It keeps a constant demand upon the attention of every man in the com- pany every minute that it lasts. It is memory exercise at first,- but as soon as familiarity and practice bring a certain degree of automaticity to the common movements, the nature of the demand changes and the strategi- cal phase of the subject is developed. The handling of troops, even in a simple military ceremony, requires not only concentration but construc- tive ability, and the moment that the work leaves the field of ceremony and takes up real military manouvering, such as skirmish drill, out-post duty, etc., the constructive element becomes predominant. No one, officeror pri- vate, can acquit' himself well in a spirited, snappy drill without giving a high degree of cncentration to the (Continued on Page 5.) Paul Fuller, New York attorney, who acted as President Wilson's agent last year, died last night. SHOWI LIVELY NTEREST AT MEETING TO DISCUSS FORMATION _OF S A. Et Thirty Men Pledge Themselves to Give Support If Student Branch is Formed Here PROF. FISHLEIGH ASKS FOR SERIOUS COOPERATION BY MEN WILL MAKE FORMAL APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSHIP IN GENERAL SOCIETY TUESDAY NIGHT 1 Thirty actively interested students1 gathered last night in the engineering building to discuss the formation of a student branch of the Society of Automobile Engineers at Michigan. The meeting was called as a result of the demand for the formation of such a society which has been comingF from the student body, particularly theE engineers, and as a result of the ac- tive interest shown by members of the general society in Detroit. The gathering put themselves on record under the following caption: "We, the undersigned, pledge our ac- tive interest and support of a student branch of the S. A. E., providing that it is formed." This list is tacked on1 the wall in the engineering society.1 rooms, room 212-214, and those inter- ested who were not able to attend the7 meeting are requested to sign up. Prof. W. T. Fishleigh, head of the automobile engineering . department, who lead the discussion,, stated that he would be strongly in favor of the1 branch providing that the students took up the work seriously and didt their best to make the society a strong one. He assured those present of the help and cooperation of the gen- eral society in forming a studentk branch. A meeting was called for next Tues- day night when it is expected that the list of- names will have increased to{ at least 50. Further plans for the branch will be made at that time and formal application for membership to the general society will be made. Itf is requested that all those who are interested in the society and would give it their support, sign the list inF the engineering society rooms. EXPLOSION BLOWS 31 MEN TO PIECES; Catastrophe Occurs at Dupont de Nemours Powder Company at t Wilmington, Del.£ CAUSE IS MYSTERY TO ALL Wilmington, Del., Nov. 30.-At least 31 men, nearly all of them foreigners, were killed and seven injured, when 8,000 pounds of black powder explod- ed in a packing house in the upper Hadley yard of the E. . Dupont de Nemours Powder Company near here this afternoon. The cause, according to an official statement by the coin- pany, is a mystery. The explosion was so severe that only a hole in the ground marked the spot. The pack- ing house was blown to pieces and so were other structures nearby. There were 25 men and a few youths from 16 to 21 years old at work in the packing house. None survived. They were all blown to atoms. Nothing could be found to enable identifica- tion. The others killed were outside the building. WHAT'S GOING ON TODAY. Public students' recital, School of Mu- sic, 4:15 o'clock. Fresh mandolin tryouts, 205 N. W., 8:00 o'clock. Dr. E. Huntington speaks, Science building, 8:00 o'clock. Catholic Study Club meets at K. of C. parlors, 7:30, Wednesday evening. Regents meeting. Michigan Union dinner, 6:00 o'clock. Senior lit smoker, Union, 7:30 o'clock. TOMORROW Soph lits smoker, Michigan Union ,7:30 o'clock. Faculty concert, Hill auditorium, 4:15 o'clock. SERB AIUCUATE MONA9STER AFTER) . SVING CIVI1iANS FRENCH CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES SUMMONS 400,000 YOUTHS TO MILITARY SERVICE FIGHT NEAR LOOS AND ALSACE FIG T1l EAtR LOOS AND ALSACE Denys Cochin States That Allies Are Satisfied With Assurances Given by Greeks London, Nov. 30. - Monastir, in southeastern Serbia, has been evacu- ated, Serbian troops having accom- plished their purpose by delaying the enemy's advance until the civil pop- ulace of the town had time to escape. The defenders are now leaving the city according to official report, and are retiring in good order. The Bul- garian occupation of the town is ap- parently a matter of only a few hours. France Calls Out 1917 Class Paris, Nov. 30.-France called for boys of 18 to colors today. The Cham- bers of Deputies passed a bill pro- viding for such a call. About 400,000 youths will be subject to military ser- vice December 15. They will be the class of 1917. Loos and Alsace Battle Scenes Paris, Nov. 30.-There was furious fighting today with grenades in the region of Loos and Alsace, the French troops shattering the German trenches north of Nuhleah. London, Nov. 30.-The destruction of the German seaplane Alvacross has been observed off Ferrane. The sink- ing of the seaplane is described in an official admiralty report. The Alva- cross dived nose first into the sea off Ostend and sunk. King George Takes Outing London, Nov. 30.-King George took his first outing today since he fell from his horse last month while in- specting the British army on the west- ern front. He was driven in a wheel chair in the palace garden. The mon- arch recovered from the injury he sustained in an accident with slight difficulty. Denys Cochin Relches Italy Rome, 'Nov. 30.-Denys Cochin, who has been in the near east on a spe- cial mission for the entente, arrived today at Messina aboard a Greek crui- ser. In an interview given before he left Messina for Rome, Cochin stated that the assurance given by King Con- stantine of the Greek government for the safety of the allies troops in Mace- donia was amply sufficient. MR. P® E BURSLEYTALS BEFORE CERCLE FRANCAS Gives Interesting Lecture on "La Russie en 1875," in Form of Series of Letters "La Russie, en 1875," was the title of an interesting lecture delivered yes- terday by Mr. Philip E. Bursley, of the French department, before the Cercle Francais. In the form of a series of letters from a traveler, Mr. Bursley described the magnificent pal- aces and cathedrals of St. Petersburg and Moscow, paying special heed to the three cathedrals within the Krem- lin walls, where the. Czars are re- spectively crowned, married and en- Each year a wonderful fair is held at Nijny Novgorod during the summer months to which 400,000 people are drawn from all parts of the empire. Merchandise of every sort is sold in the 7,000 booths which spring up on the banks of the Volga river, forming a review of Russian industry. A large attendance at the first Cercle lecture points to a very suc- cessful year for that organization. * * * * * * * * * * * * * TICKETS STILL LEFTI FEW An exceptionally lively and inter- esting program has been arranged for the membership 'steak dinner to be held tonight at the Union at 6:00 o'clock. George McMahon will be toastmaster. Prof. David Friday, of the economics department, and Will- iam C. Mullendore, '16L, will be the speakers. The Michigan Concert quartet composed of H. L. Davis, '17, F. W. Grover, '18, Chase B. Sikes, '16, Harry Carlson, '17, will sing several songs. Leroy Scanlon, '16L, at theI piano, and William C. Achi, '17L, who will perform on the ukelele, will help to make the musical part of the pro- gram a success. Nearly all of the 200 tickets which went onsale last week have been sold but there are still a. few left which may be purchased at the Union desk. Steak will be the feature of the menu. A steak dinner has not been given by the Union for several years and it is planned to make their rein- statement tonight especially entertain- ing. Five Negroes Hurt in Cuban Race Riot Havana, Nov. 30.-There was a riot today between the whites and negroes at Canacugy. The whites, resenting the negroes frequenting their plaza during the band concerts, began shoot- ing and in the rioting that followed five negroes were wounded. Military order was restored. and although fur- ther trouble was feared, the day pass- ed quietly. Normal Concert Course Ypsilanti,'Wednesday, Dec. 1 8:00 P. M. Philadelphia Orchestra-85 Musicians-Leopold Stokowski. Conductor vorspiel-"Die Meistersinger"........................Wagner Waldweben-"Siegfried................................ Wagner Piano Concerto in Flat...............................Liszt M'rs. Baskerville Symphony No. 4, in F .........................Tschaikowsky Tickets at Box Office, $1.50 Interurban Special Leaves Ann Arbor at 7:05 P. M. * * * * 1* Ad W. Riter says:- * Michigan Daily Advertisers * have a valuable habit of de- * livering the goods. Valuable * to YOU, Mr. Student. Are * YOU heeding the ads? * * * *5 * * * * * * * '*