t t rt t t J I I ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1919. P] ( DELEG ATES QUIT PA RL IN NATION'S DRIVE r MEMORIAL; STUDENT ''I $800 FROM 'Y ', '20E; IS -LEADER s Nov22; Ask r funds 1 be lo- is will it parts ne will CAMPUS FOUNTAIN AWAITS ITS BASE' Due to the fact that the stone base has not yet been received, consider- able delay has resulted in placing the bronze memorial drinking fountain, dedicated to former Mayor Hamilton of Ann Arbor. The necessary masonry work was done this summer and a new piece of side walk put in on the campus at the corner of State street and North Uni- versity to accommodate the memorial. As soon as the piece of stone for the base is received, the fountain will be set up. CL OET TUTO TEACHWAR COURSE WIDE TAKE CHWRGE OF COAST ARTILLERY WORi; MEN NOW ENROLLED enaw county ;he Student Wednesday e campaign to the delay ters in for- mmittee was upaign last ill be made sizeable to- county Coming here from 'orsr ss Mon- '0 is ex- roe, Va., Lieut. Col. Robot Arthur' Arbor. will become chief in-ructor in Mili- c° this tary Science and Tactics in the Uni- s iversity, taking charge of the Coast ittee in lArtillery Corps work. Colonel Lucas paign to will have charge of the Signal corps urchasel and both men will carry oi1 the Ord- ore hill. nance work.- enough Colonel Arthur wa graiaed from will be West Point in 1907 and is an officer of 7 in the 20 years' military experience, of which merican about two years were spenL overs-as. of, the After nine months in France. he be-i came identified with the ?2nd Division PROGRAM OUT FOR ALL-LAW SMOKER Tickets for the All-law smokr to be held at 7:30 oclock Thursday on tbe third floor of the Law building, will be on sale at the door preceding the event, the price of admission being 50 cents. - B. Mathews, '20L, will act as toast- master. Dean Henry M. Bates and Prof. Evans Holbrook will speak for the faculty, James McClintock, '21L, for the juniors and J. C. Carey, '22L, for the freshman law class. "Sandy" Wilson's orchestra will furish the music for the smoker. It is also planned to put on a vaude- ville stunt. Cider and doughnuts are to be served. TWO TRAINS WILL CARRY M ROOTERS Specials to Accommodate 600 Secured to Carry Enthusasts to Chicago Game RO$ND TRIP QUOTED AT $16; GRANT STAY-OVER PRIVILEGE Two All-Pullman specials carrying 600 fighting Michigan men and run- ning under direct orders from the Union, will pull out of Ann Arbor promptly at 10;30 on the night of Fri- day, Nov. 7, starting theWolverines' annual invasion. of the middle west. 'Complete co-operation accorded the Union train committee by the railroad authorities assures success in sending a record crowd to the game in Chi- First reservations for Pullmans may be made at the Union fiom 1 until 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, Oct. 28, and on several other days the dates of which will be announced later in The Daily. As yet no definite date has been set to dispose of the regular tickets for transportation.T No Retrn. Trip Special There' will be no special on the-re- turn trip inasmuch as ,many have ex- pressed a desire to stay over in Chi- cago pintil late Sunday night. This privilege will allow anyone to return on any train Sunday until the last one, which leaves at 12:05 midnight, arriving in Ann, Arbor at 7 o'clock Monday morning. The round trip fare to Chicago and return will be $16.04 with Pullman rates extra, and the price of the lat- ter accommodations is to be posted in the Union. Admission to the gang including a reserved seat in the Ma.e and Blue section will be $2. MAIL ORDERS STOPPED FOR 0. S. U. GAME; 20,000 SOLD Box Seats Will Be Built to Sell at $3; Students Can Still Apply Per- sonally for Tickets No more student applications for the Ohio State game will be received through the mail. Students whcrhave not yet made their reservations must come to the athletic office to secure their tickets. The ticket office is open from 9 to 12 o'clock in the morning and from 1 to 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon. Owing to the rapid sale of tickets, a number of boxes on the ground level will be built for this game. These box seat tickets will go on sale Thursday afternoon at 1 o'clock, et $3 each. More than 20,000 tickets have al- ready been sold for Saturdays game, the only seats remaining in either stand being back of the goal lines. These side stand seats are going rap- idly and will be sold 'out bpfore the game. EFFORT TO AVERT COALSTRIKE TODAY, SECRETARY OF LABOR ;BRINGS FORTH ELEVENTH HOUR PROPOSAL RAIL MEN THREATEN TROUBLE; ASK RAISE Prepare for Finish Fight Before Roads Go Back to Private Ownership, Is Said (By Associated Press) Washington, Oct. 22.-While com- mittees representing miners and ope- rators meeting in a final effort to avert the strike of half a million soft coal miners set for Nov. 1, were on the verge tonight of parting company for good, Secretag of Labor Wilson held them tgethe' over night at least with a, wage Increase proposal that ignored union demands for a 30 hour week. There was every assurance that the operators would accept it and every indication that it would be rejected bodily by the .miners. Will Meet Separately When the joint conference adjourn- ed until 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon? it was with the understanding that the two groups .would meet then andi make formal answer to the proposal, after separate consideration. Refusal1 of theminers to accept will bring the conference- to a close and force gov-? ernment officias- to resort to other means to prevent the closing of the ,mines. Secretary Wilson's offer, which pre-{ vents actual disruption of the pro- ceeding proposed that wages be in- creased at the expiration of the present contract in an amount equal to the difference between increases int wages received by mine workers since July, 1914, and the increase in the cost of living since that date, that the strike order be withdrawn and that the miners continue-at work pending negotiations on the new scale. Railway Men Serve Notice Washington, Oct. 22.-Railroad em- playes are prepared for a finish fightj with the railroad administration for increased wages, time agd a half overtime and improved working con- ditions before the government sur- renders the roads to private control. Unmistakable notice to this effect has been served by Timothy Shea of the firemen appearing before the board of railway wages and working condi- tions. (Continued on Page ix) 1020' HOP NOT BANNED. BY AFFIRS COMITTEE When questioned as to the authen- ticity of the rumors .whic have been current on the campus to the effect that there would be no J-Hop this year, Prof. Louis A. Strauss, of the committee on student affairs, stated, that such a rumor was without basis from his offfce. ]e said that so far as 4e gew the jnir class could hold their annual j-0p if they so desired. Therefore, uless conditions unfore- seen by, or unknown to, the committee. on student affairs arise, the J-Hop will be held as susual. The junior engin- eers will elect the chairman of the committee, since the lits had the hon- or last year. MC FARLAND IEADS FROSH ENGINEERS The engineering class of 1923 held its first election of officers at a meet- lvI lug Wednesday . The following men were-ehosen: President. Charles Mc- Farland; vice-president, Norman Kolb; secretary, Paul Goebel; treasurer, Floyd Adams. New Plan Seeks to Aseertain Fitness Of Yearlings For Pro- fession QUESTIONS COVER GENERAL INTELLIGENCE OF STUDENTS General intelligence tests upon which will be judged Michigan's 'uure' standing as an engineering college, will be given all freshman engineers Thursday and Friday. Tests in arith- metic, algebra, physics, geometry, and in "general intelligence" -will verify high school certificates and show the D WILSON'S HARMON Jleeting Today Usual,, I ii' (By Associated Pr Washington, Oct. 22--L drew from the National Conference tonight after fort to obtain adoption c tive bargaining resolution defeated by the vote of- a the capital group. Although the representat the public and capital their intention of remainin ,F~o r~. hn ., r m n i EN WERE UT WITH name ofI for all ppointed to con- .pus. Hel :ty, '21; 1 Velde, r cted of- cil with H. Ma- six men team is and served with it until this divi- sion left for- home after the var. Following this he vwas with the tard Division and subsequently was over two months in Paris. Fifty taking Course At the present time ther ^ s .ome 50 engineering students, chiefly fr-sh- men, taking the course in the art of Military Science and Tactics. Tha is accounted for the fact that this is the inaugural year of - the course and freshmen are pric aliy the only ones eligible.- REJECTION GAINING student's grasp of fundamentals and Trn his ability to use them. . to restore The Phln is Entirely New country ev The six examinations included under dent Wilso this investigation will be held Thurs-L day and Friday of this week. Fresh- Secretary men engineers have been excused from sonar rel attending alJ afternoon classes in or -presidentb der that these ' tests may be put conference through. The examinations, which a predicteo will be thirty, minutes in length, will Ident Wils deal primarily with'.the requisites for Meantimi engineers, but will also tend to show ihd the student's knowledge in the field.announced of every day information and experi- et ne.ident of th once. Labor afte The society for the promotion of Labolaft enginering education is co-operating Lane in with 32 prominent engineering col- Lane in leges in the' investigation of more suitable methods of admission to uni- garded as versities. The credit of the designinglttinfo of the examinations. is due Di! Thurs- harmony i tone, professor of applied psychology final worki at Carnegie institute. Prof. G. M. dustrial k Whippel of the education department. With the assisted Dr. Thurston in this work. suit .of the Seek Fair (ftandard Gompems t The fact that students whose talents been rsjec 4nd capacities are not sufficient to bnreject warrant their success in the engineer- the men ing profession are permitted to enter college has prompted this investiga- (Coni tion, ,which will extend over a period _Cu f years, and make for a more adequate and dependable criterion by which a NIPPY young man's aptitude for engineering may be judged, and his chances for success predicted. TIO Not Army Tests- These tests bear but a slight re- semblance to the army tests, being "Short an more scholastic in character. The in- the commi vestigation is being designed to meeting to throw light upon the present day Friday nig methods of admission to engineering arouse the colleges. The initial ratings, in corn- utmost inc parison with the future professional victory ov achievenents will determine the prac- With thi tical value of the tests, and will aid tee has obi students in knowing their abilities. ity to arou Le next industri vidently M. Lane Wil y Lane rt' of th but neitli er a fe the mhi ted "w ed on g sitting have tinued D. Anders appointed sident of t of the will be h day oft her comm '20E; E. Velde, nder cons he commnit in Soviet Seen As by Normal Symptom the an- [ That the stage of soviet government eld through which Russia is passing may the be a natural evolution is the opinion it- which Prof. R. T. Crane of the political J. science department, expressed Wed- '20.1 nesday before his class in municipal id- government. He pointed out that the' tee era of guild government in England. followed, the period of the village com-, munity, and that the soviet in Russia is strongest where the mirs, or vil- jlage communities, are- most numerous. In its essential of being government' j by industrial classes, he pointed out, the soviet system is the same as the old guild system of a thousand years ago in England. That the Bolshevists have adopted the soviet system as 4their platform, he said, does not mean that the sovipt has its bgasis In their radical ideas. In his opinion, explanation of the ponditions in Russia may be based on the fact that the country is a thousand years pehiid western European na- tions in point of development and evo- . -I lutiai. rd snapp ttee in c o be hel ght in H student cheering er Ohio. s eid in tained sp( mse-enthi 1 e will be a meeting of ntgtives appointed by the of all fraternities, soror- nd house clubs ' at -3 today in room 306 of the Members of the Student will explain the cam- hat is being started for or the loosevelt memor- is imperative that every e represented. KERVIN CHOSEN PRESIDENT IN SENIOR MEDIC ELECTION Senior Medic class elections were -held Wednesday, and the following officers chosen: president, J.' A. Ker- vin;- vice-president, R. M. Cleary; sec- 'retary, Marion Stevenson; treasurer, H. W. Smith. - Phi Sigma toHold Meeting Phi Sigma society will hold a reg- ular meeting tonight in room B 174 Natural Science building. Prof. R. W. Sellars of the Philosophy depart- ment will talk on "Suggestions Upon the Mind-body Problem." tioned. . Repres the program w Brumm, one of who is gifted wi into the spirit of ing. Ralph Gaul the students. Co be ly settled upon, but he- will 1 'who will represent them capab Pictures of the team will be 1 on the screen, the newly app cheer-leader will make his fir ficial appearance, the Varsity will be there and Michigan son yells will be, much in evidence. will open promptly at 7:30. ti .. ! NOTICEi SUBSCRIBERS Your unpaid subscription is now due. Presernt rate $3.50 $4.00 on Subscriptions not paid by November first - I? - k Today a a The r