I 11 I 00- 00 i Ztr rt t t 34 1 111MLL ASSOCIAl PRESS DAY AND NIGH' SERVICE I r ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 14 1920 ln*n Vill" r .. - ... _ __ . ... , . ... r.. ! vya vaw4Y1 ".fff bVVw .. PRICE THE .- ! R ., t US-FOR TREATY COMPROMIS LETI-CI iENOR LIT CLASS MEETING 'CALLED I GE RMANS! STAGE PROTEST RIOTS VUL 1OY NAMED AS IN- ASTIC JTION TO BE ) IMMEDIATELY Is Outgrowth Athletic Senior lits will hold an important business meeting at 4 o'clock this aft- ernoon in room 205 Mason hall. At this meeting it will be decided to which member of the faculty the se- nior literary section of the 1920 Mich- iganensian will be dedicated. Ques- tions as to pictures will be decided and the reports of various committees will be presented. The finance committee and the class treasurer are expected to have most important reports, and a vote of the class will be taken to determine the amount of the class dues to be levied. The invitation and' other committees will also be heard from at this time. President Hinshaw asks that a large representation be present as the mat- ters to be decided upon are most im- portant. PHYSICAL EDUCATIONT D MEE TOBEHELD HERE STATE COUNCIL CONVENTION TO OPEN AT UNION TO- MORROW ere be constituted a stu- .ttee under the supervision d of directors of the Ath- Ition whose purpose will r the athletic intereests of ity of Michigan." lutlon was adopted by the rectors of the Athletic as- a meeting last' night. The I work of this committee ilar to the interfraternity Opposition to Exploitation Bring Virtual Revolt in Berlin Laws DEMONSTRATION SPREADS TO OTHER TOWNS; MANY KILLED (By Associated Press) Basie, Jan. 13.-Many persons were killed or wounded in Berlin today when troops fired upon or bayoneted demonstrators who tried to rush the reichstag entrances in protest .against the exploitation laws, says a Berlin dispatch. The message adds that since noon crowds have paraded the streets in Berlin following an appeal from radic- al socialist newspapers for workmen to demonstrate in protest :against the law. Demand New Law Up to 2:30 this afternoon, later dis- patches say,'order had not been re- stored. Big processions passed along the 'streets converging to. the Koenigs platz from all quarters. Numerous factories were closed. Thedemonstra- tors wore flags marked, "We demand' an unrestricted workers council bill." ART COLLECTIONS TO BE EXHIBITED Four art collections will be placed on exhibition in Memorial hall at .8 o'clock next Wednesday night and every afternoon from 1:30 to 5 for the following two weeks. The exhibit will consist ,of pastells fron the collection of Mr. Georeg Booth of Detroit and over a 100 wood engravings from the Baum collection. Chinese water colors of gods and god- esses of China which were presented to the Universit Library by Prof. I Leo Scharfman will also be shown, together with the water colors pre- sented to the University by France. ENLARGED CHIMES 1MAKES APPEARNCE WEDNESDAY BULLETIN Incomplete results of the In- tercollegiate Treaty Referen- dum held throughout the coun- try Tuesday are as follows: College Propositions (PROPOSITION FOUR RECEVES -THIE SEVEN PER CENT OF 2949 VOTES C 0 AUT N0SUIT '~ I Harvard ....667 Princeton ...356 Yale ....205 Columbia ..1391 Cornell.....924 Wisconsin ..631 Johns Hopkins ,325 Maryland .. 64 11 .128 80 82 428 227, 324 III 469 381 313 436 464 TV 1113 800 930 1892 700 TUT AL BALLOT NOT AS LA FIRST EXPECTED B COMMITTEE ""7- LODGE RESERVATI( TAKE SECOND]I F. J. Petty, '21, Attributes Sn her to Eleventh How 4 Changes I REPLY TO ONE "A MICHIGAN MAN" IS OF MANY ART. ICLES 100 17 620 895 106 268 33 13 Prop. IV. III. I. I. Students 1038 750 656 336 Faculty 78 24 58 9 169 In reply to last month's article on "A Michigan Man,' the Chimes, which will make its appearance tomorrow, is running "A Michigan Woman," writ- ten by a Michigan man. The latter is heralded as a worthy answer to its i which was stitute a cam- chool athletes rsity. The in- )n was a tem- mued merely to it high school y through the - The State Council of Physical Edu- ' cation will meet Jan. 15, 16, and 17 s in the Michigan Union for the purpose - of organizing a uniform state-wide- system of physical education for all schools in the 'state. 1 The council is composed of 20 lead- ers on educational wrk, and each one * will read a paper on the subject of physical education. From these papers a plan for the work will be evolved, and it will be so classified as to pro- vide suitable physical training for all types of students from the first grade ' to the senior class in high school. 4t is expected that this system of physical work will tend to develop more uniformity, all students of state schools, in that it will provide a suit ution , and Ant s the London, Jan. 13.-A dispatch tb the Exchange Telegrahp from Berlin says . "The government is taking precau- tions against disorders including the baracading of the front of the parlia- ment buildings. The new railway strikes and the stoppage of telephone and telegraph communications are causing much nervousness. Disturbances Spread Berlin, Jan. 13.- Plundering on a Iarge scale occurred today in the oc- supied town of Oberhausen. Men stormed the town hall, seized arms, threw the archives into the street and stripped the shops. The disturbanbes spread to the villages of Marseboh and Bruckhausen where the plunderrs used firearms against the police. Or- der has not yet been restored . TAFT TO GIE LECTURE HERE SATURDAY NlGHTI a committee w up a con- submitted to within 60 II L. Forbes-, nterschol- -operation Urged ;tee was appointed to ree- i-laws 'of the Athletic as- >r the purpose of codlify- d of directors is compos- e student managers of the ms, the director of outdoor id the intramural director . This is the representa- ing body of the students etic association, and the ge that all student mem- e association co-operate by presenting suggestions us for their consideration.] able exercise for all classes of peo- ple, instead of providing only for those who participate in athletic contests. Among the council members who will speak are: F. A. Rowe, state physical- director, C. L. Brewer, coach at M. A. C., Elmer Mitchell( intra- mural director at the University, Dr. G. A .May, gymnisium director. Prof. John Griffith of the University of Illinois will be the principal speak- er from outside the state. Professor Griffith is connected with the school for coaches at Illinois, and was one of. the leaders in charge of physical training in the :army camps during the war. _ The courses and exercises will be arranged in pamphlet form so that teachers can ascertain the, prescrib- ed work for the different grades. This is thse first movement of its kind in the state of Michigan. ALUMNI CLUBS WILL MEET TO DISCUSS ATHLETIC PLANS Y J 3i t r predecessor. The number of short articles deal- ing with matters of general interest to the campus has been increased this month, according to the board of di- rectors. Two of the longer articles in this month's issue concern athletics. One treats with mass athletics, the other with a school for coaches. Neither, it is said, is supposed to solve the present athletic situation at Mich- igan, nor to remedy it, but both sug- gest possible methods of bettering these conditions. Fiction has not been neglected, the board of directors state. It seems to be, they say, the general opinion of the campus that the Chimes should maintain a good literary department, and with this fact in view the board is on the lookout for all the first class fiction it can find. The humor column has been chang- ed, and will, this month /contain a number of handy household hints, which it is said will interest such stu- dents as have suffered from the ill effects of prohibition. Carrying out the idea inaugurated last month of running a series of cov- ers depicting local scenes, the cover this month is a winter poster of the Union, wh~h the board claims to be effective. The frontispiece likewise is of a local nature; although many may not recognize the spot. HOP TICKET SALE OPEN TOAENDS SATURDAY~ Quaint Jamboree Set for Jan, 22 Weird music of Chinese instru- 'ments, the lyrical tunes of South Am- erican gauchos, Siberian serenades, and last bgt not least, a little Ameri- can jazz are Just a few of the mus- ical strains which will greet the ears of the assemblage at the All-Nation Jamboree to be held Thursday, Jan. 22, in Hill auditorium. 'i #I I I MBLY EW ERA Total 2780 (By Associated Press) Vashington, Jan. 13.-Assembly of council of the league of nations Paris next Friday will mark the ,inning of a new era in interna- nal co-operation and the firĀ§t step rards the ideal concert of nations, sident Wilson declared in issuing call for the meeting as provided the treaty of Versailles. The text the call was made public here to- ht, It will bring the league of nations 3 being as a living force devoted to task of assisting the peoples of countries in their desire for peace, sperity, and happiness," the mess-I addressed to Great Britain, nce, Italy, Japan, Brazil, Bel-! m and Spain said. The president, onvinced that its progress will ac- I with the noble purpose to which s dedicated." Representatives of the "M" elub and the University of Michigan club of Detroit will meet in Detroit Jan. 17. The purpose of this meeting will be to discuss topics relative to the ath- letic situation and to appoint dele- gates to represent the organizations at the next meeting of the athletic board in control. ,This meeting will take place early in February, according- toAthletic Di- rector Bartelme, when It is expected that a delegation from the New York, Detroit, and Chicago alumni associa- tions, the "M" club, the Regents, the University senates and the Student council will meet with the board. FRESHMAN FOOTBALL DINNER. TO BE HELD AT UNION TONIGHT All men who tried out for the fresh- men football team will attend a din- ner at 6 o'clock Wednesday night in I the Union. The meeting is the first one of its kind and the object is to see that the men are kept eligible, that they keep up interest in athletics, and get better acquainted with each other. Coach: Mather and Captain Dunphy will speak, while several others will be called on for impromptu talks. Ex-Pres. William H. Taft, who will lecture Saturday evening in Hill aud- itorium on "Capital, Labor, and thd Soviet," takes the same view on the peace treaty as is expressed in propo- sition IV of the Intercollegiate Treaty Referendum ballot, the one that re- ceived the most votes in yesterday's poll. This proposition states that there should be a compromise beti en the Lodge and democratic reservations so as to facilitate immediate ratifi- cation of te treaty. This is the same stand taken by William Jennings Bryan. Both of these men favored the Treaty and League of Nations covenant as it now stands when it first came from the peace conference. The change in view was taken only after discussion had shown certain points in the treaty would be better if slightly changed. Mr. Taft will arrive here at 5:25 o'clock Saturday afternoon, coming direct to Ann Arbor from Mount Pleasant. He will be taken to the Michigan Union, where President Har- ry B. Hutchins will give. a dinner in his honor. There will be one or two invited guests in the party. After din- ner he will go immediately to Hill auditorium, where he will give the address of the evening. Because Mr. Taft must leave the auditorium at 9:30 o'clock in order to catch the evening train for New Hav- en, It is requested that all persons be in their seats by 7:45 o'clock. The ex-president has to leave on the ear- ly train so (that he will be able, to attend his Monday classes in the Yale law school, where he is a professor. Indiana to Vote on Amendment Indianapolis, Jan. 13. - Governor Godrich late today called a special session of the Indiana legislature for, Friday fortthe purpose of ratifying the federal'suffrage amendment. Other attractions on the varied pro- gram are "La Carinosa," a flirtatious dance from' the far away Philippines, and "Joys of Love," danced by Mlle. Jeanette Kruszka, who has made a brilliant record in previous Ann Arbor performances. Two playlets, written and acted by a portion of Ann Arbor's foremost dramatic talent, the first of which will be a humorous presentation of the or- iental's opinion of American life, will fill out the program. The other skit, which is entitled "His Majesty, the King of Sahara," has its action in that time when the ytilow sands were not] completely dry. Although Ann ,Arbor has been an arid waste for many a weary month And students have for a long time passed the barred doors of, Joe's and the Orient with longing eyes and parched mouths, the management of the Japanese predicts that this skit will give temporary relief to even the most anti-Christian scientist. Official permission has been-given to all students, faculty members, alumni, and townspeople to attend the All- the Tamboree predicta that this skit may stave off the impending gloom of' examinations, the faculty men may be- come intoxicated by the strains of sweet music, and Ann Arbor's four hundred may be thrilled with glimpsesa of the dancing maidens of the langor- ous East.+ '22 ENGINEERS HOLD SMOKER; 1 WENLEY AND PARKER SPEAK Sale of tickets for the J-Hop will commence today and will close Satur- day of this week. Applications must be sent to Robert McKean, '21, 620 South State street, the price of the tickets being $6.60, and all payments must be made by check. All applicants- must state name, class, number of years on the campus, and address, and must enclose a self- addressed, stamped envelope. Frater- nities and other organizations con- templating house parties may send in one application for the total number of tickets wanted, but must append a j list of the men desiring tickets and 1the above information concerning [them. In such cases one check may be made out covering the entire amount, or each member of the group may make out his individual check and send it with the group applica- tion. Al the data will be checked and all those applications will be discarded which contain any incorrect informa- tion. The cickets are non-transferable and efforts will be made to identify the men at the door as they enter the Hop. Applications are to be filled by classes, juniors receiving first consid- eration, then seniors, graduates, soph- (Continu4d on Page Six) Results Wired Results were wired at once to Intercollegiate Treaty Referene headquarters in New York, where I will be tabulated with returns f 700 colleges and univbrsities in parts of the t country, and given tion-wide publicity. The University vote came as qulmination of a week of discusi covering all phases of the treaty, including a large mass meeting I Friday- in University hall, at wb the various propositions were expl. ed and the points for and against e were brought out by an informal bate. Articles by professors and c dents who understood various aspe of the treaty appeared in The Da and interest in the referendum creased until it was being studied argued ty students among their frie (Continued on Page Six) H. TITUS, '11, WILL SPEAK TO PUBLICATION MEN THURSI ' Proposition IV, favoring a cc mise between the Lodge and cratic reservations in order to tate the ratification of the treaty, won' by receiving a 3 cent of the total votes cast , University treaty referendum day, polling 1,038 -student vote 78 faculty votes for a total of Proposition III, favoring the reservations, was second with a of 774, and was closely follow Proposition I, favoring rati8 without reservations or amend which polled 714. Proposition : posed to ratification of the tre leagu in any form, received on votes. Larger Vote 'Expected Although the-vote was not as as had been expected by the co tee in charge, the 2,780 student 169 faculty members who cast ballots brought the University a commeendable showing of Int particularly in view of the fac the propositions, on which many made up their minds, were chani the last minute by the national endum headquarters. The con resulting from-this is believed to caused some to have stayed away the, polls.- The 2,949 persons who voted ft 35 per cent of the entire Univ ,student and. faculty bodies. 0f numbe' the students showedby h best turnout, 35 per cent of number voting as compared to 2 cent of the faculty. In the opinion of the 260 men at- tending the get-together smoker of the '22 Engineers was a complete sue- cess. Dean Mortimer E. Cooley, who was scheduled to speak, was .suddenly called out of town, his place being filled by Prof. John C. Parker. Pro-- fessor Parker spoke briefly upon the obligations of engineers to society, emphasizing that the real duty of en- gineers was to make the world a bet- ter place to live, in. He advocated as a means to this end, "A smashing big vision of the social and personal prob- lems, now confronting the coming gen- eration." Prof. Robert Wenley spoke on th value of "Hobby Horses." He em- phasized the need and worth of hav- ing a hobby, upon which a, man might easily become an authority, which fact in' itself would afford him much pleasure. Professor Wenley di- aided hobbies Into two classes, those pertaining to self, and those pertain- ing to somee organization.. TRY-OUTS WANTED desiring to try out less side of the Ath- r, report to the sec- the Press building id 5 o'clock today. Harold Titus, '11, novelist, speak at 3 o'clock Thursday after in room 5 of the Ann Arbor I building to memebrs of the' pub tions staffs. He has announced topic for his talk, as it will be it nature of a forum. Mr. Titus will speak again at o'clock on the third floor of the U before a meeting of Sigma Delta of which he is a member. While in the University, Mr. I was managing editor of The Pail: the same time serving as corresp ent for the Detroit News.