'INUI D FAIR TODAY .J Ulolrri nr ATr YOUR DOOI THREE TITLES A WEEK X. No. 5.: ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 8, 1919. PRICE THREE C. St, M PRESENTED COLE V. C.VAUGHAN FOR wgAR SERVICE EDICAL DEAN WINS MEDAL FOR AID IN STE)MING DIS- EASE CULTY MEN ATTEND )RT WAYNE CEREMONY George Sisler, '15 L, Former Mlichzigan Star, Has .338 Vatting Average George Sisler, '15E, former Univer- three games and Cornell was shut out sity of Michigan baseball star, now twice, these two teams being consider- with the St. Louis American league ed the strongest in the East. Syra- club, is hitting at a .338 clip according cuse was defeated in all three games to batting averages released July 5. played. Notre Dame was beaten two Sisler ranks fifth in the American out of three games after the Catholics league in batting, and leads the league had won from the Conference cham- n total bases. pions. Michigan had whipped the Peckinpaugh, of New York, and strongest southern nines during her Cobb, Veach. and Flagstead, of the De- spring training trip, giving the Maize troit Tigers, lead Sisler in batting, and Blue an undisputed claim to the but the former Michigan star is gain- national title. an Engineering Officer Award For Overseas Work Gets Colonel Victor C. Vaughan, dean of the Medical school, was presented with the Distinguished Service medal by May9r Couzens of Detroit, in a public ceremony held Monday afternoon at For Wayne. The medal was awarded by the war department some weeks ago for Colon- el Vaughan's having given invaluable advice and services in connection with communicable diseases, and especially contributing to the control of the in- fiuenza epidemic. The ceremony was attended by army '.nd navy officers, Detroit city officials, members of the faculty of the Univer- sity and of the Wayne county Medical association, and representatives of the Michigan Central railroad. Colonel G. H. Webb, a civil engineer of the Michigan Central railroad, was at the same time presented with a medal for supervising the construction of railroads and bridges in the battle area of France under difficult condi- tions. EARTH'S INTERIOR NOT MOLTEN MASS -PROFESSOR HOBBS. Three proofs to support the theory that the interior of the earth is not a molten mass, but a solid, were brought out by Prof. W. H. Hobbs, of the geology department, in his lec- ture "The Principles of Volcanism" delivered Monday afternoon in the Na- tural Science auditorium. He first showed that a hard boiled egg would spin and that a fresh egg would not, then applying this analogy to demonstrate that the earth would not spin if it were molten inside. The second proof was that, inasmuch as the -ocean is moved by the moon, if the earth were a crust the molten mass would be affected, not permitting th inhabitants of the earth to see the movement of the tide. Thirdly e showed that, as rocks are heavier than lava, it would be impossi- ble for the earth's crust to remain over the liquid interior. Professor Hobbs said that the production of lava in volcanos was a local ation, occur- ing only in the vicinity of the volcano. The remainder of the lecture was de- voted to telling of the pecularities of folcanism. The speaker said that trees n the path of a lava stream were not burned but swept along with the stream. NEWBERRY DORM TO ENTERTAIN MEMBERS OF WOMEN'S LEAGUE Summer school women, either be- longing to or desiring to become mem- bers of the Women's league, will be entertained at a reception to be held In the Helen Newberry Residence at 4 o'clock Thursday afternoon. A short program will follow and all are cordi- ally invited to attend. COLONEL VICTOR C. VAUGHAN ESTABLISHMENT DOF6GFT FUND STRTED BY GRAS Establishment of a University of Michigan Alumni fund is the present plan of the Alumni association of the University. This fund will consist of gifts from Michigan Alumni and will be devoted to supplying any immed- iate pecuniary needs of the University. The plan was first presented to the class of 1916 by Wilfred B. Shaw, '04, editor of the Michigan Alumnus, and contributions to it have been made by that class and also by the classes of 1917 and 1919. Payments are made o this fund through a class officer, known as a class agent. All gifts will be known as bequests of the class of which the donor is a member. This plan has already been tried at Yale, Cornell, Princeton, and Brown universities with success, according to Mr' Shaw. 10 U. S. STUDENTS TO GO TO SWEDEN New York, July 7.-The names of 10 American college students who will receive $1,000 each to enable them to o to Sweden to study in exchange with the Swedish students to come to Am- erica, have been announced by the American - Scandinavian foundation, which arranged the interchange. The men appointed are: -. Samuel G. Frantz, of Princeton, N. J., Princeton university; Harry F. Yancey, of Urbana, Ill., University of Missouri; Chester C. Stewart, of Wil- mington, Del., Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Harry W. Titus, of Laramie, Wyo., University of Wyom- ing; Robert C. Sessions, of Worcester, Mass', Worcester Polytechnic Insti- tute; Clarence N. Ostergren, of Hobo- ken, N. J., Sheffield Scientific School; William S. Moir, of Boston, Mass., Yale Forestry School; Henry M. Meloney, of Syracuse, N. Y., State School of For- estry at Syracuse niversity; Rudolph E. Zetterstrand, of Munhall, Pa., Shef- field Scientic School, and Thomas Fraser, of Urbana, Ill., University of Illinois. Four of these men will study chemistry, two hydro-electrical eng- ineering, two forestry and two metal- lurgy. In making the announcement the American - Scandinavian foundation says that the interchange of students is proof that American and European students are freed from the dominance of German learning and German uni- versities. A few years ago, it is said, these 20 American and Swedish stu- dents would have gone to German uni- versities.. HARRY A. FRANCK, '03, NOTED AUTHOR, WEDS WE STOVER GRAD Harry A. Franck, '03, a well known author of books on travel, was mar- ried June 28, in Chestnut Hill, Pa., to Miss Rachael Whitehall Latta, ac- cording to a letter received from him by Mr. Wilfred B. Shaw, '04, editor of the Michigan Alumnus. Mrs. Franck is a Westover alumnae, clas of 1912. Mr. Franck recently completed a 35- day trip through Germany with the American Expeditionary forces, after having served during the war as a member of the military censorship bureau In France. He now taking a Western automobile trip and may visit Mr. Shaw in Ann Arbor. Detroit, Mich., July 7. - Michigan draft evaders who fled to Canada, Mex- ico and other countries are to be giv- en immediate attention by federal of- ing rapidly on the league leaders. Dur- ing his last seven games Sisler has made 11 hits, four being two baggers :nd one a triple. Sisler has had 219 times at bat this season and has made 74 hits. Eighteen of these have been two baggers, four have been triples, and four home runs. Ty Cobb's Greatest Rival , Sisler is recognized as Ty Cobb's greatest rival in baseball, not only as a slugger but as an all round player. He is one-of the best base runners in the American league and the peer of the younger organization's first base- men. Sisler starred on Michigan's 1913, 1914 and 1915 baseball teams, and while yet an undergraduate was sought by Barney Dreyfus, of the Pittsburgh club, and other big league owners and managers. He was first coached by Branch Rickey and later by Coach Carl Lundgren, under whose care he devel- oped into the greatest all round base- ball player ever turned out at Mich- igan. Captain of 1914 Varsity Sisler captained the 1914 Varsity which won the national college cham- pionship with 23 games won out of 29 played, and which scored 169 runs to 76 for its opponents. That year the Wolverines shut out their opponents in 10 games of the 23 won, largely ow- ing to the remarkable pitching of Sis- ler. Pennsylvania was beaten two out of SCHOOL TO GIVE SECOND RECITAL Mrs. George B. Rhead and Robert R. Dieterle will appear in a joint pro- gram .in the second of the series of complimentary recitals to be given by the faculty of the School of Music, Wednesday evening in Hill auditorium. Mrs. Rhead, a member of the piano faculty, is an artist of wide recogni- tion, having appeared many times in Ann Arbor and also in other cities of the country. Mr. Dieterle, who has recently been appointed a member ,of the vocal fac- ulty, has just returned after appear- ing at the Peterboro, New Hampshire, musical festival. Recently he won the state contest for young singers in De- troit and later the sectional contest held in Chicago. The general public is invited but are requested to be in their seats at the hour of opening, 8 o'lock. It is also asked that parents refrain from bring- ing small children. The program in full is as follows: Vergin tutto Amor .......... Durante Lungi dal caro beve ..........Seechi Adieu chere Louise (Le Des- ertuer).......... .......Monsigny Arietto ........................Vidal Robert Richard Dieterle Caprice al ceste.... Gluck-Saint-Saens Mrs. George B. Rhead Aria: Zaza, piccola zingara from Zaza ................Leoncavallo Mr. Dieterle Reverie ......................Strauss Etincelles Etude, G flat .............Moszkowski Mrs, Rhead Jean .......................Burleigh A Banjo Song . .............Homer The Spirit Flower....Campbell-Tipton Daybreak ...................Daniels Mr. Dieterle Dorothy Phoebe Wines, Accompanist. E. E. PARDEE, '17, PUBLICITY MAN FOR INTER-ALLIED GAMES Lieut. Earl' E. Pardee, '17, formerly of The Michigan Daily sport staff, handled publicity for the Inter-Allied games in France at which the Ameri- can entries made a spectacular show- ing. The games extended over a per- iod of two weeks and closed July 6. +ifteen nations were represented in the games. Lieutenant Pardee went overseas with one of the ambulance units or- ganized on the Michigan campus in the snring of 1917.. lit for .300 Sisler hit for .300 or better all three years at Michigan, topping the .400 fig- ure in 1915, his, final season at Ann Arbor. The 1915 team was woefully weak with the stick, Sisler's work alone redeeming the work of the Wol- verines in this department. Time after time the Maize and Blue star hurled remakable games. Among these were the one and two hit games that he pitched against Cornell and M. A. C. respectively in 1915, and the 10 to 0 victory he scored over Pennsyl- vania in the next to the last game of his college career. In the last named contest he made four hits in four times at bat, one of his clouts being a home run. The next day on Ferry field in his final game as a Michigan player, Sisler hit safely three times out of four times up, driv- ing in two of Michigan's four runs and scoring the other two himself. In ad- dition, he stole five bases, stealing sec- ond, third and home in succession on one occasion, and played a brilliant game in the field. On All-American In both 1913 and 1914 Sisler was placed on the All-Ameican baseball team picked by 75 coaches and sport- ing writers named by Vanity Fair, he being the only westerner to win a place in either year. He went direct from the University to the St. Louis Browns, then managed by. Branch Rickey, Sisler's former coach,and im- mediately became a big league star. In his first game with St. Louis Sis- ler pitched the Browns to-a 3 to 1 vic- tory over Cleveland, striking out nine men. It is as a first baseman, how- ever, that Sisler has made his big league reputation, and in this depart- ment he stands unequalled. In field- ing, batting, stolen bases and total bases he has ranked near the top each year. Playing on a mediocre club he is one of the most cordially feared men in the league. He has the best chance of any man now in either league to bet- ter Ty Cobb's all-time record. AMERICA IS O. K., DECLARE FRENCH "America is all right." This is the message which Prof. Rene Talamon received from his French friends aft- er they had seen the American sold- ier in action. "For some time," said Professor Tal- amon in his lecture "French in Am- erica," given July 4 in the Natural Sci- ence auditorium, "the French had been doubtful as to the American ability to fight. They knew he was present in numbers, but were 'not certain as to his fighting qualities. "This was caused somewhat by the Americans being a little dissatisfied with conditions which they found in France. They were not used to the mud and the straw. The fear of the French was soon- dispelled though," said Professor Talamon. Professor Talamon did not tell of the campaign of the American army and its accomplishments in France, but dealt more with the French atti- tude toward the Yankee soldier. He showed that the dough boy was loved by the entire population of France and told stories illustrating the depth of French regard for Americans. "The misunderstanding of French conditions by some of the more ignor- ant of the Americans has caused them to bring back a false idea of France," stated the speaker. "Much of the dis- satisfaction with French things has been stirred up by German propagand- ists who are endeavoring to separate France from America after the war. "This can be avoided by a better un- derstanding between the two nations, which really have common bounds. Knowledge will bring this about. The college men who were in France real- fez the depth of the French and, by their attendance at the army univer- sity and French universities, are de- veloping French sympathies." WOLSEY LECTURES TOBEGIN TODAY At 5 o'clock this evening Rabbi Wol- sey of Cleveland, Ohio, will deliver the first of a series of three lectures which he will give this week in the auditorium of the Natural Science building. Rabbi Wolsey's topic in all three lec- tures will deal with the Jew in Eng- lish literature as portrayed by var- ious English authors. In his talks, the rabbi will include about eight well known authors, explaining the charac- terizations of the Jews in the realm of literature. This evening Rabbi Wolsey's lecture will deal with Chr'istopher Marlowe, William Shakespeare, and Richard Cumberland as portrayers of Jewish types. At 5 o'clock tomorrow evening the authors to be considered will be Walt- er Scott and Charles Dickens, and in the last lecture on July 10, Rabbi Wol- sey will discuss the Jew as represent- ed by Benjamin Disraeli, Robert Browning, and George Eliot. FOUR CHAPS TO ATTEND STATE GOLF TOURNAMENT SAGWIN A1Y CONTEST TO ATTRACT NOTED PLAYERS; TO LAST FOUR DAYS Saginaw, Mich., July 7.-The twelfth annual tournament of the Michigan State Golf league, to be held here July 9 to 12, inclusive, will bring together one of the finest lists of players in the history of the sport in this state, it is declared. Among the contestants will be four ex-state champions, Jimmy Standish, Phil Stanton, 'Wylie Car- hartt and Howard Lee. Each has won the championship at least once./ Many other golf leaders will also attend and practically every section of the state will be represented in the meeting. The program, just announced by Secretary S. A. Sommers, follows: July 9-Qualifying round, 18 holes, medal play. Before the qualifying round each club is requested to report a team of four men to play for the as- sociation team championship. Total scores will count, the team having the lowest score to win and the team championship trophy will become the property of the club represented by the winning team. The 32 lowest scores will play 18 holes the following day. Of these the 16 lowest for 36 holes will compose the championship flight; the remaining 16 to make up the second flight. Annual Meeting The annual meeting will be held in the early evening of July 9 when offic- ers will be elected and the tournament city for next year will be picked. July 10-First round, 18 holes, all flights excepting first and second; 18 holes medal play for 32 lowest scores of previous day; first round, 18 holes, for first and second flights; second round, 18 holes, for all other flights; first round, 18 holes, consolation, first and second flights excepted. Second Round July 11-Second round, 18 holes, first and second flights; semi-finals in all other flights; semi-finals, first and sec- ond flights, 18 holes; finals in all oth- er flights and consolations, 18 holes. July 12-Finals, 36 holes, first and second flights; presentation of cups to winners by President L. C. Shade. Trophies-Team championship cup; gold medal for best qualifying round; first flight championship, Marshall Foch cup; second flight, General Per- shing cup; third flight, Field Marshal Haig cup; fourth flight General Diaz cup; fifth flight, Chateau Thierry cup; sixth flight, Argonne cup; seventh flight, St. Mihiel cup; eighth flight, Sedan cup; ninth flight, Juvigny cup; tenth flight, Eighty-flifth division cup. WOLVERINE SUBSCRIBERS ANCIENT BATTLEFIELDS STUDIED IN LIGHT RECENT WAR $25,000 IN GIFTS FINANCE EXPEDITION TO EUROP George R. Swain to Act as Photograp er; Military Expert Will Be Assigned In the interests of humanistic r search and having as its main oe the surveying of Caesar's ancient Eu opean battlefields in the light of tI recent war, an expedition headed t Prof. Francis W. Kelsey of the Lat department will leave the Universi in a few months for Europe and ti Near East. The expedition has be made possible by gifts to the Unive sity of $25,000. Professor Kelsey will be accompai ied by Mr. George R. Swain, technic expert in photography in the Unive sity, and also by a military expert y to be assigned. Other specialists me be added if the need arises. "One of the chief objects of the e: pedition," said Professor Kelsey, "wi be a re-study of the campaigns c Julius Caesar in the light of the Gre war. Caesar's battlefields are four not only in France and Belgium but Spain, North Africa, northern Greec Asia Minor, and Egypt. In notable Ii stnaces, as along the Aisne, Caesar battlefields have been fought over recent years. The principles of stra egy which he employed have been free used by generals in the war wh< lately closed. "Nothwithstanding the intens study given to the campaigns Caesar since the reign of Napoleon II under whose direction extensive r searches were made, many interesti problems remain unsolved, and ti present is an opportune time to atta( them. "As a part of his work for the e: pedition, Mr. Swain has been reques ed by the curator of anthropoloy in t Smithsonian Institute in Washngt to prepare photographs of certain, ra ial types, especially in Asia Minor. T collection of such photographs Washington is among the most co plete in the world but lacks mater from Asia Minor, which is of spem importance for anthropological stu on account of the contact of diver racial types. "The expedition will start as soon the food conditions in Europe becon less acute. This situation will u: Ooubtedly be relieved soon after the d tribution of the harvests of the prese: year, which should be well under wa in August. The field work will requi a year." WHAT'S GOING ON July 8 5 p. m.-The Jew in English Liter ture as represented by Christoph Marlowe, WiliamnShapespeare,La Richard Cumberland, Rabbi Lo Wolsey, Cleveland, 0. 8 p. m.-Some Interesting Phases the Development of Dentistry (Illu trated), Prof. N. S. Hoff. 8:30 p. m.-Visitors' night at the 0 'servatory, admission by ticket on July 9 5 p. m.-The Jew in English Liter ture as represented by Walter Se and Charles Dickens, Rabbi Lot Wolsey, Cleveland, 0. 8 p m.-Concert. Faculty of the U versity School of Music (Hill au torium). 8:30 p. m.-Visitors' night at the 0 servatory, admission by ticket on July 10 5 p. m.-The Jew in English Liter ture as represented by Benjani Disraeli, Robert Browning, a George Eliot, Rabbi Louis Wols( Cleveland, 0. 8 p. m.-Educational motion pictur RIGHT THIS WAY! GET A KING; 278 OF 'EM ARE JOBLESS NO Paris, July 7.-Some 278 kings a near kings are out of a job as a r sulk of the war, according to late KELSEY TO HEAD, RESEARCH PARTYFO NVBi TO OF ,. -4 4 I1' l TENNIS ENTRIES OPEN Entries for the summer tennis tournament to be held soon on Fer- ry field courts, under the auspices of the Athletic association, are now open at Moe's Athletic Shop, Wat; erman gymnasium, and at The Wolverine office. Men wishing to participate may sign up at any of these places. An entrance fee of 25 cents will be charged, the receipts from this source to be used for buying of the prizes. Mr. Moe has already of- fere a ozen tennis balls as one of The following people who have subscribed for The Wolverine have not left 'their addresses at The Wolverine office, and we are therefore unable to deliver their papers: J. M. Holt. C. E. Behrens. 'T. B. Douglas. Frank Sisung. [ L. J. Schwab. L. S. Gray. t use the latter part 11