THE WOLVERINE DI ILLINOISU TO INSTALL URSE FOR COACHES TODAY AND TOMORROW HARRY MOREYI BETTY And BLYTHE - in- "THE MAN WHO WON" BY CYROUS TOWNSEND BRADY Thursday and Friday CO NST A N C E TALMADGE IN "Happiness A LA Mode" A breezy, farcical comedy plus drama. x , TR OY 'AIL OP ED SOFT COL LARS FIT WELL-WASH EASILY Cluett, Peabody Co., Inc., Troy, N. Y. MAJESTIC MAJESTIC ORCHESTRA Nightly-All Shows Sunda Aug 13-14-Vivian Marti in "You Never Saw Such a Girl." Bray Pictograph. A Christie Comedy. Aug 10-11-12 -Marguerite Clark in "Let's Elope." "The Little Widow." Burton Holmes Travels. ARCADE Shows at 3:00; 7:00; 8:3 Phones : Theatre, 2g6-M Mgr's Rea., 2316-M Tue-Wed-12- 13-Harry Morey in "The Man 'Who Won ;" Star Comedy, "Half and Half" and News Weekly. Thu-Fi-14- 15-Constance Talmadge in "Happiness a l Mode;" Judge Rum- mey Cartoon, "Twinkle-Twinkle" and Ford Wekly. 25. WUERTH THEATRE 2:00, 3:30, 7:00, 8:30, 10:00 Tues-Wed-1213-Harry Carey in "A Fight for Love" with a Lloyd Comedy and Kinogram Weekly. Thurs-Fri-14-15-"RULING PASSIONS" a six-reel special with a two-reel L-Ko Comedy, "Two Gun Trixie." Sat-16--William Desmond in "Bare Fist- ed Gallagher" with a News and Ar- buckle Comedy. IN "A SPORTING CHANCE" with a Tom Mix Comedy, "Soft Tender Foot." Tues-Wed-19-20-J. Warren Kerrigan in "The Best Man" with a Lloyd Comedy and Kinogram Weekly. Thurs-Fri-21-22-Theda Bara in "The Siren's Song" with a L-Ko Comedy, Brown's Eyes and Bank Notes." ORPHEUM THEATRE 2:00, 3:30, 7:00, 8:30, 10:00 Tues-Wed-12-13-Corinnne Gritith in "A Girl at-Bay."3Also "THE SILENT MYSTERY," No. 13. 41 Thurs-Fri - 14-15 - House Peters in Thunderbolts of Fate" with a News and Comedy, Sat-1-Pauline Frederick in "Out of the Shadows" (Ret.) with a News and Comedy. Sun-Mon - 17-18 - "THREE GREEN EYES" an all star cast with a Mutt & Jeff Cartoon Comedy and Ford Weekly. Tues-Wed - 19-20 - E. K. Lincoln in "Fighting Thro" with "The Silent Mys- ter," No. -14. Thurs- Fri-2 1 -22-"Broncho Billy"-Gil- b.rt Anderson in "Son of a Gun" with a News and Comedy. "ILL CARANT B.S. DEGREE AT END OF FOUR YEARS; COURSE TO OPEN SEPT. 22 Urbana, Ill., Aug. 1.-Men who wish to become athletic coaches can here- after get a four-year college course in coaching, with a degree, and can go forth educationally equipped for any other profession. The University of Illinois has established a course in coaching, which will open on Sept. 22. Those who complete it will receive the degree of achelor of Science. The course will be under the department of athletic coaching and physical educa- tion, which has recently been estab- lished. George A. Huff, for twenty- four years director of athleticsand baseball coach here, is the head of the new department. In an official statement from the uni- versity it is declared that the an- nouncement of this course is an im- portant sign of the trend of the times. It is pointed out that once the athletic coach was regarded by college facul- ties as more or less of a necessary evil. Now it is realized, so it is stated, that athletics and physical education must receive more emphasis in the universi- ties, colleges and secondary schools of the country. That means that there must be trained men to direct this work. Day of Self-ade Coai Passing Most coaches thus far have been ed- ucated for other fields--law, medicine, engineering, teaching. Coaching as se- rious work was often a stop gap or an Jfterthought. Beyond their own exper- ience in 'athletics coaches have been self-taught as coaches. Butthe day of the self-made coach, it is predicted, is possing. Few colleges or high schools are willing to allow their teams to be practice material for would-be coaches who plan to pick up their training as they go along. Besides, it takes too long. The demand for trained coaches is immediate and pressing, for the war has given a tremendous stimulus to athletics and physical education. Scope of Course The coaching course here will in- clude a study of baseball, football, bas- ket ball, track and field athletics, swim- ming, gymnostics, hygiene, training and massage, anthropometry, play- ground management, and the organiza- tion of teams. There will be class- room work and training on the field as well. In addition to these technical training courses there will be required courses such as education, psychology, rhetoric and public speaking, and the student will have general elective courses from which to choose. So he will have a pretty fair general educa- tion on top of his special training. Teaching Staff Lieutenant George Clark, well- known Illinois athlete, just home from France, who was a member of the phamppnship football and baseball teams of the A. E. F., and Major John L. Griffith, executive head of athletic' activities in army training camps, for- merly director of athletics at Drake university, have been engaged as in- structors, in addition to the coachesof the Illinois 'varsity teams. The nucleus of the instructional staffd will be the group of Illinois coaches who have been responsible for the record of Illinois athletic teams for the last ten years: George A. Huff, base- ball; Harry L. Gill, track and field1 athletics; Robert C. Zuppke, football; Ralph R. Jones, basketball; E. J. Man- ley, swimming, and A. J. Schuettner, gymnastics. The university has issued a circulor descriptive of the new department and. its courses. TIIOU ANDS VISIT U. S. FLEET ANCHORED AT LOS ANGELES Los Angeles, Aug. 11.-Thousands of residents of Los Angeles and other nearby towns and cities today for the first time saw or trod the decks of an American dreadnaught, when they vis- ited this port where the Pacific fleet arrived yesterday. Other thousands gathered in Exposition park to hear an address by Secretary of the Navy Daniels HUN DIPLOMATS TO BE TRADERS Berlin, Aug. 11.-No sujject is be- ing considered more seriously in Ger- many than the future of German ex- port trade, which was discussed yester- day in a lecture by the chief of the foreign trade section of the foreign office, Herr Weidenfeld, a recognized expert in German trade natters. Herr Weidenfeld said Germany would be compelled now, as before the war, to import food and raw materials and to export manufactured products of great value. Both, call for a good intelligence service coming from abroad and proceeding from Germany. England, America and Japan have made great efforts in this domain since the armistice. Germany is attempting the same by creating a foreign trade section of the foreign office. Its first task is the preliminary edu- cation of officials abroad in the diplo- matic and consular 'services, which henceforth will not represent two car- eers. The principle adopted for these officials is, in the first place, an eco- nomic education, and as soon as offi- cials abroad begin to get active they will be supplied with reports as to the current German economic situation. Representatives abroad will have to use their own initiative more than be- fore in reporting. Their reports and those of the private reporters then will be utilized for the foreign trade sec- tion. The second task of the foreign trade section lies in communicating in- telligence quickly to interested parties. WOMEN TO HAE, FINL GATHING THURSDAY LEAGUE SUCCESSFUL IN SUMMER SCHOOL SOCIAL ACTIVI- TIES As hostess for the last supper event of the Women's league, Mrs. Edward H. Kraus will entertain from 3 to 6 o'clock Thursday afternoon at her home, 722 Church street. This will be the final opportunity for summer school women to enjoy meeting so- cially as a collective body of repre- sentatives from Michigan and a large number of other universities. Begining with an opening tea at Helen Newberry residence, the pro- gram' of the league's activities has continued successfully through the past six weeks. Delcia Gilbert, '20, who is acting president of the organi- zation this summer, states that the major aim of the league in bringing the women together has been realized satisfactorily, and that the response of students to the membership cam- paign has been most cordial. The Women's league, which was or- ganized in 1890, has been gradually assuming a more and mor active part in the affairs of the campus, its membership during the last collegiate year numbering 1,200 women. Through- out its history, its function has been mutual improvement and helpfulness among ,the women of the University. Among other things, it acted as spon- sor for the introduction of regulated league houses, the junior advisor sys- tem, and the securing of Barbour gym- nasium. During the war it maintain- ed a large war work committee which directed the interests of the women in knitting, caring for the S. A. T. C. sick, and various other activities of the military regime. So complete have its services now become that its com- mittees now number 14, and include everything from the scholastic and so- cial phases of college life to the vo- cational guidance and life membership committees. Its president for the en- suing year is Marguerite Chapin, '20. POLISH ARMY UNDERTAKES NEW OFFENSIVE AGAINST REDS Basle, Aug. 11.-A Polish army has left Minsk to undertake a new offen- sive against the bolsheviki, according to a wireless dispatch from Warsaw. The troops are said to be well train- ed and to be supported strongly by artillery. Delegations from the for- mer Russian province of Volhynia, another dispatch from Warsaw says, have expressed to the Allied minsters in the Polish capital the desire of their country to be a part of Poland. AURORA BOREALIS HANDICAPS TELEGRAPH SERVICE IN U. S. New York, Aug. 11. - The aurora borealis or "Northern Lights" played hob with press and commercial tele- graph wires this afternoon, causing numerous "breaks" and delaying news and messages throughout the United States north of the Mason and Dixon line. At frequent intervals the power- ful electric currents of the aurora borealis suffused ordinary currents and completely stopped transmission. i EASTERN COLLEGES TO ENCOUR- AGE GIVING BACK OF E6IER- GENCY DEGREES New York, Aug. 11.-Harvard, Yale, and Princeton have decided to allow undergraduates to return the emer- gency degrees they received during the 'war and will encourage them to ob- tain the regular A. B., or B. S. de- grees when the college reopens next month. It has also been decided to permit the holders of the "war de- grees" who return to college in quest of regular sheepskins to take part in intercollegiate athletics. This ruling on the part of these three colleges will have an important bear- ing on the coming football season and will permit the return of several grid- iron stars who received degrees under the war curricula. Harvard will be particularly affected because the rul- ing permits the return of Ralph Hor- ween, who played for two years in the Harvard backfield. He is a good run- ning, kicking, and passing half back and should make Eddie Casey, the star of the 1916 Crimson eleven extend himself for supremacy behind the line. 'At the present time he and a number of other players, including his younger brother, Arnold Horween, center; John Desmond, tackle or end; Nils Nelson, half back, and Philip Philbin, are do- ing light work every afternoon on Soldiers' Field. It was Horween's drop kick that defeated Princeton 3 to 0 in 1916. Harvard Loses Players The Harvard line has lost two very strong players with the season about' two months away. The most serious football calamity is the injury to Ar- thur Clark's back, which will prevent him trying for a position at guard this fall. Clark severely wrenched his back recently while playing golf, and is just able to be about now with the aid of a cane. His doctor absolutely has forbidden him to play football again. George L. Batchelder is to be the sec- ond absentee. He was captain of the second university crew which defeat- ed Yale in June, and a few days before the race injured one of his knees, which, however, was made fit for the race. Batchelder is afraid he will re- injure his knee, and will therefore pass up the gridiron for rowing. He' is one of the men who plan to ex- change their war degree and made their "H" as an end on Harrie Dad- mun's 1916 eleven. First Practice Waldron P. Belkriap, manager of the Harvard football team, talked over af- fairs with Robert T. Fisher, the head coach, during his visit to Cambridge last week, but the only announcement made was that the first practice for candidates will be held on Soldiers' field Monday afternoon, Sept. 8. It is expected from that date on practice will be held twice daily, with the ex- ception of Saturdays, until college re- opens. Coach Fisher, schooled in Haughton NEW RULING TO PERMIT FOOTBALL1 MEN'S RETURN ,football, will teach that system and endeavor to surround himself with the best of the former coach's assistants. Derria Parmenter, a former center, will be one of his associates, and it is expected that Reginald W. P. Brown will renew his contract as scout and strategic coach. Charles Coolidge and William Snow of the 1916 team will assist with the development of the ends and guards, respectively. Haughton to Help Percy Haughton has promised to help out when he can, and Leo Leary may give the men on Soldiers' field a little of his attention when practice gets started. At this stage of the season, although it is too early to -as- sume a positive position, Harvard's weakness seems to be the lack of sea- soned coaching material, although when Head Coach Fisher gets ready to announce his staff these fears may appear groundless.'. The material for the team will be exceptional, and, accorded all the ad- vantages that his predecessor enjoyed, there apears td be every reason to be- lieve that Fisher will be a successful gridiron instructor. He has the sys- tem, and his success remains primarily with himself and those he is able to secure for his coaching staff. AT THE ARCADE AT THE THI Harry T. Morey has another fine in "The Man Who Won," which be presented at the Arcade today tomorrow. The story is by C Townsend Brady, and is all "rME without any "padding." There is tion from beginning to end. The i tery element is well planted in first few feet of the film and this ries ri<-it along successfully until last. Betty Blythe, who has appe4 with Morey in some of his recent tures, again plays opposite the sta On Thursday and Friday Consta Talmadge,will be shown in her la picture, "Happiness a la Mode." I ' young and beautiful wife loses husband and then wins him b again is delightfully portrayed by ( stance Talmadge in this feature. DE AN J. R. EFFINGER AND WIF LEAVE FOR ADIRONDA4 Dean John R. Effinger and Mrs. finger left Friday for Piseka, N. in the Adirondacks. Dean Effinger pects to remain on his vacation t the middle of September. A I lk 8 Fig Re I Pu on ti capa - - Lake ]Erie's nest Resorts are 2ached via. Ashley& istin Steamer Line y4 Rcursions Every Day t-in-Bay-Cedar Point 'reached every day he magnificent steel steamer Put-in-Bay, city 3,200 people. Big Hotel Victory now open at Put-in-Bay. Hotel Breakers and the world's greatest bathing beach at Cedar Point. Excursions every day to Put-in-Bay. To Ohio Points via A.& D Line and Fare round-trip week days - - $ .80 connecting trolley - lipes reduce, Fareround-trip Sundays aadHolidays 1.10 fare one-half. Five hours on the boat. Leaving Detroit at 9:00 a. m., returning at 8:00 p. tn. Cedar Point Excursions on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Steamer Frank E. Kirby leaving Detroit at 8 a. i., returning at 11:50 p.m. Five hours at Cedar Point. Fare round Trip SL00. On Steamer Put-in- Bay Friday and Sunday $1.35 round trip. Finsel's music for dancing Ashley & Dustin Steamer Lino on Steamer Put-in-Bay. Ball First Street Wharf Detroit, bMicb. room, largest on lake steam- ers. No charge for dancing. Write For Our Map Showing p Lake Erie Reso'ts I II - - . . ~ .. . y° 1!- I 'I) "I 7d l0c All remaining SUMMER STUDENTS DIRECTORI ES Will be closed out at 10c, each Directories will be exchanged for subscribers stubs until all Directories are gone Read the News. Wolverine for Campusj av yLeave Copy at fl at Quarry's and .. - A V ISS IN TheDelta IA D VE RTFI-- N For Sale at Wolverine Otice LOST LOST-Fountain pen on Thursday, be- tween Physics Laboratory and Eco- nomics Bldg. Initials, M. A. D. Call 2618. 1331 Washtenaw. 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