I HL w M rl PROBABLY SNOW-HIGH WINDS I Ap 4 r 4lt 3 atty UNITED PRESS DAY AND NIGHT WIRE SERVICE VOL. XXVII. No. 76. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1917. PRICE FIVE C I i .--,____ EXPRESS OPINIONS ON HONOR SYSTEM Facuity Members Favor Adoption of Plan to Raise Standards in Examinations CAMPUS SENTIMENT BACKS EXTENSION OF MOVEMENT Tire Frst Gunu in Thaw Battle Prosecution Wins Initial Skirmish When Partner of Accused Is Held for Extradition Philadelphia, Jan. 12.-The first skirmish of the legal battle that is to be staged to save Harry K. Thaw from being returned to Matteawan or sent to prison was conceded to the Women Endorse Campaign for System; Dunne Thinks It Not Practical New prosecution here late today when Oliver A. Brower, indicted on the That the proposed extension of the honor system to all the schools and colleges of the University will mani- fest itself as an unqualified success, was the general opinion of members of the faculty and of several students prominent upon the campus when in- terviewed yesterday. Some little doubt was expressed, however, as to whether the plan would work as well in the Literary college as it has in the professional schools of engineering and medicine. Prof. Charles Horton Cooley of the sociology department said, "I am heartily in favor of the project, and believe that with the support and co-operation of the students its success Is assurred. But the lack of certain well-defined and well-knit groups in the literary de- partment, owing to the wide choice of electives, may make the establishment of the system harder to effect." "There is no reason why the re- sults of such an honor system should not prove gratifying," said Dean Myra B. Jordan, "but of course its success or failure depends upon its reception by the student body." Margaret R. Reynolds, '17, president of the Women's league, declared that agitation in that direction had been go- ing on among the women oftthe Uni- versity for some time, and that they would welcome the inauguration of the plan with favor., Glenn M. Coulter,' '18L, president of the Michigan Union, said, "It is advisable that the honor system be extended to all departments of the University There is little doubt about its practicability." Not so sanguine was the opinion of Maurice F. Dunne, '17L. "A Utopian condition," declared the football man, "much to be desired but not to be looked for inactual practice." surprise, then, when in ling up DR. WISE TO SPEAK ON "FACING LIFE" charge of having conspired in the kid- napping of Frederick Gump, Jr., was held without bail to await extradition to New York. In agreeing that Brower is held for extradition, Henry Scott, Brower's at- torney, virtually acknowledged that Thaw will be returned to New York to face trial. "In view of the fact that Thaw is practically in custody," he said, "and will himself go or be taken to New York to answer the in- dictment under which he is charged, I am willing that the defendant be held for extradition." Assistant Attorney General Black of New York with Detectives Cuniff and Flood of the New York force, arrived here today and were awaiting permis- sion from physicians to obtain Thaw's version of the charges made by Fred- erick Gump, Jr., as well {as the Pitts- burger's story of his suicide attempt. It was expected that the murderer of Stanford White would be strong enough despite the deep self-inflicted wounds in his face and wrists to face this ordeal soon. Thaw will leave de- spite his wounds, providing he did not swallow any of the deadly poison tab- lets discovered to be missing from a bottle found in his pockets. Physicians at St. Mary's hospital declared today they were greatly con- cerned over the possibility that Thaw may have taken the poison. With the discovery that some of the tablets were missing Thaw is being watched closely. REQUIREMENTS OF COURSEEXPLAINED Hutchins Tells Literary Students Nature of Proposed War Work MAY ESTABLISH MILITARY SCIENCE PROFESSOR CHAIR Engineering Students Gather to Hear President Talk Today; to Dismiss Classes According to present indications the introduction of Michigan's long talk- ed of chair in military science is soon to become a reality. About 50 men of the College of Literature, Science and the Arts, expressed their interest and enthusiasm yesterday afternoon in the auditorium of University hall, at the meeting called by President Harry B. Hutchins for the purpose of explain- ing the election of the proposed course in military science and also for finding out the number of men who in- tend to enroll in it in case the course is given. No definite action was taken. The men were given until next Tues- day to consider whether or not they wished to take the work. 100 Men Must Enroll The specifications of the war depart- ment state that in order to have an army officer detailed to take charge of the work the University authorities must agree to maintain under the pre- scribed military training not less than 100 physically fit male students. There is that number enrolled in the present organizatio . for military training, however, it is not known how many of these intend to elect the course. President Hutchins will address the engineering and architectural students on the subject at 10:30 o'clock this forenoon, and it is expected that a large number of them will join the movement, as it is known that the sentiment in favor of military training is much stronger on that part of the campus than elsewhere. Outline Possible Courses The exact character of the proposed work and the number of hours credit allowed in the university for it cannot be determined until the detailed of- ficer arrives and arranges the courses with the university authorities to fl local conditions. The courses prop posed by the war department which are subject to modification, are as fol- lows: (a). Nomenclature and care of rifles and equipment. (b). Infantry drill regulations; close and extended order, to include the schools of the soldier, squad, and company. (c). Instruction in firing the rifle, to include gallery practice. The regulations under which this work is carried on requires that any student who enrolls in this work must (Continued on Page Six) NOTE PROMISES BOMB Feminine Writer Threatens to Blow Up Chicago Bazaar Chicage, Jan. 12.--A note written in a feminine hand stating that the Coliseum where Chicago's biggest charity event, the allied bazaar, would be blown up, was received by Thomas O'Connor, fire marshal, today. The warning was turned over to Chief of Police Schuettler, who will assign spe- cial guards to watch tht building. Athlete Joins Ambulance Corps Madison, Wis., Jan. 12.-Stevenson Lewis of Cleveland, senior agricultur- ist and track man of the last two years, will join the Wisconsin ambulance corps in France. Lewis will be gradu- ated at the close of the coming se- mester and will sail Feb. 15 from New York. Williams, Clark, and Craigh of the track, football and swim- ming teams are already abroad. PERHAPS HERE'S ONE EXPLANATION OF WHY WE LIVE ON CEREAL FOODS Chicago, Jan. 12.-With steak at 35 to 40 cents a pound and bacon at 30 to 35 cents, knights of the high cost of living were cheered today by the financial statement of Armour and company for the year ending Oct. 28, 1916. It showed gross ,sales of $525,000,000 as compared with $425,000,000 the previous year and net profits of $27,- 000,000 against $18,000,000 the year before. J. Ogden Armour, presi- dent, stated that earnings were at the rate of 20 per cent of the cap- ital stock. DESTROY VESSEL; ITALIAN 600 PERISH SCENES OF MANY LANDS SHOWN IN COSMOPOLITAN CLUB PRODU TION PLEASES LARGE AUDIENCE GROVER APPLAUDED AFTER HIS SINGIN Chinese Act Also Particularly Well I, ceived; Cast Gathers for Grand Finale Mine or Torpedo Is Responsible Sinking of Reina Margherita Near Valone for GOERNMENT MAY1TAKE CONTROL 0OF WIRELESS TiODI), HEAD OF RADIO SERVICE, SAYS SUCH ACTION NE- CESSARY Washington, Jan. 12.- Commander Todd, United States navy, head of the naval radio service, told the house- committee on merchant marine and fisheries today that the only effective way of preserving neutrality im wire- less operations is by government con- trol of wireless. The neutral question is a serious and complicated one, he said, and ought to be remedied immediately. He cited submarine activity of the U-53 off Nantucket as illustrating the im- portance of action. Commissioner of Patients Ewing told the committee he believed in government control but opposes government ownership. Ewing was of the opinon that the wireless act could thus be developed and improved under private owner- ship. He was in favor of the measure as it stands, however, and spoke, he said, for the secretary of the interior. The bill, while not actually provid- ing for government ownership, au- thorizes the purchase of coastal sta- tions if private companies desire to sell and so limits private wireless en- terprise that it eventually will lead to absolute government ownership. CAR INJURES COUPLE Interurban Crashes Into Rig Occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Sayles Another accident was added to the increasing list of catastrophes of the Detroit, Jackson, and Chicago railway at 10 o'clock yesterday morning when a Kalamazoo limited crashed into a rig occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Sayles of Third avenue at the corner of Seventh and Huron streets, totally destroying the vehicle, splintering the glass front of the car, and nearlly causing the death of the two persons in the rig. Mr. and Mrs. Sayles were taken to the University hospital im- mediately. Mr. Sayles was driving north on Seventh street and tried to cross Hur- on street and evidently not seeing the approaching interurban, continued crossing the street. When W. Pratt, motorman of the car, saw the rig, he tried to stop, but was unable to do so, and the interurban smashed into the rig. Mrs. Sayles, who is more injured than her husband, sustained a broken collar bone, a cut on the head, and a bruised eye. Dr. E. K. Herdmann, who is attend- ing the injured parties, stated last night that the couple are out of danger Both injured persons are about 40 years old. Present Reform Bills in Indiana Indianapolis, Jan. 12.-Prohibition and suffrage bills were presented to the legislature today. The dry bill backed bythe Indianapolis federation was presented in the senate by Thomas Dorrell of Greenwood, and in the house by Frank L. Wright of Randolph county. LEADPOWERS BRAS SKAW'S PLAY TONIGHTi TO GIVE RECITAL OF "THE' DISCIPLE" IN U- HALL DEVILSI Leland Powers, in his recital of "The Devil's Disciple," by George Bernard Shaw, which he will give tonight at 8 o'clock in the auditorium of Univer- sity hall, will make his twentieth ap- pearance before Ann Arbor audiences. Mr. Powers is recognized as the best reader today appearing before American audiences in such programs as Dicken's "Bleak House," "David Copperfield," and "The Christmas Carol," and the works of Booth Tark- ington, John Galsworthy, and Shake- speare's comedies, "Twelfth Night," and "The Taming of the Shrew." In 1904 Mr. Powers founded the Le- land Powers School of the Spoken Word in Boston, Mass., the foremost school of public reading, impersona- tion, and the vocal interpretation of literature in America. Mr. Powers has perhaps the most re- markable list of return engagements that has been accorded to any reader or lecturer on the platform today. Chautauqua, N. Y., has called him 33 different times to appear on their ly- ceum programs. Brooklyn, N. Y., has given him 27 engagements and Pitts- burg has heard him 14 times. The recital will be held under the auspices of the Oratorical. association, and the general admission charge has been fixed at 35 cents. The charge for reserved seats is 50 cents. For the first time in the history of the University, members of the En- gineering classes will usher at an Ora- torical association function. Hitherto, the Law and Literary colleges.have al- most exclusively taken the leading part in the activities of public speak- ing in the University, but since the election of their delegates to the Ora- torical association, the Engineering college has come closer to the ac- tivities of oratorical interests in the University. R. A. Cole, '18E, is chairman of the committee, and will appoint the ushers for tonight's lecture. 5 Dadda Rhamadad il Habodad, magic- ian and genii at large, rubbed his magic lamp. Straightway mystic scenes, spice- laden from the Orient, passed in sol- emn splendor before the eyes of the audience who gathertd in Hill audi- torium last evening to ride on the magic carpet to the lands of long ago. The plaintive melodies of Hawaii, the holy rites of India, the pomp and glory of old China in her prime, the poesy of Japan in the season of the cherry blossoms, and the piercing war cries of the dusky Congo chiefs were blent together in pleasing harmony. To the beauty and simplicity of "The Magic Carpet," as written and directed by Prof. J. R. Nelson, was due its marked success. Sent to Penelope Pembroke on the occasion of her twelfth birthday comes the Arabian sorcerer to transport her guests to lands beyond the sea. The parts of Jennie Jacobs, '18D, as Pene- lope and of Warren Townsend, '18, as "Dadda" served as the threads on which were strung the several scenes and dances. Grover Makes Hit With Songs. Two songs by Frank Grover, 'is, "The Dinkey Bird," 'and a "Japanese Love Song," the music of which were written by Abraham Gornetzky, '17, won much applause and served each as an "entre act" as did also two aesthetic dances, "Aurora and, the Moonbeams" and the dance of the Geisha girls. Perhaps the enthusiasm of the audi- ence rose to its greatest pitch at the close of the Chinese act in which was portrayed the story of Maung Nung, the Chinese Joan of Arc, which part was played by Charlotte Kelsey, '18. The role of her blind father, the Rev- erened Kwong Lee, was taken by R. Clarence Hunter, '17. The lighting ef- fects, the costumes of the actors, and the naturalness of the acting well merited the applause which was ac- corded the playlet. The poetic atmosphere of the Hindu scene, which won praise from Tagore, while it was yet in the manuscript, proved no less attractive. The wierd chanting of N. R. Chavare as Narida, the holy man, seemtd to strike the key- note of India's-an ient mysticism. How Krishnarao, full of occidental ideas, is brought back to the faith of his fa- thers, forms the theme of the act. Dr. N. S. Hardikar took this part, while that of his wife, the simple Kamala, was played by Florene Pride. Japanese Scene Pathetic. A touch of the pathetic was fur- nished by the scene trom Japan. From shrine to shrine the noble Baron Inada seeks his long lost daughter, finding her at last in the keeping of Maru the peasant. She refuses to leave her foster parents. Elsa Apfel, '17, won applausp as the daughter, as did E Katsuizukmi, '17, as the nobleman. M. Uyehara as the pilgrim caught the spirit of the spring in the warbling of his flute. To A. F. Seele, '18D, and A. R. Melcher, '18D, goes the credit for the realistic Congo scene. Both men have lived among the Zulu tribes, and as leaders of the two bands of warriors managed to present a spectacle that (Continued on Page Six) Talks at Union Service in Hill ditorium Tomorrow Night Au- "Facing Life," is the subject Dr. Stephen S. Wise, rabbi of the Free Tabernacle in New York City, has chosen as the subject of his address to be delivered at the Union church service to be held tomorrow night in Hill auditorium. Dr. Wise has spoken in practically all the principal cities of the United States, and at many colleges and uni- versities, but this is his first visit to Ann Arbor. Within the next month he will speak at the chapel services of Cornell University for the second time during the present school year. Dr. Wise is known the country over not only as a pulpit orator, but as a speaker on any occasion. He last year made a nation wide tour speak- ing in behalf of universal peace. 75 Couples Attend Architects' Dance1 More than 75 couples attended the architects dance at the Michigan Union last night. Prof. Emil Lorch and Mrs. Lorch, Prof. George M. McConkey and Mrs. Conkey and Prof. Louis Boynton and Mrs. Boynton chaperoned the party. Those serving on the committee wtre: Charles M. Norton, '19A, chair- man; Lawrence S. 'Martz, '18A, and Harold M. Kiefer, '19A. Berlin, Jan. 12.-Six hundred sailors abroad the Italian ship Reina Marg- herita perished when the ship was de- stroyed off Valone by mine or torpedo, the press bureau announced today, re- ferring to confirmation from the Bas- eler Anzeiger. The press bureau's statement follows: "The Baseler Anzeiger reports from Rome the de- struction of the Italian battleship Reina Margherita is confirmed. The vessel sunk off Valone either as the result of a mine or torpedo. Six hun- dred out of 800 men on board perished. RAILWAY BROTHERHOODS WILL WAIT FOR COURT DECISION Chicago, Jan. 12.-The conference of representatives of the four railway brotherhoods in session here probably will close tonight, W. G. Lee, presi-, dent of the trainmen, stated today. "We have reviewed the situation thor- oughly and there is nothing more left for us until the supreme court hands down its decision," Lee told the United Press. CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE TO BE SENT TO WAR THEATER Montreal, Jan. 12.-The royal Can- adian northwest mounted police are to be sent oversea as a part of the Can- adian fighting forces. Plans are under way to send this world famous organ- ization to the European war theater. The provisional governments in the west have been notified to arrange for policing their own territories during the absence of the present forces. BLAST SHAKES N. Y. Blasts at Haskell, N. Y.. shatter Win- dows in Metrop .s New York, Jan. 12.-Three explos- ions in Haskell, N. J., about 30 miles west of this city; at 10 o'clock last night, rocked the city for several sec- onds. The force of the detonations shattered a number of windows and tore down many wires. The extent of the casualties and damages have not yet been dttermined. House to Stand Pat on Defense Act Washington, Jan. 12.-The house committee on military affairs will stand pat on the national defense act of last June regardless of any action of the senate, Chairman Dent an- nounced today, following a decision of the committee to hold no further hear- ings to admit further criticism of the national guard. A Powerful Play A Meester's Interpretation HAVE YOU H-AR L E L N D POiWE Rs 6A L L Seets at Wahr's 35 to S0 ento O* DatVIL S I tos^ C .- A P *.E?'". yr ~h' "~aCe