ESTABLISHED 1890 (Y zut]C t 460 :411 at I MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS i .'M .. 1 I I I VOL. XLII. No. 165. SIX PAGES ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, May 18, 1932. WEATHER: Fair today; Warmer. PRICE IVE CENTS CURTIS ADMITS FN CONTACT WITH KIDNAPERS ROOSEVELT'S SON CAMPAIGNS FRATERNITY GROUP' WILL TAKE VOTE ON RUSH ING PLAN Interfraternity Council to Pass on Proposed Rushing System Tonight. WILL BE SECOND VOTE Faculty, Alumni Members to Be I Elected to Judiciary Committee. FESTIVAL ARTIST 'Festival to Open Tonight;Gradova, Pianist, Featured Financial Difficulties Caused Insanity, He Says. OFFERED MONEY Phone Call From Wife Brings Deceiver to Senses. HOPEWELL, N.J., May 17.- Y P-A startling confession by John Hughes Curtis, the Norfolk, Va., "intermediary," that he had perpetrated an "enormous decep- tion" in the search for the slain son of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh was made today to police. The 44-year-old boat builder wrote his story of faking myster- ious contacts with the supposed kidnappers of the child and turned' the confessionrover to police. ' Bats Were Imaginary. The boats and all of the people to whom Curtis has been referring were creations of his own mind, police were told by the manufac- turer.: '{ "I honestly believe that for the last seven or eight months I have not been myself, due to financial troubles," Curtis said in his confes- sion. "I was apparently brought back to my senses by my telephone con- MAN ADMITS KIDNAPPING NEW YORK, May 17.-(P)-A man arrested on a charge of wife abandonment in Brooklyn today told police he and five other men kidnapped the Lind- bergh baby. Police said he admitted being a narcotic user and that he had1 been drinking very heavily. Al- though ity said they doubted the truth 'ofhis story, they started an immediate investi- gation to check its details. The prisoner at first gave his name as Frank Smith but later admitted he was Frank Par- zych, 30, with a wife and two children living in Brooklyn. versation with my wife this after-; noon, when she told me of the troubles she was having and how the children missed me and also by my conversation with Inspector Harry Walsh. Was Offered Money. He declared representatives of two newspapers, one of which he] named as the New York Herald- Trlibune aid the other as the News, and the Fox Film Co., had offeredr him money for his "knowledge of the Lindbergh case or pictures off the baby."' "The matter was brought to myE attention during a conversation, and due to what I now believe wasE a distorted mind by brooding overt it, I became insane on the subject, which caused me to create the story' in its entirety," Curtis added. 'I never knew the people I namedt to Col. Lindbergh. Ty were creat- ures of a distorted mind with thee exception of Marie .Truesdale, whot had no connection with the crime.t B 1 ROERS SELECTED TOHEADALPHA NV Debating Group Elects Officers, Recipient of Honor Award; Initiates Pledges.a Charles A. Rogers, '34, was elected; president of Alpha Nu, men's de- bating and literary society, at the regular meeting of the society held last night. He will lead the society for the balance of the present sem- ester and for the first semester of 1932-33. Rogers was the society's oratorical ' delegate for the last' school year. The following are the men whc will fill the other offices for the, next semester: Leo W. Walker, '34, vice-president; Arthur D. Hawkins, '34, secretary; Bernard K. Konopka,, '34, treasurer; Charles B. Brown-' son, '35, oratorical delegate; James C. Hendley, '32, senior critic. The society also elected the re- cipient of its honor award given annually to the member receiving, a degree in June who is deemed to have rendered the best service to Haydn's Oratorio, 'The Creation,' to Mark Opening of Thirty-Seventh Spring Musical Presentation. James New York, cisco upon Associated;!Tess Photo D. Roosevelt (right), son of Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt of is shown being greeted by Mayor Angelo Roosi of San Fran- his arrival to campaign for his father in California. Mrs. Roosevelt is shown in center. Eleven Michigan Men Are Picked For West Indian Summer Cruise The day of the wind-jammer is not over; at least for eleven Mich- igan men .who will relive the lives of the old sailors in a cruise aboard the four-masted schooner, "Doris Hamlin" of Baltimore, this summer, to the West Indies in search of ad- venture on a motion picture expe- dition which will take them along the trails of the old buccaneers of the Spanish Main. The expedition, known as the Caribbean Motion Picture Expedi- tion, under the direction of L. Ron Hubbard of Washington, D. C., and Philip Browning of Michigan, will have for its primary object the search of adventure with a camera in which an attempt will be made to furnish numerous short sub- jects for "Fox Movietone News. The cruise also will foster a num- ber of different branches of trop- ical research in preparation for CILBRETH APPOINTS NEW DAILY STAF Seiffert, Thomas, Feldman and O'Brien Receive Senior Staff Positions. Karl Seiffert, '33, of Detroit, will be city editor of the Daily next year, Frank B. Gilbreth, newly-ap- pointed managing editor, a n- nounced yesterday. Other senior staff appointments are John Thom- as, '33, of Flint, sports editor; Mar- \garet O'Brien, '33, of Detroit, wom- en's editor ;and Elsie Feldman, '33, also of Detroit, assistant women's editor. Seiffert has been a member of the editorial staff on the Daily for two and one-half years, serving one and one-half years as reporter and this year as a night editor. He is presi- dent of Sigma Delta Chi and a member of Sphinx and Sigma Nu. Thomas has been on the sports staff of the Daily two years. He is a member of Sigma Delta Chi. Miss O'Brien and Miss Feldman have been reporters on the women's staff for two and one-half years. Night editors appointed for next year are Thomas Connellan, '34, E. Jerome Pettit, '34, John W. Pritch- ard, '34, Joseph A. Renihan, '34, C. H.Bart Schaaf, '34, Brackley Shaw, '34, and Glenn R. Winters, '34. Sports assistants will be Fred A. Huber, '34, Roland L. Martin, '34, and Albert H. Newman, '34. Junior appointments on the Daily business staff, the Gargoyle and the Michiganensian will be announced later in the week. which a number of modern-equip- ped laboratories have been con- structed aboard the sailing vessel. The entire personnel of the cruise is to be made up of college men and the eleven men chosen from Michigan were selected from over 1500 applicants representing all the major colleges of the East. Seven of the men from Michigan will make the trip with all expenses paid. They are: C. Wayne Mead, Grad.; John J. White, Jr., '32A.; Edward H. Groth, '34E.; Paul L. Tietjen, '35E.; Willard H a p p y, Grad.; Walter F. Kristiansen, '32E.; and Percy E. Knudsen, Grad. Mead and White were chosen as staff members while the others were chosen as members of the general crew. Groth will be a pho- tography laboratory man, Happy will have charge of the radio trans- mitting, while Tietj en, Kristiansen and Knudsen will act as seamen as part of an all-college crew. Others who will go from the Uni-I versity for the cruise, to start June 15, returning September 25, are Richard G. Finch, 134E.; William C. Stratton, '32A.; Robert A. Wolf, Grad.; and James Auer, Grad. Finch is being sent by the botany department of the University to study sea flora and fauna in the tropical waters. The cruise will consume approx- imately 100 days and will take in twenty ports among the less fre- quented islands of the Lesser An- tilles and the large islands of:Por- to Rico, Haiti, Barbados, and Trini- dad. MUSICAL SOCIETY HOLDS INITIATION( Seventeen Initiated at Annual Alpha Epsilon Mu Banquet. Alpha Epsilon Mu, honorary mus- ical society, held its annual initia- tion banquet at the Union last1 night. Dalies E. Frantz, Spec SM., was initiated as an honorary mem- ber, and seventeen music students, all of whom are members of the band or glee clubs, were initiated as active members. Winchester Richards, '32SM., the retiring president, acted as toast-' master. Cecil B. Ellis, Jr., grad., spoke on behalf of the society, and Harold S. Gelman, '33SM., spoke for the initiates. Other speakers were Professors Palmer Christian and David Mattern. New officers elected were Presi- dent, Ralph Fulghum, '33SM., vice- president, Frank Riley, '33E.; sec- retary, Truman Steinko, '33; and Usher, Richard Becker, '33. A final vote will be taken tonight a t the Interfraternity Council meeting on the proposed rushing system for next year, which defers rushing during Orientation week and pledging during the first two creeks of the school year. The plan was passed unanimously at the last meeting of the Council, held on May 11. If passed tonight, it will be referred to the Judiciary committee for approval, and then to the Senate committee on Student Affairs. The plan will go into op- eration next fall, if passed by the later body, it is believed. To Elect Judiciary Committee. Election of members to the Judi- ciary committee will also take place tonight. Five will be chosen from the faculty and three from the alumni. President Ruthven will choose one member from each of these groups. A body of alumni have been working on a new rushing system also. Their suggestions will be dis- cussed at tonight's meeting. Both the Interfraternity council and the alumni group will back the plan, which was drawn up by a cominit- tee appointed by Howard T. Wor- den, '32, retired president of the Council, it was stated at the last meeting. Methods of organization of the Interfraternity Council for next year will be drawn up tonight, it was announced by Edwin T. Turner, '33, president. To Choose Faculty Men. Nominees from the faculty who will be voted upon at the meeting are Franklin Everett of the engin- eerini school, J. K. Silvey, of the zoology department, Prof. J. H. Cannon, of the engineering school, Dean Samuel T. Dana, of the For- estry School, Prof. Philip Bursley of the French detartment, Prof. C. F. Kessler, of the engineering school, Prof. William Housel, of the engin- eering school, Philip Jay, of the Dental School, and Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, head of the Health Serv- ice. James Kennedy, Herman Kleen, Allan Connable, William Brown and Phil C. Pack are the nominees from: the alumni who will be voted upon. Three members will be picked from this group. HENDERSON SOUNDS OExtension Director Tells Senior Engineers Golden Age Lies in Future of America. Offering a reminder that beyond "each bend in the road there lies a golden age of tomorrow," Dr. W. D. Henderson, director of the Univer- sity extension service last night warned the senior engineering class at their annual banquet not to be discouraged because they were go- ing into a world cast into the throes of depression. "History shows us," he said, "that all civilizations have risen and then fallen. The danger point lies in a time of prosperity when men be- come soft mentally, physically and1 spiritually." "I know that there will be a gold- en age of tomorrow," Professor Henderson concluded, "for it is in human nature. Man is the only animal who likes to have his home beautiful as well as comfortable. He is the only animal that is pro- gressively constructive, never satis-' tied. Man is the only animal who bends his knee in prayer." Senate Will Vote on Beer TaxBill Today WASHINGTOl'N, May 17 - () --- 'rhe bi-oartisan r-oalition beh.d the billion dcl!rr revenu! bill kept it intact today in the face of three assaults in the Senate. A night session recessed, after agreeing to vote by 2 p. n. tomorrow on the Gitta Gradova, one of tne fore- Imost women pianists now before the public, will appear on the May Fes- tival program opening tonight. 1 MICHIGANNN4 - 3-1 Wolverines Fail to Make Best of Chances; Gene Braendle Stars at Plate. By Guy M. Whipple, jr. YPSILANTI, May 17.-While the Michigan nine was throwing away chance after chance to score and add to a slender 1-0 lead yesterday, Michigan State Normal made the most of breaks in the seventh and eighth innings and accomplished a surprise 3-1 win on the Ypsilanti field. A momentary mental relapse on the part of Ken Manuel, Wolverine first baseman, when he argued a close play at first and watched two runners cross the plate, was partly responsible for the defeat, although the entire team showed a lack of punch when runners were on base. Michigan pushed over a lone run in the third inning as a result of Tompkins' clean single to right, an error by Seitz, Normal first base- man, and a long fly to left by Su- perko. The slim lead dragged on successfully enough up until the seventh, although failure to hit in the pinches and ragged base run- ning cost possible scores in more than one case. To start Normal's seventh inning McNeal walked Christy and hit Co- han with a pitched ball. The next two batters he fanned, but Bailey responded in the pinch by tapping a grounder to Superko, whose throw to first was a bit slow to zatch the runner. Manuel took the l throw, evidently believing the run-, ner out, but Umpire Runkel had1 sben it differently and called him safe. Instead of relaying the ball to the plate, Manuel glared at Run- kel while some 500 Ypsilanti fans cheered violently as Christy and Cohan crossed the plate to give Normal a 2-1 lead from which Michigan could not recover.. The other Ypsilanti run came in the eighth when Michaelis doubled and scored on Christy's safety. Gene Braendle ran away with the Wolverine hitting honors, smash- ing out three hits while KenMan- uel made up for his lapse by ac- cepting ten chances at first in his old style to retain his fielding av- erage lead. Box Score Haydn's oratorio, "'he Creation," and a piano solo by Gitta Gradova will open Ann Arbor's thirty-seventh May Festival tonight in Hill a'uditorium. Miss Gradova, who is the only featured pianist on the program of the May Festival, will play Rachmaninoff's "Concerto for Piano- forte, No. 2, C Minor, Opus 18." During Miss, Gradova's four concert seasons in this country she has appeared as a soloist with the New York Philharmonic, and the Philadelphia, the Chicago, and the St. Louis Symphony orchestras. In a recent review in The Nation, she To Distribute 1932 - 'Ensians on Monday Distribution of the 1932 Mich- ig~auensian will begin Monday, according to Harry S. Benjamin, business manager. All distribu- tion will take place from the new Publications building, on May- nard street opposite Helen New- berry residence. The hours for distribution in the early part of the wecK are: Monday, 10 a. m. to 4 p. m,; Tuesday and Wednes- day 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. There are still 70 'Ensians left unsold, Benjamin says, and these may be ordered in the present Press Building on Maynard street near Nickels arcade. UNION CANDIDAE WILL BESELE-CTED Nominating Committee to Make Vice-Presidency Choices. This Week. The names of 12 men to be voted upon at the all-campus election, for the six vice-presidencies of the Un- ion for next year, will be selected this week ny a nominating commit- tee, it was announced yesterday by Hugh Conklin, '32E., president of the Union. The committee will be composed of Conklin, as chairman; Roger -N. Turner, '34L.; Jack Beechler, '32E.; David R. Lewis, '32; and Frank B. Gilbreth, '33. 1 Any member of the Union wish- ing to have his name considered by the nominating committee may do so by presenting an application to Conklin before Thursday night. Students wishing to have their names placed upon the general bal- lot after the nominating committee has made its selections, must pre- [sent a petition containing the names of at lhast 200 members of the Union, Conklin said. DR. JAMESCRAIG DIES IN TORONTO Former Professor of Semitics Dies Suddenly at Home. Dr. James Alexander Craig, for nineteen years Professor of-Semitics here, died suddenly Monday at his home in Toronto. Dr. Craig was born at Fitzroy Harbour, Ont., in 1855. He receiv- ed his A.B. and A.M. degrees at Mc- Gill university, his B.D. at Yale in 1883, and his Ph.D. at Leipzig in 1886. He was profejssor of Old Testament languages at Oberlin college for four years, came to Michigan in 1893 as professor of oriental languages, and taught here until 1912, when he resigned. Dr. Craig was recognized as a prominent authority in the field of Semitics. He taught historical and literary criticism of the Bible at a time when it was dangerous to do so, and was a pioneer in this field. Among his pupils were Professors R. W. Sellars, Charles B. Vibbert, and W. H. Worrell, of the faculty of the University of Michigan, and Professors Steven Langdon of Ox- ford, and Walter Pitkins of Colum- bia. Funeral services will be held Sun- day in Toronto. 58 Killed in Hindu Rioting at Bombay f was termed the "foremost woman pianist now before the public." The cast of "The Creation" will be the second largest to appear in any of the presentations of this year's festival. The oratorio, written for solo, chorus, orchestra, and the organ, will feature Ruth Rodgers, soprano; Frederick Jagel, tenor; Chase Baromeo, bass; Gitta Gra- dova, pianist; Palmer Christian. organist; the Chicago Symphony orchestra; the University Choral Union; and Conductors Frederick Stock and Earl V. Moore. To Give Six Choral Pieces. . In addition to "The Creation" five other choral presentations will be given during the course of the May Festival. Chief among these will be "The Legend of the Invisible City of Kitesh," by Rimsky-Korsa- koff, which will be given Saturday night. This will be the first time ,hat this work has been offered In America, and many critics from the United States and Canada will be an hand to listen to it, many of Vhem with a view to having it given at a later date by the organizations they represent. Gustav Holst's "Choral Fantasia," Stravinsky's "Symphonic Psalms,'" Protheroe's "The Spider and the -Ply," and selections from Gilbert tnd Sullivan will also be presented. Ou1',tanding among the many vorld famor svocalists who will Sppear dui'ing the festival is Goeta Ljungberg, Swedish soprano, who will sing on Thursday night. Miss Ljungberg reached New York from Sweden only a short time ago,, making her debut at the Metropoli- tan Opera house on January 20. Her performance at that. time created a furor. Critics and public alike were lavish in their praise of her voice, which was acclaimed as one of the very best. Returned From Europe. Negotations were begun immedi- ately with her managers, resulting in the postponement of her return to Europe in order that she might make her American festival debut in Ann Arbor. John Charles Thomas, who is probably the most versatile bari- tone in America, and who has recently been featured with the Boston symphony, will appear on Saturday afternoon. Juliette Lippe, who will sing the lead in "The Invisible City of Kit- ash" Saturday night, hails from the SCovent Garden company, of Lon- don. She has been especially chosen for the difficult part of Fevronia in the Rimsky-Korsakoff American premiere. Gigli To'Sing Friday. Beniamino Gigli, generally con- 4idered the finest tenor in America, vill sing Friday evening. Mr. Gigli .as been a member of the Metro- )olitan Opera company for the past ten years, where he recently created a stir by refusing to take a cut in his salary. He has been generally 'ooked upon as the logical successor o the late, great, Caruso. Among the remaining artists who tre to be a part of the program are Vina Hager, Nelson Eddy, Eric )elamarter, and Juva lngbee. FINALS IN POETRY- READINGAEHL gilbert's Rendering of Noyes' Poem Wins First Award; Slama is Second. Before a near capacity audience, L. E. Gilbert won first place in the poetry reading finals last night in Laboratory theatre. Alice Slama, Grad., was awarded second place. Mr. Gilbert's best selection was .the well-known "Barrel Organ" by Alfred Noyes which easily won him i HONOR LAW STUDENTS AT CASE CLUB BANQUET; TRACY ADDRESSES GROUP Law students who have disting- School. Participants in the junior uished themselves during the past Case club finals, who were awarded year were honored last night by gold medals, are Ledlie A. DeBow, yher schoolrathedastclubigan Robert D. Gordon, Charles E. Jones, the school at the Case club ban- Henry Y. Morrison. quet, the final event of the club for A set of Palmer's "Newton D. the present school year. Baker" was given to those juniors Prof. John E. Tracy of the Law who represented the losing teams in college addressed the group with a the semi-finals, from the Story and sketch of "The Famous Case of Ar- Holmes clubs: Paul Franseth, Ray nold Miller," which occurred in Letton, Carl Urist, and James Leo Prussia 150 years ago under the rule Warren. cf Frederick the Great. Dean Henry Law Review subscriptions for M. Bates expressed the apreciation three years were presented to the of the faculty f-or the work of the winners in the freshman finals: club during 1931-32. Paul G. Kaup- Russell A. Smith and Jarl Andeer, er, '32L., was toastmaster. Holmes club; Allan Diefenbach and MICHIGAN Ferguson, cf McKay, p McNeal, p Waterbor, ss Superko, 3b Petoskey, rf Diffley, c Braendle, lf Daniels, 2b Manuel, lb Tompkins, p, cf Wistert 1 *Douglass MICI. NORMAL Batterson, 3b Christy, cf Cohan, 2b Seitz, lb Packard, If Bailey, rf Wittkop, ss Miller, c Michaelis, p AB 2 1 0 3 4 3 4 4 4 4 3 1 1 R 0 0 0 0 (0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 H 0 0 0 1 0 01 0 3 2 0 1 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 6 2 2 10 0 0 0 A 0 2 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 E 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 .0 0 0' 0 34 1 7 24 7 1 AB 4 3 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 R 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 H 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 3 1 9 0 1 3 6 2 A 1 1 3 0 0 0 3 1 1 E. 01 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 27 3 4 27 10 3 * Batted for McKay in seventh. * Batted for McNeal in ninth. MICHIGAN .._.. 001 000 000-1 Normal -..--.. _... 000 000 21x-3 Two base hits-Daniels, Michael-