0ummr x WEATHER Unsettled, slightly cooler, nd propable showers by ev- utlng. %Ufrw MEMBI ~~Iaip ASSOCIATE PRESS IX, No. 9. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, JULY 3, 1928 PRICE FIE NAME FIVE SPEIAKERS AS PART OF LECTURE SERIES FOR 19282?9 DR. ROBERTS PICKS PROMINENT MEN FOR NEXT YEAR'S PROGRAM DATES NOT YET ARRANGED Df. Morley, Joseph Dixon, Professor 1)yboskI, Collins and Mallon will appear here. Announcements of several lecturers who will appear on the 1928-1929 Uni- versity lecture program, were made yesterday by Dr. Frank E. Robbins, assistant to the president. From present indications the lec- ure series next year will be one of the, nost varied and attractive that has ever been presented to the'University Student body and faculty. A partial list of some of the prom- nent men already secured, although lates for their appearance have not' ret been set, is representative of the ype of men that will visit the Uni- rersity as non-residen lecturers dur- ng the next school year. Morely Will Lecture. To those interested in anthropology and history, the lecture of Dr. S. G. dorely, of Carnegie Institution of Vashington will have a special appeal. )r. Morely will describe spectacular, liscoveries of the past spring by the= arnegle Institution archaeological ex- editions at Chichen 'Itza and Iaxac- um in Middle America. The School of Forestry and Conserv- tion is instrumental 'in bringing to he campus Mr. Joseph Dixson of the luseum of Vertebrate Zoology of the iniversity of California, who is au- hority in the field of game manage- Modern "Parnassus on Wheels" ERMAN BALLOON NOW On View In Ann Arbor Sunday tOUi VAT TO1DE Report of Death Is Unconfirmed When a Dodge truck painted green verse Cit and back down the east- and labellled in large black letters ern side of the state to Detroit and "The Book-Rover" set oqL Sundiay Ann Arbor. The trip will take about afternoon from the Print and Book two months. shop on Jeffersoh avenue, the event The truck is of novel design and marked the first attempt on record ! is expected to be its own best ad- to follow here at Michigan the example vertisement. It was purchased by of Parson Weems, the first itinerant the Print and Book shop from two book, "Parnassus on wheels." Vassar girls who used it last summer The truck was so" constructed that t .,jtour Pennsylvania and Long Is- both sides could be raised ta display land with books for sale. It will be the cargo of some 600 books, fiction, in charge of Mrs. T. L. Harris, who children's books, dective stories, and a will be accompanied by her husband, little biography. It will proceed dir- Rev. Harris, of the Episcopal church ectly to the lake ,;co st and 'then here, until he leaves for England. strike north, stopping at St. Joseph and the principal lake resorts. Its itinerary will depend on conditions -- encottntered and the\ caprice of its IN 111 iiiURAL S TS occupants, but the general intention is to follow the lake shore up to Tra- R UIILI UNL ILl I E VI HEARD FO INRACE, MUJNSTER LOOMS AS POSSIBLE I WINNER AS ELEVEN BAGS . REPORTED LANDED U. S. MAY LOSE TROPHY If Foreign Bag Noses Out Arm- Balloon, Gordon Bennett Cup Will Be Lost To America (By Associated Press) DETROIT, July 3-The winner of the- 1928 J. Gordon Bennett interna- tion race remains in doubt, pending a report from the German bag, Mun- ster, the only balloon not reported landed. The other eleven bags which start- ed in the race from Detroit at '4 p. m., Detroit time, have been brought' safely to earth late today closely grouped in sections of Virginia and West Virginia, with one bag cross- ing over the northern part of North Carolina. I Roald Amundsen ,{f MICHIGAN TRACKSTERS VICTORS IN OLYMPICS Capt. Ketz And Tolan Take Firsts As Wolverines Capture Detroit i Trial Honors Tennis, and Horseshoe Singles Attract Largest Number; Handball, golf and Baseball Included ENTRIES CLOSE THURSDAY More than 150 students of the Sum- mer Session have registered their names in the various togurnaments, conducted by the intramural depart- Whose reported death by an un- official report from dslo was found false after definite inquiry into the affair was conducted yesterday. The fate of the famous arctic explorer still remains a rmystery, despite frantic ef- forts on the part cf both English and Amerian governments to locate him. Mallon On Program Mr. J. J. Mallon, warden of Toyn- bee Hall, London, will be here early in the school year to show the similarity in outlooks of the English and Amer- ican peoples. Another visitor during the early part of the year will be Professor Roman Dyboski of Gracow University. Negotiations are being made where- by Arthur Collins, who is considered the most distinguished authority in the field of municipalities in Great Britain, will be on the lecture series. The Political Science department is particularly interested in his coming. Arrangements for the engagement of the non-resident lecturers are made through Dr. Robbins. It is planned,to have lecturers in whom the various, colleges and departments within the University are interested. NAME NINE MORE AS 'A' STUDENTS The list of students receiving grades of all "A" in the school ot Education for the last semester has been released by the Recorder's office. The list includes the following names: Jean M. deVries, '28Ed; Mina Gron- strand, '28Ed; Vivian N. LaJeunesse, '28Ed; Mary E. Lister, '28Ed; Grace A. Peters, '28Ed; Al ce E. Damon, 29Ed; Loraine J. L. Gay, '29Ed; Catherine E. Hodson, '29Ed; and Maud H. Stuart St. John, Spec, Ed. STUDENTS PLAN CHURCH PICNICj All Presbyterian students are invit- ed to attend the fourth of July picnic to be held at the state fair grounds a mile west of the city. They are to meet at the Presbyterian church at the corner of Huron and Division' streets at 2:30. The price of picnic! is 50 cents. r r . t . ' -3 i i s , 'C k / 2 7 t e i FROSH OWNS ALDERMAN ment, it was announced yesterday by Paul Washke, director\ of the sum- Tennis and horseshoe singles have Four Wolverine track athletes, Capt. mer sports program. Ketz, Jones, Tolan and Cambell, figur- attracted the largest number of en- ed prominently in the midwest -Olym- trants to date, a total of 35 entrants pic trials held at Detroit Saturday and being registered in each sport. The Sunday. The Michigan representa- horse shoe doubles tounament has tives won three first places and two number of'participants have enrolled second places, in the hand ball doubles tourney. Captain Ketz easily took first honors The golf tourney, which will be in the hammer throw event with a toss drawn 20 entrants, while an equal of 153 feet. Cambell took second place played over the University golf course in the same event with a throw of 146 south of Ferry field, numbered only feet. 15 entries until yesterday noon, but Tolan, a member of this year's fresh- this number is expected to be aug- man team, supplied the sensational mentdd considerably before the en- feature of the trials when he finished tries close Thursday afternoon. ahead of Fred Alderman, Michigan Entries in the various tournaments State's great sprinter, in the 200-metre will be received until Thursday, and dash. Tolan repeated his victory over all those wishing to enter are re- Alderman when he finished first in the quested by the intramural department 100-metre race. to do so at once in room 6 of Wat- Jones, Varsity hurler, forced Morgan erman gyenasit. Those that have 'aylor to break a world's record to already registered are requested to beat him by mere inches in the 400- call' at the intramural office today to mnetre low hurdles. By virtue of their note the drawings made to date, and to start play immediately. Winners victories, Capt. Ketz and Tolan will in all tourneys will be awarded me- compete in,,the Olympic finals at the% dal touhas been announced iarvard stadium Friday and Satur-dals, it has been announced. lay. The intramural department has an- day.____tsounced that athletic equipment such a.s bats, baneballs, Ind horseshoes DENY REPORT OF will be dispensed free of charge to AMUNDSEN DEATH any University organization for use on ______outing's 'and picnics. A large number of athletic articles were to several (By Associated Press) University groups during the past DETROIT, July 3- For a brief week-end outinigs and picnics. Persons pace of time today an unconfirmed or groups desiring athletic equipment eport was current that the body of are urged to call for it in room 6 Capt. Roald Amundsen had ben found or Waterman gymnasium. - Margin Close , un The air line distance covered by ERNIL the French balloon, Blanchard, which landed at 11 a. m. at Walnut Grove, !I N. C., and the United States Army bag, piloted by Captain W. E. Ketner, which landed at 12:20 p. M. near Kendridge, Va., was so close as to-; 1iehd'de'Adtsins Will Speak This make doubtful which one was out in Ate Adenoon in'amturil Sience front in the race. Aditorini oa Art These two bags, according to KarlAA Betts, scorer for the aeronautical classics, traveled the farthest air line TO TYPIFY MAIN ARTISTS distance of any of the eleven bal- loons down, expressed the belief on Renaissance Italian Painting"~ i the basis of unofficial calculations that Ithe subjet of a lecture to be delivered the Blanchard had beaten the Army this afternoon at five o'clock in the. entry, but said it was a close race. Natural ScieA. Auditorium by Miss Munster Unheard FromAdelaide X.Adams,nr n the N Department of Fine Arts. It has been No message had been picked up from {stated by Miss. Adams tha:t the lecture , the Munster, piloted by the veteranjsta s sdest lecturd ballonist Ferdinand Eimermacher, sity a non-resident lecturers du- with Karl Bach as aid, but it was aissance Italian painting, but will deal, bwihed Kar B saidr but Vir waswill not cover the whole field of ren- believed, to be somewhere over Vir- ginia or the Carolinas. It was, the specifically with two famous painters' gina o te Croina. I ws tef the fifteenth century Florentinel, first to take off in the race. If the schE Agelit o ndra lippo army bolloon is defeated permanentschol, Fra Angelico and Fra Filippo arm bos son is tefetendJperant I Lippi. These two will be shown to" possession of the second T. Gordon typify the two main charaeteri J it-'. o Bennett trophy will be lost to the i U the renaissance period, lofty siitu 1, Unite :, States. The trophy was won deoinadraakndjt s i in 1908 and again in 1927 by Ameri- devotion and reawakened inte est in can balloonist and a third consecutive y people and their lives. win would give the cup permanently These two great artists had many to the United States. The army bag things in common in addition to being to te Uite Sttes.Thearm ba contemcoraries: both wvir3 monks, was the only one of the three Amer- both lived in the same town, Florence, leans that remained in the race today, and both had the same patron Lorenzo the other two having been forcedp 'o g j' de Medici. That these two typ-Nat-R,. down Sunday. de Medici. That these two typi- The second French entry, The Land y j fy th sirit° of the period is best of Lafayette, piloted by George Blan- shown oy their own lives and char- chet, with Dr. D. M. LeGallee, Detroit, asacters. Fra Angeico was a very quiet, asad addsfl. tin canto r- - - +....,. 1ELIZABETHAN THEAl VERY COMPLEX S PRINCETONPROFESS S1iAKESPEARIAN STAGE MAR BY, 1LABORATE SETTINGS SPEAKER AVERS TRIPLE \STAGE IN VK( Professor Parrott Says Dramatit Those Days Had Greater Freed In Staging Plays "It is no longer possible to thi Shakespeare's stage as a bare form with no stage properties,' Glared Prof. Thomas M. Parrot Princeton university, and now t ing in the Summer Session, spe at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoo Natural Science auditorium on subject "Elizabethan Drama." "D the last 30 years it has becom creasingly apparent that we.l heretofore failed somewhat in our icism and understanding of ShE pease because we did not know theater which conditioned his,drZ "Intricate machinery, elaborate tings, gorgeous costumes were c acteristic of the Elizabethan si Witness one of Jonson's plays. w a fountain from which real water flow is called for, or one of Mars where - a 'tree up which one of characters can climb, must be ofn stage. ,The back of the stage hung with arras, often elaborE decorated, and sometimes painte perspective, though never scener the modern sense. Triple Theater "The Shakespearean theater w triple one. There was a large d fold which was the main stage which could represent any plac scene; back of this was a small al or rear stage, equipped with a fain, which could be set with p erties; and above this was the gal or upper stage, also curtained; w was used to indicate any scene a from or above the rest of the tion. "The absence of a curtain for main stage prevented a tense cli at the end of a scene, which marked a phenomenon in modern ma. Shakespeare's plays slowly di ish in dramatic tension at th "The lack of properties on the r stage gave the dramatist a 1l emount of freedom, comparable to1 of the writer for cinema. And y he wanted to ue properties he ec use the rear stage. No Pause Between Scenes "The 'lack of pause between se (rendered unnecessary by the fact tlhre was no scenery to change) 11 rossible swift and unbroken ac and allowed more of the story t put into the allotted time. We k Shakespeare's characters better haps than those of modern drama1 because his medium permitted hi tell us more about them. "The absence of scenery directe Tention to the action of the drama, led to an intimate contact bety i s t in the sea of Norway. This came in the form of a message to the exchange telegraph ,company, purported to be from Oslo, but definite inquiry at Oslo denies the report. Thus the fate of the noted arctic and antarctic explor- er, who went to aid in the search for General Nobile and his compan- ions in the dirigible, Italia, remained a mystery. Meanwhile Great Britain has taken a hand in the rescue work. Two large seaplanes, the air ministry announces, were being made ready and would shortly join other searching expedi- tions in the north. MUSEUM EXHIBITS' NOT YET ON VIEW Although visitors to the New Univer- sity Museum, located at the corner of North University and Washtenaw av- enues, will be welcome to inspect the new building, there will be no ex- hibits on display until next fall, ac- cording to a statement made Monday by Miss Crystal Thompson, curator, of the exhibits. WORK IS STARTED ON NEWVIADUCT Work on the new viaduct over the Michigan Central Railroad tracks and Depot street, was begun yesterday morning, and its completion is sched- uled for about October 15, according to an announcement by City Engineer George H. Sandenburgh.. Although the estimated cost of the viaduct was originally placed at $300,- 000, it is now thought that the total expenditure will not exceed $250,000. The contract for the construction of the bridge was let to the firm of Fer- guson and Edmondson, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Of this amount the, Michigan Central Railroad will pay $67,000 and the City of Ann Arbor and the State of Michigan will pay $91,500 each. Plans and specifications for the structure call for a roadway 40 feet wide and 400 feet in length and two. six-foot sidewalks. The present bridge has been closed to traffic until Oct. 15, although arrangements have been made to permit the use of the bridge' for traffic on the Fourth of July., GOULD LEAVES FOR NEW YORK TO PLAN POLAR TRIP Proessor Laurence M. Gould, of the de- partment of Geogogl, who has been chosen as geogolist of Commander Richard E. Bryd's South Pole exped- ition, will leave Monday, July 9 for New York. i i i 4 1 AVERY HOPWOOD, OF CLASS OF '05. DROWNS AT NICE NICE, France, July2-A'very Hop- wood, American playwright was drow- ned within sight of life-savers and while the crowd on the beach watched Sunday night at Juan-Les-Pins otn the French Riviera. Hopwood, apparently in good health, went swimming at 8 o'clock soon after dinner. He collapsed when far from the shore and drowned be- fore help could reach him. The playwright had been resting here after a short tour of Europe. He intended to leave for Paris in a few days and return to New York Graduated from University of Mich- igan in 1905, Avery Hopwood went' to New York as special correspondent for the Cleveland Leader and almost immediately sold his first play "Clothes" written in collaboration with Channing Pollock 'and produced in 1900. He was 24 years of age at the time, having been born in Cleveland in 1882. i on of the most prolific playwrights From that time orward he was although he -hed been an infrequent co'ntributor to the Broa4way stage. Many of his farces were adapted from, the invention of diverting if com- promising situations for his heroines. His best known plays were "Fair and Warmer," "The Gold Digger's" and "The Bat," written in collabora- tion with Mary Roberts Rinehart. "The Bat" was one of the biggest mon- ey-makers ever staged. pious sort of person given to deep meditations and reveries. His paint-l ings reflect accurately his own feel- ingc, giving the observer a soothing sense of calm. Fra Filippo Lippi was a very diff-l erent kind of man. He cared little forl religion and pity, and spent muchi more time roving about'the streets of Florence and carousing than he didj at his painting or at the monastery.' His was' the spirit of the people, and -audience and actor. This had it his work is real and alive with this gers: it'uggested such artificial spirit. The paintings of these two as the "asides," and tempted taken together give us something of' and dramatist to introduce irre the mixture of mysticism, love of jokes and quips. But however w life, and beauty that made up the re- criticize Elizabethan drama, it al naissance. ed in life and in poetic imagine ortrait of Miss Trowbrdge Painted By Well Known ArJ By Eleanor Scribner the Rockford Players she is r At the head of the stairs leading iiig to the' Bonstelle to take th .to Sarah Caswell Angell Hall hangs of "Alice " in A. A. Milne's a lovely portrait of a lovely lady, Sit-by-tlhe-Fire." Miss Elberta Trwbridge. Miss Trow- That she is an accomplice a bridge is one of the leading women of was demonstrate by her apt c the Rockford Players, a charming terization in the short part sh blonde and a delightful actress. The trays in "The Letter." portrait was painted by Mr. Harry BASEBALL RESULTS Solon of Beaux Arts in New York He is at present on a trip around the (By Associated Press) world painting portraits of the most American League beautiful women of the various nat- Cleveland 3, Detroit 7. --: ' 1 , DAILY TRYOUTS I Students enrolled in the Sum- mer Session and desirous of obtaining practical journalistic experience may report at the offlices of The Summer Michi ga, Daily in the Press building be- tween 2 and 5 o'clock any after- noon this week. Practical exper- I lence is offered both in the busi- ness and editorial departments .1 .1 ' 1 |I , MAY GET TICKETS FOR OBSERVATORY Tickets for the nights on which the Tjniversity astronomical observatory will be available after July 16 in the office of the Summer Session upon pre- sentation of the treasurers receipt. ions. Miss Trowbridge came to Ann Arbor from Detroit where she was with the Washington Square Players and the Brooklyn Players, both of New York. When she finishes her work with New York 3, Washington 4. Boston 2, 7, Philadelphia 9, St. Louis 1, 8, Chicago 7, Nsationa leanwa