SUNDAY, JULY 28, 1929 THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY PAE THREE w'F .... .... __ __... WAR RENUNCIATION CEREMONIES EXPECTEDIN TBSTER HOO0SIER TITLE HOPES' WILL REPORT FOR FOOTBALL PRACTICE THISr SEPTEMBER BENNETT NOT TO RETURN' Pat Page Anhounces New Policy for' HONORED BY NATIONS PITTSBURG AND TECH TO SHARE IN STADIUM, FOR FOOTBALL GAMES. l LASSIF\E TYPEWRITING AND MIMEO- GRAPHING promptly and neatly done by experienced operators at moderate rates. College work a specialty since 1908. E. D. O. D. MORRILL 17 Nickels Arcade HAVE FINEST SCHEDULE STELLAR CONTESTS IN HISTORY OF Coming Year; Leaders To Be Chosei Before Games BLOMINGTON, Ind, July 28.- When Pat Page issues the initial call for football practice at Indiana University in September, 19 letter- men are expected to answer. These men will form the nucleus for Page's 1929 edition of the Scrappin' HooIiers. Of this number, eight~ men already have received two let- ters in football and will play their last season of college football this year. The eight veterans are: Paul Balay and Carrol Ringwalt, Indian- apolis; John Magnabosco, Clinton; Frank Faunce, Marion; Wilbert Catterton, Kenosha, Wis.; William Shields, Muncie; and Lowell Todd, Bedford. Of this group, four are backfield men and four are line- men. Indiana had an exceptionally promising group of sophomores last season, with 11 of them receiving letters as follows: George Rfss Wabash; Charles Brubaker, Ft. Wayne; Ed Hughes, Gary; J. W. Unger, West Point, Miss.; Kennyth Bennett, Linton; Neal Baxter, Bluff ton; Fred Swihart, Goshen; Ben Mankowski, Detroit; Paul Jasper, Ft. Wayne; Frank Hojnacki, De- troit, and Joe Dudding, Hope. All but the first three named are line- men. Pat Page and the Indiana team were hard hit by the June gradua- tion and nine men who have been playing regular for the past three years will be missing from the line- up. Among these men are four all-Western performers: Chuck Bennett, all-westernhalfback, win- ner of the Chicago Tribune most valuable player trophy and offense captain; Claire Randolph, al west- ern center; Paul Harrell, al-west- ern punter, and Bob Matthew, all-1 western guard and defense captain. Indiana will have no regular cap- tain this year aj the 1928 team, at the end of the season, voted not to have one. This same plan was used by Page two years ago. Last year I. U. had two captains-a de- fense and an offense leader. Pageteshajutbfrechgm sates that just before eahgam he will appoint a defense and an offense leader. The choice of the leaders for each game will depend upon the work of the men during the practices preceding the contest.1 There will be a letterman for each position on the team. The backfield work will be divided up as follows: Balay or Bru- baker, quarterback; Magnabosco or3 Hughes, fullback; and Todd, Ross or Faunce, halfbacks. Competition1 will be keen for the center of the line. Three guards, Bennett, Swi- hart, Hojnacki; and three centers, Ringwalt, Mankowski, Baxter, will be available. Of this group, Ring- wat is the only two-letter man. Indiana will have two well known men at the wing positions. Branch McCracken, basketball captain for1 the 1929-30 season, and Wilbert Catterton, regular for two years on the grid team, will act in this Above, President Hoover ope room of White House as he proc ing left to right: Former Presie B. Kellogg. Tatterman Mari Praised For I Gordon Craig Has Approved of Puppets Having No Bad Acting Habits, for Cleansing Theater Concerning the company which will present two performances of thei puppet show, "The King of the Golden River," Monday in the Lyd- ia Mendelssohn Theater, Mills and Dunn, in their book, "Marionettes, Masks, and Shadows," have said, "Mr. William Duncan and Mr. Ed- ward Mabley, creators of the Tat- terman Marionettes, have brought to the marionette stage unusual imagination and skill, which is ad- mirably shown in their 'The Melon Thief," "The King of the Golden River," and "Pierre Patelin." Much interest in the career of the marionette has become evident during recent years in America. Perhaps the best known name as- sociated with its promotion is that of Tony Sarg, who has given con- siderable time to experimentation with the puppet. There is still another artist who is giving his attention to the mar- ionette. He is Gordon Craig, a man prominent in theatrical circles, and an ardent student of stage tech- nique. Craig, after much experi- ence with the human actor, has1 come to adopt strenuous views con- cerning the material which must furnish characters for the stage. It is his belief that the actor must be a thing of fixed form, a cre-I ation of dead material, stone, can- vas, paper and paint, in artistic arrangement. In this way the ever- changing human form will be sup- planted by one whose individuality cannot conspire against the cor- rect portrayal of the stage char- acter which it represents. Constantin Stanislavsky, in his "My Life in Art," has said of him: "Craig dreamed of a theater with- out men and women, without ac- tors. He wanted to supplant them with marionettes who had no bad habits, no bad gestures, no painted faces, no exaggerated voices, no smallness of soul, no worthless am- bitions. The marionettes would have cleansed the atmosphere of the theater, they would have given a high seriousness to the enter- prise, and the dead material from which they were made would have given Craig an opportunity to hint at that Actor who lived in the soul, the imagination, and the dreams of Craig himself." The ideal theater which Craig has visualized has perhaps its mod- ified existence in the enterprise of Agrippino Manteo, an Italian who is at present producing the epic of . ' '8 8894 8 ning ceremonies before representatives of 43 nations in historic East laimed the Kellogg treaty for the renunciation of war in effect. Stand- nt Coolidge, President Hoover and Former Secretary of State Frank unettes Creators magination, Skill "Orlando Furioso" in a theater far from Broadway, near the Bowery. Given at the rate of one episode a night, this production, opened last March, will not reach its comple- tion until some time in 1932. After that time, the Manteos will travel to California, giving their play along the way. Orlando Furioso is an nistoric puppet play, concerned with Char- lemagne, the Saracens, and the mad knight Orlando. The Manteos have given the puppet Orlando a pair of crossed eyes, as a whimsical sym- bol of his madness. The marionette has had a varied, though continuous, career through the centuries. Having its beginning in the Oriental countries, it has undergone many changes in its passage from country to country. The Japanese have been the peo- ple to develop the marionette to its highest perfection, creating crea-' tures who were capable of count- less facial expressions, not unlike the human. Rome is credited with the possession of three kinds of marionettes: the Burattini, worn likfie a glove; the Fantoccini, joint- ed dolls strung across the knees; and the type which is in use today,' the puppet worked by string and wires from above. WILL HOLD LAST PARTY AT LEAGUE Members of the faculty and the student body, both men and wom- en, will be the guests of the Wom- en's League Friday, August 2, from 9 to 12, at the League building. This party will be the last of the series of entertainments which the DANCING CHAPEL RUN BY MICHIGA'N WOMAN Anieka Leggett Interprets Religious Themes in Florentine Colony of Terpsichoreans HAS COSTETTI PAINTINGSj FLORENCE, Italy, July 27- A chapel of dance stands on the sum- mit of one of the hills surrounding Dante's city of Florence, and in it an American, Miss Anieka Yan Leggett, member of a prominent Detroit, Michigan, family, inter- prets religious themes in move- ment. For several years Miss Leggett has been a member of the large Anglo-American colony here, and now when she gives her religious dances a section of the colony, as well as some of Italy's numerous aristocrats, flock to her little cha- pel. A celebrated painter of Florence, John Costetti, once saw Miss Leg- gett dance, and immediately volun- teered to decorate her chapel. Miss Leggett has taken over a little church-like building near her home overlooking the city, but the in- terior was not finished. Costetti set to work and depicted on the walls some of the tableaux of mo- tion interpreted by the beautiful American. The dancer has dranw her in- spiration for her costumes and movements from the world famous paintings of Fra Giovanni of Fie- sole, who it is said, knew the art of rendering his worshipping an-E gels incorporeal, and of Filippo Lip- pi, particularly in his painting of Lucretia. Miss Leggett tries through her dances to give a fundamental im- I cin of i ,z it i tiix Thb , "h HOPE FOR CHAMPIONSHIP Two All-America Ends Will Appear Against Each Other in Pitt- ! Ohio State Game (By Don F. Saunders, Special to The Daily) PITTSBURGH, July 27-With thel University of Pittsburgh and Car- negie Tech football teams sharing1 The Stadium, the mammoth con-3 crete bowl erected by Pitt in 1924, Wastern Pennsylvania is assured off one of the finest schedules of stel- lar attrci.eions ever offered. Among the big games slated for The Stadium are the Pitt-West Vir- ginia, Carnegie Tech-W. and J., Carnegie Tech-Notre Dame, Pitt- Olio State, Pitt-W. and J., Pitt- Carnegie Tech, and Pitt-Penn State. Both Pitt and Tech will have bat- ter-than-average teams, and thosej who remember the Pitt team ofI 1927, and the Tech eleven of last season, believe the 1929 Eastern grid champions will be one or the other of the two local teams. PITTSBURGH, July 27-Football prospects at the University of Pitts- burgh are undeniably bright. When the Golden Panthers begin train- ing' for the 1929 campaign the first week in September, only three reg- ulars of last season's powerful elev- en will be missing. The 1928 backfield, composed of Tom (Pug) Parkinson, California, Pa., fullback; Harold (Josh) Wil-' liams, Mars and Toby Uansa, Mc- Kees Rocks, halfbacks, and Charles Edwards, Moundsville, W. Va., quar- terback, will return intact. Regular linemen who will be available are Joe Donchess, Youngstown, O., all- America end; Charles Tully, Whee- ling, W. Va., tackle; Captain-elect Al DiMeolo, Coraopolis, guard, and Ray Montgomery, Wheeling, center. Coach Jock Sutherland's Panth-' ers will play a hard nine-game schedule, including intersectional contests with Duke University at, Durham, N. C., and University of Nebraska at Lincoln. Ohio State, the first Western Conference team to play in Pittsburgh, will meet Pitt in the Homecoming Day game here November 2., THE RAGGEDY ANN BEAUTY, SHOP OFFERS A Marcel at 75c; Finger wave at $1.00; Permanent wave at $8.50. Dial 7561, MACK TUTORING AGENCY Open for Summer School 310 S. State St. Phone 7927 TYPING-Theses a specialty. Fair rates. M. V. Hartsuff, Dial 9387. FOR RENT FOR RENT-Forest near Hill; 14 rooms party furnished. 3 baths. Double garage. Phone 5740. FOR RENT-Large one-room com- pletely furnished apartment for two girls or young couple. Also newly decorated double for girls. 422 E. Washington. Dial 8544 or 9714. FOR RENT- Unfurnished apart- ments-upper and lower. Southeast section. Modern. Call 5929. FOR SALE FOR SALE-Late Model T Ford Sedan. Good tires. Excellent condition. Price $75. See owner 540 Walnut. 28 LOST LOST-On State street. between Huron and M. Hut, gold pin valued as heirloom. Reward. Phone 21566. LOST-A brown notebook with im- portant notes and two letters with a brown pocketbook. Re- ward. Call 4918. LOST-Shaeffer's Life-time foun- tain pen without cap. Finder kindly telephone 8069 at 730, Arbor Street. 22, 23, 24 LOST-Dickinson's Excursions in Musical History. Phone 6654. Reward. 1217 Baldwin. WANTED YOUNG MEN for advertising cam- paign. 220 Nickels Arcade. Thurs- day from 1 to 3. WANT ADS PAY! PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS We have all makes. Remington, Royals. Corona, Underwood Colored duco finishes. Price $60. O. D. MOR1kILL 17 Nickels Arcade Phone 6615 ---------- . m een SUMMER STUDENTS Secure Your Supplies at League has undertaken this sum- s spr ua y. roug mer and will furnish an informal every movement of the body, r at h r o u g h gestures, expressions, social evening for all members of1 of the face, and still poses, she tries the Summer Session. to convey religious conceptions. Cosing 01 tS agle Still Deeper Cuts In Price This Week I have moved shoes into the $6.85, $7.85 and $8.85 sections that were $10.85 last week. $1.00 less for 2nd and 3rd pairs. If you know anything about my shoes and better service your good judgment will tell you to buy all the shoes we have to fit you at such low prices. If you have never worn any Purfield's Shoes now is your opportunity to buy them for less than ordinary shoes and find out what you have been missing for years. ALL CANVAS RUBBER SOLED SHOES NOW LESS THAN COST. I have sorted all Ladies', Men's and Children's into 3 lots at follows: Values from $4.00 to $4.50 cut to $2.00 pair Values -up to $3.50 now $1.50 pair Values up to $2.50 only $1.00 pair p CORNER FOURTH AVE. AND __ LIBERTY ST. II DRESS COATS Unusual reductions on these fa Shown in such wanted materials as Kasha,-fur trimmings in Squirrel, Lapin and Omhre Mole. Coats that formerly sold up to price of $25 ashionable dress coats. Majora, Norma, and American Broadtail, r b...m SUMMER Reductions On Ready-to -Wear $69.50 at our July t:,. t2l f" m ' 1111 South University Ave. 2 Block from Campus I LANE HALL TAVERN SILK DRESSES Ann array of the season's smartest silk dress styles, youthful effects, cleverly designed in every detail. Plain crepes and figured materials. Dreshes that formerly sold up to $69.75, our July price brings them down to $29.75 Another group of 'silk dresses that display the newest style tendencies. Formerly priced up to $39.75, now in our July Sale at $22.75 Second Floor I The Choicest of Wholesome Foods F F' Mrs. Anna Kalmbach 1 mill l