TODAY'S EVENTS b:03 P. AL-"The Pogress of International Coopera- t wn," by Professor Dick- :+) . M.-Faculty concert at I3iji auditorium. 0, 4 p # 'ummer Sf r43t atl MEMBER A\SSOCIATED PRESS VOL. VIII No. 33 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 1927 JAPANESE INTRODUCI AE[COMPROMISE MEASURI INAVALCONFERENCI BRIDGEMAN BELIEVES SUGGES- TION IMPORTANT ENOUGHI TO BE CONSIDERED TEXT NOT PUBLISHED Spectre of Failure Still Present, How ever, and Little Hope Held for Successful Conclusion 03v Associated Press) GENEVA, August 3.-"Just an idea,' was the moderate saying which the Japanese statesman used when pre- snting early today to Hugh S. Gibson, chief American representative, their compromise formula of the cruiser problem which has menaced the Tri- partite Naval conference with failure. Despite this new move, however, it was said in responsible quarters to- night that the spectre of failure, fail- ure which, as a prospect, has gen- uinely alarmed responsible men of many countries, did not yet be deemed definitely avoided; yetfrom the Amer- ican standpoint at least, the Japanese plan to save the conference Is said to appear after closest study to include many attractive features worthy of being treated as a basis for negotia- tion., Gibson Cables Text Mr. Gibson cabled the text of the proposal to Washington today, to- gether with his own views and com- ments. Furthermore, W.C. Bridge- man, chief British delegate, who got the plan from Admiral Saito, and Vis- count Ishii :soon after they had sub- mitted it to Mr. Gibson, has tele- graphed it t3 London. It is said that Mr. Bridgeman believed the sug- gestion to be of so important a nature as to justify its consideration by the British cabinet. When the Japanese employed the expressed, "An idea," in giving the formula to Mr. Gibson, they meant what they said. They explained that they quite realize it was entirely im- nn~n^ nrlair +nvhnPAMr Ib- PRINCE ARRIVES FOR LONG VlSIT 1 IilCHN DE Prince Christopher of Greece was photographed on his arrival at New York for a two months' visit with American friends. The prince was the husband of the late Mrs. William B. Leeds, widow of "the tin plate king." PRINCIPALS DEFE IA T OPPONENTS BY 237 Picnic After Game Considered Huge Gastronomic Success By All Present 60 MEMBERS INITIATED The hard - slugging principals downed the superintendents 23-7ina hard fought indoor baseball game yes- terday afternoon at Ferry field, thereby winning undisputed cham- pionship of the Men's Education league. Mills and Loomis were the the batteries for the winners; Clark and VandenBelt for the superinten- dents. The sensational fielding of Benjamin, the superintendents' left fielder, was one of the bright spots of; Mrs. Harry 11. lHltchiins wife President Emeritus liarry B. Htc ins of the Univcrsity, died at 9) o'clo last night. Mrs. Hutchins was take ill suddenly early in the evenin Slh)iais 77 N c rs of age. The couple had been married a Imos" 55 years, having been manrli December 26, 1S72. Mrs. Hutchin )Haiden name was Mary L Crocker ac her hc me had been in tt. Clene before the marriage. i I ASTCNCERT TO B1 PRFSFNTFO TONIH RY SCHOOL OFMUSh: FREEMAN AND RHEAD TO PLA1 IN FINAL MUSICAL OF SUMMER SESSION ARE WELL KNOWN Mrs. Rhead Has Been Accoimpanis Of Choral Union And Has Been A Soloist InI May Festival The last concert in the series o summer recitals given by the Uni versity School of Music, will be pre. sented at 8:15 this evening in Hil auditorium. Mrs. Marian Strubl( Freeman, of the violin faculty, anc Mrs. Mabel Ross Rhead of the pian faculty, will take part. Both of these musicians are wel known throughout the country both as soloists and withtorchestras. Mrs Freeman recently returned from th round-the-world University Cruise On her tour she gave many concerts on board ship and while in port. O particular interest was her appear- ance as soloist in the private theatre of Rama VII, King of Siam, at Bang- kok, where she was given a tremend- ous ovation and personnally compli- niented by the king. During the war Mrs. Freeman spent many months in France playing to the soldiers. She is a graduate of the University School HM YR11MKILE WILL NOT SEEK FOR NOMINATIOI v WHFN HIS PARACHUTE kg. SFAILS TO FUNCT!ONJl,:f'CJtt':}.':"'1j - (,]}J ed LIEU'TENANT LECLAIR SCIUILZE s' IS VICTIM OF BURNING nd AIRPLANE n- - - WAS TESTING PLANE - .._- Schulze, One Of Army's Best Known . ! .- - . Aviators, Was Testing New -WF C Plane Whien Fire Cane S SELFRIDGE FIELD, Mich., Aug. 2. -Lieut, Leclair D. Schulze, of the First Pursuit Group, and one of the best known Army airmen, was killed here at 10 a. m. today when he jump- ed 1,000 feet from a burning airplane and his parachute failed to open. Schulze was testing a new engine in a pursuit plane. He was flying away from the field toward the Clin- Calvin Coolidge, ton rvrwe bevr on the Thirtieth president of the United t Sriver when observers nt tates, who de ared yesteiday tha ground saw his plane burst into he would not run for re-election i flames. the coming campaign of 1928. Coolidge The watcher§ saw Schulze leap came into office upon the death o )f frem the plane and saw him hurtle Warren G. Harding in 1923 and was ~- carhward. When officers reached the ,re-elected in 1924. If he were to run s erwhr. hen ofaicersnreacd the n he would be seeking a third term, a -spot where he had fallen' they found violation of the custom laid down by l le had not pulled the rip cord on his Wahingtons e parachute. It is their belief he lost- d consciousness as he left the plane- AN SPEAK BEORE His parachute was not defective. 1 Selfridge officers said. The plane hlcrashed about 50 feet from where IGRAUATE STUDNrTS Schulze's body was found and was eUdestroyed byU[ire. edestroyed by fire. .___ The cause of the fire could not be Dean Kraus Tells Education Students determined. of Zeal for Summer Study in f A Veteran Flyer the United States - Lieut. Schulze was one of the vet- san fliers of the Army Air Service. HUBER, WHITNEY TALK _ During the World War lie served as - a test pilot at the American overseas More than 90 per cent of the Grad- aviation base at Issoudon, France, nate students in education were pre- and flew all types of pursuit planes sent at a meeting which was held for used by the American forces. He was them yesterday afternoon in Natural recommended for the Distinguished teieseraydtrnmr Service Medal. Science auditorium. He came to Selfridge Field with Dean Edward H. Kraus as the first the First Pursuit Group in 1920, and speaker, made the significant state- for a time was adjutant of the group. ment that nowhere else is there such He flew a Loening monoplane in the a passion for summer study as in the 1922 race for the Pulitzer Trophy at United States and that the American Selfridge Field. teacher stands out distinctly in that A few months later he was detach- respect in comparison with other ed from the First Pursuit Group to teachers in the world. The policy of participate in the Army Air Service's the Summer session at the University historic flight around the world. of Michigan is different than that of Aided World Fliers many universities, according to Dean He had an active part in solving Kraus, in that if there is a demand the engineering problems of this for a new course, no qestion is ever flight, and was in charge of the base asked as to whether the attendance established in Greeland to facilitate fees from an additional course will the flight of the round-the-world air- cover the expense of it. Not more men across the North Atlantic Ocean. than 45 per cent of the total cost of He recently returned to the First I the Summer session is cared for by Pursuit Group at Selfridge Field, after the attendance fees, and this is also a course of study in the Air Service's true of the academic year when the 1 tactical schools. Previously Schulze same policy is followed. Dean Kraus had played an important part in the stressed the fact that the aim of the development of a tactical system of Summer session is to give such in- air combat by pursuit planes under struction as there is demand for. Lt n e .f s' n a Y I i I PRESIDENT OF U NITED STATES HAKES ANNOUNCEMENT TO NEWSPA PEIRS TYPES OUT MESSAGE Coolidge Makes Announcement on 4th Anniversary of His Taking Oath of Office (By Associated Press) RAPID CITY, S. D., Augg. 2.--Presi- dent Coolidge today issued 'a state- ment saying: "I do not choose to run for presi- dent in 1928." The statement, which was type- written on small pieces of paper, was handed out tpday by the president on the fourth anniversary of his becom- ing chief executive of the United States, without comment. Mr. Coolidge had asked newspaper men to see him at 12 o'clock today. Until a minute or two before there was not the slightest knowledge among the presidential staff of what- would occur at the conference. Sends Secretary Shortly before 12 o'clock Mr. Cool- idge sent for his personal stenogra- pher, Edwin Geiser, and dictated the brief message which was then trans- cribed onto small pieces of paper by typewriter. After the newspaper men had coen PRICE FIVE CENTS 4'i DO NOT CHOOSE TO ~RUN, FOR PRESIDENT IN 1928' -COOLIOGE perfect, and said tney nopeivi r.u1 - the game.iy son would feel free to make any modi- All-Americans Win of Music, and before becoming a mem- fications or any comment he desired. The teachers had to take the short ber of the faculty was head of the They told Mr. Bridgeman the same i end of an 18-3 for cellar champion_ Department of Music in Hillsdale thing. The Japanese delegates said, ! ship from the faculty's all-American college. however, that they thought the idea team, composed of Blott and Kipke. Rhead Is Noted Artist had fundamentally something to be Batteries for the teachers were Cooper Mrs. Rhead is an artist of note. said for it. and Webb. For several years she has been ac- Text Not Published The picnic dinner was a gastrono- companist of the University Choral The text of the formula has not mic triumph for the club. The bill Union, and has appeared in a number been published, but the correspon- of fare included hot dogs, doughnuts, of May Festivals with noted soloists. dents of the Associated Press under- ice cream and pickles. She also has held the honored posi- stand that the essence of the Japanese At 8 o'clock the Society of the L.1- tion of soloist with the Detroit, Chi- project is this: Y. D. initiated 60 members. I cago and St. Louis Orchestras, and It provides. for the maintenance of has given many concerts in various the status quo, so far as cruiser CHICAGO-Only one woman in 10 parts of the country. She is recog- strength is concerned, both for Great in the -United States fails to cosmetize nized as one of the finest virtuosi Britain and Japan, and gives the herself properly. of the middle west. United States an opportunity to "catch up" with them in powerfully armed f and armored cruisers. PLAYER'S GIVE SHAKESPEARE'S Under this interpretation the "built SHAKESPEARE'S and buildings" would then constltute PLAY "THE COMEDY OF ERRORS" the total tonnage itmitation for Great Britain and Japan up to 1931, and in A Rview, By Robert G. Ramsay the case of Great Britain it is esti- mated that it would bring the British The Shakespeare tradition in the was entrusted entirely to them, and naval total well under 400,000 tons. theater seemed once to be as inviol- to the policemen, and their enthu- This is the figure the Americans gave able and sacred as the Bayreuth tra- siasm alone carried the piece. To be the British and Japanese to under- dition in music yet producers have sure there was good work. Miss stand a few weeks ago that they taken such liberties with the master- Kearne's schooled in some years of would be willing to go to as a maxi- pieces of the stage that one fears Shakespearean work with Ben Greet, mum in order to reach an agreement. now to see Wagner's Brunhilde, was particularly fine in her sulphu- sheltered for years by the adamant rous description of her husband, and SHERIDAN KILLED opinion of Cocima,rise from her rock as the jealous wife gave a careful, if IN TRAIN WRECK in her famous third act entrance, clad somewhat woodenish portrayal. either in her virgin beauty, or in The production itself was excellent, Howard A. Sheridan, '25E, was knickers. It has been justly stated the costuming immensely effective and killed in a railroad accident in De- in the program, that "The Comedy of interesting, and the arrangement of troit, late yesterday, friends here Errors" is the only play of Shakes- the set remarkable. The prologue, learned. Details of the accident were peare's in which such liberties could itself the only skillful element of the not known. J be indulged or perpetrated. For the play, was well ordered, though the Sheridan has been living in Ford- syncopation of the comedy is the only playing of the Duke tempts one to son where he was assistant general' thing that could make it acceptable. borrow the criticism of Eugene Field, superintendent of F. R. Patterson It is hopeless and farcical drivel. The that "the King played as if he was company. While in the University humor, which even in the sapcious constantly under the apprhension that he was a member of he Tau Beta Pi times of Good Queen Bess must have some one would play the Ace." , fraternity. He also served as an in-; been decidedly mature, does not equal However, it is ambitious attempt structor in the gymnasium while a the spontaneous gusto of Falstaff, the which no one should miss, for withal student here. brilliant wit of Much Ado, clothed as it is a creditable undertaking. One T__ ___it is in a protective veil of bright might permit oneself the luxury of a W OM1EN'S LEAGUE poetic fanry, nor does it approach few tears, though, that they did not the superior comedy of "The Merch- stick to their original intention of? WILL GIVE TEA ant of Venice." The subtleties of com- giving "Much Ado About Nothing." The Women's League of the Uni-' edy, seem chiseled out by the hand of With "The Comedy of Errors" the versity of Michigan will give a tea an unwitting blacksmith, the comic Rockford group brings their season from 4 to 5:30 this afternoon in the situations are null, and splendidly of summer plays to a close. No one parlors of Helen Newberry Residence, void. could deny that they have been im- in honor of the Rockford Players. Miss With the exception of the dromios mensely popular, and incredibly suc- Lucy Elliot, summer social director none of the players responded to the cessful in bringing entertainment to Qf Helen Newberry, will pour. jazz casting. The, farcical element Ann Arbor audiences. rl e e 1 r 1 1 t f _I . l i f t' l I , ,) -i , . . j : i f, I into the room, the president asked them to file past him. He handed each the small slip of paper with the message. The paper had been folded by him. Newspaper men stopped to ask him if there was any comment, and Mr. Coolidge replied negatively. The dash - for telephones and telegraph wires was begun by the newspaper men. Other Guests Present Besides the newspaper men, there were in the room at the time Senator Capper, a house guest of the presi- dent, Everett Sanders and Edward T. Clark, his secretaries; Blanton Win- ship, his military aid, and Dr. James F. Coupal, his physician. No word was spoken, outside of Mr. Coolidge asking if everyone was present and inquiry of newspaper men if there was anything more to say. It is safe to say that the president counseled with no one in preparing his startling announcement. Those closest to him in his official family had taken occasion on this day, the fourth anniversary of Mr. Cool- idge taking the oath of office, to ex- press the private view that he would not make any statement of his plans for another term and would accept the nomination if given -to him, without expressing himself. S. C. A. CAMP WILL 'BE OPENED SOON The International Recreational, Camp, sponsored by the Student Christian Association of the Univer- sity, will be held August 20-27, at Patterson Lake on the grounds of the University Fresh Air Camp Enroll- ment is open to men enrolled in the Spring or Summer session of the uni- versity who are interested in an eco- nomical week's outing, and who de- sire to make acquaintances of an in- ternational sort. The comp is meant for Foreign students especially. Boat- ing, swimming, rest, discussions, eat- ing and hiking will form the major part of the day's program. The cost will be $7 for the entire weeks' expense. Registrations should be made at the main desk of Lane Hall as soon as possible. This activity is part of the Student Christian Association's program of In- ternational EEducation. OurWeatherMan I SouTH Maj. air Spatz, former commander of Dean Whitney'Talks Slefridge Field. This was a revolu- Opportunities for part time work tionary development in aerial war- during the academic year were dis- cussed by Dean Allan S. Whitney of Ifare. -IteSho fEuain After Lieut J. Thad Johnson was;the School of Education. killed last month at Ottawa while I1A few years ago Saturday classes escorting Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, were utilized largely by undergradu- - Lieut Schulze succeeded Johnson as 'ates, butttheyhave gradually changed commndin ~~ficerof te Twnty- until at the present time they are or-I t commanding officer of the Twenty- . Seventh Squadron at Selfridge Field. ganized chiefly With the graduate stu- -dent in mind. During the academic! Hie was 36 years old and was un- marred as ayear, teachers from all parts of the married.'state take advantage of this opportun- ity to work for a higher degree. DeanF CHICAGO GIVES UP Whitney averred that such a system; PLANS FOR FAIR I increased the service of the University and that the results proved part time (Ty Associated Press) worthwhile. CHICAGO, Aug. 2.-The Tribune I Dean Huber SpeaksI says today that the administration of That organization of work for a' Mayor William Hale Thompson has master's degree should include endeav-j decideyor abamdonHansforaswo or along lines of research, is thej decided to abandon plans for a world sopinion of Dean Carl 0 Huber -of the fair and centennial exposition in 1933. Graduate School. He also expressed A member of the mayor's advisory the hope that in the future a more committee is quoted as saying that a liberal interpretation would be given world's fair is provincial in the mod- to advanced degrees so that students ern age and that it would prove un- working for them could take some successful. work in their field of special interest.' The march of progress has made However the Master's degree should other things more important, such as mean something more than adding subways, lake front - projects and I just another year to the collegiate other proposed civic improvements.' course, and Dean Huber requested The Tribune says that instead of the that all students who are working for world's fair, the city will observe 1933 a' master's degree would do their best as a gala year, marking the comple- to make the standards for it as high tion of all projected enterprises, as possible. -Thinks that it will be somewh1mat warmer and unsettled,