llp mmir- , - , p =o4 o <=;OC- :ac ;;>o (o> ;;;> 4;;;c c.=.- 4:;;=> c o FLOWERS 0 4oa g AND GIFTS 334 South State Street Ann Arbor, Michigan NO 3-5049 > J( 04<7=>05;;r;><==> c<=;;> c ;;;;;;>,<;;;> 0;;;0 ' < S8Ce SALE ($1.00 to $3.00 Values) COSTUME JEWELRY c 0 at aA D 209 South Sate St. (Below Marshalls sBook Store) O0 ->< -0 ->< -0--0--o -y<-o -y -y< -o io ~ l } {) ' t7 )t { + 3 t.._ o i i Oct. 29,1929-Just Another Day The Weather Was Dismal But Times Were Good; Stock Market Irregularities Worried Few People A Window to the Communist N Poland, Seeking Western Contacts, Again Welcomes Tourist By STEPHEN HEILPERN By THOMAS TURNER NEW YORK City was damp and1 chilly. The mercury hadI reached 50 shortly after noon, then slumped back into the middle 40's. The weather was about the only; depressing topic New Yorkers could talk of. The Twenties were still roaring, and no one was car- ing about the weather. A retreatI to a nearby speakeasy would make you forget the gloominess of the Tuesday afternoon. Some worry-warts were trying to stop the October fun by prophesying doom; the recent ir- regularities of the stock market were making them feel uneasy.I Bosh! The Federal Reserve Board had just told everyone there'd be nothing to worry about. Most people were too busy to let themselves be bothered with Wall Street's little problems. Busy making money, busy spendingi money. No trouble making it, less trouble spending it. . TAKE John D. Rockefeller, for instance. His dream of build- ing a city within a city was grad- ually coming true. He had just~ picked the architects for the project. Wherever people went they were being assured that the Thir- ties would be even more prosper- ous. A brokerage firm had placed an advertisement in The Times saying, "In our opinion the pres- ent affords a favorable opportu- nity to acquire the stocks of banks and insurance companies for long-range investments." U.S. Steel had announced an extra dividend of one dollar, Al- bie Booth was creating a sensa- tion with his great play for Yale's eleven, Arnold Constable was selling $75 silk-lined suits with the two-button cut, and -Marl- boros were costing 20 cents for1 "those who can afford the best." Congress was deciding wheth- er or not to pass the Smoot-Haw- ley tariff law, and Norman Thomas, Jimmy Walker and Fior- ello LaGuardia were running for mayor. ARTHUR Hammerstein was ad-t mitting publicly for the first1 time that "talkies" were affecting The legitimate stage was also having an excellent season. A young songstress named Gertrude Lawrence was at the Empire, George DM. Cohan was starring in his own show at the Fulton, and Eddie Cantor's big hit, "Whoopee" was attracting standing-room- only crowds at the New Amster-- dam. It was a special day for the opera fans. The Met was opening that night with "Manon Lescaut," with Lucrezia Bori in the title role. The only people out of luck on Tuesday, October 29, 1929, were those who couldn t make the shows that evening. Even ihese unfortunates, however, could'find solace. If they happened to be lucky enough to own a radio they could look forward to listening to Paul Whiteman's program at 9. HOW DID Ann Arbor spend the 29th of October? The weather was the same as in New York. The University's 9,399 students - a record enroll- ment -- were complaining about the rain and/or bluebooks, and were even more oblivious to the faint heart murmur of Wall Street. Coach Harry Kipke's mairr wor- ry was his football team. He might have a chance against Har- vard next Saturday, if he could only come up with a scoring punch. Townspeople were having dif- ficulty in telling male students from coeds; the boyish "flat look" was still evident among the girls. The campus was buzzing with talk of Larry Gould, Michigan's famous geologist, who had recent- ly left with Richard E. Byrd for Antarctica. WALTER RAE, assistant dean of students, was notifying ev- eryone that he was going to crack down on those students driving, cars without permit tags. For those who weren't being faced with tests the next day, the Whitney Theatre was offering a musical revue, and the Michigan, Majestic and Wuerth theatres were presenting popular films. It was a normal 1929 day in Ann Arbor, as it was in New York. But that's not what the history books tell us. The market almost hit rock-bottom that Tuesday aft- ernoon. The Panic was on, and a wonderful decade was to come to a not-so-wonderful end. POLAND, devastated by war andI retarded by Communism, is again welcoming Western tourists. Tourists from the West can provide a real shot in the arm for the sagging Polish economy, since most visitors now come from the other "socialist countries" of Eastern Europe and bring with them levas or marks as worthless as the Polish zloty. And because many Poles are also interested in increasing con- tact with the West, the visitor is provided with an opportunity for great insight into an unwilling satellite, her Communism and her character. rVURS of Poland begin in War- saw, if only because it is the capital and transportation hub. Never the most beautiful city in Poland, Warsaw in 1945 was a smoldering heap of broken brick.I New apartments have gone up since to alleviate what was surely the most serious housing shortage in all Europe. But these buildings are of ne- cessity dull, grey and uninterest- ing. They suffer, moreover, from Russia's stultifying architectural influence. The dozens of palaces and gov- ernment buildings left by cen- turies of royal rule had for the most part survived the period When Poland was partitioned be- tween Prussia, Russia and Austria, but the majority are gone now, leveled by the Germans along with everything else in the. after- math of 1945's ill-fated Warsaw Uprising. BUT WARSAW was Poland's capital, and the people of this country, which had lost 40 per' cent of its natural wealth, dug down deep to rebuild her. The product of their efforts is the Old City and the New City, restored to 17th and 18th century appearance, which was for the Thomas Turner, a night edi- /or on The Michigan Daily, spent the summer in Poland, living three weeks with a family in Warsaw and touring the country. I the th Wa Pa P pro w o Z ati tra cor an con the Kez and Stu IE why poi abo IN of 200 frc inv MOUNTAINEER-Many Poles such as this river ANTI-FASCIST MONUMENT -- Nearly every guide make their living off the combination of Polish city and town has its own version of the old customs and beautiful scenery which charac- Red Army memorial, commemorating the "lib- terize the Tatra Mountains of southern Poland. eration" of Poland in 1944 and 1945. most part the appearance of 1939. These two "cities" within War- saw together make an island of charm perhaps a dozen blocks long within the drab city. Warsaw's truly new buildings, on the other hand, while repre- sented most commonly in drab new apartments are symbolized by the monstrous Palace of Culture and Science. This gift to Poland "in the name of Josef Stalin" is 32 stories high in a city where few buildings go over four. YARNCRAFT SHOP has everything for anything in knitting VarnerAft hoe 10'Nickels Arcade V / fThe New York by Night I ncor Stephen Heilpern, a former associate sports editor of The Michigan Daily, tells a story about the stock market crash that isn't in the history books. ; C I C x 1° the legitimate stage. The Broad- way producer was saying that there might be a future for him in Hollywood. Sound pictures were taking New York by storm, Lenore Ulric was making her talkie debut in "Frozen Justice," at the Roxy, the Capitol was presenting Marion Davies in "Marianne," and the Central was also doing 'ecord box-office business with "Dis- raeli," starring George Arliss. STEREO FULL TUNING RANGE Admiral TABLE MODEL RADIO kilt skirt it oH ilwool we plaids Sizes -1 Al-k I ...,t =; FEATURING THEEAM"' jenteu, _$TEO DIRECTOR; SENDS TME SOUNDT O7 YOU Come to our party and see and hear Stereo Higi- Fidelity at its best, brought to you through Jensen's SS- 100 3-way loudspeaker systems fea- turing the amazing new "Stereo Di- rector" ... the all new speaker devel- opment that sends the sound to you, wherever you listen, for perfect stereo plus perfect decor. Come in and hear Jensen's new Stereo Director systems at our Stereo }Hi-Fi Party. Everybody's Welcome! Model No. 4L20 ladies' casual wtear an 1212 SOUTH UNIVERSITY . .. 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