THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928 . r. .- hed every morning except Monday the University year by the Board in of Student Publirations. er of Western Conference Editorial ion. Associated Press is exclusively en- the use for republication of all news es credited to it or not otherwise in this paper and te local news pub- erein. ed at the prsto'lice at Anti Arbor, n, as second class matter. Special rate aegranted by Third Assistant Post- ription by carrier, $4.00; by mail, s: Ann Arbor Press Building, May- :ree .. :s Editorial, 4925; Bussnes', 212.,. EDITORAL STAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING EDITOR KENNETH G. PATRICK .. ....'...e aul J. Kern itor...... ........Nelson . Smith ditor.............Richar'd C. Kurvink Editor... .... .....Morris Quinn 's Editor........Sylvia S. Stone Michigan Weekly.. .J. Stewart Hooker nd Drama......... ...RZ. L. Askren t City Editor......Lawrence R. Klein Night Editors e N. Edelson Charles S. Monroe E. Howell Pierce Ro-nberg j. Klin( George U. Simnona George C. Tilley Reporters T,. Adams is Alexander r Anderson !.Askren -am Askwith se Behymer ur Bernstein a C. Bovee -1 Charles R. Chubb k E. Cooper n 'Domine las Edwards org Egeland ri J. Feldman orie Follmer iam Gentry ence Hartwig and Jung es R. Kaufman. Kelsey id 1E. Layman C. A. Lewis Marian MacDonald flenry Merry N. S. Pickard Victor Rabinowitz Anne Schell Rachel Shearer Robert Silbar Howard Simon Robert L. Sloss Arthur R. Strubel Edith Thomas Beth Valentine Gurney Williams Walter Wilds George E. Wohlgemuth Robert Woodroofe Joseph A. Russell Cadwell Swanson A. Stewart Edward L. Warner Jr.1 Cleland Wyllie from today, would far surpass any other, both in number of votes cast and in public interest. The bare fact that 14,000,000 more signified their desire to vote next week stands as evidence that the ap- proaching battle has drawn the public's interest to candidates and national issues as none before. From coast to coast, men and women have thus signified their intentions to take an active part in the campaign. Never before have two such candidates as Hoover and Smith been in the public eye, and to even a greater degree, have vital issues played such an important part in determining the direction of casting votes. The radio, the news- papers, even the talking movies and newsreels, have done their part in interesting the American citizen to a degree where he is willing to add his little ballot to the millions of others. The women voters represent ap- proximately 36 per cent of the total. This is enough to give them the balance of power, and there is no doubt but that the women's vote will decide who the next President is to be. It has been estimated that in some of the larger cities, the women's vote may go as high as 45 per cent. In the "solid South" and in the home states of the two presidential candidates, the registration has taken noticeable jumps. The in- tensive campaigns in doubtful states have also materially aided in boosting the total. Very few neg- ative effects have been even no- ticeable in working against the tide of rising registration figures. One week from tonight, the country will be in the midst of one of the most exciting times it has experienced. The. candidates will be through with speeches. The cam- paign managers will have started to regain weight. The nation will be beside radio and news office to cheer the successful man. But the last strenuous week is still ahead. Campus Opinion .Contributors are asked to be brief, confining themselves to less than 3oo words ii ~possible. Anonymous com- munications will 'be disregarded. The names of communicants will, however, be regarded as confidential, upon re- quest. Ietters published should not be construed expressing the editorial opinion of the Daily. Stands for Tillotson, Tickets, and Twenty-yard line seats-twenty yards back of the goal. s * * ( "Gee," said thesixyear-on- six ya-nthe-campus man yesterday, ( "next year I can really get ( seats on the goal line. My ( freshman year I didn't get any I seats at all, the next two years ( I sat back of the goal posts, ( and the next year I sat on the ( curve with the rest of the ( seniors." a o * * * Disillusionment! Freshman, filled with hesitation, Fraught with fearful aspiration, Blighted with scornful condemnation, Cheer! Take heart, the seats you held At last week's contest, seats you took with grimaced protest, Three years from now will be no better! ** * Yes, our name was wrong in the directory, too. Either the directory comes out January first and has three out of the five items after your name cor- rect or it comes out November first and leaves your name out entirely. * * * 0 L Lark Opines Well, my dear, as the one per- son who reads Cora's quarter-' column spasm told us yester- day, this here Cora the Co-ed is the MOST tautologous per- son ever, I mean she actually IS. For example she said right out in her column: ". . . where reverse English covers a subtle hidden meaning.. ." Oh, girls, isn't she just the most redund- ant thing EVER? And about us she said that reverse English we couldn't write. Throw over the fence the cow some hay. Toss me from the porch down a nickel. * * * rn jMusic And Drama THIS AFTERNOON: The New York Theatre Guild Present "Porgy" at the Whitney the- ater, beginning at 2:30 o'clock, as well as TONIGHT: when the curtain rises at 8:15 o'clock. TONIGHT: Comedy Club pre- sent Sardou's "Diplomacy" in the Mimes Theatre at 8:15 o'clock. "DIPLOMACY" Tonight Comedy Club officially opens the amateur dramatic sea- son in the Mimes theater with the Sardou melodrama, "Diplomacy." Done from the script which George Tyler used last year in his all-star revival of the play, the effort has been to produce a play which will support Comedy Club's reputation for offering a high class bill, while at the same time achieving some box office success-the most neces- sary thing on this Campus as mat- ters dramatic now stand. Direction of the production is perhaps the most promising factor in deciding the success of the play. The atmosphere of intrigue, with all the usual trappings of polished malice and evil aforethought which are so dear to the author of melo- drama and to Sardou in particular, who is a master of "theatrical" technique, makes the director not only the interpreter of the play- wrights idea, but often a creator in his own right when bits of signi- ficant business can be introduced to give point to the dialogue. It would be unfair to Sardou to ignore the facile wit of his dialouge or the satiric implications it carries, but George Tyler's production with all- star. cast is a guarantee that every part is an important part-as much as the actor and the director care to make of it-and that the balance of importances is so nicely held that stellar dignity need feel no hurt if the number of speeches is not overly large. R. L. A. "PORGY" iS , Irrrrrrr~rsrrr,.r.. .+r rrrrrr. .. rrrr.. r ... .+ TRENCH COATS Cravenetted gaberdine with attractive plaid lining-the ideal school top coat L - . j I VWWMFM&COMPAHIY Jor Men c 2S ~f~nce 1g4gf I Clssifie d Ads Pay $15 L C 4'~ I 1 BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 21214 BUSINESS MANAGER EDWARD L. HULSE osistant Manager-RAY MOND WACHTER Department Managers dvertising.................Alex K. Scherer dvertising.................A. James Jordan dvertising..........Carl W. Hammer ervice. ......:. ....erbert E. Varnum irculation..............George S. Bradley lccounts..............Lawrence E. Walkley ublications...............Ray M. Hofelich Assistants, rving Binzer Jack Horwich 'onald Blackstone Dix Hurmphrey Mary' Chase AMariona Kerr eanette Dale Lillian Kovinsky Vernor Davis Bernard 'Larson lessie Egeland Leonard Littlejohn Ieldn Geer Hollister Mabley Ann. Goldberg Jack Rose Kasper Halverson Carl F. Schemm George Hamilton Sherwood Upton Agnes Herwig r arie Wellstead Walter Yeagley' TUESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1928 fight Editor-JOSE'H E. HOWELL , BEAT ILLINOIS! Conference champions in 1927 nd well on their way to a duplica- ion of that title this fall, Coach Bob" Zuppke's Illini are coming : Ann Arbor Saturday highly outed and doped to win. Before a crowd of 87,000 includ- ag. a 'solid block of 5,000 Illinois ooters, Michigan's "Fighting Wol- erines" will take the field with but] ne thought, one purpose, and that s to "beat Illinois." That Michigan team proved aturday that it has learned much bout football in the past month ,nd that it has the capacity and he will to learn a great deal more t proved, moreover, that it could ight as few Wolverine teams have ver fought. In defeat it won a eal moral victory. Jt will give its ast ounce of strength this week in rder to more perfectly cope with he Orange and Blue. Against Wisconsin, it received oble support from the Michigan tands. Every day this week it will seed and appreciate the same sup- >ort. No greater tribute can be, aid to it and no finer recognition iven it than for Michigan's stu- lent body to jam Hill auditorium o the doors Friday night at the econd pep meeting of the year. Last week, unfortunately, the pep ssembly program was planned for ;oo late in the evening and many tudents who would have liked to ttend were forced to remain way on that account. To remedy his situation the Student council as announced that the Illinois pepj neeting will begin at 7:15. Too long this fall Michigan has een content to sit back and play he game from the stands, criticiz- ng each act on the field with sec- nd guesses. It is an attitude which was wiped from the face of Michigan supporters Saturday but t is one which must be forgotten or all time. Michigan teams are, vorthy of support and student loy- t1ty. Illinois is not invincible. The Michigan team will go into the! ame determined to prove that fact. t deserves to be backed by a stu- lent body which has forgotten its ceptism and is ready to say and eel whole-heartily, "Beat Illinois." EDUCATION AND CULTURE To the Editor: It is a notorious fact that em- phasis in college education in Amer- ica is tending away from the scholastic idea ,and more and more toward the production by the thousand of what is popularly con- ceived as the "successful" man. A student considers himself educated when he has become competent to remove an appendix with neatness and dispatch, draw up presentable plans for a bridge, or wheedle a jury into returning a favorable verdict. Those amenities of cul- ture which make life more than a battle of hogs about a trough are either completely neglected or The Michigan Dames gave a party1 for their husbands the other day. Bet that the favors were great big, round, solid rolling pins. * * * treated simply as interesting hang- overs from days when people were all a little queer.- Of course the net result of this state of affairs in a vast middle class of Babbits and Main Streeters, who after, making their economic posi- tion secure, spend the best portions of their lives in a state of mental ac- tivity slightly less than that of a fish. These people vaguely realize that there is something lacking in their lives, a void they vainly try to fill by going to hear a gentleman, discolored with burnt cork, sing mammy songs which any self-re- specting negro would repudiate as idiotic. This or some such mental narcotic is the fare of the average American mind outside working hours. Every normal human mind possesses certain capabilities for. cultural pleasures which deserve development, but in the vast ma- jority of cases the intelligence is clubbed into a state of servitude to the stomach. Now all this inattention to cul- tural values applies with marked emphasis to the genuine under- standing and admiration of music. A depressing example is the lack of attendance at the weekly Twilight Recitals. They are held at an hour which permits the attention of al- most any student, the music is al- ways ably and sympathetically' treated by an organist of unusual talent upon an instrument which is probably without a peer in this country. Modern music carries a great wealth of meaning; a proper inr, avnrii+io f t ei grravt mch u I The primrose path of folly I and transient joy or the l straight and narrow path, to I which course the instincts of I her fine nature dictate . . . which? What would YOU do in the 1 case of Mary Gold? 0 * * * The scenic artist of a Chicago club hung himself at a dance hall yesterday. Probably he looked at one of his own paintings by mis- take. * * * Modern Nursery Rhyme Little Miss Muffet, Sat on a tuffet, "Eating her Vitamin A. "Devil may take me, "Freud may forsake me, "But don't take my yeast cake away." Oscar. 4 ** * "An educated women," said Miss Beatrice Johnson, advisor of wom- en," does not necessarily have to be college trained." Our dear Miss Johnson, is the college trained " woman ever edu- cated? * * * President Little told us all the other day that "Machinery of the University should be used toward the end of cooperating with the state." Very true, perhaps, President Little, but in actual practice it is just the opposite. State machinery is being adapted to the use of the University-in the form of two motorcycles! * * * Hope-to-be-President Hoover is undecided about whether to call an extra session of Congress about farm relief. At any rate, Herbert, don't call it before March 4. k * * Under the auspices of the Michi- gan Women, a body composed of University Alumnae and the wives of University Faculty members; the New York Theatre Guild produc- tion of Dubose Heyward's "Porgy" will appear at the Whitney theatre for matinee and evening perform- ances today only. Offered last Spring in Detroit at the Masonic Temple with an identical cast, "Porgy" made an immense "hit." Its appearance in this town is one of the most im- portant events theatrically that seem to be forecast for the local season. Avoiding all the formal banalities and artificialities of the operetta, "Porgy" still contains all the attractive qualities of music with the additional advantage of novelty in the Negro spiritual form. Offering a story of great drama- tic interest, there is still a huge background of authentic Negrolife that approaches cosmic proportions. R. L. A. * * * MUSICIAN, CONCERT, AND AUDIENCE With his usual reliable produc- tion of at least one or two worthy! numbers on each Twilight Organ concerts, Palmer Christian will play again this Wednesday in a program of which the outstanding features will be Bach's "Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C," and Wagner's "To the Evening Star and Pilgrim Chorus," from Tannhauser.# Both of these works are too well known to need any discussion here. It will be remembered that the Wagner selection was played last, year by Mr. Christian in a program composed completely of Wagnerian music. The organ rendition was, at that time, strikingly beautiful for a transcription from Wagner's famous opera. The other numbers on the pro- gram are from the pens of modern authors. Especially( intriguing is1 the Dethier number, "The Brook." A "Prelude on an Ancient Flemish Theme" by Gilson, and "Sonata 1,." by Guilmant will round out the program. These modern pieces should be of as much interest as the moretried masterpieces, if for no other reason than as indications of present day trends in music. 1 Faithfully rendering his concerts each week, as Mr. Christian does, it is to be regretted that this really notable feature on the cultural side of Ann Arbor entertainment, is constantly spoiled by unconsider- 'r:. -1 0 u1 ( j ;'".5,ms.. ~ C r+ - \,-- -('- - -i ::: ... .,........e.- t t PAKI !~ '.4 4 V.. . 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