, NOVEMBER 8, 1928, 7." ~ THE MICHIGAN THIRD CHORAL UNION PROGRAM TO BE GIVEN DOCTOR LOVELL RESTS AFTER HARD "HOOVER FOR PRESIDENT" CAMPAIGN NEXT MONDAY NIGHT VLADIMIR HOROWITZ, NOTED PIANIST, WILL .FEATURE PROGRAM ADMIT CIILDREN FREE Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Led By Victor Kolar, will Present Other Half of Program Vladimir Horowitz, noted pianist, will combine with the Detroit Sym- phony Orchestra next Monday night in presenting-the third num- ber on the current Choral Union series. Victor Korla will be con- ductor of the orchestra. In the afternoon, preceding the regular night concert, more than 5500 school children will be pres- ent at a special concert to be given at 2:45 o'clock in Hill audi- torium. A novel program has been aranged for the children. When accompanied by their parents or chaperones, the children will be ad- mitted free. A special explanatory' discussion will be given by Miss Edith Rhetts, an authority in the particular field. The soloist, Vladimir Horowitz, who will make his only appearance in the regular night concert, has been hailed by many as "the Paderewski of his generation." He was born twenty-three years ago in Kiev, Russia, a son of a family of wealth. At the age of six he be- gan studying piano with his mother, who was an accomplished pianist. Seven years later, he en- tered a conservatory to study under Felix Bluemenfeld, a pupil of the renowed Rubenstein. His debut in the city of Karkov at the age of seventeen astounded his listeners. Since then his has been a steady rise to fame and he has been celebrated both in thiscoun- try and in many countries abroad. The Detroit Symphony Orchestra, representing the other half of Monday's program, has. been heard many times in Ann Arbor. The organization is composed of 90 f men,- all of theme solo artists and many of themmusicians within- ternational reputations. Victor Kolar, who will wield the baton for the occasion, has had1 a career as a musician and or-i chestisa leader which has taken =him from early adventures for the very sustenance by which to sur- ,vive to the heights of accomplish- ment in the musical world. He has arranged a program of two num- bers by the orchestra and a con- certo in which Horowitz will play with the accompaniment of theE orchestra.I Doctor Thomas Lovell was busy, all yesterday from 1 o'clock in the morning on, receiving congratula- tions for electing Hoover, or pre- dicting his election, no one seemed to know which. In an exclusive Daily interview granted at 5 o'clock yesterday morning at the corner of State street and the Nickel's arcade, he told reporters how his statement of last Wednesday that "one candidate is sife, and the other isn't sife" had kept the wires hot from coast to coast until Hoover's election was virtually assured. The doctor had it hot from Washington that a photo of him- self, snapped in an Abe Lincoln pose beside his newspaper stand, had run front page in all Washing- ton, D. C. papere last week over his confident prediction that Hoover would win. "It is impossible," he said, "to estimate the part my statement played in Ioover's vic- tory. I thank God that he is in." It appears probable as a result of H:ouver's ejection yesterday that Doc Lovell will have to leave Ann Arbor for four years to take up residence in Washington when hoover appoints him to a position. in the new Republican cabinet, he believes. Te appointment was practically assured early yesterday morning when a former editor of The Daily and a personal friend of the doctor's, introduced Lovell to Herbert Hoover's son, with a brief' recapitulation of the sterling Re- publican campaign work done by the local cobbler, the Doctor said. Young Hoover, according to Doc- tor Lovell's modest confession, was warm in his thanks for the valu- able assistance to his father's cause, and promised that his father would demonstrate more adequate appreciation when the time came for distribution of political plums. REKNOWN OF SENIOR AND JUNIOR CLASSES WANES WITH COMPETITION By Dug Twice the remarkable has hap- pened! Twice the senior and junior classes of the University, have been surpassed in political in- trigues. One was by our own f1:-ash- man class. The freshman class is guilty of assault and battery. Yesterday aft- ernoon when a group of "potted" freshmen came sauntering down the diagonal with no apparent malicious intent on their minds, they were attacked by two groups of other freshmen armed with, rather ineffective instruments. Aft-I er an apparently meaningless scramble, several of these instru- LIGHT TO SPEAK TO PHARMACISTS Dr. S. R. Light, vice-president ofj the Upjohn company of Kalama- zoo, will speak at the second monthly meeting, of the Prescott club at 7:30 Tuesday evening, No- vember 13, in room 303 Chemistry building. The subject of his talk will be "The Pharamaceutical De- velopment of Therapeutic Agents." The Upjohn company is a large concern which manufactures phar- maceutical supplies, and Dr. Light is a graduate of the University college of medicine. The company maintains a research fellowship on synthetic drugs in the University. WALTON LEAGUE WILL HEAR DANA Dean S. T. Dana of the School of Forestry and Conservation will speak to the members of the Isaac Walton league on the local School of Forestry and Conservation when that group convenes in its annual meeting on Nov. 9 and 10 at Lans- ing. FORESTRY GROUP HEARS MATTHEWTS ments were divorced from the scrambling mob. Upon examina tion they proved to be nothing more than campaign slips from the two opposing political factions that .re reputed to exist on this campus, Mtate and Washtenaw. "Washtenaw may have the Coun- cil, but State street has The Daily" is among the most famous last, lines. However, neither faction gotl these freshman votes. They just weren't in for these dirty politics! We, the spectators, were begin- ning to hold our breath, for turn- ing into the Natural Science build- ing was a girl, and we were afraid the same performance was to be repeated. But none of these fresh- men seem to have forgotten their high school day when "There is al- ways time for courtesy" was posted on every bulletin board. This time they shoved and elbowed one an- other in an attempt to place their ticket in her hand. After ten min- ute's of watching a score of aspir- ants striving for her hand, she calmly informed them, "i'm one of the candidates in this election." But while there's life, there's hope. Half of the thundering herd were left in a condition to continue, the desolation. Oklahoma Argicultural and Min- ing college also surpassed our worthy upper classes. A Miss Zula MUSEUM FELLOWSHIP GIVEVN TODR. KOELZ Dr. A. G. Ruthven, Director, Makes Award For Research On Fish TEN YEAR REPORT READY Dr. W. N. Koelz, engaged in re- search work on fish at the Mu- seum, has been granted a Loyd fellowship for further research in his field, it was announced by Dr. Alexander G. Ruthven, director of the Museum. Dr. Koelz has been engaged for ten years in examining and cata- loguing specimens of white fish and herring for the U. S. bureau of fisheries. A report of the work covered by him in these years will be off the press in several weeks. The fish that Dr. Koelz is inter- ested in mainly were brought down by the successive glaciers that cov- ered the North American contin- ent and were deposited in the Great Lakes and smaller lake of this region. The fish since that time have evolved into many dif- ferent forms even within the same species. Dr. Koelz is attempting to discover the fundamental factors that have caused the change in the fish, so that future breeding for the best specimens will be facilitat- ed. To do this each fish must be carefully measured, gills, length, and size. One of the results of Dr. Koelz' monumental work is a collection of .whitefish in the Museum which is probably the largest in the world. Dr. Koelz was naturalist with the McMillan Polar expedition in 1925. He was directly in charge of all the biological work, collecting fish, birds, and other specimens. On this expedition the party went to the northern extreme of Green- land, much further north than the University's geological station, Mt. Evans. Dr. Koelz hopes to be able to' go with McMillan again in the near future. Mae Felts was chosen as queen of the freshman class by no less a margin than 3,000,000 votes, which is more than twice the majority with which our senior class of- ficers were elected. Did some one say she was the nation's sweet- heart? FACULTY GROUP NAMED TO CONDUCT Prof. Robert Cusn-an, Cornell. The contest will probably be held NEW YORK CURRENT EVENTS CONTEST in March ba monthearlier than that of last year. T e executive In preparation for the annual toric departmen. Three of these body has wbh the rep- New York Times Intercollegiate, men have served on the committee resent.i'. ehools en- Current Events contest a faculty in previous years. tered in wiwill an- The date of the contest has not nounce the ;n a short committee has been selected to yet been definitely settled, but the time. supervise the competition and to matter is in the hands of a special conduct examinations. national executive committee, The body is headed by Prof. which is endeavoring to set a time' Esatisfactory to the twenty institu- The Acme o Everett S. Brown of the political tions participating. This group is science department, who is the composed of Prof. Ellen D. Ellis,'F1P (- Vr University of Michigan representa- Mt. Holyoke, chairman; Prof. tive of the academic council of the ! Henry Huntington, Brown; and organization. It includes four other members of the faculty; " Prof. John L. Brumm of the jour- Get Acquainted With SERVICE nalism department, Prof. Preston W en,-fl hlcrn ,. --..- - i N *d WEB AND FLANGE INITIATES TODAY Web and Flange, honorary engi- I neering society, will hold its an-, nual initiation at 3 o'clock this1 afternoon at the West Engineering t"Plantations in the Tropics" was Arch, followed by a banquet at the the subject of Prof. D. M. Mat- Michigan Union at 6:30 o'clock this thews, of the Forestry school, at evening. The following men, all the meeting of the Forestry club ,members of the senior class, are Wednesday night in Natural Sci- to be initiated: J. J. Burgess, J. W. Brown, L. E. Bury, G. C. Ernst, ence building. W. G. Fyfe, C. H. Gherken, A. W. Prof. Matthews discussed his Hoy, J. C. Kohl, T. M. Lesly, A. plantation work in Cuba, far east, W. Miyanaga, S. H. Purdy, W. C. and South America and illustrated Senkpiel, L. C. Van Mere, L. K. his talk with photographs. He toldI Wenzel, and L. C. Winklehaus. of the research he had done in the capacity of consulting forester for The Charleston and Yale blues the United States Fruit company have been changed into much more and the Cuba company, both of stately dances than those that pa- Cuba, where he goes twice a year raded under these names hereto- to perform work for these con- fore. cerns. niteffaszionedOxfords Ankle-Fashioning, the touch- down in shoe making. You'll "cheer" the* thought of an ox- ford that always fits atthe ankle and never slips at the heel. . SAFFELL & BUSH Opposite Michigan Theater One Man Tells Another" 543 --The Hamfton ~" 'K Img'orte Black Scotch Grain; also Broum. I I I 00 .* 40 cr=1 ____ A./"1./lIS/"./"% ". ". '"« ~,d", . ".cede"".A... v"+ +"': ". °1..e"". Just in from the Mills: Brown Worsteds Shadow Striped Bulrush English Herringbone Worsteds Oxford Grays Faint Blue and Gray Stripes Come in and see them. - !tlt111111hi l llltttl 1t EEttllttl itl11t# 11 Iil IUIt111111# ll11#11 111111i ' - What could a gentleman send to the "One and only" if there were no flowers! For there really is nothing that can convey the message of affection so well as flowers. "Say It With Flowers" I