THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBE IR 22, 1933 MICHIGAN DAILY Established 1890 I tration to be understood, and more thoroughly enjoyed. Known as the Tragic Symphony, the work builds up from the beginning movement to the last, starting out with a sorrowful, brooding na- ture, continuing in the second, in a mood of mas- culine serenity. The third is not the merry scherzo that ordinarily brightens up a symphony at this point, but is, rather, one of veiled, distinct cheerfulness. The fourth movement has "confl- dent vitality", with a vigorous folk melody. The horn passage of this movement is famous. - - tI IN M~h Wl mVTrP _vWPIAm ublished every morning except Monday during the iversity year and Summer Session by the Board in ntrol of Student Publications. Vember of the Western Conference Editorial Associa- n a, the Big Ten News Service. a4ZZCiatEd (alo0etiate t MSz ~--=933 NATIONAL iR5{ 934 -= MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is ex6lusively entitled to the use - republication of all news dispatches credited to it or st otherwise credited in this paper and the local news tbshed herein. All rights of republication of special ;patches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as rond class matter. Special rate of postage granted by ird Assistant Postmaster-General. Subscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by mail. .50. During regular school year by carrier $3.75; by ai1, $4.25.. Df ices: Student Publications Building, Maynard Street, n Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 21214. Rep'ese tatives: College Publications Representatives, c., 40 Est Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 'ylston Street, Boston; 612 North Michigan Avenue, Liago. EDITORIAL SrAFF Telephone 4925 ANAGING EDITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN ITORIAL DIRECTOR................C. HART SCHAAF TY EDITOR....................BRACKLEY SHAW ,ORTS EDITOR...........ALBERT H. NEWMAN OMEN'S EDITOR......... ......CAROL J. HANAN GHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph G. Coulter, Wil- Liam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. OMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret Phalan. 'ORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, Donald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie Western. SPORTERS: Ogden G. Dwight, Paul J. Elliott, Courtney A. Evans, Ted R. Evans, Bernard H. Fried, Thomas Groehn, Robert D. Guthrie, Joseph L. Karpinski, Thomas H. Kleene, Burnett B. Levick, Irving F. Levitt, David G. Macdonald, S. Proctor McGeachy, Joel P. Newman, John M. O'Connell, Kenneth Parker, Paul W. Philips, George I. Quimby, Mitchell Raskin, William R. Reed, Robert S. Ruwitch, Robert J. St. Clair, Marshall. D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, William F. Weeks, Philip T. Van Zile. OMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hammer, Florence Harper, Marie Heid, Eleanor Johnson, Jose- phine McLean,Marjorie Morrison, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Ruth Sonnanstine, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 USINESS MANAGER..............W. GRAFTON SHARP LEDIT MANAGER..........BERNARD E. SCHNACKE OMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER ...................... .............................. CATHERINE MC HENRY EPARTMENT MANAGERS: Local Advertising, Fred Her- trick; Classified Advertising, Russell Read; Advertising Contracts, Jack Bellamy; Advertising Service, Robert Ward; Accounts, Allen Knuusi; Circulation, Jack Ef- roymson. SISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Carl Fib- iger, Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, Norman Smith, David Wink- worth. NIGHT EDITOR: A. ELLIS BALL ather Coughlin legins Another Series.. .. ANOTHER season of radio sermons will be ushered in today by the ev. Fr. Charles E. Coughlin, pastor of the Shrine f the Little Flower at Royal Oak. Within, recent months, Fr. Coughlin has been ;sailed, p a r t i c u l a r l'y by a Detroit news- iper, as a demagogue and a person holding de- sions of grandeur. His method of presentation is idoubtedly flowery, and his addresses appeal ijefly to the emotions of the masses. On the her hand, Fr. Coughlin must be counted on as ie of the most powerful' persons in the country day. He has the largest audience that any 'eacher ever had. Millions of Americans tune every Sunday to hear the 'radio priest' assail fiat he believes to be the vices of modern cap- mism. The influence which he exercised during le 1932 presidential campaign cannot be esti- ated. The new administration realized his )wer for it gave him a seat high in its councils. It is true that Fr. Coughlin has been de- unciatory and, to a large degree, vaguely gen- al in his talks. But he has done as much as any an in obtaining the repudiation of the 'rugged dividualism' doctrine of the last decade. He s certainly done much to bring about the new >eralism. The position of the Catholic church has always en against 'rugged individualism.' It has always vored national co-operation. However, the posi- on of the church had not been clear in recent ars. The liberal encyclicals of Leo III and us XI on the rights of labor were not well- lown. It has been left for Fr. Coughlin to ex- und them to the American people. The power the 'radio priest' shows that a man who is will- g to work hard and who has a speaking ability ay still stir the masses. Musical Events Brahms First Symphony closes the program of e Boston Symphony Orchestra, Tuesday night. comes with a different kind of emotional force an the Stravinsky Rites of Spring, which pre- des it. This has to do with a personal emotion, e other a collective. The four movements are: I. Un poco sostenuto; allegro II. Andante sostenuto III. Un poco allegretto e grazioso Much could be read into Brahms that was never intended by him. Nevertheless, this does have a retrospective, contemplative character, befitting Brahms North German nature. It is concentrated evaluation of an individual experience. Closing with the Brahms, the program has no let down. Rather, it builds up from one high peak to another after the Rites of Spring. The ad- vantage of closing with the Brahms is that it is fairly well-known, and will compensate for the strangeness of the other. - Sally Place Hopwood Poetry These poems are printed through the courtesy of Poetry, in which magazine they originally appeared. Next Tuesday they will be reviewed by Professor Nor- man E. Nelson. They are by T. C. Wilson. GETTYSBURG What is it to me? do you think I care reverance took this form to thank the dead? Tribute paid with so many loads of cement, bronze plaques stuck on the stones, and memories honored by a generation of the sons of heroes. The wind blows down the highway SEETHEBATTLEFIELD THEYSATISFY across the ground where homage is an elevator taking up tourists to enjoy the view from the top (these looking down are also Americans) - strikes off to another place. On the monuments the sunlight pouring down is real; it warms: the soldiers felt it too. I had not thought even the sun's lustiness could stir these acres any more. . . Come on. Devotion's last full measure has been paid, and long ago. Let's get away from here. When the Light is Gone and the eyes seeking the tulips' bright red, behold the sharp edges worn away, the flowers a part of the darkness- It is then the trains calling and crying are closer, and the heart grows small in its singleness, watching the lights snapped on and off as the hours pass. Hoover, director of the Bureau of Criminal In- sane. GENERAL JOHNSON has acquired another claim to fame. He is the first person ever known to be late to a White House dinner. He and Mrs. Johnson were asked for eight o'clock dinner in honor of the president of Panama. But at eight o'clock Johnson was in the midst of a plea to a labor meeting. He finished at 8:15. Meanwhile the White House guests were "mak- ing conversation" in the East Room. At 8:25 they were going to dinner, just as the Johnsons ar- rived, breathless, 'in the lobby. SENATOR PAT HARRISON of Mississippi al- ways has had an enviable reputation as an or- ator. Now he has proved the magic of his voice for all time. He went to play golf with Col. Ed Halsey, Sen- ate secretary. Harrison putted and the ball stop- ped, coyly, on the edge of the cup. Halsey was keeping score and marked down a six for Harrison. The senator objected and start- ed to talk coaxingly to the ball in his low, resonant voice. Suddenly the ball rolled quietly into the cup. And Halsey marked up a par five for Har- rison. MILD bets are being placed again on the cap- itol's most famous fur coat. It's a huge, ankle length, black affair worn for the past 30 years by Rep. Robert Holden Tinkham of Massachusetts. Will it see its thirty-first year of service? Tinkham explains that he likes the coat - but, really, it is his ardent dislike of shopping. Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. AT THE MAJESTIC "ANN VICKERS" ***FINE SCREENING OF LEWIS' STORY Ann Vickers..................Irene Dunne Judge Dolphin..............Walter Huston Malvina Wormser.......Edna May Oliver Lindsay Atwell............... Conrad Nagel The Lieutenant ................Bruce Cabot In bringing Sinclair Lewis' "Ann Vickers" to the s c r e e n, RKO-Radio Pictures has achieved striking entertainment without deviating too far at any time from the main current of the book, now a best-seller. Irene Dunne and Walter Huston co-starred in this picture seemingly destined for popularity al- most equal to that of Lewis' original. The screen, of course, found it necessary to add what Holly- wood considers a faster tempo, intensified ro- mance, and "vivid realism", or what Mr. Lewis would undoubtedly call "plenty of zip and go for good old Zenith-we'll by gosh show 'em." Brilliant characterization by Miss Dunne and Huston feature this drama of a sociologically- minded young woman who is not afraid to tell the world where it can get off, and Miss Oliver, Caboa, and other strong figures lend able sup- port . The restrained directing hand of John Cromwell is much in evidence throughout. Although a great deal of credit must go to the RKO-Radio men for not making a silver hash of Lewis' strong work, it must at the same time be admitted that the sociological reforms advocated by Lewis are almost entirely left out. Lewis dwelt on them constantly; the movie reflects them only in passing. Where Lewis devoted a chapter, the movie can only spare a fleeting glimpse. And to make "vital realism" of what is, indeed, a well- nigh plotless book, as so many Lewis' works are, takes injections which Author Lewis may not so cordially approve of. To date, however, no Dreis- er-like complaints have been recorded. - G. M. W., Jr. SUSAN, WHO AIMS TO BE DIFFERENT, KISSES GENE RAYMOND FOR SISTER By HUBBARD KEAVY HOLLYWOOD - By this time Mary Kaaren (back there in Brooklyn), you have received a let- ter from your impulsive little sister, Susie, telling you that she has fulfilled your wish. Susie says she thinks you won't believe that, the very first time she saw Gene Raymond, she kissed him for you, just as you had requested. But she did. I saw her and so did several others. One of the witnesses to this strange conduct of Susie's was Ussaki Zade Bulent, secretary to the Turkish embassy in Washington, with whom Susie was lunching. His expression, when Susie jumped up to rush over to Raymond's table, said something like: "In Turkey, women don't do such things, but this is America - and Holly- wood." Susan Kaaren has been assured she'll get along in Hollywood, she tells me, because she's always doing queer and unexpected things. She believes no one in the movies is altogether normal, or one wouldn't be in them. Fu'ned Down A Test Her chance to come to Hollywood was the re- sult of an unpremeditated decision. Nearly two years ago, when she had just started on the stage, Susan was asked to take a movie test. Owing to her lack of experience, she refused. A few days ago she happened to be in the vici- nity of the Fox New York studio. "I guess I'll ask if I can take that test now," said Susan. She took the test, went home to tell her parents (and her two sisters and her two brothers) that she was going to Hollywood. "I'm quite psychic," says Kaaren. "I get that from my mother. I knew, while I was taking the test, that I'd be in Hollywood before long. Sure enough, a couple of days later, I signed a contract. Steps Ahead Susan's test, different from the average in that r. F I Too easily impressed, the heart attains no indifference - it has not learned to stand apart from these things though they bruise it. 'I Among the lights, the born of passing cars, the boats loading and unloading the idle talk of men at corner grocery stores . Secure in its own strength - a dark mass that will not surrender to stars - the night is a lesson in wisdom. BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCH ESTRA DR. SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor 110 PLAYERS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 8:15 Sharp Washington Off The Record By SIGRID ARNE THE two of them were leaving the White House in quite a hurry -Secretary Woodin of the treasury and Henry Bruere, new co-ordinator of federal credit agencies. They made a simultaneous dive for the door of the waiting limousine and bumped heads. They bowed and tried again. They bumped again. "Well," said Woodin, "lets flip for it." Solemnly Bruere pulled out a xnickle and "flip- ped," and just as solemnly Woodin- pronounced, "Heads." Woodin won. EVER so often a westerner in the capitol can't resist giving an easterner a little thrill in the wide-open-spaces manner. The urge took "Wild Bill" Lyons of Denver, special assistant to P.ostmaster General Farley and formerly a Colorado state senator. At a post-world series celebration Lyons strap- ped on a rattlesnake belt with a .45 appended and, assuming a pose, announced ominously, "We shoot from this position." It was so sudden that most of the guests slid rapidly behind chairs. But Carl Hubbell, himself, from Oklahoma and now pitcher for the Giants, just reached up for Lyon's gun and announced reassuringly, "Shucks, he doesn't mean anything." IN the lulls at the White House offices three newspapermen and Marvin McIntyre, secre- tary to the President, put their heads together Program "EINE KLEINE NACHTMUSIK" Serenade.............Mozart for String Orchestra (Koechel No. 525) I. AllegroIII. Menutto; Allegretto II. Romanza IV. Rondo: Allegro "LE SACRE DU PRINTEMPS" ("The Rite of Spring").. Stravinsky A Picture of Pagan Russia I. The Adoration of the Earth Introduction - Harbingers E of Spring - Dance of the Adolescents - Abduction - Spring Rounds - Games of the Rival Cities - The Procession of the Wise Men - The Adoration of the Earth (The Wise Man) - Dance of the Earth. II. The Sacrifice Introduction - Mysterious Circles of the Adolescents - Glorification of the Chosen One - Evocation of the Ancestors - Ritual of the Ancestors - The Sacrificial Dance of the Chosen One. SYMPHONY No. 1 in C MINOR, Op. 68 . . . . . . . . . . ..Brahms I. Un poco sostenuto; Allegro II. Andante sostenuto III. Un poco allegretto e grazioso IV. Adagio; Allegro non troppo, ma con brio brio