THE -LMICHIGAN-DAILY MICHIGAN DAILY Establshed 1890 The concert, to be held in Hill Auditorium this evening, will begin at 8:15. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ' ORGAN RECITAL Discant on the Chorale "Nun freut euch lieben .............................Ducis Prelude ........................Clerambault Toccata per l'Elevazione..........Frescobaldi Fantasia and Fugue in C-minor........ Bach Sonata Eroica....................Jongen Prelude on an Ancient Flemish M elody ......... .................Gils(41 Pantomime.....................Jepson Prelude to "The Blessed Damozel"-.............Debussy-Christian This p r o, r a m is varied both as to styles, e composers, and nationalities: French, Belgian, " Italian, German, and American. Writings of early - composers as well as literature of modern and contemporary writers is presented. The Sonata Eroica is new to this series. The Toccata of Frescobaldi is of the. s he e r e s t contemplative beauty. With its surprising turns and twists, the e Pantomime, by the organist of Yale University, r is decidedly novel. 11 I., Hopwood Poetry' EDITOR'S NOTE: The two poems printed in this column Sunday were unfortunately run together as one poem. The second poem "When the Light Is Gone" begins with the lines: and the eyes seeking the tulips PLAY PRODUCTION PRESENTS Uncle Tom' S Cabin OCTOBER 25, 26' 27, 28 REVIEW OF TWO POEMS By HERMIONE RiPMAN By PROF. N. E. NELSON 11 Published every morning except Monday during th iversity year and Summer Session by the Board i ntrol of Student Publications. Member of the Western Conference Editorial Associa n a'I the Big Ten News Service. zsociated 0 loUgiate 9 rezz 1 933 NATIONAL OEAE1 4E MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS; The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the *us republication of all news dispatches credited to it c t otherwise credited in this paper and the local new bished herein. All rights of republication of speci patches are reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Anni Arbor, Michigan, a ond class matter. Special rate of postage granted b ird Assistant Postmaster-General. ubscription during summer by carrier, $1.00; by ail 50. During regular school year by carrier, $3.75; b Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre SATURDAY MATINEE AT SPECIAL PRICES BOX OFFICE NOW OPEN Li }y 1.i S. P. vs 51 A Washington BYSTANDER '5- Offices: Student Publications Bul ding, Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan. Phone: 2.1214, Represeio.tatives: College Publications Representatives, Inc., 40 East Thirty-Fourth Street, New York City; 80 Boylston Street, Boston; 612 North' Michigan Avenue, Chicago. EDITORIAL S TAFF Telephone 4925 MANAGING DITOR.........THOMAS K. CONNELLAN EDITORIAL DIRECTOR...... .."..:..C. BART SCHAAF CITY EDITOR.....................BRACKLEY SHAW SPORTS EDITOR....,.........ALBERT H. NEWMAN WOMEN'S EDITOR.................CAROL J. HANAN NIGHT EDITORS: A. Ellis Ball, Ralph '. Coulter, Wil- liam G. Ferris, John C. Healey, E. Jerome Pettit, George Van Vleck, Guy M. Whipple, Jr. WOMEN'S ASSISTANTS: Barbara Bates, Eleanor Blum, Lois Jotter, Marie Murphy, Margaret Phalan. SPORTS ASSISTANTS: Charles A. Baird, 'Dohald R. Bird, Arthur W. Carstens, Sidney Frankel, Roland L. Martin, Marjorie 'Western. REPORTERS: 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, David G. Mac- Donald, 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, Marshall D. Silverman, A. B. Smith, Jr., Arthur M. Taub, Philip T. Van Zile. WOMEN REPORTERS: Dorothy Gies, Jean Hammer, Florence Harper, Marie Held, Eleanor Johnson; Jose- phine McLean, Marjorie Morrison, Rosalie Resnick, Mary Robinson, Jane Schneider, Margaret Spencer. BUSINESS STAFF Telephone 2-1214 BUSINESS MANAGER............W. GRAFTON SHARP CREDIT MANAGER...........BERNARD '. SCHNACKE WOMEN'S BUSINESS MANAGER................. ..... .......... CATHERINE MC HENRY DEPARTMENT 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. ASSISTANTS: Meigs Bartmess, Van Dunakin, Carl Fib- iger, Milton Kramer, John Ogden, Bernard Rosenthal, Joe Rothbard, James Scott, Norman Smith, David Wink- worth. NIGHT EDITOR: GUY M. WHIPPLE, JR. Russo-American Haze Clearing. . HROUGHOUT this country the re- action to the coming diplomatic accord between the communist Union of Soviet Socialist Republics on the one hand and the "cap- italist-planning" United States of America on the other hand has been one of optimism, approval, and relief. The philosophy expressed in former Gov. Alfred E. Smith's epigram, "They are there, aren't they, why not recognize them?" has won cut at last over Red-baiting senators and repre- sentatives, the reactionary press, the timidity of three Presidential Administrations, and the same horror of radicalism with which, we are informed, Catherine of Russia regarded the baby American Republic in the 1790's. At it took an enlightened Alexander to recognize the United States after the turn of the Nineteenth Century, so it took an en- lightened Roosevelt to make the overtures which will end the present strained and artificial rela- tions between the two great powers. By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON, Oct. 24.- The immediate tariff policy of the Roosevelt administration seems, to be to mark time. Clothed as he is with tariff powers larger than any ever enjoyed by a White House predecessor, the President so far has acted in only a minor case or two or under the flexible provisions of the tariff act. . Whether the delay arises from necessity of awaiting the outcome of NRA efforts or is due more to unanticipated events, like the London con- ference stalemate, which impeded progress of the negotiated tariff idea so prominent in Roosevelt campaign arguments is entirely clear. The fact remains that seven months after his inauguration Mr.Roosevelt has made little use of his special tariff powers. THE flexible tariff provision authorizes the Pres- ident to raise or lower any specific duty rate by 50 per cent upon recommendation of the tariff commission. When the national industrial recov- ery act came along additional powers were granted to meet fears that any raise in domestic prices would bring a flood of imports. The President even may lay an embargo against any importation that threatens domestic recovery measures. That is a one-way ticket, however. No additional power to lower was included. IMPORTER representatives say the tariff com- mission is moving slowly. It has been flooded with requests for studies. There is little indication that it has forwarded recent recommendations to the White House in any important case. Even the plea for a reduction in duties on beer, alleged to be prohibitive even if it cost foreign brewers nothing to make it, has produced no results as yet. MISS KATHERINE C. BLACKBURN, called "Casey" by White House insiders, got quick action on her clipping bureau assignment. Within 10 days after she started it down in NRA head- quarters, a daily digest of what hundreds of papers were saying about NRA and many other things was reaching designated administration desks by noon each day. The government never has had anything like it before. Various departments have endeavored to keep their ears to the ground by surveys of the press, but not on that scale on which "Casey" Blackburn's bureau is doing it. Collegiate Observer In the first poem, "Gettysburg," Mr. Wilson re- cords his resentment at the blatant commercial- izing of a field which was once a holy ground; only the sunlight is the same now as long ago; the field itself has been vulgarized. In spite of the mount- ing rhythm (which lapses in clarity and inevit- ability in lines seven to thirteen) the feeling is somewhat pale. Having some likeness in subject matter and phrasing to E. E. Cummings it lacks entirely his lustiness. Mr. Wilson expresses a gentile nausea at what would have made Cum- mings hopping mad. Mr. Eliot I imagine would have whipped the crowd with ribald scorn. The poem adequately says what any imaginative per- son must feel at seeing the battlefield so dese- crated. I cannot see that it conveys to the reader an experience distinguished or valuable enough to be embodied in verse. That the second poem is more satisfactory may indicate Mr. Wilson's present limitations as a poet. For here the sensitive man recoils from the bur- den imposed upon him by the world of experience: Too easily impressed the heart attains no indifference - and desires to be as indifferent to the color, shape, and sound of things as Night is. The poem is satisfactory because it is balanced and skillfully ordered rhythm and phrase. It suggests important limitations, however, in turning away from the world for what the reader must feel are insuffi- cient reasons. Mr. Wilson has some qualities, technical skill, sensitivity, and clear ordering of his emotions, which help to constitute a talent. He may well, in time, develop the sturdiness which should complement his sensitivity, and he will, I think, work his way toward a more regular verse form, which it seems to me would be more appro- priate for his particular qualities of mind and imagination. L It's a good number to keep in mind. You'll want it if yoe; } LOSTI a book, or key or fountain pen, theni if you've by chance PHONE 6300 FOR RESERVATIONS 'IIIl 2-1214 I FOUND 4' a coat, a badge, or hat Screen Reflections Four stars means extraordinary; three stars definitely recommended; two stars, average; one star, inferior; no stars, stay away from it. AT THE MICHIGAN **"DOCTOR BULL" Doctor Bull.. . ... . ... . ..........Will Rogers Janet Cardmaker.. .............Vera Allen May Tupping ................ Marion Nixon Joe Tupping ................... Howard Lally Howard Banning.......... Berton Churchill Mrs. Banning............ . Louise Dresser Dr. Verney ................... .. Ralph Morgan Larry Ward.. ................Andy Devine "Doctor Bull" will have an appeal to the "home folks"...It's just that way. It's a picture of the typical country doctor done very well by Will Rogers. There is some good satire, on the small American town of today which smacks a bit of Sinclair Lewis. Director Ford and author Cozzens somehow for- got that not so long ago Lionel Barrymore made quite a success in his picture "Country Doctor". "Dr. Bull" is too much like Barrymore's show. But then again we suppose we should be impressed with the fact that somewhere some one is making the supreme sacrifice. That is just what Doctor Bull does when he discovers a typhoid fever epi- demic slowly spreading over the little town of Winton; he cures a man of paralysis; tells a col- lege girl to marry the football player she met at the house party; starts off a shot-gun wedding (which for some reason the audience thought was terribly funny) and then gets married himself. Everybody gossips in Winton (just as in any other town) and Doctor Bull is watched as he courts widow Janet Cardmaker until people try to pin negligence of his duty as Health Officer on him and get Doctor Verney, the rich man with a World's Fair laboratory, to take his place. But then Janet's swindling brother is exposed as the creator of the typhoid germ starting in his lum- ber camp near the Winton water supply. Atten- tion swings back and forth until Jo Tapping is made to walk again and Doctor Bull's triumph over the "withered hags" (Shakespeare) is com- plete. Rogers is as ever: witty, bashful, and practical, chugging about Winton in his old roadster doing service to the sickly and poor. Rochelle Hudson (who looks like a college girl)), Louise Dresser (who makes a good stubborn, conceited lady), Vera Allen (who has a rather young voice for her age), Ralph Morgan (whose clothes don't fit as well as his brother Frank's), Iarion Nixon (who sems to improve a little with each picture), and Andy Devine (who should find himself another voice or else gargle a bit) support politician Rog- ers in this quaint, but fresh sketch of "Doctor Bull." In the Paramount News there are poor pictures of the Michigan-Ohio game (jerky, no sound, and too fast). Ted Healy and his three mischievous sons try a little humor in an M-G-M musical novelty, while Grantland Rice's "Water Lure" is interesting if you enjoy back flips, Coney Island, and Eleanor Holm's swimming.0 2-12141 will help to find the owner. But that isn't all. If you would like to RENT a room, or have one rented, t e same little number will do it. A lot of other things too . try it MCY-LASSIFI DSI 'F '. -.5': N Phone 2-1214 II1I DI. SERGE KOUSSEVIFZKY, conductor 110 PLAYERS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24 8:15 Sharp ry I YrI\ a On the economic front we-find a strong approval >f recognition. Peter A. Bogdonov. in particuler1 has cause to exult. The bearded chief of the ex- ;ensively-outfitted A m t o r g, n o n-CommunistI Soviet trading organization in the United States, now sees an opportunity to regain the ground be ost during the great depression, which clamped lown with abnormal severity on his concern. Conservative estimates show that the Amtorg, holder of an airtight monopoly on United States exports to Russia, will be the recipient of trade extending well into the hundred millions of dol- lars. Bogdanov will, be able to rehire the huge clerical force he was forced to discharge in the more trying economic period now happily in the past and the Amtorg's huge New York offices will once again bustle to the click of the American dollar. And it will not be a one-way road-- this road back to a measure of prosperity through the med- ium of trade with the Red state. American bank- ers, traders, mill-men, commercialists of every de- scription, even the American farmer, for so long a time downtrodden, are expected to benefit. The truly tragic surpluses of every kind of goods in ,the United States will have an outlet to a huge coun- try which is thirsty for consumers' articles. If Maxim Litvinoff agrees to the demands which will be pressed upon him when he comes to Wash- ington, the official establishment of recognition will ensue., Those who think with their heads rather than their feet, those who reflect rather than declaim,.will conclude that recognition will be beneficial to this country, and that recognition does not mean Roosevelt has "sold us out to the Reds." By BUD BERNARD Tulane University's handsomest and best dress- ed. men have former a gigolo club to keep their co-eds in dates. The rates of the club are as fol- lows: $2 for a formal dance; and $1 for an in- formal dance. The men claim that they save a lot of time by not calling up the women and try- ing to get dates. The club takes care of all the details. And then from Southern Methodist University we find that co-eds have formed a "perfect date" club to which the most attractive girls on the campus belong. A new expression has been added to the collegiate wordbook of slang. "Boy she's stacked!" is the precise way in which it is used. Translated from American into Eng- lish, to be stacked means to possess a beau- tiful figure. The Colorado State Teachers College newspaper has found another way of playing with dynamite - it's sponsoring a contest among the students to select the best liked faculty member. * * * : During a psychology lecture, at the Univer- sity of Mississippi, the professor was explain- ing the high development of an animal's'sense of smell. "Animals smell better than me", he asserted. A student, not being able to control himself, yelled out, "Professor, have you ever lived near a goat?" * * * Program "EINE KLEINE NACHTMUSIK" Serenade...... . . . for String Orchestra (Koechel No. 525) 1. Allegro III. Menutto; Allegre Mozart tto II. Romanza IV. Rondo: Allegro "LE SACRE DU PRINTEMPS" A Picture of Pagan Russia ( The ie of Spring") Stravinsky I. The Adoration of the Earth Introduction - Harbingers ,of Spring:- Dance, of the Adolescents - Abduction - Spring Rounds - 4anes of the Rival Cities - The Procession of the Wise Xn The Adoration of the Earth (The Wise lan) - Dance of the Earth. II. The Sacrfice 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. i in C MINOR, Op. 68....B.. ... .Brahms I. Un poco sostenuto; Allegro II. Andante sostenuto III. Un poco allegretto e grazioso IV. Adagio; Allegro non troppo, ma con brio -R.E.L. By way of soothing his troublesome conscience an alumnus of the University of California re- turned to the Berkley campus recently to return 25 cents to the co-op store cashier, the amount I bad manager; if he is rich he is dishonest. If he needs credit, he can't get it; if he is prosper-