THE MICHIGAN DAILY F, P Tilles Outlines Gargoyle Plans For New Term Humor Publication :Hopes To Retain High Ranking Gained Last Year Plans to continue the Michigan Gargoyle in its position as the na- tion's outstanding college humorous magazine have been announced by Gilbert Tilles, '37, managing editor. Articles of timely interest and a new department will be featured in the first issue, which will be placed on campus sale Oct. 15. Throughout, the Gargoyle will sustain the high position which it gained when a committee of popular magazine pub- lishers last year chose it as the country's leading college humorous publication, Tilles says. A greater number of cartoons than ever before will be used this year, according to Tilles. The first issue will be largely concerned with foot- ball, and will include an article by Bill Reed of the Detroit Free Press and a former sports editor of The Daily. Sophisticated Lady, Preposterous People and the Men's Fashions de- partment will be continued this year as last. The first issue will intro- duce a new department of review and criticism. It will include books, music, drama and records. Eacl: issue will be replete with candid cam- era pictures, color photographs and photographs of clay models. All of the covers willabe in color. The Gargoyle has again obtained a con- tract with a leading company which will furnish cartoons by Petty, andr there will be a short story in each issue. The price of the Gargoyle for this3 year will be ten cents, and a subscrip-t tion for the year will cost 75 cents. n combination, the nine issues of the Gargoyle and six of Life may be ob- tained for one dollar.1 TO GET PAID National guardsmen will receive their pay for the past three monthsi period at the weekly drill tonight, thef commanding officer, Capt. Garnet Burlingame, announced last week. r Student Publications Building--Home Of The Michigan Daily G.O.P. Victory In Washtenaw Famed Musicians County Is Seen For NovemberPlay Here In May By CLINTON B. CONGER Ito 248 lead over the local man, but Led by Ann, Arbor, Washtenaw the returns from the city, as usual County, which has never yet gone i the last reported, were 742 to 405 for Democratic for more than a few of- Muyskens, Washtenaw County and fices in any election, is expected to Ottawa counties were the only ones return the complete Republican slate by a general 3-1 vote in the November elections. . In the recently completed primar- ies, Washtenaw County cast more than 10,000 ballots, above the general vote here even in presidential year, with nearly 8,000 asking for Republi- can ballots. Every candidate who won the nomination rolled up a bigger total than his prospective opponent in the final election, led by former Gov. Wilber M. Brucker with 6,242 votes against a total of 833 for his Democratic opponent in the race for United States Senator, Prentiss M. Brown. Ann Arbor, with eight of the coun- ty's 36 precincts, cast a total vote of 5,569 against 4,866 polled by the county. The city reversed the coun- ty's choice in four instances, and was itself overridden in only one in- stance. The outstanding instance was in the Democratic contest for United States Senator, where Prof. John H. Muyskens carried Washtenaw Coun- ty over Brown, 990 to 833. The con- test in the county gave Brown a 428 which returned Muyskens pluralities. Not a single precinct went Demo- cratic, although Lodi, usually on the Democratic side of the fence, cast only 37 Republican ballots over 34 Democratic votes. Exact opposites were the second precinct of Ann Ar- bor's second ward, known as the "Bloody Seventh" from its traditional ability to report in last and upset any close contest, where 1004 Republicans and 197 Democrats voted, and Sharm on township, where not a single Dem- ocratic vote was cast in a total of 47. Regent Charles F. Hemans of the University's Board of Regents, run- ning for the Lieutenant Governor's nomination on the Democratic tick- et, was the choice of Ann Arbor over Leon D. Case by a vote of 442 to 411, but this was the single instance in which the county overruled Ann Ar- bor, and Case got a plurality of 748 to 726. Professor Muyskens and Riedmond M. Burr, running for Congressional nomination on the Democratic ticket after serving as a Republican State Senator, were the only two men draw- ing Washtenaw County pluralities Internationally renowned musical. organizations, famous and distin- guished soloists and purely amateur choral units of University students all combine talents in Ann Arbor each spring in the annual May Festival, one of the outstanding musical fes- tivals in the United States. For 42 years, the May Festival has continually attracted outstanding figures in American music for its concert programs. Another great program is now be- ing assembled for the 1937 festival, one which is expected to surpass in splendor and magnitude its 42 pred- ecessors. Festival concerts present music- goers with an opportunity to hear vocal and instrumental soloists, an outstanding symphony orchestra, classic choral works, and, each sea- son, the world premier of some or- chestral or choral composition, who were not nominated when state- wide returns were tabulated. George P. McCallum, running for the twelfth district (Washtenaw and Oakland counties) State Senatorial nomination as a Republican, got a lead of nearly 5,000 in 'this county over Ralph T. Keeling, Oakland County man, which dwindled to 600 votes when Oakland's 107 precincts were counted in, but his local support assured him of the nomination. The brick building on Maynard Street shown above starts its fifth year this September as the birthplace of all student publications. Here the Gargoyle, the Michiganensian, Contemporary, Freshman Handbook, and The Daily are composed. Facilities Improved At Local Air Field A new administration building and new floodlights have been added to the Ann Arbor airport during the summer with the aid of WPA funds. The runway was also enlarged allow- ing the American Airways to operate one plane daily to Chicago and De- troit. The Ann Arbor Air Service has re- ccntly purchased a Hammond bi- plane, to replace an older model, it was announced by Gene Richardson, manager of the airport. Mr. Rich- ardson expects to continue his flying instructions to University coeds and expects to increase the size of his class which at the end of last semester numbered five students. 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