THEMICHIGANI 1 X1CiY SUNDAY, JAN. 22, 19~30 AbboWFirst Band Concert ernity, will wield the baton for one of the numbers, wnhile Prof. William D. To Be Given Today Revelli will direct the main part of A G n ethe program. (Continued from Page 1) Fraternity men, who have helped In Radio FedIN-with the publicity preceding the con- will take care of the fraternity men's cert, will attend the concert en masse, contribution to the program, singing and will take charge of the ushering. By ETHEL Q. NORBERG "The Loving Cup." The program is as follows: "Komm Rivaling the Kentucky mountain Student Director Lee Chrisman, Susser Tod" by Bach; overture to feuds in bitterness is the vendetta be- '39SM, of Alpha Kappa Lambda fra- "Euryanthe" by von Weber; "The ing carried on over the air by Prof. Waldo M. Abbot, director of the Unive:city Broadcasting Service, and.I "Happy Joe" Gentile, chief breakfast clubber, of CKLW, with the score YOUR HEART WILL one up for Gentile. When Professor Abbot was con- pulse pound...to the ducting his extension class in radio your l willp. through the studios of CKLW in greatest musical lovestory ever Windsor he made a point of razzing bogtt h cen M y Gentile for his "so-called" dramaticbe sketches from 6:30 to 9 a.m. every times" singing sweethearts.. .in morning. Gentile returned the com- M- s mightiest achievement! pliment the next morning with ef- feminate imitation of Professor Ab- bot's voice commending favorably on the sketches. In return for this Professor Ab- bot sent to Happy Joe a copy of his "Handbook of Broadcasting" point- ing out that Gentile broke every fun- damental law of broadcasting men- tioned in the book which is used as a handbook of broadcasting in 26 universities. In the enclosed letter in VICTOR HERBERT'S he added, "Please, in the future, make my voice a little more masculine." And Happy Joe responded with a two-minute plug for Professor Ab- bot's book. Who will win in the final analysis is a matter of conjecture. John L. Lewis, Toscanini, the Lunts. George Bernard Shaw and many others, including the panda at the Chicago Zoo. FwA Debutante" by Clark, a euphonium solo played by Donald Marrs; Second Movement, "Symphony in C minor" by Ernest Williams; "Procession of the Nobles" from "Mlada" by Rim- sky-Korsakoy; "Sarabande" and "Lasci Ch'io Pianga" by Handel; "Phaeton" by Saint-Saens; "The Stars and Stripes Forever" by Sousa: and "Michigan Fantasy" by Karl King, arranged by Donn Chown. Harry Burnett, '23, who conceived and built the fifty portrait puppets which comprise the cast for the Yale Puppeteers' new musical revue, "It's A Small World," shows the skirts he has put on Der Fuhrer, who for once can't do a thing about it. On the upper tier in their packing cases can be glimpsed Emperor Hirohito,,Mussolini, Hitler (the latter two do a sister act in the revue), Mrs. Roosevelt, Martha Graham, Toscanini, and on the lower tier, Alfred Lunt, Lynn Fontanne, and John L. Lewis as he will appear in heaven. "It's A Small World" will be presented at 8:30 '.m. Tuesday at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. E. F. BOWEL i ounices I To Join In Staging Novel Puppet Revue "It's A Small World," the Yale the Opening of a New Barber Shop NOW SHOWING Shows Continuous Today 1 - 11 P. M. All Seats 35c TODAY 1 -3-5-7- 9P.M. NOW BIG JOY AND JIT- PLAYING! TERBUG JAMBOREE! Grvec pictuoe rengS Ii I 1 /1 CASH PAID for your discarded clothing. Claude Brown, 512 S.1 sday, .1aury 24 Main. 311 75c and 50c BOX OFFICE NO' J-HOP furniture for rent. Call 3676. Alexander's, 417 E. Liberty. 324 I I I I s _ 1 , l 4