PAGE SIX" THE MICHIGAN ]DAILY rIDAY, JANUARY 1?, 1950 M SIGNS OF THE FLAPPER ERA: Flamboyant Ads Enticed Movie Fans * * * By BOB SOLT " What does every girl want? Freedom! . . . and beautiful clothes, a car, jewelry, happiness, and satisfaction of a million de- sires. "But for certain, there is one thing every girl in town wants To see 'Girls Gone Wild!'" Twenty years ago movie ads like the one above were printed in The Daily by local "sound empo- riurn" managers to entice sheiks and flappers on the campus to the local flicker shows. WITH GLOWING catch-words, these movie blurbs assured stu- dents that they would "behold moonlit lagoons, whispering palms, and untamed, unmasked love when. Ramon Novarro as 'The Pagan' depicts thousands of thrills that are beyond imagination!" No doubt there are some Uni- versity professors on the campus today who can recall back as far as 1918 when a movie ad publi- cized "Cleopatra" with Theda Bara in the starring role as the "most stupendous, sumptuous, and sensational film spectacle on earth." * It's a movie like a scarf heavy with legends of antiquity," the ad continued, "and rich with the lux- uries and splendors of unbridled revelry-with smells of fire, a longer kiss, a little bliss, and a ser- pent hiss."' * * * FAIREST of all publicity game for early movie promoters were erring college girls of the "'lost generation." , "The Wild Party" starring Clara Bow was one of the social commentaries of the times in which misguided coeds were de- scribed as "the dazzling darlings of the dorms, victims of the flaming passion of youth and the cynicism of a man." One 1929 movie rhetorician couldn't resist using his wit to publicize a local show about "an average girl late for her work but on time for her great adven- ture! Her boy friend of the night before was her boss on the morn- ing after. She ignored. He im- plored. She sophisticated, father hesitated, son investigated! . . What did he find out?" * * * AD MEN were even aware of the value of using phrases of homespun simplicity to attract the attention of entertainment-seek- ing students. After posing the question whether the damsel in the celluloid epic would marry her true lve, one ad sincerely in- quired further whether "this girl's dreams will end at the altar, with her love drifting again in the careless current it knew before -Daily-Wally Barth FLICKER FANFARE - The flamboyancy of movie advertising in the late 20's is graphically il- lustrated by these examples taken from the pages of The Daily. Then as now, however, one ad- vertising trick was in use: favorable quotes from more or less famous people. For instance, a Chicago pastor, Al. L. Duncan, is supposed to have said about "Men Not Fit To Marry," "I heartily endorse showing it under proper conditions." Musician's Conference Begins Today 2,000 Regional Educators Meet Approximately 2,000 music edu- cators will converge on the Uni- versity today for the Fifth Annual Midwestern Conference on School Vocal and Instrumental Music, ending Sunday. The Conference, "which is re- ional in both scope and interest," according to Chairman William D. Fitch, of the music school, will bring teachers from Michigan, In- diana, Illinois, Ohio and Wiscon- sin. The meeting is sponsored jointly by the School of Music, ,he Michigan School Band and Drehestra Association and the Michigan School Vocal Associa- tion. TEACHERS registering for the conference at 8:30 a.m. today on he third floor of the Union will ;et a chance to examine an ex- zibit of school music supplies set up there. Highlighted in the ex- hibit is studio visual equipment used in modern musical teaching. Also present will be the Uni- versity's All State High School Band, Orchestra and Chorus, which meets for two weeks each semester at Interlochen. Their performance will feature music and teaching materials for olos, bands, orchestra and chorus, including music tosbeused in the 1950 district and state festivals. * * * AN UNUSUAL note in the Con- .erence will be provided at 3 p.m. in Harris Hall, when Robert Zild- ian will lecture on the history of .ymbals. Zildjian and his family mvere cymbal makers in Turkey, ind have been manufacturing the iercussion pieces for 15 years in his country. Concluding today's sessions, Dean Earl V. Moore, of the mu- sic school, will preside at a ban- quet meeting at 6:15 p.m. in the League Ballroom, at which James L. Mursell, head of the department of music at Teach- ers' College, Columbia, will speak on "The Central Empha- sis in Music Education." The University Clarinet Quartet vill provide dinner music. Gets Scholarship Leonard Verduin, director of the Campus Chapel of the Christian Reform Church has been awarded a Fullbright Scholarship for study in the Netherlands and Belgium. He will leave with his family on 7'eb. 3 for the Continent where -e intends to do research work on .he early history of the reforma- ion in Flanders. Verduin who took his M.A. in History at the University, estimat- ed that the trip will take nine months. -Daily-Barney Laschever HOT SHOTS-Members of the University's men's and women's rifle clubs score targets after their match, in which the men's team defeated the women, 987 to 944. Left to right are Dale Bess- ler, Joyce Watson, Martin Everitt and Polly Kay. * * * * Male Riflers k u she found real, honest, living love?" To find out, one only had to see 'The Shopworn Angel,' "a photoplay with 100 per cent sound." And should the student on campus complain about weird and bizarre movie plots of today, let him take notice of the 1929 film 'The Barker,' starring Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., which was adver- * * * WUOM Will Present Ty TysonToday TY Tyson, sportscommentator for WWJ will be heard over WUOM at 4:30 p.m. today as part of the WUOM dedication week program. He will be interviewed on his 35 years of broadcasting Michigan football by Les Ettr, Public Rela- tions Manager of the University Athletic Association. Also on the dedication week schedule for today is a salute from station WJR in Detroit at 10:45 p.m. The week's events will end to- morrow with two and one half hours of special programs, which will be carried by many Michigan stations. At least 13 alumni who stud- ied radio under Prof. Abbot, di- rector of the broadcasting serv- ice for 25 years, will be here to participate in a variety show from 2:30 to 3:30 p.m. Steve Filipiak, announcer and disc-jockey for WHRV will be master of ceremonies for the show. The day's events will wind up with a formal dedication program from Hill Auditorium at 4 p.m. tized as depicting "the real life, public relations man of today will' stark unadorned, where a Hula Queen fights for the right to be loved, a snake charmer turns temptress and steals white kisses from a yokel's lips, and a father fights to keep his son straight." COMPARING these movie ads of 1920 and 1950, the majority of students may agree that publicity styles have changed so that the hesitate to gush about "a poignant tale of tippling Thomas and his tainted Teresa." But perhaps just as many stu- dents willalso agree that the old publicity angle about a movie be- ing "a colossal epic with saints, sinners, and some sex" is still the main drawing card used by the movie ad men of today. PROF. DWYER'S DILEMMA: Exam Scheduling Called Tough VictoryOve It's still a man's world, buti sometimes they have a hard time1 proving it. At least that's what the Univer- sity Rifle Club thinks after ekeing out a close victory over a coed team Wednesday night. Composed of a small group of enthusiastic men, the club is try- ing to put riflery here on a par with other Big Ten schools. MICHIGAN is the only school U' Museums To Display MarineExhibi t Exhibits featuring marine life of the past and present will be on display from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today at the University Museums. Three motion pictures, "The Sea," "Born to Die," and "The Snapping Turtle" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Rm. 3024 of the Mu- seum. * * * ' THE MARINE LIFE surround- ing a coral reef during the De- vonian period of 300,000,000 years ago, and that of present day Ber- muda reefs is contrasted in a pair of displays created by artist Geo- rge Marchand. Intricate glass models are on display of the many inverte- brate animals of the seas, such as shell-less marine snails and sea squirts. A column case of shelled gas- tropods shows the wide diversity of form in a single group of marine invertebrates. The Alcove of Michigan Corals on the second floor has specimens of the coral formed by animals who swarmed the seas that cover- ed Michigan millions of years ago. r 'U' Coeds in the Western Conference which has no rifle team representing it. "It's a hard struggle," Samuel Kalow, club secretary said. Be- sides keeping ahead of the wom- en, the club has had to over- come a general lack of knowl- edge about target shooting on the part of the general public, he explained. "A target shooter uses entirely different equipment than the aver- age hunter," Kalow continued. "His rifle is much heavier, weigh- ing about 12 or 14 pounds. It's a .22 caliber weapon." ALL COLLEGIATE shooting is gallery or short-range work and matches are fired on a 50 foot indoor range. The course of fire covers three positions: prone, kneeling and off-hand (standing). Ten shots are fired in each posi- tion. Each shot has a possible value of 10 if it hits the bullseye. Thus a perfect score would be 300 or a "possible," in shooting jargon. The club fires every Wednesday night on the ROTC rifle range. They have already shot five pos- tal matches with other college teams around the country, losing only to the Universities of Wash- ington and Wyoming. WASHINGTON WON the Na- tional Intercollegiate Champion- ships last year. But though the struggle has been an uphill one, things are be- ginning to pay off for the club. ANN ARBOR v[ By DOLORES LASCHEVER The life of an exam man is not an easy one. No matter how fairly he spaces examinations, he is open to criti- cism from a part of the student body - and sometimes the faculty. His is one of those proverbial "thankless" jobs. * * * THE FIRST SEMESTER hasn't been so bad, according to Prof. Paul Dwyer, of the mathematics department, who, with Prof. C. F. Kessler, of the engineering school, makes up the exam schedules. "These exams can be spread over two weeks making the dis- tribution and the amount of time between exams less of a problem than in the second se- mester," Prof. Dwyer said. He explained that in recent years, with the increased enroll- ment, it was necessary to speed up the schedule of second semester exams to enable the technical side of commencement, exercises to be completed. "THE OBJECTIVE was to place examinations for all courses in which seniors and graduate stu- dents were enrolled in the first week of the exam period." But difficulty arose, Prof. Dwyer pointed out, because sen- Toper Film To BeShown "Topper Takes a Trip," the comic tale of a retired banker pursued by facetious ghostly friends, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. today and to- morrow in the Architecture Audi- torium. Featured in the film are Roland Young and Constance Bennett, plus Asta-the disappearing dog. The plot, a twist on the old tri- angle, gets tired Topper involved in a divorce suit, with a disappear- ing lady ectoplasm as the corres- pondent. Tickets for the film may be purchased from 1 p.m. until 5 p.m. in the Administration Building, or before each performance. iors were enrolled In almost every course on the curricula. "A committee is now studying the whole problem of commence- ment exercises," Dr. Frank E. Rob- bins, assistant to the president, said. * * * HE EXPLAINED that the com- mittee was formed after the fac- ulty of the literary college asked for some relief following a discus- sion of the expedients used in re- cent years to enable the completion of commencement records. Dr. Robbins pointed out that something can be done either about commencement exercises or about exams. "Plans for commencement are now under construction," he ad- vised, suggesting that graduation exercises would probably be modi- fied to provide relief from the stepped-up exam schedule. AS FOR THE actual making out of an exam schedule, however, Prof. Dwyer said it is too diffi- cult. "We have to provide periods for the first seven hours on Mon- day and Tuesday," he explained. "As for the irregular classes - those at noon, at 4 and 5 p.m. and in the evening - we set aside a few periods and let them take care of themselves." "If this were all we had to do," Prof. Dwyer continued, "the sched- ule would be easy. But some de- partments need to give uniform exams. He said that in cases where a department or a professor desire changes in the schedule, they are referred to the exam committee, consisting of Dean Charles H. Peake, Prof. Kenneth Jones, aca- demic counselor of the literary col- lege, and Prof. Dwyer, chairman of 'the committee. 116 N. Fourth Avo. Opposite Court House Phone 2-2549 ssets Over X $13, 500,000 R WELCOMES 30c PER BENDIX LOAD SOAP. IS FREE 30 MINUTES FOR YOUR ENTIRE WASH i f 1 f i i and A.I.M. ° t present rr~ "TOPPER TAKES A TRIP" TODAY and Saturday . . . 7:30 and 9:30 ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM Advance Sale 1 to 5 P.M. . .. Administration Bldg. I THE UD AU PEST STRING QUARTET Tills OUTSTANDING CHAMBER MUSIC GROUP OF OUR TIME Hear theni this week-end at the Rackham Auditorium. Enjoy their playing in your own home on COLUMBIA RECORDS Here are some Columbia LP Records by this Famous Quartet BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 1 BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 4 HAYDN: QUARTET NO. 30 (Horseman) BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 6 BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 11. BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 14 BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 15 DEBUSSY: QUARTET IN G MINOR HAYDN: QUARTET OP. 64 NO. 5 (Lark) HAYDN: QUARTET OP. 76 NO. 4 (Sunrise) MOZART: QUARTET NO. 1 IN G MINOR MOZART: QUARTET NO. 2 IN E FLAT with George Szell, Pianist MOZART: QUINTET IN C MINOR MOZART: QUINTET IN D MAJOR with Milton Katims, Violist Each $4.85 The Columbia catalogue is especially rich 4 4 J . : -- _ -- ..1 1. -- - Turtle Neck Sweaters 11 .. For Outdoor Activities . And Indoor Relaxation ... All Wool HALLICRAFTER MODEL 5-38 f