PAGE TVO'EMM-w w THE MICBTGAN DAILY TUEk PAGE TWENTY-TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY TIlE SDAV, SEPTEMBER 21, 1954 M _ .1 Half-Time Ceremonies ELECTION REVIEW: T reaar Trend ' etesGOP, 0 CHORAL UNION ROBERTA PETERS, Soprano THE SOCIETA CORELLI . . . BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CHARLES MUNCH, Conductor THE CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA . . GEORGE SZELL, Conductor JORGE BOLET, Pianist . . . . LEONARD WARREN, Baritone . RTS . Monday, October 4 . .Friday, October 15 . Wed., October 20 Sunday, November 7 MICHIGAN MARCHING BAND ... famous for speed, musicianship, precision U' Marching Band Famous For Precision Formations Monday, November 15 Sunday, November 21 . Sunday, January 16 . . Monday, March 7 VIENNA CHOIR BOYS (2:30 P.M.) ZINO FRANCESCATTI, Violinist BERLIN PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Tuesday, March 15 WI LHELM FURTWANGLER, Conductor NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC-SYMPHONY (2:30 P.M.) DIMITRI MITROPOULOS, Conductor . . . Sunday, May 22 EXTRA ELEANOR STEBER CONCERT , Soprano . . . . S SERIES The Michigan Marching Band. opens its season on Oct. 2 as it takes the field here marching at a cadence of 210 steps per minute. This highly polished company of men has established a reputation for precision marching, intricate dance steps and spectacular for- mations. They provide pre-game and half-time entertainment at all home games and often accompany the football squad to their contests away from Ann Arbor. Largest Band The Band this year is the largest to take the field, numbering 144 in addition to the drum major and the twirlers. At present, due to a large turnout of tryouts, the drum major and the twirlers have not been an- nounced. Twenty-five thousand miles, or a distance greater than the circum- ference of the globe is traversed each season by the Band, without leaving its practice field and the stadium in Ann Arbor. Precision Formations Precision formations range from the traditional Block 'M' to dance stunts that are so complex they have never been attempted by oth- er bands. At the opening game against Army on Oct. 2, the Band will present an Army show, honor- ing the West Point Cadets. The show is entitled "A Day In The Life Of A Plebe." Under the direction of Prof. Wil- liam D. Revelli, the band prac- tices from 4:20 to 5:40 p.m. four days a week. Instruction sheets bearing a maze of crosses and cir- cles are given to each bandsman. Out of the seemingly chaotic chart, a perfect formation is developed for the week's game. Musicianship Stressed Prof. Revelli also demands su- perior musicianship from his band, WELCOME COE DS Y! I Hairstyling to please you today The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater believing that marching is being over-emphasized when a band marches better than it plays. It is the Band's unusual balance between music quality and march- ing which gains the attention of both the layman and the profes- sional. Since its founding in 1895, the Band has been nationally fa- mous for its flashy routines as well. An instrumentation is employed with a balance between wood- Winds and brasses that is generally absent from college bands. Instru- ments are spread throughout the band instead of in separate sec- tions so that the quality sounds good from all sides. It is really four bands in one, Prof. Revelli. explained. Stresses Fundamentals Prof. *Revelli and George Caven- der, assistant conductor, spend 35 hours each on a show. A firm be- liever in fundamentals, Prof. Re- velli feels that if one stresses the fundamentals instead of perform- ance itself, the show is bound to be good. In addition, Prof. Revelli of- ten hears each member of the band individually to make sure that the tone is just right. The band maintains a cadence ranging from a slow 100 steps per minute to 176 during formations, depending on the music. However, Prof. Revelli maintains that the ca- dence which dazzles spectators takes second place to unity, preci- sion and coordination which is what really makes a band stand out. Museum Displays European Photos Currently on exhibit at Alumni Memorial Hall are exhibits of "Post-War European Photogra- phy" and "Olivetti: Design in In- dustry." The two exhibits will be dis- played until Oct. 7. "Post-War European Photogra- phy" includes 150 works by well- known photographers from Aus- tria, Denmark, England, France, Germany, holland, Italy, Luxem- bourg, Sweden and Switzerland.- Organized by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, "Olivet- ti: Design in Industry" is an exhi- bition of product design, graphic design and architecture of the Oli- vetti Company of Ivrea, Italy. By DAVE BAAD If President Dwight D. Eisen- hower is to have a Republican Congress in 1955 and 1956, his par- ty's candidates must reverse a trend. that has been reversed but once in United .States history. Only in 1934 when the Demo- crats, flushed with their success in dealing with depression hard- ships won a smashing Congres- sional victory, has the party in power gained seats in both the Senate and House during an off- year election. Present Situation At present the Republicans hold 48 Senate seats to 47 for the Democrats-there is one Inde- pendent-and their margin in the House is a narrow 219 to 215. Consequently if the voters fol- low precedent and send addition- al Democrats to Congress this No- vember, President Eisenhower's program, by necessity, will need Democratic votes in the next two years. Vice-President Richard M. Nix- on set the tone for Republican campaigns two weeks ago when. he told candidates in Cincinnati to 'run scared.' GOP leaders across the coun- try have announced that they are proud of the record of the 83rd Congress and that their Congres- sional aspirants can safely run on its accomplishments. Coming Issues However, the GOP is aware of the off-year trend and also of some other rumblings of discon- tent. Their new farm policy, the public vs. private power contro- versy and alleged recession ten- dencies are all likely to be much- discussed issues during the next few weeks. Most of the activity during the summer months has concerned primaries although last Tuesday Maine held its final election. As expected, Sen. Margaret Chase Smith won handily over Colby College Prof. Edward S. Muskie. However Sen. Smith's margin was 12 per cent less than in her Senate victory of 1948 and the state surprisingly elected a Democratic governor for the first time since 1934. Democrats Predict Democrats are elated over the results and immediately began predicting in some quarters that a 100 seat House majority in the 84th Congress was not out of the question. However it is obvious that local issues were strongly involved in the Maine election and possibly proved most conclusively that lo- cal problems are going to be de- cisive throughout the country this fall. New Jersey, Massachusetts and Kentucky appear to present the best opportunities for Democrats to secure additional Senate seats. Internal dissentioni within New Jersey's GOP ranks is Republican candidate Clifford P. Chase's big- gest obstacle. The state organiza- tion is badly split between the fac- tion that supported the late Sen. Robert A. Taft for the Presiden- tial nomination in 1952 and those who favored President Eisen- hower. Former Representative Case is endorsed by President Eisenhower but his recent denunciation of Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis.) an- tagonized the more conservative faction of his party. The recent revelation that ex- Republican governor Harold Hoff- man stole $300,000 from the bank of which he was president has also lessened Case's chances. Case's opponent is Democratic representative Charles R. Howell. stating that Sen. Cooper was the greatest Republican the state had ever produced and that Barkley was the greatest Democrat. Then he added, "This is Kentucky, so Barkley will win." Since Kentucky's party registra- tion is four to one Democratic, things do apparently favor the former Vice-President. Sen. Coop- er also is somewhat hampered by President Eisenhower's character- ization of the Tennessee Valley Authority as 'creeping socialism' TVA is almost sacrosanct in Kentucky. The one thing that might pre- vent Barkley's return to the Sen- ate is the same thing that hurt his Presidential chances in 1952-his age, 76. Republican Hopes Republican hopes for unseating Democrats are high in at least three states. Sen. J. Allen Frear Jr. (Del.), Sen. Clinton B. Ander- son (N.Mex.) and Sen. Thomas Burke (Ohio) are the three hoped- for victims. Internal party problems are damaging Sen. Frear's chances The state organization hassled for several weeks before it decid- ed to even run Sen Frear for re- election. Many of the big city Democrats who consider the in- cumbent too conservative desired former State Supreme Court Jus- tice James Tunnell Jr. However, with reluctance they finally endorsed him and he will run against Herbert B. Warbur- ton, an up-and-coming Delaware Republican. If the Democrat's in- difference toward Sen. Frear does not influence the voters he still might win. Gov. Edwin Meechem is oppos- ing Sen. Anderson in New Mexico. Democrats expect to win this elec- tion, but Gov. Meechem has been en excellent vote attainer in past elections. The state hasn't elected a Re- Publican senator since 135. _The Ohio election should be one of the tightest in the country. Senator Thomas Burke, appointed last summer to replace the late Robert A. Taft, is opposed by Re- publican Representative-at-large George Bender. Rep. Bender Is strongly support- ed by both the Taft and Eisen- hower factions of the Republican party. Although his tendency to clown keeps many people from taking him very seriously, he has proved continuously that he is a top-flight campaigner. Republicans hope that Ohio's lack of familiarity with Sen. Burke outside the Cleveland area will make him a weak candidate. Sei. Burke, who was mayor of Cleve- land for five terms befor accept- ing Gov. Frank Lausche's ap- pointment, has the advantage of running with Lausche in this elec- tion. Gov. Lausche has proved one of Ohio's greatest Democratic vote getters. Southern States The Democrats of course have several certain seats from the Southern states. The big battles here are in the primaries where in most cases there were vigorous tussles between the liberal and conservative factions of the party. Sen. Estes Kefauver won one of the most notable of these cam- paigns when he smashed Rep. Pat Sutton by a better than four-to- one count in Tennessee. Sen. Kefauver was constantly attacked for his New Deal ten- dencies and his 'internationalism' during the campaign. Sen. John Sparkman had a sim- ilar experience in Alabama but also emerged the victor. Mid-West Viewed Iowa and Illinois are being con- sidered somewhat in the toss-up category. Sen. Guy Gillette is hop- ing to make Secretary of Agricul- ture Ezra Taft Benson's new farm policy the focal point of his cam- paign. If the farmers are opposed to the lowering of price supports he figures to win. Otherwise Rep. Thomas E. Martin might enter the Senate as an exponent of the new policy. Illinois voters have a clear-cut choice between a conservative iso- lationist Joseph T. Meek, former president of the Illinois Federa- tion of Retail Associations,,and liberal, internationalist Sen. Paul H. Douglas. Sen. Douglas may have trouble with the Chicago Catholic vote be- cause of his opposition to Sen. McCarthy. However, he is count- ing on farmer dissatisfaction with price declines and support of Chi- cago labor to forge a victory. President Eisenhower has given his support to Meek after making him promise to vote consistently with his program. V 11 a " <" 'f n1 4 .!' ,f 4 i. 1 unday, October 10 i t. I' CONCERTGEBOUW ORCHESTRA OF AMSTERDAM EDUARD VAN BEI NUM, Conducto THE ROBERT SHAW CHORALE ROBERT SHAW, Conductor ISAAC STERN, Violinist . WALTER GIESEKING, Pianist TICKET INFC Choral Union Concerts Season Tickets $17.00- Block A $14.00- Block B $12.00- Block C $10.00-Block D r Wednesday, October 27 . . Monday, December 6 . Thursday, February 10 . .Tuesday, March 22 )RMATION Extra Concert Series Season Tickets $8.50-Block A $7.00-Block B $6.00 - Block C $5.00-Block D 1' i° DO YOUR ENTIRE WASH IN THIRTY MINUTES at the Quwek Service LA'U NDRY "We wash your duds in separate tubs" Using the famous Maytag Automatic Washers Fast fluff drying service available Other Features of Our One-Stop Service O 1INISIIED SIR TS-481 ouO Service Quality workmanship by Varsity Laundry, Spark- ling clean and carefully finished. Massachusetts Contest The contest in Massachusetts is expected to be very close. Sen. Leverett Saltonstall, an Eisen- hower supported on most issues is facing former Democratic Con- gressman Foster Furcolo. Partly because of the state's large Catholic population, 'Mc- Carthyism' and the threat of Communists in government has become one of the major issues. Democrats are hoping that Fur- colo will lure back some Catho- lics who deserted Democratic ranks over the Communist issue in 1952. With this in mind the former Congressman disowned Americans for Democratic Action, an organization that is anti-Com- munist but one that is constantly on Sen. McCarthy's blacklist. Sen. Saltonstall, who for a long time was non-committal on the subject of McCarthyism, has fin- ally decided to enlist Sen. McCar- thy's aid in the campaign. The Republicans may also have difficulty explaining the business recession which has affected Mas- sachusetts the last few years. Many New England industries have been transferring to the f Ir SINGLE CONCERTS Both Series Main Floor-Orchestra concerts, $3.50. Other concerts, $3.00 First Balcony- Orchestra concerts, $3.00. Other concerts, $2.50 Top Balcony, first 8 rows - Orchestras, $2.50. Other concerts, $2.00 Top Balcony, rear-Orchestra, $2.00 & $1.50. Other concerts, $1.50 4' I 1