Monday, Oct. 13, 1930

National Affairs

Oct. 13--Columbus Day, U. S. legal holiday (34 States).

Oct. 15--Opening of maintenance & membership drive by the Crusaders, young men's anti-Prohibition organization.

Oct. 27--Celebration of Navy Day, auspices of the Navy League, chief fete at Washington, D.C.

Foreign News

Oct. 10--Holding of Haitian national elections, to elect successor to temporary President Eugene Roy.

Oct. 20--Round Table conference on Indian Affairs; at St. James's Palace, London. Not invited: Mahatma Gandhi, Mrs. Naidu, Pandit Motilal Nehru, Patel brothers.

Oct. 24--Forty-third birthday of Queen Victoria Eugenia of Spain.

Science

Oct. 21--Total eclipse of the sun: at Niuaffoou ("Tin-Can") Island, Tonga Islands, Pacific Ocean.

Medicine

Oct. 13-17--Meeting of the American College of Surgeons; at Philadelphia.

Oct. 20-24--Meeting of the American Hospital Association; at New Orleans.

Business

Oct. 12-15--Nineteenth annual convention of the Investment Bankers' Association of America; at New Orleans.

Oct. 21-22--Annual convention of the International Association of Milk Dealers; at Cleveland.

Music

SEASON OPENINGS

Oct. 10--Boston Symphony.

Oct. 12--Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Music Festival; at Chicago.

Oct. 12--Leopold Stokowski-Philadelphia Symphony's first of four radio concerts over National Broadcasting network.

Oct. 16--Cleveland Orchestra; Philadelphia Grand Opera.

Oct. 17--Chicago Symphony; Cincinnati Symphony.

Oct. 23--Los Angeles Symphony.

Oct. 27--Metropolitan Opera (New York); Chicago Civic Opera.

Art

Oct. 13~Nov. 10--Exhibition of Mexican fine & applied art; at Metropolitan Museum of Art, Manhattan. Joint sponsors: Carnegie Corporation and retired Ambassador Dwight Whitney Morrow.

Oct. 16-Dec. 7--Annual international exhibition of modern paintings, by artists of 15 countries; at Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh. Prize award: $2,000 and guarantee of purchase by Pittsburgh's Albert Carl Lehman.

Sport

FOOTBALL--Oct. 18 East: Dartmouth v. Columbia, at Hanover; Harvard v. Army, at Cambridge; Lafayette v. Penn State, at Easton; N. Y. U. v. Missouri, at New York; Princeton v. Cornell, at Princeton; Syracuse v. Pittsburgh, at Syracuse; Yale v. Brown, at New Haven.

South: Alabama v. Tennessee, at Tuscaloosa; Centenary v. Stetson, at Shreveport; Georgia v. North Carolina, at Athens; Georgia Tech v. Alabama Poly, at Atlanta; Tulane v. Birmingham Southern, at New Orleans; V. M. I. v. Virginia, at Lexington; William & Mary v. V. P. I., at Richmond.

Midwest: Illinois v. Northwestern, at Urbana; Iowa State v. Nebraska, at Ames; Notre Dame v. Carnegie Tech, at South Bend; Ohio State v. Michigan, at Columbus; Wisconsin v. Pennsylvania, at Madison.

West: California v. Olympic Club, at Berkeley; California Tech v. Pomona, at Pasadena; Oregon v. Washington, at Portland; Southern California v. Utah Aggies, at Los Angeles; Stanford v. Oregon State, at Palo Alto; California (L. A.) v. St. Mary, at Los Angeles.

GOLF

Oct. 13-18--U. S. women's championship; at Los Angeles Country Club.

GOING

Best Plays in Manhattan

LYSISTEATA--Aristophanes on how to prevent war. A well-staged, amusing production (TIME, May 19).

ONCE IN A LIFETIME--The insanities of Hollywood, brilliantly satirized by George S. Kaufman (TIME, Oct. 6).

SYMPHONY IN TWO FLATS--Two independent playlets--farce and drama--by and with Ivor Novello (TIME, Sept. 29).

THAT'S GRATITUDE--Family comedy by and with a master of that genre--Frank Craven (TIME, Sept. 22).

THE GREEN PASTURES--Afro-American theology, deftly done and accompanied by some grand spiritual singing (TIME, March 10).

THE LAST MILE--Exciting prison melodrama (TIME, Feb. 24).

THE LONG ROAD--The War from the home angle. Otto Kruger makes it worth while (TIME, Sept. 22).

TORCH SONG--The decline and resurrection of a night club crooner, by Kenyon Nicholson (TIME, Sept. 8).

UP POPS THE DEVIL--Sprightly comedy about Manhattan's scriveners and their friends (TIME, Sept. 15).

Musical--FINE & DANDY (Joe Cook-- TIME, Oct. 6), GARRICK GAIETIES (TIME, June 16),HOT RHYTHM (TIME, Sept. 1), LITTLE SHOW (TIME, Sept. 15).

Best Pictures

OUTWARD BOUND--Intimations of immortality staged on a steamer, well revealed by Helen Chandler, Leslie Howard, and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. (TIME, Sept. 29).

THE CALL OF THE FLESH--Ramon Novarro's nice tenor against a Spanish backdrop (TiME, Sept. 29).

ROMANCE--Greta Garbo in a nostalgic lovestory of the 'seventies (TIME, Sept. 1).

DER TIGER VON BERLIN--Murder mystery in German, interesting as a sample of what Europe is doing with the talkies (TIME, Sept. 29).

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