Time Table: Oct. 28, 1929

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Vanderbilt v. Alabama at Nashville; V. P. I. v. Washington & Lee at Blacksburg. Midwest: Minnesota v. Indiana at Indianapolis; Nebraska v. Kansas at Lincoln; Northwestern v. Illinois at Evanston; Wisconsin v. Purdue at Madison. West: Southern California v. California at Los Angeles; Redlands v. Pomona at Redlands; Stanford v. California Tech at Palo Alto. FOOTBALL (Nov. 9) East: Brown v. Dartmouth at Providence; Columbia v. Colgate at New York; N. Y. U. v. Georgia at New York; Pennsylvania v. Penn State at Philadelphia; Princeton v. Lehigh at Princeton; Navy v. Georgetown at Annapolis; Wesleyan v. Williams at Middletown; Yale v. Maryland at New Haven. South: Alabama v. Kentucky at Montgomery; South Carolina v. North Carolina at Columbia; Tulane v. Alabama Poly at New Orleans; Vanderbilt v. Georgia Tech at Nashville; Virginia v. V. P. I. at Charlottesville. Midwest: Chicago v. Wisconsin at Chicago; Illinois v. Army at Urbana; Iowa v. Minnesota at Iowa City; Notre Dame v. Drake at Chicago; Ohio State v. Northwestern at Columbus. West: California Tech v. Redlands at Pasadena; Southern California v. Nevada at Los Angeles; Washington v. Stanford at Seattle; Washington State v. Idaho at Pullman. HORSES. Oct. 30-Nov. 2 — Boston Horse Show. Nov. 7-13—National Horse Show in Manhattan.

GOING

Best Plays in Manhattan

STREET SCENE—every door in a tenement opens on drama (Pulitzer Prizewinner). JOURNEY'S END—those well-bred Englishmen are still at war. IT'S A WISE CHILD — funny complications caused by a fake pregnancy. CIVIC REPERTORY THEATRE—splendid drama (Tchekov, Anet, the Quinteros), splendidly acted at top price of $1.50. STRICTLY DISHONORABLE — ludicrous scherzo about a speakeasy and an innocent but willing beauty. THE CRIMINAL CODE—the laws of God are not on the statutes. JUNE MOON—magnificent satire on songwriting by Ring W. Lardner & George S. Kaufman. Musical: WHOOPEE, FOLLOW THRU, THE LITTLE SHOW, HOT CHOCOLATES, SWEET ADELINE, GEORGE WHITE'S SCANDALS. Best Pictures

DISRAELI—George Arliss makes this drama of the Prime Minister who loved peacocks, gardening and Queen Victoria as exciting as detective fiction. HALLELUJAH—blackamoor joys and sorrows. BULLDOG DRUMMOND—phantasms in a not-so-merry-England. WHY BRING THAT UP?(Moran & Mack) —the "Two Black Crows" of record and radio fame, repeat their inane, hilarious dialog for the cinema. HOLLYWOOD REVUE—elaborate photography of the Ziegfeld idea.

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