Sfrt tig an Raaht Feature Section PRCtFV ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MARCH 2, 1930 PRICE rIVE nt of Many Nations to, be Assembe -, 4 Galaxy of Artists Representing Theatres of Foreign Lands to Appear on International Night Program; Colorful Costumes, Quaint Dances, Gay Music Will Build Up Vast Pageant for Annual Show Tuesday Night in Hill Auditorium. in Breaker F Sword D , Deg Grad. John Khalaf, '30 Stage Pro Lavish 4k E. Cooper O artists from 11 different combine their talents in program of music ',and 1 constitute Cosmopolitan t International Night pro-. d at 8:15 o'clock Tuesday ium. ngs and an elaborate mu- cterize this year's extrava- t from productions of other years, says Chester Ben- ' nett, director. Brilliant costumes representing the native dress -of many Eu r-o p e a n and Asiatic nationalities will lend added colQr to the hat will make up the pro- fled by the adoption of a ch the motif of the entire based. Each performer's oven into one stupendous he presentation will offer f glorified musical comedy e vaudeville'program. rado" has been chosen as and the stage settings will urt of Eldorado, a mythical performers from all corners d1 to gather once a year to in 'he variov ni are to le theme Luction v ialty' is1 ant, so er the a i of an - Breaking an iron chain, the links of which are three sixteenths of an inch thick,, 'is easy for Mozumdar. In perform- ing the feat he uses his back muscles as well as those of his arms. Joseph Akau, 31, and Josephine Marques,- '31, are pictured above at the center in a characteristic pose from the interpretive hula hula Sdancing number which they will present. - - -'- " 1r Dey 1 Long sword of the Be- douin tribesmen will be used by., Khalaf and. Itani in the Arabian sword dance number, one of the at- tractions of the Interna-, tional . Night program. Pictured at the left, below, the Hawaiians, is the Chu- mak dancing club of De-, troit, an organization of trained Ukrainian dancers, who have made a large;. number of stage appear- ances. appear in an Arabian sword dance, wi long weapons of the Bedouin desert tr The entire - Arabian portion of-the has been arranged under the auspic Arab Students' union, the newest of na student organizations, which has been here during the past few months. president. Miss Katherine Khoury, '33SM, wiJ Arabian love song, "Ahwal-Gazel," wh ode of love to a girl proclaimed by he possess the charm of a fic Desert Songs A number of DeetSns songs, i n c li .On.ProgramBedouin marc and an examp bian jazz mus offered by a mixed chorus from the Students' union. Dancing will accon singing of a' march tune composed Gibraltar victory. Ukrainian dances, to be presented hers of the Chumak dancing club of I organization of Ukrainian artists, are to be one of the most popular numbe program. The group has made a lar- of stage appearances in Detroit, ant ceived favorable notice from the me press. They have been trained und Avramenko, internationally known pe e title c present ty wher the wo e with the Hollywood Wkhere Actors Assemble f ;be up an group sed in th form a t serve as ring at t re, from which the various ir appearance. A Chinese ent, a Moslem Mosque, and ill be included among the ires. than 35 foreign students, garb of their home lands, osed about the booths, and idience for the artists per- val of Eldorado. ,he student performers, a ainian dancers and a com- ngers, in addition to a 13- t, Czeslaw Cialek, will be brought from Detroit for the production. The cast for this year's Interna- tional Night is thus said to be one of the most talented ever to have been assembled for such anding student acts is ex- lElberg chorus assembled by presentation include Charles J. Russick, '30, Karl Dinner, Elmer Feldkamp, Otto Haab, '30, Theo- dore Metz, '30, Otto Graf, '30, Oscar Haab, '31, besides Professor Hildner. They are to appear in traditional German student dress, including school caps and colored sashes representative of various fraternities and duelling clubs. Following the Germans, who are to open the program, three Japanese women students, Kimi Nojima, '32M, Kikue Sato, '31, and Hanako Ho- shino. '30, will present a folk song and dance of their native land, named Doyo. In singing this number, the title of which means in English, "Song to the Shooting Star," and which is a children's lullaby, the singers will evolve, dance. steps interpretive of the words of the song. Czeslaw Cialek, 13, boy pianist,. will be the first of the Detroit artists 'to appear. He has arranged a program of Polish numbers, including Paderewski's "Melodie in ,G," and Chopin's "Valse" and "Etude, Opus 10, Number 5." Cialek, who has been studying for several years under Frank Bishop, one of Detroit's best known piano teachers, has already attained the ranks of mu- sical composers, by virtue of having arranged a medley of Polish dance tunes. Costumed in gaily colored silken robes, a group of Chinese students, will appear in an Miss Nettis Soohoo, Miss Maida Kuo, Grad., Y. S. Ching, Grad., H- M. Chan, Grad., and Wilson Chu, Grad. The hula-hula as it is danced in Hawaii will be demonstrated by Josephine Marques, '31, a native of the Sunny Pacific, who has danced the hula on the famed sands of Waikiki. She will dance the hula in the form in which it origi- nated, a classic folk dance interpretive of Ha- waiian legendary lore, in which the motion of body and feet provide a rhythmic background for interpretive movements of the hands. By watching the movements of Miss Marques' hand it is said that an audience can follow the mean- ing of the song which is to be crooned by her partner, Joseph Akua, '31. Akau will- play the guitar and thus, furnish his own accompaniment for the native songs he has chosen to sing. He has had, a long training of stage experience and is said to be a performer of distinguished versatility. This will not be the first appearance of the Hawaiian couple in Ann Arbor. They proved a nastic team: Everet Carman, Elmer Townsley, and Harry Steinberg. An Armenian home scene is to be presented by a group from Detroit, headed by Harry Ekisian, :director of the Armenian chorus of De- troit and Highland Park. Mr. Ekisian, who re- ceived his artistic training in Boston, is said to possess an unusually rich baritone voice. His wife is to appear with him on this part of the pro- gram, in which Miss Malena Avakian will per- form an Armenian folk dance. Bulgaria will be represented by Miss Florence Boycheff, '30 SM, who has been trained under Prof. Theodore Harrison. She will appear in the colorful costume which has been worn for cen- turies by Bulgarian natives, and will sing a group of folk songs. One of the numbers on her- pro- gram, "Vino Pia," is the song of a lover who toasts with wine the praises of his sweetheart's eyes. Madhusan Mozumdar, Grad., well-known University strong man, will present an exhibi- tion of Indian athletic culture. Mozumdar has made a- large number of stage appearances and has been featured in motion pictures for his feats of breath and muscular control. Among his tricks are the lifting of iron weights,' and the flexing of any muscle in his body. His breath Incidental music for the performance, in ing an overture, will be played by, a s' ;International Night orchestra, consisting of Helen Hull, '30 S.M., and Miss Sarah K .M., violins; Miss Kathleen Murphy, '32, ' Mrs. Helen Snyder, flute; John Legg,'cla: Carl Turniclide, trumpet;' and Miss Helen Tu '30 S.M., piano. The student committee assisting Bennet Palmer in the production includes Joseph A '31, I. Avanroff, Grad., Ewe H. Cheong, Carlos H. Guardia, '30E, E. V. B. Jamgots '32E, M. Mozumdar, Grad., Winifred- Sme Grad., Joseph E. VanRiper, '32, Paul Wong, and Jack Yuen, '31. Director Bennett has asked that the" audience not demand" an encore Color, Mus to every act, ashas been , done in past years, since United that courtesy, .deemed 'a, fitting tribute to the ar- tistry of the performers, sometimes resu dragging out .the'program beyond the con measures which 'are most enjoyable. Although many International Night prop have been given in the past, and have rec the enthusiastic acclaim of large audiences ing sometimes extendd runs, it is felt by in charge that this year's program will uni color, pageantry,.and music of past perform into one mammoth spectacle. of -old a. Kammermeyer to Perform hit when they appeared at Martha Cook's' Ha- waiian party last au- tumn. K a r 1 Kammermeyer, ;ea +u t I If