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October 11, 1930 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1930-10-11

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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THF. MICHICAN

DlAILY

PAGE FIVE

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AC TRESS
MANAGER
DECISION

World Fellowship Committee
Will Entertain for
Foreign Students.
J. MICHEL IS CHAIRMAN
World Fellowship committee will
be set in motion and is scheduled
to begin active work'after a meet-
ing of the central committee next
week. Janet Michael, '31, is chair-
man of the committee. Changes in
the tone of the entertainments
given by this body have been pro-
posed and will be discussed at that
time, and the personnel of the
committee will be announced.
The general aim of the commit-
tee is to create a feeling of mutual
friendship between the foreign and
American students on the campus.
Foreign students, a majority of
whom are graduates, can contribute
their broader experience to the
group, and the Americans can
through this medium welcome and
befriend those from other nations.
A world attitude on social and
political matters is also created.
The procedure of the committee
has been to give receptions and
have informal discussion groups, to
which foreign and native students
are welcomed. Foreign guests often
give talks on customs in their land
and other topics of interest to the
whole group. A Thanksgiving party
for all foreign students is given
each year jointly by the Student
Christian Association and the World
Fellowship committee. An annual
Christmas dinner and entertain-
ment is sponsored by the Com-
mittee.
A suggestion has been made by
the committee that individual
members invite foreign students to
their houses,' introduce them to
their friends and endeavor to make
all contact with them more in-
formal than has been possible
previously. This plan will be dis-
cussed at the meeting next week.

'Gymnasium Equipment
Offered Women Here
Is Complete', Zetter
"I was very much impressed by
the completeness of the equipment
of the women's physical education
department when I came here this
year," Miss Marie E. Zettler, in-
structor of physical education said.
"The women of the University of
Michigan have every opportunity
to participate in any sport, and the
variety offered is as large as that
in any university I have seen. f
Miss Zettler is one of several new
instructors in the physical educa-
tion department here. She is a
graduate of the Ohio State Univer-
sity, and has also studied at the
University of Wisconsin.
Miss Zettler said Gnat she has
enjoyed her work here so far. This
is her first year of teaching in a
university. She is teaching gener-
al sports and will also assist Miss
Ruth Hassinger, instructor of phy-
sical education, with the intramur-
al tournaments, which work con-
sists at the present time of coach-
ing hockey.
Anna Strong, Writer,
Is Newspaper Editor

HOCKEY MANAGERS'
TO MEETMONDA Y
Arrangements Will be Discussed
for Opening Intramural
Hockey Tournament.
GAMES TO START SOON
Intramural hockey managers will
meet at 4 o'clock Monday afternoon
at Barbour Gymnasium to discuss
plans for the opening of the in-
tramural hockey season on Wed-
nesday afternoon. All sororities
interested in intramural competi-
tion, especially hockey at this sea-
son of the year, are requested to
send their athletic managers to
this meeting.
The intramural hockey season
will open with the first game at 4
o'clock Wednesday afternoon on
Palmer Field. As yet the sorori-
ties competing have not been de-
termined, nor the schedule for the
games, but these will be announced
the first of next week. Miss Ruth
Hassinger, instructor in physical
education, has charge of the in-
tramural sports and may be reach-
ed at Barbour Gymnasium or at
the Women's Field House for fur-
ther information.

"The high position which women
held in Russian drama under the
old regime has been consistently
maintained in spite of the terrific
upheaval which the theatre has un-
dergone since the revolution," said
Mr. Elmer Kenyon, of the New York
Theatre Guild, after his lecture on
"Modern Russian Drama" Friday
afternoon. "Now, however, they do
not emphasize the sustained emo-
tionalism which was typical of the
older school, for the communistic
idea exhludes reference to romance
and sent imentality of all kinds. To
them, the mere physical and bi-
I ological facts of existence are suffi-
cient, and all glamorous moonlight
and roses effects must be striken
out."
"Alla Nazimova, the fiery star of
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Eva Le Galliennes Civic Repertory
Theatre in New York is typical of
the highly emotional actresses who
symbolized the best of dramatic
expression in the Czarist period, I
Mr. Kenyon continued. "She began
her sensational career with the
study of violin, and after four year's
work in a dramatic school at
Odessa, she came to America under
the auspices of Paul Orlenoff, the
Russian producer. The company
played in New York to small but
enthusiastic audiences, and Nazim-
ova's work came to the attention
of Henry Miller, the director. She
was given the part of Nora in
Ibsen's "Doll's House" under the
condition that she learn the Eng-
lish language in six months. She
got the role."

New Changes in Russian Theater Leaves
Actresses in Esteem, Declares Kenyon

CHINESE STUDENT
TO HEAD HOSPITAL
Me-Iung Ting, '20M., Returns to
Tientsin, China, Soon.
Me-Iung Ting, '20M, who has re-
cently completed a year of gradu-
ate study in pediatrics at Ann Ar-
bor under a Barbour Fellowship,
will soon return to China where she
will again be Director of the Peiy-
ang Women's Hospital at Tientsin.
In the seven years before she
came back to the University, Me-
Iung Ting incr p 1ber hospital
staff from eight to forty-five, start-
ed a training school for nurses,
during epidemics opened branch
hospitals in neighboring towns,
and in 1928 was head of the Chin-
ese delegation to the Pan-Pacific
Women's Congress at Honolulu.

: The first newspaper in the Eng-
lish language appeared in Moscow
last Monday. It is an eight-page
periodical called The Moscow News,
YVON N E,1-IA U TI N and is edited by the well-known
American writer and lecturer, An-
Paris comedy star, has decided to na Louise Strong. It is intended
desert the stage for the convent, primarily for the American special-
She told her manager that she had ists and their families in Russia,
been contemplating this step for a- who now number upward of 2,000,
bout a year, although many of her many scattered in outlying points,
friends say that her decision to remote from home and from Rus-
take the veil was caused by unre- sian news.
quited love. The first number not unnaturally
presents Russian news in an opti-
Helen L. Domine, '31 mistic form, but it seems creditably
.' free from "propaganda" as such
Calls Board Meeting and has interesting features about
the American colony and its activ-
All members of the Executive ities in Moscow, Stalingrad, and

---_-_-

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board of the Women's Athletic as-
sociation are asked to attend the
meeting called for 10 o'clock this
morning in the Women's Athletic
building, according to Helen Do-
mine, '31, president of W. A. A. This
will be the first board meeting of
the year, and a second meeting
will be held Thursday, October 16.

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