IMAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1936 PAGE SIX rjlj~j~i MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, OCT. 27, 1936 Motion Pictures Japanese Plan For Olympice, Of Student Life First TO, Take Place In Asia TSent To rent Center Of Games Will Be where the original Olympic Games ...A o "were held. The stadium will be en- Meij Stadium At Tokyo; larged to hold about 120,000 people,i 900 Feet Shipped To East Olympic Village Planned 10,000 more than the German Reich-I By Alumni Association In sportfeld stadium this summer. The the hop, skip and jump, and the mar- athon. And it also stressed the in- ternational good will tours of Ameri- i can and Japanese baseball teams1 during the past years. The Michi- gan baseball team was invited to{ play in several of these summer tours. Finnish Students huHALLOWE'EN APPROACHES ercise sufficient supervision over their Although Hallowe 'en is more than children at Hallowe'en time, because To Organize Club a week away, numerous complaints at time the children tend to be have been received by the police de- thoughtless. Police will deal severely An organiza :on meeting for the partmnt concernig the pranks of with trouble makers this Hallowe'en, purposes of forming a Finnish Club Ann Arbor children. Police Chief Lewis W. Foley asked parents to ex- Foley stated. on the campus will be held at 8 p.m.____________ today in the League, Aarne Kolion- en, '37SM, announced yesterday. All students of Finnish descent are urgedCOUDYOU-ALL GIVE ME MAYE I COULD TOO BAD, BUT £At'LL to attend this first meeting, for which LITTLE HELP M15TER? GIVE YOU A JO6 BE TOO LATE! a brief program has been arranged by MA WIFE AM SICK NEXT WEEK SHE'LL BE WELL AND several interested students, Koljonen IBD_ ABLE TO WORK said. I J1 r IHERSELF B THAT PublicityProject The Alumni Association yesterday shipped nine hundred feet of 16 mm. motion picture film depicting student life for exhibition before alumni groups in the Far East, according to T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of the Alumni Association.{ The pictures were taken here on campus and show all phases of mod- ern campus life. Views of the cam- pus from several points of vantage are designed to keep the alumni in touch with all the inew building de- velopments including the new grad- uate school and the raising of the carillon bells. 'Shots' of seveal sports events including the Indiana football game, and others of a more educa- tional nature including the forestry groups at their labors are included. Before their return to this country in an estimated six months, these pic-' tures will be shown to University of Michigan clubs in Shanghai, Manila, Canton, Tokyo, Korea, Nanking and Honolulu. They will then be shown to those clubs in this country which have not yet seen them. The Alumni Association maintains two sets of films, the other of which is at present to be sent to alumni in this country. The films shown at the Union Thursday night were in- cluded in the latter group. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) nouncing their first meeting of the "Bible Study Classes" tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the League. The meetings will be held for one hour. Watch the League bulletin board for the an- nouncement of the room. The Graduate Club of the Hillel is having a Knock-Knock Hallowe'en party this evening from 7:30 to 11 p.m. at the Hillel Foundation. All graduate students and theirnfriends are cordially invited to attend. There will be a State Street Junior caucus in Room 318 of the Union at 8 p.m. today, according to Phil Loomis. Sigma Delta Chi, national profes- sional journalism fraternity, will hold a luncheon meeting at 12:15 p.m. to- day in the Union for members and pledges. Coming Events Luncheon for Graduate Students on Wednesday, October 28, at 12:00' in the Russian Tea Room of the Michigan League Building. Cafeteria service. Carry tray across the hall. Professor Bennett Weaver of the English Department will speak in- formally on "Sages, Satirists, and Scholars." Cercle Francais: The first meeting of the year will be held on Wednes- day evening, October 28, at 7:45 p.m. in the Cercle Francais room on the fourth floor of the Romance Lan- guages Building. It is very import- ant that all old members be present Under the auspices of The Hop- wood Committee, Paul Engle, Ameri- can poet, will give a reading from 'is poems and discuss his poetry oi Wednesday, Oct. 28, at 8:15 p.m., in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Tickets are on sale at Wahr's; The Hopwood Room, 3227 Angell Hall; and The Theatre Box office. R.1.W. Cowdern, Director. The Hopwood Awards. Zeta Phi Eta: There will be a meet- ing on Wednesday, Oct. 28, at 7:30 p.m. Room will be posted on League bulletin board. All members are ex- pected to be persent. Faculty Woman's Club: The board j Although the excitment of the last Olympic Games is just dying down, plans are already under way, fourE years ahead, in Japan to make the 1940 Olympics the largest and most swimming stadium will be increased to a capaeity of 30,000, and a gym- nasium for indoor events and tennis courts will be added to the set-up. An Olympic Village is being planned Accordingly a committee of 50 prom- inent men from all fields of work in Japan was organized to make plans for getting the games to Japan and for organizing them. About $4,500,- 000 will be spent, with one-fourthof this total being contributed by the government. The Games of 1940 should be a~n vthn t-n{ intrri~r +Tv, The purposes group, according impressive of them all, Prof. E. D. with somewhat of the same charac- among the mosti nteresting yet, Pro- to discuss inforn Mitchell, of the Intraumural Depart- ter of the German one, including fessor Mitchell said, not only because of Finnish cultu] , many modern facilities. of their new cultural and physical ment, said yesterday. setting, but also because of the strong "Japan was extremely anxious to Japan had been seeking the Gaines interest and enthusiasm of a whole get the 1940 Games," Professor for a long time, Professor Mitchell people being put behind their de- Mitchell said. "It had been planning stated, not only because of the pub- velopment. and seeking them for a long time. On licity and economic advantages they __QUALI the day before the Olympic Com- offer, but also because no Olympics POPUL mittee met to decide where the games had yet been held in Asia. Eight had JOHN BARRYMORE DIVORCED would be held, a national day of been in Europe and two in America, LOS' ANGELES, Oct. 26.-("P)-A MICH1 prayer was declared there. Then, so it was fitting, the Japanese pointed final divorce decree formally ended with the help of the German and out, that the next should be in the today the marriage of John Barry- PHOTO American officials, it was given the East. Japan then claimed that be- more and Dolores Costello. Miss games, and a three day celebration , cause of its supremacy over other Costello applied for the divorce and was held throughout the nation. So Asiatic countries in sports it had the Superior Judge Charles Bougue signed 619 EAST complete were the plans of the best title to the Games. It pointed it. Divorce proceedings were started PHO Japanese already that they were pub- out its rise in such track events as more than a year ago by Miss Costello. lished and started into effect almost that same week." Most of the games will be centered around the present Meiji stadium and athletic plant in Tokyo. This is not only one of the sport centers of Japan, but the Japanese say that its proximity to the Meiji shrine gives it a religious and spiritual character analagous to that of ancient Olympia, and aims of this to Koljonen, will be mally various phases ire. )DING TY WORK AR PRICES AN ENSIAN )GRAPH ER I: ,;: ii" I' t.-- % '' liii IT IS NEVER TOO LATE to have your garments SWISSILIZED . . . The PERFECT dry-cleaning ser- vice ... Guaranteed workmanshio. Rt I SOUTH FOURTH AVEN 13 ri I VI bl 'll LIBERTY ST )NE 4434 s will entertain the Newcomers Group at a tea at the home of Mrs. Edward H. Kraus from 3 to 5:30 p.m. on Wednesday afternoon, Sept. 28. Michigan Dames: Book Group will meet Wednesday, Oct. 28 at 8 p.m. at the League. All new Dames are cordially invited. Catholic Students and their friends are invited to attend a party Wed- nesday from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the auditorium of the Chapel. New York Students: Men and wom- en students who are interested in the proposed New York State Club, which is now in the process of organization, are invited to attend a meeting to be held in Room 319 in the Michigan Union on Wednesday evening, Oct. 28, at 7:30 p.m. Important matters such as the adoption of by-laws and the nomination of officers will be considered. XMAS CARDS 50 CARDS 50 ENVELOPES . Printed with your name THE CRAFT PRESS 305 Maynard Street Phone 8805 _ A Quality Is NOT Down Only Pri! S 1 T HE NEW ROUGH DRY Student Bundle receives the same attention and goes through the same processes as the laundry that is brought insunder the regular charges. This service gives you finished laundry on shirts, handkerchiefs, so cks. Under- CORONA 1 STUDENTS! Hand in your themes typewritten on a Corona -and see your marks go up. The finest portable. 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