1 "_____"_____THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOV. 16, 1943 Marian Anderson Calls Audiences Here Best of Any College Town Abandoned by Nazis NEWSPAPERMAN MEETS CELEBRITIES: Arny Private Recalls Reporter's Days J Marian Anderson, the world's greatest contralto, yesterday paid tribute to An Arbor and Michigan students. "AnnArbor is my favorite college town to visit. Certainly nowhere else have I been so warmly and generous- ly received. I eagerly look forward to my next opportunity to sing to the University of Michigan students and its faculty." Sang in 11 Countries Miss Anderson has sung in eleven different countries, before the high- est dignitaries of three continents and in most major cities of the Unit- ed States. To laud Ann Arbor so highly was "the least bit of repay- ment for your kindness." When asked if her unparalleled rendition of Negro spirituals were popular abroad, Miss Anderson made. several interesting comments. "With no exceptions, I have been asked in every foreign country to sing several spirituals-some of which I had not even heard." Russians Want Spirituals "It is interesting to note," she con- tinues, "that when I sang in Lenin- grad, not only was I allowed to sing Negro spirituals in spite of the ban which the Russians had on religious music sung in concert halls, but 'amidst the applause requesting en- cores at the end of the program one robust Russian Army officer shouted out from a back row, 'Deep River!'" As for their place in the music of our nation, she expressed the belief Law Review Staff Appointments Made The Law Review, official publica- tion of the law school, has announced the appointmentdto its staff of two senior editors and a junior tryout. Allen C. Holmes, '44L, of Cincin- nati, O., and Benjamin N. Quigg, Jr., '44L, of Philadelphia, Pa., have been chosen for the senior board, while Mary June Plummer, '45L, of Ann Arbor, has been selected as a junior tryout. Margaret Groefsema, '45L, of Detroit, will continue in her post as a tryout. The staff of the Review is usually comprised of 20 to 30 people, but due to the war, only these four positions remain occupied. Cmmittee Applicants o Be Interviewed Today Miss Lucy Chase Wright, chair- #nan of child care and Girl Scout Committee at the League, will inter- 'apilts ,,for.venralpo ieion6 ors; thecominiteein the undergrad- uate office from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. Positions are open for chairmen of the Girl Scouts, Girl Reserves, play- grpunds, foster parents, publicityLand das and,, org nzation comtnittees. that, "TheNegro Spiritual is essen- tially an American form of music, which was profoundly influenced by the African ancestry of the people with whom they originated. To me they are serious, and have a very deep message to bring." Praises Accompanist Miss Anderson gave the highest praise to her accompanist, diminu- tive Franz Rupp. She related that Franz was a celebrity in his own right. Mr. Rupp for many years had been "at the piano" for Fritz Kris- ler, when he was touring Europe. Further, Rupp was for quite some time the accompanist for Emanuel Freuman, the eminent 'cellist. Andrews Heads Naval Architects Commanding Officer Is Back from Leave Lt.-Cmdr. G.A. Andrews, Comman- ding Officer of the Reserve Officers Naval Architecture Group, returned yesterday from St. Louis, Mo., where he has spent a four-day leave. Lt.-Cmdr. Andrews came to Ann Arbor on May 30, 1943 to take charge of Naval Architecture Group here. Previous to that time he had charge of the same school which was then located at the post-graduate school at Annapolis. He finished up group' III's training and took charge of group IV at Annapolis. The school was transferred to Ann Arbor just prior to the time group V, the pres- ent group of Naval Architects, came in. Lt.-Cmdr. Andrews graduated from Annapolis and then served as Out- side Superintendent of the Boston Navy Yards during the last World War. He resigned from the Navy in 1921. He came into the Naval Reserve at the beginning of this war and served at the Norfolk Navy Yard until he took charge of the Naval Architecture school. Badminton, Fencing Meeting To Be Today upperclassmen interested in learn- ing, to, play, badminton or to fence will meet, ins Barbour Gym at 8:30 p. m. today, according to an an- nouncement by Madeline Vibbert, '44, badminton manager, and Pat Dillen- bec ,,'45Ed, fercigag,anager. .: Fencers will meet ,in the fencing room and badminton players will use the gym proper. Equipment will be provided for the fencers, but those women playing badminton must pro- vile their own birds. Racquets may be rented at the gymn for a small fee. Coast Guardsman and soldiers examine German radio and weath- er station equipment on the shore -of an island off Greenland. The station was captured by U.S. troops who found that all but one of the German staff had left the island. Zoology School Enrollment Falls The enrollment of Graduate stu- dents in the Zoology Department this year is the lowest the Department has had since 1920. "This drop in enrollment, how- ever," states Dr. George R. LaRue, chairman of the Department of Zoo- logy, "is no worse than that in other departments of the University." In previous years the department assistants have been composed chief- ly of men. Women were rare. This year there are only three male as- sistants, while the rest are female. All scheduled classes are being held in spite of the man-power shortage. In Zoology I there are 12 lab classes and 13 quiz sections instead of the usual 14 in each. In Comparative Anatomy there are four instead of five classes. Alll the classes are of good or moderate size. VOLLEY BALL SCHEDULE 5:20 p.m. Tuesday: Zeta Tau Al- pha vs. Alpha Phi; Alpha Delta Pi vs. Delta Gamma. 7:30 pm.n. Tuesday: Jordan Hall vs. Stockwell Hall; Colvin-Jeffrey League Houses, Zone VII vs. New- berry Residence. 5:20 p.m. Wednesday: Alpha Xi Delta vs. Geddes House; Zone I vs. Zone IV.% 7:30 p.m. Wednesday: Kappa Delta vs. Zone III; Hendrickson- Zimmer, Zone VII vs. Palmer, Ste- vens, and Rochdale Houses. 5:20 p.m. Thursday: Hill House vs. Kappa Alpha Theta; Sigma Delta vs. Pi Beta Phi. 7:30 p.m. Thursday: Washtenaw House vs. Gamma Phi Beta; Betsy Barbour vs. Martha Cook. By JENNIE FITCH How would you like to spend a New Year's Eve in New York City with expenses paid to all the big night spots? This was the happy experience of Pvt. Culver Jones, Company G, in his capacity as reporter for the Tor- onto Daily Star. As the only Ameri- can reporter on the Canadian paper which has one-tenth of all circula- tion in Canada, he was assigned to write a story on how New Yorkers spent New Year's Eve. Accompanies Dafoe Another time Pvt. Jones was given the assignment of accompanying Dr. Roy Allen Dafoe of quintuplet fame on his first trip to New York. After a visit to Washington, where Dr. Dafoe met the President, the party was given a suite at the Ritz-Carlton. They made the usual tourist's round of visiting the Majestic, the Empire State Building and the Statue of Liberty, but Pvt. Jones thinks the Refrig1) eration Unit Is Being Set Up Hsere When the two-ton ammonia ab- sorption refrigeration unit now being set up in the chemical and metal- lurgical engineering department is completed, the University of Michi- gan will become the second school in the country to possess that type of equipment. A gift of the Hoover Company, this absorption unit is being constructed for experimental purposes. It ar- rived three weeks ago, dismantled by the donors for shipping purposes, and is now being set up in the de- partment's laboratory by students and the regular staff. The unit, which has a capacity Sequalto that of freezing two tons of ice daily, occupies floor space 12 feet square. Ordinarily such equipment is made on a much larger scale for' use in industrial plants. This unit, which was donated to the University by the Hoover research department, had only 100 hours' use before being sent here. Cornell University is the other school which possesses an ex- perimental unit of the two-ton size. Seniors in chemical and metallur- gical engineering classes will use it for experiments in the thermody- namics of refrigeration cycles and it will also be .employed in the manu- f cdure+ ,f ice to be used for various types .of experiments in the engi- neering schol: L C Fraicais z10 Feetji l Leaoi All students and servicemen with at least one year of college French are invited to attend the first meet- ing of Le Cercle Francais, which will be held at 8 p. m. today in the Michi- gan League. Prof. Charles E. Koella, of the Ro- mance Language Department, will give a short talk on "Les effets de la guerre sur l'Europe de demain." Election of officers and formation of committees will be followed by group singing and general discussion most interesting event was a night club party given by Walter Winchell with Sally Rand as Dr. Dafoe's guest. Winchell Is Different Commenting on Walter Winchell Pvt. Jones said "he was very differ- ent from my expectations" and add- ed that the famous columnist is "very much of a family man and is devoted to his family. He always takes a back table in a night club and .spends his time observing, but rarely saying much himself." Pvt. Jones' work on the Toronto paper included the interviewing of many famous people. One of his interesting jobs was to accompany Prince Chichibu, brother of the Em- peror of Japan, on a trip across Can- ada. The "prize assignment," how- ever was during King George and Queen Elizabeth's Royal Tour when Pvt. Jones was with the party every day for two or three months. Interviews First Lady He was often sent to America to interview celebrities arriving on ships from Europe. One of the famous personages was Lady Astor, whom Pvt. Jones thinks is "a very charm- ing woman with a sparkling person- ality." Other celebrities whom he has interviewed include Lord Lo-! thian, Rudy Vallee and Mrs. Roose- velt. who, he says, is "very easy to interview." On another trip to America he "got in the oldest Ford I could find, rode across the continent to Cali- fornia, up the West Coast and stopped to do a series on Hollywood."' It was on this visit that he spent an afternoon on the set with Clark Ga- ble. "one of the easiest people I've ever interviewed." Writes Features In 1937 Pvt. Jones was sent to Eur-" ope to do "trained seal work" or fea- ture articles. He spent some time in Germany. went all through central Europe and stayed ten days at the Vatican. His job was to write stories so that readers could "read about Europe as seen through the eyes of someone like themselves." One of these stories was on the subject of the Pope's farm, equipped with mod- ern American machinery, where he raises most of his vegetables. Pvt. Jones is now a senior in medi- cal school, but he still thinks that journalism is "the most exciting life on earth." ' Public Health Nurses Meet Here Thursday Theoretical Courses To Be Closely Correlated With Practical Work' The Public Health Nursing Con- ference, consisting of the University public health faculty and represen- tatives of the various public health nursing agencies and counties asso- ciated with the W. K. Kellogg Foun- dation, will open today in the School of Public Health. The purpose of the conference is to provide a closer correlation be- tween the theoretical courses in the University and the practical work offered in the public health agencies by an interpretation of the content of the courses available Public health nursing agencies to be represented are the Detroit De- partment of Health, Detroit Visiting Nursing Association and Ingham County Health Department. Among the counties to send delegates are Allegan, Branch, Eaton, Calhoun, Van Buren, Hillsdale, and Wash- tenaw. Miss Ella McNeil, Associate,.Profes- sor of Public Health Nursing, will open the Tuesday meeting by pre- senting a plan for the conference. Other speakers will be Dr. George Ramsey, Resident Lecturer in Epi- demiology, Dr. Thomas Francis, pro- fessor and Chairman of the Depart- ment of Epidemiology, and Dr. Ern- est Watson, instructor of' Child Health. TYPING THESES SCHOOL REPORTS PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS Two New Men Join 'U' Staff Van Winkle, Banchero To Instruct Engineers Two new' instructors have been added to the staff of the chemical and metallurgical engineering de- partment. Working on distillation and gas absorption is Julius T. Banchero, a graduate of Columbia University, who previously taught at the Uni- versity of Detroit. Mr. Banchero is working on his Ph.D. Author of a reference and text- book, "Aviation Gasoline Manufac- ture," to be published in December, Matthew Van Winkle is teaching chemical engineering. A graduate of Purdue University, Mr. Van Winkle was supervisor of the petroleum and natural gas extension at Pennsyl- vania State University and did re- search work for Cities Service Oil Company and the Standard Oil Company of Indiana. GIRLS, We need girls for typing and clerical work. Monday thru Friday 6 P.M. - 10P.M. Call at: KING-SEELEY CORP. 1 st and Williams St. 2-2557 Red Cross Unit To Meet at Hillel Surgical Dressi'gs To' Be Folded Thursday A Red Cross Surgical Dressing Unit will meet from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. beginning this Thursday and con- tinuing on every Thursday through- out the semester at the Hillel Foun- dation. The quota for surgical dressings from Washtenaw County has been so increased that 100,000 dressings must be completed and sent to receiving centers by Jan. 1. Rita Hyman, '44, chairman of the unit, urges that as many workers as possible volunteer. "Each and every dressing folded by students will be a vital contribution and will greatly relieve the effect of the shortage of Red Cross workers now being felt," Miss Hyman says. Since the dressings are being han- dled according to Army specifica- tions, workers must comply by wear- ing washable cotton blouses or cot- ton smocks when working. 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