PAGE SIX rr II E lii it C A 1N)DA, I . F .m .i L " .a II. 1 ,,,,.... , ,...,, .. a .: ... ...: .. .. .,, -., , ,..,,,, ,. Frosh Frolic's Committemen Reveal Guests Betsy Bissell Will Attend With Robert Pollard; Sammy Kaye To Play Betsy Bissell will come from Detroit to attend the Frosh Frolic, as the guest of Robert Pollard, general chairman, it was announced last night. The Frolic will be held from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Friday, March 20, in the ballroom of the Michigan Union. Sammy Kaye's NBC orchestra, which is now playing at the popular Cabin Club in Cleveland, will furnish the music for the Frolic Featured with Sammy Kaye are Tommy Ryan and the rhythmic trio, the Three Barons. Tickets Sold Out Seeks Movie Career Foreigu Student Organizations Show Interesttg History And Deuelonm ant First receiving recognition via the airlines of WLW, in Cincinnati, Sam- my Kaye has enjoyed a rapid rise to papularity He can be heard four times weekly on a NBC, coast-to-coast network. A complete sellout of tickets was announced by John Green, who is in charge of the publicity plans. He said that no more tickets would be issued beyond the 300 limit that was orig- inally set. Green will have as his guest Marian Smith, '39, of Hicks- ville, O. Guests Of Committee William Rashleigh, who is in charge of the floor arrangements has in- vited Bertha Terlin, of Detroit, to at- tend as his guest. Marjorie Barowsky, '39 of Holyoke, Mass. will come with Malcolm Levenson, who is chairman of the orchestra committee. Dorothea Staebler, of Ann Arbor, who had charge of selecting the patrons and patronesses, for the Frolic, has asked Jack Brennan, '38Ed to attend as her guest. John Stoner, '37E, will go with Jeanette Beck, of Monroe, who direct- ed the designing of the programs. Margaret McCall of Mt. Pleasant, who is chairman of the decorations committee, will attend the affair with Herbert Jones, who will come from Wyandotte. Harriet Beecher, '39A of New Baltimore, will attend as the guest of David Bowe, who has had charge of the ticket sale. Programs Green The motif for the programs will be' a silhouette of a boy and girl which will show through a transparent cel- luloid cover, Miss Beck announced. The inside pages will be green. Late permission of 2:30 a.m. has been obtained for all University women attending the Frolic. It will< be the only class dance of the school year, other than the J-Hop, which will1 have five hours of dancing, it was said. Pleats, Tucks And Buttons Shown In i -Associated Press Photo. Scnja Heire, Nerway's famed fig- ure fkating star, announced en her atrival in New York she had defi- nitely retired from competition and hoped for a stage or screen career. Men's Chorus{ Gives Programl Before A.A.U.W. Glee Club Presents Choral Music Of Peters, Bach, Gounod And Stanley A program of choral music was presented by the University Men's Glee Club at 2 p.m. yesterday at a meeting of the Ann Arbor branchof the American Association of Univer- sity Women in the League. The chorus, under the direction ofj David E. Mattern and accompanied by Leo Luskin of Buffalo, N.Y., sang "Laudes atque Carmina" by Stanley; Bach's "Jesu, Joy for Everlasting"; "By Babylon's Wave" of Gounod's; "I Dream of Jeannie" by Foster, and "Goddess of the Inland Seas" by Pe- ters. Following the music and business meeting, Mrs. L. W. Oliphant and Mrs. Herbert Goulding presided at the tea table. The Detroit branch of the associa- tion is planning a program for Wed- nesday to which the members of the Ann Arbor branch have been invited. Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve, of Bar- nard College will be guest speaker at tea in the Women's City Club! and will discuss "Come Contrasts in English and American Psychology." Dr. Mary E. Wooley, president of Mt. Holyoke College, will offer "Thinking Internationally" as the subject of her address at dinner. Mrs. F. J. Steinhilber of Jackson, president of the Michigan branch, will also be a guest. By JOSEPHINE CAVANAGH Since so many foreign students are enrolled in the University, it is not surprising to learn that they have formed clubs and organizations as a means to keeping in contact with their respective groups. German, Japanese, Chinese, French and Ar- menian students on the campus have formed societies for the purpose of furthering social and cultural inter- ests. Some of the groups are of local origin, while others have a national organization. The interest taken by the faculty is manifested by the fact that one or more professors sponsor and further the unity of each society. Two German Clubs Two prominent organizations,r Deutsche Zirkel and Deutscher Ver- ien, have been formed to represent the German element, the former be- ing national, the latter local. Deutsche Zirkel was founded in Ann Arbor in 1931, being a continuation of an ac- tive German club formed before the World War. The purpose of the club,' as stated by Prof. O. G. Graf, faculty adviser of the group, is "to enable students in the department to use the language they are studying, and to! acquaint them with the cultural and other problems pertaining to the German language and Germany. The club also has a social function, the evenings being devoted to GermanI games, the singing of German songs and dancing." Mr. Werner F. Strie- dieck, an instructor in German, is also an adviser to the group. S German Songs Emphasized Deutscher Verein was founded by a faculty group in 1895, Prof. J. A. C. Hildner of the German department being one of its founders and being the present head of the organization. The activities of this organization were likewise discontinued during the war, but were resumed in 1919. The main interest for this group is the singing of German songs. As an, annual event the club serenades sor- orities and dormitories the Thursday before Christmas every year. Oc- casionally the members have sung their German songs over the radio from Morris Hall. The students from the East being mainly from China and Japan, two organizations, Nippon Club and Chin- ese Students Club, representing these two countries, have been formed. Both are local clubs, having for their pur- pose a means for social intercourse. Both are under the guidance of Prof. J. Raleigh Nelson of the English de- partment. When Nippon Club was founded in [1890, there were between 75 and 100 students from Japan attending the University. Now there are only three: Katsuzo Kuronuma, Mrs. Y. Akagi _ _ _ - - I AV W /-W and Miss Naomi Fukada. The other from the Near East, principally from students, seven in number, are from Armenia, were attending the Uni- Hawaii, being of Japanese descent. versity. The national headquarters Professor Nelson says that the de- of this organization are in New York creased number of Japanese on this City, where it was originally founded. campus in the past two or three years There are 12 in the organization this is due to the great development of semester. The purpose of the club is the Japanese educational system, as to give the Armenian students on this well as the large number of students campus a medium through which from that country attending German they may keep in touch with the Universities. events and progress of their country. Diplomats Represented The club has been fortunate in the past two years in having for mem- bers three of the attaches from the Embassy at Washington. All three- Hayashi, now vice-counsel in Chicago, Sasaki, vice-counsel in Los Angeles, and Matsudaira, in the Embassy at Washington - have been guests of the University for one year each. The Chinese Students Club was or- ganized more than 30 years ago at the University. Occasionally the club has a speaker at its meetings, while at other times the students discuss current problems in China. The Cercle Francais, organized for more than 30 years, is a member of the national organization, L'Alliance Francaise. Prof. Rene Talamon of the French department was one of its founders and is now one of a com- mittee of three in charge of the club's activities. Mr. C. E. Koella and Mr. J. C. O'Neill, both of the French de- partment, are the other two on the committee. _lii. L I L r Interested In French ______C The purpose of tne organization is THIS'LL MAKE YOUR HAIR CURL to promote interest in the French' language and country among its own ATHENS, Ohio, March 11. - Ac- members and among the other stu- cording to a recent survey more than dents of the University as well. At 60 per cent of the men on the campus the meetings held every two weeks, of Ohio University have curly hair. nothing but French is spoken, and short plays and entertainments are put on. The Cercle Francais spon- H A L L E R'S sors a series of lectures given every Jewelry ' year in French. State and Liberty The Ann Arbor chapter of the Ar- menian Students Association was Watch Repairing I founded in 1912 when 20 students -- - -1- 111 i I I ! I I I I I I I I I I I IF ; i ElI Spring Blouses The new spring blouses are charac- terized by a multitude of tucks, pleats and buttons. There are tucked yokes and vests in both cotton and silk blouses. Pleats come from tucked shoulders to make pert and cool short sleeves (summer isn't far away). TheI designers have used all manner of buttons, ranging from one large pearl at' the neck to dozens of small cov- ered ones down the front, back and sleeves. Avoid frilly things for your suit this year-it's going to be a tailored season. Femininity is restricted to the softness of the materials. One love- ly handkerchief linen blouse is tail- ored with a pTl-acd vest, a small round collar and a very saucy bow at thne thlroat. There can be no straddlillg the fence on t he color issue this spring. You must either choose subtle shades like dusty pink and grey-blue or be very bold and wear purples and reds. You won't surprise anyone if you wear a purple blouse and green gloves with the same grey suit. Blouse materials are mainly linen (both heavy and the handkerchief variety), crepe and challis. The lin- ens are the brightest, and there are enough different prints in this ma- terial to please the most exacting shopper. Crepe is chalky and a fa- vorite choice for white tailored shirts. The challis blouses are mostly tail- ored and in quiet colors. Some of these have tiny figures in the ma- terial. 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