. s . ft. i 14 TIE MICIGAN D'AILY PAGE U x; Marvin Freder ic, Michigan Alumnus, To Play For P ay-Off v - Mortar Board To Give Dance February 23 Career As Band Leader Started While Playing At Fraternity Parties Marvin Frederic, who began his career as an orchestra leader on the Michigan campus, will return to play for Pay-Off, which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Feb. 23, in the League Ballroom. Frederic and his orchestra furn- ished music for fraternity and sor- ority dances while he was a student in the University. After graduation he played at the Detroit Yacht Club. He has since appeared at the Book- Cadillac Hotel in Detroit, the Com- modore Perry Hotel in Toledo, the Hotel Stephens in Chicago, the At- lanta Biltmore Hotel in Atlanta, Ga., and the Syracuse Hotel in Syracuse, .N.Y. Plays Over NB The band has been playing on Na- tional Broadcasting Company pro- grams for the past two years and is now heard over the Red Network twice weekly. Hazel Bruce will appear as vocalist with the orchestra and there will also be three male singers featured. Fred- eric himself plays the piano. Informality is the keynote of Pay- Off, which is sponsored by Mortar Board, senior women's honor society. To stress this informal .idea, it is a sweater and skirt dance. It is also a women's invitational affair which all women on campus may attend. Originated [n11938 The dance will be the third Pay- Off. With the hope that a tradition might be founded, Mortar Board originated the idea in 1938. Its pur- pose is to provide an opportunity for women to extend an invitation to their escorts. Patricia Haislip, president of Mor- tar Board, is general chairman of the dance. Other members of the committee are Roberta Leete, publi- city; Jean McKay, patrons; Ellen Redner, entertainment; Mary Hon- ecker, programs; Alberta Wood, tick- ets, and Beth O'Roke, ballroom McKinney's Cotton Pickers furn- ished the music for the dance last year. Further plans for the affair will be announced at a later date, Miss Leete said. Union Coffee Hour To Be Held Today Week-day social events are headed again by the Union coffee hour which will be held from 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m. today in the small ballroom of the Union. Special invitations have been :ex- tended to Pi Beta Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Gamma Phi Beta, Delta Upsi- lon, Phi Delta Theta, and Psi Upsi- lon. All students are cordially in- vited to attend, however, Port Brown, '41, chairman, said. There will be dancing, and refresh- ments will be served. Women un- escorted are urged to attend without hesitation. Fur Trim Is Smart CY Np i . J-Hop Favors Are Described Gold Key Rings And Pins To HaveMichigan Seal Progriams and favors for the 1941 J-Hop hve been announced by Janet Sibley, chairman - of the committee, In contrast to the custom of previous years, favors will be given to both men and women. For the women there will be dull gold pins shaped like the Univer- sity of Michigan coat of arms. The pins will have safety catches. The men will receive gold key rings with the coat of arms on one side and "J-Hop, Class of 1941" printed on the other. Both will be attached to the programs, the pins to the coat of arms on the program, while the key rings will be fastened to the program cord. The programs will be green and gold, with the coat of arms imprinted on them. The decorations will also be carried out in the green and gold 'theme with the coat of arms being used here also. Nerve-Soothing Prescriptionts By FRANCES AARONSON Contrary to the usual belief, there are ways to combat the semi-annual exam jitters other than by cancelling the thought-provokers entirely. Relaxation seems to be the key- word; "relax," say the freshman dormitory advisors; "relax," say the gymnasium teachers at this time of year. This antidote for jangled nerves seems hard to take when minds are cluttered with bits of stray information; but for the coed with a very small amount of spare time there are ways to overcome the dif- ficulties. To make sleeping hours restful in- stead of tossful, a warm bath with at least 10 minutes of soothing soak- ing will calm down worried thoughts. If the retiring hour is early enough, and if it is possible to get into bed before room-mates begin snoring or mumbling calculus equations, the problem of getting to sleep will be cut down considerably. Try (why not?) cuddling a chem- istry text while wearing a bright red pair of flannel pajamas. All in one piece, these will stay in order no mat- ter how much chair-straddling or tunmy-lying the exam fiend does. Perhaps the library is the student's favorite cramming haunt. A pastel pleated skirt; bright of hue and wide of girth will solve most of the prob- lems. of cabbages anins.. I ITH THE FINAL EXAMINATION schedule about to go in effect and everyone in the mood for study, it would be unfair to organized cram- ming to break the trend of thought, so, dear students, study this typical blue- book. The first question of this society quiz is to name five couples who at- tended the gala event of the weekend, the 1940 Soph Prom. Since you can only get two-fifths of that puzzler, your professor will give you 50 per cent r+- for effort, commend you for your library acquaintance, and give you the answers. In the main ballroom, trans- forned into an 18th-century drawing room, Betty Rob- erts, accompanied by Don Whitney, Kay Dye who at- tended with Dick Arbuckle, and Nancy Sturgener, who was the guest of Fred Olds, were swinging it out. '. Th , Cl h's have Bull Session ... Jane Gram and Ruben Frost, Dick Strain and Sydney 4 Roche, Bill Keas and Virginia Patterson were seen wan- dering around in the small ballroom looking over the "Esquire" cartoons while the rest of the Theta Chi rep- resentation, which included Jim Garvin and Gerry Mc-, ; Kinley, Jack Grady and Agnes Crowe, and Jim Bartlett and7Donna Eckert, were having a, bull session in the Grill Room. An examination should be fair, so pupils, you are going to be given another chance. This is going to be a simple true and false question intend- ed to bring the class average up enough to make sure we can flunk a few. While some students were sleeping in the library, and others were having a fling at Soph Prom, the senior Barristers -of the Lawyer's Club and their guests (for the benefit of those with the blank looks on their faces, the Barristers are the students) were having a toboggan party at the Huron Hills Country Club. Gathered around the fire after an hour of sledding were Ruth Smith and Johnny Rubel, Mary Fran Brown and Bob Handley, Betty Simpson and Cirt . Newell. Whirling around the dance floor were Maxine Baribeau and Frank Butler with an interested stag line composed of Joe Monahan, Bob Moore, Jim Brown, and Scott Harkins look- ing on. Professors Are Put On Spot You are right, students, that is true. Since that was so easy, your professor is now compelled to ask a difficult question. Prepare yourselves.' Assuming that all of you know that "Infor- mation, Please," was broadcast from Hill Audi- torium Saturday night, and that many of you attended, name three acquaintances you saw there. That isn't fair, because they all went to the library on Saturday night, too? Store away the information that your professor is about to impart for future use, then. Barbara Telling and Paul Meeske were looking puzzled over a question which Hilda Otis and Doug Knight seem to have solved. June Tolen and Dick Humphries were heat- edly discussing one of the questions, while Betsy Lightner and Harold Smiley were sitting quietly with knowing looks on their faces. Your pro- fessor also got a glimpse of Mary Dick Holcomb, who attended with Ted Lorig, and Carolyn Denfield accompanied by Art Marian, laughing over the answers of the class. Jean Hendrian and her crowd were observed enjoying their professors' being put on the spot. Now a few of you may pass, dear students, but take the advice of a learned professor and glance over your books before you come wandering in to class again. President Roosevelt has been elect- Northwestern University has a spe- ed an honorary member of the cial foundation for the financing of Temple University chapter of Delta efforts to promote international Sigma Pi. peace. By DEBS HARVEY Red hair, a warm smile and a New England accent-these are the first things one notices about Miss Leslie Cameron, graduate student in play- writing, who is affectionately known as "Camionette" to the women in Martha Cook Building where sh'e is night chaperone. Further acquaint- ance reveals a delightful personality, keen sense of humor, an uncanny ability at palm-reading and a very unusual personal history. A career as an illustrator was Miss Cameron's original ambition, but an art professor discouraged her with I the words "God in his infinite mercy never made a figure like that one, and you've no business to." He did add, however, that although her art work was unworthy of encouragement, the jingles she scribbled on the back of her sketches showed a decided flair for words. Did Publicity Work And he was right, for not long after, during the reconstruction work after the war, she obtained a position writ- ing publicity for a group of Ameri- can hospitals in France. The little truck or 'camion' which she drove through the devastated areas earned her the nickname Camionette which has clung to her ever since. About a year later she became the head of the English department of a girls' school in Bitolj, Serbia. Indic- ative of the backward state of that country at the time is the story of an attempt to inculcate student gov- ernment in school which nearly end- ed in disaster. Two dinars, paper bills equal to two cents each, had been stolen, and the matter was put in the hands of the student court. Trial By Fire Miss Cameron interrupted the court Fellowship Offered 1y RfdCliffe College Radcliffe College will offer two fel- lowships at 600 dollars each for the year 1940-41 to women desiring to prepare themselves for positions in personnel administration. The fellowships would provide training for careers in private indus- try, government agencies, or educa- tional institutions. The instruction includes academic courses at Rad- cliffe and Harvard Graduate Schools, special seminars in personnel prob- lems, and supervised field work. Fur- ther information may be obtained at the Office of the Dean of Women. session just as the young judges were, explaining to their classmates that if each student would place her hands on the live coals which were in a brazier in the center of the room, only the hands of the thief would be burned.. Miss Cameron hastily de- livered an impromptu lecture on the implacability of natural laws, but the three court members at least had the satisfaction of knowing that if their method was doomed to failure, no other successful substitute was found, for the purloiner of the dinars was never discovered. A distinct improvement in the group's standard of honesty was effected, however, for the first year she was there, stealing was discour- agingly common, but by the time she left, any door in the school could be safely left unlocked. Miss Cameron recalls one moving experience which Occurred when some women in a tiny Albanian town where she was vacationing saw the Ameri- can flag which was always carried on trips and, begged her to attend the funeral of the village schoolmaster because he had been educated in the States. Educated In America The visitor was shown the young man's room, where she was touched to see the treasured evidences of an American education-well-worn vol- umes of Keats' and Sara Teasdale's poems, and a picture of a tennis team proudly displayed on the wall. A few poems written by the deceased were also shown to Miss Cameron, and one said, awkwardly but with great sin- cerity, "I love you, America, because you make me love my country more." As the schoolmaster's coffin was being lowered gently into the ground, Miss Cameron dropped upon it the flag that symbolized the land across the sea that he had loved. One of Miss Cameron's more har- rowing experinces occurred when two criminals who were being chased by the Serbian gendarmes climbed over the wall of the school and carried on a gunfight with the pursuers while she and the youngsters were in the all too immediate vicinity. She still has the skirt with a bullet hole in it which she was wearing at the time. For the finest developing and printing, bring your films to "Bob" Gach. Nickels Arcade Wide Variety Of Experiences Features Chaperon's Life-Story Sleek, bold lines make this win- ter's silhouette-the only concession being the soft, young accents of rich black or deep brown fur, de- signed to satisfy the trend toward femininity seen in the newest styles. Scholarships Open To Senior Women, A t Fashion School Tobe-Coburn School of Fashion Careers is offering five fellowships to qualified senior women who would be interested in following this pro- fession. Registrations for these fellowships must be postmarked not later than Jan. 31, 1940. Applicants will be asked to carry out a fashion research project. Aptitude for fashion work will be judged on the imagination, clarity of thought, presentation of material, and fashion flair shown by the ap- plicants. The Tobe-Coburn School has al- ready received 129 registrations from 62 colleges and universities, includ- ing five from the University. Registration blanks, along with any further information desired, may be obtained from the office of the Dean of Women. Fur- Coat Left At Niles Is Being Held For Loser From the office of the Dean of Women comes the report that a lapin fur coat, moleskin in color, bearing the label "Robertson's, South Bend" on. the lining, is being held at Niles. It was left Tuesday, Dec. 16, 1939 by a passenger who detrained from one of the Student-Specials out of Ann Arbor, probably enroute for South Bend. For further information, apply at the office of the Dean of Women. . : I I1 Ir '- w ., ~q ~ /4 IN/ MR.7 IN~ .A' A HES PRIR fo hebststa dneri a on oeeenn ocm nfo n fordeiiuVrmu I U II I I I I U ~ ./~ .......... 11 I rr ...JT___ r cn L^,.lt f_7 ,.F ,L An I