AGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUJESDAY, NOVFNrr. " 2, l.'9 I 'Share Your Turkey' Asks Center Head Wanted: a Thanksgiving Day home for 25 foreign students. Emphasizing the importance of this holiday season in America, Mrs. George Leeds, director of ac- tivities at the International Cen- ter, has sent an SOS to all students and residents of Ann Arbor to in- vite a foreign student to their home to share the holiday turkey. "THIS IS the second year we have attempted to give the foreign students a bit of the American spirit so evident at holidays like Thanksgiving, and we still have openings for 25 hostesses. "The idea of Thanksgiving is a typically American one, for it is the spirit of being home with the family, not just the meal alone," lWrs. Leeds pointed out. "We want our foreign students to share in this great American tradition," she said. "Moreover, it is a wonderful opportunity for Americans to teach and learn from foreign students." Those who desire to invite for- eign students to their homes may contact Mrs. Leeds at the Inter- national Center or by calling 31511, Ext. 358. Arts Chorale Will Present Benefit Show Under the direction of Prof. Maynard Klein, the Arts Chorale will present a varied program of song, at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 29, in Hill Auditorium to further the current World Student Service Fund drive. The Arts Chorale, organized last year by literary college students, is a mixed group of 160 members. It was started to give students of the literary college a chance to sing standard choral repertoire. PROF. KLEIN, director of Uni- ersity Choirs, was, asked by the students to conduct their group. The Arts Chorale, now open to any University student, includ- Ing music students, has been re- hearsing for seven weeks in pre- paration for their first presenta- tion, Nov. 29. Tickets are now on sale in the Administration building and on the Diag for 50 cents. THE PROCEEDS of the ticket sales will be turned over to WSSF, which is now conducting its an- nual campaign to raise funds to aid needy students overseas. The program will feature varied selections, among which are in- cluded "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desir- ing," "Joshua Fit the Battle of Jerico," "Were You There." Kelly To Address Psychology Group Prof. Lowell E. Kelly, of the department of psychology will ad- dress members of the Discussion Group on Clinical Psychology at 8 p.m. today in Rm. 4142 Natural Science Bldg. The newly formed group will hear Prof. Kelly speak on the "Boulder Conference On Training Clinical Psychologists." Undergraduate psychology stu- dents may attend the meeting. FORMER UNION PROMOTER: 'NI' Students Outstanding--Zerman IFC Glee Club Meets Today "Michigan students are far su- he admitted, but, "I haven't been hperior in personality and charac- too tat is as well-rounded as I The IFC glee club will hold its first meeting at 7:15 p.m. today in the garden room of the League. The group, directed by Maynard Klein, was organized last spring' and sang during the intermission of the IFC Ball. -Daily-Wally Barth BABY IT'S COLD OUTSIDE-Immobilized bicycles and a piercing wind plagued classroom-bound students yesterday morning after the first snowfall of the semester. The cold snap will continue today with a high of 36 degrees predicted. While students happily tramped about throwing snowballs, plant department officials sighed wearily, watched their carefully-tended lawns slowly dis- appearing beneath the onslaught of student feet and voiced the traditional plea. FIND SKELETON: Beardsley Discusses Oldest Ancestor of Japanese .Race ter to any I've met," according to Bill Zerman, '49, former ace cam- pus "promoter." Zerman, now working as field secretary for Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, has extensive grounds on which to base his comparison. His job takes him to more than 40 college campuses from Canada to Florida. * * * A JOURNALISM graduate, for-, mer general sales manager for the 'Ensian and promotion manager for last year's Union Opera, Zer- man declared that he found east- ern schools to be highly over-rated. A few months ago, Zerman talked wil General Dwight Eisen- hower, president of Columbia Uni- versity, about the fraternity sys- tem. "As a West Point graduate, Eis- enhower had never attended a fra- ternity school, and wanted to know about them," Zerman ex- plained. "There is a lot more to a fra- ternity than the social side," he noted. "Many freshmen have a great deal of respect for the upperclass- man, and the older members of the house should exert beneficial in- fluences on the social and intellec- tual development of the under- classmen." Talking about the discrimina- tion issue in fraternities, Zerman declared. "As is typical of all other fra- ternities, any question concerning our national organization always has been, and always will be de- cided by representatives of our 46,000 members." "I've never seen so many mal- adjusted people as the students at eastern colleges," he re- marked. Pointing to a difference between Michigan and other schools, he said, "In the East,. consideration for the student takes second place while major emphasis is placed on alumni relations and ivy-clad tra- ditions." SOME EASTERN schools are 'outstanding in one particular field Michigan." Zerman is one of two field sec- retaries touring the fraternity's 79 chapters in the United States and Canada. He arrived in Ann Arbor for a four day stay in time to see Saturday's football game. He described part of his duties as helping to develop the person- ality and character of the frater- nity's members. * * * * "WE TRY to keep each chapter up to a national standard, helping to solve any problems individual members or a house as a whole may have," he said. Along with his other promo- tion activities on campus, Zer- man was manager of a band in 1946-47. He belongs to Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity, and was a member of the football squad, "until an in- jury forced me to admit I wasn't good enough." Zerman will leave Ann Arbor to- morrow, to visit mid-western and southern schools. In April, he begins a speaking tour at Alumni dinners throughout the country. A Big Business The all-time United States re- cord for life insurance sales in one year was $23,000,000,000 in 1947. p 1 HEAP MUCH TO BE THANKFUL FOR ESQUIRE COLORFIXT SOCKS in Vote Today I Anne Boleyn would have kept her spouse E if only she'd worn a blouse! SOUSOL '.'u BOD ?~ A BgI 1~ ES EVERyW See them in Detroit at J. L. HUDSON Free booklet: "WARDROBE TRICKS". Write Judy Bond, Inc., Dept. M, 1375 Broadway, New York 18 INDIAN WAR Fashion fami over! Paleface ) / color. Esquire make pow-wow shades. Squaw thankful for, t won't run, won ly with whitest Catch 'e .; ..in cls OL 75 Little ONLY 75CENTS RIOR COLORS "We need a minimum of one quartet consisting of two basses and two tenors from each house. These groups will be useful for practice as a nucleous for house singing," according to John Moon, publicity director for the club. ne in men's hose n -e wI oo ts [as, w. ow enjoy feast of Colorfixt socks with 17 chieftan have much to be ! Color fixt hose ' fade. Wash safe. sheets and shirts. n at our wigwam sic ribsand links. ampum needed- t . ti t A skeleton found last summer by Japanese archeologists may be the oldest ancestor of the Japan- ese race, according to Prof. Rich-, ard K. Beardsley, of the anthro- pology department. Speaking at the annual meeting of the' American Anthropological Association and the Society for American Archeology at New York, Saturday, Prof. Beardsley said that the skeleton dates back to the earliest period of prehistoric Japan. IFC to Stage Show; Needs Male Talent *1 IT APPEARS that the Japanese racial type developed from these early inhabitants of the islands of Japan," he said. Cultural remains of these early people have been previous- ly attributed to the Ainu, a small primative group still living on the northern most island of Hokkaido. The skeleton was found in a' mound of shells and its time, the Joman period, was determined by pottery fragments and implements associated with it. These people in- habited Japan before agriculture was introduced in the islands, Prof. Beardsley explained. Robertson To Talk On Poetic Drama Strowan Robertson of the speech department will discuss modern poetic drama before an open meet- ing of the English Journal Club at 8 p.m. today in the East Confer- ence Room of the Rackham Build- ing. Robertson, vice-president of In- ter-Arts Union, will concentrate in his talk on an examination of T. S. Eliot's "Murder in the Cathe- dral," which that group recently produced. Firemen Kept Busy Fire breaks out somewhere in the United States every 36 sec- onds. PAB I UCLOTHERSARRI S "Where the Good Clothes Come From" 119 S. Main St., Ann Arbor J Fraternity men will have a chance to display their talents for a worthy cause at the IFC Talent Show, according to Dick Tinker, '52A&D, publicity chairman for the program. The Talent Show will be held Dec. 1 in the Union ballroom, and will be free to the public. As for the worthy cause: the best enter- tainers in the show will be recruit- ed to appear in Christmas party of Ann Arbor. Tryouts for the be held from 3 to tomorrow. The Union. the annual IFC for the children Talent Show will 5 p.m. today and place: Rm. 3C, ,. Tinker declared that all sorts of acts, no matter how unusual, will be welcome. In fact, the more novel they are, the better, he add- ed. Vote Todbay SEE THEM NOW AT Calkins-Fletcher COMPLETE LINE OF THE NEWEST Parker Pn fwrrr rrar~rrr~rr/irT You'll score high with this hat! !V~M R . 1 s !!pe/ lo 4e vne4mt J Y % ii A sensational new pen value! "21" offers true Parker precision and writing ease. Fast-action filler ... Octanium point the MALLORY From Yale Bowl to Rose Bowl the Mallory Stadium is the hat for youl It has a youthful air, a smart . many other features. Only this pen and the "51" satisfactorily use fast- drying Superehrome Ink. $ A5 00 Choose from red, blue, green, J - °black. Stainless caps . 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