SEPTEMBER 30, 1949 THE MICHIGAN . DAILY THE.1..11.I1/11AN 1\ALITY U U Baton Twirling Freshme oin and Foreign Student Enrollment Hits Record BreakingHigh By PHOEBE FELDMAN His feet were on the grass out there last Saturday, but his head was in the clouds-and they were definitely rosy. In fact, the stadium looked mighty sweet to Dick Smith freshman -two weeks new at the University-when he and his partner, Floyd Zabock, strutted onto the field and, gave the first performance of the University Varsity Band's new baton twirling duo. * * * "I'D BEEN twirling with my higli school band for three years," he explained, 'but it was never like that. That afternoon Was proba- bly the most exciting thing that has happened to me yet." His partner, Fred Zaboek, '53 Arch, was more casual about their work with the band and its scond-season drum major, Fred Breidenbach. "When you've performed before judges and audiences in the big contests," he remarked, "you sort of get used to big crowds." * * *o SMITH AND ZABOCK, chosen seven weeks ago from a field of seven freshman contestants, have twirling honors enough between them to bury a batch of batons. Dick Smith, tall blonde grad- uate of Weir High in Wierton, W. Va., won first prizes in three regional contests, and Zabock, from Wheaton, Ill., has 16 "firsts" and six trophies to his twirling credit. Actually, twirling is a tradition in the Zabock family. There are five Zabocks--2 older sisters, an older brother, Floyd, and his youngest sister-all veteran twirl- ers. Twelve years ago, the oldest sister, Dorma Mae, '42, began the tradition when she became first twirler at high school. When the Reception Tonight The First Baptist Church will hold an informal reception for stu- dents at 8:15 p.m. today. Dr. Ira Rumney, president of the Board of Trustees, and David Hall, president of the Roger Williams Guild, will greet the students in- formally. Special classes in typewriting, for personal or office use. Hours ar- ranged at your convenience. Day and Evening Classes. Phone 7831 or call at our office for details. No obligation. HAMILTON Business College William at State Ph. 7831 PERSONAL STATIONERY JON J. G LO .. wNtr .VrMA a .[INL.VB l1. W ' 2ata&l aa( 2aartl(4 Scad p O " 400 %44t SatIKr /aue l S$2 Includes Sales Tax 2 ® & Insured Maiin Consting of 250 sheets of Fine No. I Watermarked Paper 6xgl with 150 6 Envelopes al imprinted with your raaddraes (3 lines. Ordr, will not be filled uness occmpanld by Cockt aoney Order or Cash. Odrs will be fild 24 hours afte being rceived, NO C.O.D.'S WALNUT PRINTING C t 7 yea sin e sm. location. 905 Walnut Ave. gank Reference furnished Cleveland 14, Oho NAME ADDRESS CTY,._..,....... _... ZONE _.... STATE - Print Plainly G A 5 t T 7' f J 1 f 1 1 T is .- Matching the rise in overall en- rollment figures for the Univer- sity, the number of foreign stu- dents is at an all time high, ac- cording to Robert B. Klinger, as- sistant counselor to foreign stu- dents. There are now 770 students from out of the country, an increase of 23 over the total at this time last' year, Klinger said. The number of countries represented here has also increased, jumping to 73 this year, as compared with 70 last year. SEVEN SUCH far distant places as Ceylon, New Zealand, Estonia! and Trieste are newly represented on campus this year. British Guiana, Nigeria, and St. Lucia also have citizens studying here for the first time. Due to governmental pro- grams, the number of students from Siam, Iraq and Germany has increased remarkably, ac- cording to Klinger. As an ex- ample, Siam has now on campus more than 10 times as many students as it had at this time last year, in round numbers 21 instead of two. The Iraqi student total has gone from 12 to 29 and the Siam group has grown from two to 21. From Germany, where the stu- dents are sponsored by the U.S. Army, have come 25 as compared with the nine from there last year. VENEZUELA has also made a sizeable gain, Klinger said, by ex- actly doubling its student total here, pushing .it from 15 to 30. IN SPITE OF HER internal troubles, China still is leading in total number of students. There are now 168 Chinese students en- rolled here, a drop of but 21 from the 189 registered at the same time last year. ECA assist- ance was credited by Klinger as the main reason for the total re- maining at such a level. One, two, buckle your shoe! Your newest style by Westport... saddle stitched, crepe soled, buckled at the side in handsome silver. You'll love these easy going sport shoes with the new Dynamode crepe sole. Available in sage green, and saddle tan. All duded up and rarin' to go! .. ' . , r,. ' ; zs r° F 5 < y '- I ' _- , , f: ' ;a I .q 3 _ ;r , ' s .i :. ". . i t z ?: r J 5: b > ; r, , I N% -Daily-Wally Barth BAND TWIRLERS-Dick Smith and Floyd Zabock, newly-ap- pointed twirlers with the Varsity Band get set for a session with their batons down at the stadium. Both Smith and Zabock are freshmen and won their jobs out of a field of seven contestants. * * * * d Y h youngest sister entered the Zabock ranks, the family became probably the only twirler quintet in the country. * * * - SMITH'S START was all his idea, though. As a sophomore in high school, he was appointed as- sistant drum major. He got his promotion to head drum major the next year, and went on to compete in several state and regional twirl- ing contests. Now only one thing bothers Smith. He only hopes he looks as good out on the field as he feels. 1 - y -& Style 59 brown $695 a rugged, leather-lined blucher featured in specially-tanned domestic Scotch grain. New lightweight, flexible, water-resistant mid- sole. Raised stitched tip. Triple outsole and storm welt that outwits wear and weather. 17 Noe rHOES Jna meet the soft collar that won't wrinkle.ever! New! Van Heusen Century You can sleep in the Van Heusen Century ... study in it, and yet, the soft collar stays smooth and smart from dawn to dark... and longer- without starch. Perhaps your profs can't tell you why, but your Van Heusen dealer can. In regular collar or wide-spread. $3.95 and .$4.95 VatHeolusll "the world's smartest" P HIL LIPS-JONES CR P., NY ORK 1, N. Y. Read and Use Daily Classified A ds As advertised in MADEMOISELLE aind CHARM a >r f i $795 BROOKINS' Smart S0e3 I 108 East Washington Phone 2-2685 -- 00 flA1T1~ I II1A1.KFR~ :" Whizzer Motor Sales Company OF MI C H IGAN PROUDLY ANNOUNCES the NEW Their Modern Retail Sales Building AT THE CORNER OF MAIN AND MADISON STS. Featuring Amusement Needs For Children From Six Months to 60 Yedrs. VILE I EVMEN W lV ilW MADE IN THE U.S.A. by J.P. SMITH SHOE CO. Chicago Always Inune With Your Feet / 4 FEEL' THE JOY OF WALKING LAYAWAY PLANS AVAILABLE in these shoes -made TIME PAYMENT PLANS AVAILABLE INCLUDING SCHWINN BICYCLES IDEAL ROADMASTER BICYCLES G ILBERT WHIZZER BIKE MOTORS MODEL TO WYANDOTTE TOYS TAYLOR V DOLLS TOYS YS ELOC I PEDES to move in synchronized harmony with your feet. Their patented Synchro-Flex construc- tion puts you in a new day of modern, foot- travel luxury-with shoe style, stamina and complete ease blended. There are no other shoes like them. Prove that to yourself here. WITH SMOKERS WHO KNOW...IT'S -'b ....M,._ o z _ a I r., I 7 ~05 N E.~. R~r, ~. .1