THE MICHICGN DAILY To Open Sale Of Panhellenie Dance Tickets Sorority Women To Have Booth In League Lobby Monday Through Friday Ticket sale for Panhellenic Ball, which will be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday, Dc. 1, in the League Ballroom, will open from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday in the League Lobby. The sale will continue from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, Patricia Hadley, '42, publicity chairman, announced. A Panhellenic representative will be stationed in a booth in the Lobby to conduct the sale. Tickets will be issued on a propor- tional basis to the sorority houses. A representative from the house may buy the tickets' all at once and the tickets will also be sold to individuals from the houses, Miss Hadley said. No tickets may be returned after Nov. 28. The tickets are priced at $3.50. Miss Hadley stated that the or- chestra would be announced at a later date. . Panhellenic Ball is an annual event which is being held this fall for the sixteenth consecutive year. It has traditionally been scheduled the Fri- day after Thanksgiving, but the date was changed this year because of the conflict withnthe Ohio State game weekend. The commitee in charge of the affair includes Virginia Osgood, '41, general chairman; Mary Henderson, '41, tickets; Anabel Avery, '40, pa- trons; Betty Reutter, '40, and Flor- ence Signaigo, '41, decorations; Ruth Chatard, '40, ballroom; Barbara Taft, '41, music; Elizabeth Titus, '40, fav- ors, and Miss Hadey. Fur-Trimmed Coats Are Popular Nlurses To Hold Formal Dance Senior Ball To Be Friday; Bob Schergur To Play Nurses of the University Hospital School of Nursing will hold their an- nual fall formal from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Friday at the Ethel Hussey Room in the League. This dance will be the first of the social activities giv- en by the nurses for the year, and will be given by the senior nurses as their Senior Ball. The junior nurses will give the next formal dance of 'he year. Chaperons at the dance will be Miss Marian Durell, director of nurs- ing, Miss Marie Wanzeck, assistant director of nursing, Miss Meta Lem- ke, supervisor of instruction, Dr. and1 'Ms. Earl Hall, Dr. and Mrs. Harveyk Whitney, and Miss Genevieve De- k .rondsocial director of Couzens .iall. Golf Lesson Series Polacci Pajamas,' Housecoats, Slips, Are Perfeet Study Attire £Eamnls are assigned even c days ts irs that, lrend hmull iv& to easy of blizZaids. so warm and nornfortable nManipulation over arnm of chais study attire is in order for those and corners of desks. Yes, you can nights-before-bluebooks. With this assume your most comfortably ridicu- in mind, designers have prepared a lous pose and still keep this garment whole wardrobe of study clothes with intact. In white, pink, blue, and red, coziness as its keynote. these offer a wide variety of colors. "Polacci pajamas" are of soft blue That much-used housecoat has to flannel with huge white buttons stand plenty of punishment, too, running down the middle. The sleek- "UndePre -Studypng"ofen as- ly tailored slacks are topped by a "Under-Pressure-Studying" often as boxy jacket that makes even sloppy sumes the position of physical labor! classroom sweaters look like slinky Jersey Robes Warm negligees. These are worn with fuzzy Shops are now showing durable socks, of a violently contrasting red, jersey robes that provide the warmth- that can be worn right through the of a heavy blanket despite their light last page of Grecian urns and into the weight. Designed along the lines of cold dormitory sheets. simple evening gowns, these look Slips Are Popular charming even when swamped with Manufacturers know that many typing paper and text books. girls prefer to study in their slips, And don't forget the "doctor den- probably because of some psycho- tins" that make you look like a logical reason. So they have con- scared rabbit, and let you feel as cocted warm flannel ones, with dirndl warm as that furred animal does. 1l liPYYI Y YI YYYr1oYY11 YPYnYIY YYIiY n YY YYYY V Y PY YY Y YYIi Get a Good Start at Over Here By VICKI Z INTER begins at (]OODYEAR'S with brand new ideas in' sports- wear for the frozen months. From head to toe, from inside out, we can outfit professionals and ama- teurs alike. Costumes exciting and colorful, or practical and work- manlike; with the gayest of acces- sories to add a final fillip. We cor- dially invite you to see our collec- tion, and to view the windows at our State Street Store! Here's something too good to keep. Mr. X, a sophomore on the editorial staff of The Daily, wants "to write 40 inches a week, maintain a B aver- age, have two dates per weekend and enough sleep to keep walking." Does that seem funny to you? It does to me. Maybe it's because he has his life summed up so neatly. Sounds like a recipe for live along and like it. If he does it all, he'll do well-we don't quibble on that point-but what kind of miracle man is this who knows so exactly what he wants to do? With the rest of us wallowing in indeci- sion a prompt dose of whatever-it- takes is in order. Probably it's the senior in me speaking. During the past week I've come to the conclusion that seniors are a species apart. Two bull-ses- sions convinced me. The first blow fell when I heard a 22 year old BWOC murmur disconsolately, "To- night I feel OLD." Same senior went on to reminisce on the good old days when she was a junior, "You remember . . . JGP and In- stallation Banquet and Wyvern . . . and everything." It started me wondering. So I followed it up at a reunion dinner the next night. Fourteen seniors who as freshmen had lived together on the same corridor were having a once-in-a-coon's-age get - together. Over coffee I popped the question, "How do you feel about being a senior?" And there it was again. That same sort of remote attitude, like viewing life from Mt. Olympus. Universally they agreed that it had been fun while it lasted, but now-give them something new and different. And the crux of the thing is this-they felt like a bunch of has-beens. And so, Mr. Sophomore-Mt. Olym- pus judges you funny. Thanksgiving Hop To Be Sponsored By Newman Club Turkeys, balloons, colored lights, apples, cider, and candy will usher in the "Turkey Trot" to be held from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Wednesday at St. Mary's Chapel Auditorium. The Newman Club, which is spon- soring the dance, has secured Bobby Shergerand and his orchestra for the evening. Virginia Lee and Harold Ruienspp, '43, will be the vocalists. Members of committees who have charge of the Thanksgiving dance are co-chairmen Mary Jane Kenney, '42, and Sam Bruni; '42; Marie McCabe, '40, chairman of patrons committee; John Sullivan, '43, tickets chairman; Sally Walsh, '43, and Mary Pat Burns, '42, co-chairman of decorations. Tickets for the dance are 50 cents for couples and stags and may be obtained from members of the cen- tral committee, from members of the executive committee of the Newman eil..u - U- nA rI I Included is WINTER SPORSWEAR by SOCONY featured in current issues of leading fashion magazines. '" .r.r The University of Michigan COLISEUM OPENS for the season Saturday, Nov. 18, at 2:30 . I 11 I II I INC) T ---