T HE AMI CHIGAN D AILY PA. Eligible Applicants for J-Hop Will Purchase Tickets Today Students whose applications for J-Hop tickets have been accepted may buy their tickets from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today and tomorrow, and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday at a booth in University Hall. Dorms Issue Newspapers Among the lesser known campus activities are the various residence hail newspapers published by stu- dents. During this year of crowded dormitories, individual dorm pa- pers have appeared particularly advantageous for they represent one means of acquainting resi- dents of the many house and cam- pus events. The "Cookie Press," published monthly by Martha Cook women, is edited by Helen Gregory. Ruth Humphrey is business manager. A year's issues bound in a folder serve as an annual for the dormi- tory. Sponsored by the Strauss Me- morial Library, the "West Quad Angle" is issued weekly. 600 copies of the two-page paper are distrib- uted every Monday. Editor Charles Donoghue, Lloyd House, works with press representatives from all eight houses of the Quad. The "Stockwell Ticker" is dis- tributed every Thursday. Edited by Phyllis Wendliig, this four- page paper published, by the coeds at Stockwell Hall, has a circula- tion of 600. The students at Couzens Hall call their monthly paper TPR. Ac- cording to Jo Elliott, one of the residents, the initials stand for Temperance, Pulse, and Respira- tion, which are the three cardinal measurements that student nurses learn to take at the very beginning of their study. 350 copies of the paper, in which activities of the School of Nursing and write-ups of that School's faculty are in- cluded, are published. Basketball Today The following games in the WAA interhouse basketball tournament will be played today in Barbour Gym: Kappa Kappa Gamma I vs. Delta Delta Delta II, Alpha Gam- ma Delta II vs. Sorosis IIT at 5:10 p.m., and Couzens V vs. Willow Run Veterans at 8:10 p.m. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & Orrice SUPPiUES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 Tickets for the biggest dance of the year will cost $6 and, accord- ing to Nancy Neumann, ticket chairman, students must bring the exact change in bills, a $5 bill and a $1 bill. No loose change will be accepted, but checks may be made out to the University. Identification cards and accept- ed applications must be presented in order to purchase tickets. Tickets will be sold only this week to applicants, and those who do not pick them up then will not be able to claim them later. In buying tickets, a student should go first to his class booth and hand in his application. It will be stamped at this booth and the student will receive the matching half of the application and a publicity blank to fill out. Then purchasers should go to the cash window and pay for and receive their tickets. Fashion Career School Will Hold Contest for Coeds The Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers is offering three fashion fellowships to all senior women who are interested in this field as a carreer. Among the various phases of the field are included fashion coordi- nation, merchandising, advertis- ing, personnel, buying and styling. The fellowships which are offered amount to $850 each and entitles the winners to the one year course at the Tobe-Coburn School for Fashion Careers in New York. Registration blanks may be obtained from the Bureau of Aippintments and must be mailed before January 31. Test topics will then be sent to the candidates on Feb. 4 and writ-. ten answers to these topics must be mailed back on or before March 7 of this year. The judges will consist of the directors and faculty of the School, and their decisions will be final. Winners will be announced in the beginning of April. The fellowships cover full tu- ition for the school year begin- ning Aug. 27, 1947 and ending May 2$, 1948. Winners must be prepared to finance their own living and incidental ex- penses for a year in New York. The School offers three fellow- ships annually and the competi- tion is nationwide. Further in- formation may be obtained at the Bureau of Appointments. There will be a meeting of the radio program research division of the League Publicity Committee at 5:10 p.m. today in the League. Members who are unable to at- tend must call Barbara Hitchcock at 2-2591 as soon as possible. ASTRIDE BIG MOOSE-This little girl seems to enjoy her perch on the head of a buck moose, shot in Ontario. The moose, weigh- ing 1,350 pounds, was said to be one of the largest ever killed in Canada. By LOIS KELSO I'M STAGGERING around these days under an inferiority complex several feet square. The magazine for smart young women has con- vinced me that haven't got what it takes to make a smart young woman. This particular magazine, the dean of the many publica- tions devoted to getting at the American woman while she is still immature and keeping her that way, annually brings a group of lucky collegians to New York for a glimpse of the glorious things in store for them when they get out in the big wide world. 'These young women must be the brightest of the Bright Young Things, those most surely destined for success in the giddy little world of which this magazine writes so fetchingly that the prime qualifications for a psychologist are "a fascination for psych and a way with moppets," and those for a career in aviation "a liking for your head in the clouds and a yen for goggles and wings." hOPING to discover what qualities in these girls marked them for success, I read their contributions to the issue. One clear-eyed young American, who regrettably plans to waste her obvious literary talents on photography, started off her stint with, "After leaping and bounding through frantic traffic, cocker spaniel Monty and I finally arrived at Ylla's studio," a bit of imagery I couldn't write if I tried a thousand years. I suppose we are to assume that she leaped 4nd Mon- ty bounded. Another future career woman babbles, "I had to pinch myself to realize that I was to meet the publisher of the New York Times my first day in New York!" Someone must have forgotten the cus- tomary training period. A starry-eyed Thespian neophyte (this thing is catching) oil meeting Lynn Fontanne, was moved to remark, "Me! in Lynn Fon- tanne's dressing room, backstage at "0 Mistress Mine." Hot mirror lights, sweet-smelling grease paint, and Miss Fontanne being charm- ing to a shaky theatre devotee." It's not every day that mirror lights, grease paint, and Lynn Fontanne all bother to be charming to one person at the same time. THE YOUNG VISITOR with literary ambition, Sarah, rises head and shoulders above the rest of the crew in the use of this partic- lar art form. She starts off her book review column with an intimate glimpse into dinner at the restaurant Francais Couret with Harvey Breit, whimsically confiding to her readers her ignorance of French. "After Mr. Breit's helpful translations, at some loss to my dig- nity, we turned from dinner-ordering to the short story and stayed with it from soup to demi tasse plural." Picking her hair up off the floor, she conducts us through a series of interviews with literary celeb- rities. It is her comment on one of these, which, to my mind, stamps Sarah as something unusual. Of Miss Kay Boyle, she says, "Her won- derful vitality expressed itself even in the vigorous way she stirred her tea." I'm proud of Sarah for that observation and let's all hope she didn't get splashed. Her writing may not yet have reached the professional level-I'm afraid the way with moppets line might still be a bit above her-but she's definitely going places. Toss me that dishmop, mother, I feel awfully domestic. Engine Formal To Be Qiven Novel Programs Planned; Art Jarret's Band Will Play "Final Design," a revival of the engineering winter formal held annually before the war, will be presented by the Engineering Council from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Fri- day, Jan. 17, in the Union Ball- room. Special late permission until 1:30 will be granted to all women attending this dance, Tickets To Go On Sale This week, tickets for the "Final Design" may be purchased only by engineers from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Engineering Arch. Begin- ning Monday, tickets will be avail- able for all students on campus, but attendance will be limited to ballroom capacity. The ballroom will be decorated with caricatures of well known professors of the School of Engi- neering. Novel programs have been planned. and refreshments will be served. Art Jarret'ssMusicFeatured The music of Art Jarrett and his new orchestra, formed after his discharge from the Navy, will be featured at the formal. Jar- rett first distinguished himself as a soloist with 'red Weems and Isham Jones. Later he co-starred in the movies with Joan Crawford, Carole Lombard, Ann Southern and Sona Hene. He has also ap- peared as a vocalist on several ra- dio programs. Central committee members for the "Final Design" consist of Eu- gene Sikorovsky, general chair- man Hal Walters, decorations; Ev Ellin, publicity; Herb Schreib- er, band; Andy Poledor, programs; Bill Hannng, tickets; and Lenore Olson, refreshments. Casbah Trio To Entertain The music of Al Townsend and his 14 piece orchestra will be fea- tured at the Casbah tomorrow and Saturday which will be open from 9 p.m. to midnight. A new trombonist has been add- ed to the band, and for this week a trombone trio will be an added feature. Each week Townsend in- troduces a new arrangement of a popular song. This time the melo- dies will include "Solitude" and "Laura" with Cliff Hoff on the tenor sax. The flooshow is changed each week and features campus talent. The entertainment will be put on by Willow Run for this engage- rhent and includes Jim Leischman as master of ceremonies who has done similar work previously in Willow Run and in the Navy. Dick Collins, a novel pianist, will offer renditions in modern jazz and Ed Johnston, a magician, will per- form with some gold tricks with new twists." The last part of the show high- lights Leischman and Walt Shaf- fer as an old vaudeville team in an act called "Sears and Roebuck." All the long tables at the cam- pus nightclub have now been con- verted into smaller ones accom- I modating two couples for the con- venience of the guests. Tickets may be obtained as usual at the main desk in the League. Ushers Requested The Personnel Committee of the League would like coeds to vol- unteer as ushers for the French movie, "We Are Five," in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre today, tomorrow or Saturday. Interested students should be at the Lydia Mendelssohn lobby at 8 p.m. on the day of their choice and wear suits and heels. Recognition Night Pan-Hellenic Association will sponsor its annual Recognition Night at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Auditorium. The event will honor affiliated women for scholarship and activ- ity participation. CONTACT US FOR CONTACT LENSES We offer you the best in fitting and Preparing yotr lenses, 410 WOLVERINE BLDG. Phone 6019 4 4 j Sandals this season have wider asymmetrical bands, cut-outs are smaller and many sling pumps with squared leather soles have closed fronts, all of which makes for a more covered-up look. Hold Those Bonds! Several leading shoe manufac- turers assert that the classic and closed opera pump is on the up- swing in popularity. The WAA Fencing Club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in the WAB. All beginning and. ad- vanced fencers, whether or not they are members of the club, are invited to attend. Read and Use The Daily Classifieds! TOWN and CRMPUS SHOES, cat fischer's ,Ahei' announcei GRnND OPENING QUALITY FOOTWEAR FOR MEN AND WOMEN In Stvles to Suit Ail Occasions Ni W~ c~v r , REG. 8-07. PLUS $1 size TAX \ I I I I I I I