'i'OER 2, 1948 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY ... ....... .......... ..... . . .mm Formal Tickets Still flvailable; Floorshow Tickets are still available at the League and at the door for the League Formal, the first coed- bid all campus dance of the year, to be presented from 9:00 p.m. to midnight today in the League Ballroom. The height of the evening's en- tertainment will be reached when the League Council appears dur- ing intermission with a floorshow designed to show the League lead- ers at their best. With the subject of "I'll Ne'er Forget My College Dates," the Council wheels haveacombined music, talent and variety into a pantomine, which should prove to be on the humorous side. A spe- cial number will be the "Council Chorus" rendition of "Make Mine Michigan," a hit tune from last year's JGP. * * THE LEAGUE Ballroom will be ablaze with fall color and design to carry out the theme of autumn To Feature Council By MARJE SCHMIDT Call it a back-to-nature movement, say that it is quite con- tagious, whisper that everyone has gone wild with that "hay-fever," for this weekend over half of the parties run to the tune of hay racks, moonlight, weiners and song. By the light of tonight's moon, the Alpha Gams and their dates will wend their way through the Ann Arbor countryside via horse and wagon. atmosphere, with Jack Frost mak- ing his appearance in true fall form. Design will be three di- mensional to give a realistic ap- pearance, according to Marge Hehn, publicity chairman. Art Starr, regular Casbah or- Assembly Position Open for Coeds Petitions are due Monday noon for the position of secretary of As- sembly Association. Any eligible junior or senior in- dependent woman who knows how to type and is free from 4 to 6 p.m. Tuesdays may apply. Applicants may sign up for in- terviews in the Undergradua.te Of- fice of the League where interviews will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. Wed- nesday and Thursday. Coeds may contact the Undergraduate Office or Marian Grant, 2-3225, for aid in writing petitions. t .. I~t~I~JJ applily kkt aoloigzii berNoles! Choose brown smooth leathers or black suedes . .. all with those wonderfully long-wearing crepe rubber soles!_ As seen in McCALL'S, GLAMOUR, SEVENTEEN. MAHOGANY BROWN CALF chestra leader, with an enlarged personnel will provide the music for dancing. The Grand Rapids Room, with its newly installed television set, will be available for formal guests, and cokes will be the refreshment order of the evening. * ' * PATRONS have been announced for the dance, according to Bobby Jo Ream, League Social Chairman. They include Regent Vera B. Baits, Dean Alice C. Lloyd, Dean and Mrs. Eric Walter, Dean and Mrs. Walter B. Rea, Prof. and Mrs. Arthur Bromage and Prof. and Mrs. Benjamin Wheeler. Completing the list are Mrs. Elsie Fuller, Miss Ethei McCor- mick, Miss Margaret Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Geiger and Mr. and Mrs. Earl A. Johnson. Actives Help Transfers To Acc Imate Panhel To Hold Get-Together Week "Transfer Week" has been set by the Panhellenic Association for the coming week, Monday, Oct. 25, through Friday, Nov. 1. The Purpose of "Transfer Week" is to acquaint affiliated tranfers on campus with their chapters here. Every transfer is urged to call her house, according to Mary Stierer, president of Panhellenic. The house will make arrangements to invite the women over or will meet the coed during the week. The only way the sororities on campus can contact transfers is by the transfers themselves calling the house. Every effort has been made to find out who the transfers are, but there are no files available which will give this information. Through their houses, transfers will have a chance to participate in social events such as exchange dinners, parties and teas. They may also sign up to play on sport's teams which are sponsored by each house. The following are the houses that will participate in "Trans- fer Week": Alpha Chi Omega, 3718; Alpha Delta Pi, 2-2539; Alpha Epsilon Phi, 2-3119; Al- pha Gamma Delta, 2-4547; Al- pha Omicron Pi, 7992; Alpha Phi, 4089; and Alpha Xi Delta, 2-5579. The list continues with Chi Omega, 2-3159; Collegiate Sorosis, 2-3279; Delta Delta Delta, 2-3203; Delta Gamma, 2-2543; Gamma Phi Beta, 2-2569; Kappa Alpha Theta, 2-2547; Kappa Delta, 2- 5631; Kappa Kappa Gamma, 2- 5618; Pi Beta Phi, 2-4514; Sigma Delta Tau, 2-5587; and Zeta Tau Alpha, 3018. The Chuck McCullough Stables will be the scene of the hay party. Wagons will depart from the Beta house at 8:15 tonight and will drag their weary loads back near 10:30 p.m. chocolate will be administered in large doses to help revive thec Beta p.m. Hot crew. Perhaps it may be credited to strong constitutions or perchance the hay wagons were all being utilized, but the Sigma Chis are coming forth with a French Apache party tonight. Striped basques, berets, appropriate blouses and yards of jewelry will blossom out as couples do their best to be in keeping with the theme. JOHNNY HARBERD and his five piece 'orchestra will ride the band stand in the Sigs Parisian Cafe, located in their basement. Checkered table cloths and candle light will aid in producing this Bohemian atmosphere. Tomorrow evening the epidemic spreads rapidly as seven other houses are slated for hay rides. Campus town becomes1 the cog, and seven different routes, the spokes of this rickety merry-go-round. The men of Phi Sigma Kappa, Theta Xi, Chi Phi, Phi Gamma Delta, Greene House, Delta Sigma Delta and Adams house will be hosts to many blue-jeaned lassies. Around this time of year pledge formals also hit the social agenda. Members of ATO are honoring their neophytes at a dance tomorrow evening. The setting is a modern nightclub-alias the chapter house-with the pledges assuming the role of visiting Holly- wood stars. Refreshment will come in the form of gingerale-trying its utmost to have a champaigne appearance. MEMBERS OF PHI IOTA ALPhA are holding their anniversary dance from 8 n.m. to midnight tomorrow in the ass rmbly hall of the Rackham Building. Decorations will carry through the anniver- sary theme, but the main attraction will be a large birthday cake. Small guitars made from cocoahut shells will be preseAted to each couple as a remembrance of the affair. Invitations have been sent to many, but all friends of Phi Iota Alpha are welcome. Tomorrow afternoon the Betas have planned a listening party and doggie roast to be held at their annex. Everyone is asked to eat his fill in preparation for the Woodchopper's Ball to be held at the chapter house in the evening. Does that mean that couples are actually going to wield those axes? In keeping with the Halloween season,- the women of Betsy Barbour have planned a costume party for tomorrow evening. They realize that the costume supply is limited, but urge all to make active use of their imaginations. Dancers will find themselves wending their way in and out of corn stalks and jack o' lanterns to the music of the "best bands in the land." CLIF HOFF, who now leads the old Tom McNall Band, will swing his baton at the Delt pledge formal tomorrow evening. Preceding the dance will be a formal dinner at the house for pledges and their dates. Decorations, in the form of balloons and streamers, emanate1 from the fraternity colors of purule, white and gold. Initiates will no doubt be pleased with the programs. They are entitled "A Pledge's Dream" and carry a picture showing an active assuming "the position" while a pledge wields the paddle. Kappa Sigma holds a conclave- tomorrow when they meet with their Michigan State chapter at the Union. A discussion of fraternity' policy will ensue and is to be followed by dinner at the Union. The Kappa Sigs have made unique plans for Sunday afternoon also. Last summer one of their Latin members initiated a new type of picnic that was so successful it bears repeating. They call it an "asado," and it is an affair which necessitates much preparation for the roasting of a whole lamb. Charcoal potatoes go along with this meal. Fencing Match To Highlight Gas bah Show The one campus politician who is strictly on the fence will ap- pear in the novelty floorshow sponsored by the Scimitar Club at the Casbah, which will be held from 9 p.m. to midnight tomor- row in the League Ballroom. Special attraction, as the Cas- bah moves into its fifth week of operation, will be Ed Micleff, well- known. campus fencing personal- ity, who will give a variety dem- onstration with the saber and epee. In their presentation of the contrasts between real college dueling and fencing "Hollywood style," Micleff and his partner, Norman Barnett, promise to "foil" the audience in mior, ways than one. A ialloon duel ll be another of the teans oiringsin the name of the Scimitar Club. At present Micleff is the State Intercollegiate Foil champion and last year placed firs in five out of seven Detroit ccntests in which he competed. *ast a*complihments for the founder of the newly organized Scimitar Club are dueling the 1939 New York World's Fair and placing in the foil division at the Fair. Also included in his fencing ex- perience are Junior and Interme- diate mhanpiorvships in the foil divisions and a third in niovice dueling in New York. Michef' belongs to the Ama- teur Fencing League of Amer- ica and the New York Fencing Club, which competes with Co- lumbia, Annapolis and West Point. Instructions by the fencing fa- vorite and other Scimitar mem- bers, Pete Young and Norman Barnett are offered from 8 to 10 p.m. Friday at the weekly 1-M Coed Nites. Cliff Hoff To Play For Union Mixer The Assembly Association and the Michigan Union will hold their- second combination mixer and lis- tening party from 2 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Union Ballroom. Cliff Hoff and his orchestra will play for dancing while members of the Union staff diagram the game on a. blackboard, A radio in the rerrace Room will be tuned in on the game for those wishing to sit out dances. Refr eshneits will be served throughout the after- noon. All students unable to attend the game are invited to attend the mixer, according to Richard Cossitt, co-chairman of the social committee. ; .,_ ... , !mow ! ry. t Y ... A :. :: :? . '. SCROLLS GIVE TH IS AM ER.- SUEDE'*GLOVE A DELICATE AIR. 52 "BECAUSE YOU LOVE NICE THINGS" 116 50. MAIN ST. PHONE 2-2934 , '