i L I %AJAI N Lj 6%1'L I . ..._ i IAILY OFFICI'AL DULLETIN III 1 I I L 1 51 L%.JJ~A ~ L~f~.LLd 5 AT THE THEATERS TODAY UNIVERSITY MEN! Best and saf- ^st place to put your money is with HURON VALLEY BLDG. & SAVINGS kSSO. Dividends never less than 6 per cent. Can withdraw your money ANYTIME and receive 5 per cent from date of investment. Inc. 1891. Under State control. Wm. L. Walz, Pres., H. Ff. Herbst, Sec'y. A. A. Savings Bank Pldg.-Adv. For live progressive up-to-date ad- vertising use The Michigan Daily.- Adv. Sleep Anyplace 211 Eat at Rex'#s THE CLUB LUNCH 712 ARBOR STREET Near State and Packard I SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1920. Number 36. Freshmen of the college of Literature, Science, and the Arts: President Burton will give the last of. his series of "Talks to Fresh- nen" on Monday, Nov. 15, at 4 p. m. in Hill auditorium. All Freshmen hould be present. ollege of Engineering: All engineer freshmen will by special invitation join with the Literary reshmen in meeting President Burton in Hill auditorium Monday. Nov. 5, at 4 p. m. The Roll will be taken the same as at Wednesday Assem- ies. Engineer freshmen will, for this meeting, be excused from other xercises. The Wednesday Assembly will be held as usual. M. E. COOLEY. [eeting of the Medical Faculty: A mneeting of the executive medical faculty is called for Tuesday even- ng, Nov. 16, at 8 o'clock, in the faculty room of the Medical building. VICTOR C. VAUGHAN, Dean. ollege of Literature, Science, and the Arts: There will be a meeting of the Faculty Monday, Nov. 15, at 4:15 p. m., n the auditorium of the Natural Science building, to elect members of the tanding committees. ARTHUR G. HALL, Registrar. ducation, Departmental Conference: The next departmental conference of graduate students and others pecializing in Education will be held Monday evening, Nov. 14, at 7 o'clock, ducation Laboratory, Tappan hall. G. M. WHIPPLE. An illustrated talk on Puppet Plays will be given by Mrs. Bradley M. )avis, Tuesday, Nov. 16, at 3:30 p. in., in Sarah Caswell Angell hall. This s the first of a series of talks on dramatics to be given under the auspices f Masques during the year. All women of the University and of the com- iunity interested in Marionettes are invited to be present. J. RALEIGH NELSON. rt Exhibit: The collection of Seascapes by Woodberry will continue to be on ex- ibition throughout this month at Memorial Hall from 2 to 5 including unday. 'On Sunday at 3 Mr. Wilfred Shaw will give a lecture. There will e two gallery talks each week; announcement of these will be made in The Michigan Daily. H. P. THIEME. prize will be announced to be given G Gto the team securing the most new WH1A S GING VN 4members. T Maynard Newton, '22, is general Ichairman of the drive, and Richard Khuen, '21, is assistant general SUNDAY chairman. The captains are: Richard :30 - University NMenl's Bible class Bromfield, '22, Frank Cotter, '22, Rea- meets in Lane hall. umer C. Stearns, Jr., '23E, James B. ):30-The Rev. Leonard Barrett Witker, '23, Lawrence Snell, Jr., '23, ,speaks on "Continuing the Victory . Douglas Dow, '22E, Robert Wie- in the Field of Religion." The serv- neke, '22, Bruce Van Dusen, '22, Ben ice will be in commemoration of W. Winter, '22, Kenneth Rindge, '22A, Armistice day. Mr. George O. Bow- Seward S. r , er, '23, est '.2A- Sewad S.Cramer, '23, West H. Gal- en will direct the music. logly, '22, Byron Darnton, '23, Donald d:00-Vulcans picture to be taken at . Thorp, '21, Clark Boothby, '22. SpeddCinese tdns cu et Maurice Moule, '23, A. B. Sharp, '23, :30---Chinese Studeu.sWclub meets and David H. Preston, '23. at Lane hall to discuss famine re- lief work in north China. 00-Wesleyan guild of Methodist j4fl les /qua s church -meets with Miss Moore as leader. There will be no social October 'Record half hour because of Union servic- es in Hill auditorium. 15 - Sphinx meeting, room 802, (Continued from Page One) Screen Majestic-Louise Glaum in "The Leopard Woman," and Topics. Arcade - Charlie Ray in "The Village Sleuth." Also two comedies, Al St. John in "Trouble," and "The Tamer, the Wilder." I I i ' ic 0 14 n Btlank~ets A New Shipment Just Received PRICE $11.50 Wuerth-Bebe Daniels in "You Never Can Tell." Harold Lloyd in "Get Out and Get Un- der," and Fox News. Orpheum-May Allison in "The Walkoffs." News and Comi- classic Comedy. THIS WEEK Stage Garrick (Detroit) - Florence Moore in a side-splitting farce, "Breakfast in Bed." Schubert (Detroit) - The Sel- wyn's happy musical play, "Buddies," direct from New York with Charles King, Vir- ginia O'Brien, and Lawrence Wheat. 1- AR'5 UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORES { L U The Last Home Game Has Been Played But You Can Play B ILLI'ARD S INSPIRED MICHIGAN OFFENSE WINS FROM CHICAGO TEAM (Continued from Page Five) right tackle. Timmie adds another through left guard. Timmie again plunges for 1. Palmer kicks to his own 37-yard line. Usher hits line for 3 yards. Michigan 7, Chicago 0. FOURTH QUARTER Ball is on Chicago's 35-yard line. Usher hits line for 1. Steketee cir- cles right end for 10 yards. Usher goes through left guard for 3 yards. Banks sweeps around left end for an- other 6 yards. Banks makes first down on line plunge, Steketee runs off tackle for 5 yards. Michigan's 'all on 6-yard line. Usher plunges for 2 more. Steketee hits right tackle for 3 more. Banks makes first down nn Chicago's 1-yard line. Usher fails .o gain. Banks held for no gain. Usher goes over for touchdown. Stek- etee kicks goal. Michigan 14, Chica- go 0. Goetz opened hole for touchdown. Perrin goes in for Nelson. Steketee kicks off to Halladay who returns ball to 37-yard line. Timmie hits line for 2 yards. Forward pass, Crisler to Strohmeier, . nets Chicago 35 yards. Ball on. Michigan's 32-yard line. An- other pass, barely knocked down by Perrin. A third pass meets the same fate. Vick stops an attempted line plunge. A fourth pass is incomplete and the ball goes over. Steketee makes 11 yards around left end. Chicago penalized 5 yards for off- side. Banks makes 1 through tackle. Banks injured and leaves game. Jack Dunne replaces him. Perrin fails to gain on off-tackle. Usher plunges through center for 5 yards. Steketee kicks outside on Chicago's 16-yard line. Timmie makes 4 yards through right tackle. Cohn downs Crisler aft- er he is unable to make forward pass. Usher knocks down attempted forward pass. A Chicago forward pass Crisler to Strohmeier nets 15 yards. Another pass takes ball to 35 yard line. Usher intercepts forward pass. Usher makes 4 more. Perrin makes beautiful end run for 15 yards. MASONS ATTENTION All Masons on the campus are invit- ed to attend the regular meeting of the Craftsmen's Club, Saturday even- ing, Nov. 13th, at 7:30 P. M. at the Masonic Temple. The third degree will be conferred followed by a recep- tion for the officers of the grand lodge of the state of Michigan.-Adv. Courteous andsatisfactory I TREATMENT to every custom- er, whether the account be large or small. at the Recreation Biilliard Parlors Under Wuerth Theatre We Strive To Do The Impossible -- Please Everybody STUDENT MANAGEMENT --. -h" Phone Orders Promptly Filled Mail Orders Promptly Filled A; df o :00-Union services Hill auditorium. :00-Special services for ex-service men at First Baptist church. Dr. Allyn K. Foster will speak. A 15, minute song service at the begin- ning.of the service under direction of Mr. George A. Bowen. MONDAY :16-Offieers of Pontiac club picture taken at Spedding studio. :80 - Life membership campaign meeting, second floor reading room Union. TUESDAY 8:30-Cosmopolitan club meets at Spedding's studio, East Liberty street, for Michiganensian photo-1 graph. :00-Bohemian club meets in Lane hall. All Bohemian students in- ited. :15-Pennsylvania club meets in room 316 Union. Election of offi- cers. All men and women invited. :30-La Sociedad Hispanica meets n room 401, south wing, members and guests. U-NOTICES [embers of the United States Marine club are requested to meet at White's studio at 10 o'clock Sunday for Michiganensian photograph. enior engineer officers and chairmen .of committees are requested to have their pictures taken as soon as pos- sible for the Michiganensian. NION STARTS CAMPAIGN TO GET 2,500 NEW MEMBERS (Continued from Page One) en before they were solicited for fe membership. Final instructions regarding the ive will be given to all captains and immitteemen at a meeting at 7:30 clock Monday evening in the recep- on room, second floor, of the Union. >mpetition between teams will play i important part in the success in e drive, oflicials believe, and so a1 with, "Preferential Bidding," by Alice Comfort, and "The Student Council," by Le Grand A. Gaines, Jr., its president. The titles indicate their timeliness, and all are carefully done. Prof. A. D. Moore strikes a real need in his invitation to students for crit- icism upon teaching methods, about which they, as "the direct objects," ought to know something. Robert Masters completes the list of arti- cles with a logical argument for men's dormitories, pushing forward severalj new points in favor of this solution of the rooming problem.' Fiction is represented by four extra- brief short stories, notable principally for their interesting situations. How- ard Weeks has taken time out from his editorial duties on The Gargoyle to put a poor soul where suicide seems the best way -out, and then, leave us to argue the matter out1 among ourselves as to whether he would be justified. The style wants polish and vocabulary, but the prob- lem is certainly right up in the "Lady and Tiger" class. An innovation is Rosemary Arnold's setting in "Georg- iana Gets a Job" - right in Ann ArT bor, which has a right occasionally to snatch a few locales away from New York and London. Herbert Slusser's poem to Joyce Kilmer is a sincere tribute to the man who wrote "The White Ships and the I Red," and lived and died for the opin- ions he expressed in it. There might have been more athlet- ics in the issue, considering the time it came out. Coach Yost's photo on the cover and Captain Goetz's frontispiece are worthy of any "M"-book, but hard- ly make up for the lack of opinion on a subject which is certainly among the foremost at Michigan no matter what the season. However, make no mis- take about the November Chimes; it is ace-high all the way, there are 12 more pages of it than in October, and its art work is an improvement. Chimes has won and is holding its own place as Michigan's magazine. Read The Daily advertisements.-1 Adv. EST. 1857 All Silk and Wool Dresses 1 -3 off Including Serges, Tricotines, Jerseys, Trico- lettes, Satins, Crepe de chines, Georgettes, and Velvets. In Navy, Taupe, Black, Brown. Some The Ann Arbor Savings Bank Incorporated 1869 Capital and Surplus, $625,000.00 Resources .........$5,000,000.00 Northwest Cor. Main & Huron 707 North University Ave. have Accordion - Pleated Skirts, others Plain. 'Trimmings are Beads, Embroidery, Lace, But- I tons, etc. A 0 A I Lines are Long and Slim; Sleeves are Long or Shirt, as you wish, and Collars High or Low. (SECOND FLOOR) 1