THE MICHICAN DAILY sUNI SAMMY SQUIRT : A LIT T LE LIGHT ON THE MATTER By Lichty ,. 1 - , .. .. _ lam 7T AT opk>- oN~cA~. THIS 1!OLMH CLOSES .41 3 P. SSIFI DVERTISING AT 3 NOTICE ter call 2-1214 and ask fo BEST SHOE SHINE in town. San- Classified Advertising De fords. Sundays, evenings. 121 ment. E. Ann, 514 E. William. 261c ORIENTAL STUDENT BAZAR -- LOST-Black velvet purse on Hand-made articles: Embroidery, pus, Wednesday morning. Ivory, Shawls, Prints, Bridge and 7370. Luncheon Sets. Very reasonable prices. 305 South State. 284 LOST - Small black curly r the epart- cam- Call 283 d6 g. FOIL SALE REPOSSESSED CARS-Buy from finance company for balance due. 311 W. Huron. Phone 22001 235 WANTED STUDENT LAUNDRY WANTED- ( allr d fn d dl illiu dt Phnn SCOTT TO EXPLAINI POaLISHERS' WORK, Relations With Author Will Topic of Lecture Here Next Tuesday. Be Creative writers and/ composi- tion students will have',an oppor- tunity to become intimately ac- quainted with facts about the pre- paration and submission of manu- scripts to publishers when S. Spen- cer Scott, vice-president of Har- court, B'ace and company, publish- era, speaks there next Tuesday. a Mr. Scott will make his talk a practical discussion of problems of' the young author, and the position' of the publisher,and his handling of manuscripts. The qualifications of the publish- er's reader's preparation and revi- sion of manuscripts; and the pub- lishing house's attitude toward new" writers and unsolicited manuscripts will all be adequately treated,. Mr. Scott graduated from Michi- gan in 1914 and has been a mem-. ber of Harcourt, Brace andcom. pany for the past eleven years. AsF an undergraduate Mr. Scott was a member of the football squad, glee club, and student council; and he supported himself entirely while in. school. I SWEET CHARITY! Fans Pay for End Zone Seats, But Switch to Middle. The old adage that "Charity be- gins at home" was proved again yesterday when Michigan rooters )f the charity football game treated themselves to fifty-yard line seats. Up until game time the stadium benches were sparsely occupied in various sections, but as the opening whistle blew, as if by general agree- ment, the entire group of support- ers seated in the unreserved section at the ends of the field rose in a body and secured seats which com- manded the best view of the play- ing field, Throughout the entire game the crowd remained in the center parts of theastands, making the people who had. paid $3 for reserved seats look very, very charitable. . Some competition for the foot- ball teams in the way of public in- terest occurred when two men who had been warming .themselves in- ernally via the bottle method be- came boisterous and had to t be taken from the stadium by main force. Both were from Detroit. / Green Wave Remains Only Unbeaten Team NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 28.-(IP)- Tulane bagged the Southern Con- ference football championship and became a contender for the nation- al title by defeating Louisiana State university 34-7 here today before 30,000, cheering fans. The game brought Tulane through the South- ern Conference campaign unde- feated, and the defeat of North- western and the tie of Southern Methodist university left the Green Wave as the only unbeaten and untied major football t e a m in America. Faculty Con trol of; Publications Will I Oratory Subject. Strayed from South Fifth Ave. Boy's pet. Reward. Phone 9571. 285 FOR RENT FOR RENT-A completely furnish- ed apartment with connecting bath and shower. Nicely furnish- ed east room with adjoining kitchenette. Also front single room. Steam heat, shower, -ga- rage. Phone 8544. 422 E. Wash- WILL HOLD SEEC TRHlIS TI S IEEKh StudentI Be The preliminary trials of the ex- temporaneous contest held by the Oratorical Association are sched- uled for next Thursday at 4 o'clock, fourth floor Angell Hall. The finals of the contest, will be 7:15 p. in., Dec. 8, in tihe Adelphi room, Angell Hall, and will takeI place between the five best speak- ers of the preliminary contest. The question upon which all the speakers in both contests will de- liver five minute prepared speecrfes has been worded: To what extent should the faculty exercise control over student publications. After speaking on this subject, the contestants will be given from swenty to thirty minutes to prepare an extemporaneous speech on a question asked at the conclusion of their prepared speecn. To enter the conies-, candidates must present their subjects and brief outlines of their speeches at the office of the Speech depart- ment before 4 o'clock Wednesday, afternoon. All students on campus are eligible for the contest exceptI those who have represented the University in intercollegiate speech competition or have won in the contest before. Members of the Oratorical Asso- ciation will judge the preliminary contest, and three members of the Speech department will be judges of the finals. Gold, silver, and bronze medals are to be presented to the three winners of the final contest. DAMES MEET TUESDAY ___a__ e rLU anu envere r. none More than 40,000 children in the rary now has 85 sets of books cir-1 4863. 150 state had access-last year to sets of culating throughout the state. books with which every child should Last year 68 sets of books were WANTED-Student laundry. Also be acquainted, sent out by the shown in 61 counties of Michigan, beddi Rbl Soft Library. to more than 500 communities wbeCn.Rasonabe prices.iSof. water. Call for and deliver. This work is carried on under Thess books are loaned to com- the supervision of Edith Thomas, munities with a population of 2,000 Family Washings. Phone 707- who is in carge of the Extension or less for a period of three weeks. F-31. 53c division and state chairman of The books must becon exhibition so bok n eidcasfrteMc-that anyone in the community may TYPING-by 0. K. Thacher. 413 books and nesodcals for the Mich- have access to them. The object of Thompson. Phone 6734. 287 ers. Miss hom as bnd ter- this project is to permit children erst.cis i Thomas has been ter- to become acquainted with these LOST esd books for children for a books, and give them a desire to ntr . fyas n h snwbos adgv hmadsr oIOIETeying to stimzulate the reading of read them. .NTC-h people who adver- boksdbyichildren.w The books are all well illustrated. tise in the classifiedc alumnsof The wyo is aided by contribu- It is the belief of Miss Thomas that TH MI IAN DAILY.nshey Tiosh from the Children's Fund of these illustrations will not only at- THE MICHIGAN DAIY. They tract the attention of the children, are the people who want and ii , founded by Sen. James but also add much interest to their get quick results. If you have < uzens!in i' , 9s fund, has con- trib 29 t further te work reading of the books, anything to borrow, beg or bar- during current year. The Lib- _ I .._ _._ - t -Georgia Downs Tech ington. FOR SALE OR RENT-440 Highland Rd. Prof. Gingerich, on account of poor health, being compelled to go west, authorizes us to sell his strictly modern, exclusively lo- cated, high class eight room resi- dence at a great sacrifice. For particulars and an appointment to see this, call D. S. McComb, 4O OO0 STATE CHILDREN ARE SUPPLIED WITH READING MATTER BY LIBRAR Y 282e I 4812 or 21534. 286 .,. . ChurCh -o Be Hos to Older Boys Today (Cnnued from Page 1) w"ie i? cint and Modern Necro- irs _ Ali s Memerism and Hyp- notim, Denounced," will be dis-- ausscd at the First Church of At the Hillel Foundation services, which will be held in the Chapel of the Women's League building, Rab- bi Bernard Heller will speak on "Nature Worship and Religion." Morris Says Russell's Is Keenest of Mids (Continued from Page 1) Of late, said Professor Morris, Russell has been most interested in debate. He almost never turns down a chance to debate on the fundamental questions of the day if his opponent is of first rate qual- ity. He will engage this week in two debates in New York one on in Annual ilt, 45~-0 ATHENS, Ga., Nov. 28.- -(P)-The University of Georgia smothered Georgia Tech under an avalanche of touchdowns in their annual game here today, winn:ng 35-6. Tech scored in the closing min- utes of the game on an 80-yard drive with virtually a third-string Georgia team on the field. Rushing over t'Wo touchdowns in the first period, Georgia quickly took com- mand of the situation and the issue never was in doubt after the first ten minutes. I L D A & T ALD/ TS - rg ,M nW WUER CSTARTING Continuous 1:30-11:00 TODAY- All Seats 40c T h e writer-publisher relation-| ship will be of particular interest here because of the great attention paid to young authors and the re- ward's offered them by various lit- erary award groups. This lecture is especially recom- mended for students now enrolled in Sophomore composition, but is open to everyone. It will be pre- sented largely from a publisher's viewpoint, so that most students interested in writing or in current books will find the talk informing and valuable. Rocky Parsaca Shines as Detroit Wins, 6-0 WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. - (AP) - Largely through the flashing runs of its stocky halfback, Rocky Par- saca, the University of Detroit to- day defeated Georgetown 6-0. The Detroit touchdown came late in the fourth period. Parsaca start- ed the period by running a George- town punt back twenty yards. A penalty and some more line plung- ing by Purashoff made it first down on Georgetown's 13-yard line. Par- saca then passed to O'Neill, who carried the ball to the six-yard line, where, after three tries, Purashoff drove through for the score. Par- saca's placement was wide. RIO CRANDE b_ °A UNIVAPICTU LEO CARILLO-JOHN MACK EI SLIM SUMMERVILLE-DORO] BURGESS Three Men Are Killed in Pensylvania Wreck' LIVERMORE, Pa. Nov. 28.-(A)- Three trainmen were killed today in a rear-end collision of livestock and coal trains on the Pennsyl- vania railroad. , + +s. .' a u x v i v . +a + . sv . vrrv v~ + i i Y 1 V 1 , V 1 "Social Morals" and one on some The Michigan Dames will hold political topic. their regular meeting in the Grand ! "Russell, his speeches, and his Rapids room of the League Tuesday writing are stimulating," Professor night at 8 o'clock. The meeting will|Morris concluded. "Any man list- be of a social nature. Wives of all eni. g to him and not being made students are invited.; moe e alive is as good as dead." - - -- -*--- ____-_____ ____I -. k , ' f{r] _ " 21 f. (' m'"I HATDIPLMATSSNOO WITHIMAGAMW tTTMC , _ :: N ,, r, r .:} 'rid. 4j aA y ' ti;,t a , 1 NILA * i J....'..h'::: Purenfts 46 Malestic Today 1:30-11:00 'P. M. Now Playing .5 Fifty thousand Sylvaniari J "I'd sooner lase than cheat to win!' laid down their guns in hysterics . . . Diplomats went dipp . *Senator,- roared with rage at his homespun humor and shirt sleeve etiquettea.. a queen got back her king, and a prince returned to play. .............................. : . s: A Football ";p Tha's iffereNt F ;g wo-l ry 1% willuisu Your Father and Mother often wonder, as they sit at home, what the-r sons and daughters are doing at school-what activities of interest on the campus they might be attending. Your parent~s cannot be present to enter into the spirit of the .University but you can bring that spirit to them. Let them read each day the Campus News, the same News that you read. Strengthen That Link Between Your School And Your Parents. Richard Arlon Peggy Shannon Jack Oakie Regis Toomey SEND THEM 14r A4 "41, chtv[ttn 43ttil Extra I U I.