PAGE SIX, THE MiCITN D Alt r* THT3RSDAY, {)OILERFU14,' x949 HAPPY HOMECOMING: Authoress Betty Smith Visits Local Bookstore By GLORIA GOODSTEIN There was nothing of the bored visiting celebrity, but rather a spirit of happy homecoming about Betty Smith's appearance at a local bookstore yesterday after- noon. Although the noted author of "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" and "Tomorrow Will Be Better" has not been in Ann Arbor since 1930, the ten years she spent here are very fresh in her mind. Many townspeople came in to talk with Miss Smith about mutual friends and remembered days. * * * HER NEXT BOOK is still in the formative stage, but it will have a midwestern background. "The only midwest I know is Ann Ar- bor," Miss Smith said, "but the name of the town will not be used, for practical reasons." Miss Smith had never before been out of Brooklyn, when she came to Michigan in 1920. "I had a very happy time here, and I want to recapture those tender, cheerful years," she said. As a special student at the Uni- versity, the authoress studied writ- ing and won an Avery Hopwood Award for a one-act play. Her husband was a law student here at the same time, LATER MISS SMITH entered1 the Yale Drama School, where she wrote some seventy-five one- act plays, all but three of which were published. Since 1936 she has lived in Chapel Hill, where she is on the faculty of the Uni- versity of North Carolina as a play consultant and a special lecturer on the drama. To all budding writers, Miss Smith had this advice: "Write!" She said that a page a day, writ- ten faithfully, would soon pro- vide enough material to work from. "Live a normal life," she added. "Do your writing before nine in the morning, so that you can live and work like everyone else." Her first novel, "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn," took three years to complete. She worked on it two hours a day and spent two of the three years revising. The book has now sold over three million copies, not including sixteen different foreign language editions, and one million pocket editions. "Try to find out why people are the way they are," Miss Smith ad- vised. "Don't sit down to write a message. Write because you love it, and let the critics argue over the theme and hidden meanings." Registrants Flood Office of CityClerk Voters Line Up To Beat Deadline A steady flow of last minute Ann Arbor registrants kept the City Clerk's Office busy through- out the day yesterday, right up until closing time at 8 p.m. The crowd of would be voters filing through the lines at the City Hall, included many Uni- versity studenis who are eligible to register in Ann Arbor. AT TIMES, the line numbered more than fifty people, who wait- ed patiently in the halls for their chance to sign. City Clerk Fred C. Perry re- ported that at least four of his office assistants were at work signing up the new voters at all times, and the lines m'oved smoothly. Besides the lineup, a steadily ringing phone kept part of the staff busy answering questions about voting requirements and procedures. AT 8 P.M., THE City Police closed the doors and cut off the lines, but everyone already in line at that time was permitted to reg- ister. Yesterday was the last day for registering towvote in the Novem- ber 2 presidential election. Prof. Kauper To Speak To 'U' Lawyers Guild Prof. Paul Kauper of the law school will discuss the constitu- tional aspects of federal anti- lynching legislation at a meeting of the University chapter of the National Lawye Guild at 3:15 p.m. Friday in Rm. 3R of the Un- ion The Lawyers Guild has opened the meeting to all interested stu- dents and faculty members. Greater than '48-'49 NCN SOCIAL CHAIRMAN Looking for a favor for your Christmas Party that is new, different, and within your budget? L. G. BALFOUR CO. 1319 S. Univ. Ph. 9353 Note Selling Has 'Legal' Precedent Similar Venture Started in 1893 Faculty condemnation of the1 commercialized lecture note bus- iness follows a "legal" precedent established here 55 years ago. This may come as a surprise to Fred Zimmerman and Bill Mena- cher, founders of the Zimen en- terprise to mimeograph lecture notes, but two brothers, in law vchool, Thomas and Daniel Ed-" wards started a similar venture here irr 1893. THE BROTHERS, who wereI working their way, started mimeo- graphing law lecture notes to sup-' plement an average weekly income of $15, according to an article in Publisher's Weekly for July 29; 1944. After Thomas, the younger brother, graduated in 1898, their uncle took over the business as a sideline to cabinet making, his regular occupation. Faculty action, although a little slower than in this year's episode, inevitably came in due time. In 1906, after 13 years, the notes were banned, but the business went on. Instead of notes the firm started mimeographing laboratory man- uals and textbooks. The business specializing in scientific, scholarly, and technical books, has expanded to over $750,000 a year. Owen Cleary To Speak To Young Republicans Owen Cleary, chairman of the Liquor Control Commission of Michigan will speak on "Condi- tions at the Michigan Capital" at a meeting of the Young Repub- licans at 7:30 p.m. in the League. A Notary Public will also be on hand to authorize absentee ballots. This will be a regular feature of the Young Republican meetings until the close of the elections. Veterans enrolled in the Uni- versity this fall may not receive; their full subsistence until the week of Nov. 7, according to offi- cials of the Veterans Administra- tion. The first checks will include all subsistance payments due from Sept. 20 through the end of Oc- tober. Officials pointed out that the heavy workload the colleges and the VA face because of large en- rollments will probably cause the delay. MOST STUDENT veterans will be able to work part-time without having subsistence allowances re- duced, a VA press release said to- day. Full payments will be made as long as income from productive labor does not exceed these monthly ceilings established by P. L. 512:1. $210 for a veteran without dependents; 2. 270 for a veteran with one dependent; 3. $290 for those with more than one. ,The Veterans Administration Branch Office in Columbus will send prior notice to veterans whose National Service Life In- surance term policies expire after Oct. 8, 1948. OFFICIALS explained that this will give the veterans time to convert their term insurance to a permanent NSLI plan or renew their term insurance for an ad- ditional five years. Renewals may be made without physical exami- nation, but at a higher premium rate based on the veterans' at- taen~d ave at the time of renewal. VA stressed that veterans who plan to renew their term insurance snould submit their renewal ap- plication, plus a premium at the advanced rate, prior to the ex- piration date of the original pol- icy. E. St. Elmo Lewis, nationally known advertising expert, defines salesmanship as "the ability to make people want what they al- ready need," the World Book En- Texas Doctors Journey Here For Week's Medical Course Thirty-five Texas physicians the use have come to Ann Arbor for a one- week course in internal medicine. electroc Members of the Texas Intern- Men ists Club organized twenty-four ganiza years ago, the group has made an Stone annual one-week trip to a leading profes medical center for classes and Univer clinic conferences. facult "This is the way we keep up versity with the latest development in wester our field," Dr. Julian C. Barton, as. club president, pointed out. Last * *Walter THE COURSE, sponsored by ington, the internal medicine department versity of the medical school, will discuss next ye s of radioactive iodine and cardiogram technique. mbers of this unique or- ation include Drs. Charles and Raymond Gregory, sors of medicine at the sity of Texas, and several y members of Baylor Uni- ,y at Hlouston and South- n Medical College at Da- year the group studied at Reed Hospital in Wash- and plans to go to the Uni- of California at Berkeley ear, Dr. Barton said. I THE T 42z OLD CHUTIST-Walter Mor- gan, 76 years old, stands in his parachute harness at Fosston, Minn. just after he completed a parachute jump he said was his lifetime ambition. Morgan, an ex-farmer and the father of six children, said he leaped "to show the kids I could do it." Art Lecture To BeGiven Prof. Kurt Weitzmann of Princeton University will give an illustrated lecture on "The Im- perial Art of Constantinople" at 4:15 p.m. Monday in the Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Associated with the Archaeolo- gische Institut des Deutschen Reiches until he came to this country in 1934, Prof. Weitzmann is now a staff member of the De- partment of Art and Archaeology and the Institute of Advanced Study at Princeton. WHAT WILL IT DO FOR ME? Plenty! You will have use for it almost every month in the year because it com- bines lightness in weight with great warmth. You will wear it during the Fall . on snappy evenings to come . . . and on all but the coldest days of winter. You will use it for town, for country, for traveling, for driving a car and for almost every occasion where a coat is necessary. There is nothing that will give you greater pleasure and satisfaction. $45.00 -$47.50 l , , 1 ''N THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN 300 SOUTH MAIN STREET Watch for the NCN Baby Contest cyclopedia informs us. MAEM 0IJ0UVET "A SUZY DELAIR WHO REALLY MEANS IT." - Friday, Saturday eLourU 031$J0U VET A MAE WEST SUZY DELAI R WHO REALLY MEANS IT." -'iiHill Auditorium Ienour I 0 L 0U VET "A MAE WESTSUZY DELAI R WHO REALLY eE MEANS It. ? Friday, Saturday EUVET p ! ihoUrUE WESSUZY DELAIR AO REAdr MENS IT." _rrr AG Hi.llAuditorium I I %ur ILOUSJUVET SUZY DELAIR A MAE WEST _ - WHO REALLY MEANS IT Fridoy, Saturday 0OU UVET SUZY DELAIR A MAE WEST __ --_ _ _ _ 4 - I