THE MICHIGAN DAILY AIL Y OFFICIAL BULLETIN MatLUL if, Che BUiletib is.uonstruvt noice to all members of the ertityf Copy received at thbe office of the Assistant to the President uzt l 11 30 m Saturday Pastor Invades Inner Sanctum Commercial Education In Need CLASSIFIED DIRECTOR' Of Leadership, Says J.M. Trytten I L-- ---. - a IJul THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1932 No. 631 NOTICES To the Members of the University Council: The next meeting of the Council will be held on Monday, December 12, at 4:15 p. M., in Alumni Memorial Hall, Room B. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary University Broadcasting Service-Thursday, Dec. 8 at 2 p. m. "Laws of Elementary Physics as applied to Engineering Mechanics" by Franklin L.' Everett, Instructor in Engineering Mechanics. "Etching" by Wilfred Shaw, Director of Alumni Relations. Freshmen from the following schools are reminded of the conferences with their principals in the Registrar's Office, Thursday, December 8: Ann Arbor, Arthur Hill, Battle Creek, Birmingham,^Cranbrook, Culver, Dearborn, Detroit: Cass, Central, Cooley, Country Day, Eastern, Hudson, Miss Newman's, Northeastern, Northern, Northwestern, Pershing, Redford, Southeastern, Southwestern, Western, Detroit University School; Fordson, Grosse Pointe, Highland Park, Jackson, Manchester, Monroe, Mt. Clemens, Northville, Owosso, Paton Hall, Plymouth, Pontiac, Royal Oak, Saginaw, Smead; University (meeting at high school); Wyandotte: Roosevelt; Ypsi- lanti: Roosevelt. Students who entered the University this year from Flint Junior Col- lege will meet with Dean Shattuck on December 8 also. Ira M. Smith, Registrar tUpperclassmen: Former students of the schools listed above are invited to call at the Registrar's Office, December 8, to meet with the principals. If you will call Extension 373 you can learn at what hours your principal will be having interviews. Ira M. Smith, Rgeistrar Qualifying Examination in Education: The next series of Qualifying Examinations required for students planning to carry on directed teaching next semester will be held on Saturday, January 14, from 9-12 o'clock in the Auditorium of the University High School. Students concerned should con- sult the instructor in Special Methods in accordance with their interest. The next COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION IN EDUCATION will be held on Saturday, January 21, 1933. C. O. Davis, Secretary Graduate Students Applying for Teachers' Certificates: Will all stu- dents enrolled in the Graduate School who are planning to receive Teachers' Certificates during the current year please report at the Record- er's Office of the School of Education at their early convenience. C. O. Davis, Secretary Pre-Medical Students: The aptitude test for students expecting to apply for admission to a medical school by the fall of 1933 will be given in Room 1025 Angell Hall from 3 to 5 o'clock on Friday, December 9. Student identification cards and receipts showing payment of the dollar fee must be presented at the door. BE ON TIME. Ira M. Smith Notice: Tuesday, December 13, I am again taking a group of students from other lands to visit rural and village schools. Others interested in such. a trip please call my office before 4 p. n. Monday, December 12. George E. Carrothers House Presidents: Signing out slips must be in this week by at least Friday. They are to be turned in at the Undergraduate Offices at the Mich- igan League. If you have not attended to the matter, will you please do so immediately. Of Negro Cult (Continued from Page 1) sect seemed to be just what was needed for their emotional security., Temples of the "Nation of Islam" are located in Detroit on Hastings and. Livingston Streets. Although both were organized by Farrad, their doctrines differ somewhat. The temples are a strange com- bination of both Christian and Mo- hammedan ideas. Children are com- pelled to attend the Sunday School, where they are taught the Koran in Arabic. The services are held in pseudo-Masonic temples and before entering, everyone must give the password, a protestation of the Mo- hammedan faith in Arabic. Although the exact figures are not known, it is estimated that Farrad has made "a lot of money" in the process of converting the negroes. Mr. Beyon explained that Farrad taught the people that they were not slaves, but descendants from a lost Arabian tribe. For a certain sum Farrad traced their family trees back to Arabian princes, and for an extra large sum he traced one family back to the Quraysh, the family to which Mohammad himself and the first caliphs belonged. A New Name For $10 For $10 he would give the member, a new Arabian name, and during the recent election the negroes insisted' upon using, their new names when they registered until they were pro- hibited by officials. "I don't believe that Farrad had anything to do with the sacrificial killings," Mr. Beyon said. "That was not his idea. He did, however, teach that any member divulging the sec- rets of the cult should suffer death. The idea of human sacrifice was un- doubtedly brought in by a number of Haitians who have recently con- nected themselves with the-cult. They show their faith by achieving 'vic- tories' by sacrificing willing persons." Dean Against Short Rations For Students Commercial education schools stands in great need of lead-' ership, according to Prof. John M. Trytten of the School of Education, whose talk on the findings of re- search in the field of commercial education was broadcast yesterday >ver the University radio station. Mr. Trytten stressed the need for a close relationship between the teachers of commercial subjects and the business men of the community which the school is attempting to supply with personnel, "The commercial teacher has a unique opportunity in the develop- ment of students in that a more prompt check upon the results of her work in available than upon that of almost any other department of the school," said Professor Trytten. Quoting from the results which found through research, Mr. Trytten showed that many schools do not consider the business men sufficiently in making out their curricula for commercial studies. Another criticism which he direct- ed toward the existing system was that "there is no correlating force which will regulate all schools and make them conform to a certain spe- cified curriculum. "In the past, each teacher has been left to work out her own problems as best she could with the materials which were furnished her by the au- thorities of each individual school, who tolerated commercial education as something which the public de- manded rather than encouraged or attempted to regulate it," the speaker asserted. in highseveral students of the problem have NOTICE NOTICE-If you are driving home and wish to take passengers with you so that the cost of the trip will be minimized call AL the AD- TAKER, 2-1214. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS. S. U.--Shoe Repair Shop. Repairing] while you wait. Reasonable prices. Hats cleaned and blocked. Shoes shined. Open evenings. SEASONAL SUGGESTIONS- Wall paper, paint. Samples, estimates. Home Decorators since 1905. Dial 8107 or 7600. 30c T IS NOT TOO LATE to order Christmas cards. Our greeting card dept. is large and complete. Fran- cisco Boyce. 723 N. Univ. 29 BARGAINS-overstuffed chairs $3.00 to $9.00. Davenports $10.00. Study tables $2.00. Lamps $1. A & C Fur- niture, 325 S. Fifth Ave. 22c FOR RENT LOST-A leather notebook. With _ .. Exhibition Of Textiles Will Open Today Mrs. Comstock Prefers Family Life To Politie Harvard seal on cover. Bud Quar- ton, phone 756 F 23. Reward. 191 WANTED MEN-Wanting to make good money on a commission basis, report to Michigan Daily Office, Thursday, Dec. 8, at 4:15 p. m. 188 TYPING-Notes, papers, and Grad. Theses. C. Heckart. 3423. 35c TYPING-Grad. theses a specialty, M. V. Hartsuff. 9087. 40c LAUNDRIES LAUNDRY - Soft water. 2-1044. Towels free. Socks darned. 13c WASHING--And ironing. Called for and delivered. Silks and woolens guaranteed satisfactory 2-3478 611 Hoover. 15c G alens Fall $400 Short; Will Give Party Anyway Rain and the depression combined this year to make the Galens Tag Days fall more than $400 short of their set quota of $1,500, it was an- nounced last night by Martin Batts, M. treasurer. "However, the children in the Hospital will be given a christ- mas party as usual," said Batts, "and the workshop in the Hospital will be maintained." Although all of the checks are not yet in from fraternities and sororities, the total amount collected will be less than $1,100. MDAJ E S TIDC TODAY -- FRIDAY! An exhibition of textiles, brought' (Continued from Page 1) to Ann Arbor through the courtesy Mrs. Comstock knows pewter of the Detroit Institute of Arts, is aspieces.lMs.hosc rw.e open to the public today. The col- lection can be seen in the exhibition Prominent in a corner is a huge cases on the main floor of the Archi- ge bouhtchMrselfofora hsma tecture building, and will remain she bought herself for a Christmas there until Dec. 16. present. "I'd always wanted one, so The display, according to Prof. I got it," she laughs. She loves travel Walter W. J. Gores of the College of and spent most of her girlhood see-all tionally fine early Coptic tapestries of Europe, n fact with her father and also some early Peruvian weav- and mother. One of her greatest dis- ings. These two sets together form appointments is that she never had one of the rarest and most valuabl'e n opportunity to go to Russia, specimens of the entire agroup, Pro- though once early in the century her fessor Gores said. The Coptic tapes- bamily was ver csetabroad several tries belong to the Seventh and times before her marriage and again Eight centuries in Egypt, and the in 1928 with her older son, Kirk Peruvian weavings to the pre-con- White quest period. Although no logicalW -t :eason has been found, these two sets, She has two sons. Kirk White, who coming from widely separated coun- is 28 years old, lives in Albion with tries, show. the same type of weav- his family. The younger brother, 13 ngs. years old, is a student in the eighth "Another noteworthy set," said grade of University High School. Professor Gores, "is Islamic-Egypt- Her etchings were all about us as n.Itnshows extremely delicate we talked. They are a splendid col- workmanship an~d embodies also the lection. One of Whistler's few-he type of decoration done in the tapes- did only 28- is there; so are some try method of weaving. These tap- odd old ones of Rembrandt; water estries were originally discovered and ship scenes by Briede; bird charred and rolled in a tight ball, things of Benson; Rafaelli and Zions; lying among some ruins. Appearing all are there, one by one on the useless and valueless, they were sunny walls. She knows them well, thrown into water where they were and talks of them with the enthus- able to be unraveled and thus discov- iasm and expertness of a connossieur. ered. She likes books, history detective "Some of the fine brocade and da- stories. 'I love detective stories, read mask textiles, representative of the them at night, and find them most lest weavings of Italy, France, and sophoric," she chuckled. I left her Spain, are especially well represented bending over the stamp album, still in the group." laughing. The entire collection, composed of - _ 100 specimens, show the different so complete as to give a brief histori- me thods of decorating textiles cal outline of the history of woven through the weaving process and are textiles. FOR RENT---Furnished apartment with private bath and shower, for three or four adults; also furnish- ed apartment for one or two; and a single room. Steam heat and ga- rage. Special price to large group. Available now, week-ends, Christ- mas vacation, or second semester. Dial 8544. 422 E. Washington. 196 FOR RENT-Pasadena Apts., 414 S. Division. Furnished 2-room apart- metn, Frigidaire, bath, porch, mar- ried couple preferred. 194 FOR SALE FOR SALE-Very reasonable, rac- coon coat in good condition. Call 3494 if interested. 198 oINANCE CO.-Is selling late model cars for balance due. 311 W. Huron, 2-2001. 19c LOST LOST-Cigarette case, black and sil- ver. Engraved. Lost on East Uni- versity last Saturday night. Re- ward. Call 5593. 197 Micil igan They Dared Death - Courted Danger - to Right a Wrong! I tover Chinese Students: Students interested in obtaining a club picture may e same by calling at Rentschler's studio. The price is $1.75. In the event b more than 36 are sold each student will receive a refund of 25 cents. ACADEMIC NOTICES Geology I: The make-up field trip scliedule is posted on the bulletin rd near Geology Office, 2051 N.S. All field trip absences must be made at the time scheduled. The make-up bluebook will be given Friday at 4:00 in Room 2051 N.S. English 48: Elections in English 48 must be approved by one of the ructors in the course. This may be done Monday to Thursday from 2 and 2-5. Room 3230 A.H. EXHIBITION Division of Fine Arts announces an exhibition of works of Six Contem- ary European and American Painters in West Gallery, Alumni Memor- Eall. Exhibition open daily through December 14. EVENTS TODAY Business Administration Assembly, at 11 o'clock in Room 25, Angell' L. Dean Samuel T. Dana, of the School of Forestry and Conservation, speak on the subject "Forestry as a Business." This assembly is intend- primarily for students in the School of Business Administration but ers interested are cordially invited. Le Cercle Francais: Meeting at 8:00 p. m. in Room 408 Romance Lang- e Building. M. Ehrhard will speak. Both old and new members are urged e present. Iota Alpha regular meeting at 7:30 p .m. in Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg. essor W. E. Lay, of the Mechanical Engineering Department, will speak. graduate students in engineering are cordially invited to be present. Lanldscape Club meeting in 401 S.W. at 7:30 p. m. Dr. LaRue will speak 'Tropical Landscape." - Varsity Glee Club: Regular rehearsal 7:30 p. m. in the Glee Club ms. Polonia Literary Circle: Members desiring to try out for the club netball team please report ready for practice at 8 p. m. at the Intra- al Building, Court 4. tend the Martin Luther motion pic- itheran students are urged to at- re, tonight, -in the Grand Rapids C.-,ISTMAS.S ..IALS .HRiS,~TM3AS 1EIAS (Continued from Page 1) funds available for student help of over three hundred thousand dollars, but most of these, of course, are al- ready loaned out. Nearly every loan fund, he explained, has some strings attached to it by the donor, which Limit its field of usefulness. The in- come is to be devoted to the aid of worthy students in engineering, mu- sic, medicine, or some particular de- partment and if there are no appli- cants for it in that department it must lie idle in spite of pressing needs elsewhere. One of the largest funds is specifically denied to all law, medicine and fine arts students. 'One of the most useful funds we have," said Dean Bursley, "is one of very .modest size. It was established in 1922 by a Detroit woman who of- fered to give $30 a month for an in-I definite period. There are no restric- tions whatever as to its use and it is mainly from this source that we are givingrsmall loans to these people. It is entirely inadequate, and the $2,000 to be contributed by the Ann Arbor Community fund, which will be ad- ministered in the same manner, will be a most welcome addition." Efforts to secure more flexibility in the use of loan funds have met with scant success, for the donors cer- tainly have the right to specify how their money shall be used, Dean Bur- sley pointed out, and many of them are reluctant to permit variation from their instructions, while many other donors are dead and some be- quests are executed by a trust com- pany which cannot authorize excep- tions. Room of the Michigan League Build- ing, at 5:00, 6:30, or 8:00 o'clock. Friday evening at 8:00 o'clock, in the Zion Parish Hall, the Lutheran Student Club will have its Christmas Party. Each member is to bring a 10 cent gift in addition to 25 cents to defray the expenses of the party. Hillel Players Meeting at 4:30 in Hillel Foundation. Winter play, fi- nances, appointments, Sunday pro- grams and other business to be dis- cussed. Billiards: Instruction every Thurs- day at 2 o'clock by Mr. Williamson, in the games room of the Michigan League. Hillel Foundation invites all Jewish students to attend a tea today at the Foundation Building, sponsored by Phi Beta Delta Fraternity. COMING EVENTS Theosophical Society will meet at 8:00 p. m. in the League on Friday, December 9. Professor N. H. Anning, of the Mathematics Department, will speak on "Pythagoras." Visitors wel- {' Harry Yowl You're a bit late. That's my life- Jazz-from Sing- apore to Port Said .. i1ne with TRACY 'APeggy LSHANNON. with NANCY CARROLL GEORGE RAFT "HOCKEY HOCK" A Gledson Comedy "NO HOLDS BARRED" Novelty "BLUEBEARD'S BROTHER" Terry-Toon Extra -- WILLIAM DEMAREST I PARAMOUNT NEWS "THIE RUNAkOU N D" Cartoon "I Love a Parade" News - Novelty Comng Saturday - - --ft L Er "ROCKNE COACH GIVEN AWAY" at 8:50 BRING YOUR STUBS COME EARLY i. W W WI e wbol .,i.i F LI iALIST xi Embossed Imitation Leather Goods Folding Desk Pad with Stationery Pocket Stationery Rack Scrap Book Utility Box Oratorical Association Lecture Course presents FREDERIC WILLIAM WILE Card or Cigarette Box Waste Basket $1.00 Each Subject I r r . u.^ '!ru r t - wV TI-" L c-dt1 1%. TT C1I III