PAGE EIGHT T HE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1935 Islamic Textile Arts Discussed By Mrs. Weibel Mohammed Is Pointed Out As An Early Collector Of Moslem Designs Mrs. Adele Weibel, of the Detroit Institute of Art, in a lecture yester- day pointed out that a study of tex- tile arts is of general interest as a means of following by the styles and methods of weaving, the progress of a civilization. Mrs. Weibel, who is curator of tex- tiles at the Institute, spoke yester- day in Alumni Memorial Hall on the subject of "Islamic Textiles of the Middle Ages." Hers was the sec- ond lecture in the "Near Eastern Art and Culture Series" being sponsored by the Research Seminary in Islamic Art of the University. Islamic textiles, Mrs. Weibel said, achieved their first prominence at the beginning of the Byzantine period, and then changed little until the Tenth Century, when they achieved their fullest development. The ma- terials used were varied cotton from India, silk from China, and linen and wool. Herbs, minerals and mol- lusks were used in making the rich dyes. Gold and silver were also lav- ishly used in the textiles. She pointed out that Mohammed himself was one of the earliest col- lectors of designed textiles. Mos- lems, she said, have been collectors of textiles ever since they were first recognized as an art in themselves. Mrs. Weibel then showed a number of slides, illustrating, she said, only the Byzantine and Sesanian tradition. The slides showed the most typical scenes used in all Eastern art. These include hunting scenes, and scenes with the Tree of Life in them. It is difficult, Mrs. Weibel said, to differ between Sesanian and Byzantine art, as they are alike except for very small details of color and design. The Tree of Life, she said, is the most common feature of both schools. One of the most famous of these tapestries, shown on a slide by Mrs. Weibel, pictures a ruler hunting lions. He is dressed in armor, and through the armor the ornate design of his state clothes may be seen. He is shown in a typical pose, holding a baby lion on his arms, while the mother tries to snatch it from him. $852,000 Is Received Here For Park Job Waterloo Development To Cover 10,000 Acres; 100 Men AlreadyAt Work An allotment of more than $852,000 for the purchase of necessary prop- erty and the development of the Wa- terloo project in Washtenaw and Jackson counties, made by the na- tional parks service, was announced yesterday by C. D. Platt, manager of the project. The total area of the proposed park is more than 10,000 acres, for whose acquisition $312,000 of the entire al- lotment has$been set aside. Ofthis, some $200,000 has already been com- mitted in signed contracts for the purchase of necessary territory, and the remainder of $540,300 is intended for the development of the parks. One hundred men are already at work on the project, it was an- nounced, and men will be added at the rate of about 10 a day through the National Reemployment Bureaus in Ann Arbor and Jackson. Three major phases of the project are outlined as present. First is the development of a mass recreation center at Mill Lake, in Washtenaw County, providing camping and pic- nic facilities, bathing beaches, space for group camps, and general recrea- tional equipment. The second part of the program calls for a recreational and resort de- velopment of Negroes at Little Pleas- ant Lake, in Jackson County, and the third enterprise is a public bathing beach and picnic grounds on the south shore of Big Portage Lake, near Newport Bathing Beach on the Dex- ter Road north of Dexter. Other proposals under the project contemplate refuges for wild fowl and game, and an extensive fish-rearing enterprise has been begun with plans for the construction of one of the largest breeding ponds in the State in Jackson County, in cooperation with the county conservation league there. In Ann Arbor C. H. Elliott, county welfare relief administrator, an- nounced that more than 1,400 Wash- tenaw County residents have now been transferred from direct relief to the work relief rolls under the WPA, with a payroll of $28,155.20 for the period from Nov. 20 to Dec. 5, paid entirely from Federal funds. Varsity Debaters lIn Action Friday The men's Varsity debating squad will take part in its only debate of the semester Friday, it was an- nounced yesterday by Arthur A. Se- cord, debate coach. The affirmative team will meet Il- linois here and the negative team will debate Wisconsin at Madison. The affirmative team will include Wil- liam A. Centner, '38; Collins E. Brooks, '37; and Leo Burson, '39. They will debate the question, "Resolved, That the Several States Should En- act Legislature Providing for a Sys- tem of Complete Medical Service Available to All Citizens at Public Expense." The negative team will include Clif- ford C. Christenson, '39; Frederick E. Densmore, '36, and Harry L. Schnid- erman, '39. Sabotage On New Cruiser i Why Emil Ludwig Likes Our AmericanColleges By RALPH W. HURD Everyone knows Emil Ludwig, who will speak Thursday in Ann Arbor, as the internationally-famous biog- rapher of Bismarck, Napoleon, Goethe, Christ, Lincoln, and other great personages in history. Few know, or can imagine, Emil Ludwig as an accurate and informed .ommentator on American college life. Perhaps the best expression of Lud- wig as such a commentator can be found in the American Magazine of October, 1931, in an article written by him entitled "Why I Shall Send My Boy to An American College." In the article Ludwig includes six basic reasons for this decision, and they comprise the impressions left by American colleges on a visitor from a foreign country who has had the necessary amount of interest and time intelligently to inform himself on existing conditions. Ludwig asserted, first of all, that he would send his boy to an Amer- ican college "because in America learning is a cheerful and happy. thing. The American student is not bent over his books for five weary' hours at a time. He is at his books for an hour or two, and then he has change and recreation in exercise and play." Ludwig found in American col-+ leges "an easy comradeship existing between the pupil and the teacher, not to be found anywhere in Eu- rope." He was impressed with "the American competitive system which awakens in the student an ardent desire to prove himself foremost in physical prowess, in spiritual and in intellectual matters." Ludwig would send his boy here because of the great variety of races which come together in close and friendly communion in this coun- try. "Nationalistic and racial hatreds1 such as the various nations of Europei cherish and tend, are, in America-at least among the whites - unknown," he stated. In this connection he advanced the opinion: "The thought never occurs to the American student that stu- dents of other races may be better than he or she, or not so good. Such thoughts burden the social inter- course of innumerable students of European schools." "My boy is to learn," he continued, "that there is a similar tolerance in regard to class and caste. Although I have found many of our own social prejudices in your country, I believe that the lesson a young man can learn only in America or in Soviet Russia is that, in these countries, everyone works, including the rich." Ludwig declared that "No country in Europe has, up to the present time, held the idler in social disrepute, and this score of idleness I hold to be the greatest American invention." Another major value of American college Ludwig found to be in its pacifistic attitude. "My son," he said, "has been brought up as a pacifist, but in our schools he would be sur- rounded by disquieting talk about parties, about world power, about re- venge, about hate against other na- tions. "Such talk as this he will not hear in the schools of America. The wish for power among his American fellow students will not express itself in the wish to butcher. Living with the youth of America, my son will learnI that money is better than war, that peace is better than money, and that health and love of his fellows are better than anything else," he stated. Turning to criticisms advanced against American colleges, Ludwig found "the greatest European criti- cism of America to be the accusation of an insatiable materialism. But on this score, the only difference between Europeans and Americans is the en- gaging frankness and naivete of Americans in admitting the all-im- portance of money, while in Europe all of this is just as true, but veiled and disguised." Another criticism common among Europeans, who accuse Americans of being in too much of a hurry, was also decriefd by Ludwig. "The famed American 'haste' is nothing more than a mere matter of European prej- udice," he asserted. MANN PHARMACY HEAD In the senior class elections of the College of Pharmacy held yesterday, Larence G. Mann of Nunda, N. Y. was elected president. The other officers chosen were Eu- gene E. Land, vice-president; Lily Hindley, secretary; and Alvin Sass, treasurer. Is Reported Investigation Of Dama To Reduction Gears 'Quincy' Is Started age Of QUINCY, Mass., Dec. 9. - (RP) - Serious damage to reduction gears connecting turbines of the new U. S. cruiser Quincy with the propeller shaft was reported today by Harry E. D. Gould, general manager of the Fore River shipyards. Asked if the damage had resulted from sabotage, as had been reported, Gould said an investigation of the matter was in progress. Gould declined to estimate the ex- tent to which the propelling mech- anism of the new $12,000,000 fight- ing ship had been injured when the machinery was being tested Saturday. Shipyard employes unofficially ex- pressed an opinion that the big re- duction gears, which serve in a ca- pacity similar to the transmission gears of an automobile, might have suffered $100,000 damage. Saturday's accident was the second' serious mishap to delay work on the 578-foot 10,000-ton cruiser. Last August fire swept the main cable room of the vessel soon after it was launched, causing damage to wiring and electrical equipment estimated by Fore River Shipbuilding Corp. offi- cials at $100,000. Elaine Plans A Hollywood Trip For Date With John NEW YORK, Dec. 9. - (fit) - Dark- eyed Elaine Barrie, protegee of John Barrymore until their romance broke up a month ago, is leaving for Holly- wood this week - ostensibly to ap- pear in a play. The New York Daily News, how- ever, quoted her as saying she intend- ed to see Barrymore, after whom she made a fruitless transcontiental chase early in the fall. "We've made a date," she was quoted. I While U You Are Home C hris tmas Vacation - -- T Be Sure To Take Advantage of the Time To Tell Your Parents that it is No Longer Cheaper to Send Your Laundry Home! I, Here Are Some Facts! I WHEN you take into consideration the cost of sending your laundry home (express charges) - the time and trouble spent by your family in having your laundry washed at home - and the length of time it takes for your laundry to be returned to you, especially when you are sorely in need of a clean shirt, then, you too, will take advantage of this new, cheaper, certified service that the Ann Arbor Laundries are now offering and that just can't be beat for economy and service. Shirts, handkerchiefs and socks are finished to meet the most critical eye -- underwear and pajamas are washed and folded ready to wear. I WE LIKE PURPLE, ANYWAY WASHINGTON, Dec. 9. - (1'} - Postoffice Department officials have told a House appropriations subcom- mittee that postal service again is "in the red" and indefinite retention of the 3-cent postage rate is desirable. ' I GIVE A FOUNTAIN PEN THIS CHRISTMAS For Dad- Wahl - Eversharp - DeLuxe - - $10.00 For Mother, Sister, or Brother- Wahi - Eversharp Non-leaking and Adjustable - $5.00 and $7.50. For Kid Brother or Sister- Wahl - Eversharp at $3.00, $3.75, $5.00 or Wahl - Oxford $1.00, $1.95, $2.95 VATCHING PENCILS Wahl - Eversharp 95c, $2.00, $3.50. $4.00 DOMPLETE SETS $1.95, $2.85, $3.95, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00. and $12.50. SAMPLE BUNDLE 3 Shirts 2 Suits of Underwear 6 Handkerchiefs 3 Pairs of Socks 2 Bath Towels COST 92c Price per lb. Minim Sk~irt xr . ..ioc . ." num Bundle 50c S0 0 09 0 lOc (Full Dress Shirts are not included in this Special Price) Sox Extra, per pair .. 2c Handkerchiefs, Extra. . IC GI 1Iiw I r WHITE SWAN LAUNDRY --a n... .._ :.. -rte KYER LAUNDRY Phone 4185 III' :m I ,i - i