E M I C H I G A N 1) A I LY SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1936 TUF MICHIGAN DAIL4Y SATURDAY, JANUARY 18, 1936 I Aga-Oglu Gives Talk On Nordic And Islamic Art European, Mohammedan Similarities In Culture Described In Address Dr. Mehmet Aga-Oglu, lecturing yesterday in the Alumni Memorial Building on the subject "The Iden- tity of Expression in Islamic and North-European Arts," pointed out the remarkable similarities which may be found in Islamic and Nordic arts of the fourth to the 12th cen- turies. Dr. Agla-Oglu stated that by North-Europeancountries he means ,Scotland and Ireland, Scandanavia and North Germany. "The artistic conceptions of the two civilizations," he said, "are very simple. The cul- ture represents itself in decorative forms, and not in representational art." A number of slides showing Islamic and Nordic works of art together were then shown. The first showed a title page from an Irish Gospel of the eighth century, and a title page from a Koran of the same period. Dr. Agla-Oglu pointed out the simi- larities in the design of the pages. The close geometric design is clearly noticeable in both pages, and it is this, he said, which seems to point to likeness of the artistic philosophies of the two widely separated peoples. The second set of slides showed an example of bronze work from Tur- key, and a wood carving from a shrine of St. Patrick in Ireland. In both of these decorative pieces, a rhyth- mical repitition of design is the mo- tive, and this same influence, Dr. Agla Oglu pointed out, is also dis- cernable in the music of Islam and the Northern countries at the same period. Another slide shown pictured two heralded horse heads, both alike in their design, and in the use of ara- besque features intermingled with the natural appearance of the figures. The use of-arabesque design, said Dr. Agla Oglu, is common both in Nor- dic and Islamic art. The reasons for this, he said, are in both cases re- ligious. The religion of Islam dictates that the artist must not imitate the work of Allah, and fear of insulting their Gods prevented the Nordic artists from imitating nature exactly. This fear, he said, continued after the in- troduction of Christanity to the northern peoples. Weaver Speaks On WJR On Era Of Romanticism Bremer Witness (b,, (1 .1 Pep rts n forth more vigorously, and more out- BrimmRep rs n Cat holics W ill pthan heretofore, its objec- Press Conventions $ions to the go vernent's socialistic Defy Nnexican article three of An account of two journalism con- So the national constitution, reformed ventions attended in Washington, r S c alistOrde in D., 1934, to make socialistic edu- D. C., during he holidays was given cation compulsory, the pastoral letter said "no Catholic can be a Socialist." by' Prof. Jehn L. BrumR of the de- lfuse Compliance WithI It defined as Socialism any sys- partment of journalism at a meeting tern which "does not recognize the of Kappa Tau Alpha, national hon- Decree Inhibiting Church rights of God and the church." orary journalism society, at the home Control Of Education Although issued in printed form of Mr. and Mrs. Donal Hamilton __prior to being read, the pastoral let- Haines Thursday evening. MEXICO CITY, Jan. - ter was not immediately circulated Dorothy Shappell, '36, also spoke, Catholic church authorities said to- widely. No government official would presenting a review of Walter Du- comment on it before it was read. ranty's book "I Write As I Please." day instructions to Mexican Catholics ------ -__eo itar- Plans were made at the meeting to to refuse to comply with the Federal PLEADS GUILTY present a dance for all journalism socialistic education laws would be GRAND RAPIDS, Jan. 17.-UP)- students sometime during the second read Sunday in all churches through- Ward Harris, fifty-one-year-old WPA semes:er. The dance will be spon- out the country. worker, pleaded guilty before Circuit scred in conjunction with Theta The instructions were contained Judge Thaddeus B. Taylor Wednes- Sigma Alpha, national journalism in a collective pastoral letter, pre- day to the fatal stabbing of Mrs. sorority for wcmen. Claire Gorman, pared by the nine archbishops and Evelyn Bouck last Saturday night in '36, was named co-chairman of the 30 bishops, in which the church set his room in a boarding house. dance committee. ,- Hillel Players To Give One-Act Play In Pontiac "The Finger of God" has been se- lected as the one-act play to be pre- rented by the Hillel Players before the Bnai Britn orgamzation of Pon- iac. The play was chosen fromt three presented by the Players before the public and ranked by the audi- ence 's applause. Marguerite Merkel, '37, is the direc- tor of the play and Robert Fisch- grund, '37, Lillian Rosen, '36, and Richard Rome, '36, compose the cast of the production. Al -~-- ae d tress Proo. Terese Carmichael (above), 29, testified at St. Paul she saw Cas- sius McDoinald, accused conspirator in the Bremer kidnaping, at the home of Alvin Karpis in Miami, while she was nurse for Karpis' woman companion, Dolores De- laney. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) Moore, of the Engineering College, will be the guest of honor. Members are requested to sign at the Union before the meeting. The cost is $.35, and the time 6:30 p.m. The time for taking the 'Ensian picture will be chosen. Unitarian Church. Sunday: 5:30 Twilight service, "A Battle yet to be won" by Dr. A. P. Reccord. 7:30, Liberal Students Union. Dr.1 A. P. Reccord on "Rethinking Re- ligion." Elet Alumni Head Y.M.C.A. President Emory J. Hyde, president of the University Alumni Association, was elected president of the Y.M.C.A. at a meeting of the new board of direc- tors held Thursday night. He has been a member of the board for more than a year. Recently Hyde made a trip to Cal- ifornia, where he studied the policies and activities of six branches of the Y M.C.A. In his position as chair- man of the program committee he has cooperated with more than 30 local leaders in directing thehactivi- ties of the local branch. f The COLONIAL INN 303 N. Division - 8876 Luncheons - 1 1 :30 1 :30 Dinners - - 5:30 - 7:30 Sunday Dinners 12:30- 2:30 Room For Private Parties Aow F 1 T, ORO 1 State Street on the Campus The Michigan Daily's Market Page Brings Results Saturday Special 2 Dozen Cookies and 1 Loaf of Bread 25C WE BAKE TO PLEASI, MO DDE R BAKING COMPANY 210 North 4th Avenue Fire Sale LAST DAY SATURDAY HEADQUARTERS for Home Dressed Poultry and Meats, Groceries and Vegetables We Carry PREMIER Canned Goods. LEMBLE'S Forest Avenue Market QUALITY WE DELIVER Final Clean-up 530 Forest Avenue Phone 4251 I 'I Prying Into Of Poets Private Lives Is Deprecated By Professor In Talk Prof. Bennett Weaver of the Eng- lish department spoke over Station WJR yesterday afternoon, discussing the period of Romanticism, its effects and significance. Professor Weaver lent much em- phasis to the point that as students of literature people are liable to stress tro much the knowing of intimate facts about the lives of certain poets. "There are two sides to a poet," he said, "one with which he faces the world, the other with which he faces eternal love and truth." "The period of Romanticism was essentially one of revolution," he said, adding that French and American revolutions affected men's manner of thinking, and that the old order was broken up, yielding to a new. He continued that as far as the Englishmen were concerned, the pe- riod was one of war, a condition sup- plemented with the agricultural and industrial revolutions - all of which changed the very bases of life. Yet despite this turbulent and changing atmosphere, he added, beauty such as disclosed in the "Ode' to a Skylark" seemed to be the center about which great poetical thought and expression revolved. Professor Weaver implied that it was bad taste to want to know the private facts about a literary genius when those facts are such as to sat- isfy only human curiosity and cannot be used to help us understand some- thing worthwhile which the genius has produced. "I think it not only bad taste," he added, "but it is bad judgment, also. It leads to a deep confusion of the purposes with which we study literature, which, after all, have to do with our learning about life and the ways in which we may live most abundantly." Professor Weaver spoke admiringly of Wordsworth, Shelley, and Burns, in that they were truly representative of their age, the Romantic period. He continued by saying that the so- cial theory of the dignity and worth of the common man was in Words- worth's hands transmuted into a poetic theory. The poem was inter- ested in the elemental passions of .11 C- AC ~" dwAtt