THE MICHIGAN DAILY Survey Reveals G rttdutaesHave Least Divorces A typical college graduate leaves school, at the age o 22, marries quick- ly, and is less likely to seek a divorce than other persons, a survey of col- lege alumni conducted recently by the educational bureau of the De- partment of the Interior reveals. More than half the men and wom- en alumni live in metropolitan cities of 100,000 population or more, and many of them live with relatives dur- ing their first one or two years out of college, the study says. It was directed by Dr. Walter J. Greenleaf, of the Department of In- terior, and was conducted through cooperation by 31 universities. It was financed by relief funds. The survey also disclosed that: College men tend to marry earlier and in larger proportion than co- lege women. Fifty-seven per cent of men alum- ni, 61 per cent of the women, have no children. The divorce rate among college alumni is low, compared with that of the country as a whole. More college women than college men are divorced. Engineering and business adminis- tration are most popular undergrad- uate majors for men; education and English for women. Thirty per cent of the men, 19 per cent of the women were unable to find the work they wanted after gradua- tion. Ninety-nine per cent of college al- umni have never been on relief. A typical graduate will earns about $1,321 during his first year after graduation. After eight years he will receive $2,416. Adult Education Institute Hears Talk On Russia (Continued from Page 1) S i S' f{ i. y' i I r ., Y f { 'I r i U 1 Wane In Crusading Fervor Surveyed By Throop's Book By HERVIE HAUFLER the Vatican searching for these ec- In the 12th century, Europeans clesiastical analyses of the growing went by thousands on crusades to the hostility to Crusades and in compar- ing the accounts with the-reports in Holy Land, in thel ate 13th the Popes' vernacular literatures, including Old calls for Crusaders gained few fol- French, Provencal, Middle High Ger- lowers. The change of public opin- man and Old Spanish. He found that ion which caused this wane in crusad- the vernacular accounts affairm and ing fervor is surveyed in_ "Criticism support those from ecclesiastical of the Crusade," a book written by sources. Prof. Palmer A. Throop of the history, One of the chief reasons for this department and published this week by the Swets and Zeitlinger publish- wanng asceticism, Professor Throop ing house of Amsterdam. found, was a growing doubt of the The change in popular interest is papal right to issue Crusade indul- significant, Professor Throop be- gences for the slaughter of infidels. lieves, because it shows the rise of When later Popes became so involved a more secular Europe, a shift of tn secular affairs that they launched loyalty from church to state. It Crusades against Chrsitian princes mairks the decline of papal power. and offered indulgences for their deaths, the popular doubt was crys- Since the Crusades were always to tallized. their advantage, some of the Popes The princes, in turn, wanted to became alarmed over the decline of fight Crusades for purely nationalis- religious interest. They sent en- tic purposes. The Germans fostered' cyclicals to all bishops and monas- crusades against the pagan slaves teries, asking for advice, and then threatening their borders, and the elected a council to consider the in- Spaniards crusaded against the Mos- formation. lems. The people were willing to Professor Throop spent a year and fight Crusades only as long as there a half in Vienna, Venice, Paris and was promise of material gain. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President until 3:30 P.M.; 11:00 A.M. on Saturday. . ..... .e_.,... TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1939 VOL. XLIX. No. 151 Notices re nait isnpeu ay b iterienal anguages department that he will partment declared in the first lecture e among their faculty this year. of the series on Contemporary Ameri- can Figures. Although not much of a politician, Phi Delta Kappa Professor Cuncannon added, Hull is p ~a Southern, gentleman, an expert in Irntiates Seventeen matters of international tradeand the only outstanding member of the President's cabinet. Phi Delta Kappa, national hon- Today's program includes: Parli- rary education fraternity, initiated amentary Law Series, conducted by 7 students at a banquet last Satur- Mrs. Emma Fox, State parliamentar- ay in the Union. ian of the Michigan State Federation Graduate students honored are:. of Women's Clubs, at 8 a.m.; Adult idney F. Straight, Duane Chamber- Education Series, "The Constitution tin, Matt Lappinen, Roland L. Scha- and Adult Education," Prof. Wes- er, Kenneth Spitler, Frank Ballen- ley H. Maurer of the journalism de- er, George Jacobs, Edwin Knudson, partment, at 9; Music and Art Series, talph N. Miller, William C. Morse, "The Art of Listening to Music," homas S. Nurnberger, jr., Rafael Prof. Glenn D. MsGeoch of the Mus- ont-Flores, Rio Piedras and Verne ic School, at 10; Literature Series, tockman. Others initiated are: "Ibsen and Modern Drama," Prof. leorge E. Luther, '41Ed, Joseph W. John L. Brumm of the journalism de- ole, '39Ed, Meyer Davis, '39, and partment, at 11. 'harles A. Ormsby, '39. The afternoon's program is: In- ternational Relations Series, "Colon- ial Aspirations of Present-day Italy," Hiawatha Elects Officers Prof. Howard M. Ehrmann of the history department, at 2 p.m.; Con- Hiawath Club, organization for temporary American Figures, "Thom- pper peninsula students, announced as Dewey," Professor Cuncannon, at he election of the following officers 3 p.m. Ist night: Phil Westbrook, '40, presi- In the Phi Kappa Phi address at ant; Wesley Olds, '39A, vice-presi- 8:15 in the League, Prof. Bernadotte ent; William Jackson, '41, secretary E.. Schmitt, chairman of history at nd Don Counihan, '41, treasurer, the University of Chicago, and Pulit- Wheaton Strom, '39L, is the out- zer prize winner, will speak on "The oing president. European Situation." Classfied D' SReirectory Note to Seniors, June Graduates, and Graduate Students: Please file application for degrees or any spe- cial certificates (i.e. Geology Certifi- cate, Journalism Certificate, etc.) at once if you expect to receive a de- gree or certificate at Commencement in June. We cannot guarantee that the University will confer a degree or certificate at Commencement upon any student who fails to file such application before the close of busi- ness on Wednesday, May 17. If ap- plication is received later than May 17, your degree or certificate may not be awarded until next fall. Candidatesfor degrees or zertifi- cates may fill out cards at once at office of the secretary or recorder of their own school or college (students enrolled in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, College of Architecture, School of Music, School of Education, and School of Fores- try and Conservation, please note that application blanks may be ob- tained and filed in the Registrar's Of- fice, Room 4, University Hall). All applications for the Teacher's Cer-" tificate should be made at the office of the School of Education. Please do not delay unt*' the last day, as more than 2,500 diplomas and certificates must be lettered, signed, and sealed and we shall be greatly helped in this work by the early filing of applications and the resulting longer period for preparation. The filing of these applications does not involve the payment of any fee whatsoever. Shirley W. Smith. Attention University Employees: Whenever possible charge all per- sonal long-distance telephone calls and telegrams placed through the University telephone system, to your resident phone. Herbert G. Watkins. First Mortgage Loans: The Univer- sity has a limited amount of funds to loan on modern well-located Ann Arbor residential property. Interest at current rates. F.H.A. terms avail- able. Apply Investment Office, Room 100; South Wing, University Hall. Mandelbaum and Marsh Scholar-] ships. The following applicants for Mandelbaum and Marsh Scholarshipsi are requested to meet the Committee in Room 1210 Angell Hall, Thursday, May 4, at the times indicated. formation, 201 Mason Hall this afternoon, to interview men for sell- ing in their home counties in Michigan. This is open to stu- ilents who will be available early in June and alumni who are avsail- able immediately. Kindly make ap- pointments at the Bureau,' 201 Ma- son Hall, or call 4121, Extension 371. Office hours 9-12, 2-4. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Michigan Dames: Any Dames in- terested in attending the Adult Edu- cation lectures and meetings this week may do so by registering in the Rackham Building lobby, stating they are members of Dames. Programs will be available there with addition- al announcements in The Daily. Student Loans: The Loan Commit- tee will meet on Tuesday afternoon, May 9, to consider loans for the Sumi mer Session and the year 1939-40. Ap- plications must be filed for this meet- ing on or before May 5. The University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information has received notice of the following Civil Service examinations. The last date for filing applications is noted in each case: United States Civil Service: Auditor (Marine Accounts) $3,200 May 29. Forestry Student Aid $1,260 May 22. Junior Tabulating Machine Oper- ator $1,440 May 29. Michigan Civil Service: Institution Pharmacist A. Salary range: $130-150 May 13. Plasterer A2. Salary range: $115- 135 May 13.{ Attendant Nurse C. Salary range: $80-100 less maint. May 13. Accident Claims Investigator I. Salary range: $150-190 May 15. Chemical Testing Laboratory Aide. AL Salary range: $140-160 May 18. Complete announcements are on file at the Bureau of Appointments' and Occupational Information, 201 iason Hall. Office Hours: 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information. Academic Notices Final Doctoral Examination of Mr. Rober Seymour Campbell will be held on Tuesday, May 2 at 2:30 p.m. in 3089 Natural Science Building. Mr. Campbell's field of specialization is Fountain Pens R-I DE'S 302 S. State St. Typewriters MARSHALL CUT-RATE 231 S. State, At the head of Liberty Phone 5933 - We Deliver -TODAY ONLY- 50 OL DGLD Chinese Students To Present film And Exhibition "Sable Cicada," Chinese moving picture, and a stage show featuring an exhibition of the Chinese game of shuttle-cock will be presented Fri- day and Saturday in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre by the Chinese Students Club.. Produced in China, "Sable Cicada" has an all-Chinese cast, the dialogue s in the Mandarin dialect and there is Chinese incidental music. English subtitles translate the dialogue. The title role is played by Violet Koo, famous Chinese actress. Performances will be held at 8:30 p.m. Friday and at 2:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Saturday. Price of admis- sion is 50 cents and -tickets may be obtained at the Union, the League or from members of the Chinese Stu- dents Club. Funds raised will be con- tributed for medical aid in China. Chinese Art,. alks Close Arts Season An exhibition of Chinese objects of art from Detroit, a series of four Tuesday evening lectures on, "What to See in American Museums," and a photographic exhibition of "Master- pieces of Persian Architecture," will bring to a close the season's regular activities at the Detroit Institute of Arts in May. The Tuesday evening lectures, to be given by John D. Morse, museum director, will be illustrated with slides The first in the series will be given at 8:30 p.m. tonight on, "New Eng- land and the Atlantic Cities," May 9, "New York City," May 16, "The Great Lakes," and May 23, "The Western' Cities." The May 9 and May 23 talks will include short surveys of the art exhibits at the two World Fairs this summer. Stale Lawmakers Seek Aid For Afflicted Children LANSING, May .-(') -A bill in- troduced in the House of Represen- tatives tonight by Reps. Ellis Faulk- ner, James I. Post and Arthur O'Dell of the ways and means committee would provide a fixed ceiling for state expenditures for the care of crippled and afflicted children. The measure would provide for alj location of the annual appropriation to counties on a population basis in approximately equal monthly instal- ments. When state aid funds are ex- hausted, counties either would dis- continue the activity or shoulder the cost themselves. The 1937 Legislature voted $2,500,- 000 a year for aid for crippled chil- dren, yet with the work limited only the number of eligibles seeking treat- ment the fund is more than $1,000,000 in the red. Zoology. The title of his thesis is "Vertical Distribution of the Rotifera in Douglas Lake, Michigan, with Spe- cial Reference to Submerged Depres- sion Individuality.' Professor P. S. Welch, as chairman of the committee, will conduct the examination. By direction of the Executive Board, the chairman has the privilege of inviting members of the faculty and advanced doctoral candidates to attend the examination and to grant permission to others who might wish to be present. C. S. Yoakum. Directed Teaching, Qualifying Ex- amination: All students expecting to do directed teaching next semester are required to pass a qualifying ex- amination in the subject which they (Continued on Page 4) I. }} By HOWARD GOLDMAN time connected with the University, In the spring of 1894 a small group but not listed in other files. of loyal alumni founded the Universi- The catalog office performs many ty of Michigan Alumni Association. invaluable services. The Alumni Asso- Today, 45 years after this meager be- ciation -is entirely dependent upon ginning, the Alumni Association is it for mailing lists. Each year, 'for an efficient administrative organiza- example, football ticket applications tion, centralizing the activities of are mailed to the entire list of more more than 200 alumni and alumnae than 92,000 living alumni. clubs throughout the world. Authentic and carefully checked Connected in function with the records in the files have been used association, but under the direct and accepted as court testimony. supervisian of the University, is the Supposedly "lost" alumni have been Alumni Catalog Office in the base- located through accurate address ment of Alumni Memorial Hall, under sources. Mrs. Hadley has even re- the directoprship of Mrs. Lunette Had- ported a case in which the office ley, since 1925. At present this office, acted as Dan Cupid, in supplying considered a model of its kind, is a young lover with his heartthrob's charged with recording and handling birthdate!! names of more than 200,000 individu- The office encounters less than a als at some time connected with the two per cent return on mail, se University. accurate is its address list. Almost These names are listed in numer- 2,000 address changes per week are ous files, according to various func- made in the records. tions. The large master file contains New York, Ohio and Illinois rank a card for every alumnus. (includ- below Michigan in that order in num- ing deceased persons), and the regis- bers of alumni, while China, Canada tration card of every undergraduate. and Japan lead foreign listings. De- The long rows of biographical file troit is the only city which outranks cases include newspaper clippings, Ann Arbor in numbers of former correspondence, registration cards students. and other biographical data concern- At least 10 University of Michigan ing every name in the master file. Clubs are outside North America. A geographical stencil file is kept Canada boasts the largest foreign for mailing purposes. Names of alum- membership, but other groups exist ni indexed according to cities and in the Hawaiian and Philippine Is- states, as well as departments, facili- lands, continental Asia, Europe, tate specialized mailing to any part Africa, Mexico and Central America of the country. Another stencil file, and South America. considered an extension of the old Alumni interest in University ac- University Alumni Index, lists alum- ivities is subject to a large degree of ni according to departments and fluctuation, according to Bess L. 4'ear of graduation. M'cLouth, office manager in Alumni The obituary file keeps on perman- Memorial Hall. Leadership, special ent record pertinent facts about de- events and financial conditions all ceased alumni. Included in this record effect this interest, she added. are dates and places of birth and death, and any biographical data which have been gathered. Engineering Professors Two files deal with World War Attend Detroit, Meeting ~ervice. One lists every .Michigan man who participated in the war, his rank Fourteen faculty members of the and where he served. The other lists University engineering school attend- alumni who died in, or as a result ed a meeting of the Michigan sec- of, the war. tion of the Society for Promotion of Other files deal with Summer. Ses- Engineering Education in Detroit sion and extension course students, Saturday. Prof. M. L. Enger of the and faculty. "A supplementary file University of Illinois delivered the lists names of other persons at some main address of the meeting. SH-H-H! DON'T TELL A SOUL BUT YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS "PYGMALION" - ' ~Is Now Playing- "rf course it's good,. I wrote it!" -Bernard Shaw Also DISNEY CARTOON "Mother Goose Goes Hollywood" Pete Smith's "MARINE CIRCUS" 1 } {~ " , ".. ' a~'~aax , 5Irk:. a a':": '.4.... A er r l s"S uun§, '4 . '?' Sy "' { : W '',,' ; ".}$ . 3j "lCE FOLD ES OF 1..3 WANTED-Cooking. Woman experi- enced in instiutional work desires position with large group fratern- ity or sorority. Box 8. 621 WANTED-5 boys for summer work. Conferences today 10 to 5, Room 316 Union. John Boyd. 620 WANTED -- TYPING TYPING-Reasonable rates. L. M. Heywood, 414 Maynard St., phone 5689. 271 TYPING-Experienced. Miss Allen, 4082-.45th Avenue. Phone 2-2935 or' 2-1416. 79 LAUNDRIES LAUNDRY - 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low prices. 9 MISCELLANEOUS WASHED SAND and Gravel, Drive- way gravel, washed pebbles. Killins Gravel Company. Phone 7112. 17 CASH PAID for your discarded clothing. Claude Brown, 512 S. Main. 311 HOME DECORATORS-Decorating, painting. Budget plan if desired. Dial 7209. 181 Starting Wednesday 1:10 1:20 1:30 1:40 1:50 2:00 2:10 2:20 2:30 2:40 2:50 3:00 3:10 3:20 3:30 3:40 3:50 4:00 4:10 James H. Armstrong Russell M. Braga Robert C. Brockway, Jr. Kenneth T. Calder Martha L. Chapman Emery A. Cook, Jr. Gladys L. Engel Harry E. Goodman William G. Jackson Florence M. Krenzler Paul T. Lahti Elliott Maraniss Michael Massa Harold 0. Osterweil Mary J. Sanford Anson D. Solem Stanford Sobel Leland G. Swart Gerald M. Waters I IMPORTANT for its startling story of women without men... IMPORTANT for its glamor- ous new sta d isco v e ry . . . c.Alexander KORD;, presents A representative of the Davis Tech- nical School in Detroit will be in the office of the University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational In- MICHIGAN THEATRE Wed. Eve. Victor Payne Jennings presents EHEL DxfM~ff CORINNE LKARE EDNA BEST.*BRRY BARKS ii I VACUUM TIR III EI(