r, T1TE'MICHIGAN DAILY irmtA There Goes Michiganensian No. 1000 i E S C f t A/ 14 J f E,] '41, purchases 100,t copy of 1Wihalganensian froth W-1i1, Book Exchange Funds Establish Scholar1ship s Similar Plans At Other Big, Ten Universities Create A Surplus Of Profits The recently-approved plan for a University Book Exchange, to be op-, erated by students, will embrace the establishment of a special scholar- ship fund created from the profits of. the exchange, it was announced yes- terday by sponsors. The success of similar exchanges in other large mid-western universities and the response which greeted the acceptance of the plan here have been taken as indications that the estab- lishment of such a fund will be pos- sible. Exchanges at the University of Minnesota and Purdue University have shown exceptional profits. The Minnesota exchange realized the profit of $1,200 from the sale of $13,- 000 worth of used texts. The exchange, which will operate from Feb. 9 to 19, and in similar pe- riods each semester, in the north lounge of the Union, will afford em- ployment for a number of students, under the supervision of a student manager to be appointed by an ex- ecutive committee. The committee will be composed of representatives from the League, the Union and the offices of the Dean of Students and the Dean of Women, and will also supervise the employment of all per- sonnel. The committee has also urged that donations of used textbooks be given the exchange to provide an impetus for the opening of the exchange. Do- nations can be left at the Union, it was announced. Applications for positions to the ex- change staff are still available at the Dean's office and the Union, it was added. It was stressed by the com- Bullitt And Kennedy To Push Arms Bill Two Art Exhibits Talent In Conve Will Be Displayed FrSca u r~F or Social Suo Here .fan. 11 To 25,_ _ _ By PAUL CHANDLER Two exhibitsnplanned for this Social success on the campus with month by the Ann Arbor Art Asso- ciation will be displayed simutaneous- members of the opposite sex depends ly Wednesday, Jan. 11 to 25 in the almost entirely on a college student's North and South Galleries of Alumni talent in conversation and his initia- Memorial Hall. Live and desire to meet other girls One gallery will be devoted to and boys, it is revealed in a survey paintings by Sarkis Sarkision, prom- taken by Prof. Frances W. Burks, of inent Detroit artist, who won double the department of psychology of inen Detoitartit, wo wn dobleStanford University. honors at the Annual Exhibit for Michigan Artists held at the Detroit This test shows that girls who have Institute of Arts in November and received poor marks in discipline December, 1938. His "Student" won throughout their school careers have the Detroit Museum of Art Founders' better success in their relationships Day prize and the Lillian Henkel with boys than do those co-eds whose Haass Purchase Award. classroom conduct has been good. Sarkision was a pupil of John Car- Forced humor, hypocrisy, and ir- rol and his assistant at The Society responsibility were cited as three of of Arts and Crafts in Detroit. Works the outstanding traits of students from his studio and those now in who were unhappy in their college ' private ownership will be exhibited. social life. rThe Detroit Institute of Arts has Professor Burk's survey was con- loaned prints by 19th centu':y and ducted by means of a battery of three contemporary French and English written tests which were submitted artists for the other exhibit. Works to a hand-picked group of students by members of the Barbizon School, on the Stanford campus. The tests Daumier, Gavarni Toulouse, and Lau- included a group of ten problems in- trec, and among the Moderns, Pi- volving original solutions to difficult casso, will be displayed. social situations; a group of ques- l t rsation Makes cess, Test Reveals The formula for success was then taken from the answers of those stu- dents who were rated high in per- sonality. Causes for lack of populari- ty were found in the papers of those who were deficient in "social pres- tige." Boys will find themselves socially popular if they have shown restraint in their classroom performances, the survey reveals. "There is a notable tendency toward restrained behavior among the successful boys, and com- paratively unrestrained behavior among successful girls," Professor Burks explains. On the basis of these tests it is pointed out that girls who show great interest in boy's activities are usually the most popular. Girls who like the occupation of reporter for a woman-s page and who enjoy amusement parks are the campus "queens." Movies Of Chinese War To Assist Financial Drive In order to explain the pressing need for funds to ali Chinese and Japanese students in tiv' Far East, a meeting will be held W dnesday, 8 p.m. at the First Baptist Church where motion pictures of the Japan- ese invasion will be shown. This meeting is part of a united campaign of student organizations throughout the world to raise $100,000 of which America's share is $50,000. New Furnace Enables Study Of Old Pottery By JEAN MAXTED Study of how the ancients made their pottery has been made possible by the recent acquisition of an elec- trict furnace uy the laboratory for research in archaeological technology in the Museum of Anthropology. Con- trol of atmospheric conditions by the varying of the quantities of gases and compressed air enables reproduction of conditions under which the an- cients worked. Clay from the sites where ancient pottery has been excavated will be fired in the furnace, Fred Matson, Rackham Predoctoral Fellow, ex- plained. Most of the material is to be used in the experiments comes from Seleucia where a University ex- pedition has been working for several years. Besides the electrical furnace the laboratory is equipped with appara- tus for chemical analysis of the com- position of the pottery. In order to learn how the pottery was made, the laboratory uses photo- graphic microscopy. From examin- ing the clay and other materials used in making the pottery and by deter- mining the methods used in manu- facture, Matson predicts we will be able to tell the history of the de- velopment of the potter's art, the period which the materials represent, and whether they were manufactured locally or imported. Lovell To Talk OnEngineering Union Vocational Series Continues Thursday Prof. Albert H. Lovell, assistant dean of the engineering college., will deliver the next in the current series of vocational talks and forums at 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday in the small ballroom of the Union. Pro- fAssorLovell 11will speak on "Engineer- ing As A Profession." The talks, which are sponsored by the Union, are designed to acquaint students planning to enter various fields and professions with the prob- lems and solutions of problems in their chosen work. The forums will also act to permit discussion among students interested in the same field. Following the talk, coffee and hot chocolate will be served on the ter- race adjoining the small ballroom. Medics Hear Newburgh Dr. Louis H. Newburgh, Professor of clinical investigation in the de- partment of internal medicine, read a paper entitled, "Studies in Gout" yes- terday at the weekly luncheon of the Medical Journal Club. ,, : , i x . 1 S t s _ r Students and members of the As- sociation will be admitted free, while non-members will be charged 25 cents for entrance to the exhibits. Union Coffee Hour Guests Announced Guests at today's weekly Union Cof- fee Hour will be Pi Lambda Phi, Al- pha Epsilon Phi, Chi Omega, Acacia and Zone 6 of Congress, it was an- nounced yesterday by James V. Halli- gan, '40F&C, Union social chairman. Coffee and hot chocolate will be served during the hour, which will be from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the small ballroom of the Union, on the terrace adjoining the ballroom. The campus at large is also invited to attend, Halligan said. tions designed to indicate strong vo- cational preferences of students, and a third general questionaire consist- ing of 61 items. Each of the subjects who took the test was previously rated as to his "social prestige" by a group of 10 persons who were friends of the boy or girl, or who were well-acquainted with him or her. MARSHALLS CUT-RATE DRUG STORE 231 SOUTH STATE AT THE HEAD OF LIBERTY Sale Prices Effective Tuesday, January 10, only Y WASHINGTON, Jan. 9 )-J Union To Sponsor New Armed with secret data; which is Club For Student Skiers understood to include a report from Col. Charles A. Lindbergh on Ger- The Union will sponsor the forma- many's air armada, two key United tion of a club for students interested States' Ambassadors will go to Capi- in skiing, it was announced yesterday tol Hill tomorrow in an apparent ef- by the Union student offices. Stu- fort to remove congressional doubts dents interested in joining such an about the Roosevelt armaments pro- organization are requested to attend gram. a meeting at 5:15 p.m. Thursday in The two men, Joseph P. Kennedy, Room 302 of the Union. Ambassador to London, and William I It , was added that the club will C. Bullitt, Ambassador to Paris, ar- be definitely open to novices and will rived here unexpectedly today from ! provide an opportunity for them to Florida vacations. 'receive expert instruction. German Race Will Never Enjoy Free Political Will Eaton Says FLAT FIFTY CIGARETTE SALE. 50 for .......29C Includes -- Luckys, Camels, Chesters, Raleighs, Old Golds. 50 for.......33 C Includes--Kools, Philip Morris Economy CHOCOLATE BAR SALE _ All Large 15c Nestle or Hershey CHOCOLATE BARS lOc Your choice of: Almond, Plain, Semisweet, Crunch, Hazelnut, Honey, Almond. 50 for Includes -- Marlboros. . .. 42c Virginia Rounds, By WILLIAM ELMER The German people as a race have never enjoyed free political expres- sion and it is not probable that they ever shall, Dr. John W. Eaton of the German department stated in a pa- per delivered before the Modern Lan- guage Association in New York, Dec. 28, last year. The psychological traits of the German people make it unlikely that with any change of political leader- ship, there will come a sudden and complete change in the German as a political human being, Dr. Eaton. said. Contrary to the commonly-held opinion that the ending of the pres- ent abnormal state of affairs in Ger- many will bring about a return to free political expression by the Ger- mans, Dr. Eaton stated that they have never experienced such a free- dom. Germany gained but little from the Rennaissance and allied movements which promised and achieved great- er degrees of individualism and free- dom in other European countries, Dr. Eaton pointed out, and this failure was reflected in German satire of the time, notably the degeneration of the out-spokenness and courage of Mo- scherosch and Grimmelshausen into the timrous satire of Rabener. In Rabener's own words, "I do not dare to say to a village schoolmaster, what a Londoner or a Lord Bishop would have to listen to." Dr. Eaton said that the 18th cen- tury was the turning point. It was then that the free man bore fruit, or the culmination of centuries of slows and painful growth began to emerge. But it did not develop in Germany. The average German of the 18th cen- tury, said Dr. Eaton, regarded liberty as coming from above from his rulers rather than an objective to be achieved from within. To a demonic leader who promised results the Ger- man would yield unquestioning obe- dience so long as such a leader could achieve some appearance of prestige and success at home and abroad. Last Day In Technicolor LORETTA YOUNG "KENTUCKY" Starting Wednesday! A Picture that Dares to be Humana a{k """"" r""" SEE A HOCKEY GAME WITH THE Mante* cJatYfxw School begins Jan. 16. New courses offered are: Contract Bridge, Land- ART CINEMA LEAGUE Presents . scape Gardening, Current Events, and a Scout Leader Training !Metropolitan Opera Course. Groups continued are: Typ- Tenor Sensation ing, Shorthand, Bookkeeping, Eng- -j _C__ lish, Public Speaking, Mathemat- E i c s, Languages, Woodworking, Stagecraft, Cooking, Sewing, Home pUyCCNIS Nursing, Painting, Drawing, Metal- las OP craft, Mechanical Drawing, Piano, yCMendelssohn Theatre Gym Classes, Photography, Inter- L Box Office Open Thursda ior Decorating, and CommunityFr.&Stat85 Orchestra. For further information Fri. & Sat. at 8:15 call 5797. 287 E All Seats Reserved h y Wewr GOOD A'aJw BUY NUNNEBUSH ANKLE-FASHIONED OXFORDS as h 91st ANNUAL WINTER SALES SPORT COATS priced 30 pr. ALL-WOOL SLACKS priced sigh as $20 reduced to as high as $8.95 reduced to $995 $395 plus apt. i $10.00 - $10.50 $9.00 Shoes .. $8.50 Shoes . $7.00.Shoes $5.50 Shoes . . Shoes. . Now $8.95 .Now $7.95 .Now $6.95 . Now $5.95 .Now $4.95 U U See Our Advertisement Friday U See, Our Advertisement Friday 11 I III JAMES ELUSUM 111 E I