JAN. 15, 1939 City Churches Offer Special Services Today Communion, Many Talks' And Character Studies To Constitute Programs (Continued from Page 1) has announced that a chapel just inside the vestry has been opened for the purpose of mediation. The chapel will be open at 4:45 p.m. each week- day except Wednesday and Saturday beginning tomorrow. The Sino-rapanese situation will be discussed at the meeting of the Disciples Guild. Lucille Eberle will report on the talk given by Dr. Walter H. Judd last week for the students who were 'unable to hear Dr. Judd's speech. Foster H. Campbell, '42, will give the historical background of Ja- pan in an effort to show reasons why Japan is justifying her actions against China. "A Christian and Cooperatives" is the topic that the Rev. Henry L. Pick- erill will speak on before members of the Wesleyan Guild at Stalker Hall. Kenneth Morgan, director of the Student Religious Association, will give the first in a series of discus- sions on "Social Action and Social Living."~ Prof. Charles T. Goodsell of the history department of Kalamazoo College will address members of the Roger Williams Guild on the topic, "Christianity and the International Crisis." Professor Goodsell's talk is the second in a series of four discus- sions of vital current events. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sundwall And Eddy Flood A dds To Venice's Supply Of Canals After Sudden9 Thaw Lecturer To Speak To Attend Meetings On Indian Ivories Announcement that several faculty Mr. James M. Plumer. lecturer on members will attend scholarly con- w.Far Eastern Art, will discuss recent ventions in coming weeks was made archeological discoveries on the'trade yesterday at the President's office. route from India to Rome in a lec- Prof. John Sundwall, director of ture entitled "Ivories from Afghanis- the division of hygiene and public tan," at 4:15 p.m. Wednesday in the health, will spend Feb. 4 and 5 at a Graduate School. conference of the American Public These ivory and bone discoveries Health Association. Health 4 A twere made by the French Ar- Prof. Nathan B. Eddy of the phar chaeoloical Society and date from macology college spent Jan. 9 to 12 in between the years 200 B.C. and 200 Washington, D.C. at a conference on A.D. Because of their basic Indian work dealing with drug addiction. character, they represent one of the Faculty members of the Institute most important finds in Afghanistan. of Public and Social Administration- -- will attend a meeting of the Associa- tion of Training Schools from Jan, BMW 26 to 28 at Cleveland. ..... . 41CORSE TTE , a M Wiz' \1 ' '. ' ' jj( > _z North Carolina Schooi Vexed By Negro Case Receipt of a New York Negro's ap- plication for admission to the Univer- sity of North Carolina graduate school has precipitated an unprecedented situation on the southern school's campus. While university officials refused to make definite statements, student leaders voted against the admission of Negroes. In the graduate school, however, a survey conducted by the Daily Tar Heel, college newspaper, indicated that a majority favored the termination of the Southern tradi- tion of racial segregation in educa- tion. Further reports were made to the effct that eight Negroes, residents of North Carolina, will seek entrance into the university on the grounds that Negro schools do not provide equal facilities. North Carolina's student senate went on record yesterday as opposing the admission of Negroes to the university, but favored the enlarge- ment of facilities for Negro profes- sional schools in the state. Student senators were of the opinion that if a Negro were admitted, his life at the university would be made miserable. Approximately one out of every four students participated in last Friday's Daily Tar Heel poll as a more than two to one majority balloted in favor of admittance of Negroes. "At the present time," university President Frank Graham said yes- terday, "only one Negro is pressing a claim for admission to any school or division of the University of North Carolina." He did not deny that other applications have been received. These, he explained, have been re- fused either for academic reasons or because the applicants did not press their claims. Dr. J. C. Shepard, president of the North Carolina College for Negroes, declared that he is "firmly convinced that Negroes could do their best work only in their own schools." A thena Debaters Slam Matrimony, Defeat Kappa Nu (Continued from Page 1) With all those canals in Venice, that Italian city had a flood to add to its watery content. Sudden thaws almost hid the pattern-marked pavement of this midtown square. Wooden bridges were hastily rigged up to take care of the passenger traffic. R OO $dROly r "Madn of e os, the Da Vinci, Renaissance irtoneer, faint shadowing oftthe face givesha tender, poetic quality, with a sug- Marked Dawn Golen4Atye gestion but not the actuality of a smile. In "The Last Supper" the same technique is employed to create an Versatile Florentine Used of the Golden Age, combined all these impression of strength. innovations, working out the synthesis Painting Limited Innovations Of Others between 1480 and 1498, the dates Ever since Leonardo, painting has As Basis For Own Art of his unfinished "Adoration of the suffered from the limitation of re- Magi" and "The Last Supper," re- garding shadow as negation of color. (Editor's Note: This is the third in a spectively. Raphael built on this This is a defect of his teaching and series of articles in which the writer, foundation. practice. eneieiede t'ciLeona~rdo Most Versatile When he was nearing 50, da Vinci Sof the fine arts department is tracing the history of modern art. This article Leonardo was one of the most ver- scribbled down some of his precepts, deals with the painters of the Renais- satile men ever born. He was a paint- saying: The artist should employ jsance. Photographs of works by artists "slcie eig"ta S eIO~ of this period will be on exhibition be- er, sculptor, mathematician, scientist, "selective seeing," that is, he should ginning tomorrow in Room A,' Alumni inventor, poet and musician. Although choose the most gracious aspects of Memorial Hall.) for a time he discarded painting in reality; he should observe deaf-mutes By SYLVIA 7oRE I favor of exact science, he is best to learn the possibilities of expression .L .remembered as an artist. through gestures; seek equilibrium Leonardo da Vinci, Mihtveiangelo I He believed that a painter must and an active balance in single figures Buonarotti and Raphael Sanzio, three knoealywhd the is about;th or relations of figures to each other; of the greatest artists the world has he must be in a filial relation to na- get the action right, then add details. produced, share the glory of the ture, imitating her directly rather Actually he was describing principles Renaissance. Leonardo marked the than through the eyes of other artists, which, whhe accepting the richness dawn of the Golden Age; Raphael Painting, he said, is greatest when and variety of the early Renaissance; and Michelangelo represent its culmi- the postures of the body mirror the he had put in order for once and for nation. emotions of the soul. Leonardo's ownall. The task facing the ambitious young personality shows vividly in his paint- Leonardo believed that there is no Florentine artist of 1475 was assimila- ing. He could take an old and uni- science-and he might have added, tion. Tedious and discouraging years versal theme like the "Madonna" or no art-which cannot be mathematic- of research had brought about most "The Last Supper" and, by applying ally demonstrated. Certainly the ap. of the necessary knowledge, but it his own interest in psychological re- plication of this theory to his own was scattered. Masaccio had modern- action, give it new freshness. art, and his systematic assimilation ized Giotto's monumental patterns P u res Mysterious of the discoveries of his predecessors iaed ottostmucumentvalespalihttrsyriudid much to create the splendor of and found structural values of light Technically, he thought the aim of the Golden Age. and shade; Domenico Veneziano dis- the artist is to create a sense of re- covered a handier method of oil- lief or projection where there is :done, painting, and with Paolo Uccello through distribution of light and Abbot ToDscuss Radio worked out the mysteries of linear shade. His pictures are dusky and A perspective; Andrea del Castagno mysterious, tending to black and Interesting facts about radio will be made a systematic study of anatomy, white values. An amazing facet of the subject of an extension lecture by while Antonio Pollaiuolo pictured the his genius is that by employing this body in action. 1same light-and-dark technique, he Prof. Waldo M. Abbot, director of the Leonardo da Vinci, pioneer and one could get totally different effects. In Upiversity Broadcasting Servi.ce, at of the most intriguing personalities I the famous "Mona Lisa" and the love- 8 p.m. Thursday in Bay City. I I11 R NC 11 " 1 LIB SLIGHTLY HEAVY FIGURES Clothes make the woman! And this foundation makes all clothes look better! Its perfection is its fit. Note the built-up shoulder section. 350 to 750, 20%, Off during Jonucry CORSET SHOP Dial 3110 110 E. Liberty and when he saw it in bobby pins he roared for 30 minutes more." Thomson attempted to prove that "people live longer when married." Even the hard-boiled misogynists fall finally, he said, while on the other side even a Garbo finally finds her Stokowski. In the rebuttal Laing tried to prove his quotation that "a good wife is a piritual harem," while Miss Wat- kins declared she wasn't interested in the Kappa Nu "travel talk on Tahiti." "Dickens, Pepys and Shakespeare were unhappy while married," she said. "That's good enough for me." The judges: Prof. Joseph A. Kitchen of the political science department, Prof. William Steere of the botany de- partment and Prof. Richard Fuller of the sociology department voted unanimously for the fairer sex, prov- ing that it's better to sizzle in the fry- ing pan than to trust your tortured soul to.the fire. N E T S CH I F F 0 k STRAPLE . . , {q 1+ Z 4Ss 55. MA R ILYN SHOPPE ..- f ti oi Y- A I "THE QUARRY" Rents Pvr monthllRPII Hospital Beds ........ .$15.00 Infra Red Lamps .......$ 8.00 Ultra Violet Lamps .... $10.00 Wheel Chairs ...... Baby Scales ........ Crutches ... per week 8.00 .. . .$ 1.50 . .$ .50 We have just received a complete assort flIL tI- -:.11 .c I tment of J-Hop formals I ia U I