TfHE IVIC IIIG AN DAIL Y TuESDAY, AUG. 9,x932 Comprehensive Professional Examination in Education: This examina- required by the School of Education will be held on Saturday, August rom 8 to 12 in the Auditorium of the University High School. All under- duates who are candidates for the Teacher's Certificate in August are wired to take this examination. Graduate students who are taking their ter's degree or doctor's degree are the only ones excused from this ex- nation. C. 0. Davis, Secretary. Sculpture Exhibit:' An Exhibition of Sculpture in Photographs by nbers of the National Sculpture Society, in the North Gallery of Alumni norial Hall. Display will be held until the end of Summer School. Reich Leaders Meet to Decide Fate of Hitler Party Chiefs' Conference Will Determine Ultimate Position of Nazi Head BERLIN, Aug. 8.-(P)-Germany's most powerful political leaders began to gather in Berlin today for a series of conferences likely to determine the ultimate position of Adolf Hitler in the new government. Chancellor Franz von Papen re- turned Sunday from a brief holiday and Hitler himself, Gen. Kurt von Schleicher, minister of defense, for- mer Chancellor Heinrich Bruening and Alfred Huegenberg, Nationalist leader, are due to arrive in the next day or two. President Paul von Hindenburg will return from his summer estate at Neudeck on Constitution day, Aug. 11. The National Socialists under Hit- ler today seemed more ready than ever to enter the government, even though President von Hindenburg insists the cabinet must not be dom- inated by parties. Dr. Bruening's Centrists, who here- tofore have been opposed to partici- pation in the government by the Nazis, now seem inclined to insist that Hitler's party must show, by its entry into the cabinet, how many of campaign promises it can fulfill. Before the week is over Germany is likely to know how the new gov- ernment will look and how the forces will line up in the Reichstag. Political rioting continued through- out Germany over the week-end, re- sulting in one death and a number of injuries. Kurt Katzan, leader of the Reichsbannermen at Loetzen, was shot dead in a street fight there with a group of Hitler's National So- cialists. Seven civilians and three police- men were wounded by bullets in a fight which followed a rifle club fes- tival at Froendenberg, .Westphalia. Several were hurt in other clashes and windows of six Berlin branches of the Nationalist newspaper Lokal Anzeiger were smashed by stones wrapped in copies of the Communist paper Rote Fahne. Wood to Replace Bone Carbon for Refineries WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.-Burning bones to make sugar white is a prac- tice folowed in 21 refineries. The department of labor, in a sur- vey of the wages and the hours of labor in the cane sugar refining in- dustry, lists 775+ persons as having the "oddest jobs"-preparing bone- char. Their work is handling skeletons of animals-hogs, sheep and cows- that they may be partly charred andtused in whitening sugar through filtering. They strip, scrape, shred, boil and char these bones, which come from the large slaughter houses and occasionally from the pampas of the Argentine. New methods of refining sugar, using wood carbon instead of the bone process, eventually may elimi- nate this phase of the industry, re- finers say, Til'ets in Missouri Senate Race (Associated Press Photo) Col. Bennett C. Clarke (left), and Henry W. Kiel, Republican, both of St. Louis, are the senatorial nominees in Missouri. Both are out- spoken opponents of prohibition. Clark is the son of the late Champ Clark and one of the founders of the American Legion in Paris. Ann Arbor Traffic Regulations Outlined in Special Pamphlet sI pecial Lecture: Mr. Earl D. Bruner, Superintendent of the George r Republic Association of Eastern Pennsylvania, will speak in the orium of the University High School at ten o'clock today s theme will be "Corrective Education Based on the Behavior of Some mn Hundred Different Wards of the Court Over a Period of Twenty- Years." The public is cordially invited to this address. Ann Arbor's traffic regulations as outlined in a special pamphlet for! the information of motorists contains the following regulations: 1. Vehicles shall not exceed 15 miles per hour in business section or 20 miles per hour in residential dis- tricts, and no vehicle shall be driven in an alley faster than 7 miles per hour. 2. Every motor vehicle operated on the public highway shall be equipped with two white headlights of equal candlepower. Motor vehicles and trailers shall also have one rear red light visible. At night-time, any truck or trailer over five feet six inches in width, shall have a green light on the left side. 3. Any automobile or motor vehicle parked within the districts herein- after described shall not need its front or rear lights burning when the street lights are burning. The districts are as follows: Main from William to Catherine, Washington from Fifth to Ashley, Liberty from Fifth to Ashley street, Huron from Fourth to Main, State from Huron to William, Maynard from Liberty to William, and North University from State to Thayer. All other vehicles except as herein provided, shall have one white light visible at laest one hundred feet from the front and rear. 4. All slow-moving vehicles shall keep as near the right curb as prac- ticable. 5. A right-hand turn may be made at all times when proceeding with traffic. A right-hand turn may be made against the stop signal, pro- vided the vehicle is brought to a complete stop before making the turn. 6. The following streets shall be and are hereby designated as "t h r o u g h streets." Washtenaw, Twelfth from North University to Huron, East Huron from Twelfth to Main, West Huron, South Main to city limits, Packard, North Main, State, Miller, and which traffic shall have the right of way at all inter- sections except those of state trunk line highways; and intersecting state trunk line highways the driver at the right shall have the right of way. 7. Motor v e n I c r e s approaching through traffic streets shall come to a full stop before entering the inter- section of said through traffic streets. Full stop being hereby defined to mean that the vehicle shall not be in motion. Any person operating a motor vehicle shall approach all - treet intersections in a careful and prudent manner. Tomorrow The Daily will print further traffic regulations in, the city of Ann Arbor. Old Statue in Brittany Is Destroyed by Bomb RENNES, France, Aug. 8.-(/)- The memories of Frenchmen were carried back 400 years today by a bomb. Giving vent to an animosity and spirit of autonomy which dates back to 1532,. when Brittany was merged into France, a bomb Sunday blasted a statue in the City hall here. Final Repertory Play: The final play of the summer season, "Tour u Monde" directed by Thomas Wood Stevens, will open on Wednesday eve- .ing and continue through Saturday. Orchestra Concert: Professor David E. Mattern will lead the Summer chool Orchestra in the following programs this evening, at 8:15 'clock in Hill Auditorium. Wolfe-Ferrari, Overture to "The Secret f Susanne": Goldmark, Symphony No. 1 (The Rustic Wedding) (In the arden-Dance): Vieuxtemps, Concerto No. 4 for Violin (Andante-Adagio eligioso-Finale marciale) (Karl Kuersteiner): Humperdinck, "The Little andman" and "Evening Prayer" from "Hansel and Gretel": Beethoven, 'oncerto No. 5 for Piano (First movement) (Helen Bentley): Wagner, enusberg Scene from "Tannhauser." The public is -invited. Charles A. Sink Women's Education Club and Pi Lambda Theta: Miss Edith Bader, ssistant superintendent of the Ann Arbor public schools, will speak hursday evening, Aug. 11, on "Glimpses of German Schools," at the Wo- ien's League at 7:15 o'clock. All women are cordially invited. j}ri r Delicious and Refreshing J , Ii% MICHIGAN REPERTORY PLAYERS' FINAL WEEK Great Scenic Spectacle Cast'of One Hundred WHIRLWIND MELODRAMA -COMEDY - ROMANCE r d ME Mw, id " "Around the World in 80 Days" - JULES VERNE AND ALPHCJNSE d'Ei'dNER'Y NEW STAGE VERSION BY THOMAS WOOD STEVENS Wednesday Through Saturday i1 Silver Li[niing LYDIA MENDEL SSOHN THEATRE All Seats 75e 11 11 i MICHlk:OA"N UNION CAFETERIA ..= 3