THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAYOCT. 2 Writes Ford With Hoover at Detroit Address Students Study Medicine and Law Most Profitable Professions eeking Criminals For Three- Year Research By Columbia Man Sho ......_._.__ 5, 1932 , ows . ermp R orts Medicine and law are the two most profitable professions, a three-year study extending through practically Classes Are Meeting Men every profession and trade in the In Prisons; To Visit In United States by Dr. Harold F. Clark, Teachers College, Columbia Univer- Local and Detroit Jails sity, indicates. The average annual earnings of members of both the For the term paper in criminology medical and legal professions is 'tudents are trying to supplement $5,250. class and library work by obtaining Figuring the average working life- first-hand contact with delinquents time of professional men as between and institutions dealing with delin- 40 and 45 years, Dr. Clark reached quents, Clark Tibbitts, who is taking the figure of 117,000 as the present over Professor A. E. Wood's classes in value of the average lifetime earn- Criminology this semester, said in an ings of doctors, and arrived at the1 interview. same figure for lawyers. He also dis- A number of the students are meet- covered that a large number of doc- ing delinquents in Ann Arbor and tors practicing in the United States Detroit in attempting to get complete are not graduates of college medical life histories, better to understand schools, and it is this group which development of criminal careers. lowers the average. Similarly, a large "One student is making a complete percentage of lawyers did not attend historical study of bootleggers in the law school, it was revealed. border town where she was brought Lifetime Records Studied. up. In' making this study she expects Dr. Clark was aided in his research to meet federal prohibition officers, by several professional and trade bootleggers, and people of the com- journals, insurance companies, and munity to get their reactions," Tib- by the United States Government. bitt. caid_ 1' (Associated Press Photo) Henry Ford (left) is shown as he stood on the stage in the Olympia arena, Detroit, with President Hoover Saturday night, when the Repub- lican nominee made the principal address of his third campaign trip to the midwest. In the center is Mrs. Wilbur M. Brucker, wife of Gov- ernor Brucker. The figures for each profession are reached by examining the records of men who enter a profession and re- main in it until they retire or die, rather than by examining the in- comes of men who stay in a profes- sion for only a few years and then transfer to some other means of liv- lihood. Not only do the annual average earnings of the doctors exceed all others - except that of the lawyers -but Dr. Clark believes the young medical graduate of today may earn considerably more income 30 years from now than the present medical man with 30 years practice. Colleges on Decrease There has been a consistent de- crease in the number of medical col- leges accompanied by an ever-grow- ing demand for medical treatment due to greater public health activities and greater general knowledge of health measures. Forty Students Initiated Into Cosmopolitan Club Opening the year's activities, 40 students of American and foreign nationality were formally initiated into the Cosmopolitan Club Saturday night at Lane Hall before 100 mem- bers.* John Khalaf, chairman of the or- ganization, presided over the cere- mony. Prof. Charles E. Koella of the Romance Languages department wel- comed the new members and ex- plained the meaning of the Cosmo- politan Club and its aims. Due to the absence of Mrs. Freder- ick B. Fisher, Mrs. Helen Halsteda, whose husband is Dean of Lucknow College, India, delivered the main ad- dress of the evening, speaking on "The Responsibilities of the Return- ing Student and His Attitude Toward the Mother Country." I1 Dr. Clark pointed but that another field in which certain indications of change are apparent is that of public- school teaching. The salary schedules were devised for a system in which only a small percentage of workers reaching the maximum rates, due to a high turnover. With the increasing tendancy for workers to remain for life in the field, the percentage of workers reaching the maximum rates is consistently growing and will quite likely prove a tax burden. In regard to journalism, Dr. Clark found that the majority of persons who were graduated from schools of journalism did not remain in that, particular field, but branched off into advertising and publishing. Summary Given The summary of average annual earnings is. as follows: Medicine ...............$5,250 Law...................5,250 Engineering .............5,000 Architecture .............5,000 Dentistry...............4,725 College Teaching........ 3,260 Social Work . .......... .,2,517 Library Work ............2,250 Journalism ..............2,250 Skilled Trades........... 1,700 Nursing................1,570 Unskilled Labor...........945 Farming............ ....650 Sets New Glider Record With Motorless Loops AKRON, 0., Oct. 24.-(/P)-E. B. Sutherland, of Akron, went "up and over" in his motorless plane 35 times at a glider meet Sunday to establish himself as a claimant of a record for glider loops. Pilots from glider clubs throughout the midwest, including organizations from Pittsburgh and Ann Arbor, Mich., watched Sutherland's feat. I Planning a program which will in- clude features of interest to the gen- eral student body as well as to its own members is one of the aims this year of the Russian Student Club, according to Paul D. Kalachov, Grad., president. "There are more than 20 Russian- born students attending the Univer- sity this year," Kalachov said. "Last year an organization known as the, Russian Student Club of the Univer- sity of Michigan was created through the efforts of a few energetic Rus- sian students." Probably the most worthwhile and one of the most interesting features of the Russian Student Club is the fact that it is organized on the prin- ciple of nationality and language rather than on political beliefs, Kal- achov said. The difficulty of uniting royalist sympathizers of the present regime Was formerly considered in- superable,\but placing the club's or- ganization on the basis of nativity removed this obstacle. Because of this fact, the club has been able to unite under its leadership the major- ity of Russian students on campus, Kalachov stated. "The club has stimulated a friend- ly understanding of its members' quite colorful pasts and in general a better acquaintance has been pro- moted among the Russians," the president declared. Another student visited a number of Russian training schools, prisons, and prison camps last summer. "This project should prove of great interest to the students," Tibbitts de- clared, "and brnig to light informa- tion which will possibly aid in further study and correction of delinquents." Campus Kissing Scored As Unhealthy But Certain SEATTLE, Oct. 24.-Kissing is be- lieved to be an inevitable part of stu- dent life by Dr. D. C. Hall of the University of Washington health service. Although it is unhygeinic and a very possible means of, transmit- ting serious diseases, Dr. Hall thinks it is futile to try to do anything about it. "The habit is above the power of man-made rules to modify," he de- clared. He is, however, strongly against kissing between patients and visitors in the University hospital and strives to prevent it there. For the first time since its com- pletion, toll is being collected from vehicles crossing the Mississippi at St. Louis. Receipts are used for un- employment relief. The oldest road in Ohio is in Sum- mit county where its use is traced back to Indian days. Dr. Crane Honored 'By M. A. Degree In Medical Exercises August W. Crane, '94, was the re- cipient of an honorary master of arts degree at the eighty-third annual opening evercises of the Medical School, according to an announce- ment in the current issue of the Michigan Alumnus. Dr. Crane delivered an address on the subject of the X-Ray, a field in which he has devoted much time since 1897. Upon graduation, Dr. Crane opened offices in Kalamazoo. In 1905, he dropped his general prac- tice and since that time has special- ized in diagnostics. During the World War he served on both the local and state medical advisory boards. Many other honors have been con- fered upon Dr. Crane in the course of his distinguished career. In 1898 he was made a member of the Lon- don Roentgen Ray Society, He has been past president ,of the American Roentgen Ray Society and has, been acting editor of the American Jour- nal of Roentgenology. In 1921 the Radiology Society of North America awarded Dr. Crane its Gold Medal "in recognition of achievement in the science of radiology." Talk It Over With Your Banker,,., Your banker can help you in solving your financial problems. In business he may show you the way to safer operation and greater profits . . . and in your personal affairs he can be your guiding star to financial security. This bank's officers are always glad to be of service to every depositor. 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