s1% THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDA'Y'', OCTOBER 15, 1335 SIX TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1935 Ann Arbor Man Points To Zenge As Kidnaper Identifies Him As Jones' Who Abducted Dr. Bauer Before Killing CHICAGO, Oct. 14. --{}P)--One of the state's principal witnesses against Mandeville W. Zenge on trial for the mutilation-slaying of Dr. Walter J. Bauer, today identified him as the "T. S. Jones" who kidnaped the physi- cian at Ann Arbor, Mich. Norman Jedele, clerk of the Jen- nings House at Ann Arbor, was the witness. Jedele finally pointed Zenge out as Jones. At first when asked to find "Jones" in Judge Cornelius J. Harrington's packed courtroom, he failed to do so. "Jones" registered on July 26, said Jedele, and kept to his room. Bauer lived in the adjoining room while attending summer school at the Uni- versity of Michigan. The doctor had left his bride behind him, after a three-hour honeymoon, to continue his school work. Jedele's mysterious guest, who wore dark glasses, vanished on July 30, the date of Bauer's abduction, the cleric said. When Bauer was brought to Jackson Park hospital in Chicago he told of being kidnaped by "Jones." He had never seen Zenge, although they were rivals for the affections of Louise Shaffer, who married Dr. Bauer. Owen Gluett, of Flint, Mich.,' a guest at the Jennings House on July 28. He first saw "Jones," the witness testified, on the porch of the hotel. He saw him several times after that through the open door of Zenge's room. . Gluett was followed to the stand by Charles Reaume, the hotel house- man, who also identiifed Zenge as the man who spent several days at the otel The state is trying to prove that Zenge, a 26-year-old Canton, Mo., farm youth, slew Dr. Bauer for re- venge after Bauer had married Zen- ge's childhood sweetheart. Dr. Bauer was a professor of chemistry at a Kirksville, Mo., college of osteopathy. Social Work Group To Meet In Ann Arbor (Continued from Page 1) Michigan" will be given Saturday morning by Judge Ruth Thompson of the Lansing State Emergency Relief Administration; "Problems of Ad- ministration," E S. Guekert, of the Flint Community Fund, Inc.; "The Psychiatric Understanding of Social Problems," Dr. A. M. Barrett, head of the department of psychiatry here; "Delinquency and Probation," Prof. Lowell J. Carr of the sociology de- partment; "A State Program for De- pendent Children," Mr. C. F. Ram- sal, director of the Michigan Chil- dren's Institute here; "Generic Case Work," Miss Mildred A. Valentine of the sociology department; "Unem- ployed Youth," and "Supervision of Case Work," Miss Effie Doane of the Illinois Emergency Relief Adminis- tration. Miss Comstock will preside over the evening session, and Miss Lea Taylor of the Chicago Commons will speak on "Implications of Social Se- curity Legislation." Round tables will also constitute the Friday morning program, with the discussions of "Training of So- cial Workers," "Delinquency and Pro- bation," "Generic Case Work" and "Supervisors for Case Work" being continued and five other subjects being begun. The new round table topics, and the leaders, will be: "Administration of Old Age Assistance," Phillip A. Callahan of Muskegon, president of the Probate Judges of Michigan; Dr. Robert H. Haskell of the Wayne County Training School in North- ville, and William J. Norton, execu- tive vice-president and secretary of the Children's F'und of Michigan. The concluding talk of the con- ference will be given by Dr. Hugo Freund of Detroit on "Illness as a Challenge," at the luncheon Satur- day noon, with the newly-elected president of the conference, presiding. Hlop wood Room Has Collected 900 Volunes In Eleven Months !r ' I By RALPH W. HURD Less than a year ago, in late No- vember of 1934, the Hopwood room. was established by the Hopwood- Committee, under the direction of Prof. Roy W. Cowden of the English department, for the purpose of bring- ing to students interested in writing a more intimate contact with the world of writers outside the Uni- versity. Operating entirely on the strength of funds gained through lectures and other activities promoted by the Hop- wood Committee itself, the room has been able to collect more than 900 volumes of modern literature in the few brief months of its existence. As the culmination of a growing demand for an objective center of interests in connection with the Avery and Jule Hopwood Awards for excel- lence in writing, a vacant room on the third floor of Angell Hall, or- iginally assigned to the English de- partment, was secured and equipped with appropriate facilities for a read- ing room. Dominating the Hopwood room is a "round table," the history of which extends back into the period when West Hall, located on the present site of Betsy Barbour House, was the cen- ter of instruction in rhetoric and journalism, under the supervision of former Prof. F. N. Scott. It is be- lieved that Avery Hopwood himself, then only beginning his career of writing as a student here at the Uni- versity, sat around this table that is now furthering the purpose for which he established his Hopwood Awards. With the room finally equipped for use, the Hopwood Committee im- mediately set about the collection of modern prose and poetry. Lectures, such as the one given by Gertrude Stein last year, were sponsored and the proceeds were translated into rows of intriguing books lining the shelves of the room, books dedicated to the contemporaneous in litera- ture. The Committee on Contemporary Literature, composed of professors in the English department, contrib- uted books which it had received from publishers for reviews written in the English Journal. The most recent additions to the library of the room are several vol- umes of poetry and short stories by James Stephens, who lectured here last week under the sponsorship of the Hopwood Committee. These volumes include his "Etched in Moonlight," "Deirdre," "In the Land of Youth," "The Crock of Gold" and' "Collected Poems." The room also contains, in ad- dition to its volumes of literature. bound volumes of all the prize-win- ning entries in former Hopwood contests. Professor Cowden believes that these manuscripts "will prove to be of increasing value as time goes on, not only as a guide and inspiration for students competing in future Hopwood contests, but also as an indication of the progress and trends of modern literary effort." Supplementing its main purpose as a library of current literature and the most important of student writ- ings, the Hopwood Room is sponsor- ing this year weekly teas to which are invited faculty members and all advanced writing students. Every Thursday, from 3:30 p.m. on, stu- dents with a common interest in writ- ing find opportunity for associations and interchange of ideas unavailable in the books themselves. The Hopwoodtroom is openevery day except Saturday and Sunday from 2 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., and all students who are taking courses in composition beyond the introductory courses, both in the English and the Journalism departments, are invited to make use of the facilities of the room. WALTZ TO MARCH Its efficiency in military and civil protection will be demonstrated by Co. K, Michigan National Guard, civic officials and war veterans, to- night in the Armory. Stanley Waltz, manager of the Union, will head a University delegation. 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