THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JAN. 7, 1938 He Can't Keep Away From The Bench Beynon Claims Slosson Doubts Any Rumanian Dr. Page Addresses Educatiio Meetiii Migrant Labor Union With Italy Or Germany Jo, a eethg Dr. John Page of the executive i l.ousec r ()o n (continued from Page 1) Russia while France and the Soviet __att wr eo-bUnion are allied, Professor Slosson mation after the war the most stable said. There has never been much Southern White Families alliance in Europe. love lost between Russia and Ru- A BSince 1919, after which all three! mania, especially since the latter. i~ct'eJJ tBa(I Coniditions scountries, Yugoslavia, Czechoslova- gained Bessarabia in the post-war In Automobile Centers kia and Rumania, split up a good por- grab bag, he added. The presence of tion of Hungary, they have been a strongly anti-communist govern- Southern white families who have forced to hang together to suppress ment in Rumania cannot be expected migrated to Michigan's automobile! a strong Irredentist movement, Pro- to improve relations, especially if the manufacturing centers seem to be fessor Slosson pointed out. But cer- communist threat is used as a scare- atisfied with living conditions which tainly democratic Czechoslovakia will crow to further Premier Goga's pol- would not be acceptable to other pop- be hard pressed to continue astride icies, Professor Slosson concluded. !lation groups in the North, accord- the Treaty of St. Germaine with a ing to Dr. Erdmann D. Beynor, of Fascist partner, he added. Any It board of the Michigan Educational Association was the chief speaker last night at the University district meet- ing of the Association in the school of education. Dr. Page, speaking before a group of educators from all of the colleges, told of the plans of the State Associa- tion for the coming year. Read The Daily Classifieds i 3 I . I the sociology department by infor- movement which tends to cloud this mation released yesterday from in- policy and disrupt central Europe vestigations in Flint. will have very audible blessings from Most of the migrants who come Italy and Germany. It will also, from the South to Michigan are from however, bring economic pressure Arkansas, Kentucky, Missouri and from France, heavily interested in Tennessee. Dr. Beynon stated, and maintaining the alliance, pressure! numbered around 165,925 in 1930. A which cannot be disregarded with im- Smajority of them go to the urban punity. This has already manifested 'enters, the laborers being attracted itself in a French plan to prevent by the automobile industry, further arms shipments to Rumania, The percentage of the southern Professor Slosson said. migi'ant families that own their own "France, as usual when her feathers homes in the North is less than half are ruffled in Europe, can be expect- that of the families in the general ed to send diplomats all over the population, Dr. Beynon declared, and1 Balkans in a frenzied attempt to the percentage that have neither i mend her fences," Professor Slosson basements or running water in their said. homes is higher than that of Negro The strongest link with Germany families and twice that of general appears to be Goga's pro-German families. reputation and his strongly anti- General belief that the southern semitic stand, Professor Slosson con- white families in the north segregate tinued. But this Jew-baiting must themselves from the rest of the pop- not be interpreted as merely aping ulation is unfounded, Dr. Beynon Hitler. Anti-semitism has had a long stated. He pointed out that the fam- and peculiar course in Rumania. Be- ilies studied were scattered in a more fore the war, while the Jews were or less uniform fashion over all of not persecuted directly, laws were the districts within the city and met- passed attacking foreigners, and Jews ropolitan areas. were defined as foreigners. The in- l ttervention of the great powers had While the southern whites have secured the abrogation of most of aken up professional positions to these laws by 1920. Goga's speeches less extent than the northern Ne- are in this tradition, however, and groes or men of the general popu- be thisrdee, se eling lation, Dr. Beynon declared, there he may be able to carry out his pro- are more foremen among the mi- gram despite the large percentage of grants than among the general pop- Jews in the country. ulation, indicating that the automo- Jews in the onty bile factories have attracted sons of A complicating factor in the whole former plantation owners who are situation is Germany's enmity toward able to fill managerial positions. Mosto of the men are former share-crop- Prof orle Wins ers or tenants. JANUARY CLE WINTE! ARANCE SALE RHATS Hats you have seen at much higher prices, drastically reduced. FELTS, SUEDES, VELVETS, FELT COMBINATIONS 49c 89c and up Schiller's Hat Shot) 219 SOUTH MAIN STREET r Justice Willis Van Devanter (right), retired from the United States Supreme Court is shown in New York on his way to sit as a trial judge in the U.S. District Court. With him is Federal Judge John C. Knox. It is rumored that Justice George Sutherland, who recently announced his retirement from the Supreme Court, will also undertake this type of work. Child Guidance Institute Nears End Of Organizational Process Offices In Trick Building under a state-wide setup, will pro- Tovide Michigan with the machinery To B OccpiedAs Part for increased effectiveness in solving Of Revamped Program problems of delinquency, Professor Carr declared. Counties which have By ROBERT MITCHELL worked mainly alone so far, now can With the work of moving from turn to state aid and advice in their 'work. Haven Hall to the new central offices By fighting juvenile maladjust- in the Trick Building completed, ment, it is also expected, he stated, Michigan's new Child Guidance In- that other central anti-crime agen- stitute is nearing the end of its or- cies in the state will be benefited ganizational process and will begin from improvement in delinquency ganiatioal roces an Wil beinconditions. its complete program early next __Itions_ month, Prof. Lowell J. Carr, of the( sociology department, director of the Institute, said yesterday. I RO TC Contest It. Group Pictures Arrange for them Now! Est. 1890 UNSURPASSED GROUP FACILITIES Day or Night Two Acquitted In SeaSlaying 1 i f I I I The Institute has been in Haven Hall since last November when Pro- fessor Carr was appointed director to work with an executive committee that includes Dr. Edward W. Blake- To End Jan.26 Two Besti Studelnts To Lead Crew Of Aafje Not Guilty In KillingOf 'Mad Jack' LOS ANGELES, Jan. 6.-(IP)-A Federal grand jury today freed Rob- ert Horne, 27, and George Spernak, 19, of guilt in their confessed parts $670 In Auto Suit A University traffic expert has proven his expertness to the tune of $670.75. That was the amount of money Prof. John S. Worley of the Trans- portation Engineering department won yesterday in a successful suit which had its basis in an automobile collision in which he was injured Aug. 31, 1936. He had asked $5,000. The circuit court jury delivered the verdict against John and Catherine Hoban, Ypsilanti, after three hours of deliberation. Studio: 319 E. Huron 11 Opp. A.A. News Dial 5541 man University counselor fr reli- - ' s"in ending the piratical career of "Mad gious education, Prof. Charles H.i Each Platoon's Drill Jack" Morgan, after five days of Griffitts, of the psychology depart-I terror aboard the luxurious yacht ment, Prof. Howard Y. McClusky and R.O.T.C. drill competition, which Aafje. Prof. Willard C. Olson, of the School started last Monday, will continue Morgan, who had chartered the of Education, and Dr. Raymond W. throughout the next three weeks to yacht last Dec. 20 for an announced Waggoner, director of the Neuropsy- culminate in the presentation of two-day pleasure trip to Catalina rhihiri Institute. It was founded last commissions and awards Jan. 26, ac- Island. was declared by the survivors summer by the Palmer-Flynn-David cording t, Lieut.-Col. Basil D. Ed- to have killed the owner, Dwight a.. wiartin Act of the Michigan legis- wards, commanding officer of the Faulding, Santa Barbara hotel man, lature. University unit. the first night out. I 1- 3 Regents Act As Trustees E Under terms of the act, the Board: of Regents of the University was sdtt up as a board of trustess for the In-s stitute. A committee, headed byk Vice-President C. S. Yoakum and in-c cluding Prof. E. B. Stason, of the Law School, and Professor Carr and Pro-s fessor Waggoner, from the University, submitted its plan of organization, and the appointments were made ine November.- The Institute is to carry on re-t search in child delinquency for agen- cies in the state and to coordinatet the work of such groups, Professor Carr stated. It is aided by an ad- visory committee made up of repre- sentatives of seven of these organiza-c tions and its work has been divided into several specific functions. Research is already being carried' on by John Graves and Wallace Watt, formei: Ann Arbor Boy Scout execu-, tive, and fellowships in the Graduate I School will be offered next semester. Advisory work for communities and local courts is also under way, being done by James E. Stermer, former probation officer in Wayne County. Stermer is investigating means of community-Institute cooperation at the present time. Field Examination To Be Made Field examinations of pre-delin- quent and abnormal cases will be be- gun under Dr. Nils Wessels of the University of Rochester next month, when two psychiatric social workers will be appointed to help him, Pro- fessor Carr explained. These three! will travel to counties that have asked for aid and will work with authori- ties in these counties and send in- formation to the advisory and re- search groups back in Ann Arbor. The most serious cases will be sent to Ann Arbor for examination by the University psychiatrist under Dr.I Waggoner and by the University psy- chological clinic under Professor IGriff'itts. Findings will go to the com- munity organizer, who will assist localI communities in carrying out plans of treatment. The Institute itself will1 not do any treatment. This week, the two best basic stu- Armed, he forced Horne and Sper- dents per platoon' will be selected by ' nak to lower Faulding's body, the platoon leader and the best squad weighted with the ship's anchor, and and best platoon per company will continued on toward the unknown be selected by the company comman- destination, which Federal agents der. Next week's competition will in- learned might have been a south seas elude the selection of the best basic island. student per company by the com- After five days of terror in which pany commander, the selection of the the seven remaining passengers said best squad per drill period by the stu-, they were in constant fear of their dent field officer and the selection' lives, Horne said, he felled Morgan of the best platoon per drill period with a marlin spike and with Sper- by the regular army instructor. nak's aid, tossed him overboard in The following week, Colonel Ed- West Mexican waters. wards will select the best drill squad Horne and Spernak had been held, and platoon in the regiment. on murder charges, but the grand At 5 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 26, in a jury, hearing evidence for two days, ceremony which all R.O.T.C. stu- declined to indict them today and dents will attend, commissions and the federal marshal ordered their re- awards will be presented. lease. 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