x ..«.. .. THE VICI ITAN DAILY., _________________________________________________________________________________ I _________________________________________________________________________ reign Affairs Till Be Topic I Dr._Woolley' ner Mt. Holyoke Head Be Guest Speaker : A.A.U.W._Supper Mary E. Woolley, president- tus of Mt. Holyoke College, will est speaker at a supper meet- t 6:15 p.m. tomorrow at the gan League sponsored by the. rational Relations Committee, American Association of Uni- y Women.. meeting, which is open to the will follow a reception for Voolley at 5:45 p.m. at the e. Reservations for the supper ow being taken at the League, announced. rmer president of the A.A.U.W.I Voolley is well known as an city on international affairs as s being the author of books1 nerican life such as "The Early y of the Colonial Post Office" The Development of the Love rmantic Scenery in America." n in 1863, Dr. Woolley began reer as anlinstructor at Wheat- >llege before going to Brown rsity, where she graduated in She taught biblical history in sley college, becoming head of department of biblical history' terature.in 1898. In 1900, Dr. ey was appointed} president of Progress In Prison Reform Seen Despite Recent Breaks IT N. 14 J ,% F 2 J 8y HOWARD A. GOLDMAN "Things are looking up in the field of prison reform." In spite of numerous recent at- tempts at prison-breaking, blamed by some on low standards in prison personnel and extreme measures in prison reform, this was the opinion voiced by Prof. Arthur E. Wood of the sociology department in an in-, terview yesterd y. Defending h's assertion, Professor Wood, a criminology expert, declared that "the prison has never been built from which prisoners couldn't es- cape." He added that many penal systems, especially in cases of states, are pitifully- inadequate and even corrupt, but that the modern prison reform program should not be blamed for these deficiencies. For Inmates' Reconstruction This reform idea, he explained, is bending every effort to facilitate a reconstruction of inmates' behavior and outlook, always remembering that most prisoners sooner or later become members of society again. Toward this end, he observed, re- habilitative programs are being sub- stituted wherever - possible for the old-type punitive system. . Commenting specifically on theF record of 76 escapes made during the last year at the wall-less St. Charles Jekyll- yde Female Consoles Engineers A committee of six engineers shout- ed in glee!-at last they had found the perfect personifivation of the "typi- cal engineer's date" to the Engineers'1 CBall. ICarefully scrutinizing the talent at, Ill., School for Boys, Professor Wood pointed out that degrees of prison reform must vary with each prison, according to the type of criminal housed. Certain types of "bad" wrongdoers, even among youths. should be kept behind bars, to give society adequate protection. Urges Acute Judgment The answer, he asserted, appears to lie in closer differentiation between institutions and in more acute judg- ment in assigning criminals to these institutions. Some steps in the right direction are being taken in the classification system now used on prisoners, Pro- fessor Wood pointed out. Upon en- tering a prison, he explained, men are given - educational, psychiatric and other examinations. Reports and checkups are continually being made, he added. The Federal Government particu- larly has made progress in the edu- cational, psychiatric and medical fields of prison reform, he declared. Professor Wood also pointed to pro- gress in raising prison personnel standards made by schools which train prison guards. Michigan has a small institution of this type, he said. Proposals have been made, he asserted, to abolish the inadequate county jail systems, and to substi- tute a half-dozen large penal farms to take care of prisoners ordinarily housed in these jails. Slepard Tells. Political Views f )eeeh Ends Lion Institlte ed from Page 1) e Detroit News, Arthur .nn Arbor News, Prof. sen of the education of. Qeorge Benson of ;ence department, de-j adequate definition of a ever be reached. The eluded that Americans formed of any people Cole of the Unitarian do featured the morn- >rogram with an ad- ng Ourselves Against The terrific power of the explosion which smashed the Buergerbrau beer hall in Munich only a quarter of an hour after Fuehrer had left is illustrated by this view of the wreckage of the hall. This photo was radioed from Berlin to New York. Hitler stood near the picture during his address before the Nazi "old guard" celebrating the anniversary of the unsuccessful putsch of 1923. ,, , ,I , a y The Daily style show yesterday in the Conversion To Socialism League, the manly committee saw line after line of campus queens, but Outlined In Hillel Talk they remained unimpressed. Then "Alice" strode in as a goon and was 1\fartineau's "Seat of Authority in amazingly transformed into a perfect Religion" and various volumes too specimen of feminine pulchritude. nuimerois to mention dealing -with Here was the engineer's answer- politics are the main things which in her sudden metamorphosis, Alice have changed my thinking from that portrayed the amazing transforma- of the 19th century liberal 'to that tion which so many coeds undergo of a man who believes in Socialism, each weekend. Shouting "goon by Prof. John Shepard of the psychol- day, peach by night," the engineers ogy department stated in a speech left the ballroom confident of their last night at the Hillel Foundation. choice. Professor Shepard devotedthe first I part of his talk to -a discussion of the ' ish Students Meet influence of his high school super- zntbndcnt and his chemistry profes-, Matt Lappinen, instructor at the sor at St. Lawrence University upon Ypsilanti State Teachers College, -interesting him in psychology but discussed Finnish music last night at devoted most of his speech to dis- a meeting of the Suomi Club held cussing his political views. at Lane Hall. He completed his "When I was young.' Professow program by leading the group in Shepard said, "I was a liberal of the modern ballads and folk songs from Wilsonian type, but after analyzing Finland. Toivo H. Liimatainen, '41E, the world situation these' ,past few president, announced that the next years I have become convinced that meeting would be held Nov. 25 in the we must make some radical change lower room at Lane Hall. !in our economic system. -= p must build up three defenses I t, propaganda, Rcv. Cole assert- irst, we must look at both sides questions. Second, when we niscious of a deliberate propa- in our conimunity, we must ract it with propagawnda of our Third, we must redognize the used by prnopagadiists. These t of name calling, the use of ing generalities, deliberate ex- t.ion ,tcstimoniais, and appeal common sense. Institute, according to Dr. - director of the Extesion Serv- ,as by far ..he most s;Ucessfl 10 held thus far. The regis-I u of 1,217 was the largest in stitute's history. AI.LY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) sion, "What is the Christian o Peace?" ity Lutheran Church will hold 'ship services at 10:30 a.mn. Rev. Yoder will deliver thc sermon. Lutheran (hureh will hold its p services at 10:30. Rev. Stell- vill deliver the sermon. i Methodist Chlrch: Dr. C. W, ures will preach at the morn- rship service at 10:40 a.m. on ring In." ker Halt: 9:45 a.m. Student at Stalker Hall. Prof. Roy S. n of the Engineering School egin a series of discussionm* on 4 group of questionnaires g with the standards of good /il, happiness, and other simi- >jects. n. Wesleyan Guild meeting at :ethodist Church. Dr. Robert , District Superintendent of the District, will speak on "Peace." ship hour and supper following eeting. ;ineers To Test Autos it a dozen automotive engineer- udents will journey into the y with Prof. Walter E. Lay to- set up a "weather bureau" in to test an automobile under nt weather conditions. QUICK, CONVENIENT AND SAFE tANSPORTATION . Luren D. Dickinson, Michigan's 80-year-old Governor, grinned broadly when Maxine Smith, 16, high school senior, presented him with a complete outfit of red flannel underwear at Lansing. Maxine is "Red Flannel Queen" of Cedar Springs, Mich., which has sbeduled a festival for Nov. 11 in tribute to the old fashioned garment . Considerable blackout area is cast by the shadow of Leonard Crun who's known at a British training depot, as "Two-Ton Tony," pre- sumably after Galento, the Ameri- can fighter and boastful barkeeper. ; Co-incident with the announcement that six Stand ard Oil Co. tankers were being transferred to Pana, Figuring her cats' lives at nine manian registry, painters blacked out American flags painted on the sides of the tanker H, H. Rogers, shown each, Pegge Lippe, Philadelphia above, and replaced them with the Panama emblem and the name of the isthmian country. Maritime painter, saved 19 lives when she union leaders charged the procedure doomed many American seamen to unemployment. The tanker is fled from France because of war. shown at a Boston dock. She had been painting in Europe. ALE X iN DER KI PN 'is RUSSIAN BA Ss The beauty of his voice and the magic of his personality have won artistic triumph for hir in the music capitals of the world. According to the New York Times, he is 10 mit. downtown t IIII -