THE MICHIGAN DAILY r-FRIDAY, NO1TER!RER 5, 194] :.. _. + v " rr ai +av V iUZV 9 UNIVERSITY GRADUATE: Collier's Editor To Give Journalism Talk Today Gurney Williams, associate edi- tor of Collier's Weekly, will ad- dress journalism concentrates and other interested students at 3 p.m. today in Rm. E, Haven Hall. New Directory Arriving Soon Bindery To Come Through By Tuesday Despite delays and breakdowns, the Student Directory, will posi- tively come out Tuesday and the price will be one dollar, Salesman- ager Jim Reagen announced yes- terday. The bindery has broken down for the third time; the where- abouts of the fat 450 page body is still uncertain. The rainbow, colored cover and insets are still waiting in Detroit. But broken binderies notwith- standing, the 20,000 name Direc-1 tory will come out Tuesday, Rea- gen declared. Williams, who graduated from the University journalism depart- ment in 1931, will talk on "Ad- ventures of a Humorist." An in- formal coffee hour, sponsored by the Journalism Society of the De- partment of Journalism, will fol- low the address. * * * WILLIAMS began his magazine career in 1925 as a staff member of the American Boy Magazine. He attended the University from 1927 to 1931 and during that time wrote a humor column for The Daily. The visiting lecturer joined the staff of the old Life Mag- azine in 1932, and became man- aging editor two years later. Williams transferred to Col- lier's Weekly as cartoon editor a few months after Life was sold in 1936. The fifth lecture in the jour- nalism series will be given by J. C. Oestreicher, director of the Inter- national News Service foreign news department, on Nov. 17. He will speak to a journalism assem- bly in the afternoon and will de- liver a public address in the Kel- logg Auditorium in the evening. 7. PHOENIX HOSIERY CLUB.. with Us /amou.s .Iochingx -lontp an. ecturer Will (open New Series 12 Economists To Give Talks The first of 12 lecturers spon- sored by the University will appear here next Monday and Tuesday. He is Prof. Fritz Machlup, of the economics department at the Uni- versity of Buffalo. PROF. MACHLUP will speak before the Economics Club at 7:45 p.m. Monday in the Rackham Amphitheatre, and again at 4:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Amphithe- atre. Both lectures are open to the public. Topic for the Economics Club address will be "The Bas- ing Point System," while that for the public lecture Tuesday will be "The Problem of Monop- oly and Competition." Each of the visiting economists in the series will spend two or three days at the University, de- livering two lectures and meeting students and faculty informally. The entire series will deal with the general theme of "Economic Issues and Public Policy." PROF. DAVID McCord Wright of the economics department at the University of Virginia, will be the second lecturer, Nov. 22-23. He will discuss anti-trust laws and policy. Other visitors will be Profs. Jacob Viner, Princeton; Kenneth E. Boulding, Iowa State; John H. Williams, Harvard; Theodore W. Schultz, Chicago; Howard S. Ellis, California; and Abram Bergson, Columbia. Prof. Machlup is a native of Austria. He received his education in that country and has consid- erable experience in industry there. He came to the United States in 1933, and has been on the faculty of the University of Buffalo since 1935. Cuber Asserts Criminals Are Made in Home He Says Law Can't Prevent Delinquency Criminals may be made in the home, under the very eyes of the law, but there is no legal way to prevent this. Dr. John F. Cuber, director of the Marriage Counseling Clinic at Ohio State, expressed this opinion before the final session of the Parent Education Institute yes- terday at the Rackham Building. His subject was "Legal Problems in Parent-Child Relationships." EXPLAINING THAT "at best law operates negatively," he de- clared "the promise for tomorrow comes from education, and coun- seling and guidance techniques." He praised the new concep- tion of family relations and ju- venile courts as "custodial" as well as punitive agencies. In- dividualized treatment of ,of- fenders, and informal court proceedings are "all for the good," he said. Deploring archaic concepts in law, and variations of state laws which allow parents to use chil- dren in custody cases as "pawns in the game of hurting one an- other," Dr. Cuber asked for "an emancipation proclamation for the rights of children." ASSOCIATED PRESS U OCT URE Ne H O N O R S OLD F R I EN D--Bernard Baruch, former ,counsellor to Franklin D. Roosevelt, places wreath at the base of ~ late president's statue in Grosvenor Square, London. H A R V E S T I N G R I C E - A combine moves across a rice field near Crowley, La. New grain is transferred from hopper to trucks which take it to driers in the city. Southerners consume nearly 60 pounds of rice per capita yearly. National average is six pounds. * A pair of Phoenix Ny- lons at no extra charge after the purchase of 12 pairs. $1.50 Others $1.35 to $2.35 viiltijfi;t;"'n + 't 4p S s i . w, A K I ' U L I C E A I W V K - Gendarmes stop parade of war veterans 'in Paris as demonstrators try to convexrge on Ministry Gf-Finance to protest Licreased cost of living. Ft T KV OJ t I - Lawrence Levy. 8, holds his new fox terrier while Lorraine Taaffe feeds it ice cream at party given by a New York pet shop owner to celebrate his 61st birthday' :The owner, Billy Rose, gave away 30 puppies to children. - It's so amazingly simple - just step into our hosiery department end join our hosiery club. Continue to make your hosiery purchases as you would normally and when you have purchased your 12th pair, you will receive a pair of lovely Phoenix nylons at no extra charge. You'll agree, it's a wonderful stocking economy. 309 South State Street - V I E D H I I 7 C t A K I DE - Cabbie Howard LeDuc shows Actress Jo Hipple the; specially-designed television set to be installed in a taxicab at Chicago. p. Connie Casuals $5.95 fS BLACK SUEDE L 0 0 K H E R E, S 0 N - Flame, movie German shepherd, holds paternal paw around his son, Blaze, at Hollywood. I i 4 4N4 iA I Just for fun, how do you like a vamp cut almost down to your toes? r1 _- ,.1 _ . . ._ .* *. . ._ ._ E. _ _ _ ,. ._- . ::'* .,:~, ::::t :;r%': ;: ..