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September 25, 1953 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1953-09-25

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

T rGr s1

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

rRWDAY, ,SFPTEIM BER IM15

I _________________________________________________________________________ I

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__ _ __

Vinson Post
Successors
Considered
Two ne.w names are now being
considered as possible successors of
Chief Justice Vinson as the head
of the Supreme Court, according
to Prof. Joseph Kallenbach of the
political science department.
The new contestants Prof. Kal-
lenbach mentioned were Judge
Ore L. Philipps of the 10th cir-
cuit court of appeals in Denver
and Judge Arthur Vanderbilt, New
Jersey's supreme court chief jus-
tice. Judge Vanderbilt who has
been responsible for many of the
recent reforms in New Jersey's
judiciary system is also a past
president of tlae American Bar As-
sociation.
AMONG THE earlier candidates
being considered for the job are
Gov. Earl Warren of California
and Gov. Thomas Dewey of New
York. Both Warren and Dewey will
soon finish their terms as gover-
nors of their respective states.
However, as several professors
pointed out, many ' prominent
men are in the limelight for the
position and speculation is still
going on as to who will be ap-
pointed.,
According to Prof. Kallenbach
it is highly probable that the Su-
preme Court will be without its
ninth member when it convenes in
October. It is unlikely that Pres.
Eisenhower will appoint a justice
before Congress convenes and his
only other alternative would be
to call a special session of Con-
gress for confirmation.
Campus SPA
GroupFolds
Following the folding of the
Young Progressives last year, the
Society for Peaceful Alternatives
is off campus this fall.
Paul Dormont, '55, SPA presi-
dent, credited the folding of the
political group to "just plain lack
of student interest." -
Approved by the Office of Stu-
dent Affairs in February, 1952, the
SPA has since held discussions
centering 'around peace.

Portrait Presented

-Daily-Don Campbell
HUBER HOUSE-Yesterday Huber House of South Quad was
presented with a portrait of the late Prof. G. Carl Huber after
whom the house is named. The portrait of Prof. Huber, former
Dean of the Rackham School of Graduate Studies, was painted
in 1931 by the noted artist Gari Melchers at a cost of $5,000. View-
ing the portrait are from left to right: Chuck Turner, '54, presi-
dent of Huber House; Mrs. Neva Fosienkemper, associate advisor;
and Richard Wall, Grad., resident, advisor.
FORMER RED PRISONER:
Robert Vogeler To Address
State Educators' Conference

Taylor Sees'
Student Aid
"Two years of state education
beyond the twelfth grade will be
made available to the boys and
girls of Michigan in the not too
distant future."
This prediction was voiced by
Dr. Clair L. Taylor, State Super-
intendent of public instruction,
who gave the opening address at
the one-day sixth annual Confer-
ence for School Board Members,
School Officials and Laymen here
yesterday.
EXPLAINING THAT this will be
accomplished by community col-
leges, Dr. Taylor said that he saw
no reason why every child in Mich-
igan who wishes it should not have
this opportunity to extend his edu-
cation beyond the 12th grade.
He also predicted that "we
will have adequate and well paid
school teachers. Salaries cur-
rently are not what they should
be to compete with inflation and
with ordinary industry."
Dr. Taylor urged school officials,
"Do not be discouraged if you
have not solved all of the problems
there are in education, because by
the time you reach these goals,
conditions will have changed and
you will have to start all over
again."
* * *
HE STRESSED the need to
"make certain that we are doing
something at the local level to in-
form people we are spending the
money wisely, so that we then can
face the problem on a state-wide
basis and present it to the State
Legislature in a united manner."
Speaking at the conference
dinner meeting yesterday James
B. Edmonson, dean emeritus of
the School of Education, declar-
ed that the powers of the local
board of education are far
greaterhthanmanytcitizens rea-
Ilize.
He said that no other nation in
the world has given a local board
of education such heavy responsi-
bilities. "In spite of some criticisms
and shortcomings, our plan has
worked and has contributed much
to the development of 'the most
successful school system in the
history of education," he added.
Choral Union
Seeks Singers
A few vacancies still occur in
the tenor and bass section of the
University Choral Union.
Men interested in joining the
chorus may make appointments to
audition by calling the University
Musical Society, at 7513.
Rehearsals are held from 7 to
8:30 p.m. Tuesday in Auditorium
A, Angell*Hall. Members of the
chorus with good attendance rec-
ords are given courtesy passes to
the ten concerts in the Choral
Union Series and to the May Fes-
tival.

Seniors
Seniors are again reminded
by 'Ensian editors to make their
senior picture appointments at
the earliest possible date.
Appointments may be made
from 2:30-5:30 p.m. today in
the Student Publications Bldg.,
420 Maynard St.
Photographing will begin
Monday and continue for a two
week period only.

Reading Disability CitedGrant Given
4 .-i- '"Ia-- - To Professor

Z ts uuusu v "Cucuque tcy

Def end All
Bar Urged
DETROIT - t{PA}-The nation's
lawyers yesterday were asked to
assume a position of leadership
in upholding the Constitution and
the American form of governiment
and in exposing the dangers of
Communism.
William J. Jameson, president
of the American Bar Association,
called on the nation's lawyers to
protdt the rights of individuals,
called before hearings by recog-
nized authorities, to refuse to tes-
tify under provisions of the Fifth
Amendment.
JAMESON, speaking at a lunch-
eon meeting at the annual con-
vention of the State Bar of Michi-
gan, however, asked the state
group ,to join the American Bar
Association in eliminating known
communists, or communist sympa-
thizers, from their ranks.
"Let us make certain that all
accused, including communists,
have a fair trial or hearing under
recognized standards and rules of
procedure," he said, "but let us
not condemn as witch huntin' all
efforts to rid our government, our
profession and our schools of the
disciples of Communism."
Gov. Williamis
T'o Talk Today
At CityChurch
Gov. G. Mennen Williams will
speak on "The Christian and His
Vocation," at 7 p.m. today, at the
parish house of Saint Andrew's
Episcopal Church, 306 N. Divi-
sion.
The governor's talk will be the
first in a three lecture series spon-
sored by the Episcopal Founda-
tion.
Prof. Helen Dodson of the as-
tronomy department and the Rt.
Rev. Dudley B. McNeil, Bishop of
western Michigan, will deliver the
remaining two lectures speaking on
their vocations in relation to the
ultimate realities of their faith.
City Parking Lot
To OpenSaturday
The eastern half of the city's
new parking lot at S. Main and
Packard Sts. is expected to be open
tomorrow to help ease the parking
problem created by the Michigan-
Washington game.

"The chief cause of juvenile de-
linquency today is not the so-
called broken home, but reading
disability ."
This, only one of the startling
statements to issue from the Uni-
versity of Michigan's Conference
on Residential treatment of Emo-
tionally Disturbed Children, was
voiced at the luncheon session by
Dr. Lauretta Bender, eminent child
psychiatrist of New York Univer-
sity Medical School and Senior
Psychiatrist of New York's Belle-
vue Hospital.
* * *
A MOTHER of three children
herself, Dr. Bender paid her re-
spects to the various psychiatric
approaches to emotional disturb-
ances, but went on to assert her
faith in the parental embrace as
the best therapy for the disturbed
child.
"Perhaps we spend too much
time in conferences talking
about children's medical prob-
lems and not enough time with
the children themselves," Dr.
Bender speculated.
Contrary to current popular no-
tions, Dr. Bender opposes the phil-
osophy that a child is nothing but
a regressed adult. "He is a child,
and he brings to the doctor all the
special problems and resources of
a child.
Dr. Bender, a renowned special-
ist in childhood schizophrenia, a
type of mental illness which causes
the child to cut himself off from
all contact with reality and peo-
ple, after twenty years of study has
concluded that children are not
basically oral in nature.
* * *

use their mouths. All mammals do.
But more basic to the child's first
experience of sensation is gravity.
And it is this experience of being
held up, or of falling, or of whirl-
ing that is at the root of our later
and more refined reactions."
It is this reaction to space and
the feeling of support that has led
Dr. Bender to observe that whirl-
ing is a favorite childhgod activity,
because in whirling the child is
momentarily out of touch with
reality and flying off into realms
of fantasy.
Yet the extreme is found in the
schizoid child whose complaints of
dizziness may be so intense that
he has lost all contact with the
boundaries of real life; he is out
of tune with the world yet he may
persist in holding his hands above
his head for fear the world may
fall on him.

Of Psychology
Prof. Anna S. Elonen, of the
psychology department has been
awarded a U. S. Education Ex-
change Grant by the Department
of State.
The grant, made under pro-
visions of the Fulbright Act, will
finance a lectureship in clinical
and social psychology which
Prof. Elonen will conduct at the
School for Advanced Education
Studies in Finland.
A native of Finland, Prof. Elo-
nen received her B. A. degree at
Lawrence College, her M.A. degree
from the University of Minnesota
and her Ph.D. degree from the Uni-
versity of Chicago.
In addition to teaching at the
University, Miss Elonen has been
psychological consultant to the
Veteran's Administration since
1951.

U U

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Sunday, Noon - 7 P.M.
Phone 7191
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ED TO LOOK for
KING SPACES
when you do your
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* SOFT DRINKS

"OF COURSE, children suck and1

Robert A. Vogeler, International
Telephone and Telegraph Com-
pany executive who was held for
17 months in Hungary for alleged
spying will be a featured speaker
at the Oct. 8-9 meeting of the
Michigan Education Association at
the University.
Opening the convention at 9:30
a.m., Oct. 8 in Hill Auditorium,
Vogeler will tell approximately
3,000 teachers of his "Seventeen
Months of Despair."
Teachers attending the con-
vention will come from Washte-

OPEN DAILY 2 P.M. TO 2 A.M._
After-the-game dance
EARL PEARSON AND ORCHESTRA

Are you eligible to join?
DANCING
Friday and Saturday Nites
Members and Guests
314 East Liberty
Phone 2-3972
CLTJS You must be 21

naw, Jackson, Monroe and Len-
awee counties.
In addition to Vogeler's talk, two
other addresses are slated for the
first session. Richard Barnes Ken-
nan, secretary of the National
Commission for the Defense of
Democracy through Education of
the National Education Associa-
tion, Washington, D.C., will speak
on "Some Marks of Progress."
\Edgar L. Grim, assistant sup-
erintendent of public instruction
in Lansing, will talk on "Good
Teachers Make Better Commu-
nities."
At the second general meeting
at 2 p.m. Oct. 9 in Hill Auditorium
MEA president, Milburn P. Ander-
son will deliver his speech on
"Looking Ahead."
U' TV Actors
Will Present
WeelyShows
Beginning October 5, University
students will present four live tele-
vision shows a week over station
WPAG-TV in Ann Arbor, Prof.
Garnet R. Garrison, director of
U-M -television announced yester-
day.
The programs to serve as on-
the-air laboratories mainly for
speech and journalism students
will include a 15-minute sports
and news show three times a week.
A children's series, a group of
shows interviewing interesting per-
sonalities and an experimental
program will be telecast once a
week. '

NEW SHIPMENTS of
USED TEXTBOOKS
arriving daily !
NEW BOOKS IF YOU PREFER
For that hard-to-find textbook
try
FOLLETT'S
MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE

322 South State

BOB GRAHAM, Mgr.

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of the 1953-54

M O R L ' 314 S. State Ph. 7177
Open Saturdays until 5 P.M., except Home Games

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