failing, council gels (dine...council gels (dine.flea if happened in michigan schools failing,...

1
.Flea Gels Council (Dine If Happened in Michigan Schools Failing, Employers Charge 40 Pet. of Job Applicants Poor in Arithmetic, Grammar, Spelling CLASSIFIED SPORTS NEWS DETROIT 31, MICH., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1949 1 5 of D?tS f ,0?,? Griffh completed an exhaus-fiiT- hi 8 Pu,bUc-so- ol system. He presents his a series of articles, of which this is the fourth. BY JOHN GRIFFITH ' ' Free Pres. Staff Writer Detroit schools are grinding out another "lost generation." Ignorant of the three Rs children are "sloughed off" upon a business world which rejects many of them as "unacceptable" Clearing Election Returns to ask a record-breakin- g 1949-5- 0 IXJI fr J- - 'v- - til , 1 u SS&izJ 3m Lwsft y 1 Ada j?a I Tit A h - I HJ it W j 3 AFTER 30 YEARS Repentant Woman Sends $50 to DSR A $50 bill was sent to the DSR to salve the conscience which has been bothering a Detroit woman for. 30 years. "This," she wrote, "will more than cover the nickels and dimes I took from the DUR during the first World War. "There was absolutely no need for me to steal. It was the first and last dishonest act I ever performed." She was a conductorette at the time she stole the money. She suggested that the money go to an infantile paralysis vic- tim. The DSR Commission de- cided to comply with her wish if it can legally do so and do- nate the money to the March of Dimes. Pupils to Get Tooth-Deca- y Preventive Detroit dentists are beginning an extensive program to treat school children's teeth with decay-preventi- ng Sodium fluoride. of the program and study of its results are in the hands of the Detroit District Dental Society. The society will act as liaison between dentists in private practice- - and the Board of Health. Dr. Ralph H. Campbell , an- nounced the . program at the Dental Society's second annual Children's Dental Health Confer- ence. DR. CAMPBELL pointed out that many dentists already had treated children with the fluoride solution which prevents on an average of 40 per cent of tooth decay. "The Board of Health and schools are going to make a record of past treatments," he said. "Future treatments will be reported by dentists." The fluoride treatments were demonstrated Monday at the Dental Conference in the Hotel Statler. Candy Wholesaler Dies in Cheboygan Special to the Free Press CHEBOYGAN Frank J. Hutchinson, 50, prominent Repub- lican and businessman, died Tues- day from a heart ailment. During the war, Mr. Hutchinson was chairman of the Cheboygan County Republican Committee. He operated a wholesale candy BY DONALD F. SCIIRAM To warm his motor for a test of the alcohol in his radiator, James Whitaker, of Adrian, drove his car around the block. It stalled on the ice at the Wa- bash Railroad crossing. WTiita-k- er jumped before it was hit by a westbound passenger train. The train demolished the car, skidded the wreckage to the eastbound track. An eastbound train was halted by flares. WTiitaker said he wished he'd let his radiator freeze. Champagne corks peppered firemen Tuesday in Grand Rap- ids. They were called out to put out a blaze in a freight car con- taining a shipment of the bub- bling fluid. Loss by fire and effervescence was $2,000. ALPHEUS P. DECKER, vet- eran state representative from Deckerville, turned the tables on Lloyd Buhl, publisher of the Deck- erville Recorder. Because Rep. Decker's pay has been held up by a taxpayer suit, Buhl has been offering to take up a collection to help him out. Decker, however, hearing that Buhl had become the father of a son, his fourth child, brought in a box of cigars, saying: "When you get a family that size, you don't give away cigars, you ask for contributions." Decker is the father of eight children. . Another Michigan publisher to become the father of a son Is Duane DeLoach, of the Blissfield Advance. The newcomer Is the eighth DeLoach child, seven of whom are living. State repre- sentative from Lenawee County is Rollo G. Conlin of Tipton. Senator is Elmer R. Porter of Blissfield. FOR snitching silverware from an Ann Arbor fraternity house as an initiation stunt, a Michigan State College fraternity has been disciplined by its parent body. There will be no dances or parties for the rest of the year for Alpha Phi Sigma. - The East Lansing boys sent two pledges after the Alpha Phi Sigma forks during "Hell Week." They got the forks, but got caught and had to give them back, which they intended to do anyway. But na- tional headquarters regarded it as an unfraternal act. Alta L. Robinson of Mio played 753 games of solitaire, and kept score on the basis of paying herself $53 for the deck, taking $5 back for each card successfully played. At one time she owed herself $852, another time was $687 ahead. She ended the series $23 ahead of herself, and that much behind, too. TWO high school ' boys" from Cedar Springs led an elderly cou- ple to safety from a burning home. Rescued were Serene Dlaauvelt, 84, and his sister, Rebekah Switzer, 82. Rescuers were Edwin Gane, Jr., and Norwood Avis. iWWWfcBli, nninnri n.'IflO'ilfMlltifiViiairiiirfi till n in A- - 1 Tf" Free Press Photo GEORGE SHILLITO CITY CLERK THOMAS LEADBETTER Senate agent checks Detroit's voting machines to Amend OleoBill House Pulls Teeth of 4th Offender Act From Our Lanslnt Boreas LANSING Plans of the rural legislators to make adjustments in the Colored Oleomargarine Act after it is adopted were revealed when it was advanced without to the third reading. Rep. Floyd Town, Jackson Re publican, is a bitter opponent of easing the margarine code. He told his colleagues no alter native remained but to pass the bill as presented by initiated peti- tion. "IF WE DONT," Town said, both the amended and original bill will go on the ballot and a ref erendum .will be necessary in trie future to change whichever is adopted. "This way if we pass the pres- ent bill, we can change it in the future without a referendum." By a 62 to 33 vote, the House passed and sent to the Senate a bill which draws the teeth from the Habitual Criminal Act. The present act makes a life sentence mandatory upon a fourth felony conviction. The bill of Rep. Howard E. Carroll restores discre tion to the sentencing judge. REP. EDWARD Hutchinson, Allegan Republican, took the floor in opposition. "I have also supposed that the possibility of severe punishment was a strong crime deterrent," Hutchinson said. "I'm afraid that if the possibility Nof a life sentence is removed, offenders will take advantage." Rep. John Kruse, Manistee, pro posed a bill to permit local, Gov ernments to put in their general funds the 85 per cent of license fees returned to them. It is designed to thwart Liquor Commission efforts to have the license money reserved for enforce ment. Registration Sets Record A total oi 868,129 persons had qualified as electors for a spring election when the books for the Feb. 21 primaries were closed Tuesday, City Clerk Thomas D. Leadbetter reported. The total was a record for an off-ye- ar vote, Leadbetter said. There were 870,050 qualified for last fall's presidential election. The big number of holdovers for the spring poll accounted for the record. comfort Acquisition of 12 Sites Is Sought Projects Would Give City 14,350 Units BY GEORGE A. HOUGH, HI Tree Press Staff Writer Common Council has agreed to hear on Feb. 10 a Housing Com- mission plea for condemnation of 12 sites for public housing. The sites would accommodate 14,350 rental units which would be erected on 324 acres of slum and 403 acres of vacant land. Council's invitation to James H. Ingles, secretary of the Housing Commission, to present argument for the condemnations came after a two-ho- ur debate about substand- ard housing. IN THE DEBATE, Inglis, F. Gardner Legg, ( secretary of the Board of Health; Joseph P. Wolff, Building and Safety Engineering commissioner; Traffic Judge John D. Watts, and George F. Emery, director of the City Plan Commis sion, all pleaded: "More housing, not stricter laws or stepped-u- p building-cod- e . enforcement." Inglis pointed out to Council an area around St. Jean and East Jefferson where illegal conversion to multiple units had tripled occu- pancy. "That's substandard housing that only new housing can over come," Inglis said. COUNCIL PRESIDENT George Edwards urged Judge Watts to jail landlords who deliberately overcrowded buildings. Inglis told Council that only two sites were available now for public-housin- g development. Construction could begin on both sites within 60 days of passage of a Federal housing law, he said. The areas are those proposed for the Douglas Apartments, adjacent to the Brewster Homes, and the Jeffries Project, near Grand Riv- er and Brooklyn. THE CITY has delayed con- struction on both sites for several years while holding title to the property and collecting rents from occupants of the old houses. In creased cost of construction made it impossible to build with avail- able funds although plans have long been ready. Inglis told Council Detroit should be ready to take advant- age of the proposed seven-ye- ar Federal housing program. Swift enactment is expected, Inglis said. Detroit's share of the na- tional program would be about 30,000 units. Slum sites Inglis wants are in two areas near Larned and Chene, in one south of Michigan between Fifth and Tenth, and another next to the Brewster Homes. Vacant-lan- d sites are on Eight Mile at Conner, Eight Mile and Connant, Eight Mile and Wyom- ing; at Plymouth and Burt Roads; at West Chicago and the Fere Marquette tracks; at Joy and Greenfield and at Ford and Soutn- - field. fc Auto Crashes Take Lives of Two More Two names were added to De- troit and Wayne County's traffic-fatalit- y list of 1949. Erwin Karbowski, 23, of 5227 Chopin, died in Receiving Hos- pital. Joseph Krantz, 32, of Can- ton, Ohio, died in Wyandotte Gen eral Hospital. Karbowski was injured Mon- day when an automobile in which he was riding, driven by Eugene Kischuk, 24, of 4715 Larkins, crashed into two util- ity poles at Michigan and Elmer. Kischuk was jailed on a reckless-- driving charge to which he later pleaded not guilty. Police say he will now be recalled on a manslaughter charge. Krantz died of injuries suffered in a head-o- n collision at Dix and London, Lincoln Park last Friday night. William Lambranos, 55, of 10327 Dix, Dearborn, a passenger in the other car, was killed. to 10 US. W(ATHW BUXSAU AMP 5 ? t vy yvxz " ) Bar Patrons Give Bandit a Busy Time A bandit walked into Ma-lick- i's Bar, 8527 Michigan, and pointed a gun at Gilbert Cam- eron, 34, the bartender, who was alone. The thug forced Cameron into a back room and bound him with adhesive tape. Then Arthur Gutowski, 31, of 4005 Trenton, walked in. The bandit took $1 from him. ANOTHER CUSTOMER, Albert Schroeder, 44, of 9164 Northlawn, walked in. The ban- dit took $4 from him. He forced the customers Into the back room, too. Only then did he get a chance to take $83 from the cash reg- ister and flee. the sets Duaget of 573,000,000. Three new board members will be elected this spring. Employers complain that spelling is deplorable and knowl- edge of punctuation and rules of grammar are hazy and vague. About 40 per cent of these youngsters lose their chance for significant jobs when these weak- nesses show up in employment tests. . TEACHERS LAY the blame on overcrowded classes. They say it is impossible to teach with any measure of success when there are more than 40 in a class. The recognized ideal Is 25 children to a classroom although 30 is acceptable. School Supt. Arthur Dondineau placed the median class size at the present time at 39. He said the cost in additional teacher sal- aries alone would be $800,000 to decrease the average by a single child. Employers charge that young sters are turned out with a "poor work attitude " lacking in respon sibility . toward the job and the employer. BLAME FOR THIS is placed on tne modern method of education in which emphasis is placed on stimulating the child's imagina tion, his wish to learn, power of analysis and sense of inquiry. Professional educators point out that the catch in this theory is the ease with which such in- struction becomes mere enter- tainment. "Children have flitted through school like a game," said one per- sonnel expert. "School is work like any job. Pupils should be taught that they must produce.' A lack of vocational guidance and counselling was reflected re peatedly in youngsters applying ior jods. SCHOOL FIGURES show that the 137 counselors in the schools are taking care of as many as 700 boys and girls each. Clerical work takes up time which.should oe spent In solving youth's prob lems and advising them on their life work. In practice, this counselling lack has results which would be ludicrous were they not so tragic For instance, there was the commercial high school graduate who had received lengthy instruc- tion in filing. Yet on applying for a job, she was informed she was too fat to work among filing cabinets. Intelligent counselling, also, would have aided the girl with a facial defect who had to be told that her high school business course was useless for job-hunti- ng purposes. MORE THAN one-thir- d of De- troit public school students take the college prep course. They graduate with a smattering of cul- tural knowledge but no "saleable" training. True vocational guidance and counselling would have informed them that most have not the mental or financial background for college. They find out only after the damage is done. Dr. Warren K. Layton, divisional director of the guidance and place- ment department, said his staff is doing its best under a handicap. He admitted that the pupil-counsel- or ratio should be no more than 250 to 1. PARENTS AND teachers feel that children would be eased over rough spots by occasional confer- ences and exchange of information by the teacher and parents. Yet no time of the day is set aside for such meetings. Parents complain that they are given the "brushoff" or are treated with hos- tility when they go to the school headquarters on Broadway. On one occasion, a parent group from Merman Gardens was re- pulsed by Dondineau with the words: "What are you complain- ing about? You're not taxpayers." Tomorrow: Board of Com- merce education committee calls for "survey" of school system. Down tat 1 . .... 023 10I ViwA J(J0 .v. 1 tiKpWur .ur. She ft -- .tut! Wlr Anwi - emu. uutiupiuauic. Employment manae-ers- t Free Press that up to 40 per cent of the boys and girls leave school Without mastering simple arith- metic. ' One personnel executive , said their handwriting is "atrocious." THEIR STATEMENTS were made as the school board prepared Stands Mute f i If V T i . A z - i Free Press Photo BURTON T. COOK t Released on bond Broker Mum on Buying Stolen Steel Burton P. Cook, 39, of 616 VV. Philadelphia, 'a steel broker, stood mute at his arraignment before Federal Judge Arthur Koscinski on charges of knowingly receiving stolen steel. A plea of not guilty was entered for him. He was released under $1,500 bond. COOK WAS ONE of two men named in a three-cou- nt indictment charging the receipt or iZ7,ouu pounds of hijacked steel. The other was Sol Kaye, 80, of Chicago. Both he and Cook were ofifcials of the Cookson Products Co., 99 Bates. The firm was dissolved last De- cember. Kaye was expected to appear for arraignment Wednesday. Sister Kenny Group Joins United Drive The Michigan Chapter of the Sister Kenny Foundation joined the United Foundation, it was announced Tuesday. That brought to 23 the health and social services which have merged their plea for funds in the United Foundation drive which will be launched Feb. 7. JOHN R. WILT, secretary-treasur- er of the Sister Kenny Foundation, said that the merger "is recognition of the necessity of bringing order out of the end- less and confusing separate ap- peals for many worthy agencies." At the same time, Dr. E. J. Huenekens, of Minneapolis, chief of staff of the Kenny Founda- tion, announced a new policy. He said that it would "work through the medical men of the country in carrying on and super vising the Kenny method of treat- ment (of infantile paralysis) and seek of established teaching centers and universities in spreading knowledge of the work." A NEW TRAINING program is designed to increase the number of trained Kenny technicians available for duty at treatment centers throughout the nation, Including one at Pontiac. - Dr. Huenekens said that regis tered nurses and physical therapists could apply for training in the Minneapolis school at the Detroit Foundation Office, 710 Washington Blvd. Building. Commuters May Give Up Canada Homes Special to the Free Pre.t 2 D SJ? R Approximately 1,200 Canadians of the Windsor area who work in the United States will leave Canada with their families after the next Dominion election unless that country's in- come tax policies are revised, the Windsor Commuters Club declared. Further, according to Howard Sprung, president, members will refuse to pay their Canadian In- come taxes. Sprung pointed out that the Canadian who works in the United States pays the United States In- come tax and, if the Canadian tax Is higher, pays the difference to the Canadian Government. Injuries Fatal LAG-W-Ja- ck Dwyerj 31, of Wilhamston, died in a Lan- sing hospital from injuries suf- fered in an automobile accident Saturday. the pace for casual Senate Aides Here to Seal City Ballots Senate investigators have ar- rived in Detroit to clear voting machines of results of the Nov. 2 election. Destruction of ballots has been delayed pending Senate action on a demand for a recount by Frank Hook, Ironwood Democrat who tried to unseat Senator Homer Ferguson, Republican. GEORGE J. SHILLITO, spokes- man for the five investigators, said . that the results shown on machines would be sent to a Senate subcommittee on privileges and elections. Investigators also will place the Senate seal on boxes con- taining printed ballots. Voting machines already have been cleared in Grand Rapids. The investigators will check machines in Dearborn and High- land Park, and in Macomb, Wash- tenaw, Saginaw, Genesee, and Bay counties. ELECTION OFFICIALS have been anxious to clear machines for the Feb. 21 primary. Registration for the primary election closed at 8 p. m. Tuesday. Persons who had not voted in De- troit in the past two years had to er. Club Sudan Oivner Faces New Charge Howard C. Pyle was charged with allowing minors under 17 in his Club Sudan, 550 E. Adams, without parents or guardians. A warrant was signed by Re- corder's Judge Gerald W. Groat Pyle will be arraigned Wednesday. THE WARRANT was issued on statements of a Fern-dal- e girl. She said she went to the club Jan. 21 with three other girls aged 17, 18 and 19. She said she couldn't remember whether they were questioned as to their ages. She declared they did not have to , show identification cards to prove their age. The other girls said all told doormen they were 18 but were not asked to prove It. Pyle also faces charges of vio- lating fire regulations for over- crowding in his club, a teen-ag- e soft-drin- k dance hall. College's Record ALBION Albion College has registered 1,316 students for the second semester, 49 more than the midyear record set in 1948. U.S. Temperatures (I t Hours Ended at 8 P. M.) Official Government Figures MICHIGAN Hish Low Hiph Low Alnena 25 15 Jackson 13 Battle Creek 24 13 .Lansing 26 14 Cadillac 18 14 Marquette 20 10 DETROIT 29 16 Muskegon 'Z'.i 16 Ewanaba, 19 8 Saginaw 24 14 Flint 6 15 S. Ste. Marie 22 10 GrU. Rapids 23 16 Trav. City 21 18 MIDWEST High Low Hieh Low Bismarck -- 6 -- 21 Indianapolis 32 15 Chicaeo 25 17 Kansas City 34 14 Cincinnati 31 11 Mpls.-St- . P. 2 --5 Cleveland 28 13 Milwaukee 16 11 Des Moines 14 3 Omaha 13 Duluth 8 -- 7 EAST ' Hitrh Low Hirh Low Boston 33 29 Philadelphia 36 26 New York 35 29 Washington 41 29 SOUTH Hiph Low Hirh Low Atlanta 48 24 Miami 83 63 Jacksonville tj.'t 41 New Orleans 42 32 Memphis 39 7 St. Louis 38 16 WEST Hiph Low High Now Albuq erque 40 10 Phoenix ) 25 Denver -- 6 Salt Lake C. 20 Eort Worth 3? 14 S. Francisco 49 3? Angeles 67 33 Seattle 38 24 Okla. City 35 13 Detroit sunrise. 7:45; sunset. 5:46. and original, bold styling ' I Four bold patch pockets with dis- tinctive button flaps make this "Sportster" sports coat a style-stando- ut in any company! And you'll go for its long loungy look (and the resultant extra comfort), Choose from eight handsome colors in rich, smoothdraping woolens it's another fashion first from Hudson's Men's Casual Shop! 2nd Floor Woodward Section F niisou J e) casual sh6p Ay )N- - - : "if It A- - Pricea rableet to 3 ft sales tax - - Associated Press Wirephoto The cold front west of Michigan Is coming on to bring a drop In temperatures, the Weather Bureau said. Wednesday' mercury readings will range from 10 to 20 degrees. Occasional snow flurries are expected early in the day. Winds will be moderate to fresh west to northwesterly.

Upload: others

Post on 27-Jul-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Failing, Council Gels (Dine...Council Gels (Dine.Flea If Happened in Michigan Schools Failing, Employers Charge 40 Pet. of Job Applicants Poor in Arithmetic, Grammar, Spelling SPORTS

.FleaGelsCouncil (DineIf Happened

inMichigan

Schools Failing,Employers Charge

40 Pet. of Job Applicants Poorin Arithmetic, Grammar, Spelling CLASSIFIEDSPORTS NEWS

DETROIT 31, MICH., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1949 1 5of D?tS f ,0?,? Griffh completed an exhaus-fiiT- hi

8 Pu,bUc-so- ol system. He presents hisa series of articles, of which this is the fourth.BY JOHN GRIFFITH ' '

Free Pres. Staff WriterDetroit schools are grinding out another "lost generation."Ignorant of the three Rs children are "sloughed off" upon abusiness world which rejects many of them as "unacceptable"

Clearing Election Returns

to ask a record-breakin- g 1949-5- 0

IXJI fr J- -

'v--

til , 1 u SS&izJ 3mLwsft y 1 Ada j?a

I Tit A

h - I HJit W j 3

AFTER 30 YEARS

RepentantWoman Sends$50 to DSR

A $50 bill was sent to the DSRto salve the conscience whichhas been bothering a Detroitwoman for. 30 years.

"This," she wrote, "will morethan cover the nickels and dimesI took from the DUR during thefirst World War.

"There was absolutely noneed for me to steal. It wasthe first and last dishonest actI ever performed."

She was a conductorette atthe time she stole the money.

She suggested that the moneygo to an infantile paralysis vic-tim. The DSR Commission de-

cided to comply with her wishif it can legally do so and do-

nate the money to the March ofDimes.

Pupils to GetTooth-Deca- y

PreventiveDetroit dentists are beginning

an extensive program to treatschool children's teeth with decay-preventi- ng

Sodium fluoride.of the program

and study of its results are in thehands of the Detroit DistrictDental Society. The society willact as liaison between dentists inprivate practice- - and the Boardof Health.

Dr. Ralph H. Campbell , an-nounced the . program at theDental Society's second annualChildren's Dental Health Confer-ence.

DR. CAMPBELL pointed outthat many dentists already hadtreated children with the fluoridesolution which prevents on anaverage of 40 per cent of toothdecay.

"The Board of Health andschools are going to make arecord of past treatments," hesaid. "Future treatments will bereported by dentists."The fluoride treatments were

demonstrated Monday at theDental Conference in the HotelStatler.

Candy WholesalerDies in Cheboygan

Special to the Free PressCHEBOYGAN Frank J.

Hutchinson, 50, prominent Repub-lican and businessman, died Tues-day from a heart ailment.

During the war, Mr. Hutchinsonwas chairman of the CheboyganCounty Republican Committee. Heoperated a wholesale candy

BY DONALD F. SCIIRAMTo warm his motor for a test

of the alcohol in his radiator,James Whitaker, of Adrian,drove his car around the block.It stalled on the ice at the Wa-bash Railroad crossing. WTiita-k- er

jumped before it was hit bya westbound passenger train.The train demolished the car,skidded the wreckage to theeastbound track. An eastboundtrain was halted by flares.

WTiitaker said he wished he'd lethis radiator freeze.

Champagne corks pepperedfiremen Tuesday in Grand Rap-ids. They were called out to putout a blaze in a freight car con-taining a shipment of the bub-bling fluid. Loss by fire andeffervescence was $2,000.

ALPHEUS P. DECKER, vet-eran state representative fromDeckerville, turned the tables onLloyd Buhl, publisher of the Deck-erville Recorder. Because Rep.Decker's pay has been held up bya taxpayer suit, Buhl has beenoffering to take up a collection tohelp him out.

Decker, however, hearing thatBuhl had become the father of ason, his fourth child, brought in abox of cigars, saying:

"When you get a family thatsize, you don't give away cigars,you ask for contributions."Decker is the father of eight

children..

Another Michigan publisher tobecome the father of a son IsDuane DeLoach, of the BlissfieldAdvance. The newcomer Is theeighth DeLoach child, seven ofwhom are living. State repre-sentative from Lenawee Countyis Rollo G. Conlin of Tipton.Senator is Elmer R. Porter ofBlissfield.

FOR snitching silverware froman Ann Arbor fraternity house asan initiation stunt, a MichiganState College fraternity has beendisciplined by its parent body.There will be no dances or partiesfor the rest of the year for AlphaPhi Sigma. -

The East Lansing boys sent twopledges after the Alpha Phi Sigmaforks during "Hell Week." Theygot the forks, but got caught andhad to give them back, which theyintended to do anyway. But na-tional headquarters regarded it asan unfraternal act.

Alta L. Robinson of Mioplayed 753 games of solitaire,and kept score on the basis ofpaying herself $53 for the deck,taking $5 back for each cardsuccessfully played. At one timeshe owed herself $852, anothertime was $687 ahead. She endedthe series $23 ahead of herself,and that much behind, too.

TWO high school 'boys" from

Cedar Springs led an elderly cou-ple to safety from a burning home.Rescued were Serene Dlaauvelt,84, and his sister, Rebekah Switzer,82. Rescuers were Edwin Gane,Jr., and Norwood Avis.

iWWWfcBli, nninnri n.'IflO'ilfMlltifiViiairiiirfi till n inA- - 1 Tf"

Free Press PhotoGEORGE SHILLITO CITY CLERK THOMAS LEADBETTER

Senate agent checks Detroit's voting machines

to AmendOleoBill

House Pulls Teethof 4th Offender Act

From Our Lanslnt BoreasLANSING Plans of the rural

legislators to make adjustmentsin the Colored OleomargarineAct after it is adopted wererevealed when it was advancedwithout to the third reading.

Rep. Floyd Town, Jackson Republican, is a bitter opponent ofeasing the margarine code.

He told his colleagues no alternative remained but to pass thebill as presented by initiated peti-tion.

"IF WE DONT," Town said,both the amended and original

bill will go on the ballot and a referendum .will be necessary in triefuture to change whichever isadopted.

"This way if we pass the pres-ent bill, we can change it in thefuture without a referendum."

By a 62 to 33 vote, the Housepassed and sent to the Senate abill which draws the teeth fromthe Habitual CriminalAct.

The present act makes a lifesentence mandatory upon a fourthfelony conviction. The bill of Rep.Howard E. Carroll restores discretion to the sentencing judge.

REP. EDWARD Hutchinson,Allegan Republican, took the floorin opposition.

"I have also supposed that thepossibility of severe punishmentwas a strong crime deterrent,"Hutchinson said. "I'm afraidthat if the possibility Nof a lifesentence is removed, offenderswill take advantage."Rep. John Kruse, Manistee, pro

posed a bill to permit local, Governments to put in their generalfunds the 85 per cent of licensefees returned to them.

It is designed to thwart LiquorCommission efforts to have thelicense money reserved for enforcement.

RegistrationSets Record

A total oi 868,129 persons hadqualified as electors for a springelection when the books for theFeb. 21 primaries were closedTuesday, City Clerk Thomas D.Leadbetter reported.

The total was a record for anoff-ye- ar vote, Leadbetter said.

There were 870,050 qualified forlast fall's presidential election.

The big number of holdovers forthe spring poll accounted for therecord.

comfort

Acquisitionof 12 SitesIs Sought

Projects Would GiveCity 14,350 Units

BY GEORGE A. HOUGH, HITree Press Staff Writer

Common Council has agreed tohear on Feb. 10 a Housing Com-

mission plea for condemnation of12 sites for public housing.

The sites would accommodate14,350 rental units which would beerected on 324 acres of slum and403 acres of vacant land.

Council's invitation to James H.Ingles, secretary of the HousingCommission, to present argumentfor the condemnations came aftera two-ho- ur debate about substand-ard housing.

IN THE DEBATE, Inglis, F.Gardner Legg, ( secretary of theBoard of Health; Joseph P. Wolff,Building and Safety Engineeringcommissioner; Traffic Judge JohnD. Watts, and George F. Emery,director of the City Plan Commission, all pleaded:

"More housing, not stricterlaws or stepped-u- p building-cod- e .

enforcement."

Inglis pointed out to Council anarea around St. Jean and EastJefferson where illegal conversionto multiple units had tripled occu-pancy.

"That's substandard housingthat only new housing can overcome," Inglis said.

COUNCIL PRESIDENT GeorgeEdwards urged Judge Watts tojail landlords who deliberatelyovercrowded buildings.

Inglis told Council that onlytwo sites were available now forpublic-housin- g development.

Construction could begin on bothsites within 60 days of passage ofa Federal housing law, he said.

The areas are those proposed forthe Douglas Apartments, adjacentto the Brewster Homes, and theJeffries Project, near Grand Riv-er and Brooklyn.

THE CITY has delayed con-struction on both sites for severalyears while holding title to theproperty and collecting rents fromoccupants of the old houses. Increased cost of construction madeit impossible to build with avail-able funds although plans havelong been ready.

Inglis told Council Detroitshould be ready to take advant-age of the proposed seven-ye- ar

Federal housing program. Swiftenactment is expected, Inglissaid. Detroit's share of the na-tional program would be about30,000 units.

Slum sites Inglis wants are intwo areas near Larned and Chene,in one south of Michigan betweenFifth and Tenth, and another nextto the Brewster Homes.

Vacant-lan- d sites are on EightMile at Conner, Eight Mile andConnant, Eight Mile and Wyom-ing; at Plymouth and Burt Roads;at West Chicago and the FereMarquette tracks; at Joy andGreenfield and at Ford and Soutn- -field. fc

Auto CrashesTake Livesof Two More

Two names were added to De-

troit and Wayne County's traffic-fatalit- y

list of 1949.Erwin Karbowski, 23, of 5227

Chopin, died in Receiving Hos-

pital. Joseph Krantz, 32, of Can-ton, Ohio, died in Wyandotte General Hospital.

Karbowski was injured Mon-

day when an automobile inwhich he was riding, driven byEugene Kischuk, 24, of 4715Larkins, crashed into two util-

ity poles at Michigan andElmer.

Kischuk was jailed on a reckless--

driving charge to which helater pleaded not guilty. Policesay he will now be recalled on amanslaughter charge.

Krantz died of injuries sufferedin a head-o- n collision at Dix andLondon, Lincoln Park last Fridaynight. William Lambranos, 55, of10327 Dix, Dearborn, a passengerin the other car, was killed.

to 10US. W(ATHW BUXSAU AMP

5 ? tvy yvxz" )

Bar PatronsGive Bandita Busy Time

A bandit walked into Ma-lick- i's

Bar, 8527 Michigan, andpointed a gun at Gilbert Cam-eron, 34, the bartender, whowas alone.

The thug forced Cameron intoa back room and bound himwith adhesive tape. Then ArthurGutowski, 31, of 4005 Trenton,walked in. The bandit took $1from him.

ANOTHER CUSTOMER,Albert Schroeder, 44, of 9164Northlawn, walked in. The ban-dit took $4 from him.

He forced the customersInto the back room, too.

Only then did he get a chanceto take $83 from the cash reg-ister and flee.

the

sets

Duaget of 573,000,000. Three newboard members will be elected thisspring.

Employers complain thatspelling is deplorable and knowl-edge of punctuation and rules ofgrammar are hazy and vague.About 40 per cent of these

youngsters lose their chance forsignificant jobs when these weak-nesses show up in employmenttests.

.

TEACHERS LAY the blame onovercrowded classes. They say itis impossible to teach with anymeasure of success when there aremore than 40 in a class.

The recognized ideal Is 25children to a classroom although30 is acceptable.

School Supt. Arthur Dondineauplaced the median class size atthe present time at 39. He saidthe cost in additional teacher sal-aries alone would be $800,000 todecrease the average by a singlechild.

Employers charge that youngsters are turned out with a "poorwork attitude " lacking in responsibility . toward the job and theemployer.

BLAME FOR THIS is placed ontne modern method of educationin which emphasis is placed onstimulating the child's imagination, his wish to learn, power ofanalysis and sense of inquiry.

Professional educators pointout that the catch in this theoryis the ease with which such in-struction becomes mere enter-tainment."Children have flitted through

school like a game," said one per-sonnel expert. "School is worklike any job. Pupils should betaught that they must produce.'

A lack of vocational guidanceand counselling was reflected repeatedly in youngsters applyingior jods.

SCHOOL FIGURES show thatthe 137 counselors in the schoolsare taking care of as many as700 boys and girls each. Clericalwork takes up time which.shouldoe spent In solving youth's problems and advising them on theirlife work.

In practice, this counsellinglack has results which would beludicrous were they not sotragicFor instance, there was the

commercial high school graduatewho had received lengthy instruc-tion in filing. Yet on applyingfor a job, she was informed shewas too fat to work among filingcabinets.

Intelligent counselling, also,would have aided the girl with afacial defect who had to be toldthat her high school businesscourse was useless for job-hunti- ng

purposes.

MORE THAN one-thir- d of De-troit public school students takethe college prep course. Theygraduate with a smattering of cul-tural knowledge but no "saleable"training.

True vocational guidance andcounselling would have informedthem that most have not themental or financial backgroundfor college. They find out onlyafter the damage is done.Dr. Warren K. Layton, divisional

director of the guidance and place-ment department, said his staff isdoing its best under a handicap.

He admitted that the pupil-counsel- or

ratio should be no morethan 250 to 1.

PARENTS AND teachers feelthat children would be eased overrough spots by occasional confer-ences and exchange of informationby the teacher and parents.

Yet no time of the day is setaside for such meetings.

Parents complain that theyare given the "brushoff" or aretreated with hos-

tility when they go to the schoolheadquarters on Broadway.

On one occasion, a parent groupfrom Merman Gardens was re-

pulsed by Dondineau with thewords: "What are you complain-ing about? You're not taxpayers."

Tomorrow: Board of Com-merce education committee callsfor "survey" of school system.

Downtat 1 . ....

023 10I ViwA J(J0

.v. 1 tiKpWur .ur. Sheft --.tut! Wlr

Anwi -

emu. uutiupiuauic.Employment manae-ers- t

Free Press that up to 40 per centof the boys and girls leave schoolWithout mastering simple arith-metic.' One personnel executive , saidtheir handwriting is "atrocious."

THEIR STATEMENTS weremade as the school board prepared

Stands Mute

f i

If V T

i . A z - iFree Press Photo

BURTON T. COOKt Released on bond

Broker Mumon BuyingStolen Steel

Burton P. Cook, 39, of 616 VV.

Philadelphia, 'a steel broker, stoodmute at his arraignment beforeFederal Judge Arthur Koscinskion charges of knowingly receivingstolen steel.

A plea of not guilty was enteredfor him. He was released under$1,500 bond.

COOK WAS ONE of two mennamed in a three-cou- nt indictmentcharging the receipt or iZ7,ouupounds of hijacked steel.

The other was Sol Kaye, 80,of Chicago. Both he and Cookwere ofifcials of the CooksonProducts Co., 99 Bates. Thefirm was dissolved last De-

cember.Kaye was expected to appear

for arraignment Wednesday.

Sister KennyGroup JoinsUnited Drive

The Michigan Chapter of theSister Kenny Foundation joinedthe United Foundation, it wasannounced Tuesday.

That brought to 23 the healthand social services which havemerged their plea for funds inthe United Foundation drive whichwill be launched Feb. 7.

JOHN R. WILT, secretary-treasur- er

of the Sister KennyFoundation, said that the merger"is recognition of the necessityof bringing order out of the end-less and confusing separate ap-

peals for many worthy agencies."At the same time, Dr. E. J.

Huenekens, of Minneapolis, chiefof staff of the Kenny Founda-tion, announced a new policy.He said that it would "work

through the medical men of thecountry in carrying on and supervising the Kenny method of treat-ment (of infantile paralysis) andseek of establishedteaching centers and universitiesin spreading knowledge of thework."

A NEW TRAINING program isdesigned to increase the numberof trained Kenny techniciansavailable for duty at treatmentcenters throughout the nation,Including one at Pontiac.- Dr. Huenekens said that registered nurses and physicaltherapists could apply for trainingin the Minneapolis school at theDetroit Foundation Office, 710Washington Blvd. Building.

CommutersMay Give UpCanada Homes

Special to the Free Pre.t2 D SJ? R Approximately

1,200 Canadians of the Windsorarea who work in the UnitedStates will leave Canada with theirfamilies after the next Dominionelection unless that country's in-come tax policies are revised, theWindsor Commuters Club declared.

Further, according to HowardSprung, president, members willrefuse to pay their Canadian In-come taxes.Sprung pointed out that theCanadian who works in the UnitedStates pays the United States In-

come tax and, if the Canadian taxIs higher, pays the difference tothe Canadian Government.

Injuries FatalLAG-W-Ja- ck Dwyerj

31, of Wilhamston, died in a Lan-sing hospital from injuries suf-fered in an automobile accidentSaturday.

the pace for

casual

Senate AidesHere to SealCity Ballots

Senate investigators have ar-rived in Detroit to clear votingmachines of results of the Nov.2 election.

Destruction of ballots has beendelayed pending Senate action ona demand for a recount by FrankHook, Ironwood Democrat whotried to unseat Senator HomerFerguson, Republican.

GEORGE J. SHILLITO, spokes-man for the five investigators,said . that the results shown onmachines would be sent to aSenate subcommittee on privilegesand elections.

Investigators also will placethe Senate seal on boxes con-

taining printed ballots.Voting machines already have

been cleared in Grand Rapids.The investigators will check

machines in Dearborn and High-land Park, and in Macomb, Wash-tenaw, Saginaw, Genesee, and Baycounties.

ELECTION OFFICIALS havebeen anxious to clear machinesfor the Feb. 21 primary.

Registration for the primaryelection closed at 8 p. m. Tuesday.Persons who had not voted in De-

troit in the past two years had toer.

Club SudanOivner FacesNew Charge

Howard C. Pyle was chargedwith allowing minors under 17 inhis Club Sudan, 550 E. Adams,without parents or guardians.

A warrant was signed by Re-

corder's Judge Gerald W. GroatPyle will be arraigned Wednesday.

THE WARRANT was issued onstatements of a Fern-dal- e

girl. She said she went to theclub Jan. 21 with three other girlsaged 17, 18 and 19. She said shecouldn't remember whether theywere questioned as to their ages.

She declared they did not haveto , show identification cards toprove their age. The other girlssaid all told doormen they were18 but were not asked to proveIt.Pyle also faces charges of vio-

lating fire regulations for over-crowding in his club, a teen-ag- esoft-drin- k dance hall.

College's RecordALBION Albion College has

registered 1,316 students for thesecond semester, 49 more than themidyear record set in 1948.

U.S. Temperatures(I t Hours Ended at 8 P. M.)Official Government Figures

MICHIGANHish Low Hiph LowAlnena 25 15 Jackson 13Battle Creek 24 13 .Lansing 26 14

Cadillac 18 14 Marquette 20 10DETROIT 29 16 Muskegon 'Z'.i 16Ewanaba, 19 8 Saginaw 24 14Flint 6 15 S. Ste. Marie 22 10GrU. Rapids 23 16 Trav. City 21 18

MIDWESTHigh Low Hieh Low

Bismarck --6 --21 Indianapolis 32 15Chicaeo 25 17 Kansas City 34 14Cincinnati 31 11 Mpls.-St- . P. 2 --5Cleveland 28 13 Milwaukee 16 11Des Moines 14 3 Omaha 13Duluth 8 --7

EAST'

Hitrh Low Hirh LowBoston 33 29 Philadelphia 36 26New York 35 29 Washington 41 29

SOUTHHiph Low Hirh Low

Atlanta 48 24 Miami 83 63Jacksonville tj.'t 41 New Orleans 42 32Memphis 39 7 St. Louis 38 16

WESTHiph Low High Now

Albuq erque 40 10 Phoenix ) 25Denver -- 6 Salt Lake C. 20Eort Worth 3? 14 S. Francisco 49 3?

Angeles 67 33 Seattle 38 24Okla. City 35 13Detroit sunrise. 7:45; sunset. 5:46.

and original,

bold styling

'

I

Four bold patch pockets with dis-

tinctive button flaps make this

"Sportster" sports coat a style-stando- ut

in any company! And you'll

go for its long loungy look (and theresultant extra comfort), Choosefrom eight handsome colors in rich,

smoothdraping woolens it's

another fashion first from Hudson'sMen's Casual Shop!

2nd Floor Woodward Section F

niisouJ e) casual sh6p Ay )N--- : "if It A- -Pricea rableet to 3 ft sales tax

- - Associated Press WirephotoThe cold front west of Michigan Is coming on to

bring a drop In temperatures, the Weather Bureau said.Wednesday' mercury readings will range from 10 to 20

degrees. Occasional snow flurries are expected early in theday. Winds will be moderate to fresh west to northwesterly.