Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1938 — Page 10

. gional NLRB director, announced

Al Higdon: “The students

"161 HOWE HS. STUDENTS MAKE ROLLS OF HONOR

90 of Group Win Highest Distinction Allowed by Faculty.

Thomas Carr Howe High School today announced 161 names of students who are on the high honor and honor rolls for the period ending Dec. 5. Ninety students made a rating of 26 or more honor points necessary for the high honor list and 71 have between 22 and 25 honor points required for the honor roll. Those on the high honor roll are:

Marilyn Behymer, Dorothy Jasper, Mary Elizabeth Donnell, Muriel Garrett, Jean Huston. Harold Heitz, Beth Henderson, 3 Phyllis Wear, Chester annfeld, Mary Alys Werk-

fostered the merit system.”

become organization-conscious as

curricular activities.

useless honoraries, and a merit system which breeds activity-hounds.” Their attack is timely in that a university self-survey committee, appointed by President Wells, will make recommendations to the board of trustees for “channeling” campus organizations soon after the first of the year.

Organization defenders clashed with their critics in an open forum debate this week and other forums are to be held soon. ; Presiding at the first encounter, Dean Bernard C. Gavit, who imposed the drastic Law School ban, declared: “The move was made to

,|effect an improvement in work, and

Patricia Myers, Kenneth Davis, Ruth Duncan, Ann Holloway, Leonard Hull, Bettie Jackson, Miriam Jasper, Ruth Kimberlin, Phyllis Lawrence, Howard Moore, Mary Alyce Smith and Betty Sionebraker. . Grace Thompson, Caroline Zink, Janis Baron, Robert Caplinger, Shirley Courtney, Eleanor Havens, Lois Knapp, Ann Link, Lottie Pierson, Melville Weesner, Suzanne Weesner, Anna Jane Bash, Barbara Brooks, Jo Ellen Burroughs, Donald Clapp, Phyllis Dukes, Evamae McCoy, Robert McMullen, Mary Elizabeth Schafer, Gordon Stephens, Marjorie Stewart, Robert Winter, Robert H. Brown, Russell Eckert, Gerrude Hall, Catherine Jordon, Bertha McDowell, Abbie Mortimer and Paul Schis-

ell. Donna White, Floyd Bicknell, Eloise a, Joseph Cottom, Jean _Eichaker, Juanifa Godfrey, Margaret Gordon, Clyde Holder, Phyllis Jerome, Delmar Johnson, Howard Kirk, Ardith Kitterman, Alice Louise Lawson, Joanne McDonald, Alma Maudlin, Martha Milholland, Carolyn Miller, Betty Lou Noffke, Edward Payne, Anita Pendley, William Prater, Elaine Rebholz, Billie Rech, Jack Ryder, Naoma Strickland, John Thomas, Harriett Thornhill, Jean Williams. » Honor roll students are Lois Allen, Donald Brown, Robert Bruck, Jack Bitter, Joan Burgess, Marjorie.Dynes, Laura Mae Hart, Evelyn Courtney, Betty Lou Spangler, Dora Mae Bird, Wilma Gayle Sexon, Geraldine Gates, William Gordon Arthur Graham, Charles Gribler, Doris Grimes, Virginia Hodges, Betty Jean Hoff. LaVaughn Simpson, Charles Scheffe, Dorothy Troutman,

* Ca’olyn Snowden, Donald Williamson, June Kelly, Leaman, Maryetta Johnson, R Rockford, Jean Lowe, Thomas Lamson, Shirley Low, Georgene Miller, Doris Meyer, Batrice Myers, John Minatel, Jane Gaborn, Wanda Pflueger, Ione Rice and Do-

lores Reed. Phelps, Jack “Parmer, Catherine

David Setterguist, Frederick Smith, Betty

Southers, Dorisjeane Spiess, y VanArendonk, James Wade, Violet Jane Whitaker. Elaine Anthony, Juanita Davis, Eileen Edwards, Nora Tomlinson, obert E. Brown, Frances Bays, LeRoy Bartlett, Robert Alexander, Mary LaVerne Sharp, Suzanne Conner, Rolland _Crim, Richard Dobbs, Leslie Donber Robert ey. Thomas Dugan, Duke Hanna, JoAnn Harmo

Pe a AUTHORIZE SECOND | STOCKYARDS STRIKE

CHICAGO, Dec. 14 (U. P.)..—The estock Handlers’ Union, which - recently tied up trading at the Union Stock Yards by a 13-day strike, empowered its strategy committee today to call a second strike if necessary to expedite negotiations for a contract. The handlers, affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, struck Nov. 21 but returned to work Dec. 3 after the company had agreed to sign a contract within 10 days. The period ended yesterday and the union voted to give the committee power “to take any action it sees fit to force the Union Stock Yards & Transit Co. to, a speedy settlement.” Representatives of the C. I. O. “and the company conferred daily during the 10-day truce.

RUSHVILLE COMPANY GETS NLRB REPORT

A trial examiner's intermediate report recommending that the International Furniture Co. of Rushville disestablish an alleged “company union” has Been served against . the firm, Robert H. Cowdrill, re-

today. : The report also recommended that - the company “cease interfering with the employees in their attempts to join the Upholsters’, Furniture, Car- . pet, Linoleum & Awning Workers’ International Union of North America, an A. . of L. affiliate.”

AD CLUB TO SEE FILM '

. A moving picture, “Word Magic,” will be shown tomorrow noon before bers of the Indianapolis Adverising Club at their weekly luncheon at the Indianapolis Athletic Club.

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consequently in grades, in our school.”

Senior, Freshman Speak

Replied Neal Gilliatt, a senior from Washington, Ind.: “The seven or eight,/seniors most eligible for the class presidency this semester had scholastic averages of 2.6 (A-minus). Students capable of leading in activities also are leaders in scholarship.” Gilliatt is president of Blue Key honorary, University Theater business manager, treasurer of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, senior swimming manager and a member of the Board of Aeons, Beta Gamma_ Sigma, Dragon’s Head and Theta Alpha Phi. Alfred Glenn, nonorganization freshman from Pompton Plains, N. J., charged: “The administration, under the present merit system, presumes that students in the most activities are the best students, regardless of how much work these activity hounds actually do. That is unfair.”

Merit System Defended

Al Higdon, newly named sehior class president, was quick to defend the merit system, declaring: “The students themselves, more than the administration, have fostered the merit system as the best possible method of filling student offices. How else are candidates to office to be judged fairly except by their records as indicated by membership in groups which they have served?

“It seems to me our unactive critics are going very far afield in spreading their attack as far as the administration.”

Higdon, in being chosen class president on the merit basis, ranks as the “most active” man on the campus. He is president of, Delta Upsilon Fraternity and the Board of Aeons, Arbutus business manager, Union Board secretary, and a member of Blue Key, Sphinx Club, Phi Eta Sigma, Dragon’s Head and Le Cercle Francais. He has been junior Arbutus business manager and sophomore and Junior baseball manager. His home is Scottsburg.

Dean Defends Law Sch On Extra-Curricular Work

By PAUL BOXELL

Times Bloomington Correspondent BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Dec. 14—Indiana University students have School ruling which prohibits law students from taking part in extra-

A large bloc of unorganized students have questioned formally what they call “undemocratic practices by social fraternities, the existence of

Dean Gavit: “Better Grades” 2 2

ool Ban

an outgrowth of the new Law

PORT OF ENTRY SYSTEM ATTACKED

Brewers Say Provision Threatens Loss to Their Markets.

Members of the Indiana Brewers’ Association were on record today as favoring removal of the disputed “port of entry” provision from the Indiana Alcoholie Beverages Act. Declaring at their meeting yesterday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club that they feared the loss of their markets in other states if the importer system: was continued, brewers said they favored a permanent settlement of the disputes which have threatened to involve Indiana in beer embargo wars with neighboring states. Adolph B. Schmidt, Evansville, was re-elected president for a third term. Other officers re-elected are Charles Reuss, Ft. Wayne, vice president; Oscar Baur, Terre Haute, secretary; George H. Voedisch, South Bend, treasurer, and these officers, with Fred Shoaff Jr. Ft. Wayne, are the directors.

2 WOMEN BEATEN; . MATE OF ONE HELD

BRAZIL, Dec. 14 (U, P.).—Alpha Comer, 33-year-old steamshovel operator, was held today on a charge of assault with intent to kill after he allegedly struck his second wife

and another woman on the head with a revolver. :

¢ Alfred Glenns “The administration presumes. . .”

/

Hounds’

U, PROFESSOR T0 SPEAK HERE

Sales Council to Hear Starr Talk on Business Trends Monday.

Dr. George W. Starr of the Indiana University School of Business Administration faculty, will analyze current business trends and prospects for 1939 at the year-end meeting of the Indianapolis Sales Executive Council Monday at the Columbia Club.

Representatives of several busi-

\ ness groups have been invited to attend the meeting, which will follow a dinner at 6:30 p. m. They are the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, Credit Men's Association, Advertising Club and the Marketing Research Club. Reservations are to be made with Francis Wells, executive secretary of the council at the Chamber of Commerce offices. The Sales Executive Council, organized in September, 1937, under the Chamber’s sponsorship, is composed of sales executives of Indianapolis concerns. It provides a medium of exchange for sales ideas and experiences to develop sales plans and methods, according to H. P. Wetsell, secretary-treasurer. Other officers are Edward Zink, president, and Paul O. Ferrel, vice

president.

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Mrs. Mildred Comer, the wife, and Mrs. Nellie Hill, with whom she lived, are in a hospital, seriously injured. Comer had been free under bond on a bigamy charge. He denied the attack.

2 HELD IN KILLING Two Negroes, man and wife, were held by police today in connection with the shooting of Carl Hatcher, 34, 1115 Kiger St., Negro, who died at City Hospital early this morning. Detectives said they found Hatcher, wounded by a shotgun blast, at 13th St. and the Monon Railroad tracks last night. ee

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sor of sociology at the Pennsylvania ing on the case of a Uniontcwn, Pa., Following a 10-month study of the case of Alice Harris, who had been kept in a darkened attic room of her grandfather's farmhouse from her birth until last February, Dr. Davis found two principal reasons behind the girl's apparent dullness: Lack of ambition and lack of training. The first, he said, seems to be the result of the second. Mr. Davis reports that little Alice, during the time he studied the case, had not learned to eat, to chew solid food, to stand up, to. follow directions, to obey, to walk or to crawl. “The things she does now that she had not done before were for the most part elementary activities

Child Rescued From Tsoltion Is Revealing Sociological Study

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. Dec. 14 (U. P.) —Social isolation tends to delay normal mental development, Dr. Kingsley Davis, associate profes-

A

State College, said today in reportgirl kept isolated for five years.

contingent mainly upon better physical health, involving more organic co-ordination and energy,” he

said. The child, now being cared for by Fayette County authorities, had aptitudes of 3-months-old child at the time she was rescued. Physicians then said she would be normal within a year. The child was imprisoned, officers said, as punishment for being an illegitimate baby. Following a recent examination of the child, Dr. Davis reported that little Alice “seemed totally without

land had hit upon some methods of

satisfying them. She seemed deliber-

“The cases of isolation indicate that the difference between animals

innate than has been assumed, the main differences being those transmitted from the cultural environment by the communicative process. It does appear that the human organism is less fixed by innate face tors than is that of animals, though the difference is one of degree only. The human organism seems less definitely adjusted to any noncultural environment.

“In the retraining of an isolated child it would seem that there are certain elements of culture which can be picked up Without the development of communication in the strict linguistic sense. These are mainly matters of play, smiling, expectancy, etc., which resemble very strikingly what an animal, in a way compatible with his equipment,

motivation for learning anything.” “She did have desires, apparently,

tends to pick up.”

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