Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1940 — Page 29

FRIDAY, oCT. ~ MAP STUL ENTS | ~ ANALYZE WAR

Valparaiso Group Group Discusses Hitler for Delegates To CoA

Several WV University students discussed a fellow geographer—Adolf Hitler—before delegates to the Indiana State Teachers’ con-

vention in the Ayes. Auditorium yesterday,

With the use of maps which they . described as “accura up to. the time this meeting | started,” the speakers outlined the reasons for the war in Europe For example, Pe, annexation of Norway. was explained as not a grasp for political power, but a proJecgion for German ’s flow of iron rom e rick ® Dl deposits in The maps also sh wed why German troops were gable to enter Rumania without a gun being fired. They illustrated the large influx of Germans and Russians _ into the rich mining and grain areas of that Balkan country. Today’s teachers. of was explained, do not attempt to follow each map change of the war but encourage their upils to study current events closely and try to foresee possible future changes. A student often is able to predict accurately the war's next moves by knowledge of |g graphy + the eaeience of cistrl ion,” teachers

For the war, the speakers = explained, is merely a battle for resources: which have been separated by man-made invisible walls. a Hitler, they indicated, would get A-plus” for his HnqWiedge of the subject.

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Chivanp Boys’ Court iilie Suggests Dancing Be i Allowed at Night.

By SAM TYNDALL

One of the most socially constructive steps Indiana schools ‘could take would be to throw open public schools for dances and supervised

today.

for dances and let the youngsters use the gymnasiums” Judge Braude said, “and 1 believe you will find a decrease in delinquency and crime in the younger generation.” Judge Braude, who has been judge of Chicago’s 26-year-old Boys’ Court for three years, was in Indianapolis after speaking last night at the opening session of the Indiana State Teachers’ Association,

Raps ‘Crime and Dance’ Spots

In the interview, the judge said that after school hours, the ’teenaged pupils must seek out “questionable” recreation places for their “night life.” “These places are known as ‘crime and dance’ spots,” Judge Braude said, “and they are just that’— breeders of the widest range of

criminal activities. The Chicago Boys’ Court deals with boys between the ages of 17 to 21 exclusively, and was the first court of its kind in the country. From his experience in dealing with boys (he has handled some 17,000 cases in three years( Judge Braude has made several conclusions.

Truancy Delinquency Symptom One-is that truancy is one of the

| first symptoms of delinquency. “If

you find a, boy. staying away from school day after day you can be

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assured—and you're not guessing— he is mixed up with a gang.” Another, although not a new observation—but one, he said, that

Mi should be stressed even more—is

that “kids need jobs.” “Idleness and crime are natural mates,” he said, adding that in the past several years the number of cases in his court had decreased and he attributed it chiefly to the fact that there were fewer youths out of work. The Civilian Conservation Corps has helped a great deal, Judge Braude said.

Helped Reduce Loses

- “Regardless: of the political aspects with which some people may associate the question, the fact remains that these work projects have cut the cases in my court. “Kids need jobs, not just: because it is good to have them busy and out of trouble, but because they need spending money, which they feel they must have.” The juvenile authorities’ chief job, he said, is te work out a plan to “nurse the youth through adolescence.” ' “Adolescence is a he said. “For this reason’ 1 am opposed to our present reformatories which only let lie idle the unfortunate youths who have committed crimes. “All the youngsters do in these kinds of reformatories is spend their time planning what they are going to, do when they get out,” he said. Judge Braude said farms where the inmates could work and keep themselves busy are greatly preferred.

Cites Chief Problem

“Our chief problem with boys up to 21 who are in trouble is to break the bad habits and bridge the adolescent gap.” But even this plan is not good for real crime prevention, Judge Braude said. “Crime prevention should begin in the high chair—and not in the electric chair.”

CRIME PROGRAMS

“ON RADIO RAPPED

Five Lutheran leaders spoke to-|

day at.a meeting of Lutheran pastors and teachers of Southern Indiana gnd Kentucky at the Emmaus Lutheran Church, Modern radio crime programs were denounced by W. T. Ladwig of Cincinnati, who said radio is “breeding a race of neurotic impressionables.” The Rev. W. O. Schoech, Ft. Knox, Ry., army chaplain, explained the life and duties of a chaplain in an army camp.

Martin Kollmorgen of Cincinnati.

talked on interdenominational enrollment; the Rev. J. W. Acker of Evansvilie, stressed intensive Bible Study for young people, and Prof. W. E. Buszin of Concordia College at Ft. Wayne, discussed Lutheran chorales. New officers, who will preside at the Evansville 1941 convention, are T. J. E. Hermann of Brownstown and H. J. Meyer of Evansville, cochairmen, and E. A. Rakow of} Henderson, Ky., secretary.

HEMINGWAY’S BOOK BRINGS . $100,000

HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 25 (U. P.).— Paramount studio: foday announced the purchase of Ernest Hemingway’s newest novel for the record price of $100,000, twice what Mararet Mitchell received for “Gone ith the Wind.”

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Urges “Scheols io Join Fight .On ‘Crime, Dance Spots

recreation, Judge J. M. Braude of] the Chicago Boys’ Cours declared |

“Keep the schools open at night|

tricky. period,” |

Judge J. M. Braude . . . “Idleness and crime are natural mates.”

NAME OFFICERS AT PIKE SCHOOL

Pupils Choose Members of Council; Band to Sponsor Play.

Ruth Rentsch has been elected president ‘of the newly-organized student council at Pike Township High School. of New. Augusta. Other officers named were Barbara Furr, vice president, Marion Oden, secretary and Jack Snyder, treasurer. The council is composed of the president and two elected members of each of the junior and senior high. school classes.

The members of the council are: Ruth Rentsch, Maxine Davis and Jack Snyder; juniors, Barbara Furr, Marion Oden and Bernard Smith; sophomores, Marion McClelland, Betty Snyder and Billy Maines; frfeshmen, Betty Rose Kissel, Joseph Wagle and George Longmire; eighth grade, Ann Merritt, Chris Denton and Jack Brookshire, and seventh grade, Nita Anderson, Wilma Porfer and Harry Kimball, The high school will open its dramatic . season Nov, 1, when Katherine Kavanaugh’s “Girl Shy” will be given in the high school gymnasium under the auspices of the school band. Band members in the cast are Kaye Bass, Gerald Young, Maxine Davis, James Power, Alma Guion, Thelma Guion, Harold Power, Barbara, Furr, Imogene Repass, Jerry Coble and Robert Bryan.

AMERICAN VESSEL . HELD AT HAIPHONG

HANOI, French Indo-China, Oct. 25 (U. P.).—French authorities today refused permission for the American-chartered French freight-

er Siklang, laden with American goods, to sail from Haiphong harbor. The vessel was boarded by Japanese Army ‘and Navy officers yesterday.

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WARNS OF NEED

FOR PATRIOTISM, _

The jury trying humorist ‘Frank 1 Dr. Lee Advises Teachers to

Impress Love of Coun- | try on Pupils. "By TIM TIPPETT “Teachers of Indigna—we cannot leave the teaching of love of country and faith in America to Irving

Berlin and Kate Smith. We shall “/

That is the message Dr. Edwin A. Lee, dean of the School of Education, University of California, has to present to the 18,000 teachers assembled here at their association’s convention. _ The educator was one of the featured speakers at the general session held at the Cadle Tabernacle

] this afternoon.

Warns Listeners

“I have tried to recall a single teacher who:had ever tried to impress: me with the greatness, the beauty, the majesty of these United States—I could not recall a one,” he said. Warning that teachers must impress upon their pupils what true patriotism is, he said: “We have seen one of the candidates for the highest office in the

United States stoned and his wife .

spattered with eggs and tomatoes. We have seen both candidates hissed and booed when their picture was flashed on the screen. We have seen both sides stoop to ine famy and falsehood, whispering campaigns, innuendo. “And across the waters the dictators grin behind their masks and say ‘How can a people believe in government where such things are possible? Democracies are decadent, impotent. They are for the weak, not the strong. We will wipe them irom the edrth.’”

Job for Teachers

This, Dr. Lee maintains, must be corrected by the teachers. Speaking of “The Conservation of Human Resources,” Dr. Lee emphasized that the spirit of independence must be preserved. “It is tragically under fire today in this country. Men who in the past have been free and wrested their independence from the wilderness now depend upon their government for their existence.

port which will in turn be available to their children.”

FAILS IN ATTEMPT TO ‘DIE IN STYLE’

NEW YORK, Oct. 25 (U, P.). — Marian Nevins, 29, a blond who fled from poverty in Chicago, has lost her chance to die in style. After 10 days asleep from an overdose of sleeping powder, she awoke in a hospital to learn that the plan in which she invested the savings from her job as a candy company secretary, to die “among nice people” at the fashionable Hotel Pierre, had failed. Today she was “atraid I'm to get well.” She still didn’t want Physicians said she would

tain. She said she had no place to go, that “the world has no place for me.” BEST WATCH REPAIRING

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Ie ury ‘Wonders. If Scully's Right

LOS ANGELES, Oct. 25 (U. P).

‘Scully on charges of misappropriation of public funds today reflected upon his opinion that most insane persons could handle their Business affairs as well as some state-appointed “At least they could do no worse

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‘guardians have done,” he sald on ‘the witness stana.

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FALANGE | INQUIRY IN: ~~ MEXICO DEMANDED ||

. MEXICO CITY, Oct. 25 (U. P.) — Leftist groups today demanded & congressional investigation of the undercover activities of the outlawed Spanish Falange, that it was gaining. strength” and attempting to extend a pro-Axis movement throughou | Latin. America.

Francisco Franco's Nationalist Government in Spain and his branches

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