Sixth grade students, predominantly Negro, at Detroit's Boynton Elementary School, are tested as to their social preferences among other students, and correlations attempted with race.
Studies "how one school's teachers (twenty-four black, two white) perceived the value and origin of, and their own involvement in selected school actions" as school camping, father-son night, student bowling club, school carnival.
"Attorney-at-law and Solicitor in Chancery at the Detroit Bar" editorializes on relation of the Negro to labor organizations, and on the progress of the race.