THE 4Wt1CH1G-A-N DAB FRllDAY. NO"v"FivMFR, 1:i. 1029 T H.IC I A ....... . . ....... 4,~ThA y 0 VV T4%11 11 ', \ 1; lb ,L 7f i 7 REGIONAL GOVERNVMENT ADVOCATEDI BY REED AS SALVATION OF CITIES ('~pci Ito Te D ly) a satisfactory substitute for region- CE1ICAGOtt, Nov. 14 - Establish- al goen n, cntnd Dr ment of regional governments, goen nt cniud Dr which woumld cover entire metro- ! R 'Fcd. "Thetre are but twcvo alterna- politan ateai, as a mean!7 tPo sollv Y{ yj,94 h.e I *-,y) state in- the large problems of ci t itri'c.s, terfei'ence iin affairs essentially to~ was advocated by Prof. iloiilas I cal oir ref ion al c o opera1A on."5 Reed, of the politi~lal science ,le "TitCi cato," he said at the end partment in his speech before te National Conference on Improving. of his talk, "there exists condition Governm-ent, delivered here today. which seem~ to )povecivic degenier- "Regionalism," said Professor ation of the lowest kind, andl ther, Reed, "is i fact that cannot be 'de-1 Chicago surcessfully put over a nied by the boundary descriptions+. of the city charter: tour uis of civic elitespt ire of such size and local governmnent, 'cities, towns. and beauty as to leave us dumlbfouindedI count_ 2s are no Mnore than histori-I at the breadth of vl'iuto and the cal accidents which once~ corres- powec of achievenent" ponded fairly well cvitli the condi- I w1iIcldgv yo a tions and needs of 'life, but now I.1clllgv o no long et do sty." forinlla uapl-)icable ta all r°0egis,. Professor Reed pointed out that h'buthiere is none,-"lhe said. "There the mere tact; of regionalism car- I i~e some c 1({ion1s ill which uh~iere are ries with it a need for. regional gov nl~r ,re ci t' ,where a certLain sim- eminent. In anytioy surroun-; ding a large city tere ritor 3pif p1io1 ci be achivd lems of planning, zoning, 4ranspor- hnrrply (diniinatipthis townshil tation, recreation, traffic, health, alid u~n i ohi as the small- sanitation, and public utility rela- 1est 1i ti of rural laical -overn'rent t ions that cannot be solved by the I='ii't1er'Cinc , tai couty lj is nic s existing rmethods of regional gov- la're tdy rm h pit fvii erment. Io yfo h otl fve j , A solution to the problem, will not of c fle(Aive or time1, distanice than Grand Jury Probes ICIPE [1BneI oesL ss into Liquor RCEIVi E STA__ TE AID0 With Pesonal locan gTOKIS 1 I I x ,f , S Lc =a [t t Y rt"a[cc at'iritit= Pi poixlc Infstruictioni I i-iv e Plaice [iShow x.; { Well as Pain1-tiligs. $9OO . t,!VrEN I IOSPITALI thze towhip wa p il the 1Th-os".t ey n Ie ins are not foinch t iis. They arise ja hood of large cities. regLinal prob-j the neighbor- State Ks7m Chargei of Michigan Airports' (11v A cratedPre'ss) LANSING, Nov. [4.-All airports in the state, beginning next week, must operate uinder a temporary license issued by the slate board1 ' Qn a'eronautics, it was announcedf by board members today. Questionnaires have been sent to' all aviations schools and to all air-t ports and temporary licenses willl be issued to each. These will be followedL by inspections by repr e- sentatives of the board and no reg- ular license will be issued until all requirements of the board are lived up to. One question to be gone into byy the board will be the advisability of permitting a single aviator to -ive flying instructions without iproviding 'a ground course. Steel Society Reprints 0O WBostcon'.g Paper Prof. 0. W. Boston, of the engin- ering shops department, is the I itithor of the leading article con- 'ained in "Transactions," a publi- ,ation of the American Society for Steel Treating, which has just been issued. The article is a reprint of a pa- aer which was delivered before the annual gathering of the society at levelahnd in September. the paper xccupies some 40 pages of the an- iual publication of the society, zndis illustra ted swith csomes;lI md is illhotiratgrwihp h a tse, ind allhsphtioicrsowgrso seel, .he laborator~y equipment wi th~ 01chi Prof. Boston's experimnent wvere carried out. The paper is an account of a series of experiments o1) which Prof. Boston has been engaged over zan extonded period of time. l,"I I j('iM bes of ltie"cAim Arbor Arit ! LANSING4, Nov. ;.-Asate suppot; I' < f Yof the work being done at the Urn I K asi~ilii ':t year, Magazine writer, wtho testified work was -andertaken chiefly under ___________________ numbering 250 exhibits, has neces- efrea rndjuy ncoricIoutesosrsrl teKn Daughters and sirmilar onrganiza- a ct