The Weather Increasing cloudiness; prob- able showers; coder north por- tion and in south portion Sat- urday night; Sunday rain. L .Aittga aht VOL. XLIH, No. 12 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, OCT. 8, 1932 PRICE FIVE CENTS f i Bruno Points Out Fallacies In Dole Work 'How Solve Problems Of Present Crisis?' Social Worker Asks Meeting Raps Restrietions On Relief Program Item Of Residence Keeps Many 'Bums' From Get- ting Needed Help, Claim By A. ELLIS BALL Bringing to a close the Michigan Conference of Social Work last night in the Lydia Mendelssohn theatre, Prof. Frank J. Bruno, of St. Louis, president of the National Conference of Social Work, spoke on "The Chal- lenge of the Present Emergency." Prof. Bruno pointed out the falla- cies in the present system of ad- ministering welfare aid. "We realize the failure, but how are we to meet the problems of the present crisis? To the social worker the problem is one of relief, but to the taxpayer it is one to be done as economically and rapidly as possible. "When we first encountered this depression we thought that it would pass over in a short time, and relief was given out haphazardly. But now we must go about the task with sys- tem. We must not only help the unemployed, but restore confidence in him." He turned to attack the restric- tions levied on relief work. He said that residence was one item that prevented a number of those who needed relief from getting it. He spoke of the bums, or "floaters," who were a product of the present in- dustrial system. "These men," he said, "traveled about the country wherever work was to be found. When the depression came,, these men flocked to the cities for security and relief, for in the cities the wealth is centralized. But because these men are not residents of the city aid is very small." Prominent Sociologists Lecture At Conference Students, faculty members, and members of the Michigan Conference of Social Work crowded the Grand Rapids room of the League yester- day to hear three men prominent in sociology discuss relief work in Mich- igan and Illinois. The men were Frank Bane, direc- tor of the American Association of Public Welfare Officials, Father Sie- denburg, of the University of Detroit, and Kenneth Sinke, director of the Michigan State Unemployed Com- mission. Pointing out the necessity of fed- eral aid to carry on relief work dur- ing the coming winter, which, he says, will be the most distressing since 1929, Mr. Bane said, "This is now a problem of government. We can no longer rely upon charity, for the burden is too heavy. We must plan now for the future as there is no time to go through the experi- mental stage again," he said. As a possible solution, he sug- gested a sufficient public fund to be set aside for welfare relief and han- dled cautiously by competent social workers. Priest Stresses Chicago's Needs Father Siedenburg, formerly of Loyola University at Chicago, point- ed out why federal and state aid was so necessary in Chicago. Until the Federal Relief Act was passed in July, Chicago relied soley upon priv- ate funds to carry on welfare work, as that city had no public charity chest. But vast expenditures of money soon consumed the private funds and state aid became imperative. Chicago received $9,000,000 from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and exhausted that sum within three months. The city has been granted $5,000,000 more, with the promise of another $4,000,000, with which it is hoped to carry the suffering through the winter. Speaks On State Relief Mr. Sinke spoke on "State Relief in Michigan,'" and showed the dif- ficulty of direct state aid. The con- stitution, said Mr. Sinke, prevents, the issuing of any bonds, except a maximum $50,000 bond for roads. "The highway aids to a certain ex- tent in contributing to unemploy- ment relief," he declared, but is in no T1 OT+rt ,,ovk nf a fthe s In Race For Governor (Associated Press Photo) Lieutenant Governor Herbert H. Lehman of New York, who was nom- inated for governor by Roosevelt- Smith forces combining against the Tammany Hall candidate. University Aids More Students, Report Reveals Partial Payments Of Fees Help Many; Remainder Payable Next Semester Financial assistance totalling ap- proximately $120,000 was extended this year by the University, through the medium of loans and deferred tuition payments, to more than 2,000 students, more than twice as many as received aid in any previous year, according to information received yesterday from J. A. Bursley, dean of students, and Herbert C. Watkins, assistant secretary of the University. No Shrinkage in Fund During the period of September 18 to October 7, 307 new loans were made, totalling $36,245. These were from the fixed loan funds available' every year. There was practically no shrinkage in the amount, and about 25 per cent more students were accommodated than last year from that source, by carefully scrut- inizing each application and allow- ing only the minimum amount on which the applicant could get along. At the same time, between 1,600 and 1,700 students took advantage of the opportunity to pay 60 per cent of the annual fee in advance and sign a note for the remainder to come due at the beginning of the, second semester. The total amount of notes signed is $82,417, including some coming due before the end of the semester. This is about $20,000 more than the 1931 figure, and rep- resents a much larger number of stu- dents, since again the average al- lowance for each was smaller this year than last. Number Of Notes Doubled When the method of partial pay- ment by note first made its appear- ance eight years ago, about 150 or 200 students took advantage of it. Growth of its use has been very gradual, but the last two years have seen enormous demands placed upon{ it. Last year around 800 notes were signed, while this year more than twice as many were made. Notes in; such large numbers create some fi- nancial embarrassment to the Uni- versity, since fees collected in Sep- tember are the mainstay of the school until after the first of Janu- ary when the state is able to begin paying the mill tax out of automo- bile license receipts.1 Ray L. Wilbur Will Speak At Union Forum Lecturer Is President Of Stanford And Secretary Of Interior Department Meeting Scheduled For Next Thursday Th1e President And His Principles' Is Topic Of Speech; Begins 1 P. M. R y Lyman Wilbur, United States secretary of the Interior and presi- dent of Stanford University, will be the speaker at the second of this years Union political forum, it was announced yesterday by John H. Huss, recording-secretary of the Un- ion. The forum will take place next Thursday, October 13, at 1 p. m. in the assembly hall of the. Union, Huss der the auspices of the County Re-l said. A luncheon for Mr. Wilbur un- publican Committee will be held at -the Union preceding the forum. "The President and His Princi- ples" will be the topic discussed by Mr. Wilbur. He is at present hold- ing the position of Secretary of the Interior on a leave of absence from Stanford. Mr. Wilbur will address the citizens of Ann Arbor in the Whitney thea- tre on the evening of October 16. Among the positions that Wilbur has held are chairman of the exe- cutive committee on race relations of the Pacific coast, chief of the con- versation division of the United' States food administration in 1917, and member of the national state park commission. He is also a lec- turer and demonstrator in psycholo- gy at Stanford. Al Smith Will ork For DemsI In StumP Touri 'Father' T. M. Iden Critically Ill; Upper Room Class Meets Tonight at seven, the TJpper Room Bible Class meets at Lane Hall under the leadership of Rev. Howard R. Chapman while their former leader, Thomas M. Iden, affectionately dub- bed "Father" Iden by the eight thou- sand Michigan men he has taught there, lies seriously ill from a danger- ous operation performed at St. Joseph's Hospital early last week. The organization of the Upper Room Class here in 1913 followed "Father" Iden's experience at Butler college and the group is continuing this year along the same lines that he estab- lished as a tribute to his leadership. Information secured from Prof. Louis A. Hopkins, Secretary of the College of Engineering, and intimate friend of Mr. Iden indicated that he was now convalescent and able to receive immediate members of the family. His removal to his home is set for next week but he is expected to be confined to his bed for at least a month. "Father" Iden is in direct contact with Michigan men throughout the world and his work with them con- tinued even after he resigned active leadership of the group last June. Kenneth S. Bowen in the June issue of the "World Call" called him "A Mark Hopkins on a log; Socrates walking with young men; a Tagore under a tree; only God knows what a mighty influence he has exerted up-' on his children in the faith." Canby Praises Michigan For Literary Talent Hopwood Lecturer Urges Technique Development By Discipline and Study "I think there is no institution more promising for creative writing than the University of Michigan," declared Dr. Henry Seidel Canby, editor of the Saturday Review of Literature, in a lecture on "Prize Lit- erature" given yesterday afternoon at Lydia Mendelssohn theatre under the auspices of the committee on Hopwood awards. In his lecture Dr. Canby pointed out what should be expected from contestants for the Hopwood prizes. "I do not think the writing in such, contests can be expected to be the, kind of work that has been most successful in American literature during the past ten years," Dr. Can- by said. "Such writing is not suc- cessful until the writer has some- thing to describe, and excellent work is not to be expected of young peo- ple." Stresses Technique "However, there is one thing that should be required in such contests and ought to be encouraged, and that is technique," Dr. Canby de- clared. He urged the development of technique through discipline and through a careful study of great lit- erature and the application of its principles to creative writing. "You cannot teach much about creative writing. Find out what your technique is and bring to it all your resources and knowledge," Dr. Canby said. "You can supply the mind and imagination with material and make an opportunity for your talent." "The present era is the most hope- ful in American literature since the Civil War." Dr. Canby declared.. "There are more promising men and women now. I think that the period of rapid transition is over, and we are beginning to pause, intellectual- ly." I Emphasizes "Inner Light" Dr. Canby emphasized the import- ance of bringing out the "inner light" of the mind, and expressing the relationship of the mind to its own country. "There is a tendency for Americans to live in the outer quarter of their minds," he declared. Taking nineteenth , century and contemporary writers as examples, Dr. Canby pointed out deficiencies in their work because of lack of techni- que. "Many good books are out of balance because the technique does not correspond to life," he said. Titan Gridders Victors; Leonard Is Knocked Out DETROIT, Oct. 7-(JP)-The Uni- versity of Detroit football team took advantage of the only important break of the game tonight to defeat Washington and Jefferson, 7-0. A fumbled nnt in the third maarter Will In Michigan And Northwestern Meet In Nation's Headliner; Mixup In Cheering Section Definitely Campaign Four States; 'Fights Against Tamnmany NEW YORK, Oct. 7-(P)-"Al" Smith, the "Happy Warrior," will take the stump in four states, it was learned definitely tonight, and cam- paign in the interests of a Democra- tic victory in November. While the number of his addresses will be limited, he plans at present to speak in Massachusetts, Connecti- cut, Rhode Island and New York. Delegations from all four of those states supported him in the Chicago convention. Although it was announced in Il- linois that Smith would speak there, it was learned he has not yet added that State to the list. The possibility of Smith entering the Roosevelt-Garner speaking cam- paign was seen by Democratic lead- ers after he had brought 10,000 cheering men and women to their feet at the State Convention last Tuesday by grasping the Governor's hand in friendly greeting. RECEIVE PLEDGE SLIPS Freshmen will receive pledge slips this morning and will return them to the offices of the deans of men and women before noon. Approximately 600 Ticket Applications Received Are On Wrong Cards; Formations Iay Fail Urge Students To Procure Mittens Explain That Slips With Z' Are Only Ones Good For Cheering Section;- Many Are Dissatisfied Plans for a super-cheering section of 1215 students at the Northwest- ern game today met an obstacle when approximately 600 ticket ap- plications for the favored sections were lost or were not sent in. Harry A. Tillotson, business manager of the Athletic Association, was forced to fill up the section with an equal number of non-applicants. In spite of the fact that William Temple, '33, head cheerleader, said the cheering section applications were correctly turned in, Tillotson charged that students had used dif- ferent applications or had sent in re- quests for extra tickets, either of which automatically bars the stu- dent from sitting in this section. '600' Must Get Mitts Temple stated that announcements of the confusion had been made at the pep meeting last night, and that this, with the notice printed in this morning's Daily, he considered suf- ficient to warn the 600 "pickups" in the cheering section that they must get their mitts at Saffell and Bush's store this morning. With 600 mitts missing from 'the cheering section, .the figures to be formed would fail miserably, Temple said. The confusion will probably pre- vail for the four remaining games at which the mitts are to be used unless a scheme for straightening 'out the disorder is devised, accord- ing to Temple. The yellow instruction slips pasted over the back of all cheering-section tickets will serve as identificajion for the procural of the mitts. When asked to comment on the misunderstandings which have arisen Mr. Tillotson said "It's just one of those things," and added that it was probably too m'uch of a departure from the customary management of the cheering section. S New System Substituted .In the past, 1296 seats have been provided with yellow and blue plac- ards, new ones being distributed at each game. Under the new system, 1215 pairs of mitts are to be given to the students, used at the game and turned into Boy Scouts at the end of the third quarter. Students are warned that to ob- tain seats in the cheering section, their yellow application cards, stamped with the "Z" or "N" must be mailed or turned in to the ticket office, with other cheering section applications only. If additional tick- ets are requested for non-students, they are filled in a non-student sec- tion. If the "Z" stamped tickets are lost, stolen, or disregarded as is evi- dently the case with 600 students, a motley section is the result. Columbia Protests Against Doak Are; Silenced By Rules NEW YORK, Oct. 8.-Columbia University students who planned to hold a mass demonstration to fur- ther their struggle for abandonment of Secretary of Labor William N. Doak's ruling forbidding compensa- tory employment for foreign students were frustrated by the discovery of a University statue forbidding open- air meetings, according to the Co- lumbia Spectator. The Spectator, crusading student newspaper, is co-operating with the Campus Social Problems Club in an attempt to force Doak to rescind the measure. An undergraduate strike similar to that led by Reed Harris, former Spectator editor, is rumored in the offing. Prof Aam Tero v Aones dire-tnr "Are Michigan traditions disap- nearly every department of the game. pearing or is Michigan spirit wan- Northwestern is inherently an offcn- ing?" Fielding H. Yost, director of sive team. Coach Hanley has de- intercollegiate athletics, asked more veloped his attack than 4,500 students who packed Hill a mi-il many have Auditorium last night for a pre-game r*d* ted that he pep meeting- i h ave too many The/ response of the crowd to us for Michigan Coach Yost's talk showed that the today. This year enthusiasm of the "Benny-to-Benny" A i c h i g a n h a s days is not gone. opened up consid- "It was the best pep meeting .... erably but still de- have attended within the last 15 p ends upon a years," said J. Frederick Lawton, '11, string defense. The co-author of "Varsity," which en- Wildcats sponsor tered on its twenty-second year yes- daring plays, while terday. "They had more of the good VJiTreZT the Wolverines are old spirit than they have had in a more conservative. long time." Michigan's line will outweigh the "They" roared out Michigan songs opposing wall by more' than 12 and yells in an inspiring fashion, and pounds to the man. The backfields poured out on to North University will average 175 to 173 with the avenue after the session to parade slgiht edge going to the home team. after the band to the Union and Today's grudge battle is the re- then back to Morris Hall. sult of two years of co-championship Standing with rolled shirt sleeves, shared by the two teams. After the Judge William "Willie" Heston, All- tie last year, the matphing of these American back of the "point-a-mm- two teams was a natural. The coun- ute" days, recalled the Northwestern try-wide interest in today's game is game of 1901 when Michigan beat expected to draw nearly 70,000 fans the Wildcats 29-0, in spite of previ- to the Stadium. ous predictions of a Northwestern In Northwestern's workout at D victory. troit yesterday, two players stood "The team is up against the same out. Pug Rentner demonstrated hs kind of a game tomorrow," said expert passing and sensational in- Judge Heston as he urged the stu- ning abilities while Olsen, reputedly dents to give the team complete sup- the best kicker in the Big Ten, :ent port this afternoon, long, low spirals out of bounds azjsl then changed to high ones down the W ldcatsBoast field for exceptional distances. Northwestern has a pair of strong ends in Dick Fencl and Edgar Man- H u e Band For ske. Although these men are not dopedto out-star R e d Williamson Today's Game and Ted Petoskey of Michigan, they expect t o s t o p Special Train Expected To Michigan's r un - ning attack. Each Arrive At One; Will Be weighs 162 pounds Band's Headquarters while the Wolver- ine flankmen tip the scales at 185. , EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 7.-(Special) Another so-call- -Northwestern University's 160-piece ed weak spot in purple and white band willhstep from the Wildcat line- EMRO its special train at the Michigan Sta- up is at center. Harold Weldm dium at 1 p. m. tomorrow and will weighs but 13 p ouan ds and is march on to the field to meet Michi- matched against Charles Bernard, gan's smaller blue-coated aggrega- who is about 210. However, Coach tion on the latter's own ground for Hanley is not worried about these the first time in tyears. three men as much as about his Because its program for the day other linemen. His guards and has been kept a careful secret from tackles are heavier but not as heavy even the Northwestern students, the as Michigan's. - Wildcat band is expected to take the If Rentner can be stopped, North- field the cynosure of more than 70,- western will lose much of its offen- 000 pairs of eyes. Plans on the eve sive power. Hanley said in Detroit of departure here called for a seven- yesterday that he expected Mi.h., minute demonstration before the gan's line to bottle up his star for game and another seven minutes be- most of the game, but if he gets tween halves before Michigan's away only once or twice, it will be "Fighting Hundred" puts on its own enough. show. STARTTN LINEUPS The Wildcat band, one of the Mich. Noath larger bands of the Western Confer- Petoskey - . . M"ske ence, is not under a military depart- Wistert......... T .le. ment, but its formations and musi- Kowalik........LG ...,y cal presentations have aroused wide Bernard........C .e..n interest in the West. r'+,.m,.r ,i, Starr Commonwealth Reforms World's Youngest Hold-Up Men The Brownell Boys, aged 6 and 7, the "baby bandits"who not long ago terrorized a northern Michigan city have reformed and. become "darn nice kids' under the tutelage of Floyd Starr, director of the Floyd Starr Commonwealth for boys which is. to hold its 4nnual tag day in Ann Arbor today. The story of these boys and their eventual reformation is told in a lit- tle pamphlet published by the com- monwealth and written by Earle R. Clemens. "World's Youngest Bandit" At the age of five years, Joseph had earned the title of "the world's youngest bandit." He and his broth- fire at night to the contents of waste baskets in a lumber office, causing a damage of $300; of starting a fire in the Baptist church, with a loss of $500; and of robbing a half dozen offices and other buildings. Used Sympathy Racket One of the favorite rackets of the baby bandits was the sympathy dodge. They would huddle together in the hallway of a palatial home, set up a wail, declare they were orphans, that they were lost and hungry, with the usual result that a kind-hearted housewife would take them in and feed them. While the woman was out calling to the police, the boys -would grab anything valuable in sight and beat it down the street.