The Weather Continued cloudy and scat- tered showers today. Warmer. Sir igau moomIb ait Editorials Intelligent Destruction . . . Law Of The Lawns.. VOL. XLV. No. 37 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1934 PRICE FIVE CENTS End Meetings Of Education Institute Here Superintendent Of Public Instruction Gives Aims Of Modern Education Voelker's Address Is Closing Feature Toledo Educator, Dean Edmonson Also Address Saturday Sessions A noon luncheon yesterday at the Union, addressed by Dr. Paul F. Voel- ker, superintendent of public instruc- tion, closed the meetings of the fifth annual Parent Education Institute. Declaring "the new concept of edu- cation is to teach children to appre- ciate the American form of govern- ment," he added that he felt en- couraged over the educational situa- tion in Michigan, and he explained nine goals of education set forth by the Michigan Educational Planning Committee. He listed the following goals: ap- preciation of the American form of government; the development of character; the teaching of co-opera- tion; the teaching of the benefits of seeking the truth; the teaching of the instrumentalities with which to find the truth; the finding of the child's sphere and leading him there; the de- velopment of leadership among youth; the enrichment of adult life; and the teaching of persons to adjust them- selves to new problems. Longer Education "The time will come- when educa- tion will not end with college, when it will always continue," Dr. Voelker asserted. He pointed out that the "so- called fundamentals, reading, writing, arithmetic, etc.," are only one of the goals of education. Dr. Voelker, in pleading for co- operation, hoped for the time "when even Republicans and Democrats would co-operate in matters of edu- cation. And they are beginning to now," he said. Dr. Voelker cited four levels of sat- isfaction of life: pleasure, success, joy, and happiness. "These," he said, "must be brought out in the lives of all people, young and old, if educa- tion is to serve its purpose. It must come,"'he stated, "if democracy is to be worth anything." The final day's'session of the In- stitute was opened by Dean James B. Edmonson of the education school, speaking at 9 a.m. in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre on "A Program for Unemployed Youth." Outlines Proposals Stating that 40 per cent of the boys and girls of high school age in this country are not attending school, and describing the rapidly increasing tendency on the part of employers to eliminate youths under 21 from their businesses, Dean Edmonson sub- mitted a summary sheet to the mem- bers of the Institute outlining the proposals he has formulated concern- ing "What the Community Can Do For Its Youth." The summary listed a number of projects by which communities can alleviate the unemployment situation among the young people. It further suggested ways in which communities can foster increased educational and recreational facilities for the boys and girls who are now being deprived of these opportunities, and too frequent- ly being forced into a life of crime and tramp "jungles." While state and Federal govern- mental aid is necessary in the financ- ing of education, Dean Edmonson stated, such policies ought to be di- rected in such a way that the com- munity as a unit would still consider itself ultimately responsible for the care of its own youth problems. The Youth Council recently form- ed in Ann Arbor was cited by Dean Edmonson as an excellent example of the possibility for community ac- tion in this respect. Dougdale Speaks Following the speech by Dean Ed- monson, R. E. Dougdale, superintend- ent of schools, Toledo, gave a talk on the crisis that has been reached in the financial status of school systems throughout the country. Dougdale spoke in the absence of Dr. Caroline Hedgers of the Elizabeth McCormick Memorial Fund, Chica- go, who could not attend due to ill- ness. Dougdale pointed out that whereas schools in Michigan are now fearing the effects of the 15 mill tax limita- tio am nAM T ~ a milar m-ha-- FOOTBALL SCORES Illinois 7, Army 0. Purdue 26, Chicago 20. Northwestern 7, Wisconsin 0. Iowa 0, Indiana 0. Pittsburgh 19, Notre Dame 0. k Columbia 14, Cornell 0. S Fordham 13, Tennessee 12. Yale 7, Dartmouth 2. Mich. State 13, Marquette 7. 1 Oklahoma A.&M. 19, Detroit 6. Iowa State 0, Kansas 0. Ohio State 76, Western Res. 0. Princeton 19, Harvard 0. Navy 26, Washington & Lee 0. Syracuse 16, Penn State 0. Alabama 34, Kentucky 14. Georgia 14, Florida 0. Santa Clara 20, California 0. Stanford 27, U.C.L.A. 0. Oregon 13, Montana 0. Texas"Christian 34, Baylor 12. Temple 14, Holy Cross 0. Penn 41, Lafayette 0. Southern Methodist 7, Texas 7. Churches Offer Students Many Features Today New Presbyterian Preacher Commences His Official Duties Here The entrance in church circles of Dr. W. P. Lemon, delivering his first Sunday morning service at the Pres- byterian Church, will be a feature of the varied programs which are of- fered students today by Ann Arbor churches. Dr. Lemon's topic will be "An In- clusive Religion." He will speak on "How God Views the World" at the evening Student Forum meeting which follows a recreational meet- ing at the church house. Gertrude Muxen, faculty member, will be the featured speaker at the morning's student classes. At the First M. E. Church the Rev. C. W. Brashares takes "Fellowship" as the fifth in his series on "What We Want." Wesley McCraney will lead the afternoon meeting of the W o r 1 d Friendship Department at Stalker Hall, and Professor Shirley W. Allen will be guest speaker at the Wesleyan Guild service there in the, evening. His topic will be "Good, Will." Dr. Bernard Heller's morning topic at the Hillel Foundation will be "What Is Education For?" Hirsh Hootkins of the French department leads a class in Jewish Ethics in the after- noon at the Foundation. Morning service at St. Paul's Luth- eran by the Rev. C. A. Brauer will feature "The Open Bible --Luther's Gift to the Church." The evening1 program presents a student supper and an illustrated lecture. The Rev. E. C. Stellhorn's morning topic at the Zion Lutheran will be "Our Re-a formation Heritage." A program of student fellowship, supper, and for- um will feature the evening. ,The Unitarian Fellowship of Lib- eral Religion's regular afternoon dis- cussion will present a view of the political arena before election-"Jeff- erson Casts a Ballot." In the eve- ning Miss Emily V. White of thil physical education department will speak on "The Modern Dance." Union Plans Open House For Tuesday More Than 2,000 Students Expected To Be Present At Annual Event Late Permission Is Granted To Women Exhibitions, Dancing, And Inspection Tours To Be Featured On Program With an expected attendance of more than 2,000 men and women stu- dents, plans for the annual Union Open House, to be held from 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Tuesday, have been com- pleted. Members of the house committee, under James Cook, '36. are working on a program which will include a series of exhibitions and dancing in the Union ballroom. Special late permission until 11 p.m. has been granted women stu- dents by the office of the dean of women. Free dancing in the ballroom on the second floor will begin at 8 p.m. with music provided by the regular Union orchestra under the direction of Bob Steinle. Will Tour Building Student committeemen will be pres- ent to conduct visitors on supervised tours of the building showing them the various facilities of the building including the bakery, kitchens, guest rooms, and the tower. Ruth McGinnis, champion women's pocket billiard player and a repre- sentative of the National Billiard As- sociation of America, will present an exhibition of trick shots in the bil- liard room at 8 p.m. Previous to the demonstration, she will give an hour lesson to a selected group. The finals of the all-campus ping pong tournament, which was started several weeks ago, will be played in the billiard room. Students may register for the an- nual billiard tournament during the exhibition, it was stated by student officials. Women To Bowl A selected team of women bowlers will roll a demonstration match against a squad of men. Last year the women's team, with a handicap, de- feated the men. Official returns from county, state, and national elections, which are held on Tuesday, will be posted through- out the evening and announced over the public address system in the ball- room. A group of swimmers and divers from the championship Varsity swim- ming team will present an exhibition in the natatorium at 8 p.m. It was announced that men stu- dents who have not already registered for their student memberships will be able to do.so during the evening in the student offices on the first floor. Pieken Pool tarts Refunding Wagers Minnesota Swamps Wolverines With Last Half Drive, 34 To 0; -Rally Massed Body Of Students Will Cheer Team Upon Arrival At 3:30 Today 'Fighting Hundred' Will Lead Parade1 Campus Leaders Pledge Support For Display Of 'True Michigan Spirit' "Let's give the team a hand when it comes home tomorrow. The boy went down fighting." This was the telegram received by Union officials last night from Joseph E. Horak, '35, head cheer leader, who accompanied the Varsity to Minneapolis. Immediately plans were made for a pep rally today at the Michigan Cen- tral station when the squad returns home. When the train rolls in at 3:30 p.m., it is expected that many more than the thousand which greeted the Wolverines after the Chicago game will be cheering them again in de- feat. Michigan's "Fighting Hundred" will also arrive with the- team, and will lead the parade up State Street. In addition to Horak, other members of the cheering staff will be on hand to direct the rally. Student leaders who were asked last night to support the rally all promised enthusiastic co-operation. Allen D. McCombs, '35, president of the Union, said "This is a grand opportunity to demonstrate the true Michigan spirit; support in defeat as well as in vic- tory." Carl Hilty, '35, president of the Un- dergraduate Council, Dexter E. Good- ier, '35, president of Druids, and John C. Healy, '35, president of Michigam- ua, were other leaders-of campus or- ganizations who declared themselves in favor of a pep rally today. Goodier and Healey announced that members of their organizations would be on hand to assist at the rally. Large Crowd Expected For Chase Lecture 'Economy Of Abundance' Will Be Discussed By Noted Author With an even larger crowd expected than that which heard Ruth Bryan Owen speak here recently, Stuart Chase, eminent economist and author, will deliver the second lecture of the Oratorical Association series at 8:30 p.m. Thursday in Hill Auditorium. His subject will be "The Economy of Abundance." According to Carl G. Brandt, busi- ness manager of the association, Mr. Chase has a smooth, swift-moving style of speaking that includes an excellent sense of humor. He is re- puted to be one of the most sought+ after speakers in the United States,+ but has time to spend only two weeks] of the year on the lecture platform. Is Widely Read Author He is the author of many widely, read books, among which are "The Tragedy of Waste," "Men and Ma- chines," "The Nemesis of American Business," "A New Deal," and "The Economy of Abundance." His lecture will include an analysis of "the problem of adjusting modern living conditions to our new economic life." "The Economy of Abundance" and the problems involved are vividly in- troduced by Mr. Chase in these words: "Suppose that the 13 million people living in the United States in 1830 had awakened on the moaning of Jan.,'1, 1831, with 40 times the physi- cal energy they had gone to bed with the night before. An active picture meets the mind's eye; a very active picture. Economy Would Change "Assuming no increase in the in- vention of labor-saving devices - what might we logically expect in the way of economic changes in a culture essentially handicraft? From an economy of scarcity, with barely enough to go around, the young Re-; To W elcone Team Home , Dynamite! -Associated Press Photo Stan Kostka, Minnesota's sensational sophomore fullback, didn't get going until the second half yesterday, but then he lived up to his reputation, ripping through the Wolverine line for long gains almost at will. Kostka is one of a long line of Minnesota plungers who have become famous - Joesting, Nagurski, and Manders. Kostka left yes- terday's game after being viciously tackled by Ferris Jennings, Mich- igan's 140-pound quarterback and safety man. October FERA Checks Will Be Issued Tuesday Payment of $11,530.40 to 908 FERA students will begin at 8 a.m. Tuesday, it was announced yester- day by Harold S. Anderson, cost accountant of the building and grounds department. The offices of the building and grounds department will be open to pay students from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Students are urged to come as early as possible to receive their wages. No payments will be made after Thursday, officials stated. Ann Arbor Officials Criticized By Lehr That Ann Arbor officials in charge of constructing the proposed sewage disposal plant, which PWA grants have made possible for the city, have played politics to hinder its progress was inferred by Rep. John C. Lehr of this district when he addressed more than 200 Democrats last night in the circuit court room here. "I offered my services and they re- fused to take advantage of them," the congressman s t a t e d. "Elsewhere throughout this district, such progress is much further advanced." Ne w Magazine Will Make Its Campus Debut A new student magazine, "Ad- vance," will make its debut tomor- row when the first issue will be offer- ed for campus sale. The magazine, selling at 10 cents per copy, is edited by Jacob C. Seidel, '35, Joseph D. Feld- man, '37, and Davis R. Hobbs, '35L, with headquarters at 114 S. Ingalls St. The purpose and policy of the new publication is explained in an intro- ductory editorial, which says, in part, "Our policy is .simple and firm: to encourage those writers who believe that creative imagination and crea- tive thought are directly linked to social and economic conditions." The first issue contains a short story about "Honey," a CWA worker, by Feldman; an article entitled "The Proletarian Novel," by Seidel; a poem on the theme, "We Are Our Own," by Donald Rand; an analysis of "Pro- duction," by Kenneth Ratliff, '37; a strike spectator's experiences during a "Toledo Afternoon," by Rose Park- er; a discussion of "Russian Litera- ture and Life" by Prof. Clarence L. Meader of the department of speech and general linguistics; and mis- cellaneous verse, fiction, and criti- cism. Gophers Continue Dash Toward Championship With Dynamic Force Michigan Maintains Edge In First Half Wolverine Defense Tires; Norse Power Streams Through Late In Game By ARTHUR W. CARSTENS MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 3. - A jinx of 41 years' standing was broken here today as the powerful Minnesota football team defeated Michigan, 34 to 0, before a record homecoming crowd of 60,000. Never since the two teams met for the first time in 1892 had the Gophers been able to win over Michigan at home, but today they col- lected five touchdowns and four con- versions to smash tradition to bits and move one step nearer the National championship. An inspired Michigan team out- played the Northmen during the first half by a wide margin, losing an op- portunity to score in the opening min- utes when Regeczi's pass to Ward from the five-yard line fell incomplete in the end zone. Matt Patanelli put the Gophers in a hole when he blocked Beise's punt and recovered it on Minnesota's 16 to put Michigan in position to make their one futile scoring attempt. Ced- ric Sweet's fierce tackling and John Regeczi's fine punting kept the Norse- men in the shadow of their own goal for 30 minutes, even after Captain Pug Lund and Stan Kostka came into the game at the beginning of the second quarter. Come Back In Second Half But the powerful Gophers found themselves in the second half, just as they did against Pittsburgh, and it would have taken more than the ob- viously tired Wolverine line to stop them. One assault Kike's men did stop on their own 18-yard line, but after Regeczi's punt pushed Minne- sota back to its 45, the Gophers, not to be denied, marched 55 yards on a line buck, a pass, and an end run, all by Lund, for their first touch- down. Then the Gopher attack, as if sud- denly inspired, began a barrage of touchdowns. A 76 yard run by Al- phonse, which occurred on the second play after the kickoff, accounted for the second score and began the rout in ernest. Taking the kickoff behind the goal line he was nailed by Viergever on Minnesota's 23-yard line. Kostka gained a yard. On the next play Al- phonse started wide around left end, cut back and outran the entire Mich- igan team, including Willis Ward, who gained on the fleeing Gopher. but couldn't quite catch him. Lund's Kicks Lead To Score It was the brilliant placing of Lund's boots which led directly to Minnesota's final touchdown in the third quarter. After a Minnesota march had been halted at the Michigan 41-yard line, Lund got off a beautiful kick which went out of bounds on the one-yard line. Regeczi, forced to kick behind his own goal posts, got off a good. boot to Lund, who returned the bal from Michigan's 45 to the 33. The Gopher attack bogged, and Lund was forced again to try for the corners. He did, putting the ball out on the six-yard line. Regeczi, again facing the test of getting off a successful kick behind his own goal posts, punted straight up in the air, the ball going out of bounds on the Wolverine 34-yard line. Perfect Passing Seizing the opportunity, Lund got off a 33-yard pass to Maurice John- son, Gopher end, who scored without a hand being laid upon him. It was the fourth pass of four which were at- tempted and completed by Minnesota today, and it was the second of two which accounted directly for Gopher touchdowns. With the game apparently on ice, Lund was taken out of the game amidst a tremendous ovation from the crowd. But the Gopher juggernaut kept on scoring. After Regeczi had kicked over the Minnesota goal line for a touchback, Clarkson, on the sec- ond plav. ran 28 yards to his own Llod DougasThe local operator of the Pickem oy ouglas To Speak Pool, Cleveland, which has thus far On 'Flight To Freedom' failed to pay $2,115 won by 800 stu- dents here on football game selec- Dr. Lloyd C. Douglas, who will speak tions last Saturday, has started to at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday in Hill Auditor- pay off the money originally invested ium on "The Flight of Freedom," is by the students. well known in Ann Araor. For seven Agents operating the pool here took years he was pastor of the First Con- in a total of approximately $304 and gregational Church here. are paying off this sum to students Besides his fame as a minister and who invested anywhere from 25 cents lecturer, Dr. Douglas is well known to $5 in the pool, as rapidly as possible. as an author. His book, "The Mag- The operator of the pool has not nificent Obsession," is still a best sell- been able to contact any of the Cleve- er three years after publication. land officials of the pool. Prof. Bromage Advocates Home Rule Amendment For Counties Washtenaw Politicians To Feel Axe In Next Issue Of Gargoyle This is the third and last in a series of articles in which prominent faculty authorities discuss the advisability of passing the amendments to the State Constitution which appear on the ballot Nov. 6. Today's interview is with Prof. Arthur W. Bromage of the political science department, and a recognized authority on county government. By COURTNEY A. EVANS The passage of Amendment No. 4, better known as the county home rule amendment, was advocated as highly desirable by Prof. Arthur W. Brom- aa in an interview with The Daili Constitution imposes one type of gov- ernmental organization upon the counties of the State, and the purpose of this amendment as discussed by Professor Bromage, is to permit those counties that desire to change their governmental structure, a means to accomplish this end. "The amendment does not propose to change any county which prefers to remain under the present system," he said, "because all that a county has to do - is to do nothing. No changes will be imposed upon any county against its will. It is for the benefit of those counties that do want reorganization, that amendment No. 4 Having disposed of one political party, the Ship of State, Gargoyle now tackles the estimable opponents, Washtenaw, in the November issue which will appear for campus sale Wednesday. If the Ship of State was drowned in the Huron river last month as the "Garg" showed, a smashing fate is also predicted for the Washtenaw group and its various ringleaders, all of whom appear in the new issue of the magazine. In addition there will cording to Eric Hall, '35, managing editor, is "the most distinctive ever to be presented in the Gargoyle." Four prominent members of the University faculty are seen in carica- ture and another group of Varsity football players, following the popular drawings of last month's issue, are also portrayed. Wayne King, the "Waltz King," and his band are discussed this month in the "Modern Music" column. The second "Preposterous Person" will be revealed Wednesday. as will five mnre