PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1934 SLATE WSIRE NEWS program will be given by Mr. Max I A L 7'O F C A 13ULLTINT Fuller, Miss Eleanor Heck, and Miss DAILY OFFICIAL BULLET1IN 6g" Felicia Shpritzer, graduate students Publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the in Speech* and by Mrs. Frances Petti- University. Copy received at the office of the Assistant to the President bone, an alumna of the University. until 3:30; 11:30 a.m. Saturday. All persons interested are cordially WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1934 down Thursday night, Nov. 15, and invited to attend these meetings. VOL. XLV No. 44 j transportation provided for those inE IJLUL~CItEĀ£1 k .l Th GLIt .Jiii Stanley SpeaksI On University Radio Prooram 'Shifting Shorelines OfI Great Lakes' Is Subject, Of Broadcast CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY Notices President and Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to students and their friends on Wednesday, Nov. 14, from 4 to 6 o'clock. the order of their signing : e erman h rd fhrin Circle will hold a "Tanzabend" in the Freshmen in the Literary College: basement of the Congregational The remaining Freshmen mayob- Church at the corner of Williams and tain their six weeks reports in Room Sate St.. at p.m. All members are urged to come. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Place advertisements with Classified Advertising Department. Phone 2-1214. The classified columns close at five o'clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no extra charge. Cash in advance-11c per reading line LAUNDRY PERSONAL laundry service. We take individual interest in the laundry problems of our customers. Girls' silks, wools, and fine fabrics guar- anteed. Men's shirts our specialty. Call for and deliver. Phone 5594 611 E. Hoover. 2x T. 102 Mason Hall according to the fol- lowing schedule. K-R. Wednesdav I MacDonald Silences War Debt Discussionj LONDON, Nov. 13. - (P) -PrimeI Minister J. Ramsay MacDonald and1 Neville Chamberlain, chancellor of the exchequer, between them today placed an effective quietus on any efforts to bring the war debts question up for reconsideration. MacDonald told the House of Com- mons that the whole question of inter- national debts was in abeyance at present. That statement, he said, applied equally to the international debt dis- cussed at the Lausanne Conference and to the war debts owed to the United States. Chaco Is Captured By Bolivian Offensive BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 13. - UP) - A new Bolivian offensive in the Chaco Boreal today had recaptured approx- imately 1,600 square miles of territory ,hi the northwest portion of the dis- puted area, reports reaching Buenos Aires said. The Bolivian drive, launched de- spite the onset of the rainy season, virtually wiped outhParaguay's hard won conquests in the course of Gen. Estigarribia's daring advance toward the Parapiti River and Bolivian oil fields in August. Rickenbacker Forced To End Miami Flight JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Nov. 13 - (P)-Darkness overtook Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker here today as he landed his fourteen-passenger plane at 5:50 p.m., hours behind schedule on his projected dawn to dusk round trip flight from New York to Miami. Charges Of Overwork Are Made At Denison GRANVILLE, O., Nov. 13. - Deni- son University campus was aflutter with excitement today over charges made by the Denisonian, college week- ly, that a record number of student nervous breakdowns are being caused by "lengthy assignments promulgated by overzealous professors." Whistler Memorial Hospital is taxed with a record number of students suf- fering relapses because of over-work, the Denisonian article stated. The average Denison student is getting only six hours' sleep nightly, as a result of the "heavy social and scholastic requirements," it was said. U.S. Eases Restraint On Foreign Exchange WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 - (11) - Observers read hints of orthodoxy, stability and confidence in the future of the dollar today between the lines of a Treasury order removing all restrictions from transactions in for- eign exchange. Although the move had little if any reflection in the day's currency quotations, Treasury officials were pleased with the reaction expressed in world money centers, where the view was taken that it represented an advance toward normal conditions. The order removed a requirement that all purchases of foreign ex- change obtain the permission of the Treasury, a consent readily given in all cases. It substituted only a con- dition that all future purchases in excess of $5,000 be reported to the Federal Reserve Banks. Circuit Court Reverses Byers' Case Decision NEW YORK, Nov. 13. - ()- Rob- ert J. Byers, former Michigan adju- To University Community Fund SZ. Thursday. r Campaign Solicitors: The Ann Arbor T Community Fund Exect~ive Commit-! tee wishes daily reports on subscrip- Academic Notices tions to the Fund. All University i solicitors, therefore, are requested to English 31, Mr. Litzenberg's sec-i turn in signed subscription cards tions: The assignment for Wednes- daily to the following members of the day, Nov. 14, is Wordsworth's "Mich-t University Central Committee : i ael." Architecture ... Professor Bennett ! I Education .....Professor Schorling I Psychology 31: A discussion will be1 Engineering......Professor Dodge given Thursday at 7 p.m. in Room 300t Hospital.............Dr. Haynes W. Med. for my classes which were1 Law............Professor Tracy dismissed Monday on account of thet Medicine..........Dr. Edmunds Armistice Day program. All Others......Professor Rodkey Any cash or checks received in full or partial payment of subscriptions should accompany the cards. R. G. Rodkey, Chairman University Central Committee University Broadcasting: 9:15-9:30 a.m.-Laboratory Pro- gram for University Speech Class announcing the concert by the Don. Cossack Russian Chorus, the lecture by Lyman Beecher Stowe, and Camp- us News. 2:00-2:30 p.m.-Vocational Guid- ance Series - Topic, "The Social Service Worker," Arthur E. Wood, Professor of Sociology, and Director of the Curriculum in Social Work.! Registration for all senior and graduate students who are interested in obtaining positions next year will be held at the Bureau, 201 Mason Hall, as follows: Tuesday to Friday, Nov. 13 to 16, inclusive; hours 9:00- 12:00 and 2:00-4:00. This registra- tion covers both teaching and non- teaching appointments. There is no charge for registration at this time, but after Nov. 16 a late registration 1 fee of $1.00 will be charged. All stu- dents who wish to file their creden- tials this year are urged to register during the regular enrollment period. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Informationi. Pre-Medical Students: The Asso- ciation of American Medical Colleges Committee ton Aptitude Tests recom- mends that any student applying for entrance by September, 1935, to a medical school should take the Ap- titude Test. This will be given on December 7, 1934, in Room 25, Angell Hall, from 3 to 5 o'clock. For ad- mission to practically all medical schools'this test is now a normal re- quirement. All applicants for ad- mission to the University of Michigan Medical School are expected to take it. A fee of one dollar is charged to defray the expenses of the Commit- tee. Full information and applica- tion blanks should be obtained as soon as possible at the Office of the Registrar, Room 4, University Hall. Registration will extend from Nov. 12 through Dec. 3. Ira W. Smith, Registrar School of Forestry and Conserva- tion, Mid-Semester Reports: Cards for mid-semester reports are being mailed today to all instructors of stu- dents in the School of Forestry and Conservation. These should be mailed promptly to the office of the School of Forestry and Conservation, Room 2048 N.S. Students, College of Engineering: The final day for the removal of in- completes will be Saturday, Nov. 17. In cases of extenuating circumstances this time limit may be extended, but a petition for extension of time must be filed in the Secretary's Office on or before Saturday, Nov. 17. College of Architecture, Mid-Semes- ter Reports: Cards for mid-semester reports are being mailed today to all instructors of students in Architec- ture.. These reports should be mailed promptly to the office of the College of Architecture, Room 207 Arch. B. D. Thuma i Psychology 31: Attention is called to the fact that the make-up color; demonstration will be held in Room 1121 N.S., Thursday from 7 to 10 p.m. The other make-ups will be given in Room 300 W. Med. in ac- cordance with the schedule posted on the bulletin board. Lecture Stuart Chase Lecture: The second number of the Oratorical Association Lecture course will be presented in Hill Auditorium tonight when Stuart Chase speaks on the subject, "The Economy of Abundance." The lec- ture will begin promptly at 8:30. Tickets are available at Wahr's book- store until 5 o'clock and will be avail- able at the Hill Auditorium box office sd cs eg .tl oty nbasis of five average Words to George M. Stanley of the geology line) for one or two insertions. Thccsophical Club study class department spoke over station WJR 10c per reading line for three or meiga8pm.MihgnLeague1 more insertions. meeting at 8 p.m. MichiganL yesterday on "Shifting Shore Lines Minimum 3 lines per insertion. Chapel continues the study of 'Kar~ of the Great Lakes," as part of the Telephone rate -15c per reading line man-The Law of Consequences.' Michigan, My Michigan" series of 4 one or two insertions. ma MihiaThe MchgaLawresof 14c per reading line for three or All interested are welcome. radio programs. more insertions. ________ad y progas. y10% discount if paid within ten days FresmanGle Clu: Rheasal Stanley began by citing the ex- I from the date of last insertion. Fresbman Glee Club: Rehearsal Minimum three lines per insertion. at 5 o'clock in the music room of ample of the different positions of By contract, per line -2 lines daily, one tethe Tawas lighthouse. "In 1856 this; month................c the Union. Please be punctual.hs 4 lines Ehs I. 2months........3c lighthouse was located on the end 2 lines daily, college year.......7c of Tawas Point," he said, "but dur- 4 lines E.O.D., college year.......7c Varsity Glee Club: The Waiting T." 100 lines used as desired.........9c List Club will meet today at the usual ig the next 20 years the pointr s 1000 lines used as desired ........c time in the Glee Club rooms. Regu- built out by e waves an cu2,000 lines used as desired........6c lar meeting on Thursday night for almost one quarter of a mile, and in The above rates are per reading line, theVarity1876 the lighthouse was relocated at1 based on eight reading lines per inch. the Varsity Club - all members pres-hs Ionic type, upper and lower case. Add ent. Members of both clubs be on the new end of the point. By 1900 6c per line to above rates for all capital etM me r atf:30bthtpontcasulmotboe-hlfnile letters. Add 6c per line to above for time promptly at 7:30. the point was almost one-half mile !bold face, upper and lower case. Add loc longer than in 1876, and a fog horn per line to above rates for bold face Luncheon for Graduate Students was placed at the end of the point caital ettrs.nt at 12 o'clock in the Russian Teakin that year. Thus it was built out type. Roo1 of the Michigan League Build- three-fourths of a mile in 44 years.I ing. Professor Arthur Lyon Cross, For some reason the further exten- LOST AND FOUND RichardHudson Professor of English sion of Tawas Point has not been RcrdudnPrfsrofEgshcarried on as rapidly in recent years." G History will speak informally on Arie raply in e e eas LOST: Drawing instruments. Lost 3rd "Some Harvard Worthies of the Nine- Anothereamperisron floor W. Engineering Building. Re- ties."coast of Lake Superior. Fish tugs ties_ the Michipicoten River, 1 ward for return. No questions asked. - entering h h tn r15 Phone R. B. Scott, 2-2147. Graduate Women Students: A pos- years ago, were accustomed to pass ture class for graduate women will between a certain island and the LOST: One full-dress coat Monday meet at 5 o'clock in Barbour Gym- mainland; but, by 1931, a point had evening, between 6 and 7. Reward nasium. Any graduate woman in- been built out by the shore currents Call 8911. terested is invited to attend. to connect this island with the land, and boats must now enter by another Dance Club Demonstration: The channel.I Brow n xp a n Dance Club will give a demonstration Stanley explained these and other Explains ae C:45 in Barbour Gymnasium. examples by the phenomena of "post- ar priclal ivie adglacial uplift." When this territory! Fresh en e wpari ireited ad was co ered by a great glacier the land was depressed, and when it left LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 4x STUDENT Hand Laundry. Prices rea- sonable. Free delivery. Phone 3006 9x PROFESSIONAL SERVICES NASH-Custom Tailored clothes. Measured by C. Krug, expert tailor. Office 214 E. Washington. Phone 2-1910 for appointment. 6x NOTICE PACKARD CAFE now open. Special meal ticket, $5 for $4. Regular din- ner, 25-35 cents. Lunch 25 cents. Cakes and pies all home baked. FINANCE CO. offers bargains in re- possessed and repurchased cars. Many 1934 cars with low mileage included. We will trade and extend convenient terms. Open evenings. 311 W. Huron. Ph. 2-3267. lox WANTED WANTED: MEN'S OLD AND NEW suits. Will pay 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 dol- lars. Phone Ann Arbor 4306. Chi- cago Buyers. Temporary office, 200 North Main. 7x Significance Fational Election tien was the first held under the provisions of the "lame duck" amend- ment which the veteran reform sen- ator sponsored. Senators and repre- sentatives who were elected last-Tues- day will now begin serving their terms and sessions on January 3 of next year instead of having to wait until a year from this December. Professor Brown mentioned one mnrn nnint of c~~irriiaraqarci 4% .4 from 5 o'clock until the time of the lecture. Patrons are urged to obtain tickets as early as possibleand avoid congestion at the box office.! Events Today Business Administration Assembly: Mr. Henry H. Heimann, Executive Manager of the National Association of Credit Men, is to speak on the sub- ject "Recovery and the New Deal" at 10 a.m., in Room 231 Angell Hall. Students in the School of Business} Administration are expected to at- tend, and others interested are in- vited. Chemical Engineering Seminar: Mr. S. J. Meisenburg will be the speaker at the Seminar at 4 p.m. in Room 3201 E. Eng. Bldg., on the sub- ject, "The Influence of Small Con- centrations of Air in Steam on the Steam Film Coefficient of Heat Trans- fer in a Vertical Tube Forced Circu- lation Evaporator." Mechanical Engineers: The A.S. M.E. will hold a meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the Michigan Union. Professor Young, of the Forestry Department, will speak on Conservation. There will be important business to discuss. All mechanical engineers are urged to attend. v A.I.Ch.E.: Meeting, 7:30 p.m., Room 3201 East Eng. Bldg. Prof. A. H. White will speak on "Building Ma- terials Old and New." All interested are cordially invited to attend. a Publicity Committee of the League: Important meeting at 4:15 in the Undergraduate Offices of the League. National Student League meets at 8 p.m., Room 302 at the Union. It will take up organization, new elec- tions, and future plans. Members and all interested in joining are re- quested to attend. Wesley Players will have an im- portant meeting at Stalker Hall at 8 p.m. All members are urged to be present. Michigan Dames: The Book Group meets at the home of Mrs. William Clay, 505 N. Division, at 8 p.m. Coming Events Electrical Engineering Colloquium: The second of the series of colloquia, conducted by the faculty and the graduate students of the Department of Electrical Engineering, will be held Thursday, Nov. 15, in Room 153 W. Eng. Bldg. at 4:30 p.m. Mr. Shin L. Ma will speak on "Hyperbolic Vector Diagrams." In- terested seniors in the Department are welcome to attend. All graduates are expected to attend. Cercle Francais meeting Thursday evening at 7:45- in Room 408, Ro- mance Language Building. Refresh- ments will be served. Both new and old members are cordially invited to attend. Dues are payable at this time. Polonia Circle: Regular bi-weekly the earth began to spring back in itsI normal position, and is continuing to do so. In concluding, Stanley said, "I might even state a geological fore- cast. As the land continues to rise at Buffalo, at the outlet of Lake Erie, the Lake Erie waters will grad- ually back up the Detroit River. If the uplift continues at its presentl rate for 400 years, which is probable, Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair will become one. There will cease to be any current in the Detroit River, and freighters might go equally fast in either direction. In 20I0 years, there{ would no longer be a St. Clair River, for Lake Erie and Lake St. Clair1 would be united with Lake Huron at one level. If the regulating works at the Chicago drainage canal were left to decay, at about this same time, 2000 years hence, the Great Lakes would probably be draining to the Mississippi; outflow at Buffalo would be discontinued and Niagara Falls would run practically dry." Twenty Years Ago From the Daily files of November 14, 1914 {Continued from Page 1)} that several New England voters thought of running John Quincy Adams for vice-president in the 1820 f election in order to show their confi- dence in him and to keep his name in the public mind until the next pres- idential election. Adams declined the nomination because, as the Plumer correspondence shows, he was afraid moreUpoiozi1iic '1 ne.re iLs of the effect his running against Dan- of the election show that the Demo- iel D. Thompkins of New York might crats are assured of control of the have on the voters of that state. Senate for at least four years since Plumer~, although he respected Adams' only one thiird of the Senate is sub- wsesnth estildthougtject to election every two years and that his name should be connected the Democratic majority is so large wththe h lect souldbeso e ctedothat the Republicans cannot hope to wicast his votiorin some way,0resgain control before 1938 at the ident - the single vote which Mon- earl . roe failed to receive. Over-confident Democrats may take OPERA REHEARSALS a note of warning, thinks Professor Members of the Union Opera Brown, from this parallel situation, Cast are requested to report today because, as it turned out, Adams was at the following times and places elected president in 1824 although of meeting: there were so many candidates in the Group III and IV -4 p.m., Lit- field that he had to rely on a tle Ballroom. "lame duck" House of Representatives Group II - 4:45 p.m.; Room 305. to get the office. The era of good Promptness is desired. feeling which existed then and appar- ently exists now soon gave way to PET BEAR KILLS OWNER, 67 a period of intense strife within the party, according to Professor Brown. SAN ANGELO, Tex., Nov. 13. - (P) Another significant item, Profes- -- W. Tom Brown, 67 years old, was sor Brown said, is that the voters of clawed and bitten to death by a three- Nebraska adopted the amendment year-old pet bear at his filling a s% Pi Tau Pi Sigma meeting at 7:30 meeting Thursday., Nov. 15, Michigan p.m. with the initiates at the R.O.T.C. League, 7:30 p.m. All students of Pol- Drill Hall. Uniforms requested. ish ancestry are invited to attend. Alpha Nu meets at 7:30 p.m. sharp, in the Alpha Nu room, fourth floor Angell Hall. The final debate in the first round of the pledge debate series will be held on the subject, Resolved, That the Legislature of the State of Michigan should reorganize countiesI of the state into substantially larger' units. After the debate an open forum discussion of the subject will be held. Education Clubs Dr. Purdom will speak at an open meeting of the Edu-! cation Club, on "How To Get a Job," in Room 2431 in the University Ele- mentary School at 7:30 p.m. An open discussion will follow the speech. Interpretive Arts Society: The pro- gram for tonight will begin at 7:15 and will be over in time for the lec- ture by Stuart Chase. The meeting; place is Room 302, Mason Hall. The Matinees 30c Nights 40 Cosmopolitan Club: Lecture by Dr. J. T. Sunderland on "Contributions of East to Our Culture," Nov. 17, Lane Hall, 8 p.m. A Scavenger Hunt is to be given at Stalker Hall Friday evening, Nov. 16. Groups will leave the hall in quest of loot at 8:30. Be sure to join in this fun. . Michigan Dames: The Music Group will meet Thursday, 8 p.m., at the home of Mrs. R. C. Hussey, 595 River- view. Music of the South will make up the program. GIRL UNCONSCIOUS 17 DAYS SPRING LAKE, Nov. 13.- (P) - Bernice Start, 17 years old, had been unconscious for 17 days Tuesday. She was struck by a hit-run driver's car. Her condition is still critical. Motion pictures of the Harvard and Pennsylvania games, together with a novel variation in the program in the shape of "talking movies," will be given soon in Hill Auditorium by the Varsity Band in the hopes of raising funds to purchase new overcoats. President Harry B. Hutchins has received complaints from the builders of the new women's dormitory to the effect that students have made a practice of removing the lanterns placed as warning lights. Cornell's football team arrived in Detroit today with every man on the squad in the best of shape for the clash with the Wolverines tomorrow. The team will practice at the Detroit Country Club all morning and then depart for Ann Arbor. According to statistics sent to the Michigan Alumnus, Michigan has 32 men in the 63rd Congress while Har- vard had only 20 alumni representa- tives. Investigation of the campus demand for the re-instatement of the Junior Hop yesterday showed that the matter has not yet been actively considered. providing for a unicameral legisla- ture, an amendment proposed by Sen. George Norris (Rep., Neb.). The amendment was carried to success in spite of the opposition of leaders of both major parties. Another result of the election re- bounds to the credit of Senator Nor- ris, Professor Brown said. The elec- TODAY - THURSDAY DOUBLE FEATURE GEO. BANCROFT in "ELMER AND ELSI E" GLENDA FARRELL in "Merry Wives of Reno' tion on Love Oak Creek. B sETTER POSITION'S for the -BETTER TRAINED 20th Year Hamilton Business College State and William Streets Phone 7831 WEEK DAYS 15c till 6 25c after 6 I Sundays, Holidays 25c Matinee & Night Vi MICHIGAN 0 m: m 1 _, Matinees 30c Nights 40c * ENDS TONIGHT tant and welfare officer for the Amer- ican Legion, today won the first round Aeronautical Engineers' Division in his fight to have set aside a Federal A.S.M.E.: Those definitely going to Court conviction of conspiracy to de- Selfridge Field Saturday, Nov. 17, fraud the government through sale of please sign the list on the bulletin surplus Army and Navy goods sent to board of the Aero Dept. in the East Michigan for distribution to the needy. Eng. Building. The list is to be taken Every Day 15c to 6 ESTIC a0 )c STARTING TODAY r 2 ' A, VAST PAN~tM F BARBARCB.1V QR(C BS.' 25c after 6 P.M. WHITNEY ____Now TWO FEATURES Vera Brown's "Redhead" Grace Bradley Bruce Cabot and Helen Hayes- gives an outstanding performance in Sir James Barrie's renowned play WHAT [VERY WOMAN MOWS "" "PILGRIM DAYS" Novelty PAUL TOMPKINS PARAMOUNT NEWS 00 Brian Aherne Madge Evains ii "TII SCfkLT UMPESS" A Paramount Picture with * * 7*k* TOMORROW Stage and Screen Aglow ! ! I ** RUSSIAN REVELS A A chin inc in r-dnri E R scin R ll ,+ a I I