PAGE, TWO TII1 MTCTTGA N1IiAI[r . ............ . . . . . ......... . ...... ... ... .. . . .... Court Orders Hayden Jailed; Bail Withheld Rapp Says Trial May Not Reach Docket Until May Session Of Court [Continued from Page 1) the first I knew of the hold-up was when they shouted 'This is a stick- up.' Then one of them came over and covered me." "Do you see the one who covered you in this court room?" Prosecutor Rapp asked. "That is the man right there," Conlin replied, pointing at Padgett. Conlin further testified that he was sitting behind a clothes case at the time that the actual shooting took place ,and could not °see over its top Who actually fired the gun or guns. "There were two shots," he asserted. "I ain't smart enough," Padgett stated when Judge Payne asked him if he wished to question Conlin. "I can't see why a man would deliberate- ly lie-"he continued, when Judge Payne interupted him and reiterated his warning that Padgett must con- fine himself to asking questions alone. During Wetherbee's graphic de- scription of the events that took place, Padgett listened intently, elbows rest- ing on the table and his hands clasped beneath his chin. "Padgett," Wetherbee testified, "started walking toward the door as if ,he were a customer walking out. When he got between Stang and the door, he turned around and stuck his gun in Stang's back. The big fellow took his gun and started for the door. Apparently he jumped for them, and the next time I saw him he was ly- ing on the floor beneath the tie table." Wetherbee stated that he was busy dialing the police station when the shooting occurred and was not an eye-witness. He also related how he had walked up to Stang and warned him at the risk of his own life. "I'll shoot your guts out if you let on," he quoted Padgett as saying when he (Wetherbee) walked up to Stang. 'My duty is obvious and easy," Judge Payne said as he ordered Pad- gett bound over. "There was suf- ficient evidence given to show that a crime had been committed and that there is probable cause for suspect- ing the respondent. That is all that Is necessary." Five Killed When Speeding Train Crushes Automobile --Associated Press Five persons, returning to their hemes in Lansing, Mich., from a church convention, were killed their automobile was crushed by a speeding Grand Trunk pacstngcr train at Haslett, nearby village. girls waiting at the crossing for the train to pass were struck by flying debris. Photo. when Two Debate Squad Announced For Big Ten Meet Coach Secord Is Preparing Two Teams For Western Conference Tournament Michigan's representatives in the Western Conference Debating Tour- nament, to be held April 3 and 4 in Chicago, were announced yesterday by Arthur E. Secord, Varsity debating coach. The squad making the trip to Chicago is divided into a negative team consisting of Harry Sniderman, '38, Clifford Christenson, '37, and Col- lin Brooks, '37; and the affirmative team of Don Mayfield, '37, William Centner, '38 and Eugene Gressman, '38. Huron River Once As Large As Ohio, States Prof. Leverett Carried Glacial Waters In its edge to the southward. The River Deep Valley Soithwa1 hjoined this stream at the point where . y. . . .the Fairview Cemetery now stands, ,ro Mississippi River made a sweep through the city by Ferry Field and entered the Raisin By PROF. FRANK S. LEVERETT and Lake Maumee at Tecumseh. This is the first of a series of ar- From this lake its waters escaped ticles on the Huron River valley. writ- through the Fort Wayne outlet into ten by members of the University fac- the Wabash and the Ohio. ulty for a guide booklet to the Huron River. Other articles will appear at As the ice continued to melt, Lake a later date. Maumee extended northward along The story of the Huron is the tale the face of the glacier beyond Ypsi- of a young and vagabond river that lanti with a branch running up to has wandered about over its territory Ann Arbor. Here the Huron built a as few other rivers have ever done. delta at the head of the estuary. The It was less than 40,000 years ago terrace along the Ann Arbor Rail- that the stream took its rise at the road west from the Pontiac Road was edge of the ice cap which then cov- made at this time. In Ypsilanti ered the State of Michigan except for Lake Maumee formed the bar on an irregular strip running up through which the Water Tower now stands uc II i LIr ffh t a nfnI) wiuicrich Union Lecture To Be Offered By Prof. Ford Economist To Base Talk On Federal Government Tax Measures Prof. Robert Ford of the economics department will speak on "Federal Taxation" at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the fifth of the Sunday lecture series sponsored by the Union. A research investigator for the New York State Tax Commission and an agricultural economist for the United States Department of Agriculture in 1933, Professor Ford is very well qualified to speak on the subject of taxation, Union officials declared. "The subject should prove most in- teresting both to the general public and to students, in view of the great discussion concerning taxes," Rush Bowman, '37, committeeman in charge of the lecture series stated last night, "Since the processing tax has been declared unconstitutional, one of the greatest problems of Congress has been in trying to find suitable mea- sures for raising revenue," Bowman pointed out. The talk by Professor Ford will deal with the proposed new measure and with other possible plans for raising money to pay for the vast governmental expenditures. Professor Ford will also give a val- uation of the neCw tax proposals and will discuss the controversial corpora- tion surplus tax provision. Comparatively new to the Universi- ty faculty, first being appointed in 1934, Professor Ford has long been interested in taxation and has made that subject his special field for re- search. He was an instructor in Co- lumbia University until 1933, receiv- ing his doctorate in that year. Since coming to Michigan he has served on the economics faculty and has been research investigator in the Bureau of Reference and Research in Gov- ernment. BOAT BUILDER DIES WAYYOON LAKE, March 27.-(A) - Walter Master, builder of fast boats and cruisers for summer vis- itors, died Thursday. down to and into the lake. The wa- ter now found escape through Lake Erie out along the Ontario ice cap I by Syracuse and down the Mohawk and the Hudson to the Atlantic. The outlet from Lake Erie must have been lower then than now for the waters were drawn to a much lower level than the present, and the Huron built a delta many miles out into Lake Erie. About eighteen thousand years ago, it is estimated, the ice was so far melted out of the Ontario basin that the waters began to flow over Niagara Falls and down the St. Lawrence. The Huron has thus in succession discharged its waters into the Kan- kakee, the Wabash, the Grand, into1 Lake Erie and the Hudson, and into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The only rock outcrops in the bed or bluffs of the river are in the vicinity of Flat Rock and Rockwood, near the mouth. In places the river is at a level of 150 to 200 feet above its rock bed. Classified Directory FOR RENT-ROOMS CLASSIFIED FURNISHED apartment availabl ADVERTISINGApr 1st, June 15th. For appoint- Place advertisements with Classified 413 Idvertising Department. Phone 2-1214. ...................._. The classified columns close at five MODERN apartment with sleeping >clock previous to day of insertion. Box numbers may be secured at no porch for rent through the summer. extra charge. Phone 2-2806402 Cash in advance Ic per reading line (on basis of five average words to --- line) for one or two insertions. loo FOR RENT: Five-room housekeeping per reading line for three or more apartment with yard and basement Insertions. Minimum 3 lines per in- sertion. Call 6809. 406 reiephone rate --15c per reading line for two or more insertions. Minimum FOR RENT: Suite with overstuffed three lines per insertion. 10% discount if paid within ten days furniture, private bath and shower from the date of last insertion. Also single room. Cross ventila- By contract, per line -2 lines daily, Alosgero.Cos etia one month ......................:8c tion. shower bath. Phone 8544 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months........e422 E. Washington. 2 lines daily, college year......7c 4 lines E.O.D., 2 months........8c 100 lines usedaas desired .. .. c FOR RENT: One double, one singl 300 lines used as desired .. .8 room. Comfortable, clean, well 1,000 lines used as desired........7 2.000 lines used as desired ........6 furnished. 1117 Forest. Call 3909 The above rates are per reading line 405 based on eight reading lines per inch [onic type, upper and lower case. Add 5c per line to above rates for all capital LOST AND FOUND letters. Add 6c per line to above for - ---- bold face, upper and lower case. Add LOST: Black Cocker Spaniel. Sturd- 10c per line to above rates for bold face iybulwtefrp s.Rwr capital letters. ily built, white forepaws. Rewar The above rates are for 7% point offered, 501 Onondaga St. 6890. type. 412 NOTICES~ LOST: Small diamond in ring. Prob- MAC'S TAXI-4289. Try our em- ably in Library or League or be- cient service. All new cabs. 3x tweei. Call 194 Jordan. 407 EYES examined, best glasses made at LOST: Women's oxford glasses lowest prices. Oculist, U. of M. Finder please call D-42 Lawyer graduate, 44 years practice. 549 Club. 401 Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x _____..___._ NOTICE: We clean, upholster, repair and refinish furniture. Phone 8105. A. A. Stuhlman. 15x SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll - NOW buy ofd and new suits and over- coats for $3 to $20. Also highest prices for saxophones and typewrit- ers. Don't sell before you see Sam. Phone for appointments. 2-3640. 20x LAUNDRY LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned Careful work at low price. Ix BIG NEW French Fellowship THRILL! Awarded To Prator 7 Clifford H. Prator, a Teaching Fellow in the French department oft the University, was awiarded an American Field Service Fellowship Romance! Drama! for 1936-37, it was announced recent- Mystery! A truly ly. Mr. Prator is the second graduate great picture! student from the Department of Ro- LIO mance Languages to win this much coveted award within the past three years. MAUREENO'SULLIVAN It was stated that there are now ERICLINDEN only three Field Service Fellowships Dudley Digges Spring Byington in French for the entire country. Mr. Charley Grapewin- Henry Wadswort Prator will spend most of the year in Directed by Richard Thorpe study in France where through the AMetigokdgnIHayrpcTrnU facilities of the libraries and archives \ Also he hopes to compete his doctoral dis- JOE COOK in "PENNYWISE" sertation. "TIMBER GIANTS" Novelty SUNDAY - PRISON TRUSTIES STOP FIRE ROBERT MONTGOMERY JACKSON, March 27.-()-Two MYRNA LOY in trusty inmates of Southern Michigan "Petticoat Fever" state prison plowed furrows with a tractor Thursday around the farm -_ _ _ _--- home of Theron Dunn, four miles north of here ,to save it from a spreading marsh fire. In a letter to prison officials, Fire Chief Ernest C. Daunter praised the two trusties, Peter Perrigo and Peter Podah. n~- T ,r-," .U I EVENING RADIO PROGRAMS 6:00--WJR Musical Moments. WWJ Ty Tyson. 6:15-WJR News of Youth. WWJ Dinner Music. CKLW Joe Gentile. WXYZ Walter Remson. 6:30-WJR Musicale. WWJPress-Radio; Soloist. WXYZ Day in Review. CKLW Rhythm Ramblings. 6:45-WWJ Religion in the News. WJR Musical Masters. WXYZ Don Orlando. CKLW Old Bill. 7:0O-WJRYou Shall Have Music. WWJ Concert Orchestra. WXYZ Town Talk. CKLW Will Osborne's Music. 7 :15-WWJ Popeye the Sailor. WXYZ Lady in Blue. 7:30-WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Musical Moments. CKLW Serenade. 7:45-WXYZ Sandlotters. WWJ Hampton Singers. CKLW Washington Merry-Go-Round. 8:00-WJR "Ziegfeld Follies of the Air." WWJ "Your Hit Parade." WXYZ Larry b'unk's Music. CKLW Bob Albright. 8:15-WXYZ Boston Symphony. 8:30-CKLW Cincinnati Symphony. 9:00-WJR Nino Martini: Andre Kostel- anetz' Music. WWJ Jan Peerce: Rubinoff's Music. 9:15-WXYZ Henry Biagini's music. 9:30-WJR Stoopnagle and Budd. WWJ Al Jolson. WXYZ Barn Dance. 10:00-WJR California Melodies. 10:30-WWJ Celebrity Night. WJR "Racket Expose." WXYZ 400 Club. CKLW Scotch Varieties. 11:OQ--WWJ Russ Lyon's Music. WJR Smelt Run. CKLW Freddie Martin's Music. WXYZ Baker Twins. 11:15-WXYZ Lowry Clark's Music. CKLW Kay Kyser's Music. 11:30--WJR Ozzie Nelson's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Glen Gray's Music. CKLW Shadows on the Clock. 12:00--WJR Barney Rapp's Music. WWJ Dance Music. WXYZ Carefree Carnival. CKLW Basil Foreen's Music, 12:30-WJR Bernie Cummin's Music, CKLW Johnny Johnson's Music. WXYZ Griff Williams' Music. 1:00-CKLW Jack Hylton's Music. 1:30-CKLW DeMarco's Music. 2:00-CKLW Ted Weems' Music. kl The question to be used in the Big thriver s tse Ten tournament is the same one that river has its source, has been the subject of numerous It followed its present channel as practice debates for the past two far as Base Line Lake, but there it weeks, namely, "Resolved: That Con- found its course to the southward gress Should Be Empowered to Over- blocked by the ice sheet and turned ride by a Two-Thirds Vote, Decisions westward, flowing across the present of the Supreme Court Declaring Acts beds of the Grand, Kalamazoo and of Congress Unconstitutional." St. Joseph Rivers to discharge into Continuing their schedule of prac- the Kankakee and thence into the tice debates in preparation for the Mississippi. As the stream was at Tournament, the squad will debate in this time fed by glaciers on three two dual meets Monday in Detroit sides which must have been melting with the University of Detroit and rapidly, it became a mighty river Wayne University, Mr. Secord an- nearly as large as the Ohio, as the nounced. Tuesday night another shores of its old channel indicate. practice debate will be held with Al- As the ice melted to the south and! bion College, in which the two teams east, the river turned'southward in- will meet Albion, on both the nega- to its present channel and excavated tive and affirmative side of the Con- a wide valley to Dexter where it made gress-Supreme Court question. a detour to the south and east and; After returning from the Chicago reentered the present valley below meet, the team will hold its last de- Delhi. The western front of the gla- bate of the season Monday, April 6 cier was now at Ann Arbor, leaving with Rutgers College in the Lydia a moraine near the Pontiac Road, Mendelssohn Theatre. and a broad stream was flowing along Continuous 1:30 - 11 P.M. aFeture 1:00 - 3:12 - 5:18 - 7:30 - 9:42 STARTING TODAY! A GRAND SHOW, 15c to 6 -- 25c after 6 THE PICTURE OF PIC'ITU ES with its beach running through High- land Cemetery. Lake Maumee ultimately extended northward around the Thumb into the Saginaw Valley From thence its waters were discharged through the Grand River Valley and connections into Lake Chicago, which was the lower end of what is now Lake Mich- igan, whence the waters of the Huron find their way again into the Missis- sippi. The large lake of the Erie Basin, Lake Whittlesey, now covered the lower reaches of the Huron and formed a strong beach just below Ypsilanti with a delta extending up through the present site of the city, forming the terrace on which the business section west of the river stands. As the ice melted from the Erie ba- sin and the waters flowed eastward, the mouth of the Huron moved east- ward with the receding waters form- ing a series of deltas from Belleville Think a Minute!I ver oy's Radn9The k~ead_ .. w .. Ads I, t 1 9 iYl yb ~ A ~ 1 C t S I 2 qtr r-c ,~r ',-.rci_ Section b ,,s brought uy, ,c t nmithW'9 o0 r 1(vi C1 1 .il i S. YLYU REULnw is the time Adcolumn. Want~-. Religious Activities FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH State and Washington Streets MINISTERS: CHARLES W. BRASHARES and L. LaVERNE FINCH Music: Achilles Taliaferro Sermon - "CHRIST'S WORLD" HILLEL FOUNDATION Corner East University and Oakland Dr. Bernard Heller, Director 8 I'M. -- Sunday venng Forum. Dr. Heller will speak on the "PLIGHT OF THE POLISH JEW" FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Mlasoni Templ , k .327 Sonth Youri h Miv-nisters: William P. nLenon and Ni Nrm umW. Kunkl lel . leader. Wia ItIs I(lie Most AggrPesi \e Tingin t he Spiritual Life?" 1:5 A.M - .-Serm on b Dr Toemon (! (F a c a cAr jgtse jtt-' 4 ner tea on titler i n otilY ga 7.1714 The ichiga" DailY Wf \NT- lDEPARTMENT 1~ 11 III Il III