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April 09, 1936 - Image 2

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1936-04-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

I.'

TTTI~ MTIIA1I~N JIAItTY

THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1936

LATE
WIRE
NEWS

When Is River Mouth? Answer
May Decide Boundary Dispute

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

Japanese Army Hits
Soviet War Reports
TOKYO, April 9.-(Thursday)-
-(P)-The Japanese army in
Manchoukuo, in a communique
today, declared Mongolian reports
of a battle which occurred March
31 were pure propaganda and
falsification of facts.
Soviet dispatches from Ulan
Bator, Outer Mongolia, to Mos-
cow, on April 2 'said the battle,
which lasted all of March 31 and
until daybreak April 1, occurred
on. Mongolian soil and that the
Japlanese and Manchoukuoans
were pushed back with heavy
losses.

That Is Question In State's
Contest With Minnesota,
VanderVeldeExplains
[Continued from Page 1)
cerned a river. The original boundary
was from Lac Vieux Desert north-
westerly to the source of the Mon-
treal River on the west and the source
of the Menominee River on the East.
But the Montreal River has an east
and a west branch. Michigan long
claimed that it was the west branch
referred to in the Treaty of 1873, a
claim which would have given her
235,000 acres or 330 square miles of
additional land, valuable for its min-
eral content. Wisconsin, however,
held that it was the east branch the
treaty meant.
In 1919, Governor Albert Sleeper
appointed a boundary commission to
build a case for Michigan, but by the
time the litigation reached the Su-
preme Court of the United States for
a decision in 1925, all three members
of the commission had died. The
high court appointed a Federal boun-
dary commission to settle the dispute,
and recently it handed down a de-
cision upholding the commission's de-
cision, which gave a few islands in
Green Bay to Michigan.
Michigan's history might well be
one of boundary disputes, for one of
the things the State is famed for is
her old argument with Ohio, which
precipitated a "war" in which the
only casualty was a horse. In that
dispute, Professor VanderVelde ex-
plained, the argument hinged on the
validity of a boundary line from the
southern-most point of Lake Michi-
gan to the northern-most point of
Maumee Bay, in Lake Erie. Michi-

Senator Borah
Attacks DuPonts

PEORIA, III., April 8.- -P)
The Duponts, Delaware indus-
trialists, and two oil companies
shar-ed the fire of Senator Wil-
liam E. Borah tonight as the Ida-
ho Republican opened a down-
state Illinois stumping tour for
primary Presidential votes.
His shots were delivered before
a capacity audience in the Ma-
jestic Theatre here. Said Borah:
"One of the Dupont dynasty,
which has been builded for 100
years by exploiting the common
people, said the other day that I
was a dangerous man.
"He' said he would take any-
body but me for President.
"Thank God I have not lived
in vain, when I can convince
those men and the Standard and
Sun Oil companies that they
cannot control me if I should be-
come President."
The massemeeting audiience
hailed this with long applause.
EVElNING RADIO
PROGRAMS

6:00-WJR Musical Moments.
WWJ Ty Tyson.
WXYZ' Rhythm Time.
CKLW Omar.
6:15-WNJR News of Youth.
WXYZ Contrasts in Music.
WWJ Dinner Music.
CKLW Joe Gentile.
6:30-WJR Duncan Moore.
WWJ Newscast.
WXYZ Day in Review.
CKLW Rhythm Ramblings.
6:45-WJR Strange as It Seems.
WWJ Musical Moments.
WXYZ Lowell Thomas.
CKLW Song Recital.
7:40-WJR Myrt and Marge.
WWJ Amos and Andy.
WXYZ Easy Aces.
CKLW Phil Marley's Music.
7:15-WJR Jimmie Allen.
WWJ Human Side of News.
WXYZ Alice Sheldon.
7 :30-WJR Kate Smith.
WWJ Evening Melodies.
WXYZ Musical Moments.
CKLW Variety Revue.
7:45-WJR Boake Carter.
WWJ To Be Announced.
WXYZ Red Horse Ranch.
8 :00-WJR Airshow: Alexander Gray:
Mark Warnow's Music.
WWJ Rudy Vallee's Music.
WGYZ Pittsburgh Symphony.
CKLW Gabriel Heatter.
8:15-CKLW Jack Hylton's Music.
8:30--WJR Gertrude Neisen and Harry
Richman.
WXYZ Merry-Go-Round.
CKLW Little Symphony.
8:45-WJR Musical Program.
9:00--WJR Walter O'Keefe:
Glen Gray's Music.
WWJ Captain Henry's Showboat.
WXYZ Death Valley Days.
CKLW On Review.
9:15-CKLW Melody Treasure Hunt.
9°:30-WJR Ed Wynn-Gulliver the
Traveler.
WXYZ Mellow Music.
CKLW Pop Concert.
9:45-WXYZ Murray Van
Wagoner,
i:00-WJR Horace Heidt's Bigadiers.
WWJ Bing Crosby: Jimmy
Dorsey's Music.
WXYZ Jubilee Singers.
CKLW Recital Hall.
i0:15-WXYZ Sammy Dibert's Music.
i0:30--WJR March of Time.
WXYZ Lowry Clark.
CKLW Jack Hyiton's Music.
10:45-WJR Dance Tunes.
WXYZ Larry Funk's Music.
11:00-WJR Bulletins.
WWJ Bureau of Missing Persons:
Dance Music.
WXYZ Baker Twins.
CKLW Freddy Martin's Music.
11:15-WJR Songs You Remember.
CKLW Kay Kyser's Music.
WXYZ Russ Morgan's Music.
1 :30-WWJ George Kavanagh's Music,
WXYZ Meredith Wilson's Music.
CKLW Ted Weems' Music.
11 :45-WJR "Solay" violinist,.
12 midnight - WJR Barney ,app's Music.
WWJ Dance Music.
WXYZ Paul Pendarvis' Music.
CKLW Orville Knapp's Music.
12:30-WXYZ Ed Fitzpat-ick's Music,
WJR Ozzie Nelson's Music.
CKLW Will Osborne s Music.
1:00-CKLW DeMarco's Music.

:New Graduate
School Will Be
Full Equipped
(Continued from Page 1)
and the other a capacity of 200, are!
provided for. These will be used,
especially for large meetings and na-
tional gatherings for the "presenta-
tion of papers of scholarly and sci-
entific character."
The largest of the halls, which
will be located on the first floor, will
be equipped for all types of projec-
tion work and acoustically construct-
ed, with the assistance of University
experts. The auditorium will be
of the hemi-cycle type, similar to that
in the Natural Science Building.
There will also be "less formal" '
rooms for conferences and discus-
sions. It is planned to have these
rooms much smaller, some with a ca-
pacity of but 25 students and others
with facilities for as many as 200 stu-
dents.
According to Dean Yoakum, spe-
cial roams will be included in the
building for those who are working
on a formal research task which is
financed by the income from the
Rackham fund.
As was previously stated, when
work on the building will begin is
as yet unknown. However, the con-
struction of the building will be done
by a private contractor, and the Uni-
versity building and grounds depart-
ment, although now aiding in the
building of a heat tunnel on the
ground will have little to do with the
actual construction of the building.
The architects, Smith, Hinchman,
and Grylls, of Detroit, have been sent
samples of the earth under the Rack-
ham building, so it is very probable
that exact plans will soon be released.
All the clearing of the ground for
the building has been done. The few
remaining need not be cleared off for
the actual construction to begin. Be-
cause of the lack of knowledge con-
cerning the actual appearance and
exact laying out of rooms it is highly
conjectural when the construction
will start in earnest. However, it is
very probable that by June 1 con-
struction will be under way.
Edward C. Pardon of the buildings
and grounds department stated that
no excavations can be made until
the plans have received approval of
the Rackham Fund committee and a
committee from the Graduate School.
Final plans, however, are now in
the hands of Dean Yoakum and are
being carefully considered.
__________

gan lost this dispute, he declared,
chiefly because Andrew Jackson, who
was president at the time, wanted
Ohio support for the candidacy of
Martin Van Buren, which he was
sponsoring.
Had Michigan won the argument,
Professor VanderVelde pointed out,
Toledo would have been in Michigan
rather than in Ohio. Michigan based
her claim, he said on the "fact" that
Lake Michigan's southern tip was
really lower than had originally been
supposed.
Multitudinous tomes have been
written on that boundary line, which
also involved Michigan in a dispute
with Indiana. Poor Michigan, what
a time she has had. But, success-
ful once, she may be successful again,
with the backing of the library of
Congress experts.
DAILY OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 1936
VOL. XLVI No. 136
Notices
Student Accounts: Your attention
is called to the following rule passed
by the Regents at their meeting of
Feb. 28, 1936:
"Students shall pay all accounts
due the University not later than the
last day of classes of each semester
or SummerdSession. Student loans
which fall due dur g any semester
or Summer Sessio which are not
paid or renewed are subject to this
regulation; however, student loans
not yet due are exempt. Any un-
paid accountsaat the close of busi-
ness on the last day of classes will
be reported to the Cashier of the
University, and
"(a) All academic 'credits will be
withheld, the grades for the semester
or Summer Session just completed
will not be released, and no tran-
scripts of credits will be issued,
"(b) Allstudents owing such ac-
counts will not be allowed to register
in any subsequent semester or Sum-
mer Session until payment has been
made."
S. W. Smith, Vice-President
and Secretary.
To the Members of the University
Council: The next meeting of the
University Council will be held on
Monday, April 20, 4:15 p.m., in Room
1009 Angell Hall.
Library Hours, April 11-20: During
the spring recess the General Library
will be open as usual from 7:45 a.m.
to 10:00 p.m. daily, with the excep-
tion of the Study Halls in the Library
building and the Graduate Reading
Rooms, which will be open only from
10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m.
The hours of opening of the De-
partmental Libraries will also be
10:00-12:00 a.m. and 2:00-4:00 p.m.
Sunday service will be discontinued
during this period.
Wm. W. Bishop, Librarian.
The Lost and Found Department in
the Business Office, Room 3, Uni-
versity Hall, has lots of gloves, scarfs,
hats, pens, pencils, and boks that
(Continued on Page 4)
NOW
Double Feature Bill
Stan LAUREL
Oliver HARDY
"The Bohemian Girl"
JANE WITHERS

""PADDY O'DAY"
PARAMOUNT NEWS

NOTICESI
MAC'S TAXI-4289. Try our effi-
cient service. All new cabs. 3x
STATIONERY: PrInted with you
name and address. 100 sheets. 100
.,evelopes.$1.00. Many styles.
Craft Press, 305 Maynard. 9x
ONE THIRD OFF on all fur work.
E. L. Greenbaum, 448 Spring Street.
Phone 9625. 14x
BOARD job for boy renting room,
yery reasonable. Call 4039. Box 119
430
NOTICE: We clean, upholster, repair
and refinish furniture. Phone 8105.
A. A. Stuhlman. 15x
Grant 'Charter
To Future War
Veterans Here
(Continued from Page-)
igan students directly after Spring
Vacation. The manifesto states, in
brief, that the Veterans of Future
Wars, convinced that this country will
be engaged in war within the next
three decades, demand that the gov-
ernment agree to pay to the members
of the organization a bonus of $1,000,
payable on June 1, 1965, but to be
paid immediately to all male citizens
between the ages of 18 and 36, so
that they may enjoy the bonus now 1
and not risk losing it through death
in the next war.
The manifesto also creates the
Home Fire Division of the Veterans'
of Future Wars, open to all mothers
and future mothers of inaie children,
and to future wives of Veterans of
Future Wars. The purpose of this or-
ganization, as stated in the mani-
festo, is to obtain for its members a
trip to Europe to view the future
battlefields of theii future sons, and
to obtain for future wives a pension
of $50 a month for the remainder
of their lives.

.A'

EYES examined, best glasses made at
lowest prices. Oculist, U. of M.
graduate, 44 years practice. 549
Packard. Phone 2-1866. 13x
SELL YOUR OLD CLOTHES: We'll
buy old 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.
lox
WANTED
WANTED: Amateur movie camera, 16
mm. film. Write Box 118, stating
make, year, and condition imme-
diately. 428
WANTED Canoes for week-ends of
April 25 and 26. Call A. Kuesel.
Phone 7756 or A. Hartsig, Phone
5321. 427

LAUNDRY
LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sax darned
Careful work at low price. Ix
- -I- - - - - _ _
ENGLISH HOUSE PARTY
July 11 - Aug. 30
Through Keller Travel Bureau
of New York City
Call BABCOCK - 5602
Thursday and Friday Only

TEN-YEAR-OLD KILLED
DETROIT, April 8.-yPi)-Richard.
Little, 10, was killed instantly today
when a horse kicked him at his farm
home near Flat Rock, Mich.
FOR RENT
Two miles from Campus, charm-
ing modern bungalow on Pontiac
Road overlooking Huron River
Valley. Large living room, field
stone fireplace, screened porch, 3-
car garage. 2 acres of fruit trees,
flowers, garden and lawn. Avail-
able May 1st. Long lease if de-
sired. $50 per month. Oril Fer-
guson. 721 Church St. Phone
22839.

Continuous 1:30. 11 p.m.
15c to 6 - 25c after 6
NOW
RICHARD DIX
"TRANSATLANTIC
TUNNEL"
and
NEIL HAMILTON
"MUTINY AHEAD"
Extra
COLOR CARTOON
"ALI BABA"
---____ and --___
LATEST UNIVERSAL NEWS

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