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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

September 28, 1937 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1937-09-28

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

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

CIO CALLS STRIKE I~ Di
PORT HURON, Sept. 27.-()-A 1)1. lanchard
Committee for Industrial Organiza-
ticn Union called a strike at the NotedBio ist
Mueller Brass Co. today shortly after
the firm awarded sole bargaining;
rights to American Federation of Stricken At 49
Labor unions.
Read The Daily Classified Ads Authority On Snakes Dies1
Of Illness Contracted At
Summer Camp
Quiet services were held in St. An-
drew's Episcopal Church last Fri-
BALLROOM day for the late Prof. Frank M.
Blanchard, high-ranking herbatoilo-
n gist of the zoology department. Thej
Rev. Henry Lewis officiated.
A member of the University staff
since 1919, Professor Blanchard is1
widely known for his many articles
PUBLIC CLASS in his field of research including a!
series of "The Life History of the
Wednesdays Snakes" and a "Key to the Snakes, of
7 till 8 p.m. United States, Canada, and lower
\ California."
CProfessor Blanchard was taken ill
while at the University Biological
f Station in Cheboygan county, Mich-
C L A S S E S igan, while working on a revision of
R ESUMEDhis manual on snakes published in
E ME1925.
September 29 Born in Stoneham, Mass., on Dec.
19, 1888, he graduated from Tufts
College in 1913. After receiving his
Doctor's degree from the University
of Michigan in 1919, he taught at
.x the Massachusetts Agricultural Col-
RO Y H O Y ER lege and worked in the division of
R ~. in UT E reptiles at the National Museum in
Washington, D. C.
STUDIO Mrs. Blanchard who survives her
3 NICKELS ARCADE husband is assistant director of the
University Botanical Gardens. Their
children, Dorothy, Grace, Eleanor
--- - _-- and Frank, Jr. also survive.
hi , III

Path Of Death In China Sky Shown

Phi Sigma Delia Leads all sororities was: Alpha Delta Pi,
111182.4; Pi Beta Phi, 81.9; Gamma Phip
Fraternity Scholarship Beta, 80.2; Alpha Chi Omega, 80.2;
Delta Gamma, 79.9; Delta Delta Del-
(Continued from Page 1) ta, 79.4; Collegiate Sorosis, 79.3;
Mu, 80.3; Trigon, 79.9; Zeta Beta Kappa Kappa Gamma, 78.8; Kappa
Tau, 79.5; Phi Epsilon Pi, 79.4; Phi; Delta, 78.9; Zeta Tau Alpha, Chi'
Beta Delta, 79.1; Alpha Lambda, 78.9: Omega, 77.9; Alpha Epsilon Phi, 77.4;
Kappa Alpha Theta, 77.3: Alpha Xi
Triangle, 78.9; Chi Phi, 78.2; Pi Delta, 76.8; Alpha Omicron Pi, 76.5;
Lambda Phi, 77.9; Sigma Phi, 77.4; Alphi Phi, 76.2; Phi Sigma Sigma
Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa Tau, 77.0; Al- 75.1; Alpha Gamma Delta, 74.7.
pha Kappa Lambda, 76.7; Phi Sig- ----
ma Kappa, 76.6; Alpha Delta Phi,
76.1; Chi Psi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, A Large and Select St
76.0; Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Gamma
Delta, 75.7. W aterran F<
Alpha Tau Omega, Acacia, 75.6;
Kappa Sigma, 75.5; Theta Delta Chi,
75.3; Theta Xi, 75.0; Sigma Phi Ep- And Pencils in
silon, Delta Tau Delta, Beta Theta
Pi, 74.9; Hermitage, 74.6; Phi Delta Range 4
Theta, 74.4; Delta Kappa Epsilon,
74.3; Delta Upsilon, 74.0; Kappa Del-
ta Rho, 73.7; Alpha Sigma Phi, 73.6; * Vo* IV
Theta Chi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Phi 314 SOUT]
Kappa Psi, 73.5; Psi Upsilon, Sigma3
Alpha Epsilon, 73.4; Sigma Chi, 72.4;
Zeta Psi, 71.2.
The general scholastic average of MA R I LYN
FISHOW'S WATCH
'JEW E LDRY R ETPA IR DMR
347 Maynard Cor. william
Watch Crystals 35c FROCKS

. "i

A Japanese aviator met death when his plane was shot down during
an aerial duel over Shanghai, crashing into flames with a load of
bombs. Smoke from the plane is shown here trailing dpwnward across
the sky; the plane itself is hidden behind the cloud. This picture
was rushed to the United States by transpacific plane.

I

111

A

COlonial Inn
DINING ROOMS
303 North Division Telephone 8876
OPEN WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29
WEEK DAYS 5:30 to 7:30 SUNDAY 12:30 to 2:30
AFTERNOON TEAS
Luncheons and Afternoon Bridge by Appointment Only

III

.111

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Regents Accept
$14,000 Gifts,I
5 Resignations
(Continued from Page 1)
Miller will be placed in the Chinese
Study Endowment Fund.
Faculty resignations included Dr.
Egbert R. Isbell, assistant editor of
the University Press and associate
editor of the University of Michigan
Encyclopedia. He will go to the
Michigan State Normal College as as-
sociate professor of history.
Donovan H. Young resigned as as-
sistant professor of engineering me-
chanics to go to Stanford University,
and he will be replaced by Dr. Igna-
tius A. Woktaszak, formerly assistant
professor of applied mechanics at the
Kansas State Teachers' College.
Theodore Hornberger resigned as
assistant professor of English to go
to the University of Texas, and Lee R.
Schoermann resigned his position as
professor of wild land utilization to
go to Michigan State College.I
Walter L. Menge has resigned as
associate professor of mathematics to
go to the Lincoln Life Insurance Co.
of Fort Wayne, Ind., as associate ac-
tuary.
One faculty appointment and one
advancement were made at the meet-
ing. Russel A. Smith, J.D. was
named assistant professor of law. He
is a University graduate and was,
formerly with Craybath, de Gers-
dorff, Swaine and Wood of New York
City. Herbert Francis Tagger, form-
erly assistant professor of accounting
and director of the bureau of business
research, was appointed associate
professor of accounting.
The entire library of the late Prof.
Robert M. Wenley of the philosophy
department was presented to the
General Library by his children, and
72 special fossil formanifera were pre-
rented to the Museum of Paleontol-
ogy by the Mexican Petroleum Co.
Tk

SLATER'S, Inc.
336 Sough State

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BUT IT STILL SOUNDS SWEET
Every fall when Michigan women return to Ann Arbor,
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DRSES
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