1'8E 3UNlMER MIC SIGAN IAiLY Y + y T; c -.- . iP_ . S E IC IArAIYFIA. JUL _.. 1931 Daily Of ficial Bulletin Publication in the Bulletin Is constructive notice to all members I the University. Copy received at the office of the Dean of the ummer Session until 3:30, excepting Sundays. 11:30 a.m. Saturday. HAWKS SETS SPEED RECORD TO HAVANA Recent Seniors Regret Fraternity Life, Lack of Plan, Bad Work, Report Shows We have all makes Remington, Royal, Corona, Underwood !T. VOLUME XI FRIDAY, JULY .24, 1931 NUMBER 22' U. '1 Excursion No. 7: General Motors Proving Ground will be visited Saturday morning, July 25. The extensive road and laboratory facilities of the General Motors Corporation will be inspected under the guidance of plant engineers. The party leaves in special busses from in front of Angell Hall at 8 a.m. Round Trip, $1.00. Tickets must be secured in1 room 9, University Hall, before Friday, July 24, 5 p.m. Carlton F. Wells Graduate School: Students enrolled in the Graduate School will not .be permitted to drop courses after Saturday, July 25. A course is not officially dropped until it is reported in the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell hall. Students who have changed their elections since submitting elec- tion cards should call this week at the office of the Graduate School, 1014 Angell hall. This involves the dropping and adding of courses, the substitution of one course for another, as well as the change of in- structors. G. Carl Huber, Dean School of Education: Permission to drop courses without "E" grades will not be given after July 25. No course is considered officially drop- ped unless it has been reported in the Recorder's Office of the School of Education, Room 1431, University Elementary School. Elizabeth R. Clark, Recorder Physiological Chemistry 120-The first lecture of this course will be given on Friday, July 24, at 7:00 a.m. in the West Amphitheatre, West Medical Building. H. B. Lewis Pniversity Women: There will be a swimming pasty for women on Friday, July 24th at one of the nearby lakes. The fee will be fifty cents and tickets should be purchased from the Physical Education of- fice in Barbour Gymnasium before Friday noon. The group will leave Barbour Gymnasium at five o'clock. All women students are cordially invited. Clips 27 Minutes off Time Last Saturday by Hall; Averages 180 M.P.H. Set HAVANA, July 23.-(IP)-Capt. Frank Hawks landed here at 11:08 this morning, completing a flight by way of Wilmington and Miami that regained for him the speed record from New York, knocking; 27 minutes off the time of James Goodwin Hall, who beat Hawks previous record last Saturday. Hawks took off at 3 a.m. from Floyd Bennett Field, Brooklyn. Hall, broker and former army avia- tor, made the flight Saturday in eight hours and 35 minutes cutting eight minutes off Hawks' previous flying time. Hawks landed at Wilmington at 5:44 a.m. Mechanics poured more than 100 gallons of gasoline into his plane's tanks and he took off again at 6:01 a.m. for Miami, where he landed his monoplane at Pan- American Airport at 9:37 a.m. After his plane had been re- fueled again and he had obtained clearance papers, he took off for Havana at 9:52. He said he had fought headwinds most of the way from Wilmington to Miami, aver- aging about 180 miles an hour. Looking back over four years of University life many recently grad- uated seniors experience keen re- grets over a number of things, as is shown by statements made to Daily reporters. That fraternities play too impor- tant a role in the lives of Univer- sity of Michigan students is the es- sence of a grievance expressed by one senior. The majority of the freshman class is snatched up by the 80-odd fraternities on the cam- pus, he said, and from that day on students lose their sense of pre- vious individualism. The moment that a man enters into such an atmosphere, he ex- plained, he is forced to submit to a type of poise and conduct which belongs, not to himself, but to the whole group with whom he associ- ates himself. This senior regretted that he could not have waited until the University shall have provided dormitories for all students. Much the same feeling was ex- 1 pressed by a woman student, who said that her four years had made her lose much of her individuality, in that she had had to conform somewhat to the standards of those Less poignant was the regret of another woman student who said, "I don't regret anything especially. I suppose I should regret not study- ing more, but I'm afraid I don't." Two seniors declared that if they could experience their four years at the University again they would make a better allotment of their time and "keep their work up to date." Another senior stated that "financial difficulties would not per- mit me the time I should have liked for extra-curricular activities; neither would they allow the so- cial life which would have been my pleasure. However, given my Uni- versity life to live over again under the same circumstances, I hardly believe there would be any great change, and I can truthfully say I can gaze back upon my college days with no poignant regret." Colored duco fnishes. Price $60 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 TRY THE DEL!CIOIJS HOME COOKED FOOD at the 417 EAST HVURON ST. Lunch. Dinner Sunday ..5c and 75c .........:.$1.00 Dinner .. $1.50 BUY OEA PLAN FR T JP TO fMF LIBERTY, N. Y., July 23.-(A)- The, plane Liberty, which carried Otto Hillig and Holger Hoirtis across the Atlantic to Germany last month, is to fly the ocean again, with its new woman owner,. Mrs. Umberto Loffredo, as the pilot. She bought the big Bellanca ship Wednesday from Hillig for a flight to Rome. She paid Liberty's flying photographer, just returned home from Europe, $23,000 for the plane, a thousand more than he paid to have it especially built for his trip. Mrs. Loffredo told him she plan- ned to take off from Buffalo in mid-August, with Newfoundland as the last stop before heading out over the ocean airway for Italy's capital. Rento Rinaldi, who has crossed the south Atlantic by air, will be her navigator. OHIO WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY --A course in Prohibition has been instituted by the poltical science department here. Lectures are de- livered by both wet and dry lead- University Zoological Museum Possesses with whom she came in contact; and, she added, "I regret that I was not able to meet even more 4 people than I did." BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard Street TODAY, 11:30 to 1:30 SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT BALLS SHREDDED LETTUCE OR SALMON SALAD BUTTERED TOAST JELLO COFFEE, MILK Valuable Skins of Guatimalian Animals In the mammal division of the, Zoological Museum the skins of the animals collected on the expedition to Guatemala at the beginning of} the year are being reworked and stuffed for scientific study. This expedition was begun last January in cooperation with the Carnegie Institution at Washing- ton, D. C. and was completed in June. The animals were collected about Uaxactum, Guatemala, where the main camp was located. Seven hundred and thirty mam- mals were .brought back-a very representative collection from that region. The smaller animals such as rats and bats were stuffed in the field but the large ones were treated with salt and packed in moth balls for shipment. To be mounted they must be soaked in cold water over night, the fur allowed to dry and stuffed with excelsior. The department is very pleased with a long-tailed cat which is sel- dom seen. This cat lives in Central America and feeds on birds and smaller mammals, being similar to the ocelot. The howling monkey with its roar which can be heard - .1 for miles and the spider monkey are the other representatives of this territory. Many of these ani- mals resemble those found in the United States. The tayra is like a large weasel and the kinkapou has long hair and a tail like a raccoon. The entire collection is said to fbe very valuable. 5:30 to 7:30 FRIED PERCH, CUCUMBER SAUCE VEGETABLE DINNER WITH POTATOES ROASTCOF BEEF OR HARD COOKED EGGS BREADED VEAL CUTLETS SPANISH PORK CHOPS MASHED OR FRENCH FRIED POTATOES PEAS, CARROTS NOODLES, SPINACH 35c I i Michigan Repertory Players TONIGHT 1 "Ljove and Chan1Y c" DIRECTED BY JEAN MERCIER BY MARIVAUX III SWIFT'S Drug Store hF FOR I PRINTING and DEVELOPING OF YOUR FILMS I ONE DAY SERVICE SLATER'S, Inc. Lydia MENDELSSOHN Theatre ALL WORK GUARANTEED All Seats 75c For Reservations Phone 6300 PHONE 3534 We Deliver South State Street South and East University a'il Subscribe to The Summer Michigan Daily I,. - . ''! l 1IL~ :i Ir * The Place to Eat-The Place to Meet .. . JNI l A -, _ _ W 45c .UNiCHEN- DINNERS