THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1932 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 7, A.932 .rte DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Two Youths Plan Flight to Norway Publication in the Bulletin Is constructive notice to all tnembers of the University. Copy received at the office of the Dean of the Summer Session until 3:30, exceptIng Sundays. 11:30 a. m. Saturday. VOLUME 'XIII THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1932 NUMBER 9 Notice to Heads of Departments and All Others Interested: Somei saving can be made by disconnecting telephones and having them recon- nected in am le time for the opening of the University in the fall. If you know of an telephone which can be disconnected during the summer without interfering with the general efficiency of your department please communicate. the fact to Mr. Frank Clever of the Business Office. Shirley W. Smith Excursion No. 4-Niagara Falls and Vicinity: The Department of Geology will conduct the Summer Session excursion to Niagara Falls as it has for many years. The trip is open to all students of the Summer Ses- sion and their friends.d This year total expenses may be kept under $15.00, including an, ade- quate allowance for incidentals. This total provides for all the imprtant features at the Falls as well as for round trip railroad fare, hotel accom- modations, meals, and the like. Further information concerning the itinerary, expenses for individual items of the trip, and other details are available at the Summer Session office, Room 9 University Hall. Round trip rail tickets must be secured before Friday noon, July8. W. H. Hobbs Medical Library Given Valuable ]Book Collection (Continued from Page 1) be classified as a period of carica- ture; and, 'lastly, is the modern "Dance of Death," many ideas for which arose from the World war. In almost all of these representa- tions, the physician plays a more or less prominent part. It is to the physician himself that Dr. Warthin has directed his attention. From the work of Holbein came the Biblical verse which forms a text for many of the representa- tions. It is only "Physician, cure thyself," and is to be found in Luke iv, 23. Death is always the victor except in a few recent works. In one, a print designed in the early 19th century by Collings, the tables ate turned and the physician dis- charges the clyster full in the face of the advancing skeleton. Even this is only "ridicule towards the medical profession," Dr. Warthin explains. In addition to the representations of the physician with death, the skeleton may be seen shaking hands with the undertaker, riding out of town on a ghastly car laden with cholera victims, pouring out the apothocary's medicines, lurking in the closets of the insurance agency, or mounting on the horse of the quack doctor. Death is to be.-seen leering at the soldier through the barbed wire en- tanglements or rising out of the bul- warks in front of which awounded soldier lies. Death is even to be seen on the shell-torn battlefield, standing awed at its own destruc- tion._" CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LOST AND FOUND LOST-A Mortar Board pin. Louise\ Malone, 1930, engraves -:n back. Finder please call 22543. 2 WANTED WANTED - Family and S t u d e n t' laundry. Called for and delivered. Phone 48863. -2 WASHING AND IRONING WANT- ED-Will call for and deliver. Soft water used; washing done separate. Phone 2-3478.1 -c Republicans Commence 'Campaign At Chicago CHICAGO, July 6.-(AP)-The Republicans formally opened t h e campaign to re-elect President Her- bert Hoover todays establishing na- tional headquarters in the Palmer House. Eyerett Sanders, chairman of the National Committee and gen- eralissimo of the field forces, con- ferred with publicity director, for- mer Gov. Henry Allen, of Kansas.' The entire sixth floor of the hotel was occupied by the campaign forces which for the first time in the party's history will be directed from the West. One of the first pronouncements by Sanders was that whatever the President had to say would cone di- rect from the White House. All speaking tours, other than the Pres- ident's, would be planned ii$ Chi- cago. WANTED-Laundry. S o f t water., 21044. Towels free, socks darned. WANTED-Student laundry, eight y e ar s experience. Reasonable prices. Phone 23365. Will call for and deliver. --6 WANTED-Women, board $4.50 a week. 2 meals a day. Two blocks from campus. Call 21017. --0 FOR RTNT FOR RENT-Furnished apartment with private bath and shower, for 3 or 4 a'dults. Furnished apart- ment for 2. Also single room. Continuous hot water shower, ga- rage. Dial 8544. 422, E. Wash- ington.' -1 FOR RENT-Large, airy single front room. Private family. Desirable location. 904 Oakland. Tel. 4010. -2 FOR SALE FOR SALE-Most dependable Furs and Complete Service. Lowest prices in Our 28 years in Ann Ar- bor. Zwerdling's Fur Shop, 215-17 E.. Liberty, Phone 8507 for Fur Storage. -C BRIGHT SPOT 802 Packard St. 11:30 to 1:30 Potato Salad with Frankfurters and Relish Breaded Pork Cho Roast Beef, Potatoes, Pickled Beets Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast with Poached Eggs Custard with Raspberry Sauce, Cake Ice Cream' Coffee-Punch-Milk "30c 5:30 to 7:30 Soup Liver and Bacon Hamburg Steak - Fried Onions Breaded Pork Chops Roast Leg of Lamb Roast Beef Breaded Veal Cutlets Mashed or Au Gratin Potatoes Vegetable Salad - Succotash Cake - Ice Cream - Custard Jello Coffee Tea Milk 40c, *.. Observatory Nights: The University Observatory will be open to stu- dents of the Summer Session Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, July 11, 12, and 13, from 8:15 to 10 P. M. Admission will be by ticket. Tickets may be obtained in the office of the Summer Session upon the presenta- tion of the treasurer's receipt. Summer Session University Band: Special 'Rehearsal tonight at 7:00 in Morris Hall. Open to all students of the University who play band in- struments. Bring your own instrument, the Basses and Drums only are furnished by the band. Nicholas D. Falcone Physics Colloquium: Dr. Arthur 3Bramley, Assistant Director of the Bartol Research Foundation, will talk on' "The Neutron" at 7:15 p. m. tonight, in Room 2038, East Physics Building. All interested are cor- dially invited to attend. S. Goudsmit Lecture: Professor Edwin D. Dickinson will lecture on "The Enforce- ment of International Law" Friday, July 8, at 8 p. m. in Room 1025 Angell Hall. The lecture is open to the public. Art Exhibition: A small collection of) water colors, prints, and etch- chings, all by Assistant Professor Valerio, i now hung in the ground floor corridor cases of the Architectural Buildidg. It may be seen daily from 9:00 to 5:00, excepting Sundays. Brookhart-Fish Debate: Senator Smith W. Brookhart of Iowa and Congressman Hamilton Fish, Jr., of New York will debate in Hill Auditor- ium on' Monday evening, July 11, at 8:15. The subject for the debate will be: "Shall the United States Recognize Soviet Russia?" Reservations should be made now at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre box office. FACULTY CONCERT: James Hamilton, Assistant Professor of Voice 'in the School of Music, assisted, by Maud Okkelberg, Assistant Professor of Piano, will give the following program Tuesday evening, July 12 at 8 o'clock in Hill Auditorium. The'general public with the exception of small children is invited without admission charge: Haendel: Recitative Deeper and Deeper Still from "Jephtha"; Air Waft Her Angels Through The Skies "Jephtha"; Aria, "Sound An larm" from "Judas Maccabaeus"; Giordani: Caro Mio Ben; Gaccini: Aarilli; Carissiini: Vittoria; Donizetti: Aria,, "Una Furtiva Lagrima" from "L'Elisir d'Amore"; Strauss: Morgen; Schu-; bert: Du Bist Die Ruh; Brahms: O Kuhler Wald; Brahms: Vergebliches Standchen; Rachmaninoff : At Night; Moussorgsky: Little Star; Tchai- kovsky: Pilgrim's Song. Charles A. Sink The Liberal Student's Union of the Unitarian Church announces the' first of a series of summer discussions for Sunday Night, July 10, 7:30 p. m., The Subject: "Economic Planning""Refreshments and social hour follow' the discussion. The group will meet in the church parlors, corner State and Huron. Associa teadIPres~s kPoto In a rebuilt monoplane these two youths planssoon io fly the Atlantic to Oslo, Norway. Clyde Lee (right), 24, of Oshkosh, Wiscon- sin, is -to pilot the ship and Julius Robertson (left), 19, of Oshkosh and Negaunee, Michigan, is to be his navigator and relief pilot. Hospital X-Ray Shows Lack of 'Padding' Clue to Back Aches A new clew to cause of the array of aches and pains in the back and legs, which have tortured the humman race from primitive to modern times, and which physicians and layman alike have been able to describe only in such general terms as sciatica, sciatic rheumatism or lumbago, has been discovered by research at Uni- versityl hospital. In, 70 pet cent of' patients with sciatic rheumatism as- sociated with "low back pain" and similar symptoms, X-ray study re- vealed that the padding which na- ture provides between the bony parts of the spine had degenerated, allowing pressure on delicate nerves. Between every . vertebra nature has placed a cartilaginous pad, the intervertebral disc, in the center of which, is an oval sac filled with gela- tinous matter and called the nucleus pulposa, which 'acts as an hydraulic shock absorber -for the jars and pres- sures occurring, in the backbone. The majority of sciatic patients ex- amined by Dr. Paul Williams at Uni- versity hospital were cases in which the nucleus pulposa was apparently damaged or completely destroyed' be- tween the last lumbar vertebra 'and the first sacral vertebra allowing the two bones to come so close together that pinching of the sciatic nerve re- sulted. A segment of -the nerve leaves the spine at this point and provides feeling an motion in the legs and feet. Pai from such a Uniiversity Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information: seniors and graduate students interested in securing either business or ching positions will please call at --- office,. 201 Mason Hall, Tuesday ough Friday, July 5 through' 8 in- sive, for free registration. Hours registration are from 9 to 12 a. m., H E a2 to 4p.m. a 40 cents Intramural Golf:'All faculty men and men students who wish to play* in the intramural golf tournament this summer should play their quali- fying round this week. It is advis- able for each player to turn in more than 9ne score in order that an average may be taken from which a handicap tournament may be con- sta'ucted, if it Is found ex~pedient to conduct the play in this way. Sign the score cards and leave them at the Club House. Faculty and Students SUMMER situation may be felt throughout the' study have been presented to the lower part of the back or legs. Univer ty by Mrs. Warthin. The While man's ancestors were walk- list in ludes about 280 volumes and Whil ma's ncetor wee wlk-more than 400 prints and woodcutsl ing on all fours and lumbro-sacral dealing with the "Dance of Death." joint probably made little trouble. For an upright posture, however, it is bad engineering by Mother Na- ture. The sacrum is the portion of the spinal column attached to the rigid pelvis, whilethe fifth lumbar vertebra is the last of the flexible part of the spinal column. 4Iost bending is done at this joint and the greatest weight of the upper part of the body falls upon it, says Dr. Williams, so that it is especially liable to injury. In man the joint is not well suited to its work, how- ever, since the top of the sacral vertebra slants downward and out- ward, placing a sliding or shearing stress on the soft padding. Recog- nition of this fact a careful X-ray study of the region will allow the physician to make a more under- We Close standing diagnosis of many "lum- bago" and "sciatica" cases. 25c Until 2 P.M. 30c after 2; Nights 40c Now Playing! JOAN BLONDELL in ""'he Famous Ferguson Case' Extra=Edgar Kennedy Comedy-Hearst News Complete : 'Hot Weather Comfort, NEARLY 200 SHEER CREPES Light and Dark Navies and Browns r Muonotone Prints . One- and Two-Piece Misses Sizes W14 to 20V Women's Sizes 16 to 44 * Hlalf Sizes 1 4/2 to 261/2 OUTSTANDING VALUES They Sold Formerly From $15 to $20 885 MORE COTTON FROCKS Eyelets, Linens, Crepe Shantungs, Chiffon, Voiles, Embroidered Voiles, in pastel shades; hut W~o"-/ the 1* 4 V r - - - ' r - . -~ w - - ti dl STUDENT e nf ~1 4. the finest quality foods at the lowest safe prices . cold plate luncheons- satisfying warm lun- cheons - tasty salads ... all can be had with true fingerle quality at lower prices. Campus Sale Today DIRECTORY vegetable dinner.35c i I i SALE PRICES! luncheons II 11 I I ders .. . *50C All Books of Fiction Non-Fiction and Poetr Drastically Reduced in Price! A HIGH GRADE STOCK OF STATIONERY AT 40 PER CENT OFF A table of hundreds of volumes of fine reference books as low as 49 cents each or three volumes for one dollar. We are displaying, now, a large fall order, just arrived, of JUVENILE BOOKS. You have the first opportunity of hundreds of selections of a really fine stock of books for youn6 people. Prices of these books at truly 1932 levels. -try luncheon and dinner at one, of these finer restaurants today. You as a -judge of good food will wonder how we can sell such a good mel at such a reasonable price, -and then -ancing at the hut I' p each evening to good music. n. b. modern ventilating equip- ment -keep the fingerle operated restaurants cool and comfortable I I