1938 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE wt DAILY OFFICIAL Four German F (Continued from Page 2)a 8 p.m. Tickets 50 cents on sale now at Michigan League Information desk; or see Leah Lichtenwalter or Ernest Hares. A grand time for all, delicious food, entertainment and dancing. Theh largest social event for the "Treble- aires" and "Kingfishes" this summer. Let's all be there 100 per cent. New members of Pi Lambda Theta. Kindly call for your certificate at Room °2533, University Elementary ' ' School on Tuesday, between 10 and 11 o'clock. Cal Frances Quigley atk 23082 if unable to call at this time The Intramural Sports Building will be closed Friday, Aug. 19, at 6 p.m. All lockers must be vacated or re-; newed for the school year on or be- fore that date. The locker fee is $2.50 for the period from Sept. 19, 1938 to June, 1939. Exhibition of EarlyChinese Pottery Four German fliers, taking off fr at the School of Architecture, Mon- westward flight between the two cit roe Street, under the auspices of the Bennett field at the conclusion of ti Institute of Fine Arts upon the occa- between Germany and the United S sion of the Summer Institute of Far Eastern Studies. The exhibition has if been extended by request throughout the Summer Session. Colleges of Literature, Science and the Arts, and Architecture; Schools of Education, Forestry and Music: Sum-s mer Session students wishing a tran--- script of this summer's work only should file a request in Room 4, U.H. several days before leaving Ann Ar- bor. Failure to file this request will result in a needless deay of several days. The Bureau has received notice of the following Michigan Civil Service w Examinations. Veterinarian, $150 per month. Ap- plications not accepted after Aug. 22,y 1938. Sanatorium Physician Classes, $200 to $325 per month less maintenance. Applications not accepted after Aug. 16, 1938. Laundry Classes, $75 to $140 per month less maintenance. Applica- tions not accepted after Aug. 17, 1938." Cook Classes, $75 to $140 per month less maintenance. Applications not accepted after Aug. 15, 1938. Building Construction Classes, $130" to $200 per month. Applications not accepted after Aug. 15, 1938. For further information please call x.r= at the office 201 Mason Hall* Office hours, 9-12 and 2-4. University Bureau of AppointmentsC and Occupational Information. Each student who has changed his address since June registration should Colleges of Literature, Science, and file a change of address in Room 4 the Arts, and Architecture; Schools U.H. so that the report of his sum- of Education, Forestry and Music: mer work will not be misdiected. First Baptist Church, 10:45 a.m., Aug. 14. Speaker, Dr. Walter S. - flqI IG Ryder of Flint, Michigan: Theme: "Horizons of Religion." Dr. Ryder is a graduate of Colgate-Rochester. - ENDING TONIGHT He has held important pastorates in the Northwest and was for a time H'istory Professor of Sociology at Macalester In the Making! C ee 4 D St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Services of worship Sunday are: 8 a.m. Holy Communion, 11 a.m. morn- TOMORROW ing prayer and sermon by the Rev. Robert Morris. Stalker Hall. Student Class at 9:45 a.m. with John Platt, Grad., as lead- er. This will be the last student meeting for the Summer Session. First Methodist Church. NVorning worship at 10:40 o'clock. Rev. Earl Sawyer will preach on "The Sword of the Spirit." Misses Jean and Miriam Westerman will sing "0 Di- vine Redeemer" by Gounod. Achilles Taliaferro will be at the organ. First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Ave. The Rev. A. G. Crooks of this city will be the guest speaker at the Morn- ,:.ing W~rship Service at -10:45. He has chosen for his topic "Capturing the World for Christ. Dr. Healey (Continued on Page 41 STARTING TODAY! ;: It is Grandest Comedy! 9b0 I i OESSO With PylsW lh - i om Berlin unheralded, completed a non-stop flight to New York-the first ies in history-in 25 hours. The 24-passenger transport is shown at Floyd he flight, which was undertaken to prove the feasibility of air service tates. niversity's New Psychiatric Institute Hiers Complete Non-Stop Flight To U. S. Germany Builds 39,000 Pound Air Giant For Atlantic Crossing FROM THE NEW YORK TIMES +regular mail and passenger service Said to be one of Germany's lar- between Europe and the -United gest and fastest land planes-if not' States, has already received permis- the largest and fastest-the Brand- sion to make 14 landings in this coun- enburg is an all-metal, low-wing try this summer. The hop of the Con- monoplane powered by four engines. dor will count as one of the 14, it is Except for the number of engines, understood. it is more nearly comparable to theA The operating technique of Pan Douglas commercial transports of American Airways, Imperial Airways the DC-3 class used by many Ameri- and Deutsche Lufthansa, where four can domestic air lines than any oth- i men are employed for flying, naviga- er aircraft in general use in the tion, radio and power, was used on country, the crossing. Built by the Focke-Wulf Manufac- turing Company in Bremen, it is 78 feet long, has a wing spread of 108.4 feet and a gross weight of 38,720 pounds. Although its exact passen- ger capacity is not known, it is un- derstood to be about that of the Douglas DC-3's, which carry 21 pas- sengers. It is powered by Pratt &Whitney Hornet engines, manufactured in Germany, under license, by the Ba- varian Motor Works. These engines, known as G-132's, are air-cooled and are capable of developing 720 horse- power each. Any two of them are able to sustain the plane while in flight, and with all, four turning over the plane is said to have a crusiing speed of about 200 miles an hour. The plane has retractable landing gear and variable-pitch, metal propellers Recently a plane of the same type flew from Berlin to Cairo, and it is understood that similar craft are now used commercially on the Ger- man air line connecting Berlin and Baghdad. Not a great deal is known about the plane's apparatus for communi- cation and navigation. It is known, however, that it carries one long wave radio transmitter and receiver of 150 watts and a Lorenz short-wave radio transmitter and receiver of 20 watts. A Telefunken homing device and a receiving set for radio beams are also included in the equpimernt. Call letters for the plane are D- COTTONS . .. Sheer ACON. According'to the information avail- Washables ... Darker D able here, the original arrangement was to have the Brandenburg fly . . . Afternoon Dresses. around the world under the auspices of the Focke-Wulf Company. The dresses you can buy f German Government stepped inLo season wardrobe for a s the picture, however, and after con- ducing negotiations for permits to land in various countries along the FORMER PRICE proposed route decided to have the plane cross the North Atlantic as one Sizes 1 of the survey flights of Deutsche Lufthansa. The Deutsche Lufthansa, which has been conducting survey flights over the North Atlantic for the last three years in the expectation of opening COTTON Get Your N ame Stamp at $2.00 (See Calkins-Fletcher's ad p. 4) Fill out this coupon (first, mid- die, and last names necessary) and mail it with 25c in stamp to ALL SAL Calkins-Fletcher Drug 324 South State St. !Che 6 z ANN ARBOR, MICH. 1 FULL TAME S. .E....... Address 309 SOUTH City...................... Speeches, String Quartet On Breakfast Prograin The program for the breakfast for candidates for masters degrees which will be given at 9 a.m. Sunday in the Union, has been announced by Miss Ethel McCormick, social director of the Summer Session. Opening the program will be sev- eral selections played by a string quartet under the direction of Prof. Hans Pick. Following the talk to be given by Dean James B. Edmonson will be singing by Don Yang, who will be accompanied by F. Way. President Ruthven's speech will conclude the program 'Special i00 af s . . . Prints . . . Pastel resses .. . Sports Dresses Evening Dresses. for your Fall and next song. ES FORGOTTEN 11 to 46 dInds in IDRESSES and 129 n Neuro-Psychiatric ' Institute To Treat Mental nDisorders ment of mental diseases, the Univer- sity this spring took steps to insure its position on the frontier of mental therapy by breaking ground for a new $400,000 Neuro-Psychiatric In- stitute which will include the most modern equipment for treating men- tal disorder known to 1938 science. The Institute will house 83 beds, 20 of which are reserved for children. Formerly a distinct entity from the University, the Institute was under the jurisdiction of both State and University authorities. It was then called the State Psychopathic Hospit- al. The title of State hospital, however, it was felt by Dr. R. W. Waggoner, director, and his staff, attached a disagreeable stigma to both the insti- tution and its patients. The new name, it is intended, will, therefore, aid in building in the public mind the con- ception of a mental disorder as pre- cisely comparable to physical disorder and deserving of the same sympathy 'and study. The new Institute will be a division O.D.MORRILL 314 S. State St. Typewriters, Stationery, Student and Office Supplies ' Since 1908 Phone 6615 t l i I C 1 I t i C 1 i of the University hospital and as such will make available a vast new laboratory to students of mental derangement as well as facilitating a more complete cooperation with the other departments of the University Michigan was the iirst University to have a mental hospital associated with it, the State having opened a mental clinic here in 1906. Psychiatric institutes similar to the one under construction here are now located. at the Columbia University medical center, the Cornell medical center, both in New York City, at the University of Iowa, in Iowa City, at the University of Colorado in Den- ver and at Johns Hopkins in Balti- more. ES FINAL Seth Pilon [op STATE STREET I , ., .. . , . i A AR ISHALL CUT RATE A 231 SOUTH STATE STREET 8 Doors North of Kresge's R S H A I Drugs, Cosmetic, Tobaccos To the Class of 1942! Make your budget go further by Thrifty buying at the MARSHALL Cut Rate Drug. Your checks will be cheerfully cashed. FREE! Desk Blotters with the outstanding events of the year upon them. Drop us a i r..1 I line and let us reserve some for you-- '-I ° :<::A~f III