SEPTEMBER 24, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY "'PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN SEPTEMBER 24, 1935 ' 7 PAGE TWENTY-SEVEN Changed Staff Of Teachers Begins Year Deaths, Illness, Leaves, And Appointments Alter UniversityFaculty Riegel Given Chair In Business School Kelso Becomes Professor And Director Of Newly Formed Institution One Of Four Units In New Law Quadrangle (Continued from Page 25) the Arts: Werner Emmanuel Bach- man, organic chemistry; John Reg- inald Bates, general and physica chemistry; Stanley Dalton Dodge geography; Dwight Lowell Dumond history; Howard Sylvester Ellis, eco- nomics; Otto La Porte, physics; Wal- ter Otto Menge, mathematics; Lewi Stephen Ramsdell, minerology; Wil- liam Sleator, physics; Erich Walter, English; Bennett Weaver, English. College of Engineering -Carl Ed- win Burkland, English; Melville Bing-. ham Stout, electrical engineering. School of Dentistry, Richard Henry Kingery, denture prosthesis; George Raymond Moore, orthodontics. The following were promoted from instructor to assistant professor: Col- lege of Literature, Science, and the Arts -Chester Arthur Arnold, bot- any; Robert Peter Briggs, economics; Harold M. Dorr, political science; Edward Barrows Greene, psychology; Norman Raymond Maier, psychology; Valentine Barthold Windt, speech. Dieterle Advanced Medical School-Robert Reichard Dieterle, psychiatry. School of Dentistry, Dorothy Ger- ald Hard, dental hygiene. School of Music -Louise Cuyler, theory ' of music: E. William Doty, organ and theory. The Regents have also approved the following leaves of absence: Arthur S. Aiton, professor of his- tory, second semester of the 1935-36 school year, to lecture at Centro de Estudios de Historia America, Seville. Werner E. Bachman, assistant pro- fessor of organic chemistry, first semester of the 1935-36 year, sab- batical. Clifton O. Carey, associate professor of geodesy and surveying, first semes- ter of the 1935-36 school year, sab- batical. George, Carrothers, professor of education and director of the bureau of cooperation with educational, in- stitutions, first semester of the 1935- 36 school year, sabbatical. Carver Is Mathematics Professor Harry C. Carver, associate professor of mathematics and insurance, first semester of the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. Arthur H. Copeland, assistant pro- fessor of English, the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. John W. Eaton, professor of Ger- man and former head of the Ger- man department, the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. Howard M. Ehrman, assistant pro- fessor of history, first semester of the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. Earl L. Griggs, associate profes- sor of English first semester of the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. Joseph R. Hayden, professor of po- litical science, first semester of the 1935-36 school year, to continue as vice-governor of the Philippines. Robert B. Hall, associate professor of geography, first semester of the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. George L. Jackson, professor of the history of education, the 1935-36 school year. Reuben L. Kahn, assistant pro- fessor of bacteriology and director of the clinical laboratories at the University Hospital, first semester of the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. Cooper H. Langford, professor of philosophy, the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. James H. McBurney, instructor in speech, the 1935-36 school year. Erwin E. Nelson, associate professor of pharmacology, the 1935-36 school year, to reorganize the laboratory of pharmacology in the Department of Agriculture. Normal E. Nelson, assistant profes- sor of English, second semester of UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LEGAL RESEARCH LIBRARY Lawyers Club Architecture Follows ®Engls.h InnAndUniversityFaue Even as the gift of the estate of the late Horace Rackham will real- ize many of the dreams of the Grad- uate School, the University's newest completed unit, the Law Quadrangle has realized dreams of the Law School and of William W. Cook, whose gift made the quadrangle and other University buildings possible. With the opening of Hutchins Hall in 1933 the group of buildings was completed. The plans for the quad- rangle were carefully formulated about a decade ago by Mr. Cook, ad- vised and assisted by Dean Bates of the Law School and the late Presi- dent Hutchins. The buildings were not erected in accord with the fiats of any one period or style of architecture, but rather were designed to embody the best features of the old English Inns the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. Willard C. Olson, associate profes- sor of education and director of re- search in child development, first semester of the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. William A. Paton, New York,Alum- ni professor of accounting and pro-1 fessor of economics, first semester of the 1935-36 school year. Thomas H. Reed, professor of po- litical science, the 1935-36 school year, to act as director of the Mu- nicipal Consultant Service. Kenneth T. Rowe, assistant pro- fessor of English, the 1935-36 school year, sabbatical. W. Carl Rufus, associate professor of astronomy, the 1935-36 schoolE year, sabbatical.1 Ivan H. Walton, assistant profes- sor of English, the 1935-36 school1 year, sabbatical. Also approved by the Board of Re- gents were the following resignations:. Dr. Charles Leonard Brown, associate professor of internal medicine; Dr. Robert Kennard Brown, professor of operative dentistry; Harry N. Cole, instructor in chemistry; Edwin C.1 Goddard, professor of law; Carleton B. Joekel, professor of library science; Marguerite Wilker Johnson, associate professor of education and director of. the nursery school; Donald E. King, assistant professor of surgery;, Dr. Frederick G. Novy, dean of the medical school, professor of bacteriol- ogy and director of the hygienic lab- oratory (retired) ; James M. O'Neill, professor of speech; Vladimir P. Tim-1 oshenko, lecturer in economics; George E. Uhlenbeck, associate pro- fessor of physics. Although they still retain their professorial titles and functions, the following men resigned administra- tive duties: Professor Eaton, chair- man of the German department;, Prof. James W. Glover,chairman of the department of mathematics; and Dr. Marcus L. Ward, dean of the school of dentistry. Regents Approve Resignations The following professors died dur-f ing the school year: Samuel Moore,r professor of English; Benjamins March, Freer Fellow, curator in thes Museum of Anthropology; Dr. Carlt Huber, dean of the graduate school; Tobias J. C. Diekhoff, professor of German; Dr. Chalmers T. Lyons, pro- fessor of oral surgery; Kathryn Horst, research assistant professor of phar- macology; Edmund Wild, associate professor of German; and Frank Stevens, associate professor. of Court with those of the Oxford and Cambridge colleges. The buildings composing the quadrangle are the Lawyers Club, the John P. Cook Dormitory, the William W. Cook Leg- al Research Building, and Hutchins Hall. Style Is Elizabethan, The general style of the Lawyers Club is Elizabethan, a transitional style embodying something of the features of the Gothic and of the Renaissance periods. The dining hall, which is essentially Gothic, re- sembles closely the chapel at Eton college and the one at King's College, Cambridge. The ceiling is carved from old oak ship timbers and at either end of each of the nine main trusses which support the beams is a carved figure, many of them the heads of eminent jurists such as Coke, Blackstone, Marshall, and Cooley. The dormitory part of the club ex- tending along South University Ave- nue is arranged in the English college apartment style with separate en- trances to the sections, as they are called. The tower is especially at- tractive for its ornate stone work and,tbecause 0f its striking appear- ance, has become something of a landmark on the campus. Towers Are 90 Feet High, The exterior of the Legal Researchs Building, in which the donor was most keenly interested, follows the same general style as the others in the quadrangle, although it is more emphatically Gothic than any of them. Four square towers rise from the four corners of the building to a height of about 90 feet. Each is capped by four short Gothic spires and around the tops are the coats of arms of the 48 states carved in white limestone. On the north face of one of the north towers is the great seal of the University of Michigan and on the other north tower are gilded figures forming the face of a clock. The various buildings forming the quadrangle are all connected by a series of walks made of heavy irregu- lar flag stones embedded in concrete. Along these walks elm trees and various shrubs have been planted, giving to the buildings an air of age and dignity in keeping with the donor's plan. Cook Gives $10,000,000 Mr. Cook, who made one of the largest single gifts ever received by an educational institution, gave the University more than $10,000,000, and, because not all of it has been used for the Law School, the balance has gone for the construction of a girls' dormitory, named in honor of t the donor's mother, Martha W. Cook, and for the endowment of research projects. The remaining funds, according to the stipulations of Mr. Cook's will, may be used at the discretion of the University Board of Regents and of- ficials in building up the law depart- ment, either in the form of scholar- ships, buildings, or to supplement the salaries of professors in order that the school will continue to attract the leading members of the law pro- fession. The Law School is, with one pos- sible exception, the only institution in the country where in one closely connected unit all the physical equip- ment for carrying on an advanced professional study is centered. With- in two blocks are located all the dor- mitories, class rooms, offices, librar- ies, commons and recreational facili- ties for 300 men. Mr, Cook, who amassed the largest portion of his fortune through suc- cessful investments when he was practicing law in New York City, was considered by many of his close friends to be an unusually eccentric individual. Although the law quadrangle in Ann Arbor represent- ed the prime achievement of his life, he never returned to see the buldings which his generous gifts. had made possible. It had always been his wish that there should be nothing in the nature of a memorial to him in the quad- rangle, but largely at the insistence of the University, the trustees were prevailed upon to consent toa slight alteration in the plans so that above the delivery desk in the main read- ing room of the library are two fig- ures symbolic of learning with the simple inscription: "The buildings forming this law school quadrangle together with the supporting endowment are the gift of William W. Cook of the Class of 1882. To his memory the University erects this tablet." Saturday Class Rule Is Put In Operation (Continued from Page 25) full schedule made up of courses the student must take to complete his program, where no section of any course falls on Saturday. Employ- ment on Friday night might consti- tute a reason for exemption, Dr. Woodburne said. A specific exemption recommend- ed in the report was one for the astronomy department "because of the unique working hours of the faculty." On the question of changing wom- en's hours Friday night because of the Saturday morning classes, Dean Alice C. Lloyd said that when and if need for any changes arose, the sub- ject would be dealt with by the stu- dents themselves. No action was con- templated, however, she said, until after several weeks of school will have given opportunity to study the situation. ,Joan Secley, '36, president of the Michigan League, said that any action would have to originate in the League Council, over which she presides. The Council will meet once this week, probably today, and again Monday, Sept. 30. Any action of the Council must be approved by the Board of Representatives, composed of Panhel- lenic and Assembly. Average Radio In Use over 4 Hours Daily Interesting Facts About Radio Public Brought To LightInSurvey Mr. and Mrs. John Citizen keep their radio going an average of 4 hours and 20 minutes every day, Dr. Frank N. Stanton of Ohio State Uni- versity told members of the American Psychological Association during their recent convention in Ann Ar- bor. These figures and other in- teresting facts about the radio public came to light as the result of a survey Dr. Stanton is conducting in and about Columbus, O. His modus operandi, Dr. Stanton confided to the psychologists, con- sists of installing in home radios a mechanism which, the owners are in- formed, records the amount of cur- rent used by the radio. Actually, the machine records the use of the radio at 30-second intervals over a period as long as six weeks. Sunday Popular With Listeners A week is the usual period of recordings, however, and at the con- clusion of that time Dr. Stanton calls for his machine and interviews tIhe radio owners about their use of the radio the day before. Replies in about 50 test cases showed that while most owners knew approximately how long the radio had been in use during the preceding day, only about a third of them could account for that period by identify- ing the programs heard either by sponsor's name, product name, or the performers' names. Sunday, Dr. Stanton's readings showed, was by far the heaviest lis- tening day, with the average radio turned on for 5 hours and 35 min- utes, mostly in the evening. Tuesday was second in the standings, and Sat urday showed the least use for radios. Prefer News Broadcasts "Of course, this was a spring sur- vey, and Saturday will probably move up in the list this fall when foot- ball broadcasts begin," Dr. Stanton pointed out. Dr. Stanton has also been conduct- ing a second survey by questionnaire, designed to find out the nature of the radio public's desires. The ques- tionnaires were widely distributed near Columbus, and were returned by mail, unsigned. What programs do Mr. and Mrs. Citizen prefer? Well, they both want to listen to news broadcasts, and give them first place on their lists of choices. Comedy rates second, drama third, popular music fourth, and variety and classical music tied for fifth. Men Vote For Sort Broadcasts If you take Mr. John Citizen's word for it, and leave the wife out, comedy comes second, and sports third, but with Mrs. Citizen at the dials, the second choice will be drama and after that classical music. Dr. Stanton's survey also attempted to determine just what the radio lis- tener does while he's listening. Men he found, confine themselves to three activities: just plain listening, and second, a tie for reading and eating -but no sleeping. Women also go in for unadulterated listening, but al- so tune in on the radio while sewing, cleaning house, eating, ironing, or resting in just that order. Some of the other items in Dr. Stanton's check list were writing, dancing, bathing, studying, driving, and lying in bed, but the results were meager. Automobile listening didn't show up as well as he had expected. Several of his Ohio State psychology classes took the test last spring, and he claims to have "flunked" those who admitted studying with the radio going. A BATES A itioticeSeas~on1's5 "Con" iudfTrom Page 25) luminaries than have ever been pre- sent ed in one season here. Sea)on iickets, which may now be obtained as the offices of the School of Music, will again be offered at the reduced priesa of last year of $10, $8.50. $7, and $5. In addition each scason ticket contains a coupon good for. $3 i exchange for a season May Festival t(,ket, in accordance with a schedule to be announced. Thefirst group of tickets, at $10, are designated as patrons tickets'and entitle the holder to the same seat location for the May Festival, the l Low School Dean BAND TRYOUTS ANNOUNCED Tryouts for the Varsity Band hive been requested by George Hall, man- ager, to meet with Director William D. Revelli throughout this week in Morris Hall. All freshmen irglled in the R.O.T.C. are eligible fPr- try- outs as are all students enrolled in the School of Music. Prospective drum majors of the Varsity band have also been asked to report. seats all being located in three center sections on the main 'floor. Two side sections on the main floor and all seats in the first balcony will be offered at $8.50, the first eighi rows in the second balcony at $7, and the remainder of the seats in the second balcony at $5. Individual concert tickets will also be sold at the reduced prices of $2, $1.50, and $1. They will be on sale on and after Oct. 10. THE ANN ARBOR PRESS.... Printers of student publications, Uni- versity bulletins and fine books, catalogs for manufacturers and advertisingl t- erature. a GROWING INSTITUTION _ ECI [A JS For University Opening I d M v v . # S T U L LA JD Y MP I OTHER STYLES STUDY LAM RIGID ARM with ADJUSTABLE SHA and TRAY in Base $1.0 13-INCH LAMP wi ADJUSTABLE SHAG Dumper Top Ash Tr $1.29 in PS DE th DE -ay 9c Enameled and Attractively Decorated Bridge Lamps .. .93c Alarm Clocks . .:$100 BAS K ETS 25c Bath Towels. Heavy Quality Metal Shoe Trees 25c ,20c a Pair Adjustable Sizes For MEN and WOMEN. , s '1 40'S 5c to $1.00 STORE 200 SOUTH MAIN _E M '39 I'ii ------- I Stylists for Men of Michigan DnLetH O'Toole DETROIT OFFICE 420O MICHIGAN THEATRE 0104, ,RANvOLPN 9240. Finely Tailored Clothing SMARTLY STYLED $4.50 and Up I t) wt K q: F Sf '{ . . f y a y it .. , ' ' " I+r i T II I . q 7 I ' w i' l , l _ i 9 ;"' , _ _ - r r I . -ra R ,ail i , _ Oldest National Bank InMichiga-n We Consider STUDENT ACCOUNTS Important in Our Business Endorsed by 71 Years of of Student Patronage Under U.S. Government Supervision. I I III I I lIII I