4 SEP~T. 22, 1936 TfI-E MICHIGAN DLTALY Board Accepts More Than $53,000, Approves 4 Resigi cations p. _ Regents Accept Gifts, Approve Faculty Change Medical Library, Trust Fund For Engineering School Are Received Carillonneur Chosen Sabbatical Leaves Given Five Professors; Four ResignationsAccepted The acceptance of gifts of more than $53,000 and the approval of numerous faculty changes chiefly occupied the Board of Regents at its June and August meetings. Property valued at $35,000 was given to the University by Ormond M. Hunt, vice-president of General Motors, for the establishment of thec Harriet Eveleen Hunt Trust Fund to assist students in the College of En- gineering. The fund will be a mem- orial to Mr. Hunt's mother, who died last April. The valuable medical library of G. Carl Huber, dean of the Graduate School at the time of his death Dec. 26, 1934, and former head of the anatomy department and of the anatomical and histological labora- tories, was given the University by Dean Huber's family. Motions Announced Wilmot F. Pratt, New York City, was appointed to the new post of carillonneur for the new Baird Caril- lon. Promotions were those of Walter B. Rea from assistant to the dean of students to assistant dean of stu- dents, Thelma Lewis from instructor to assistant professor in the School of Music, and Carlton F. Wells from in- structor to assistant professor in the English department. Prof. Charles T. Olmsted of the engineering me- chanics department will take the po- sition of assistant dean of students vacated by the resignation of Prof. Fred B. Wahr, and Prof. Donald M. Matthews will be acting dean of the School of Forestry and Conservation during the absence of Dean Samuel T. Dana for the first semester. Sabbatical leaves for the school year were granted Prof. Samuel Law- rence Bigelow of the chemistry de- partment, Prof. Roger Bailey of the College of Architecture, Prof. Francis E. Ross of the economics department, and Prof. Theodore Hornberger of the English department. Leave for the first semester was granted Prof. E. H. Barnes of the College of Architec- ture. Other Gifts Made Several resignations were accepted by the Regents. Prof. Stephen Timo- shenko of the engineering mechanics department will teach at Leland Stanford University. Prof. Warren L. McCabe of the chemical engineer- ing faculty has joined the taff of the Carnegie Institute of Technology, and Prof. George L. Jackson of the School of Education resigned because of ill health. President Ruthven Greets Freshman Class Psi Upsilon..................75.4 Sigma Phi Epsilon............75.1 Alpha Delta Phi..............75.1 Delta Alpha Epsilon............75.0 Phi Sigma Kappa ..............74.6 Delta Tau Delta..............74.5 Triangle .....................74.1 Delta Kappa, Epsilon ......... 74.0 Hermitage...................73.7 Phi Kappa Sigma............73.5 Alpha Phi Alpha ..............73.5 Phi Kappa Tau ................73.1 Sigma .Nu..................72k0 General Sororities Ch tulrches To Hold FirstAnnual Orientation Sunday Sept. 27 Alpha Delta Pi ............... Alpha Chi Omega ............. Pi Beta Phi .................. Gamma Phi Beta........... Delta Zeta ................... Chi Omega ................... Delta Delta Delta ............. Collegiate Sorosis ............ Alpha Xi Delta .... .......... Kappa Delta ................. Kappa Alpha Theta .......... Kappa Kappa Gamma..:.... . Alpha Epsilon Phi ............ Alpha Omicron Pi ............ Delta Gamma ................ Phi Sigma Sigma .......... Alpha Phi .................... Alpha Gamma Delta .......... Theta Phi Al)ha ............. Zeta Tau Alpha. .............. Medical Phi Lambda Kappa ........ Phi Delta Epsilon ............. Nu Sigma Nu ................. Alpha Kappa Kappa ........ Medical Fraternities ......... Theta Kappa Psi ............ Alpha Epsilon Iota (sorority) All Medical Students .......... Phi Chi ...................... Independent Medical Students . Phi Beta Pi .................. Phi Rho Sigma ............... Law Phi Delta Phi ................ Law Fraternities .............. All Law Students ............. Delta Theta Phi..:........... Independent Law Students .... Lawyers Club ................. Dental Independent Dental Students Delta Sigma Delta ............ All Dental Students.......... Xi Psi Phi .................. Dental Fraternities ........... Alpha Omega ................ Other Professional .86,9 .81.5 .81.4 .80.3 .80.8 .80.3 .80.2 .80:0 .80.0 .79.6 .79.4 .79.1 .78.9 .78.1 .78.0 .77.0 . 76.9 .76.5 .75.5 .75.2 .82.6 .82.6 .81.3 .80.2 .80.0 .79.9 .79.9 .79.4 .79.0 .78.6 . 77.8 .77.7 . 75.3 .73.8 .71.9 .71.5 .71.5 .71.2 .77.6 .76.4 .76.3 .75.2 .75.1 .73.4 The first Orientation Sunday, an innovation in Ann Arbor, will be held Sunday in many of the Ann Arbor churches. The new event, which will become an annual custom, was insti- tuted by the churches to welcome the new students. Special services have been arranged in most of the churches and all stu- dents are invited. At the Congrega- tional Church the Rev. Allison Ray1 Heaps will speak at the 10:45 -a.m. service on the subject "Building Christian Personality." Howard Hol- land will welcome the students. A student fellow supper will be held at 6:00 p.m., the students will be ad- dressed by Prof. Preston W. Slosson of the history department. A special welcome has been ex- tended to new students to attend the services Sunday at the Zion Lu- theran Church. The Rev. E. C. Stell- horn will officiate at the 10:30 a.m. service. At the Trinity Lutheran Church the Rev. Henry O Yoder will speak to the students at 10:30 a.m. An in- formal meeting of Lutheran students will be held at 6:00 p.m. at the Par- ish Hall. At the St. Andrews Episcopal Church a corporate communion for first year students will be adminis- tered at 8 a.m., followed by the morning service with the Rev. Henry Lewis officiating. An informal stu- dent fellowship meeting will be held at 7:00p.m. at Harris Hall. The Rev. Dr. C. W. Brashares will welcome the new students at 10:45 a.m. at the morning worship of the First Methodist Church. At 6 p.m. a student guild for all of college age will be held at Stalker Hall. The Rev. R. Edward Sayles will give the 10:45 a.m. sermon at the Baptist Church. A student fellow- ship meeting will be held at 6 p.m. under the direction of Dr. Howard Chapman at the Giuld Hall. Morning worship with the vested Fall Rushing Period Looms For Next Week (Continued from Page 1) which no fraternity will be allowed to contact a freshman. On Friday each rushee will get from the office of the dean of stu- dents a preference list, on which he will list the fraternities he prefers in order of their desirability. He is to mark this list outside of the office and return it the same day. Fra- ternities turn in their lists the same day, listing the men in order of pref- erence and stating a definite quota. Over that weekend University em- ployees and Interfraternity Council officials compare preference lists of rushees and fraternities and on Mon- day the results are made known to the fraternities and the prospective pledges. The men are formally pledged at dinner Monday night thus bringing to a close the period of sil- ence and the task of fall rushing. student choir and special service for students will begin at 10:45 a.m. at the First Presbyterian Church's temporary meeting place in the Ma- scnic Temple, 327 S. Fourth Ave. The Westminster Guild will meet at 6 p.m. with a supper and pro- gram. The Rev. H. P. Marley of the Uni- tarian Church will address the new students on the subject "Persons, Place, Portents" at the 11 a.m. serv- President Ruthven (above) will extend his official greeting to the ntarly 2,000 members of the incoming freshman class in an address at Hill Auditorium tonight. Sorority rades Are ops gain, Women's Averages Lead Men's mb F 'rf (Continued from rage 1I' out Martha Cook for the best record among 29 women's dormitories and League houses. Houses accommodat- ing less than eight girls were omitted from the tabulation. Women students retained their scholastic advantage over men stu- dents by a 78.2 to 75.8 margin. Fra- tern ities and sororities again were ahead of independent men and women with an average of 77.8 to the independents' 76.4. In the scale which has been used in compiling the scholarship record A equals 100 per cent, B equals 85 per cent, C equals 70 per cent, D equals 50 per cent, and E equals 20 per cent. All grades earned by ineligible or dropped pledges have been omitted from both fraternity and independent averages. The grades have been in- cluded in the all-men and all-women groups, however. Group % R 'A General Sororities .............79.5 Women students*..............78.2 Independent Women Students . .78.0 General Fraternities and Soror- ties .........................77.8 Women's Dormitories and League phile Raphael, Health Service psy- chiatrist, in research in psychiatry. The Class of 1913 Engineers gave $40 as the nucleus of a loan fund, and Kapp, Smith, Hinchman, and Grylls, Detroit architects, offered a $10 prize for a sketch problem in architectural design. Further appointments announced by the Board of Regents were those of Prof. E. Blythe Stason of the Law School and H. C. Builkley, Detroit, to the Board of Governors of the Law Club; Prof. E. C. Mitchell, Prof. Hen- ry C. Anderson, and James E. Duffy, Bay City, to the Board in Control of Physical Education; Mrs. James S. Symonds, Saginaw, to the Board of Governors of Alumnae House; Mrs. Shirley W. Smith and Mrs. Clifford Woody to the Board of Governors of Adelia Cheever House; Mrs. Ernest Kanzler, Grosse Pointe, to the Board of Governors of Betsy Barbour resi- dence; and Mrs. Arthur Bromage to the Board of Governors of Helen Newberry residence. Houses .....................77.3 General Fraternities..........77.0 Men and Women* .............76.5 Independent Men and Women* .76.4 Independent Men Students* . . . . 75.8 Men Students* ................75.8 *Medical, Law, and Dental students are not included in the starred groups. Because of lack of uniformity between the grading systems in the professional schools and those in the nonprofessional schools of the Uni- versity, it seems advisable to consider Medical, Law, and Dental students as separate groups. The comparison of these schools, either with each other or with the rest of the Uni- versity, is not significant. General Fraternities Alpha Chi Sigma ... Delta Sigma Pi ..... Alpha Rho Chi ..... Alpha Kappa Psi ... Women's Dormitories Houses ..........81.1 ..........77.9 ..........73.5 ... .......73.4 And League Austin ....................... Martha Cook Building ......... Pray ......................... Benjamin .................... Shauman .................... Helen Newberry Residence .... . .81.7 .81.4 .80.5 .80.3 .80.1 .79.9, A second grant of $10,000 by the Earhart Foundation for the support of the recently established Bureau of Industrial Relations and a gift of $5,000 from the Milbank Foundations, of New York for the establishment of the Milbank Hypertension Research Laboratory under the direction of Dr. Max Peet, noted University brain sur- geon, were announced by the Regents. Gifts of $750 each were made by the Alumnae Council and the Michi- gan Gas Association, the first toward the establishment of a $15,000 en- dowment fund for the Alice Crocker Lloyd FellowVship, and the second for a renewal of the annual fellowship in has engineering. The University of Michigan Club of Detroit added $629 to its endowment fund. Three gifts of $500 were an- nounced by the Regents. Parke, Davis, Inc., Detroit, has established ai fellowship in the College of Phar- inacy; Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, is assisting Dr. Walter J. Nungestre of the bacteriology department in re- search on pneumonia, and the Mil- bank Foundations is aiding Dr. Theo- Phi Beta Delta ........ Phi Alpha Kappa .... . Zeta Beta Tau........ Phi Epsilon Pi ........ Trigon ............. Alpha Lambda ........ Acacia ............. Sigma Alpha Mu ...... Kappa Nu ........... . Delta Upsilon, ....... . Sigma Phi ............. Pi Kappa Alpha ....... Lambda Chi Alpha .... Phi Sigma Delta ...... Sigma Chi ........... Kappa Delta Rho ..... Tau Kappa Epsilon ... Alpha Kappa Lambda Zeta Psi .............. Phi Delta Theta ...... . Kappa Sigma ........ Chi Phi............. Phi Gamma Delta .. Sigma Alpha Epsilon .. Phi Kappa Psi ......... Alpha Sigma Phi ...... Pi Lambda Phi ....... Theta ChiP............. Theta Xi........... Alpha Tau Omega .... Chi Psi ............... Beta Theta Pi....... Theta Delta Chi ...... ..........82.8 ..........82.2 ..........82.2 ..........81.3 .........81.1 ..........80.1 ..........79.8 ..........79.6 ..........78.9 ..........78.8 .........78.5 .........78.3 ..........78.3 ..........78.0 .........77.6 .........77.3 ..........77.3 .........77.1 . . 77.0 .........77.0 .........76.9 .... 76.8 ... . .76.8 ....76.8 .........76.5 .........76.4 ... . .76.4 ... . .76.3 .76.1 . . 76.0 .........75.9 ... . .75.9 .... 75.7 Alumnae House ................79.6 Adelia Cheever ................79.1 W ood .........................79.1" Wilson (215 S. Thayer) .........78.8 Curtis ........................77.5 Wilson (1029 Vaughn) ........ 77.4 Bannasch .....................77.1 Mosher-Jordan Halls ..........76.9 Rock .........................76.8 M cEachran .....................76.8 Betsy Barbour House ...........76.8 Reeves ........................76.7 M itchell ...................... 75.0 W olff .........................74.9 Fostor ........................74.4 Gorman ......................74.2 Augspurger . ..................73.8 Holcomb ......................72.9 Tuller ........................72.4 Stegeman .....................72.0 Radford ......................68.5 Clark .........................68.4 Jeffery ....................67.3 WEDDING MARCH OUT OTTAWA, Sept. 21.-(Canadian Press) -The wedding march from "Lohengrin" was banned in Canadian Catholic churches by a pastoral let- ter read here by Archbishop Forbes. PRINTING LOW RATES -- FINE WORK Dial 2-1013 . . 308 North Main Street Downtown, North of Main Post Office The ATHENS PRESS SEE US FIRST Freshmen ! Upperclassmen!* New Students ! MILTONS wishes to extend a cor- dial welcome to Miehi- gan' s old and new stu- dents and to wish them MIC HGAN WOLVERINE success in the coming LANE HALL 202 SOUTH STATE _ 3 AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR ELGIN and AMILTO .1 Student Cafeteria announces its FALL OPENING FRIDAY MORNING year. Former Michigan Men have learned ,the value of Milton's Clothes. We invite the new men to come down and be- come acquainted. I it I