THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1945 I I I I - WHERE ALL CREEDS MEET: Student Religious Association Holds Freshman Rendezvous Bringing students together in an inter-denominational religious atmo- sphere, the Student Religious Association at Lane Hall has a varied weekly and annual program. The Freshman Rendezvous usually held during orientation week, has been the traditional means of acquainting freshmen with the Association. When not holding the Freshman Rendezvous, the Association has held open rehouse for freshmen during orientation P 1week. ro . rice Is Religious music seminars, seminars on social and political problems, cof- feehour and Saturday lunchhave be- ! e come a traditional part of the as- sociation's weekly program. To Save B ells The religious music seminar con- sists of the presentation of excerpts Percival Price, Pulitzer-prize win- from the world's foremost religious music played on records. Analyses ning University carilloneur, has been andscommentsnbytheddirector of granted a six month's leave of absence this division are also a regular part to travel to Europe to study and at- of the program. These programs are tempt to save the stolen carillon not designed primarily for music ma- bells of Europe from the scrap pile. jors but for students with a layman's interest in music. Ge ny, where dum edonth Hmo Coffee Hour, held each Friday, pro- and quays are 5,000 bells stolen from vides opportunity for a purely social occupied countries by the Nazis and afternoon following the week's work. saved from the melting pots only by Students are invited here to familiar- the war's end. ize themselves with the program of Price, who is an authority on bells the SRA and to meet and know other and is considered the foremost caril- students interested in the Associa- rr .i Tn+ A . ition. loneur in North America is certain that many prized and irreplaceable carillon bells are among the jumble at the Hamburg docks. Shortly before D-Day, Price, at the request of the American Society for the Preservation of Cultural Monu- ments in Europe, furnished detailed information regarding the size, num- ber and location of European caril- lons for Supreme Allied Headquarters. I I, Male Glee Club Gives Concerts, Makes Tours The Men's Glee Club, one of the chief contributors to campus varietyl programs and musical events, is plan- ning an ambitious program for the fall and spring terms, according to Prof. Dave Mattern, director of the group. ,Getting off to an early start, the organization will lead entering fresh- men in school songs during the orien- tation period this fall. When try- outs are completed, the club will be- gin work for its campus concert pro- grams. May Tour Country If transportation conditions per- mit it, Prof. Mattern hopes to re- sume -Glee Club concert trips during the 1945-'46 season. In the past, these trips have included perform- ances at leading New York hotels, in Chicago, cities in this state, Wash- ington and Buffalo. They are spon- sored by the Alumni Association. Recently, the Glee Club prepared several records of new songs by Fred Lawton, who wrote the lyrics to "Varsity," which they presented to former Athletic Director Fielding Yost. Other activities this past year have included participation in the 'Kampus Kapers,' the 'Army-Navy Revue,' 'Victory Varieties,' the cam- pus Christmas program and com- munity singing, which the club led from the library steps. Active in Broadcasts, Serenades The club was also featured on a Sunday morning University broad- cast. Combining the musical with the social, the group has serenaded sororities, and then spent the eve- nings following this as guests at sor- ority socials. Most Glee Club work involves par- ticipation by the whole group. There are also performances by soloists and quartets, or by instrumentalists who are members of the group. Officers of the club for the 1945-'46 season are Ray Buntaine, president; Phil Steding, vice-president; Jerome Horwitz, secretary-treasurer; and Richard Miller, librarian. Campus Guilds Will Welcome New Students 16 Protestant Faiths Have Organizations a Student guilds and regular Sunday worship services of Ann Arbor churches, will have a special welcome for all new students during the fall term. Approximately 30 religious groups are established in Ann Arbor and have'able leaders to help the new- comer in his educational, spiritual and social life. Dr. Blakeman Is Counselor The University counselor in reli- gious education, Dr. Edward W. Blakeman, is available for consulta- tion daily in his Angell Hall office for all students regardless of reli- gious affiliation. Guilds are maintained by a num- ber of churches which offer varied programs on Sunday evenings. Dis- cussion groups, lectures by Univer- sity professors, and outsanding visit-' ors to the campus, classes in reli- gion, as well as social events are planned. Whether Protestant, Catholic or Jew. the new student will be sure to find a religious group with which he has something in common. 16 Student Groups Among the 16 groups on campus are: the Westminster Guild at the First Presbyterian Church, the Roger Williams Guild at the First Baptist Church, Wesleyan Foundation at the First Methodist ChurchhGamma Del- ta (Lutheran Student Chapel) at the New Lutheran Chapel and student center, the Lutheran Student Asso- ciation, the Congregational-Disciples Guild, and Canterbury Club at St. Andrews Episcopal Church. Inter-Guild, an organization which represents the above groups, leads in making plans for greater coopera- tion among the Protestant churches. Catholic students will find a spe- cial chapel for them, St. Mary's near campus, while Jewish students will be welcomed at the Hillel Founda- tion, on Hill and Haven Streets. illel Serves Jewish Faith Performing a social, cultural and religious function for Jewish stu- dents, the 18-year-old B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation chapter at Michi- gan is also a place to study, to learn, and to exchange ideas. Under the leadership of Rabbi Je- hudah M. Cohen, a secretary, a stu- dent council of 25 members and a staff of student directors, the Foun- dation provides, for students and. servicemen, personal counsel, dan- ces, record concerts, religious ser- vices on Friday nights and on major religious holidays, picnics and the opportunity to meet and make new friends. Dramatics, Photography Students can find an outlet for literary or photographic talents by working on the Hillel'News or in theI fully equipped Hillel darkroom. The Hillel Players is a student theattical group which provides entertainment for social functions here and at B'nai B'rith lodges throughout the state. Last year there were classes in Yiddish, Hebrew and Contemporary Jewish History. The 1945 Worship conducted an informative series on Anti-Semitism featuring specialists in several fields. Phonograph Record Colection The Foundation has a large phono- graph record collection. Students are welcome to take advantage of the well-stocked neon-lighted LouisWeiss Memorial Library. The library, con- taining over 1,600 volumes dealing with Jewish subjects and including many recent best-sellers, is open from 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. EWT '(7a.m. to 9 p. m. CWT). The Foundation also regularly rereives more than a score of nationally distributed mag- azines and newspapers. VL" Physical Services To Be Consolidated Consolidation of the physical equip- ment and functions of the University Buildings and Grounds Department, Plant Extension and Storehouse into a single unit to be known as the Plant Department has been announc- ed by Robert P. Briggs, University vice-president. Walter Roth, before the reorganiza- tion assistant superintendent of the buildings and grounds department, was named head of the Plant De- partment. The new department is divided into four subdivisions: Plant Operation and Maintenance; Plant Extension; Storehouse; and Office Section. How does the average college stu- dent today compare, as far as health1 is concerned, with the student of a quarter-century ago? Generally speaking, he's taller, weighs more, has better teeth, is int far better health and has better pos- ture. But at the same time he is more likely to wear glasses, fractures a bone, or suffer from acute appen- dicitis, pneumonia or diabetes. This is the picture presented by doctors at the University of Michi- gan Health Service in a statistical study covering University students from 1919 to 1942. Today's young men and women now in attendance at the University of Michigan come from smaller fam- ilies. In 1919 they each had an aver- age of 2.2 brothers and sisters; today the figure has fallen to 1.7. Goiter is on the decrease, as is nervousness and tuberculosis. In 1919 the average male student weighed 134 pounds and was 5 feet, 5.4 inches tall. Now he weighs 148 stripped and is 5 feet, 9.2 inches tall.' The average girl increased her weight by 5 pounds to 123, and her height .7 inch to 5 feet, 4.1 inches. Men's eyes are poorer, the coed's better. In 1928, 62 percent of the men and only 20 percent of the coeds had1 Awards Gwen For Writing Hopwood's $551,070 Used as Prize Money "Getting Gertie's Garter," "Little Miss Bluebeard," and "Up in Mabel's Room," these and other farces writ- ten by Avery Hopwood helped gain would be writers at Michigan a finan- cial start. Hopwood, a 1905 graduate, was a millionaire playwright at the time of his death in 1928, when he willed his alma mater $551,069.78 from which prizes are awarded in the annual Hopwood writing contests. Begun in 1931, the awards to date total $90,000, prizes being awarded in each of four classifications, drama, essay, poetry and fiction. Awards for Hopwood winners range from $50.00 to over $1,000. Michigan is the only university in the world which offers its students such large prizes in the field of writing. When the contests were begun, they were for upperclassmen only. The following winter, however, a spe- cial Freshman Hopwood Contest was begun, and in 1938 the annual sum- mer Hopwoods came into being. One of the 1931 winners was Betty Smith, who entered a play entitled "Francie Nolan." Miss Smith's recent best seller, "A Tree Grows in Brook- lyn," had as its heroine one Francie Nolan. Many Hopwood prize winners have had their'winning works published by major publishing houses. "The Bro- ken Pitcher" by Naomi Gilpatrick, "Years Before the Flood" by Mari- anne Roane, "Family Tree" by Flor- ence Maple, "A Sweep of Dusk" by William Kehoe, and "Valley of the .Sky" by Hobart Skidmore are some of the better known published Hop- wood award winning books. 20/20 vision or better. Now the men have fallen to 55 percent while the coeds doubled to 40 percent. The percentage of men having "good" teeth has jumped from 43 to 69 percent. Women have gone from 76 to 81 percent. In 1919, 30 percent of the Univer- sity of Michigan students reported that they had had their tonsils out "well." Today the figure is 67 per- cent. From 1933 to 1940 men reported their serious headaches were doub- ling. In the same period coed's serious headaches fell nearly half. More men are reporting that they worry more, women are worrying less. By the same standard, men are find- ing studies more difficult while the women find them easier. Posture today is far superior to that in 1922. The percentage of men having what is termed "A plus, A minus stature" has increased from 7 to 32 percent. Coeds have bettered their posture by more than 700 per- cent, jumping from 3 percent in 1922 to 24 percent now. From 1931 to the present, coeds judged to have an "athletic consti- tution" have increased from 30 to 60 percent, while men have fallen from 43 to 37 percent. .And what kind of a he-man has the University of Michigan devel- oped? In all those years, chest- thumping men students have in- creased their chest expansion by a measly one-tenth cf an inch, now being able to stretch out to 32.4 inches. GENERALLY HEALTHIER: Student Health Survey Report Released; Improvement Noted You'rwe sure@ to click[! , s tb Duty Overseas E xperienced by Marine Students Although they rarely talk much about what they have done, the ma- jority of the Marines stationed at the University pave seen overseas service From Guadalcanal and rainy Bou- gainville to Iwo Jima and Okinawa, from elmost every branch of the Corps, they have come to receive a college background prior to receiv- ing commission:. They are men like Ernest V. Helland of Carlson's Raid- ers, who spent one month on patrol behind Jap lines, raiding; and living off Japanese supplies: Frederic L. Banta, of the 2nd Division, combat intelligence, 3rd battalion, 6th Ma- rines, whose section of 12 men and an officer found copies of the plans of all the installations in the Mar- shall Islands and Harry M. Ri i- ardson. Second Separate Engineer Battalion who worked on airfields on Guam and Iwo Jima while under fire. Rieaardson tells of the time he and five other men went outto i2- connoiter an air strip on Iwo Jima and somne Jap snipers started shoot- ing at them. As they ducked, two Marines stuck they heads out er a foxhole and said, "Get up and walk around. Let them shoot at you so we can locate them." Recommended by the commanding officer of their respective units on the basis of their physical standing, background of certain subjects in high school, and possession of of- ficer-like qualities, the Marine train- ees are sent here for a limited time to get as much academic training as possible so as to enable them to become better all around officers. If you remember to send GREETING CARDS for all important occasions. We suggest that you select your CHRISTMAS CARDS now for those overseas. Perhaps your pals at home are due for a birthday. Don't let the distance separate you, come in and buy that card today. ALL EQUIPMENT for the amateur photogra- pher as well as developing films, enlarg4nments, and photo finishing are to be found here. FINE FOOD served with true cordiality makes dining at the ALLENEL a real pleasure. Enjoy our genial hospitality on all important occa- sions, on week-end dates, and for dinner during FRANCISCO-BOYCE ,, !I i uI I :Z4 F ®, I I 6t 516 East Microclean £tAN UNDER THE MICROSCOPE I Liberty Free Delivery I K ~ w ter fo fneeneraimet n nnAror Phone 23-23-1 ANN ARBOR'S rKI Y fi IA] ITY CI FA NFRS KEEP A-HEAD I ,I I II ,I 111 , , I