THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MRK2~14 President Voices Assembly's Views Regents Confirm Appointment 'Of Eight to UniversityFaculty The Board of Regents approved eight appointments to the Uni- versity faculty at a meeting yes- terday. At the same meeting, gifts to- taling $14,901.70 were accepted; the largest being a $5,000 dona- tion from Parke, Davis and Co. of Detroit to continue research ont the immunization of tuberculosis.t THE NEW FACULTY appoint- .nents include Gordon B. B. M. Sutherland, professor of physics.# named, professor of economics and Ross Lee Finney appointed professor of composition. Robert J. Niess was named as- sociate professor of French, Charles L. Rulfs, assistant pro- fessor of chemistry, and Lawrence L. Rauch assistant professor in the department of Aeronautical Engineering.** THE LIST concludes with Rob- ert V. Kesling, who was named assistant professor of geology and associate curator of the Paleon- tology Museum. Profs. Irving H. Anderson and Ralph M. Patterson were reap- pointed to the executive commit- tee of the Institute for Human Adjustment. The Institute's direc- tor, Clark Tibbitts was granted a leave of absence, covering one third of his time, from March 1 to July 1.- ___ y Y _ ww Student Body To BePolled Interviews with a cross-section of the student body will begin to- morrow as part of a study being conducted by the Bureau of Stu- dent Opinion. Interviewees, selected by a sci- entific sample of every tenth reg- istrant listed in Dean's Office files, are being notified by post- card to report at 206 Mason Hall at specified times. Findings will be published in complete statistical form follow- ing the completion of interviews after vacation. Flying Boxcar SAN DIEGO-The fuselage vol- ume of the Navy's 190-passenger transport plane, Constitution, is larger than the largest pullman car, biggest box car, largest flat car and passenger bus combined. SPEAKS TOMORROW: Asia's Revolts To Be Topic Of AP Writer Swinton's Talk Former Michigan Daily Editor Stanley S. Swinton will speak on "Covering Asia's Revolutions" at 3 p.m. tomorrow in Rm. B, Haven Hall. Swinton recently completed three and one-half years service in Indonesia as chief of the South Eastern Asia Bureau of The Asso- ciated Press. HE IS NOW resting in Ann Arbor at the home of his par- ents, Prof. and Mrs. Roy Swinton, while awaiting further assignment for the Associated Press. During the war, Swinton cov- ered the Mussolini execution at Milan while working for Stars and Stripes. After the war he became civilian correspondent for the AP in the Pacific. While at the University, he was elected president of Sigma Delta Chi, Journalism fraternity, and' was city editor on The Daily AFTER GRADUATING in 1940 he began his career with the A? in Detroit. Swinton joined the Armed Forces in 1941. Following the lecture, which is one in the series offered to interest students and the gen- eral public by the Journalism department, a coffee hour will be sponsored by members of Sigma Delta Chi. Open discussion will be directed by the chapter's president, Stan Dean, Grad. Kenneth E. Bouiding was To Continue Sales Of Announcements Engineering graduation announ- ' ements are going on sale again tomorrow. They will be sold from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the East Engineering Ex- tension, outside the Aeronautics r Office on the main floor. Sales had officially closed last week, but popular demand called for the extra day's sale. 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