F Seventieth Year of Editorial Freedom ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 190 l -Day-James Warneka ADDITION--Included in this year's construction projects for the University is the three-story addition to the Student Activities Bldg., adding over 35,000 feet of floor area, The addition should be completed by September of.next year. It will house the Office of Admissions,'the Student Employment Office, the office of Student Affairs, the cashier's office, and the Bureau of Appoint. ments and Occupational Information. Campus Sees Building Spurt By MICHAEL OLINICK Building activity at the Univer- sity resumed this summer after a virtual three-year blackout on state-supported construction. New structures filling out the University landscape are a $1.1 million cyclotron laboratory on North Campus and a $975,000 three-story addition to the Stu- dent Activities Building. The SAB expansion will be financed by stu- dent fees, while the state will pro- vide capital outlay for the cyclo- tron building. With the exception of the Men- tal Health Research Institute, sup- ported in part by federal funds, no building has been erected on campus with state aid since Oc- tober 1956, when the Fluids Engi- neering Building was authorized. $7 Million Allocated The state has allocated $7 mil- lion for University construction for 1960-61 and this money will be used for the cyclotron labora- tory and the Physics-Astronomy- Institute Building, now in the planning stages. Similar appro- priations for capital construction in the last two years were $1.3 million (1959-60) and $2 million (1958-59). The new cyclotron laboratory will house a $1.8 million cyclotron, financed by the U.S. Atomic Ener- gy Commission, as well as the Uni- versity's smaller accelerator now located in the basement of Randall adding over 35,000 square feet of Laboratory, floor area. University Vice - President for The Office of Admissions, the Research Ralph Sawyer estimates Student Employment Office, the it will take two and a half years office of Veteran Affairs, the Cash- to build and install the cyclotron ier's office, and the Bureau of Ap- which will be "The best high pro- pointments and Occupational In- cision instrument for analyzing the The Legislature's capital outlay nuclear structure of heavier ele- bill did not include appropriations ments." for a new music school, a fluids Unique Structure engineering building or a medical The new structure rising on school addition. These were all Maynard Street will be an addition given top priority on the Univer- to a building almost unique on the sity's request. American college campus. Few The University will continue to universities have a center like the place these items at the head of SAB, designed primarily to house the desired new construction list student organizations, activities, sent to the Legislature each year, and services. The addition will con- Vice President for Business and solidate student-service offices by Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont said. President's Welcome I extend a cordial welcome to the students who are begin- ning new programs of study at The University of Michigan. May I remind our freshmen that since they are spending four or more years at the University they proceed immediately to lay their academic foundation soundly; that they explore all aspects of the University, curricular and extracurricular; and that they take the long look at what they expect from life before deciding how the University can best help them reach their goals. Best wishes for success and happiness in your life and work at The University of Michigan. Harlan Hatcher President mnt, Dearborn Branches 0er nique en Four years ago the University decided it was time to expand - the result was the establishment of a two-year senior college in Flint The experiment proved so successful that the University again m expanded beyond the bounds of Ann Arbor last year, this time set- ting up a branch known as the Dearborn Center. '. Both small campuses are unique in the educational services they offer. The Dearborn Center, which began operations last year with a total enrollment of $3 students, expects to have a full-time en- rollment of around 200 this fall. All three of its basic curricula will be offered this year: engin- eering, business administration and liberal arts, Offer Work-Study Programs The engineering and business administration curricula are gear- ed to work-study programs in which the students spend alternate semesters on campus and on carefully selected work assignments in business and industry. The main work-study curricula break into programs in business administration, industrial engineering, and added this year will be electrical engineering. Offered without the work-study system will be two new pro- grams, one in liberal arts and the other in teacher certification at ice