PAGE TWO TIfE mrlcl YGAN DAIL'Y''"' TUESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1964 4 PAGIS ~WO TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY TUE SflAY, AUGUST 25. 1964 Schools, Colleges S nSectrumon ,I ''; ' Central Campus .houses but a small s'ection of' the academic facilities of the University. From the athletic fields to the medical center to l-the resealrch- complex of -North Campus, the University extends far from what may seem to many undergraduates to be its hub at the diag.. The million-dollar physical com-. plex in all .of these areas houses the '17 schools and colleges that compi'se the University. Two of them are located outside of Ann Arbor. These units, the Dearborn Center and the Flint College, are ,discussed in the "Uni- versity A ' inistration" section of this issue. Architecture and" Design Colege. * This division offers three pro- grams:- a five-year professional program leading to. a bachelor of architecture degree,- a. four-year bachelor ,of science in landscape architecture degree plan and var- ious .curricula eading to a bache- lor of science in design. It also offers a -graduate program leading to several graduate degrees. Sometime with the next decade or so, the college will leave - its drab quarters on central campus and move.to a new building- currently nothing but a vacant lot bearing a "to be erected" sign -on North Campus.. The -new dean of the college, appointed this summer, is Regi- nald, ,F.Malcolmson.~ Business Administration School... This school provides five degree programs last yeai, requiring two Welcome Students and Un erstly Personnc1 to the newv retwodeled U-N BARBERS_ (near Kesge's) "Our dea is workmanship and service-Senitation is the law!" NEW OWNER: DOMENIC DASCOLA, Class of '36 of the Doscola Barbers years of, background in the liberal arts. One leads to a master's degree in hospital administration, and is conducted with the aid of the public health and Medical Schools and the" University Hospital. It requires .one year's residence in a hospital. The other four degree programs are confined mainly to business and economic areas, as are several of its :research and information bureaus. The school sponsors the Bureau of Business Research,Bureau of Industrial Relation's, and Bureau of Hospital Administration. In addition it holds numerous con- ferences throughout the year with interested parties from the busi- ness- and industrial world. Unlike many of its counterparts, the business school is in "excel- lent 'shape" as far as its physical facilities¥ are concerned. School administrators are presently thinking about student housing problems, One of the present ideas begin considered is to set up a living arrangement similar to the one at the Law Quad. Dean of the Business School is Floyd. R. Bond. Dental School. .. The University has had a pro- gram in dentistry since 1875. It is presently being conducted in two adjoining buildings - the Dental-Bldg. and the W. K. Kel- logg Institute, both located on N. University. As with the architecture school, the dental school also has a prob- lem of space. Independent accred- iting groups have appraised the school's facilities as distressingly bad in comparison with the level of instruction. A newbuilding for the school ranks high in priority among the University's various building plans. The school offers both graduate and postgraduate dentistry cur- ricula. Dean William R. Mann heads this University unit. Education School. . The: educational -school is lo- cated in University High School which is used as a laboratory for instruction of teaching. However, University High will be phased out of the system as soon as Ann Arbor builds a new public high school. University High will become an elementary school.. of four years of college and pass- ing an entrance examination. The dean is Allan F. Smith. Literary College .. . This is by far the University's largest and most diverse teaching division. In its buildings, which fill most of central campus, the literary college offers depart- mental degree programs in 32 departments. In addition, its cat- alogue lists eight interdepart- mental programs, 13 "special pro- grams" and four programs each builtharound the study of one area of the world: America, the. Far East, the Near East and Russia. As the University's liberal-arts division, the literary college also offers liberal-arts courses to stu- dents enrolled in or planning to enroll in other University divi- sions. Business administration, dental, and education school st .- dents spend their first two years in the literary college; the col- lege's bachelor's degrees also help qualify students for law, iredictal and other professional cjrricula. Even after being enrolled in the specialized University divisions, students often take advantage of literary college courses. Literary College departments also offer graduate programs of various descriptions. The college's dean is nationally- known economist William Haber. Medical School*... With more than 800 students enrolled, the Medical School, es- tablished in 1850, is the largest in the country. Offering work in 21 depart- ments, the school comprises 2e Medical Center complex. nor I of the women's dormitories tn the hill. Students desiring to enter the school must show 90 tours o2 undergraduate w o r k in the science-oriented pre-medical pro- gram. The Medical School is iato'i- ally known for the excelle ice of its faculty and its University Hos- pital. Michigan residents are g'n preference in admittance. The dean is William !H.b. J. Music School. . . Once scattered across the cen- tral campus area with its facilities dispensed throughout some 13 buildings, the music school is now unified in a new North Campus building. With over 700 music majors and nearly 80 faculty members, it is the second largest music school in the country. It offers a standard four-year undergraduate program as well as a graduate program leading to bachelor and master of music de- grees. Its faculty members have won several national and international prizes, and frequently give free concerts on campus. The Univer- sity of Michigan Glee Club won the Welsh International Eistend- dford at Llangellen, Wales, last year. The school's summer program at Interlochen is w el l k n o w n throughout the country. The dean is James B. Wallace. Natural Resources.. . The University has the nation's first school of natural resources, established in 1950. Offering degree programs in wildlife management, fisheries, conservation, forestry and wood technology, the school is situated in the Natural Resources Bldg. on East University, north of the en- gineering buildings. Many of the top officials in government and private forestry and conservation bureaus are University graduates. The dean is Stephen H. Spurr. Nursing School ... School officials are anticipating an increase in the number of male students wishing to apply to this unit. Its basic program consists of a four year program combining gen- eral and professional education leading to a bachelor of science degree in nursing. The, Reason The University's listing of some of its divisions as "col- leges" and others as "schools" isn't merely arbitrary. The distinction? A "college" admits undergraduate freshmen And offers them a full four (or five) year undergraduate pro- gram. A "school" is a more specialized division which re- quires at least two years of college education for admission and which gives mainly gradu- ate, professional or technical degrees. The one year old medical sur- gical program which leads to a master of science degree is also expected to attract more students this year. Comprising one male student and over 650 women, this unit is situated in the Medical Center complex. The dean is Rhoda Reddig Russell. Pharmacy College ... Established in 1876, this college is the smallest (about 150 stu- dents) of the 14 graduate and professional units at the Univer- sity. It provides a five year program for a bachelor of science in phar-' macy degree, a six year profes- sional program for a doctor of pharmacy and two graduate pro- grams. The curricula include special studies for hospital and profes- sional pharmaceutical work and also for industrial technology. The $1.2 million Pharmacy Bldg. dedicated in 1961 provides modern facilities and planning for re- search activities. The dean is Tom D. Rowe. Public Health... In order to prepare professional workers, to offer in-service train- ing to existing public health workers and to conduct research, this school was established in 1951. There are only a dozen or so comparable schools in the country. As a graduate school, it offers programs leading to masters de- grees in public health and indus- trial health and doctor of public health. Research projects by the school's faculty members include a $144,000 five year study of virus drugs and another study of factors associated with nuitrition. While situated in the Public Health Bldg., new space is being provided. this fall by the adapta- tion of the former residence hall Victor Vaughn. Myron F. Wegman is the dean. Social Work School ... This school is found among the various language centers and classrooms in the Frieze Bldg. It is a graduate school, with a two year program leading to a masters degree. Most of the unit's work is done with funds received from the fed- eral government. One of these projects, supported by a $200,000 grant from the Dept. of Health, Education and Welfare, involves a study of possible cures and edu- cational"programs for juvenile de- linquents. The dean is F. F. Fauri. 1 #1 a 4 4 PHARMACY COLLEGE students apply their classroom knowledge in the college's prescription department. Presently, the education school offers both 'A' and 'B' track pro- grams. The first is for those stu- dents desiring, to become second- ary school teachers. The 'B' track covers subjects in' which student teaching is not available and which are not fre- quently taught in high schools. The school has its library facil- ities on the second floor of the UGLI and sponsors semesters abroad with the University of Sheffield in England. In 1879, the University marked the path by being the first in- stitution in the country to offer a professorship in the science and art of teaching. Dean of the school is Willard C. Olson. Engineering College .. . More than 3000 students are enrolled in this unit, which pro- vides undergraduate programs in 13 fields, leading 'to a bachelor of science degree. The college is offering a new in- terdisciplinary program in bio-en- gineering which combines work in the biological and medical sciences with those of engineering.. The program is for graduate students only and no' undergraduate de- grees will be given. The library facilities of the en- gineering college are on the UGLI's third floor. The dean is Stephen Attwood. Graduate School.. This is an administrative unit offering 25 different degrees. The actual instruction comes from the faculty and facilities of other schools. Located in the Rackham build- ing, the graduate school coordi- nates and approves entrance ap- plications of students into other departments' graduate programs. Much of the work involves the sponsorship of post-doctoral pro- grams. Law School... Established in 1860, the Law School offers a three year course leading to a bachelor of laws de- gree. It also offers three graduate programs. Using the case method, students examine and analyze the presen- tation and validity of arguments in a given case. A closed circuit television hookup with Washtenaw Court aids greatly in this respect. Well known for their research, Law School professors edit the two publications in existence per- taining to international law. RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE: New LSA Unit Aims at Innovation By JEFFREY GOODMAN Next year a pilot group of 500 literary college freshmen will participate in the University's newest educational experiment: the residential college. Aimed at improving the learning process and partially answering growth needs, the residential college will integrate living, eating, library, classroom and faculty office facilities in one building or a small cluster of buildings, to be located between Central Campus{ and North Campus. This unified, relatively isolated physical framework will hope- fully provide for an intimate, small-college atmosphere where academic pursuits will become a more complementary part of the student's life and where contact among faculty and students is greatly enchanced. Prototype? And perhaps most significant, the University may well use the residential college concept as a guideline in other expansion in the years ahead. Thus Vice-President for Academic Affairs Roger While urging its students to take The buildings that compose the literary college courses, the Engi- Law Quadrangle are a landmark neering unit does not have a two and are known to nearly all stu- year language requirement. It dents and many visitors. maintains a separate English de- Qualification for entering the partment. Law School consists of completion W. Heyns, charged by the Regents with the responsibility of working out the college's details, considers that the new unit will also be a "model" for future University growth. The proposal for the residential college originally came from the literary college faculty members in the spring of 1962. By November of iast year the full college faculty gave its tentative support to the proposal. Numerous reports followed-among them, a paper by one of the literary college's associate deans and recom- mendations by another college committee-and in April of this year the Regents, after a second faculty endorsement, authorized the Office of Academic Affairs to begin planning the new unit Maybe 1965 While new facilities may not be available for the college-funds must be appropriated by the state , Legislature-until 1967, it Is hoped that the concept will go into operation by 1965 in existing buildings. The residential college will be an administrative unit of the literary college, with its director-Associate Dean Burton D. Thuma -maintaining his appointment in the larger unit. Its faculty, a volunteer staff, also with literary college appoint- ments, will probably receive short-term assignments in the new unit. This procedure and efforts to maintain a high quality of education in the residential college are aimed ' at removing the stigma-at first feared by some professors-of being assigned to the literary college's "Siberia." 1000 Students Eventually the residential college will contain about 1000 stu- dents, all of whom chose to be in the residential college rather than the regular literary college. They will represent roughly a cross-section of the student body, and will not be selected for any special level of ability or field of interest. But to help' develop a strong feeling of identification with the college, a freshman admitted to the residential college would be expected-though not required-to stay there for his entire under- See LSA, Page 7 I I I i The Center of Campus Activity... ICTNIIAN UNION s o "" f w 11 6. The Unio; offers a multitude of facilities including-Dining Room, Michigan Union Grill, Barber Bowling Alley, Swimming Pool, Billiard Room, Listening Student Offices, Meeting Rooms, Pendleton Library. Shop, Rooms. You meet the nicest The MUG. ..for a m.eal or a coffee ate.. . people on a Honda, Maybe it's the incredibly low price. Or the fantastic mileage. It could be the precision engineering. Or the safety and conven- ience features. But most likely it's theifun. Evidently nothing catches on like the fun of owning a Honda. Join in. The first step is a demonstration ride. Why not today? ,.. .: -" --:. . eE-' . i :. .:.' --.. Y S Y ": "_ x- >,£T3 ad z £ y Bx ..',-.A'^S., R4 ,'' :i - ::3_._ 4.:c .',if Y 1