FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ConstructionOfGraduate Building W ill Begin In Summer Session $6,500,000 Of Rackham Fund Is Given School' Final Construction Near Completion; Plans To Be Approved Soon 0Ceupise sTwo Blocks Destruction Of Rooming Houses Affects More Than 90 Students Shortly after the start of the Sum-. mer Session, work on the new build- ing for the Rackham School of Grad- uate Studies will begin in earnest. Final plans are now nearing comple- tion and probably will be approved in a few days. A total of $6,500,000 was donated by the administrators of the estate of the late Horace Rackham, prominent Detroit lawyer, for the Graduate School n accordance with the re- quest of the late philanthropist, who wished that his estate be used for "the benefit of humanity." Last August a $5,000,000 gift was announced for the Graduate School, but when it was found that the build- ing and school could not be placed in a "proper setting" without addi- tional space, -1,500,000 more was given. Two Blocks Aquired Two blocks have been acquired by the University, acting through the Ann Arbor Trust Company, for the building. Work was begun last No- vember in razing the houses to the ground on the blocks, and excavation has already started. All but a few buildings; including houses and apart- ment buildings, have been cleared on the second block. A survey conducted by The DailyF early in March indicated that ap- proximately 91 students. were affectedt by the University's purchase of thet second block. At the close of the first1 semester these students were forced to find other places to live, and this further aggravated the present hous- ing crisis.I1 The new Rackham School for grad- uate students, will be designed as a center for graduate students. Not only are rooms planned for classes andC lectures but there are also special rooms set aside for social purposes. Some of the room will have lounges in order that "students may regain the lost art of conversation," accord- ing to Dean Yoakum of the Graduate1 School. 1 Groups To Meet Certain hoiorary and special so-r cieties for graduate students will have r rooms in the new building. It is s planned to have these groups hold t their meetings in the building and to use the new structure as a headquar- ters for all their activities.k No drawings of the proposed struc-a ture have been sent to the Rackham c Fund Committee or to the Univer- c sity by Smith, Hinchman and Grylls, s Detroit, the designers of the build- ing. a Before the plans are finally accept- s ed and work can actually start on v the building, a committee from the c University and the Rackham Fund Committee, must give them their ap- 1 proval. Dr. Mark S. Knapp is the chairman of the committee and the administrator of the Fund here inr Ann Arbor. When the new building c is completed, the Rackham Fund Committee will have offices on the first floor. One wing of the floor will be devoted to a suite of roomsc for the committee.- No announcement has yet beenV made as to when the building will i be completed and ready for occu-c pancy. However, according to Deans Yoakum "things are moving as fastr as they can" and at the earliest op- portunity the foundation of the new structure will be laid. Radio Features Of Educational Value Praised "The successful educational pro- grams of Prof. Waldo Abbot at the University of Michigan" were men- : tioned in an editorial in a recent issue of the Broadcascing magazine as broadcasting work, the information of which should be made available to educators. The article pointed out that WPA funds are now being used in an at-s tempt to show the way to educators toward the proper use of radio fa-1 cilities by writing model programs. It suggested that these funds bea used to establish a central federal agency to gather and make avail- able to educators in the various col- pzp.n rrnivsitia nowbraat- Botanical(Gardens, 51 Acres Of Fertile Among the valued possessns of the University is its Botonical Garden, a plot of fertile land consisting of 51 acres, which offers facilities for all phases of botanical instruction and research concerned with growing plants. Among the equipment which be- longs to the Botanical Gardens are seven greenhouses, a two-story brick laboratory, and ample work rooms. The entire tract has been piped for water. An important feature of the green- houses, it has been pointed out, is the provision of several separate rooms for individual research prob- lems, each equipped with automatic heat control and independent ventila- tion. A collection of growing plants for teaching and exhibition purposes is now being developed on a wide scale. It includes more than 2,000 species and varieties, including some of the more important economic and orna- mental species of the tropics and a representative collection of hardy per- ennials, shrubs, and trees. The Gardens are responsible for the decoration of all University buildings. Biology Camp To Be Led By Prof. LaRue Station To Be Situated On Shors Of Lake Douglas In Cheboygan County Headed by Prof. George R. LaRue >f the zoology department, a staff of 5 faculty men from the University nd other schools and colleges will e on hand to conduct the 28th an- iual Biological Station, from June 29 o August 22, on the shores of Doug- as Lake, in Cheboygan County. The Biological Station for teach- ng and research in botany and zo- logy forms an integral part of the Jniversity's Summer Session. Since ts establishment in 1909 it has been onducted for eight weeks periods very year. The camp is conducted on the Bo- mardus Tract, an area of more than ,900 acres which lies along the outhern and eastern shores of Doug- as Lake, and extends southward to urt Lake. The tract has a lake rontage of more than six miles. Pell- ton is the nearest village, situated ine miles west of the Station. Rail- oad connections reach as far as Pell- ton, the remaining nine miles being raversed by automobile. Camp Offers Variety According to the bulletin issued by the University, the region "offers n excellent variety of vegetational onditions, some original and many thers considerably modified as a re- ult of lumbering operations and fire." Thus persons attending the camp are fforded unusual opportunities to tudy various types of ecological de- elopment and to diagnose ecological oncepts. To those interested in taxonomy, his area abounds with diversified material. Over 1,000 species, distri- uted among nearly 100 families and more than 400 genera, have been re- orded in former years. Diverse flora and variety in habitats give ample pportunity to observe distribution. The study of animal life can well be arried on at the Biological Station s well. There is a wide range of ter- estrial and aquatic habitats, includ- ng those created by agricultural pro- esses, and the large unsettled or parsely settled areas offer an ele- ment especially conducive for biologi- al work. Species Are Abundant The Summer Session bulletin states hat there are 14 species of amphibi- ns and 15 species of reptiles, many f which are common enough for col- ection purposes. Many species of ish spawn during July, thus affording pportunity to study breeding beha- ior and embryology. Ornithologists also have good ad- vantage to pursue their studies, for during the previous summer sessions bout 175 species of birds have been dentified. These include the sum- ner bird population and early au- umn migrants. Although the spring nigration is over when the camp opens, many shore birds from the ar north can be observed on their way southward before the session is closed. Although living conditions are quite different from those encountered in he city, all provisions have been nade to preserve the health and con- fort of those in attendance at the Station. Cottages, mostly built to house three people, are equipped with screen doors and windows, heating any medical service necessary. A one-room hospital is available to any- one who may need temporary hospi- tal care. Life at the Biological Station is not, however, entirely confined to the realm of study and work, for there are recreational facilities aplenty at the camp. There is a large diamond where converts of the national pas- time can take a crack at the horse- hide, and there are excellent op- portunities for swimming, diving and boating. Each Saturday night ai party or entertainment is held in the clubhouse, which is equipped with chairs, tables and a piano, and is the common recreation center. LaRue Heads Staff The staff of the Station will be under the direction of Professor La- Rue, and will include Prof. Alfred7 H. Stockard of the zoology depart-' ment, who is secretary of the camp;1 Dr. William M. Brace of the Health< Service, who is staff physician; and< Odina B. Olson of the University High School, who is Dean of Women at the Station.t Special Summer Tours Include Niagara Falls And Detroit Trips (Continued from Page 1) and the weather station. Reserva- who will give an illustrated lecture tions must be made in the Summer on the same subject at 5 p.m. on Session office before 8 a.m. July 25, July 13. The trip to Niagara Falls when the special buses will leave for will be made by railroad in special Milford. They will return at 3 p.m. coaches, which will leave Ann Arbor A tour of the Cranbrook Schools, at 3:30 p.m. on July 17, returning one of the most beautiful in the late Sunday night, June 19. country, will comprise the ninth ex- Henry Ford's famous Greenfield cursion, to be held August 1. Special- Village will be visited on the sixth buses will transport the students excursion, to be held July 22. Points to Bloomfield Hills, where they will of interest which will be seen will be inspect the five schools of the Cran- Ford's village, the museum of early brook Foundation, Christ Church and American life, Edison's Menlo Park the Carillon. Laboratory, and the Dearborn Inn. The last and one of the most The trip will be made by special interesting trips will be to beautiful buses, which will leave the campus Put-In-Bay on Lake Erie. The ex-1 at 1 p.m. Since this tour is also of cursionists will leave Ann Arbor at especial interest, it will be repeated 7:30 a.m. on August 5, taking a spe-. for the eighth tour, to be held July 29. cial bus to the boat dock, where they The seventh tour will be a visit to will board a steamer for the 125-milei the General Motors Proving Grounds, trip. On the island they will visit, the several caves, Perry's monument and other points of geologic and scenic interest. The tour will be under the direction of Professor Scott. Club Will Continue Through Summer Although the Faculty Women'sl Club will not be as active this sum- mer as it has been in various activi- ties during the past school year, it will not disband entirely during the summer months. Mrs. Edward Adams, president of the organization has' announced that a reception and gar-1 den party for members of the visit- ing faculty of the Summer Session will be held in the gardens of the League sometime during the Summer Session. This affair will be similar to that which took place last year, Mrs. Adams announced. Dr. James A. Naismith, 74-year-oldf inventor of basketball, played the game only once in his life. Date Of Conference On Education Set The seventh annual Summer Edu- cational Conference of the School of Education is to take place on July 15 and 16. In the past, this conference has had an approximate attendance of 1,000 people, including many principals and superintendents from out of town. At the conference, significant issues are discussed and opportunity for ex- change of views on facts, proposals and trends of education are pre- sented. The following are a few of the topics scheduled to be covered at the 1936 conference: Is the Issue of Academic Freedom Real or Imag- inary?; What New Educational Agen- cies Should be Developed to Meet the Needs of Unemployed Youth?; Should the Traditional Elementary School Curriculum Be Abandoned?; , . * :r _.. _ , .... yf rte' 1: f 'r: /4 . . FASHION REQUIRES / 1 J I .T l\Iin WHITES COOL CJor successful Summer Serti ice insist on cljreene 'S ...,for PANAMA HATS WHIT I NENS PALM BEACHES WHITE FLANNELS As members of The National Association of Cleaners and Dyers, Greene s process of clean- ing Palm Beach Suits has been approved by The Goodall Company. For faultlessly clean white clothes, try this new and improved method of cleaning. It will pay you GREENE'S ;I CROCLMA mUNDER THEM1CRQSfUY L - -- 3..--- -* IN tI