THE MICHIGAN DAILY A. A.IL)b M),a I I- ootball Tickets Free' to Students Basketball, Other Sports Admission Charges Paid for by Tuition Fees Student tickets for all Michigan home football games will be dis- buted beginning Monday, Sept. 24, in Barbour Gymnasium, under group seating plan instituted in 1949 by SL and the Board in ntrol of Intercollegiate Athletics. Along with the pasteboards, covered by the tuition fee along h other University privileges, students this season will receive an litional bonus. Game programs, which in the past have been handled by private irces, will be given out at each contest to all student ticketholders e of charge. The programs include names and numbers of Miohigan and op- sing team players. The tickets themselves are handed out on the basis of seniority. niors receive the best of the student allotment of seats, juniors the onext best, and so on down to fresh- luge Building 'rogram for U' Under Way A multi-million dollar buildingI ogram which will provide acres new classroom, dormitory, hos- tal and research facilities is1 aring completion on the cam- I back of Angell Hall, the lit-1 ary college building, a new four or addition complete with an; ht-story office room tower is ing pushed to completion to lace classroom and lecture hall; ace destroyed in the Haven Hall e a 'year and a half ago. The; Lck and steel structure will cost er $4,000,000 when it is finally mupleted in the fall of 1952. New steel stairways are also be- g built into the north and south id of the present Angell Hall 'ucture. The new skyscraper men's dorm- ry, South Quad, will be par- Mly completed by the fall and ficials expect to house about 500 en in it the first semester. By e second semester, the entire ilding's capacity of 1,150 should ready for occupancy, they say. In the University hospital area, e new Outpatient Clinic and edical Research Building which gether will cost a total of $6,- 0,000 are well under way. Con- ete pouring has been completed i all six floors of the clinic and e foundation work on the first or of the research building hiich will. be used by the Medical chool is under way. men. Students may pick up their tick- ets any day from Monday until Friday. In order to rer'(-ive them, they must present a cashier's re- ceipt at the student football ticket window in Barbour Gym. The cashier's receipt is coupon number 6 on the "railroad ticket." (To the unitiated, that's the regis- tration card with the many sec- tions.) Those who wish to sit together at games may do so by presenting their receipts at the s-lme time. Students in different classes may sit together, but they will do so in the section where the one with the least semesters in residence sits. Seniors who wish to sit with freshmen forfeit their chances of sitting on the 50 yard line; they must sit in the end zone. Returning students must bring a transcript to registration so that the number of semesters in resi- dence may be determined. Two summer sessions counts as one re- gular semester under the plan. Ticket manager Don Weir hand- les all the arrangements for the distribution, in addition to serving as czar of a complicated domain down in the athletic administration building. Ticket requests from coast to coast for Michigan home games flood into the office, which carries a full staff of secretaries to handle the voluminous corespondence'. Men Students Live Mostly In Group Units Most University men park their golf bags and hang their hats in dormitory resident halls.or fra- ternity houses during their strug- gle with higher education. All freshmen must spend one year in the dormitories before they can make the move to fra- ternity houses or rooms in private homes. - * , , THE "MICHIGAN House Plan" in the resident dormitories meets the social, fraternal and athletic needs ti University males so well that many men never make the move. 4 Resident advisors offer aca- demic advice and general coun- selling to the dorm dwellers, and, through their staff assist- ants (one to a floor), protect property and keep a reasonable respect for order alive in the dormitories. Each house in the Quads also has an associate advisor. Associ- ate advisors or "house mothers," help direct social activities and al- ways are around to give the femi- nine side of the picture, when its sought. . , * T H E STUDENT government program is probably the force that is most effective in making the quads more than just a place to sleep. Each house council determines in large part the conduct and ac- tivity of its own house. Leaders from the quads student govern- ment become members of the Board of Governors of the quad- rangles and as such have a great influence in determining Univer- sity policy on the quads. * * * ABOUT 15 per cent of the stu- dent body are affiliated with fra- ternities. At the University, fraternities have always been a large force in student affairs. Social activi- ties are mixed with academic chores in fraternities with a "re- laxed tension" that appeals to a! great number of University men. Freshmen who want to take a! Nook at fraternity life may sign up' for rushing at the beginning of their second semester, after they have made their grades. If they elect to affiliate with a fraternity, an dare nominated by one, they must remain in the quads until the end of their first year. However, they can parti- cipate in all fraternity activities durin gthat time, and they move into fraternity houses at begin- ning of their sophomore year. Looking after the health of the thousands of Michigan students is the job of the University's Health Service-one of the first and best student health centers in the United States. The Health Service provides necessary medical care and treat- ment without charge in its build- ing a half-block off-campus on Fletcher St. BEFORE A STUDENT can reg- ister for the first time at the Uni- versity, he must receive a tho- rough physical examination, us- ually lasting about two hours. X- rays are also taken to check for tuberculosis. Records are made of any de- fects in posture, of past illnesses and minor complaints. But it is entirely up to the student whether or not he takes ad- vantage of Health Service fa- cilities. Each student is assigned to a physician medical adviser whom he may feel free to call on for ad- vice or treatment of any ailment. * * * IF THE SERVICES of a spe- cialist are required, the student will be referred to one of the Health Service's specially equipped departments, which include: Minor surgery (cases requiring intensive surgery are referred to the University Hospital). A physiotherapy clinic for ul- tra-violet light treatments, and with whirlpool baths to aid stu- dents to regain the use of limbs kept in casts or stiff for other reasons. A mental hygiene department with full-time psychologists and psychiatrists taking care of situ- ations ranging from questions of general personality and scholastic adjustment ot psychological and emotional problems of a more complicated nature. AN EYE CLINIC that offers' complete refractions and then en- ables students to buy glasses made by private companies at significant savings. A dental clinic for examina- tion and treatments (most den- tal repair work is referred to the Dental School or private dentists). A clinic nurses station for dress- ings, general treatments a n d emergencies that also handles vac- cinations and injections. Should a student be involved in a local ac- cident and taken by friends or police to an Ann Arbor hospital, the Health Service will help with the bill. Clinics of dermatology, d i e ts therapy and ear, nose and throat.t Student patients are never used as clinical subjects for medical student instruction or experimen- tation. * * * A 60-BED INFIRMARY is lo- cated on the third floor of the Health Service. However, Dr. War-, ren E. Forsythe, director of the Service, pointed out that it is sel-t dom that more than half the beds; are used at any one time. Cases that cannot be handled] by the Health Service are gener- ally referred to the 1,029-bed University Hospital. In cases of serious illness, parents are no- tified by special delevery letters. In the "good old days" when a student became ill in his room, his roommate usually provided all the medical and nursing attention which he might receive. IF THINGS GOT BAD, t h e roommate usually put his buddy on a train and sent him home. If someone came down with a eentagious disease and an epi- demic developed, the college us- ually declared an unexpected two-week holiday. No students, no epidemic. The first University Health Service was organized in 1913. It was staffed by three physicians, a nurse, a clerk, and had a budget of $10,000ewith which to assist the University's 5,520 students. LOCOTED ON the third floor of the modern $500,000 four-story Health Service building first op- ened in 1940 is an infirmary with 20 full or part-time nurses, where students requiring bed care are hospitalized. , * * * STUDENT ELIGIBILITY f o r Health Servicefacilities is auto- matic with the taking of four hours or more of credit hours (in- cluding fellowship teachers), while those with less than four hours Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES BEST IN NATION: 'U' Provides Low Cost Med ical Service can obtain privileges by paying a $10 fee at the beginning of a se- mester. Though faculty and students' wives are not included in this eligibility list, they may be giv- en certain injections at the Health Service, Services offered to students without charge include 15 days of general hospitalization d u r i n g each semester at a daily expense allowance of more than $10.00, surgeon fees and operating ex- penses for acute surgical condi- tions, simple drugs and dressings, and medical attention at the var- ious University summer camps. Freshman health lectures, the traditional bane of first year stu- dents, will be waived for those who can pass a special examination given during orientation week this year, Dr. Warren E. Forsythe, dir- ector of the Health Service has announced. Those who do not pass the exam, however, must attend the six-lecture series and pass an- other examination given at the end of the course of lectures. The lectures are designed to acquaint students with health problems re- lated specifically to the student environment. All first year students will be required to attend the first lec- ture on Oct. 8 (for men) or Oct. 22 (for women) in the Natural Science Auditorium. At that time it will be announced which stu- dents earned the privilege of not attending the series by passing the orientation week exam. The men's lectures will be given by Dr. Forsythe and members of his staff in three sections during the middle of October. Women's lectures will be given by Dr. Margaret Bell and other staff women in two sections ther last week in October. i' 4' 4 +' \ \" Freshman Health Lectures Waived for Some Students f FOR FACULTY AND STUDENTS ALIKE.. TINKER & CO. right on the campus have pro- vided fine suits and top-coats . . . meticulously tailored to measure for Men and Women. For class, dress or lounging, TINKER & CO. have the right styles, the correct fabrics and at surprisingly low prices. Freshmen . . . come in and get acquainted. Soph s, Juniors and Seniors are sure to know us. KAHN TAILVRE \LVTHES 613 EAST WILLIAM ST tE ET Ia For other athletic events, stu- dents may gain admission by show- ing their identification cards--with some exceptions. Swimming and hockey carry a small ticket fee to help liquidate the cost of these sports. I ,I An exceptional platform series consistent with the high educational and en. tertainment standards of the University of Michi- Zknifer itty e| )ichriyan Oratepical 444eciation 1951-52 LECTURE COURSE presents a program of 4itin9ui Aed Celebritie4 0 . gan. / HILL AUDITORIUM 9 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN i! t dS rpa ,iterature Adeenture - ?lational and WOW'd Afjfail rnteptainmeft Vice-President ALBEN W. BARKLEYS U. S. Senator ESTES KEFAUVER BRIAN AHERNE Distinguished Star of Stage and Screen SEASON TICKET PRICES: Main Floor, $7.80 (Tax Incl.) First Balcony, $6.60 (Tax Incl.), SPECIAL RATE TO STUDENTS -2.40 Complete Course - Second Balcony, Unreserved CHARLES LAUGHTON America's Leading Platform A ttractionA 4. m '*in ~ - _____________________________________________