GE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY FOR MEN ONLY': Union Offers Numerous Attractions to Campus The Michigan Union, campus men's club, if being robbed of one college tradition-its ivy trim- but it is firmly hanging on to its more noted tradition of forbid- ding women to enter the front ....... door.' Offering extensive recreational facilities and endless special ser- vices-for men only-the Union Huron River Site of New IU' Cam us (Continued from Page 1) No time schedule has been set for the major part of the project- ed campus. University officials have a "master plan" on paper, calling for construction of the Huron campus in a series of self- contained units, each of which will be of quadrangle design, built as the need arises and funds become available. s " *- EACH THREE-OR-FOUR build- ing unit will be of standard archi- tecture-but the units will vary. Modern styles are expected to be the architectural motif, but the University doesn't want to commit itself to a standard style which may become obsolete. . The whole project, according to a statement by President Har- lan I. Hatcher, has been formu- lated as a long-run effort to meet "increasing responsibilities and demands upon the Univer- sity." Enrollment has now dip- ped to 17,000, but in 1948 reach- ed an uncomfortable peak of almost 22,000. Although there must be some further construction on the pres- ent campus, "we know now that there is not adequate space for an enrollment of 254000 students-or possibly more-which it is reason- able to anticipate in the 1960's. "Since the University cannot expand much further In its pres- ent setting, the natural area for its growth is toward the north where the valley of the Huron River and the sloping hills may be used fully in developing a campus of beauty and utility." The new Huron center would be a mile and a tenth, as the crow flies, from the center of the cam- pus. Only the arboretum and the municipal golf course would sep- arate the two campusues, making a virtually contiguous, although sprawling, University community, with a recreational center in the middle. Included in the fine arts center would probably be the Music School, which for years has been dissatisfied with its present cramp- ed quarters in Harris Hall and Burton Memorial Tower. Also in 'U' plans is a beautiful outdoor amphitheatre set in idyl- lic surroundings. It would be built on a concave slope, overlooking an artificial lagoon. New Grads To Hear Dean Dean Ralph A. Sawyer of the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies will address an assembly for new graduate stu- dents at 8:30 p.m. Friday in the Rackham Amphitheatre. Dean Sawyer and other mem- bers of the staff will welcome the students and explain the facili- ties and opportunities available to them at the Rackham School and on the campus. The program is being sponsored by the Graduate Student Council which represents the University's graduate student population. An open house and mixer with dancing and refreshments will be held after the talk at the Rack- ham Assembly Hall for graduate students and their guests. Opera Meeting A meeting of the Union Opera Program Committee, open to freshman men and women, will be held at 6:45 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 17, in Rm. 3K of the Union, according to Bob Golten '54, com- mittee chairman. has for 49 years been a campus center for students and alumni. Recently, however, women have been allowed more liberty in use of Union facilities. The cafeteria is open to them week- days from 2:30 to 5 p.m. and on Friday and Saturday evenings. The Bowling alleys are also open to women on Friday and Satur- day eveniigs and Sunday after- noons, from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. But in spite of occasional pro- test uprisings by women students, the tradition barring them from using the front door still shows no signs of breaking down, ALL MEN students automati- cally become eligible for member- ship in the four-story brick land- mark as soon as tuition fees are paid. Available at registration, a membership card entitles a stu- dent to use the numerous Un- ion facilities which combine the advantages of a recreational hall, a hotel, a lounge, a cafe- teria and a library. Recreation-wise, the Union of- fers swimming, bowling, billiards, ping-pong, and* in less strenuous manner, checkers andschess. * * * . NEARLY 200 guest rooms make the Union popular to football weekend visitors and overnight lodging accommodations are avail- able year-round to members and guests. The Union's lounge facilities and cafeteria services have given it the "campus-meeting place" tradition. Besides its functions as a men's club, the Union has lately become a campus service center. Its third-floor rooms are open to meetings of accredited campus groups. The main desk sells sup- plies, magazines, and newspapers. On Saturday evening, throughout the year, the Union sponsors dances in the second- floor Ballroom which accommo- dates 400 couples. Of special interest to incoming freshmen, the Union takes charge of orientation of men students and sponsors a stag party and a mixer during orientation week. Other special functions are: Travel Service, where drivers and riders are matched for vacation travel; Student - Faculty coffee hours held twice a month; and Tu- toring Service, in which students register to receive aid in their sub- Jects. Managed by a Board of Direct- ors composed of alumni, faculty members and students, the Union is a center for most men's club of- fices. Student managers for 1952- 53 are Bill Jentes '53, president; and Jack Ehlers, '53E, secretary. 'U' Orientation Still Goes On (Continued from Page 1) A new event in the schedule this year, a student publications open house will be held Thursday- afternoon and Friday morning to give new students a picture of the main campus publications-The Michigan Daily, Michiganensian, Gargoyle and Generation. A series of 12 one-half hour meetings have been scheduled Wednesday morning and Thurs- day morning by Student Legisla- ture to give new students a round- up of SL activities. Students' academic ability will get a tryout at 1 p.m. Friday and 8 a.m. Saturday at Hill Auditor- ium where academic aptitude tests will be given. As a final note in the program Friday night has been set aside for newcomers to attudent the various welcoming programs plan- ned by church organizations. Evaluations May Be Ended Literary college students may not have another opportunity to grade their teachers as they have in the past. At the last faculty meeting, members voted to appoint a spec- ial committee to make recommen- dations as to whether or not the evaluations should continue. Last year the faculty was graded "a shade lower" than the time before. Where T idI j.. -X 1 1 ......... :.n..:. v a -:::.:"i}:{::i:,::}}:. ... .4 :3 NEW:. AD.....TIONS-Roome :.y ;:; numbrin inthethre ne Ane~lHalladdtios wll cosey fllo :th riginal Angell Hall pl}}:-}an.}, :. . Numbers in th.: e .::.: : classroom .::.::section,....::Mason. ...Hall,:. }are-: in:..the ,.400's.-.h onkr{the groud foor 140's n te foor bov an soon. ffies n Hven allfolow he sme lanwit numbrs i the600'. Th fou Anell all uditrium arelettredA, B C Sad D.Mainentrnce to...the...buildings:::::: are:::;marked "E"" in {i"S: the .. above ::idiagram.: LS ISA Mixer To Be Held The International Students As- sociation is giving a mixer to help foreign and American students be- come acquainted at 8 p.m. Satur- day in the student lounge of the First Methodist Church, 120 S. State Street. Entertainment presented by for- eign student groups, record danc- ing, square dancing, community singing and an introduction to the International Students Asso- ciation are planned for the even- ing's program. Read and Use Daily Classifieds BLOCK 'M' SECTION: Grid Stubs Redeemable At Barbour Gymnasium Students holding Block 'M' stubs will be able to redeem them for season football tickets on Monday in Barbour Gymnasium, the Wol- verine Club has announced. The reservations, which are transferable, were distributed by the Club last semester in a new attempt to give the University a first-rate flash card section. Groups of students who want to sit together can do so if they pick up their tickets at the same time, according to Dorothy Fink '55 Block 'M' Committee co-chair- man. All unclaimed reservations will be distributed Tuesday morn- ing on a first-come-first-served basis. In addition, Block 'M' section members will be required t, at- tend a mass meeting, the date of which will be announced later, and come to football games a half-hour before kick-off for a practice session. "With just a small amount of practice, we hope to perfect a flash card section in the near fu- ture which will rival the best in the country," Miss Fink declared. op 4A4t it tau 4 THIS YEAR "Latest Deadline in the State m STUDENTS Welcome to Michigan and Ann Arbor from . CAMPUS NEWS * ASSOCIATED PRESS WIRE NEWS * UNIVERSITY'S DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN " NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL NEWS " LOCAL & STATE NEWS " NATIONALLY KNOWN COLUMNISTS, I