PAGE TX TIlE IIciCHEAN DAILYV Oti'!'f.Y14fb 411bY LA1 J l PING, 195 Flint Campus Opens New Eran FIRE-TRAPS CONDEMNED: Buildings Rated 'Hazards' By JIM DYGERT A new era in the history of thE University will begin when its first branch campus opens in Flint. The date will probably be Sep- tember, 1956. Approved in principle by the Board of Regents Jan. 21, the pro- gram provides that the University operate a senior college in con- junction with Flint Junior College The University will administei and staff the senior college opera- tions in facilities provided by the Flint Board of Education. Request for $37,000 An appropriation request for $37,000 to continue planning and organization for the Flint cam- pus was before the State Legisla- ture as this went to press. University President Harlan H. Hatcher and Vice-President Mar- vin L. Niehuss have told legisla- tors the proposal won the interest of the Regents and they would like to experiment. The new senior college would be operated in the same physical plant now used by the Flint Jun- ior College, located a few blocks east of downtown Flint. Flint Junior College is the ben- eficiary of a $7 million endowment from the estate of W. S. Ballenger, w h I c h produces approximately $500,000 a year. Adjacent Uto Junior College Adjacent to the junior college Flint is developing a $13 million cultural center for the community at large, but also available as a University adjunct. Popular subscriptions are ac- counting for most of the $13 mil- lion. Three million dollars have already been given by General Mo- tors Corp., and the Charles S. Mott Foundation of Flint has contrib- uted $1 million. The $37,000 grant from the Leg- islature would enable the Univer- sity to complete plans, decide what courses should be taught and bring a complete prospectus to the lawmakers next year. President Hatcher has said the University hopes to get the branch started by the fall of 1956. During the first year, an esti- mated 500 students would be en- rolled in the senior college. After that, enrollment would rise to a peak estimated at 4,000-5,000. Mott Originates Idea Charles S. Mott, Flint philan- thropist and president of the Mott Foundation ,originated the idea back in 1946 when he said, "Wouldn't it be fine if boys and girls here could graduate from the University without leaving Flint?" One of the main reasons behind the plan is the problem of meeting a continually increasing enroll- ment. In addition there has been a conviction that, as President Hatcher wrote in a letter to the Regents, "the University is not a geographic fact, but a mission, a program, a concept of education, a kingdom of the mind and of the spirit." College Partly in Use Part of the development pro- gram is almost completed. Both the $650,000 Ballenger Field House and the $1,075,000 Harlow H. Curtice academic building are now being used, though not fully completed. The $1,557,000 Charles Stewart Mott Arts and Science Building is also nearing completion. All three are primarily parts of the commu- nity cultural center, bit will also be used by both the junior and senior colleges. Another building in the area houses present activities of the junior college. A large area behind the Ballenger, Curtice and Mott buildings is earmarked for future buildings. Also in the immediate vicinity are St. Joseph Hospital, St. Joseph Nurses School, Flint Central High School and Whittier Junior High School. Architecture School Slates Construction, By HANK FINNEY Construction of the North Cam- pus Architecture Building will be- gin in 1958 and be completed in 1960 if construction proceeds as expected. Legislative appropriations for the building are expected to amount to $4 million. Three requests will be made for appropriations between 1956 and 1959. All financing will be done by the State Legislature. A request for $1 million was made by the College of Architec- ture and Design in 1953 for an addition to the presently used Architecture Building, but it was not passed. Upon completion of the North Campus structure, the building now used will be turned, over for use by some other de- partment of the University. Although it is sid h yrhitec- (Continued from Page 1) Also familiar to engineering stu- dents is East Hall. Once a school house, East Hall's 20,000 square feet were acquired in 1922 for $14,300. The' building is used for engineering college offices and classrooms. Present plan is to raze East Hall when replacement space is pro- vided by new construction of engi- neering college laboratories on the North Campus. The Music Building was classed as combustible in 1943 and again in 1944. The Fire Marshall recom- mended its razing in 1947 and its replacement in 1951. Well-known to Army ROTC and speech students is the Temporary Classroom Building, classified as fire hazardous with recommenda- tions for replacement in 1951 and 1954. Rifle Range Another structure on the con- demned list associated with the military is the ROTC Rifle Range. Built in 1894 for $57,000, it has 17,000 square feet for rifle prac- tice, air force band practice and storage. Nearthe Rifle Range and also on the condemned list is the West Physics Building, built irA 1889, and Addition, built in 1905. The University plans to raze the building when a new Physical Sci- ence Building can be constructed{ on campus for the physics and as- tronomy departments. On the other side of the main campus are two more condemned buildings, the Waterman and Bar- b o u r Gymnasiums. Waterman Gym was classed combustible in 1943 and 1944. It was recommended to be razed in 1947. Barbour Gym was listed as com- bustible in 1943 and 1944. Razing was recommended in 1947 and re- placement in 1951 and 1954. There are no present plans for the replacement of either gym be- cause of lack of funds, according to Vice-President Pierpont. No Replacement Plans For the three remaining struc- tures on the Fire Marshall's con- demned list, there are also no present plans for replacement or razing. The Institute for Social Re- search Building was classified as fire hazardous in 1951 and its re- placement recommended. It was built in 1891, cost $63,000, has al- most 34,000 square feet, and is used for offices. The Radiation Laboratory was classified as fire hazardous with a recommendation that it be con- structed throughout in 1943. A 1947 recommendation called for razing. Last on the list is the Special Projects Research Laboratory, which has not been mentioned specifically in reports, according to Vice-President Pierpont. -Daily-John Hirtzei ROMANCE LANGUAGE BUILDING, CONDEMNED IN 1943, WILL BE RAZED WHEN AN ARBOR HIGH SCHOOL IS READY FOR UNIVERSITY USE. PANORAMIC VIEW OF NEW FLINT CAMPUS, WHERE UNIVERSITY CLASSES WILL BEGIN IN FALL, 1956. CHARLES S. MOTT BUILDING RISES ON FLINT CAMPUS. Education Unit Plans Building By SHIRLEY CROOG Provided the State Legislature appropriates funds, the School of Education will have a building of its own on campus. The education planning com- mittee has asked the Legislature for planning funds amounting to $34,000 for 1955. It is anticipated that approximately $3,400,000 will be requested for actual construc- tion work for 1956 and 1957. Although the education school project has been brought to the Legislature's attention before, this is the first year a specific approp- riation request has been made, ac- cording to Prof. Howard Jones, chairman of the planning com- mittee. Enrollment in education school has increased 25 per cent in each of the last two years. At the present time there isan enroll- ment equivalent to 1,000 full-time students. The new building will provide facilities for an enroll- ment of 1,800 full-time education students. Location of the education school building will be somewhere on the main campus in order to be close to the University Elemen- tary and High Schools. "As yet we have no preconceived ideas of what the building will look like," Prof. Jones said. "Design will de- pend on the site, the architect, and the education specifications written by the faculty." Facilities in the new building will include classrooms, offices, seminar rooms and administrative offices for the education school. The committee is also planning to have a laboratory with interview- ing rooms for the preparation of guidance counselors, and centers for curriculum materials and ref- erence research. --Daily-John Hirtzel EAST HALL, AN OLD SCHOOLHOUSE, WILL BE TORN DOWN WHEN NORTH CAMPUS ENGINEERING LABORATORIES ARE COMPLETED. FOUR YEARS OLD: Social Work School Grows TREND TOWARD SPECIALIZATION: Architecture School: Flexible C ----- I By WELLS I. BENNETT Dean of the College of Architecture and Design Looking ten years ahead for the College of Architecture and De- sign, it is necessary to make cer- tain assumptions. Considering the beginning flood tide of students and the plannedx !xpansion of campus and facili- ties it is taken for granted that Architecture, including Landscape Architecture and Art, will contin- ue to constitute the College com- bining the mutual interests of the' creative visual arts just named, while admitting their considerable variations. Curriculum Changes Our curriculums have changed DEAN BENNETT in detail over the past ten years and it would be regrettable if this certain that our services as a Col- were not to continue. The next lege will increasingly extend on decade should see some consolida- ldgeylndheampux. o tions within each of the major beodte cmpus groups. Service to Colleges In architectur-e a trend toward Our staff will contribute more integration within the majors -extensively and, we believe, more d e s i g n , construction, building effectively to other colleges of the pus. This will be our professional center. It will provide adequate and special accommodations looking forward to our needs in 1965 - drafting rooms and studies, lec- ture rooms and offices in number and in kind adequate to our needs. New uses will require newi species by 1965. Those mentioned below' are already in prospect, others are certain to appear. Research Laboratory The College now has a small temporary research laboratory structure. This activity will great- ly expand. Research and testing is becoming a more important part of our educational process. Photo reproduction as a service device directly attached to the de- sign and research facilities will re- quire suitable quarters, as will a sizeable and well-equipped shop. Our present shop can accommo- date only 20 students. Other Needs Our policy of faculty-student group seminars and class discus- sions requires conference roomt to supplement the usual lecture amphitheaters and blackboard re- citation rooms. A moderate-size auditorium for assemblies and exhibition spaces for review of student and visiting showings and for public exhibi- tions will be indispensable. At present we have no confer- ence room and there is a short- age of exhibition space. For our general curriculum in Art and our service courses to the Colleges of the University, we will need to offer instruction on the present main campus so long as the nrinrinml unnrrod ioP enl- I By FEDELE F. FAURI Dean of the School of Social Work The School of Social Work is completing its fourth year on the{ campus. Formerly the graduate social work curriculum was offered in Detroit by the Institute of Social Work, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. In 1951 the School, with headquarters in Ann Arbor, was established by the Board of Regents and became the fifteenth among the schools and; colleges of the University. Transfer of School Closer integration with the en- tire University has been achieved by the transfer of the School to An Aror. j governmental and voluntary so- cial agencies. At this stage of development in social work education, however, there is also a need to assist per- sons currently employed in social agencies to obtain basic social work courses. The need is obvious when it is considered that of the 80 thous- and positions in the United States only 16 per cent are currently fill- ed by individuals who have comn- pleted their work for the Master of Social Work degree. For this reason, the School, in addition to offering the two-year graduate curriculum on the campus, pro- vides in cooperation with the Ex- tension Service off-campus courses in various cities in the State. Demand for Social Workers Professionally trained social 4 E DEAN FAURI The primary purpose of the School is to prepare full-time stu- dents for practice and research in workers are indemand for a con- TIDAL WAVE OF STUDENTS: Education School Records 75th Year stantly growing number of health and welfare services. The antici- pated increase in men and women seeking advanced training in the years ahead will seriously strain the School's present facilities as with all other units of the Univer- sity. The next ten years promise even greater responsibilities for the equipment and city planning-is already apparent. This is to strengthen specializa- tion through clearer orientation. Considering the coming pressure upon staff the facilities, and at the other end of the educational process, the demand for well-train- ed graduates, the integrated cur-N riculum seems inescapable. Flexibility in Curriculum In the Art Department we have up till now been able to afford the luxury of flexibility in curri- culum and educational goals. There has been little rigidity as to standards expected from gradu- University. There will be more and better organized extension courses in Art ana television programs. Traveling exhibitions, demonstra- tions, and conferences will expand as service activities. Studies for growth of the physi- ,al plant of the College are al- ready under way. In general we Nave to think of some 1000 stu- dents-,-for most of whom we will have to house specialized profes- sional education. Even with a tightening organi- zation of the arts program a min- ority group will combine a major in Art with a minor in the Col- School with an expanding popula- By WILLARD C. OLSON tion requiring basic services and Dean of the School of Education Certificates are awarded to stu- the development of new commun- As it celebrates, its 75th anni-:. dents enrolled in eight schools and ity services. versary year of professional edu- colleges other than the School of cation, the School of Education is Education and these students take graduate schools of social work undergoing unprecedented expan-the required work from the fa- utEd the University of Michigan School sion. culty in Education. of Social Work ranked fifth in The tidal wave of students has The School of Education oper- the number of students specializ- reachedmthebSchoolsooner and in aces aUniversityvElementary during the past larger numbers than any of the 5 School and 'a University High ~er early or general predictions would f School enrolling an additional 500 Pear. have suggested. A persons of appropriate ages and Primary Needs In 1953 there was an influx of has cooperative arrangements for The number of social work po- undergraduates amounting to aa: student teaching with the Ann sitions has been increasing more 25 per cent increase, the same Arbor Public Schools and other rapidly than the ability of the thing happened again in 1954 and school systems. graduate schools to fill these po- the extrapolations for the fall of Officials of the School of Edu- sitions. 1955 suggest that the same thing I cation some time ago set an in- The primary need at the Uni- will happen again. I crease of 75 per cent as an im- versity of Michigan School of So- Undergraduate Enrollment ' mediate goal determined by the cial Work, as well as at other I e _' M .- 4 1 a .,+ +-+._ ..,.,._...tt, ... .. __ . . . _ a h nl. f:r m l . ... . .. , - - - - _ _ a E I