VEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1955 1,500,000 IN RESEARCH FACILITIES: THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4 Phoenix Lab Opensy New Atomic Fields EIGHTH PRESIDENT: Hatcher Begins 5th Year as 'U' Head gew fields of atomic research Fe opened to University scien- as June 9 with the dedication the ultramodern Phoenix lye- irial Laboratory. ['he three-story, glass and brick ucture, a living monument to SUniversity's dead of World Lr II, is believed to be unequal- outside government facilities. Studies involving the most pow-, ul sources of atomic energy vre been made possible by the - 500,000 lab. It contains the lat- facilities for handling and ring these materials. i. powerful bundle of radioac- e Cobalt 60, the first to be 'ved into the laboratory, was loaded July 11. Its strength was Imated to be about twice that th world's known supply of Nuclear Reactor %i $1,000,000 nuclear reactor and ilding financed by a Ford Foun- sion grant to the Memorial- oenix Project is under construc- ni. As thiis issue. went to press, excavation had bee compet-g ired and heating lines were be- installed from the Phoenix University Presiden HalnH the University this fall. Eighth president of the Univer- sity, the 56-year-old educator, au- thor and civic leader was appointed to succeed retiring President Alex- ander Ruthven in May, 1951. President Hatcher has a wide background frhis job ofp heading Aiienative of Ironton, 0., he pre- pared for .college at Morehead Normal School in Kentucky. After completing preliminary work at Ohio State University, he received his Ph.D. degree there in 1927. OSU Vice President He did postgraduate work in the United States and abroad, becom- ing an Ohio State professor in 1932. He served as dean from 1944 to 1948 and became OSU vice pesidentrin charge of faculties Noted as one of Ohio's leading citizens, ,President Hatcher was given the Ohio Governor's Award for advancement of Ohio's pres- tige in 1949. A year later, he received the Ohioana Grand Medal for his books on Ohio and the Northwest Mrs. Hatcher Mrs. Hatcher has a background atmuch centere arundBOhioe New Havren, Conn., Mrs. Hatcher received a Bachelor of Arts de- gan her teaching career in Colum- bus soon after. She met President Hatcher when he was a professor of English at OSU and she was a teacher of French and German at the univer- sity high school. Other members of the Hatcher family are 11-year-old Bobby and nine-year-old Anne Linda. President's Aides Aiding the President in running the University are Vice Presi- vin L. Nehuss Vice Pesident Wil bur K. Pierpont, in charge ot business and finance, Vice Presi- dent for Student Affairs James A. Lewis, Assistant to the President Senior Board One of More Active Groups One of the less publicized but more active campus groups is Senior Board. Attempting recently to become a more important campus gov- erning body, Senior Board is made up of the officers of all the sen- ior classes of the University's schools and colleges. In addition to doing a great dea of hplannin fot~r commence- nator of inter-college events. This year Senior Board will be ner '56. Other offcersB area vie chairman Jerry Prescott, '56BAd, R ankin '56A, recordi tgsecretry Marilyn Smith, '56BAd, and treas- urer Roger Anersen, '56E. Daily Classifieds Erich A. Walter, Secretary and Assistant Vice President Herbert G. Watkins and Director of Uni- versity Relations Arthur L. Bran- don. Gives Credit Founded in 1928 as the sum- mer home of the National High *School orchestra, Interlochen Na- tional Music Camp has grown into a town of dormitories, studio buildings, cafeterias, libraries, lab- oratories, warehotises, a sawmill and hospital. Campers range from grade school to graduate students. IGraduate and undergraduate stu- dents enroll in a field branch of the University. Part of the Summer Session, the University branch offers courses for regular credit In the music school, speech department, educa- tion school and architecture col- lege. Courses are offered for the same credit as In regular summer sessions. At least one concert Is planned for every night of the eight weeks, excepting Mondays. A sym- phony concert is scheduled for 8 p.m. every Sunday. HARLAN H. HATCHER ...'U' president -PHOENIX LAB-The new $1,500,000 Phoenix Memorial Laboratory is equipped with extensive facilities for atomic energy research. Located on the new North Campus, it is the first building for the Memorial-Phoenix Project, a war memorial dedicated to the study of peacetime uses for atomic energy. The buildings' facilities are for research on the peaceful uses of atomic energy, the purpose of the Nearly nieyears ago, the Stu- dent Legislature went on record as favoring a "functional war memo- rial to the World War I- dead," thus laying the seed for the Phoe- nix Project. Tribute To War Heroes In the wake of the war, *he project was conceived as a living tribute to Its heroes, dedicated to testudy of peace-time pten- inery months after the initial SLresolution the idea received of- appointment of a faculty-student War Memorial Committee. The committee later adopted the suggestion of prominent alum- nus Fred J. Smith, a New York publsiher, who proposed that re- search be devoted to the study of atomic potential in the r'ealm of peace-time activity. By May gof r1948 the inevitable the Regents, the pat asprcleared for te Poject' realiation. A. Sawyer of the graduate school, and his staff began in 1949 on a borrowed operating budget of $25,000. That year Phoenix grant- ed a total of $6,400 to individual researchers to explore various atomic areas. During 1952-53, $555,692 was spent by the Phoenix project on research, operations and construc- Labh wthe first buidingtoe completed for the Project'. The lab, located on the new North Campus, contains two radi- ation "caves," with wals three- fet thick, nine-ton doors and specially treated windows. Each cost $150,000. Try FOL LET T'S First USED BOOKS BARGA IN PR ICES STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY PER SEMESTER: 'U' Regents Raise Tuition Fees $0,1$2 S Student tuition fees are at their present level because the Board of Regents raised fees $10 per semester for Michigan residents and $20 for non-residents at its SJune meeting. As a result of the increase, tuition for a Michigan resident Is now $100 per semester and $235 for a non-resident student. Last increase in fees was in 1953 when tuition was raised to $90 for *residents and $215 for non-resi- dents. Combined with an expected fall 4 enrollment of 19,750, the increase in fees is expected to bring an additional $400,000 to the Univer- sity. Income from student fees and other, resources will be in-- creased from $5,824,000 in 1954-55 to $6,488,400 for 1955-56. tio of $23,725,00 the inreas made possible by General Funds Budget for University Operations of $30,213,400, which is $3,336,404 larger than the previous year's budget. $University President Harlan H. LHatcher reported that 89 new fac- I ulty members would be added to the staff this year, bringing the total to 1,449. President Hatcher said fees at the University have changed from time to time but haven't kept pace *with changes'in the economy. The University has never been the top one in fees, he said, but has kept near the top in fees at state sup- ported universities. Increased expenditures In the bnew budget include $1,179,000 in salary improvement, and $580,000 k n additional personnel. Plant operations and extension will cost an added $451,000. This Includes Yjanitors, maintenance, -heat and *power for new buildings and re- habilitation of present class- Srooms. Conducts Variety of Studies Who does wht ow often and why, Is thie job of the University's Institute for Social Research. The Institute, established in 1946, consists of two centers: the Research Cepiter for Group Dy- namcs, and the Survey Research Center. Both centers have their beginnings in events which occured before their association with the University. - Survey Research Center grew out of an organization with the United States Department of Agriculture. The Division of Program Surveys was formed by the government in 1939 under the direction of Rensis Likert, present head of the Insti- tute. Surveys During War Surveys were carried out first for the Agriculture Department, but during the war years, the sur- vey range and variety was widened to include many other government projects. After the war, key members of the research organization were de- termined to carry on the work, but found It necessary to associate themselves with some academic In- stitution. They desired a greater freedom of choice in i'esearch ob- jiectives. The University provided the ne- cessary freedom in combination with an expanding social science program. Also, Michigan was one of the few universities with ex- perience in administration of large scale research units, and was able to provide the necessary housing and financial support. In 1946, the Survey Research Center was established .at the University. Second Began In 1945 The second of the centers now comprising the Institute was. founded in 1945 by Prof. Kurt Lewin at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Prof. Lewin, a pio- neer in the field of group research, had been making substantial pro- gress in developing experimental techniques, and had succeeded in isolating different types of leader- ship and their consequences for various groups. Prof. Lewin died In 1947, and his successors decided to; move their group to an institution with great- er social science resources. In 1948, the decision to invite the Research Center for Group Dynamics to the Universiy was made by the Board of Reents Prof. Angus Campbell has been director of the Survey Research Center since 1948, and Prof. Dor- win Cartwright has headed the Research Center for Group Dy- namics over the same period of time. Study Economic Decisions The oldest program of the Sur- vey Research Center Is concerned with dynamics of major economic decisions-made by consumers and businessmen. Under the direction of Prof. George Katona the pro- gram believes that people's mo- tives, level of information and atti- tudes influence economic behavior. Data traditionally rpgard as eco- nomic is supplemented by quanti- tative Information on psychologi- cal factors. Studies have been supported by various governmental agencies, private business firms and foundations. A grant from the Ford Founda- tion provided necessary economic impetus to the Detroit Area Study. Established in 1951, the study pro- vides faculty and graduate stu- dents with opportunity to study behavior in a major metropolitan .center. An important area of research for the Group Dynamics unit has been in developing methods for improving group functioning and utilizing group processes in ways to maximize member adjustment. HAIRSTYLING YOUR TASTE 715 N. 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