THE MCM GAN DAILY" MONDA'Y', SEPTEMBER 17, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1956 WPOW P o "UI*s Key To ' E xpansion O ?j"..,."%' v'?':'::::+? ?. ..- Qa' d1 LTl 1'liliJ lTitilf I Cramped by the growing pains confronting all institutions of higher education, the University has called upon North Campus to provide the ground space for its future expansion. Located a mile north of the main campus, this 670-acre tract of rolling land has faced a blitz- krieg attack of steam shovels, caterpillars a n d construction crews since University President Harlan Hatcher, in, the spring of 1952, broke ground for the Cooley Memorial Building. Functionally, North Campus structures have tended toward physical science, engineering, and graduate education. Four Structures Completed Four structures of glass and orange brick have been completed. In the Fall of 1953, the Mortim- er E. Cooley Building, dedicated to the Dean of the University's College of Engineering from 1903 to 1928, became the first complet- ed building on North Campus. Most of the work within the building is conducted by the Uni- versity Engineering Research In- stitute in advanced electronic re- search, ERI now carries on $8,- 000,000 of top secret government and industry research. Phoenix Dedicated In June Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, dedicated in June, 1955, in mem- ory of University World War II dead, functions as a . research building for the peacetime uses of atomic energy. Alumni and public donations provided the $1,700,000 for the structure. Dr. Henry J. Gomberg, assistant director of the Phoenix Project, says of the Laboratory, "There is no other non-governmental labor- atory in the country like this. In it, we can use radiation to help create new materials, alter old ones, probe the structure of mat- ter, effect genetic changes in liv- ing materials, and interfere with or kill undesired organisms or growths." Ford Nuclear Reactor, schedul- ed for completion this year, was financed by a $1,000,000 grant from the Ford Motor Co. and works closely with the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory. When com- pleted, it will be the nation's most powerful private reactor., Inside the windowless, four- story cube building will be a 40,- 000-gallon "swimming pool", 26 feet deep, 35 feet long and 23 feet wide. Walls for the 'pool' will be six and one-half feet thick for the lower half and three and one-half feet thick at the top. From a bridge across the top of the 'pool', a fuel core will be su- spended 20 feet into water, Studies of neutrons and their effect upon matter procede from 'piping' beams of neutrons away from the fuel core, or by placing materials near the core for neutron bom- bardment. Central Services Bldg. Third structure completed is the Central Services and Stack Build- ing, financed by a State appropri- ation of $470,000. This building will facilitate the storage of the University's older and less used books. Last completed unit on North Campus was the $1,850,000 Auto- motive Engineering Building, used for instruction ad research in the automotive a n d aeronautical fields. Two-stories high and 400-feet long, the structure will house 17 sound-proofed test cells, where engines will be surrounded by "curtains of air" when experi- ments are being run. A committee composed of repre- sentatives from Michigan indus- tries will help equip the Automo- tive Engineering Building, a fine experimental center in a State which is the automotive hub of the world. Three units on North Campus should be completed yet this year. Aeronautical Engineering Lab- oratory, finished by the United States Air Force and by funds earned by ; the Engineering Re- search Institute, will house three wind tunnels. To General Wind Velocities One wind tunnel will generate wind velocities up to 7500 miles an hour-ten times the speed of sound to be used for experiments in the guided missile and space satellite areas. Winds of 750 mph and 3000 mph will be whipped up for research and instruction in two other tunnels. The subsonic tunnel is a tapered steel tube, reaching 20 feet in di- ameter, which winds in a closed circle for over 300 feet outside the main building. Equipment for observation of beach erosion, breakwater design and the effects of lake and ocean waves on various structures will function in the $4,000,000 Fluids. Engineering Laboratory, now un- der construction. There also will be studies of air polution, heat transfer, air filter- ing solar power, fluid mechanics and air conditioning, ship and propeller design, hydraulics, and chemical distillation and fraction- ating. Married Students Apartments Northwood Apartments, a 396- unit housing development for married students on North Cam- pus, is connected with the main campus with hourly bus service. This development will help sip- hon off part of the campuses' load of 5,000 family men-and-fomen. The development includes two sizeable parking lots and a play- ground for the project's numerous children. In regard to future develop- ment on North Campus, the Uni- versity, in its projected five-year capital outlay request to the State Legislature, has asked funds for three major buildings. College of Engineering, in 1960 will ask $208,000 planning money for a Highway Laboratory and a Sanitary Laboratory. School of Music will seek a $2,- 000,000 appropriation in 1957 to begin construction on its $4,500,- 000 building of the future. A planning money request of $178,000 for a $4,500,000 Archi- tecture Building will again be sub- mitted in 1957 to the Legislature in Lansing. 4 -natty-'Bil van Oostehout THROUGH THE TREES-And across what was once a barren 670 acre tract stretches the University's dream of the future-the new North Campus. In the foreground is the Automotive Labora- tory, equipped by prviate industry for public research. In back- ground is the veterans readjustment center. One day the entire tract will be a complete campus with classroom space, research facilities and living quarters. "4 {:I -Daily-Bill van Oosterhout ORTHWOOD APARTMENTS-North Campus is to be more than an adjunct to the University. lans for a fraternity row, a modern nine million dollar coed dormitory, construction of more narried students apartments and recreational areas are intended to make the campus a unit in self. Some predict it will one day be considered the main campus. At any rate it marks the begin- ing of an era. Apartments above are typical of the married student sapartments. -Daily-Bill Van Oosterhoutl EIGHT MILLION DOLLARS OF RESEARCH-Top secret government and industry research are carried on in the Mortimer E. Cooley Building, dedicated to the dean of the University's College of Engineering from 1903 to 1928. It was the first completed building on North Campus, opened in 1953. Altogether there are four completed structures on North Campus, all representing the sciences and engineering. .? - .d I ;, x1 V ;: MEANS j' TRA LARGE VALUES on all your textbook purchases I :; t .I II