:Y 1ersity Continues North Campus Expansi By JOHN WEICHER -Daily-Richard Bloss MEMORIAL LABORATORY-The brick porti6rn of ng houses the University's giant reactor, unique in the Future University expansion will come largely on North Campus, a 700-acre tract of rolling land lo- cated a mile northeast of the main campus area. Since University President Har- lan Hatcher broke ground for the first structure five years ago, seven units have been completed. If funds from the State Legisla- ture are forthcoming, construction will start on two others this year, according to John G. McKevitt, assistant to Vice - President in Charge of Business and Finance Wilbur K. Pierpont. These two structures are the School of Music Building and the Cyclotron-Synchrotron of the en- gineering college. Music Has Priority The music school structure will have priority in construction. Plans drawn up include a central administration and service area, also housing a student center, with wings on each side. One of these wings will include the studios, classrooms and prac- tice rooms, while the other will house band and choral rehearsal halls. . The proposed building will oc- cupy 110,000 square feet of land. An organ recital unit will be placed behind the administration area. If a sufficiently large appropria- tion is granted by the Legislature, work may also begin on the cyclo- tron-synchrotron. The i machines here will be used to speed up elec- trons and neutrons, respectively, before these particles are used in atomic bombarbment. The cyclo- tron-synchrotron will- be one of several engineering- college struc- tures. --Daiy-Ricnard B1oss NORTHWOOD APARTMENTS-Now in use are 396 living spaces, with another unit of construction slated to be constructed in the future. Another of these structures will Campus Switching Station. This be the Fluids Engineering Labora- will be used to provide electric tory, first unit of the Fluids En- power and telephone service to the gineering Building. This laboratory buildings on the campus.' will house equipment for observa- One other building should be tion of beach erosion, breakwater completed this year. This is the design, and the effects of lake and Printing and Warehouse Building.; ocean waves on various types of Bid& may be taken soon on the structures. third unit of Northwood Apart- In addition, a number of other ments, a housing development for studies will be carried on in the married students, designed to help new buildingl These include air alleviate the shortage of housing pollution and conditioning, fluid for these students., mechanics, heat transfer, hydrau- The first two units, containing lics, chemical distillation and frac- 396 apartments, are now in use, tionating, and ship and propeller as the University is seeking to design. make North Campus more than The other units of the Fluids just' a stepchild of the main area. Engineering Building are listed as The proposed third unit of the projects for the distant future, apartment project will add 285 McKevitt says. apartments to hose already oc- In this same category he includes. cupied. the Highway Laboratory and Ar- Second Unit Done chitecture Building. Second section of Northwood Station Scheduled Apartments was one of the units Another building which should completed this past year. be finished this year is the North Another of these recent addi- L tions to the campus is the Aero- nautical Engineering Laboratory. Three wind tunnels are housed in this building. One of these gen- erates winds of up to 7,500 miles per hour, ten times the speed of sound. Experiments of guided mis- siles .and space satellies are carried out in this tunnel, which winds in a closed circle for 300 feet out-° side the main building. The two smaller tunnels create winds with velocities between 750 and 3,000 miles per hour for pur- poses of research and instruction. Phoenix Memorial Laboratory was also completed last fall, al- though this building has been in use since its dedication in June, 1955. 'The third floor was just finished. Peacetime Lab This building is the only non- governmental laboratory in the country used for research in peace- tiine uses of atomic energy. Alum- hi and public donations supplied the $1,700,000 needed to complete the building, a memorial to the University's dead of World War IL Ford Nuclear Reactor was also completed in conjunction with Phoenix Memorial Building. Here neutron bombardment is carried, on {in a 40,000 gallon "swimming pool." This is the nation's most powerful private atomic reactor. First building on the campus was the Mortimer E. Cooley Me- morial Building, named for the dean of the engineering college from 1903 to 1928. This was dedi- cated in the fall of 1953. Engineering Research Institute uses the building for advanced electronic research. Top secret Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY government and Industry projects are carried on here. Others Completed r Other completed buildings in- elude the Automotive Engineering Building, where instruction and re- search in automotive fields is carried on. The building houses 17 soundproofed test cells, in which experiments on engines .can be made. The older-less-used portion 'of the University library is housed in the Central Services and Stack Building, the other North structure. All these buildings an in one half of the 700- Present plans for the o call for a joint city and 1 project to provide sewer and improve water distr: northeastern Ann Arbor, the North Campus area. In this section of the located the sites to be oc Bendix Co. and Parke, I Co. A 4 B l A fill N, -LDaiy-R1cnard Bloss IONSTRUCTION -- Nearing completion is the Fluids ig Laboratory Building, which will house numerous Whether you are a Freshman or a Senior you are Eligible to Rush Fraternities v... IZZA at the Del Rio ron have tried the rest -- try the BEST. Reasonable Price on Delivery Service From 6P.M. to 12 P.M. BEER and WINE to take out 122 West Washington Hours 4 to 12 P.M. -- Closed Tuesday * THE INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL wishes to announce WANTED: STUDENTS 7' D We are looking for students who are nlderested in the world outside of the classrooms, the dorms, thefraternity and sorority houses, and the football stadium. 0 We are looking for students who are concerned about National and international affairs Economic developments Scientific advances Reports about medical achievements Progress in sociology, psychology Important events in sports Reviews of art, literature, TV, radio, movies Personalities--the names in the headlines And other signjficant matters in the forth- coming year We are looking for students who wish to be well-in- formed but who 'must be careful about their finances 1 To such students, we offer the following special con- pus rates: FULL YEAR SCHOOL YEAR I U.S. News & World Report Time-$4 (8cco copy) QZ $3.67 (9cca copy) Qj Life--$4 (8c a copy) Q New Yorker-$3 Sports tllustrated-$4 (9c a copy) Q (Sc a copy) _ Sat. 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