PAGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUG. 15, 1836 'AGE TWELVE THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUG. 15, 1938 Program For Concentration Is Explained Every Student Must Have 60 Hours And 60 Honor Points To Concentrate Students in the University's College of Literature, Science, and the Arts who are studying for the degree of Bachelor of Arts or a similar degree do not "major" in the subject of their choice, as in the case at many schools and colleges, but take a first or Gen- eral Program, usually for two years, followed by a second or Degree Pro- gram, usually requiring another two years. Change Semester Fees; Become Effective In Fall Effective with the beginning of the regular University year 1936- 37, the matriculation fees, the di- ploma fee (except for duplicate diplomas), fees for special cer- tificates, and the general labora- tory fees in the Medical School and hospital were abolished by the Heard of Regents on Feb. 28, 1w36. As an offset for the ma- triculation, diploma, and similar fees abolished, semester fees were rzadjusted, all effective with the beginning of the regular Universi- ty year 196-37 as follows: SCHEDULE OF SEMESTER FEES In the following schedule the name of the school or college is followed by two figures. The first Engineering College Anticipates Increased Enrollment Of 200 Revival Of Industry Laid To Heavier Demand For4 TechnicalEmployes With the revival of industry since 1933 the demand for technically trained men has increased propor- tionately so that the total enrollment in the College, undergraduate and graduate students, has increased from 1645 in 1933-1934 to 1731 in 1934- 1935 and to 1942 in 1935-1936. Al- though personnel officers of the em- ploying companies are examining graduates very critically as to profes- sional training and character, prac- tically three-fourths of all last year's men have been placed. At present1 student interest in our curricula runsr very strongly to Mechanical Engi-t neering, Chemical Engineering, sot that for the next three years or sot these departments will be heavily loaded. In all departments there is ax decided increase in the grailuate work, some 234 students being now enrolled for the various Master's and Doctor's degrees. The combined effect of thesec factors leads to an expectation of a; ten per cent increase in enrollment, or a total of about 2100 students. At present the College is reviewingj its undergraduate courses and teach- ing methods, seeking to improve the- co-ordination and presentation of thei material in the main fundamental subjects common to all programs. The College strives constantly to have its training broad and funda- mental, leaving specialization more and more to graduate work. In thisE latter field very notable developments are planned in extensions of the wind tunnel researches in Aeronautical En- gineering; in the studies of heat transfer, electric lighting, electronics, television and radio in Electrical En- gineering; in soil mechanics and its relation to foundation bearing power in Civil Engineering; and in Diesel engine development, air conditioning, and refrigeration in Mechanical En- gineering. The department of Electri- cal Engineering will offer a special symposium in Electronics in the Sum- mer Session of 1937. In Engineering Mechanics a new field of fluid mechanics will be devel- oped. Since the beginning of the 20th century there has been an enormous increase in the knowledge of the be- havior of fluids in motion. As a resultz of this work new theories have beent developed and substantiated by ex-t perimental research. One of the mostt important points resulting from thisc work has been the recognition of the fact that all fluids, such as air, water, and lubricating oils, obey the same fundamental laws. This activity inI what is now known as "fluid mechan- ics" has been greatly stimulated by the development of aeronautics and by such problems as the streamliningi of railroad trains and automobiles.- Plans are now being made to offerc courses in which the fundamentals of fluid mechanics are to be studied along with some of the most import-i ant engineering applications. Prof.; R. A. Dodge of the Department of Engineering Mechanics and Prof. M. J. Thompson of the Department of Aeronautical Engineering are now en- gaged in the preparation of a text- book on the subject which will be ready for use in the second semester of the year 1936-37. It is believed that this will be the first textbook to be published in this country which deals with the fundamentals of fluid flow in a manner suitable for presen- tation to undergraduate engineering students. The course in fluid mechanics will be accompanied by a number of dem- onstrations with models illustrating applications to the flow of both air and water. Apparatus for this work is expected to be acquired early in the fall and will be suitable for some quantitative experimental work as well as for demonstrations. Along with these developments it is planned to introduce a number of advanced courses in which the ap- plication of fluid mechanics to engi- neering problems will be studied in greater detail. Opportunities for the execution of research work on prob- lems of fluid flow will also be avail- able. To enter the Degree Program, us- is the fee for legal residents of ually at the beginning of the stu- Michigan, and the second is the dent's junior year, the student must fee for non-residents. have completed at least 60 hours of work with an average grade of C or 1 Literature, Science, better. A student who fails to attain and the Arts .....$ 55 $ 75 the C average required for admission 2. Engineering.........60 80 to candidacy for a degree may be 3. Medical ...........110 175 given one semester and one Summer 4. Education ..........55 75 Session after the semester in which he 5. Law ...............70 75 passes the 60-hour line, in order to 6. Pharmacy 60 80 bring his honor point index up to the 7. Dentistry .......... 110 150 required minimum. The record of 8. Graduate ...........55 75 the student, however, must be satis- 9. Business Adminis- factory enough to justify the exten- tration............55 75 sion of time. 10. Forestry, Conserva- Must S-lect 'Department' tion .............. 55 75 At the conclusion, then, of his soph- 11. Music ..............55 75 omore year, when in the ordinary 12. Architecture ........60 80 course of events the student has re- 13. Part-time Fee, All ceived 60 or more hours and an equiv- Schools and Col- alent number of points (at least), he leges, Group 1 .... 15 15 becomes, upon application, a candi- 14. Part-time Fee, All date for a degree. Then he must se- Schools and Col- lect either a "division" or a "depart- leges, Group 2 .... 25 25 ment" of "concentration." A "department," in the technical sense of the word, is a course of study Universit Has such as French, History, Chemistry, or Anthropology. A student is at lib- A L b ar v erty to concentrate in any department A Lb rary For if he wishes to do so. A "division," as thy term is technically employed. je*u- refers to a lirger grouping of courses, very_ uDect of which there are three. Group I, or Division I, is composed of Ancient Lanugages and Literatures, Modern More Than 900,000 Books Languag e and Literatures, Classical Housed In Libraries On Archaeology. Journalism, and certain courses in Speech and General Lin- MichiganCampus guistics. * Must Choo , One of Three One general library and 15 spe- Group IT, or Division IT, is devoted cialized libraries are available to stu- to scientific moures (Mathematics, dents at the University. Astronomy. P h y s i c s, Chemistry, The General Library, situated in Minerogy, etc. ) Division III, is de- the center of the campus square in voted to the "social sciences" (His- which most of the undergraduate tory. 'onomics, Sociology, Political schools are located, has an abundance Sciencreetc. of reference and fiction books, and A stvjd'nt may conyentrate in any subscriptions to all the leading mag- of the-c th:ee larger fields of study. azines and newspapers in the United For exi amule: A student who is pri- States. There are one large reference marily interested in scientific pur- room and two large study halls in this suits may, after completing in his ! building. On the third floor there first two years at Michigan a total of are several graduate reference and 60 hraurs with at least 60 honor points, study rooms. proceed to concentrate in Group II The 15 specialized libraries are as (S-ience) or he might .:elect a depart- follows: The William L. Clements Li- mont in the group (such as Physics, brary of American History, the Engi- for instance, if he is more interested neering, the Architecture, the Medi- in Physics than in a more sweeping cal, the Law, the Dental, the Chem- survey of all the sciences.) istry and Pharmacy, the Chemical Each student's credit for gradua- Engineering, the Physics, the Eco- tion, comprising his entire course of nomics-Mathematics, the Business study in all four years at the Uni- Administration, the Forestry, the Mu- versity, must include not less than 30 seum, the Transportation, and the hours study in his department of con- several Natural Science libraries. centration, or not less than 60 hours In totality, there are more than of study in his division of concen- 900,000 volumes and more than 17,000 tration, if he chooses the latter. maps, prints, and photographs, and Minimum of 120 Hours subscriptions to 4,025 periodicals and _ _ _ _ i r A MESSAGE TO THE CLASS, L~ OF 1940 tw What.. ONE OF- THE EW 2,501' I WILL S tIk)L) are one of the new 2,500 students who will get their i a first taste of University life in Ann Arbor. We welcome you here whole-heartedly. It should be carefully noted that it the student selects a division of con- centration, which is a field of larger scope than a department, he must take 60 hours in that division, rather than 30, which is all that is required in the department of concentration. A minimum of 120 hours is required for graduation in the College of Lit- erature, Science, and the Arts. . Other rules pertaining to the stu- dent's concentration program may be found in the 1936-37 announcement bulletin of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. These pages are two of the most important in the catalogue, and are deserving of theI earnest study of the incoming fresh- man. __ _ League Library Affords Girls Browsing Hour, The League Library, which was opened for the first time last year, offers an array of books for recrea- tional reading. The library is located on the third floor of the League. It is planned in the same nature as the Hopwood Li- brary in Angell Hall. However, it is not an educational library, its chief purpose being to afford a browsing place for one's spare time. When the library was opened last September, 1000 books lined the shelves. With the aid of the Under- graduate Book Fund which was formed, more than three hundred books have -been added. These may be taken out for a period of two weeks with renewals, or they may be read in the library. Emphasis has been placed on mod- ern drama, contemporary poetry, pop- ular biography and fiction. Transla- +nn nf noted foreign books and clas- 150 Freshmen To Be Guests At SCA Camp Rendezvous Group Meets Sept. 18 At Patterson Like Fresh Air Camp More than 150 freshmen will be guests of the Student Christian Asso- ciation atthe annual FreshmensRen- dezvous Camp, to be held at the Pat- terson Lake Fresh Air Camp, Sept. 18, 19 and 20. Any first-year man may attend the camp, which is held for the purpose of allowing new students a chance to make early acquaintances, and to ac- quaint them with the various activi- ties carried on at the University. An extensive program of speeches by prominent faculty members and student leaders is now being planned, according to William Wilsnod, '37, president of the S.C.A., although ar- rangements have not yet been com- pleted. However, it is definite that President Alexander G. Ruthven will address the students as he has in pre- vious years. A charge of $1.75 i made for the weekend, which includes all expenses: Any freshman may enroll for the camp now by sending an application blank directly to the Student Chris- tian Association at Lane Hall. The program will not interfere with Or- ientation Week activities, since ac- tivities for all freshmen do not begin until Tuesday. Ira M. Smith, Registrar of the Uni- versity, and Dr. Edward W. Blake- man, Councelor of Religious Educa- tion, will act as advisors for the camp, You will soon discover that Ann Arbor is a great town... that Michigan is a great university ... that friendships and business contacts here are really worthwhile. You will soon discover, among other things that GOLDMAN is the largest and foremost dry cleaner .i Ann Arbor... the one cleaner that has -enjoyed outstanding preference among Michigan students for over 25 years ... the only dry cleaning firm in the state of Michigan that combines MIRACLEAN, RE-TEXTURING and MOTH- PROOFING into one complete service, and offers you this service at the price of ordinary quality. You will soon discover, when you send your first garment to GOLDMAN that these 3 exclusive features make "clothes cleaned by Goldman" so far superior to average cleaning quality that there is naocomparison. Yes, you will soon discover that your dry cleaning is in capable hands when you make GOLDMAN your permanent dry cleaner. May we have the pleasure of serving you soon. G 01PiMAN , y C, % I EPL____.- " .* jI d