..m_ THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUG. 12, Eleven, 1939 Big Ten Football Schedule Date MICHIGAN l Chicago Illinois Indiana Iowa Minnesota Northwestern Ohio State Purdue Wisconsin Sept. Beloit Bradley Nebraska Arizona Notre Dame Marquette 30 at home at home at home at home away at home Oct.. Michigan State Wabash Iowa Indiana Nebraska Oklahoma Mssouri Texas 7,at home at home away at home away at home at home at home Oct. Iowa Harvard So. California Wisconsin Michigan Purdue Ohio State Northwestern Minnesota Indiana 14 at home at home away away away at home away at home away at home Oct. Chicago Michigan Indiana Illinois Ohio State Wisconsin Minnesota Michigan State 'Northwestern 21 away at home at home away ( at home at home away at home away Oct. Yale Northwestern Wisconsin Illinois Cornell Santa Clara Iowa 28 at home I away away at home at home away at home Nov. Illinois Virginia Michigan ( Ohio State Purdue Northwestern Minnesota Indiana Iowa IOS 4' away away 1 at home away away at home away at home at home Nov. jMinnesota Ohio State Wisconsin Fordham Notre Dame Michigan Purdue Chicago Northwestern Illinois ,1s 11 at home at home at home away at home away at home away away away Nov. Pennsylvania Oberlin Ohio State Michigan State Minnesota Iowa Notre Dame Illinois Wisconsin Purdue M en 18 fl away at home away away at home away away at home away' I at home Chicago at home Purdue Northwestern at home I away Wisconsin at home I Iowa' at home Michigan away Indiana away Minnesota away History Of Golf Course Is Revealed the east side of State Street and has now been abandoned entirely. "In acquiring the land for the present course, the University had to use the right of eminent domain," Professor Trueblood said. "About 140 acres were condemned and all but ten were sold to the Athletic Association immediately. However, one man who owned ten acres refused to sell, claim- ing that the land was not to be used for educational purposes but only for athletic purposes. "So the Athletic Association went to court, where it was held that physi- cal education was a part of the func- tion o fthe University, and the land was to be purchased at the appraised value." The new course took about two years to construct and represents an investment of $365,000. Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost played the leading part in organizing plans for its development. McKenzie and Maxwell, prominent architects, designed the course. Mc- Kenzie, a Scotch architect, is known for his work on many other standard and championship courses, including the famous St. Andrews course in Scotland, where for many years in- ternational championships have been played.. The course is watered by springs under the Stadium, situated across Stadium Boulevard. Water from the Stadium seeps into a six-foot tile leading to a main city sewer. In the summer this passage is blocked off, and the water runs down to the golf course, where a powerful engine is used to distribute it over the course. When the season is over, the water from the Stadium is allowed to run its regular course again. From 25,000 to 30,000 persons play the course annually,, Herbert T. Rogers, manager of the course, esti- mates. Among these have been Tom- my Armour, Walter Hagen, Jimmy Thompson, Lawson Little, Horton Smith, Johnny Malloy and Michigan's Johnny Fischer and Chuck Kocsis and a great number of other men prominent in the game. Fischer holds the course record, a 64, scored in June, 1936. Book Exchange To Open In Fall Started Last Year In Union; Owner Sets Price A student-operated book exchange where used textbooks can be sold for the price asked by the owner was opened by the Union last year. The book exchange operates only at the beginning and end of each semester. The exchange charges only i small percentage of the sale price of each book, in order to meet ex- penses. Since the organization oper- 'tes without profit, prices on used books should be lower, usually, than in the local bookstores.. Books are not sold directly to the exchange, but are left there for sale at any price the owner names. Em- ployees of the exchange are all stu- dents, chosen by the Union Under- graduate Council. Announcement of the dates during which the book ex- change will be open will be made dur- ing Orientation Week. Botanical Gardens 51 Acres Of Fertile Land Located Here Among the valued possessions of the University is its Botanical Gar- den, a plot of fertile land consisting of 51 acres, which offers facilities for all phases of botanical instruction and research concerned with growing plants. Among the equipment which be- longs to the Botanical Gardens are seven greenhouses, a two-story brick laboratory, and ample work rooms. The entire tract has been piped for water. An important feature of the green- houses, it has been pointed out, is the provision of several separate rooms for individual research problems, each equipped with automatic heat control and independent ventilation. A collection of growing plants for teaching and exhibition purposes is now being developed on a wide scale. It includes more than 2,000 species and varieties. A, .1 ,_1 14 at your Union -f, I Starting September Twenty-Second, the Michigan Union presents regular dances every Friday and S aturday night. Bill Sawyer and his band will furnish the finest music on the Michigan campus. Informal s1 per Couple to' a I ~I N P 1