. .. GENERAL SUPPLEMENT Yt e Bki Au fjat tlj BUY WAR BONDS . . ......... . ........ .... VOL. LIV. No. 38-S ANN ARBOR, MICH., FRIDAY, AUG. 25, 1944 'U' Plans Big Postwar Building Prog ram New Coeds Face Acute Housing Shortage' Dean's Office Is Forced To Discourage Students 18,000 Students May Enroll Here $27 Million To Provide Dormitory Administration, Gymnasium Facilities Architectural contracts were let this month on the $27 million Univer- sity postwar building and expanlsion program geared to accommodate an expected enrollment of upwards of 18,000 full-time students. The physical face of the campus will be completely lifted when the projected program is completed.. A new administration building, expanded women's gymnasium facilities, additional men's and women's dormitories, an addition to the main library, and erection of new labratory and research facilities are included in the plans. After four months of study, the report of the University Plant Extension committee was submitted and approved by the Board of Regents last September and transmitted to the Governor for study and legislative action. Because of an unprecedented acute housing shortage no entering woman student can be assured of a room in a University approved residence, 'ac- cording to an announcement from the office of the Dean of Women. Women who do not have definite room arrangements for the coming fall term are not encouraged to en- roll in the University. Discouragement Necessary "Never before have we been forced to be' so discouraging, and we regret very much the necessity of being so now," Miss Jeannette Perry, Assis- tant Dean of Women, said. "We always want to welcome to our University all qualified students who choose it for their alma mater, but we do not feel that we can hold out unjustified hopes which might be disappointed when it would be too late for you to enter another college," she continued. An enrollment increase of 650 wo- men is anticipated by the office. Four hundred of these will be regu- larly-enrolled students, and 150will be holders of state scholarships which have been granted by the Regents of the University. 100 Nurses Included Included in the increased enroll- ment is a group of 100 cadet nurses, iwho will receive their training here under the sponsorship of the federal government. Housing facilities for women are being increased so far as possible, Miss Perry said, with the conversion of many former fraternity houses into coed residences. Nearly all fra- ternity houses, with the exception of Psi Upsilon, are being taken over by ,women, but these are already filled. Waiting lists, Miss Perry said, are already too long. Housing Inelastic Housing has been made inelastic by the wartime proximity to an in- dustrial center. In the past the Dean's office has been able to add to its list of approvect rooming houses Army, Navy Quarters Open To Civilians Facilities in West Quadrangle, closed to civilian students since July, 1943, when the Naval V-12 program occupied the building, will be open to freshman men this fall. Allen-Rumsey and Wenley houses, which accommodated underclassmen with the exception of Navy occu- pancy since the quad's dedication in 1939, will be prepared for incom- ing men. Fletcher Hall has been relin- quished by the Army iueadquarters on campus and will house approxi- mately 55 civilian students. "Cy" Adams Available The only other University admin- istered residence hall for civilian men will be "Cy" Adams, formerly the Psi Upsilon fraternity. Accommoda- tions for 250 men will be provided by the four buildings. Previously six fraternity houses had been controlled by the Univer- sity for men's housing. In line with decreased civilian men enrollment, all but one of these houses are being turned over for use by coed students. Fraternity Houses Converted About 15 fraternity houses will be used to house women for the fall semester and women's groups will rent directly four or five more houses. Incoming male students will also be accommodated in local rooming houses, privately owned and Univer- sity supervised. Students planning to live in rooming houses must make their own arrangements for accom- modations and it is suggested the student investigate the facilities be- fore renting. Standard agreements are issued to the householders by the University to avoid misunderstand- ings in leasing rooms. Figures Not Complete Enrollment figures for the fall semester are not complete as yet. Total enrollment as tabulated for the current month exceeds a similar whenever necessary. But because Ann Arbor is only nine miles from the Willow Run bomber plant, local hou- sing has been largely preempted by war workers, and University housing can no longer be expanded at will. Local war industries have also caused an acute shortage of all kinds of help so it is impossible to serve meals in the houses converted into auxiliary dormitories. Figures on the number of women turned away from the University because of the housing shortage are unavailable. It is known that all University dormitories were filled by March 1. V-12 Student Quota T o Be Cut This Fall 300 Navy Men Are To Relinquish Dormitories National reduction of the fall Navy V-12 Training Program-will probably reduce by about 300 the 1,317 V-12 students now in training here, Prof. Marvin L. Niehuss, director of the Division for Emergency Training, announced recently. When the Navy V-12 program was begun in June, 1943, some 1,300 men, mostly recent high school graduates and former University students, mov- ed into the "U.S.S. West Quad," in pre-war years a men's dormitory. For the first time since the program went into effect, civilian men students will be housed in the West Quadrangle again in the fall. The Navy is re- linquishing Allen-Rumsey and Wen- ley houses, retaining other accom- modations in the quadrangle. Discipline Is Strict Discipline is strict in the V-12 pro- gram. The men have a 9:45 p.m.] curfew, nine and one half hours of physical education, drill and in- spection each week, and must main- tain satisfactory grades in order to remain in school. Liberty is granted only on week-ends and V-12 men must secure regular Navy leave pap- ers to travel outside the 40-mile limit. Accumulated demerits are used for discipline, 150 demerits in the first year automatically disqualifying a person from the V-12 program. 75 demerits are sufficient to disqualify a V-12 trainee in succeeding years. Navy V-12 trainees are, by and large,apermitted to continue their original lines of study if they were former University students, or to elect their own choice of courses if they are new students. However, aspiring musicians are required, for example, to register for applied sci- ence courses and others such as those in history, geography, English math- ematics, languages, engineering sub- jects, political science and naval or- ganization. The 'sailors wherever pos- See V-12, Page 3 SUMMER SCENE-A group of naval V-12 trainees dressed in summer whites stroll past the General Library between morning classes as civilians cluster on the steps, a popular meeting place. No, the little girl standing at the left is not a student. -Photo by John Horeth BACK TO COLLEGE: Returning Veterans Are Aided By University's Service Bureau More than 100 veterans of World War II, 78 of them previousstudents at the University, are enrolled this summer, Clark Tibbitts, director of the Veterans Service Bureau, has announced. Making sure that every returned veteran gets started right, the Uni- versity Veterans Service Bureau is helping an average of 10 to 12 men each week to map out a program covering the months or years imme- diately ahead. The most thorough and complete testing and guidance service available anywhere in Michi- gan is offered these men by 17 coun- seling and testing agencies on cam- pus. 'G.I. Bill' in Effect Veterans may also receive help from the Service Bureau in applying for benefits under the "G.I. Bill," which authorizes an educational sub- sidy and an allowance of $50 to $75 per month for eligible veterans. Den- tal students who will be discharged from the Army at the end of the Summer Term, may apply for this financial aid inasmuch as they have not completed their courses. The Service Bureau was set up as soon as it was determined that vet- erans would be returning to the campus in numbers. Its purpose is to see that the former serviceman gets every possible help the institu- tion can give. Problems brought by veterans vary as widely as the men themselves and each individual's case and needs are considered separately. His record, ambition, talent are appraised. Every man, and particularly one not en- rolled, has a concrete and individual program mapped out before he leaves Ann Arbor. Veterans who had not previously planned a college education may not meet University entrance require- ments. These men are given scholas- tic aptitude tests and subject matter tests to determine whether it is wise for them to attempt a college pro- gram and whether they need further pre-college preparation. Such prep- aration is made available through the Division for Emergency Training at the University. Services Are Many Finding apartments for married veterans, securing part-time employ- ment for veterans needing work and full-time employment for wives of veterans and helping men apply for disability pensions are other ser- vices of the Service Bureau. According to records compiled by the Service Bureau, 26 of the veter- ans enrolled this summer have been discharged because of relatively seri- out disabilities. Many were disabled in combat duty outside of the United States. Average number of months in service is nine and one-half and the average age is 23. One Third Have Degrees Approximately one-third of the See VETERANS, Page 4 'U' Continues War Services 1,200 Army Men Are Training Here Continuation of the Army's Spe- cialized Training Program (ASTP) this fall will mark the beginning of the third year that the University has organized and maintained its pro- gram for war services. At the present time there are more than 1,200 enlisted men and officers in special training here representing varied branches of the Army and studying a variety of 16 different aca- demic programs. 18,000 Men Trained During the past two years 'begin- ning in September, 1942, when the Judge Advocate General School was moved here from Washington, more than 18,000 Army men have passed through training programs. The entire teaching force of the University comprised of more than 900 professors, instructors and tech- nicians and the 14 schools and col- leges have been mobilized on a 50 week a year academic basis since April 1942 to accomodate the Army program. Recognized as one of the leading educational institutions serving the armed forces, the University first re- oriented its schedule to meet the needs of the Judge Advocate General School when it established head- quarters here in the Law Quadrangle 3,000 Legal Officers Provided The law facult>, political science and history departments, and other facilities have cooperated to train more than 3,000 legal officers for the Army. Various graduations during the two year history of the school have brought such ranking officers here as Maj. Gen. Myron C. Cramer, the Judge Advocate General of the Army, Maj. Gen. Henry S., Aurand, commanding general Sixth Service command; and in July Undersecre- tary of War Robert P. Patterson ad- dressed the class. The Army on the campus is organ- ized under the command of Col. Ed- ward H. Young who is also com- mandant of the JAG school. Attach- ed to headquarters are a corps of ex- ecutive, administrative, and public relations officers who handle the work of this area. The GI student took the place of a dwindling civilian male population which began to show a marked de- crease in the winter of 1942. Under contract the Army took over the East Quadrangle designed for 450 Favorable Action Taken A committee from the state legis- lature surveyed the campus last Feb- ruary and favorable legislative action was taken the following month which made $580,000 available to the Uni- versity to begin the program. A serious need for improvement and expansion was cited in the com- mittee's report which stated "the University is seriously - handicapped in many departments by the-:inade- quacy and obsolescence of its physi- cal plant." Grant First Since '32 Whatever building: is done on the campus after the war Will mark the first state grant -for University con- struction in the last 12 years. There have been no -major plant extensions on the campus since 1932. The proposed new administration building, badly needed for many years, will be .constructed on State Street -between Helen Newberry House and the Union. 'U' Hall -To Go All administrative offices, business activity, broadcasting studios, and department offices would be housed in this General Service Building and University Hall, condemned as a fire hazard since 1923, would be razed. At a proposed cost of $1,310,000 this building would bring up to date University administration housing which is now centered in a building built in 1871 for an enrollment of 1,200 students. A planned addition to the present Chemistry Building would increase, the laboratory space 70 per cent at an estimated cost of $800,000. In line with technical advances an engin- eering extension isk\,, contemplated which would add 300,000 feet of floor space for an anticipated 1800 stu- dents and bring up to date facilities now in operation. Library Alterations Planned Improvement in the facilities of the library including additional study rooms and betterlighting is planned at a cost of $790,000. At a cost of one and a half million dollars a sec- ond unit would be added to Angell Hall. This move would be the second step in the proposed plan for the literary college first adopted in 1924 when the present structure was erected. It is hoped that the future will see a quadrangle constructed around the present building to bring together all the departments and of- fices of the literary college. Projects Are 'Musts' Additions to the physics lab, the Union, and construction of a new dormitory for women would complete the list of projects marked "must" for immediate construction in the program. The second phase of the building and expansion scheme, projected over a ten year perigd after the war, would greatly enlarge all present structures-hospital, medical build- ings, health service, men's dormi- tories. It would provide, as the com- mittee sees it, "A physical plant on a par with the high rating the Uni- versity holds in the nation." MUSIC AT MICHIGAN: Choral Union Series of Ten Concerts Will Begin Nov. 4 -- Among the attractions listed for the 1944-45 music series are Helen Traubel, Fritz Kreisler, Dorothy Maynor, three well known philharmonic orchestras and the Budapest String Quartet. Besides the ten concerts on the Choral Union series, the annual May Festival with outstanding soloists, the Christmas performance of Han- del's "Messiah" and chamber music concerts will also be presented, Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the University Musical Society has an- nounced. n9 -j ter-- ' r-' Vf Opening Is Nov. 4 Opening the Choral Union season Nov. 4 in Hill Auditorium will be Helen Traubel, soprano and Metro- politan Opera star. Others schedul- ed for the same month are the Cleve- land Orchestra with George Szell as guest conductor Nov. 12; Fritz Kreis- ler, violinist, Nov., 17 and Josef 'Lhe- vinne, pianist, Nov. 27. The young violinist, Carroll Glenn, will play Dec. 5, the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra under the. direc- tion of Serge Koussevitsky Dec. 11 and Vladimir Horowitz, pianist, Jan. 15. Soprano To Appear Dorothy Maynor, distinguished so- prano, will appear Feb. 3 and the Westmirlister Choir under the lead- ership of John Finley Williamson Feb. 11. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Desire Defauw will conclude the series March 19. FRITZ KREISLER r ''.7 '4 .~- -__ a m~ An unusual number of orchestras have been scheduled for the series, Dr. Sink said, in view of the increased public interest. This has been at- tributed to more attention given to orchestra music in public schools. Tickets on Sale The -Budapest String Quartet will make their first appearance in Ann Arbor in a series of three concerts. Generally acknowledged as the