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Construction of the Central Service and Stack building and the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory on North Campus, September 1954

Construction of the Central Service and Stack building and the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory on North Campus, September 1954 image
Year:
1954
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 15, 1954
Caption:
UNIVERSITY'S NORTH CAMPUS: Construction progress on two buildings on the University's North Campus is shown in this air view looking at the new campus from the south. In the foreground the $450,000 Central Service and Stack building nears completion. The $1,00,000 Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, near the center, is well under way. To the right of the laboratory is the completed Mortimer E. Cooley Memorial Laboratory. Three new projects slated for the North Campus later this year and in 1955 are a $1,000,000 nuclear reactor, a $1,850,000 Automotive Laboratory and a housing project for married students.

Japanese Students Arriving Tonight

Japanese Students Arriving Tonight image
Parent Issue
Day
30
Month
July
Year
1966
Copyright
Copyright Protected

Thomas A. Leonard in the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Thomas A. Leonard in the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 image
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 8, 1968
Caption:
Gas Ionized A blinding flash turns the transparent ports white (right) as Thomas A. Leonard of Ann Arbor, a U-M doctoral candidate, presses button to vaporize a lithium wire. The resulting gas is ionized by an electrical discharge to generate a hot, high-density plasma. Scattered laser light is measured to provide information about plasma temperature and density. Leonard carries out his experiment in the Fluids Engineering building on North Campus.

Errol Oktay at the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Errol Oktay at the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 image
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 8, 1968
Caption:
Above, Errol Oktay of the U-M department of nuclear engineering uses a laser to probe plasmas. The equipment is in the nuclear engineering department's section of the Fluids Engineering Building on the North Campus.

David R. Bach in the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 Photographer: Jack Stubbs

David R. Bach in the Phoenix Memorial Laboratory, North Campus, August 1968 image
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 8, 1968
Caption:
Can Be Dangerous Prof. David R. Bach of the U-M nuclear engineering department operates neutrons generator (small atomic particle accelerator) in department's section of the Fluids Engineering Laboratory on the North Campus. The equipment shown accelerates duetcrons to bombard a target containing either deuterium or tritium. The resulting reaction produces high energy neutrons with well defined energies.