THE MICHIGAN DAILY i Students Plan Campus Developmen By JUDITH OPPENHEIM An exhibit showing a possible 25-year plan for the architectural redevelopment of the central cam- pus area is currently on display in the lobby of the Architecture and Design Building. John Ochsner, Clare Gunn, Walter Kocian, John Grissim, Jack Haynes, Tom Cheng, and William Bozas designed the pro- ject as a requirement for a course in the Masters Degree Program of the College of Architecture and Design. It is based on an earlier project by Philip B. Wargelin, Grad., and John D. Telfer, Grad., which pro- poses that on the regional level, Ann Arbor will act as the matrix of a statewide setup of community colleges emphasizing the beginning of undergraduate training. Centralization The Wargelin-Telfer plan sug- gesst that in Ann Arbor, the nu- cleus, the central campus will be oriented toward undergraduate schools and the University's grad- uate schools, while north campus is used for engineering and indus- trial research. The central campus would in- clude several school complexes, such as architecture and design, education, biological, physical and social sciences, law, and music. In order to provide for expanded facilities and form a pedestrian campus, with a ten minute walk- ing interval between buildings, the Wargelin-Telfer Plan moves traffic' to the outer boundaries of the campus area with vehicular pene- tration only by loops at critical points serving parking facilities, building service, and campus en- trances. --DavidGilitrow INTERMEZZO-Bargain Days shoppers, summer session students, and other Ann Arbor residents took advantage last night of one of the musical interludes of summer in Ann Arbor-a Diag band concert- as a welcome and cooling diversion. FORD FOUNDATION PROJECT: Professors Add to Humanities Study I A national Ford Foundation pro- ject on improving the studdy and teaching of humanities will in- clude critical writings by two Uni- vezsity professors. Analyses ofsrecent scholarship in ethics and social philosophy will be contributed by Prof. Wiliam K. Frankena, chairman of the- philos- ophy department. Prof. John E. Higham of the history department is writing a critical evaluation of studies in history since 1930. Prof. Gerald F. Else, chairman of the department of classical studies, was a member of the pro- ject's original committee, which mapped the goals and procedures of the study in 1958. A Ford Foundation grant of $335,000.subsidizes the study, which is administered by Princeton Uni- versity's Council of the Humani- ties. The director of the project is lProf. Richard Schlatter, chairman of the history department at Rut- gers University. The humanist scholars' general task, Prof. Schlatter says, "is to organize our huge inheritance of culture, to make the past avialable to men, to judge, as a critic, the actions of the present by the experience of the past." How Will Analyses of scholarship in phi- losophy, history, literature, classi- cal studies, art and religion will determine how well the task is being accomplished. Other out- standing scholars will prepare short books on their subjects. The study seems to broaden the scholar's outlook beyond his own specialty and any current "dominant movement" of thought. Its results should also be of hel: to University administrators con- cerned with curriculasdevelop- ment, Prof. Frankena asserted. The separate studies may be combined in a one-volume critical history of American scholarship ir the humanities since 1930. to the Stars," following which the fifth floor observatory will be oper for observation of Jupiter, Saturn, the Double Star and Hercules cluster. The lecture will begin at 8pin, in Rm. 2003, Angell Hall, S 1 s i S + e I z e , s t Housing Expansion To the southeast, in an ear which is presently residential, a renewal project was proposed to provide the sorority and fraternity housing necessitated by expansion of the University. The Wargelin-Telfer design is, intended to solve the frictions caused by random growth of both1 the University and the city. Sources of friction include traffic congestion, lack of adequate park- ing facilities, depreciation in real estate surrounding the campus, and business relationships. PROJECTED VIEW-Ann Arbo Imagined it-c. 1985-is constru graduate students, and is on disc ture & Design Sehool. The new project now on exhibit stems from the proposals of the Wargelin-Telfer study, and puts the earlier plan's varied begin- nings into a conceivable spatial order. Michigan 1985 It is a projection to 1985, vis- ualizing the central campus as a fully self-contained urban com- plex in the sense that it is at once an academic society, a cultural and conference center, a recrea- tion area, a residential area com- plete with shopping centers, and a provider of attractive open space. on the east, and Catherine on the north with penetration loops at Division and Thayer. Due to obsolescence, deteriora- tion, or failure to fit into the de- // sign concept for this central area, all of the existing buildings except f~ Angell-Mason-Haven Hall, the Un- 1 dergraduate Library, East Engi- /4.%"Yneering, East Medical, the Church Street parking structure and the $3