6 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ?AC TWO-YEAR AUTHORIZATION: aE SEVEN Aid Overhaul Defeated -Daily-Richard Steiner WORKMEN PUT THE FINISHING -touches on renovations which will provide more study space in the Undergraduate Library. Work was begun July 13 and is scheduled for completion Sept. 7. UGLI Expands Study Space There will be less of a crowd, traipsing the aisles looking for seats in the Undergraduate Li- brary this semester due to a re- arrangement of library equipment. This will allow for 371 additional study spaces. The work which started July 13 will be completely finished Sep- *ember 7, after the new furniture arrives andI is installed. The new spaces will be' either single desks or tables. Stacks have been moved and aisles decreased in order to pro- vide for maximum usage of floor space. Although the library will seem crowded with furniture and stacks, the equivalent of one floor of study space will be created. When the work is completed, the UGLI will have approximate- ly 2000 study spaces available. Reorganization has been carried out with the aid of the University industrial engineering graduate students as planners. Weekend Moving The plant department is doing the actual moving, much of which II occurs on weekends. Decreased at- tendance during the summer ses- sions has given an opportunity to work with minimal effect on li- brary users. In addition. inconvenience has been reduced because workers re- arrange one floor at a time. Head Librarian Rose Faucher cited figures of 7000-8000 stu- dents the UGLI serves each day in the fall. She also explained there was no need for increased shelf space because the UGLI is used as a working collection rath- er than a reference source. This means there is a rapid turnover keeping volumes off the shelves. Other Libraries In addition, an engineering li- brary on North Campus, consid- ered in the future, would provide the UGLI with two floors of ad- ditional space for study and stack facilities. Miss Faucher also noted that study space can also be found in departmental libraries in other campus buildings. When the reorganization is completed, she said, the UGLI will be better equipped to handle increasing demands for study space. By ERNEST B. VACCARO WASHINGTON (IP) - Congres- sional passage of President Lyn- don B. Johnson's $3.36-billion for- eign aid authorization bill has left ,Senate advocates of a drastic overhaul of the program licking their wounds in defeat. The Senate's battle with the House for a two-year authoriza- tion and a revamping of the over- seas-aid format is certain to' be renewed in the next session. The Senate caved in Tuesday when it voted 67-27 passage of a bill tailored to House demands, and previously approved by that body. All it needs is Johnson's signature. Amount SThe amount of authorizations didn't even figure in the major dispute this year, and the long- agreed upon totals came within $97 million of what Johnson ask- ed. The final amount that actually will be made available to finance the program will be fought out in a subsequent appropriations bill providing the money. Here's what the Senate wanted, and for which its conferees ar- gued unsuccessfully in 14 meet- ings with House negotiators ex- tending overtwo months: " A two-year authorization to avoid the yearly struggle over for- eign aid legislation and to give aid officials more time for plan- ning their overseas military and economic'assistance programs. r Termination of the program in its present form at the end of two years and the creation of a congressional committee to inves- tigate its administration and rec- ommend changes to reduce spend- ing and concentrate future aid in countries where it will be most ef- fective. Got Neither It got neither. Instead it got promises from the House con- ferees to consider a multi-year authorization next year and from the administration to recommend a longer program then. It got WELCOME STUDENTS see 1 eo~al0° or MEASURES X-RAYS 'U' Experiment Orbits In Sunshine Satellite' j-" r -r p a .g CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. M) -- A "sunshine satellite" was sent aloft to study the sun recently but disappeared into a dark cloud of technical difficulties. The satel- lite carried a University experi- ment. A three-stage Delta rocket dart- ed skyward from Cape Kennedy at 10:17 a.m. to push the 620-pound satellite toward an intended 350- mile-high orbit., They did'not know whether the satellite, named OS03 for Oribit- ing Solar Observatory, had achiev- ed a lower orbit or had plunged into the ocean. But 47 minutes after the launch, officials announced the payload had not achieved the planned or- bit because of apparent trouble with the rocket's third stage. Mission Fails But, they said, its mission was an apparent failure. Officials said the final, solid- fuel stage of the rocket ignited prematurely and the satellite ap- parently did not reac]1 the plan- ned orbital velocity. OS03 carried nine experiments to continue solar investigations begun by two earlier OSO satel- lites, launched in 1962 and last February by the National Areo- nautics and Space Administration. The six-pound University pack- age in the satellite is designed to detect and measure X-rays from the sun that are longer, or less penetrating, than those emitted by medical or dental X-ray ma- chines. University Project Director Richard G. Teske explained that this part of the Orbiting Solar- CLEANING SPECIAL Observatory experiment is "to ob- tain information on the relation- ship of X-ray production to other kinds of activity which takes place on the sun. X-Ray Emissions - "It will also help astronomers to understand the physical con- ditions in the solar atmosphere which lead to the emission of these X-rays," Teske said, The OSO experiments could also help in predicting solar flares whose swiftly - generated X-rays could menace manned space flights. T h e University observations with OSO will be studied in con- nection with ground-based obser- vations made at the University's McMath-Hulbert Observatory near Pontiac, where the sun is under constant surveillance during day- time, cloud-free hours. Assisting Teske at Cape Ken- nedy are John Maurer and Ray- mond Kuriak of the University Space Physics Laboratory, who are technical supervisors for the project. rg "' :{:?t e :S^ :":~: %S:11 ';ti?:'i"::""'ric:''Xiv%:"' :i v I 11 I PANTS SKIRTS SUITS DRESSES 60c $1.20 OLIVIA'S Kleen King Dry Cleaners 1226 Packard TRADITION... States that one Red Rose be given for each Late Minute a girl receives. Now Ready And Leasing UNIVERSITY TOWERS DESIGNED EXCULSIVELY FOR MEN AND WOMEN STUDENTS ... -- D--J- 4.,., - 6,.~1+ .- ti,-A i.-,- rA kmArnkmc " Fitil lpnrmth mirror