PAGE TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. AUGUST 13, 1966 PAGE TWO TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1966 OMEGA 14K GOLD-FILLED WATCHES echian derer ON SO. UM 7IYCRS ITY $ew lo ivesty AtIN PsJOr 4a H4t'Ab ANARDOR,,MtcHidiA RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE: Planning Committee Prepares for First Students }, I'm going down to FOLLETT'S to get quality used textbooks. They're as good as new and up to 33% less. It's about time you wised-up, k-: 1 . ~ T K e - IIt., .7r"r y t r- - YOU CAN SAVE UP , T by buying used textbooks at Follett's We have the most complete line of new and used texts on campus. If you can't find the specific book By MICHAEL HEFFER The faculty planning committee for the residential college is look- ing forward to a year of accom- modations for and choosing the first class in the new college. The Regents approved a build- ing and site plan in June, but there is still a great deal of paper- work to be done before construc- tioni begins. Designs for the North Campus buildings are still being worked on, as faculty members and architects meet to iron out problems in the floor plans. When the floor plans are agreed upon, the architects will still need about six months to draw up com- plete working plans. Therefore, bids will not be taken until spring. Plans for the next two years at East Quad, while the college awaits the completion of its build- ings, are already complete. The residential college will take over Prescott and Tyler Houses next year with about 230 male and fe- male students. The planning committee plans to do some remodeling in the base- ments of these houses. Some rec- reation areas will be turned into classes and faculty offices. This work will be done next summer. Other problems the faculty com- mittee will face include work on the curriculum, and the recruit- ment of faculty. The faculty com- mittee will also be working with the student committee on student- faculty government. Planners feel that there is still plenty of time to have the build- ings ready by 1969. At that time residence hall buildings, an office and a classroom building should be completed. They are expected to, cost $11.8 million. The Regents had approved a general plan for the college in April, but on the condition that costs be cut sufficiently so that differential tuition and room and board rates would not be needed. The plans were sent to the ar- chitects to make changes and re- duce costs by over $1 million. When the faculty planning com- mittee for the residential college saw the changes that resulted, they strongly protested that such alterations threatened the success of the college. They objected, for example, to the separation of offices and class- rooms into two buildings. It was even believed. that certain com- mittee members might resign from working on the college if changes then proposed were accepted. However, committee members, architects and administrators were able to work out a compromise. Their plan, the one approved by the Regents, reinstated $350,000 of the costs cut after the April Re- gents meeting. Most of this money will go to- ward excavating most of the base- ment space under the buildings. Much of this space will be left un- nifished until funds, possibly from the donor campaign that has al- ready started, are provided. University architects envision about six months more work of drawing up detailed plans and taking bids on the construction, which will probably start next spring. The final plan may be summar- ized as follows: -There will be two types of fairly similar housing units, A and B, containing singles anddoubles with suites that contain living rooms. There will be no kitchen facilities in the rooms. -There will be classrooms scat- tered throughout these residence buildings capable of containing 30-40 students, for seminars and recitation sections. -The basements will be exca- vated, although much of the space set aside for game rooms and student government rooms will be unfinished. -There will be 1,247 students in the college. -There will be a two-story fac- ulty office building, connected on both floors to a two-story class- room auditorium building. -The classroom building will have one very large auditorium, with a seating capacity of several hundred. Around this will be sev- eral large lecture halls, with ca- pacities of 60-100 students. -In between the two buildings, but off the walkway connecting the two, will be a student "con- course," an area similar to the fishbowl. The faculty planning committee has already drawn up criteria for choosing the freshman class. To get into the college, a student must be accepted as a freshman in the literary college, and desire to enter the residential college. The faculty committee hopes it will receive more applications than it can accept so it can choose its classes with the following prin- ciples in mind: --It does not want an "elite" group of honors students; -It wants the same proportion of honors students to non-honors the literary college has; -It wants the same proportion of women to men; -It wants the same proportion of out-state to in-state students. The purpose of these guidlines is to test whether the residential college can succeed with the same student selection the literary col- lege has. Selection A second major selection job the committee faces is that of faculty. Many faculty members in and out BEFORE ELECTION: Johnson Stumps Through Swing States WASHINGTON (IP) - Take an outline map of the United States showing the congressional dis- tricts. Shade in those districts where Democrats upset Republi- cans in 1964. Chances are your pencil has touched a lot of the spots where President Johnson has been trav- eling for will visit between now and Nov. 8, election day. On the basis of his journeys to date, it appears plain the Pres- ident is primarily concerned with giving what political help he can to first-term Democratic House members from marginal districts. Winning Difference And well he might. They have supplied the votes that meant the difference between winning and losing in many of the tough leg- islative battles of the present Congress. In the 1964 election, Democrats ousted Republicans in 47 House districts and subsequently picked up a 48th district in a special California election. On their part, Republicans oust- ed 10 Democrats, seven of them in the South. The others were one each in California, Idaho and Wisconsin. One of the happier events for the Democrats was the defeat of five Republicans in Iowa. It was the biggest Democratic gain made in any state except the more pop- ulous New York where Democrats took seven seats from Republi- cans. Iowa Trip Where did Johnson go when he made his first openly political speechmaking of the year in June? To Iowa and to neighbor- ing Nebraska where, the Demo- crats had picked up one House seat. July came and the President whirled on a warm Saturday into Indiana--two fresh Democrats, Illinois, one and Kentucky, one. The weekend of Aug. 19-21 Johnson was on what was advertised as a nonpolitical trip, climaxed by a conference at Cam- pobello with Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson. Buffalo Stop He went by way of Buffalo, Syracuse and Ellenville, N.Y., speaking at all three places. Buffalo is the home territory of Democratic first termer Rich- ard D. McCarthy who beat con- servative Republican John R. Pillion in 1964 and will face him again this fall. Syracuse is in the district of Rep. J. Michael' Hanley, another of the 1964 Democratic winners, and Ellenville is the home town' of first termer Joseph Y. Resnick. Fall Opponents Resnick's fall opponent is Hamilton Fish Jr., son of the con- gressman Fish who was often a political target of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt always seemed a bit nettled that the people of his home New York district would send a Republican to Congress. From New York it was on into New Hampshire-one first termer and Maine, one-with a stop also in Rhode Island where the Demo- crats want very much to beat Republican Gov. John H. Chafee in the fall. The following weekend, Aug. 26-27 Johnson hopped off to Col- orado-two first termers-and to Idaho and Oklahoma. All three of these states have Republican governors now and are electing governors this year. Each state also elects a sena- tor this year. Republicans are up in Colorado and Idaho and a Democrat in Oklahoma. Where will the President still go this year if he is indeed pri- marily concerned politically to help the first-term Democrats? Going back to the map, there are four shaded districts in Ohio and three in Michigan. One of the Ohio first termers is John J. Gilligan who is op- posed by Robert Taft, Jr., bearer of another name which, like Fish, stirs the combative instincts of Democrats in high places. There are four in New Jersey and two in Pennsylvania. And- surely a West Coast trip is a pos- sibility and possibly four in Washington State. A trip West might involve stops in Wyoming-one and Montana. The Wyoming first termer, Rep. Teno Roncalio, is trying for the Senate against Gov. Clifford P. Hansen. Democratic Sen. Lee Metcalf has the prospect of a tough fight for reelection against Gov. Tim M. Babcock. If he goes to the West Coast, Johnson no doubt would like to do anything he can to help Dem- A ocratic Rep. Robert B. Duncan who is running for the Senate in Oregon against Gov. Mark 0. Hatfield. He may go into California where Republican Ronald E. Reagan is challenging Gov. Edmund G. Brown. There are also a couple of freshmen Democratic house members there. of the college have expressed in- terest in teaching at the college. Many of the residential college's teachers will be working there part-time, and keeping up their graduate and research work on Central Campus. The faculty committee expects to follow the buildings that have already been approved with others at a later date. These others in- clude a library, a gymnasium and a science building. RETIREMENT POSSIBLE: Thant To Decide Today On Second Term as UN Officer U KOSHER DINING CLUB Dinner Monday-Thursday at Six and on the Sabbath-Friday evening and Saturday noon Participate regularly, or , by reservation only-NO 3-4129 Hillel Foundation 1429 Hill National Council of Young Israel (L' 1' YOu dout UBE to be too smart to know where to get the best buy in usedtexts. 5 you need just ask one of our friendly experienced clerks -they'llbe.glad to help you. f Fast-Friendly Service " Art & Drafting Supplies " All Your- School Supply Needs * Big Savings By Buying Used Textbooks 1 So why not stop by and browse around... ANON A new Campus literary magazine Who knows, you may buy something,.. fF M IC H IG AN B O OK S T OREF CONOEIIINMSTO EECTIOAE TUOUiew sERVICE mNDTAuE STATE STREET AT NORTH, UNIVERSITY " ANN ARDOR * Prose * Poetry - Short Stories 50c By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS - U Thant will disclose today a decision that can influence the course of events in the United Nations and much of the world for years to come. The unassuming Burmese will send a letter to the 117 member nations saying whether or not he will take a second term as UN secretary-general. His current 5- year term ends on Nov. 3. Some among the diplomats, of- ficials and correspondents at this UN headquarters are predicting Thant will bow out; others seem as positive that he will stay. Many believe he first will an- nounce that he wants to leave but that the Security Council will rec- ommend him for another term- and that he finally will agree to stay a year and a half to two years. Eligible To Retire Thant is 57 and is eligible to retire on pension at $13,750 a year. As secretary-general he gets a car and $65,000 a year in sal- ary and allowances. If Thant stays, he will keep trying to bring pressure to bear on a settlement in Viet Nam, to find a solid financial basis for UN peacekeeping work and to so- licit more money from the rich countries to build up the poor countries. If he leaves, there will follow first a period of negotiation among the big powers and others to settle upon a successor and, after that, a pause in the activity of the sec- retary-general while the new man gets settled and develops his own style. Chief Officer The UN charter makes the sec- retary-general the chief adminis- trative officer. He can lay be- fore the Security Council any mat- ter which in his opinion may threaten international peace. ' Sometimes the secretary-general has acted on his own or at the request of interested governments to help settle conflicts. Thant was successful in the Cuban mis- sile crisis and the West Irian dispute. He failed in the Yemen fighting and on the confronta- tion of Indonesia against Malay- sia, now ended by mutual agree- ment. Thant is the third man to be secretary-general, after Trygve Lie of Norway and Dag Hammarsk- jold of Sweden. He had been Bur- ma's UN ambassador for four years when Hammarskjold died in a plane crash Sept. 17, 1961, on a peace mission in Africa. The Security Council and the General Assembly unanimously chose Thant acting secretary-gen- eral to serve out Hammarskjold's term, to April 10, 1963. On Nov. 30, 1962, they unanimously nam- ed him secretary-general, for the rest of a normal term running to Nov. 3, 1966. Say the Word He need only say the word to get a second term. The presidents of the United States and France, the prime ministers of the So- viet Union and Britain and the African and Asian groups-in all, 61 of the 117 UN members-have urged him to continue. , By the way he has led up to his decision, he has perhaps unin- tentionally built suspense. In Jan- uary he said he would announce it in June. In June he said he would announce it in August. Now the deadline is next Thursday. Both publicly and privately, he has talked as if he meant to leave. He has said that being secretary-general is a killing job, that he wants to spend more time with his family, that Burm- ese like to go back to Burma and that he is disappointed in some of the main objectives he had set for his first term. These were to ease world ten- sions, get the Americans and Rus- sians together and put UN peace- keeping on a sound financial bas- is. Vacillating Deision Before the budget advisory com- mittee in June, he spoke as if he meant to stay. He said he final- ,o ly had a grasp of the UN finan- cial picture and had some ideas to try out. But in Geneva last month he said that while he had not made up his mind definitely, "I have expressed my desire to be relieved of my duties at the end of my p term." When six Asian delegates saw him early this month to tell him the Asian group hoped he would stay on, some came away feeling the chances were 60-40 that he would not. Thant told the Asians he had + not made a definite decision. But he said five years was enough for any one man to do what he could for the organization. And he re- called that, after his 1/2 years as acting secretary-general, he had balked at taking a full five years beyond that. , Financial Troubles Because of a big-power dispute over how to finance peacekeep- ing, Thant has had to keep beg- ging members to give money for the U.S. force in Cyprus. The Soviet Union still owes roughly $70 million and France roughly $20 million, through this year, in disputed General Assem- bly assessments for peacekeeping and other purposes. Neither has made its promised voluntary con- tribution to help cover the result- ant deficit. Concerning the development dec- o ade, Thant's own appraisal at-its midpoint showed that the devel- oping countries, far from advanc- ing toward a goal of an economic growth rate of 5 per cent yearly, had slipped backward. Another UN study brought out that the capi- tal flow to such countries from A the developed market economies was lowr in 1964 than in 1961. When it came to Viet Nam, North and South seemed bent on war to the finish. The United States paid scant attention to Thant's peace proposals. Red Chi- na accused him of promoting a 3 "peace talks fraud" for the Amer- icans. The Soviet Union refused to work for a new Geneva peace conference. 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