THE MICHIGAN DAILY orid's Educators Ponder Coliege gas Housing Unit, Like 'U' Residential loge, Aims To Unite Living, Learning JEFFREY GOODMAN academics-oriented living odelled on the residential concept will adorn the Uni- of Texas campus starting L Led College House, the unit ttempt to offer educational tion outside the classroom. ts will meet and dine with ors and hold seminars and lans," a Daily Texan/article idea behind College House to that behind the residen- .lege scheduled to open here ear. Essentially, the motive make better academic use potentially most significant ig experiences outside the om-the student's living lege will attempt this by includ- ing living, eating, study and some classroom and-lecture facilities in one building or a series of small buildings. Excluding only formal classroom facilities, Texas' College House will place strong emphasis on weekly lecture series, faculty "house .fel- lows" who will eat and talk with House residents, informal seminars and student presentations, exhibits and a library of current periodi- Smith feels that "something has to be done for the student who excels in one area but is average in others. This large midsector has no place to receive intellectual stimulation. This student has to select himself and rise out of the anonymity and anti-intellectual- ism of dormitories, fraternities, sororities and cooperatives," the Texan states. Creative Individuals Thus minimal selection stand- ards will be employed for students wishing to liye in College House. Smith said that "strict selection requirements would frustrate one of our goals. We are interested in the' creative individual, the student who wants to learn and contrib- ute." Residents of the House will be from all areas of study and all class levels. The statement of purpose for College House further emphasizes that it is an experiment, but one hoped to be successful enough for imitation on a large scale. Thus Texas views College House in the same way that the residens- tial college is viewed at the Uni- versity. "It will be a well-primer, extending the reach of academics far beyond the classroom. If noth- ing else, College House will be a somewhat revolutionary experi- ment for the University. Hopeful- ly, this block of houses will be- come a prototype of the Univer- sity living unit," the Texan states. Privately Owned The new unit is owned by a private corporation, though Smith and resident students will manage it. It has full sanction from the University. Accommodating almost 115 stu- dents, the House will be co-educa- tional. Smith explains that "when- ever a female is present, conver- sation always tends to take more constructive lines." Applicants 'were asked to pro- vide information on their majors and their reasons for choosing that field, their opinions on aca- demic achievement, their general academic goals, their grade points; specific reasons for wanting to live in College House, hobbies, employ- ment, travel, extra-curricular or- ganizations and awards. Investment in Students Initiation of the unit is part of Texas' growing interest in self- improvement. As Smith explained,j "in order to grow, the University needs to invest not only in better faculty and facilities, but in bet- ter students.' "A state university which has grown from a substantially third class one to such a competitive position has undergone a change in the type of student it recruits. T'his change is less noticeable than the change in. ranking." The basic idea behind College House and other residential col- leges is an old and widespread one, the Texan notes The uni- versities of Bologna, Paris and Oxford, in the twelfth and thir- teenth centuries, were organized' as residential colleges. Never Raised Contemporary examples exist at1 Rice and Harvard Universities, P ;i cals. Just as important in the think- ing of those behind College House is the opportunities it will offer to average students. According to. graduate student Don Smith, who' will direct the House, Texas' hon- or programs allow only a portion of students to have contact with the better professors, books and I special programs. where students living together have opportunities to raise ques- tions at meals or informal con- versations with resident faculty members. Many of these questions would never be raised or ;get an- swered in the classroom, the Texan states. Opportunities for a fuller aca- demic life are seized through other means in universities in France and Italy, however. There students generally open and util- ize channels of communication for themselves, and the student hostel often becomesa center for dis- sent, discovery and academic freedom. Asian History Course Here First in Nation The University this fall will be- come the nation's first state-sup- ported university to offer a course on the history of the world's cur- rent trouble spot, southeast Asia. The history class will be one of several new courses offered by various, departments during the coming academic year. Others are: The health aspects of air pol- lution, in the public health school and engineering college; The history of Chinese thought and 20th century thought in Eng- land, in the philosophy depart- ment; Conflict systems, in the eco- nomic department using the facil- ities and materials of the Center for Research on Conflict Resolu-: ion; Seven courses in the psychology department, all for juniors and seniors: including psychological phenomenology, psychodiagnostic testing with children, psychology topics in factor analysis, mathe- matics of factor analysis, ego; psychology, developmental psy- chology, and orientation to social ring, Learning Facilities University's residential col-1 Se, Higi Russians Drop Last Year Of Secondary Training, ,-- - - MOSCOW-The Soviet Unionj recently announced a reduction of1 its 11-year system of primary andl secondary education to 10 years. The change is part of a new educational policy intended to speed the entry of young people t f College Roundup PORTLAND, Ore. - Faculty members at Reed College will no longer be required to sign the loyalty oath required by Oregon law. The college's attorney, Wil- liam Wyse, said "Oregon schools and colleges actually are violating the United States Constitution by requiring the oath, because the outlawed Washington oath (re- cently voided by the U.S. Su- preme Court) and the Oregon oath] are almost identical." COLUMBUS-Ohio State Uni- versity will begin an honors pro- gram this fall. Designed to draw top students to the university, the program will offer honors scholars special privileges such as scholar- ships for the needy, access to they graduate stacks, and individual at- tention from counselors. * * * MINNEAPOLIS - University of Minnesota senior Jack Mogelson is organizing Yellow Cab Co. work- ers to strike for increased wages. and improved working conditions. A part-time cab driver himself, Mogelson and several others per- suaded his union, Teamsters Local, 958, to vote down the existing company contract and then vote approval for the strike. WASHINGTON - The United States Department of Health, Ed- ucation, and Welfare has estab- lished its third Learning and Re- search Center at the University of Wisconsin. About $2.5 million will support initial research to de- termine what factors make study easier for the individual. MILWAUKEE-The University of Wisconsin will give academic ice this fall. Under a ne pro- gram the volunteers will g t spe- cial financial aid and study op- portunities, including more than 40 graduate fellowships, assistant- ships and scholarships. into the labor force: The Soviet government announced earlier this year that the four-year to five- year period of higher education would be reduced by one year. A decree of the Soviet Com- munist party and the government, made public recently, said the transition period to the new sys- tem was to be completed by the end of the 1965-66 school year. The decision meant in effect that the Soviet Union's long-range goal of achieving 11 years of universal compulsory schooling by 1970 had been dropped. Since the school year 1962-63, the Soviet Union has had eight years of compulsory education, from age 7 to ,age 15. About 40 per , cent to 50 per cent of the graduates of eight-year schools have been taking full-time jobs and continuing their educa- tion at evening classes. The others have moved on for an additional three years in so-called polytech- nic day schools in which a fourth to a third of the school time is de- voted to shopwork and other forms of industrial training. The one-year reduction was made in the period of polytechnic training. Explaining the significance of the decree, the Educational Min- ister of the Russian Republic, Yevgeny 1. Afanasenko, said in an interview with the Tass press agency that the curriculum ad- justments would involve mainly a reduction in the time spent in in- dustrial training. He said the experience -of the last few years had shown that one to two years of shop training was sufficient to prepare students in industry, Many Experiments Tried Soviet education has had a his- tory of considerable experimenta tion; Between 1919 and 1931, the basic school in the country pro- vided nine years of noncompulsory polytechnic education, with stress on industrial training. A reform in 1931 established 10-year schools, with seven years of attendance compulsory. Poly- technic training was de-emphasiz- ed but never dropped. Another' education reform, in 1958, raised the compulsory school- ing period to eight years from ,seven, with the transition to be completed by the fall of 1962, and extended the 10-year course to 11 years, with renewed em- phasis on industrial training in the senior classes. Copyright, 1964, The New York Times :_i I W1TEL COME / U.f of M. students psychology; Creative dramatics speech department. by the MICHIGAN'S Wolverines - Michigan's famous Marching Band -The Victors- State Street -The League -The Union FURNISHED ROQMS Brightly furnished rooms for men students. Snack facilities available including refrigera- tors, Coke machine and in- stant coffee maker. Lounge with TV. Near campus. 668-9593 all are great traditions of a great a U University. SUBSCRIPTION OFFICE OPEN EVERY WEDNESDAY GREENE'S CLEANERS is a tradition, too, For Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre 10-1 and 2-5 P.M. forty-one years GREENE'S CLEANERS have given the best in dry cleaning and shirt laundering to thousands of Michigan students. In fact, many alumni around the country still send garments to us for special cleaning services. In'Ann Arbor, GREENE'S have four convenient locations and six routes to servi ce the quad- fraternities, rangles, dormitories, apartments and room sororities, ing houses. At the infor- mation desks in all quads and dorms you will find a GREENE'S card to fill out and attach to your garments. You will also find a place to leave garments for GREENE'S daily pick-up serv- ice. There is no additional charge for pick-up and delivery. THE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE on drycleaning and shirt laundering takes three days. For same-day service, take your garments to any of GREENE'S cleaning plants. I m ~ ~.......____________________