'U' Plans Five-Year Outlay Program Faculty Senate: Its Place in J A Modernization of Facilities Stressed by Officials f By Thomas Turner THE UNIVERSITY'S plans for future growth are set down in a five-year, $130 million capital outlay program, prepared at the request of the Legislature. The program would allow for accommodation of 28,000-30,000 students (in contrast to the pres- ent 25,000), according to Vice- President and Dean of Faculties Marvin Niehuss, but the emphasis in planning is on bringing the Uni- versity's facilities "up to date" rather than on expanding them. This year's capital outlay bill will provide for a Physics-Astro- nomy Institute of Science and Technology Building, to be built on North Campus. A School of Music Building, also on North Campus, still heads the request list. The architecture col- lege is also scheduled to move to North Campus, and there has been talk of combining the two units in; an Arts Center, but this will prob- ably not be done. ALSO GIVEN high priority are+ new School of Education and Medical Science Buildings. These+ are particularly important, ac- cording to Neihuss, because they; will free buildings on the central campus for use by the literary college. Other North Campus construe-i tion is to include: Fluids Engineer- ing Building (second unit), Math-1 ematics and Computing Center, Materias and Metallurgy Build- ing, Engineering Classroom, Li- brary and Office Building, Uni- versity Elementary and High School, Sanitary Engineering Lab-] oratory and Highway Laboratory. To be built on the central cam- pus during the same period are: Medical Science Building, Dental Building, Science Building (two units), Chemistry and Pharmacy Building, Television Studios, Law Classroom Building and Public Administration and Political Sci- ence Building. This construction completed, the music school, education school and architecture college would be lo- cated entirely on North Campus. The medical school would be en- tirely east of East University Ave. The engineering college would be divided between-North Campus (upperclassmen and graduates) and central campus (lower class- men). .(Administrators disagree pri- vately as to how complete the North Campus - central campus schism should and will be. One sees inter-campus movement of students, via shuttle-busses, for example, as unworkable. There will sooner or later be a literary college classroom building serving North Campus, he believes.) THOUGH office and laboratory space is now the University's most serious physical need, com- pletion of the five-year construc- tion program would be impossible without renewed attention to the perennial bugaboo, student hous- ing. The University is taking ad- vantage of the present lull in hous- ing needs to plan carefully for the new units North Campus develop- ment will require, according to Vice-President for Student Affairs James A. Lewis. His office is taking a look to see "what mistakes we have made,' he said,-Indicating that past con- ILA Mee presented by the University Musical Society 1960-1961-in Hill Auditorium CHORAL UNION SERIES TEN CONCERTS HILDE GUEDEN . . . Thurs., Oct. 6 Viennese soprano, prima donna of the Metropolitan Opera, and star of the 1956 May Festival, returns to perform in recital. BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA . .. . . Sat., Oct. 29 CHARLES MUNCH, Music Director VAN CLIBURN . . . Wed., Nov. 2 America's sensational young pianist. BRANKO KRSMANOVICH CHORUS OF YUGOSLAVIA . (2:30) Sun., Nov. 6 BODAN BABICH conducts this international prize- winning chorus of eighty voices in its first tour of America. ARTUR RUBINSTEIN . Mon., Nov. 14 Veteran world-famous pianist returns for his tenth Ann Arbor appearance. EXTRA CONCERT SERIES FIVE CONCERTS JEROME HINES . . . Mon., Oct. 17 American basso of the Metropolitan and La Scala Opera Companies, and Bayreuth Wagner Festival. VAN CLIBURN . . . Mon., Oct. 31 The Ann Arbor debut of America's most celebrated young pianist. ROBERT SHAW CHORALE and ORCHESTRA . Thurs., Jan. 12 A favorite event in Ann Arbor's rich music season. ZINO FRANCESCATTI . Tues., Mar. 21 Foremost violinist returns for sixth appearance in Hill Auditorium._ CONCERTGEBOUW ORCHESTRA OF AMSTERDAM . (2:30) Sun., Apr. 23 EUGEN JOCHUM, Conductor ORDER SEASON TICKETS NOW An unprecedented early heavy sale for both series indicates that late purchasers will have less choice for locations than in recent years. Orders are filed in sequence, and will be filled in the order received. Tickets will be mailed Septem- ber 15. CHORAL UNION SERIES $18.00 - Block A. Few remaining unclaimed seats in the three center sections on both Main Floor and in First Balcony, front to rear. $15.00 - Block B. Two side sections on both Main Floor and in First Balcony, front to rear. $12.00-Block C. Top Balcony, first 8 rows. $10.00-Block D. Top Balcony, rear 13 rows. EXTRA CONCERT SERIES $9.00-Block A. Three center sections on both Main Floor and in First Balcony, front to rear. $7.50-Block B. Two side sections on both Main Floor and in First Balcony, front to rear. $6.00-Block C. Top Balcony, first 8 rows. $5.00-Block D. Top Balcony, rear 13 rows. SINGLE CONCERT TICKETS-Beginning September 26 any re- maining tickets will be placed on sale for single concerts at $3.50, $3.00, $2.50, $2.00, and $1.50. struction was not always preceded by such appraisal. FACTORSt o be taken into ac- countin the new dorms in- clude: 1) need for "a more normal arrangement between men and women." 2) "the obvious advan- tage of smaller units." 3) the need for graduate housing, of a different sort from that serving undergradu- ates. "It's my guess" the current ap- praisal will "strengthen our feel- ing" that smaller units are called for, Lewis said. Suite - arrangements may be tried, he said, though students have expressed no great enthusi- asm for them. "Cubicles" may be provided for graduates, with access to common kitchens. Coeducational dining rooms and lounges may be included. Thomas Turner is a senior in the literdry'college and an English major. He is now con cluding his year as editor of The Daily. Sam's Store SPECIAL all-weather COCAT S at low prices and $1495 . Fine combed poplin 0 Raglan sleeves Water repellent SAM'S STORE Continued from Page Thirteen ERE HAS BEEN talk of de- centralization, Prof. McClusky said. The Senate now meets as a whole twice a year, but parts of it might,meet in between. None of these changes would be fundamental; the present Senate would remain, though perhaps functioning differently. A plan calling for greater revision was first suggested by former SAC Chairman Prof. Lowell Kelly, chairman of the psychologyde- partment, and is currently advo- cated by Prof. Eastman. Prof. Eastman's plan calls for a council of representatives of 50 or 75 members who would be elect- ed by the University faculty. This council would meet regularly, "probably once a month."'Its members would have time released from academic work to devote to Senate affairs. FROM THIS GROUP would be chosen a smaller executive council of five or six that would meet weekly with the Vice-Presi- dent and Dean of Faculties, the highest administrator connected with the faculty. In this manner the group would have much better direct connections with the Ad- ministration than the present ar- rangement provides. This plan would eliminate the twice-a-year "town hall" meet- ings of all professors, where, Prof. Eastman said, little can be ac- complished and too many mem- bers must vote on issues they've never heard about before. The whole faculty would be told about the current problems of the Senate by the elected members, either in department or college meetings or through informal con- versation (perhaps in a faculty club). If a professor had a strong view on an issue, he could express it at the smaller Senate but not vote. THIS REVISION, Prof. Eastman said, would provide, a firmer basis for faculty communication, one of the major problems at pres- ent. The channels for communica- tion exist now but are not fully used. The new Senate would, it seems, be better informed than the pres- ent one, and would be more able to act quickly. On the other hand, professors not on the new Senate would probably become less and less well informed. The smaller group would sift through the many generalized topics now discussed at "town hall," and would pick out for consideration only the policies that affect the University's gen- eral educational goals. This kind of discussion generally interests individual faculty members more, Prof. Eastman said, and so it might arouse more interest in Senate activities.. The new council would have the further advantage of being better able to handle the divisions that now occur between schools and colleges. As things stand, he said, a school particularly affected by a subject is apt to come en masse and vote as a bloc, and so is its opposition. The new Senate could not be packed. FURTHERMORE, the new group would be 'more broadly ori- ented toward the University, be- cause of its released time from de- partmental and academic work. It could resolve any conflicts between schools, or between individual schools and the University's over- all goals. Objections to this plan seem to stem from different conceptions of the Senate's role. Should the Sen- ate be a more manageable, repre- sentative body, or a guardian in which any professor can speak and vote? And what values does it have as a symbol of the profes- sion? To Prof. George M. McEwen of the engineering school, the Senate is a guardian - "a guardian for faculty rights, faculty needs and academic policy insofar as they are not within the provinces of the schools and colleges." It is not primarily a legislative body, though it can have legisla- tive function. The Senate's main role should be to watch University activities closely by committee in- vestigations reported to the Sen- ate. BUT THE SENATE should not restrict the privilege of voting any more than it now does. Each faculty member wants a voice on the issues close to him, and, since the Senate is a guardian, "I think he should have it." And in the present arrangement, the fact that all professors can vote is valuable because it en- courages them to learn about Sen- ate affairs, Prof. McEwen added. "Some believe there exists, by the nature of the University com- munity, an antagonism between the administration and the fac- ulty, and that the faculty must have a stronger voice. I do not share this." He thinks the faculty participates in decisions on many other levels and in many other ways, and moreover the Senate when it wishes to can have "a strong voice, as was indicated in the early fifties." PROF, MAURER, the Senate is a symbol of the cooperation between administration, regents WILD'S Has the SPORT COAC CPL E Pmported Hopsac Dacron Plaid and faculty, and of the common aims of University academicians. It is not a delegation of Regents' and administration's power to the faculty, he argues, but it sym- bolizes the "partnership" of the administration and faculty. The Senate is the town meeting of University scholars, Prof. Maurer believes. University life has become more and more com- plex, and attention to extended activities takes up more and more time, so that "we no longer have a community of scholars, but a collection of scholars." But even without this com- munity of scholars, he says, the Senate has value as a symbol of the mutual respect and common. aims of academic people, out of which grow freedom of expression and freedom in planning and do- ing one's work in a sense of in- terdependence. Everyone can still attend Senate meetings, speak out and vote, and they prize this privilege. Conscious exercise of this freedom of ex- pression will provide from the Senate a greater and greater number of educational leaders' that the University will need. "I've often thought," Prof. Maurer said, "that every town should have a freedom hall, where any group can meet and have its say regardless whether its views are popular in the community. The Senate is ours. There it is, a great symbol. "WE SHOULD BE very sure of what we are doing before we attempt, in the name of efficiency, and effectiveness, to reduce its size. The things wrong with the Senate today are symptoms that cannot be treated by merely ex- perimenting with changes in or- ganizational dimensions." Among the several professors in- terviewed, no one specifically spoke about faculty control of policy as opposed to faculty expression and influence on it. However, it ap- pears to be a crucial consideration in deciding what the Senate should be. If one believes more faculty con- trol is a good idea, then it seems that neither the new Senate plan nor suff the a n mur and ent sam T case pow fact aid hav disn mer pre( poli gen of Adr eno whe orgt wou effi sior tha sor. disc WARSAW PHILHARMONIC . WITOLD RowICKI, Music Director HENRYK SZERYNG, Violinist . . . . Wed., Jan. 18 Tues., Feb. 14 "Here is a string virtuoso of consummate technique and true musical sensitivity." (Boston Globe.) JUSSI BJOERLING . . Tues., Feb. 28 The great Swedish tenor. Recitals and opera appear- ances this season climax a remarkable career. 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