Page Six THE MICHIGAN DA1Lu Sunday, October 17, 1971 U' proceeds wit/i student housing plans p dkw (Continued from Page 1) require additional land purchas- es on the part of the University. The Northwood-Terrace Assoc- iation (N-TA) the group which opposes the site-feels that the Housing Office has not taken in- to consideration the "social costs" of this project. 'The Housing Office proposed, and accepted this site without consulting us at all," says Ron Beck, a member of N-TA. "We have asked the University Planning Office to do a compat- ibility study to determine the im- pact of mixing a large number of single students with families. We feel that the University has only analyzed the financial cost and ignored totally the social cost of this site," Beck added. If the Northwood site is cho- sen over the objections of N-TA the University will select a con- sultant to draw up detailed spe- cifications. These specifications will then be sent to construction companies for their bids. The preliminary plans call for seven medium-rise four -story buildings. Of the seven buildings, four are expecetd to contain close to 40 units of housing, two will contain around 30 units, and one will have 20 units and a child day care center attached. 206 units of housing are being planned with 19 designated as economy one-bedroom apart- ments and another 19 units as regular one-bedroom apartments. The bulk of the housing-130 units - will be two bedroom apartments with 38 planned as three-bedroom untis. The economy one-bedroom apartments are designed to give the same privacy : and conveni- ence as a regular one-bedroom except they will be slightly smaller. The 206 units will have a rmtiu- imum occupancy of 824 tenants, assuming that only one student occupies a bedroom and that all units are rented.. The preliminary plans call for bedrooms large enough for stu- dents-if they wish-to have two or possibly three beds in each bedroom. This would enable stu- dents to greatly reduce 'ne cost of living in these apartments. Each separate building w4l al- so have its own storage area and laundry facilities. The stor- age area will be fenced off so that each apartment will have its own lockable storage space. The Housing Office plans that these apartments will be well constructed and will provide all the features students have indi- cated they want in housing. A study on student housing done in 1969 by the University Institute of Social Research, shows that the top featur s con- sidered essential by students were a bathtub/shower unit, ade- quate closets, cooking facilities, furnishings, private parking, and laundry facilities nearby. The apartments are expected to include well-furnished living space, complete cooking facili- ties, and adequate study space. The apartments will also be air- conditioned. The reason for what might be called the "lavish" furnishings is to entice students to move out to North Campus. The housing office hopes to have the apart- ments filled to 95 percent capa- city during the fall and winter and 50 percent during the sum- mer. With the University planning to keep a stable enrollment over the next few years there may be problems filling the new hous- ing. The main complaint of many students is the distance of North Campus from Central Campus and the feeling of isolation that results. The University hopes that by adding a large number of su- dents to this area it il in- crease the sense of community and lessen the feeling of isola- tion. The drive for low-cost student housing has continued for many years in Ann Arbor. In 1967 the main focus of the Student Advisory Committee on Housing (SACH) was to explore the possibility of very low cost housing around the central cam- pus area. The rents were hoped to be as low as $50 per month. The main reason for a Central Campus site was to keep the traffic from any new housing mainly pedestrian. The aim of SACH over the early years stayed on cheap cen- tral campus housing. It wasn't until late 1968 to early 1969 that the Commitee shifted its a rd to North Campus. The reasons given 'or the shift were the high cost of acquiring land in the Central Campus area and the high cost of developing that land. Another factor was the availability of land already own- ed by the University out on North Campus. The final blow against inexpoii- sive Central Campus housing came in July, 1970 xnen the committee was informed that HUD did not have the funds to finance the housing. During this time, student sup- port for low-cost housing was increasing. Demonstrations and mass meetings were called, pro- posals were presented . to the Regents all with no visible res- ponse. Two other groups also tried to gather funds to start housing projects. However both of the projects, one planned by the Inter - Cooperative Council and the other by the three Univer- sity Credit unions, fell through for lack of funding. The project proposed by the students', University c nployees', and the hospital employees' cre- dit unions was to entailt>00 units of housing spread over 25 acres to be situated at Glacier Way and Huron Parkway. The credit unions had applied to HUD for partial backing but funds were not available. The housing situation in Ann Arbor grew increasingly worse and. to dramatize the problem, the Tenants Union fTU .estab- lished a Tent City on the Diag last fall. Ten to 15 ,its were set up on the Diag and people lived there until the University forced them to leave on the grounds they constituted a health hazard. .Continuing pressure was plac- ed on the University and' its Re- gents until last spring, when they passed approval of the pro- ject now being planned. The project--while not the type nor the quantity of housing de- sired-appears to be the only hope for student housing in the near future. Only you can prevent forest fires. * *tc£ 4 This little silpstick could incree your typing speed by two or three days. Students will be elated over a completely new way to correct typing errors: Liquid Paper's® new dispenser, slipstick.' When you're typing the big one, the 30-page paper you've been sweating for weeks, that's when mistakes bug you the most. So you slow down. And the closer you get to the bottom of the page, the more you clutch up. Mess up now and you've got a whole page to retype. When you've got a slipstick handy, you don't worry about mistakes. One easy touch releases a special fluid that buries the mistake and leaves a clean new surface like the paper itself. So you type relaxed. And make fewer mistakes. On the big assignments, Liquid Paper's new slip-- stick could put you days ahead. ASK FOR LIQUID PAPER SLIPSTICK AT YOUR BOOKSTORE OR ORDER DIRECT WITH THIS COUPON. --------------------------- -- Liquid Paper Corporation I Dept. CSI 9 30.Markville Drive1 Dallas, Texas 752311 Please send me .Lquid Paper slipsticks @ $1.25 e, Name ( Address City/State/Zip Total amt. enclosed: $_ (Texas residents, add 4% % state and local sales tax.) L----------------------- Liqad fp ~msan Join The Daily Ad Staff Controversy '71 presents David Harris Prisoner for 20 months for draft re- fusal. Leader of prison strikes for bet- ter prison conditions. Sunday, October 24 2 p.m. Hill Auditorium Tickets $1.25 Union and Fishbowl Oct. 18-22 Also available at the door DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, a @ INENSR SPERIES6 cREENs, 1NGS, 4N0MERS ABRINGS, EATNER GOODS MORE WIERt NE SS. IRR r~S~lLHAO bE AN tMPoR ED Co OAT"14 ... lAw j6 .sa MtstAY at SUNDAY, OCTOBER 17 Computing Ctr. Open House: Tours, 1-6 pm. UAC: "The Killing of Sister George," Residential College Aud., 7, 10 pm. Special Event in Dance: Betty Jones Master Classes, Barbour Studio, Inter- mediate, 2:30-4 pmn.; Advanced, 4-5:30 pm. School of Music: "Collegium Musi- cum," Sch. of Music Recital Hall, 8 pm. MONDAY, OCTOBER 18 SACUA Meeting: West Alcove, Rack- ham Bldg., 2 pm. Senate Assembly: Rackham Amph., :3:15 pm. School of Music: Doctoral Organ Stu- dents, Hill Aud., 3:30 pm. Computing Ctr. Short Course: D. FACTORY CLOSEOUT WOLVERINE HATS 1750 full color plastic vacuum formed Wolverine hats $1.50 retailer, only $.20 ea. rmin, 250) . If check is with order, we pay shipping. Hots formed as brown and block wolverines wearing blue sweater with yel- low "M" on it. "Wolverine" in blue on yellow visor. (Sample $1.00, postpaid.) Bagley Spe.- cialty Advertising, Executive Plaza, Lakeland, Fla. 33803. Loettner, "BATCH*, *PRINT*, AND *PUNCH* Facilities," Seminar Rm, Comp. Ctr.. N. Campus, 4 pm. Physics Seminar: D. Meyer, "How SU3 Symmetry Works in Peripheral Interac- tions," P&A Colloq. Rm, 4 pm. School of Music-: Marilyn Mason. or- gan, Hill Aud., 8:30 pm. Following organizations will be in- terviewing in our office week of Octo- ber 25. Call or come in beginning Mon- day to make appts. Oct. 26 Columbia Univ.-Bus, Ad. Sch. Program in Health Planning-U of M Boston Law College Office of Management & Budget SOct.27 New York Univ., Grad. Sch. of Bus. U.S. Civil Service Comm. Oct. 28 Univ. of Chicago-Grad. Sch. of Educ. Ohio State Univ. Grad. Bus. Sch. Graduate Outing Club, Hiking at Hid- den Lake Gardens (Irish Hills), rain or shine. Meet at Huron St. entrance to Rackham Bldg. Oct. 17, 1:30 PM. India Students Association, Diwali Celebration Oct. 17, 5:00 PM, Scharling Auditorium. School of Education Build- ing. Call for reservation 764-2547 or 769-7369. Meeting for representatives of all University School and College Govern. ments, Oct. 18 3:00 PM, Homer Heath Lounge, Michigan Union. Discussion of government funds, proposal for No- vember election ballot. 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