The Michigan Daily-Thursday, March 30, 1978.-page 7 Dorm decor hits 'lofty' heights .. By MARLENE MALINAS ..~ FOR RENT: Modern tri-level, fully L carpeted, complete with bar, study area, wood paneling. Sound like a dream come true? It can be yours for only $220 a month in a 5.University dorm. Of course, you have to be willing to 'a . put ina little work first. MOST DORM rooms start out with xe.....only the essentials - a desk, dresser and bed. The dimensions of an average room are 100 square feet, with the ceilings about nine and one-half feet above the floor. It sounds bleak, but with a little imagination and a substan- .. tial investment, these basic quarters gw>< can actually be made quite livable. Tocreate extra space in the box-like F rooms, lofts have increased in use over the past few years. A wooden frame is .. built some seven feet above the floor to support the bed, thus freeing the floor space for other purposes. Senior Bill Rice, a resident advisor at Couzens Hall, has transformed his average-sized single room into a com- fortable bi-level, THE FIRST level of Rice's haven Daily Photo by BRAD BENJAMIN serves as a front room and extends RICK SCHMALE AND CHARLIE ROTHSTEIN relax in their elaborately decorated Markley room. Like a growing number seven feet back. The other five feet'of of University students, the pair have taken pains to make their cramped dorm quarters more livable. $8.3 BILLION CAL L ED INSUFFICIENT: City officials boot Carter's plan floor space house the water bed he bought used for $15. Six feet above the floor, Rice has constructed a second- story loft with wood he purchased for $50. Both levels are fully carpeted. Charlie Rothstein and Rick Sch- male's Markley Hall room looks more like the interior of a van than a dorm room. The entire room is carpeted with rich orange shag carpeting - ceiling, desks, walls, everything. Their quar- ters are virtually soundproof thanks to the carpeting. Moreover, Rothstein notes, "This room buffers all of the bad qualities of a dorm." Since their room is located on the first floor of the complex, the ceiling is higher than most, in this case, twelve feet above the floor. The two have created a separate second floor which serves as a loft. To do this, however, required a bit of electrical engineering - hooking up a new light under the new "ceiling." sformed their sixth floor room into a tri- level. Upon entrance, visitors must~step up into the "lounge area" which features a beanbag chair and a . A short wall of wood paneling sepajtes this from the second level, which serves as a study area. The third level is.the loft. A pull-down ladder marks t en- trance to the upper floor which is ed by an exhaust fan when it become too hot. WASHINGTON (AP) - Some city of- ficials, looking at how President Car- ter's new urban policy actually will work, say the $8.3 billion plan may not carry enough money. Says a New York City official: "We like what we see, but I've got to tell you - $8.3 billion wouldn't save the South Bronx, let alone the rest of urban America." WHILE CARTER'S proposed new spending and tax breaks for 'lqcal businesses seem like a lot, the money must be spread out among the nation's 18,500 cities, towns or villages. Administration officials, sensitive to criticism that the urban plan includes actual spending of just $742 million next year, stress the 150/ program changes that Carter has ordered. "There is a lot more here than just money," says one official. Nevertheless, the spotlight is on the spending proposals, which will go to Congress soon. DETROIT SEEKS $23 million in federal aid to improve just one area - the huge Belle Isle Island Park. While the city would use public works money on the project, rather than relying on the proposed urban parks fund, the total pricetag indicates the degree of disrepair of many urban parks. An informal survey of planning of- ficials in Boston, Milwaukee, Detroit and Peoria, Ill., indicates a substantial and increasing need for federal aid, especially among older cities whose eroding tax bases make it difficult to raise local revenues. Larry Frishman, planning director in Peoria, says his city will apply for a share of the $4.5 billion that Carter earmarked to stimulate business ac- tivity in distressed areas. "WE'RE AN old city, trying to redevelop our downtown area," Frish- man said. His first evaluation of the Carter plan: "I'm afraid there doesn't seem to be much money in it. It looks underfunded for our purposes." One example of how city needs out- strip the President's plan is in Boston, where housing aide Andrew Olins said the city needs $6 million to $12 million for home rehabilitation loans, which Carter wants to expand nationally to $150 million. "Weigh our needs against the national total and you sense the disparity," Olins says. CARTER ALSO is urging $150 million in a new federal effort to develop urban parks and recreation. In context, the parks fund is blood from a rock, and!I for one am grateful," says one city parks director who asked that he not be named. "But I have to tell you, the money won't go far. Everyone is going to want a piece." Milwaukee's deputy city planning commissioner, John Bechler, says his city just built four day-and-night basketball courts in a housing project at a cost of $50,000. HEALTH CARE is another example. Carter's urban health initiative would increase spending for health clinics in poor neighborhoods from $10 million to $30 million in 1981. Boston says it needs $12 million a year to run its extensive network of neighborhood-based health clinics properly. This year the city is spending $5 million to support 24 facilities. Hospitals Director David Rosenblum says glumly. "Trouble is, we're going broke doing it, and we're meeting only half the need of Boston's.poor." Jog.* Just for the health of it. Physical Education Public Information American Allance for Health Physical Education and Recreation 1201 16th St N W Washington 0 C 20036 ~%ARMY SURPLUS. LEVI SALE Levi's Straight Legs and Sef-Bottoms $12.9 Army Fatigue Pants and Shirts Just arrived-Full selection-New and used Coleman Peak I Backpacking Stove No. 576-700 Reg. $28.98 SALE $23.98 S. , 4th Ward: The lines are drawn (Continued from Page 1 generally considered crucial to the composition of Council. Long known as Ann Arbor's "swing ward," its voters typically pick the party which will dominate City Council. OF THE CITY'S five wards, the Fourth contains the largest slice of town as well as a vast socio-economic cross-section of the community. Located on the southeast side of the city, it is home to the largest number of registered voters in Ann Arbor (over 18,000). This diverse constituency in the ward has made the problem of tenants another priority issue with the can- didates. Calling, upon his housing ex- perience from his student days, Fisher said he can empathize with the city's tenants. "To me, the real difference is that it's (solutions to housing problems) got to England held its first state lottery in 1569 to raise money for construction of harbors. Altogether, 40,000 tickets were sold at 10 shillings each. Over the years, private lotteries were gradually sup- pressed and public lotteries lost favor, the last one being held in 1860. come through the cooperation of the people. They've got to work together be cause they've got to mutually benefit each other." Cappaert noted that housing is scarce in the city and stressed the fact that he's been "rapping landlords since '67." He added that he- feels very strongly that the University must con- tribute more to solving the housing shortage. We specialize in ladies's and children's hairstyling DASCOLA STYLISTS " 615 E. Liberty-668-9329 * 3739 Washtenow-971 -9975 * 613 N. Maple-761-2733 * 1611 E. University-662-0354 Seaway Two-Man Nylon Tent with Rainfly complete with stakes, poles, and stuff Reg. $43.98 NOW $36.98 sack Camp Trails Backpacks and Bookbags ENTIRE STOCK 10% OFF ALSO IN STOCK: Eureka tents, Twin Peaks Sleeping Bags, Dexter and Danner Hiking Boots, Best selection of Knives in town - Buck, Schrade, Puma, and Swiss Army Knives. Fisher Due to an increased interest in PSYCHIC PHENOMENA, LADY ATHENA is conducting a seminar and workshop, April 1st and 2nd, 1978, at the Ra- mada Airport Inn, on some phases of this subject. Classes are limited to the first 30 persons registering. LADY ATHENA PSYCHIC PHENOMENA WORKSHOP TOPICS INCLUDE: " TELEPATHY * CLAIRVOYANCE * AUTOVOYANCE " CANDLE RITUAL USE FOR SELF HELP " DISCUSSION OF WITHCRAFT REINCARNATION Call for more information-981-0719 210 E. Washington at Fourth-994-3572 OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-6, master charge wE ,.. of Cappaert s' ~~Stu'd in Itay Next Fall Barbieri Center/Rome Campus Sponsored By TRINITY COLLEGE Office of Educational Services Hartford, Conn. 06106 0 JUNIORS Don't be left out of your 1979 MICHIGANENSIAN Yearbook! r i Cappaert FOURTH WARD DEMOCRAT CAPPAERT ON THE ISSUES " "THE CITY MUST ENCOURAGE AN INCREASE IN THE SUPPLY OF HOUSING, PARTICULARLY IN THE MODERATE PRICE RANGE." " "I SUPPORT WHOLEHEARTEDLY BOTH TENANTS RIGHTS BALLOT PROPOSALS." " "OUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT SHOULD PUT A GREATER EMPHASIS ON HUMAN SERVICES, SUCH AS HEALTH CARE, DAY-CARE, AND JOB TRAINING SERVICES." " "OUR ROADS NEED FIXING IN A WELL-PLANNED MAN- NER THAT WILL MAINTAIN THEM IN THE FUTURE." " "WE MUST CAREFULLY MONITOR THE ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT OF PROPOSED CITY DEVELOPMENT. WE SHOULD LEARN FROM THE MISTAKES OF OTHER CITIES." s 0. i I' Sign up for an appointment TODAY by call- ing 764-0561, weekdays from 9 am-9 pm. Or stop by our office at 420 Maynard (next