The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 16, 1988 -- Page 11 Campus construction continues on its course BY NOAH FINKEL Upon returning to campus this term, students have had to get used to the sometimes deafening and al- ways distracting sounds of cranes, drills, bulldozers, and other machines used in the construction and renova- tion of many of the University's buildings and structures. On eastern central campus, con- struction of a new $45 million Chemistry Building is scheduled for completion by spring 1989 and will be operational by next fall. Paul Spradlin, director of Plant Extension said, "They're making excellent progress. One can see that the whole exterior is just about fin- ished." M. DAVID CURTIS, chair of the chemistry department said the old building, originally constructed in 1908 and expanded in 1948, could no longer meet the department's needs. "We have needed new space for the last 20 years. We have no meet- ing spaces, no office spaces, and our teaching labs are no longer safe enough to conduct many experi- ments," he said. "The new building is state of the art., Nearby, a new pedestrian bridge between the Randall Laboratory and West Engineering is now operational despite not being complete. The bridge is part of a long-term goal of connecting University buildings by walkways "wherever feasible," Spradlin said. BUT to physics Prof. Lawrence Jones, the bridge serves a more im- mediate purpose since much of the Physics department is moving from Randall to West Engin. "[The walkways is a cost-effective way for the department to be cohe- sive as it moves to West Engin... That's very important for the intel- lectual health of the department." Across the Diag the construction of a new computing center in the courtyard of Angell Hall should be operational by next spring. Spradlin said the $3.9 million computing center will house 300 computers to help meet the campus-wide demand for computers. North Campus is also getting a bit of a face lift, with a $4.4 million expansion of the North Campus Commons. The Commons will roughly double in size and be com- pleted and operational by fall, 1989. FRANK CIANCIOLA, director of the Michigan Union, said, the center, similar to the MUG in the Union, will include an array of retail services inside the Commons, such as fast food restaurants, a travel agency, and a copy center. Cianciola said the enlargement of the Commons will fill a void on North Campus. He said the new commons will provide a place where the north campus community can congregate to eat and socialize. DAVID LUBLINER/Daily' Students pass beneath a crosswalk connecting Randall Laboratory and West Engineering. The passenger bridge, built last spring, is part of ongoing campus construction. Local Vietnam veteran closer 7 to goal of national holiday - BY DAVID SCHWARTZ Col. Charles Tackett, a long-time proponent of bet- ter compensation for Vietnam veterans, may be one step closer to realizing his dream of a national holiday for Vietnam veterans. Tackett, in conjunction with the Michigan Student Assembly, recently mailed two resolutions concerning war veterans to the 50 state governors and 100 U.S. senators. Although the last letters were sent out Wednesday, Tackett has already received responses from four governors and has garnered the support of two Michigan legislators. Tackett said yesterday that he is encouraged by the response thus far. "I'm surprised I'm getting feedback so quickly," he said. In addition to proposing a holiday to honor Vietnam veterans, Tackett asked the governors and senators to introduce legislation which would give U.S. soldiers involved in any foreign conflict the same status as war veterans. "I hope that they'll review (the resolutions) and I also hope that they'll pass them," Tackett said. "Then I'll have strength to go to Washington (to lobby)." In Tackett's proposal, the holiday would be held an- nually on May 7, the day in 1975 when President Ger- ald Ford officially approved the final withdrawal of troops from Vietnam. In Michigan, state Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Ar- bor) and state Sen. Harmon Cropsey (R-Decatur) have both introduced bills into their respective legislative bodies to create the May 7 holiday. Tuition 0ontinued from Page 1 autonomous from state control. Blanchard was unavailable for comment yesterday, but State Sen. V(illiam Sederburg (R-East Lans- iqg), chair of the Senate Higher Education Appropriations Subcom- sn ittee, said the University should r hive kept the 12 percent increase. Sederburg said the 7.5 percent tu- ition increase figure is misleading because it doesn't reflect the fee in- crease. Now, he said, the University can still raise student costs the same amount, yet the 12 percent figure will no longer hurt the University's image in the state. "Evidently they aren't concerned about what it costs students," he said. "They're con- cerned about getting good press." THE RECOMMENDED in- crease for in-state students, including the fees, totals 9.9 percent. Michigan Student Assembly Ex- ternal Relations Committee chair Zachary Kittrie said the fees will not be reflected when the University re- leases its tuition figures. "Fees are a disguised form of tuition," he said. "They're not apparent to students who are evaluating whether to come here or not." Kittrie said the problem lies within the University's budget pro- posal, which MSA will begin scru- tinizing, with the help of a newly- hired budget analyst. "We are going to try to recommend ways to trim the University budget while main- taining quality," Kittrie said. ELLEN LEVY/Dolly Run With it Cindy Wyels, a University graduate student and captain of the Women's Polo Team runs the stairs of the University stadium. This is the first season the Water Polo Team is recognized as an official club sport. The U-M Students of Objectivism Presents Peter Schwartz Individualism vs. Collectivism The Right and Wrong Solutions to Apartheid Tuesday, September 20, 1988 8:00pm Angell Hall Auditorium B no charge For more information call 663-6142 Co-sponsored by the Ayn Rand Institute. ANN ARBOR'S OWN COMEDY THEATER TF ROUPE ~MAGAZINE . \&e SPec ages Pac 1\ ' \ WATCH ZENITH'S AWARD-WINNING FLAT TECHNOLOGY MONITOR REVOLUTIONIZE YOUR PRODUCTIVITY LIKE NEVER BEFORE! ZENITH INNOVATES AGAIN! With the level of com- patibility and clarity you need to visibly improve your productivity. Presenting the revolutionary Flat Tech- nology Monitor from Zenith Data Systems-winner of PC Magazine's coveted "Technical Excellence Award.* AMAZING COMPATIBILITY. 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