The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, February 22, 1978-Page 3 IrMU SEE WY HAPPEN CALL:D&AlY Housing reapplication Reapplication drawings for students wishing to return to their dor- mitories next fall will take place tonight at 7:30 in each dorm. Those students must have turned in reapplication cards to their dorms by February 8. Also, students can only participate in the drawings of their respective dorms at this time, but need not be present at the ac- tual drawings. 'The Housing Office stresses that historically, most people who have folowed the reapplication procedure have been able to return to their dorms. Special election The Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) holds its special election today with polls open at the following locations: Angell Hall Fishbowl, Geddes bus stop, N. University St. across from Huron Valley Bank, across from the Union on State Street, south of the Engin Arch and the corner of Monroe and Tappan St. At 4 p.m. polls will open at South Quad, East Quad, Markley, Bursley, the Graduate Library and the UGLI. Students must present their validated ID card in order to vote. The ballot questions'include a referendum to change the structure of MSA from a combination of at large and appointed seats to a com- pletely at-large system, with a- certain number of seats apportioned for each school and college within the University. If passed, the referendum would also require that both the president and vice president be elected by the students rather than from the MSA. Don't forget to vote. A decade ago.. . February 22, 1968: The Student Government Council approved a resolution similar to one passed yesterday by the Graduate Assembly declaring March 19 a "Day of Deliberation" when students should boycott classes in opposition to the war and the draft. Happenings;... . ... students who want to be managers for the Wolverine football team next fall should contact Mark Andrews at 995-4825, after 6 p.m.... the Union gallery will present a'sale and exhibition of Orien- tal art today and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. . . . at 11:15 the Friends of the WEarth will meet on the Diag to protest Project Seafarer... at noon the International Center series on European Travel continues, with a talk on backpacking, camping, hiking and equipment... at 12:10 in 2040 LSA, Nancy Hicks, former Washington correspondent for the New York Times speaks on "Problems of the Woman Journalist.". .. at 4 p.m. "Maternal Effects and Non-Effects on Lanfuage Acquisition" will be discussed in the School of Education Schorling Auditorium.. . also at 4, William Mirsky will speak on "Methods for Computing Air-Fuel Ratio From Exhaust Products of Internal Combustion Engines," Rm 2042 Brown Lab.. .and in 3056 NatSci, George Sugihara will discuss "Toward a Unified Theory of Species Abyndahce: Nature is Really a Crack-Up".. . events taper off until 8; when Professor William Adams speaks on the European economy in Lecture- Rm 1, MLB. . . also at 8, the Ann Arbor Democratic Committee meets with Senate Candidate Carl Levin as featured speaker . . .at 8:15 the Prostitution Education Project presents two films on the economics of prostitution in Alice Lloyd's LKline Lounge. Frat officers The Fraternity Coordinating Council, overseeing body to what goes on inside frats, announces its new board of directors. This year the positions were filled by: Vice President for Rush, Dave Deploy; Vice President for inter-fraternity relations, Jack Withrow; and Vice President for University Relations, Brian Laskey. This year's secretary, the first woman to hold a position on the board, is Michelle Brown, the new treasurer is Bruce Dane. Appointed officers, chosen by the fifteen-member council, were FCC rep to the Pan-Hellenic Association (the organization for sororities on campus), Paul Brown; the Social Chairman, Pete Wiltse; and the rep to the Student Buyers Association, Adam Emerson. District reps are Dave Findley, John Babrowski, Chris Donahue, and Rick Simon. Good luck. On the outside . . You couldn't exactly call it balmy, but for the fourth day in a row skies will be blue and temperatures, relatively speaking, mild. Today's high will be 25 with sunny skies. Expect a low of near zero tonight. Thursday's outlook calls for more of the same. PARENTS SUE ANN ARBOR SCHOOL DISTRICT: Are IQ tests cu By ELEONORA di LISCIA Intelligence tests are widely used as basic guidelines for determining a child's capacity for learning and what type of educational program he/she ,is best suited to. Recently, however, these tests have come under fire from educa- tional psychologists, teachers and parents as being culturally biased and therefore discriminating against cer- tain groups of children. The parents of 15 black children who attend Ann Arbor's Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School have filed a. suit against the school district charging that cultural biases in both intelligence (IQ) tests and instruction practices have caused their children to be labeled as "underachievers." A district judge, hoping to avoid a trial, has given the school system three weeks to devise a program to aid these children. WHILE OTHER factors, including dialect, are important issues in the case, IQ tests play an important role. Ruth Zweifler, a spokesperson for the parents and children, said, "I think there's no question that tests prejudice children and reinforces the perceptions of teachers." IQ tests are generally administered to children in the elementary grades. These tests are standardized and test only the knowledge a child has acquired to that point. The tests concentrate on - measuring verbal and perceptual abilities. The tests are used in the Ann Arbor school system, school psychologist Dale Bell' said, as a means of determining students' eligibility for special education programs and to measure the success of certain teaching methods and programs. ZWEIFLER SAID she feels the tests discriminate against minority children. "The WISC and Stanford-Binet (two types of tests) special education statis- tics (turn up) disproportionate (num- bers of) minorities. That judgement is based on those tests." Dr. Hazel Turner, spokespersonfor the school district, maintains that the term cultural bias has been loosely de- fined. "We have the same environment. We have different resources. But we don't live in an exclusive ghetto. Children come into contact with all kin- ds of people." Turner refused further comment on the cast. A UNIVERSITY professor of psychology, Harvey Reed, said the IQ tests discriminate against minorities most likely because the questions "are naturally culturally biased. It is im- possible to construct such a test that would not be biased against some cul- tural group." According to Reed, IQ is simply a person's score on one of these tests, derived by dividing -mental age by chronological age. "What these tests measure actually is unclear," he said, "except how well you do on these tests." IQ test questions are usually devised by psychologists. "These questions," Reed said, "reflect our middle class culture. They try not to, but they Sample IQ test questions "Who wrote Romeo and Juliet?" "You are inside a large airport when you find a letter, already sealed and addressed with a stamp on it. You: a) put the letter in a nearby mailbox. b) give the letter to a man in a uniform standing behind a desk. c) open the en- velope to see if there is money inside." "Who discovered America? a) Chris- topher Columbus b) Leif Erickson." probably do discriminate against the poor, blacks, etc." QUESTIONS which, are labeled as culturally discriminating fall under several categories. An example of a specific cultural question would be "Who wrote Romeo and Juliet?" A child from a lower income or minority family would be less likely to know the answer to this than a child from a higher income family. Not knowing the answer, however, is not necessarily an indication of how bright a child is. This example, taken from a California IQ test, was cited by Asa Hillard, Dean of Education at San Francisco State University, during a trial charging cultural biases on tests in that state. Other questions deal with specific values: "You are inside a large airport when you find a letter, already sealed and addressed with a stamp on it. You a) put the letter in a nearby mailbox. b) give the letter to a man in a uniform standing behind a desk. or c) open the envelope to see if there,-is money in- side." According to Robert Green, a professor of educational psychology at Michigan State University, who cited the question, a child's answer could vary with his community values, but an incorrect answer would still be penalized. Iturally A THIRD kind of question, also from the California test cited by Hillard, has been misdefined, according to testing experts, as being part of a person's ,general information. The question - "Who discovered America?" with possible answers a) Christopher Co- lumbus and b) Leif Erikson, would be disputable with an American Indian child. Although the child disagreed with the answers available, not marking an answer would also be considered wrong. Relying on information based on these types of testing questions can lead, Reed says; to children who are otherwise bright being mis-classed. A child can be labelled as slow or retar- ded and placed in a lower level educa- tion class which may have an effect on his achievement for the rest of his life. IQ tests cannot be thrown out alto- gether, however, educators say. Although they refute the test's ability to determine a child's intelligence, they say some information can be obtained through them. ALICE WARSHAW, a member of a local group for parents of children with learning disabilities, defends the tests for obtaining diagnosis of these problems. "You get performance and verbal diagnosis. Learning disabled children have a discrepancy between the two. "We use them to find out strengths and weaknesses," she added. "The total IQ score will usually not be correct. (But) we are not interested in it." Educators are also confined to the \tests by governmental standards. In order for school districts to obtain government money for a special education program, each child must be tested. This leads the problem in a full . . biased? circle. In order to aid educationally im- paired children, they must be tested. In order to test them, the culturally biased tests are used and the possibility of in- cluding children who are not in need of special education under that label oc- curs. TO: Read the Michigan Daily WHEN: Tuesday-Sunday mornings ,,Y. I WHERE: Anywhere you like 1 " SPECIAL " at the Hage! Factoqy 1306 S. University INTRODUCING ALWAYS FRESH, 7 days. Our New Cream Cheese Spreads: strawberry-blueberry vegetable-walnut 49C per sandwich on your choice of bagel (Good thru Feb. 28) "Expert in Tray Catering" MEDIATRICS SOUNDER' The story of a black family's struggle for survival during the Depression in the deep South. An encouraging vision of human strength and love. Starring PAUL WINFIELD and CICELY TYSON. February 22nd Daily Official Bulletin 7:00 and 9:00 MLB 3 WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 22, 1978 Daily Calendar: Friends of the Earth: Rally to protest Project Seafarer, meet Diag, 11:45Ha.m. Journalism: Nancy Hicks, former Wash. correspondent for the New York Times, "Problems of the Woman Journalist," 2040 LSA, 12:10 p.m. Ind./Oper. Eng.: Dr. J. B. Bryan, Chief Metrologist, Lawrence Livermore Labs., Livermore, Calif., "Precision Engineering," 229 W.E., 2:30 p.m. Physics: J. B. Hartle, U.C. Santa Barbara, "Black Holes," 296 Dennison, 4 p.m. Statistics: Lorraine De'Robertis, Yale U., "Use of Prior Knowledge in Bayesian Inference," 451 Mason Hall, 4p.m. Astronomy: J. Huchra, Center for Astrophysics., "Groups of Galaxies," 845 Dennison, 4p.m. Ctr. Western European Studies: William James Adams, "The European 'Economy: Bureaucratic Management and Large Industrial Corporations," Lec. rm. 1.MLB, 8 p.m. General Notice: CEW will hold an admissions Information Clinic for women who want to return to school at a brown bag lunch on Friday, February 24, 1978. Topics to be discussed include choice of program, degree and non-degree admissions categories, processing ap- plications, and finding help with individual problems and questions. Admissions Information Clinic will be held from 12:00 noon to 1:30 p.m. at the Center, 328 Thompson. All persons who are making plans to begin or con- tinue an education are welcome. For further infor- mationm contact the CEW at 763-1353 or 764-6555. SUMMER PLACEMENT 3200 SAB 763-4117 W. R. Grace & Co., Columbia, Maryland. Summer Intern Program. Must have chemical background and a year of study toward an MBA. Further details available. Summer Intern Government Programs available to undergrads, and grads. various agencies covers fields of drug abuse, mental health, research analyst in Gerontology, poli. science majors, admin. and tech, openings. You must study these on your own. Camp Echo Lake, New York Coed. Will interview Thurs. Feb. 23 from 1 to 5. Openings include ar- ts/crafts, waterfront (WSI), nature, tennis, dance, cabin counselors. Register by phone or in person. National Music Camp, Interlochen, Mi. Will inter- view Tues., Feb. 28 from 9 to 5. Openings include nature, arts/crafts, waterfront (WSI), athletics, cabin counselors. Register by phone or in person. Camp Tamarack, Mi. Coed. Will interview Tues., Feb. 21 and Mon., Feb. 27 from 9 to 5. Openings for counselors, specialists, kitchen staff, nurses, caseworkers, and bus drivers. Blue Lakes Fine Arts Camp. Mi. Coed. Will inter- view Thurs., Mar. 2 from 9 to 5. Openings include waterfront (WSI), recreation director, archery, cabin counselors. Nippersink Manor Resort, Wisc. Will interview Mar. 1 and 2 - Weds., Thurs, from 9 to 5. Openings: waiters, waitresses, recreation staff, maids, kitchen help and many others. Register in person or by phone. P.E.N. AWARD NEW YORK (AP) - The American publisher Helen Wolff is the winner of he Second Annual Publisher Citation from P.E.N., the American writers' or- ;anization. She began her publishing career in ermany. In 1941, she and her husband, he late Kurt Wolff, came to the United tates and started Pantheon Books, here she edited adult and juvenile ooks, worked on publicity and adver- ising and production operations. The olffs joined Harcourt Brace ovanovich in 1961 as the first editors to ork with an ongoing house as a co- ublishing team with their own imprint. P.E.N. is an acronym for poets, play- rights, essayists, editors and ovelists. HOLLYWOOD ON TRIAL A Vintage Documentary on what happened to Hollywood during the McCarthy persecutions of the 1950's. Historical footage of the Hollywood r__--- _ ~fr I Aon'NFIE IR r~ARY THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LXXXVIII, No. 119 Wednesday. February 22, 1978 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 764-0562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters); $13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day morning.subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. 4\DLATJI t 0theh rborfilm co-operative presents at ANGELL HALL Wednesday, February 22 BRUNO DER SCHWARTZE (Bruno The Black) (Lutz Eisholz, 1970) 7 ONLY-AUD. A The documentary film which inspired Werner Herzog to use Bruno S. for his film EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF AND GOD AGAINST ALL. Bruno the Black is a social outsider, an illegitimate child who is moved from one 1 eform school to another, runs away whenever, possible, and altogether spends 13 years in these or in homes for the mentally-impaired. Since 1958 he has lived in com- parative freedom, but in his own private world. Thnaks to the remarkable cinematic presence of Bruno, who reminisces about his life, Lutz Eisholz has IVA (TI 411 VIIIAILS% MENDELSSOHN THEATRE SUN. FEB. 26, 2 & 8 pm Guest Artist Series a . I, r Featuring JAMES U UAWTWAQI'J mE