The Michigan Daily-Friday, May 18, 1979-Page 9 'U' courses share Harvard 'core' idea By SARA ANSPACH University administrators say they have no plans to follow Harvard University's revamping of its un- dergraduate curriculum and degree requirements to include mandatory, specialized courses in place of broad in- troductory classes. But the ad- ministrators also say the ideas that prompted Harvard's recently announ- ced curriculum overhaul have been in- strumental in some curriculum developments here. HARVARD UNVEILED its new un- dergraduate program Tuesday. In ad- dition to requiring "core" courses in five areas-literature and arts, historical studies,rsocial analysis and moral reasoning, science, and foreign cultures, the school will insist that graduates show proficiency in writing and mathematical skills, including the use of computors. LSA Associate Dean John Knott said about a year ago administrastors briefly discussed some of the types of changes Harvard will be, instituting but he added they felt these innovations were not appropriate for a school like the University. "We don't have a strong general education tradition similar to Harvard," he said. Also, Knott said the University is so - large and diverse that it would be dif- ficult to agree on the courses to be taught ina core program.- THE PHILOSOPHY behind Har- vard's core program is that students benefit from in-depth studies of a specific topic by learning how knowledge is gained and studied more than from a general overview of a sub- ject in which students retain only bits and pieces of information. Several University programs were developed with this philosophy in mind, said Knott. The Great Books division in the Honors College is a type of "general education" course, said Knott. Next fall, Knott said, he expects more honors courses will be offered. The freshman seminar program, which will begin its second year next fall, is another example of courses which are specific and inter- disciplinary. The 15 courses in the smaller program are small (15-20 students) and taught by a senior mem- ber of the faculty. "UNIVERSITY COURSES," classes an elementary knowledge of computers in areas such as American Studies, are and can set up a simple loop program. also examples of "non-standard" cour- "THE IMPLICATIONS of this are ses offered through LSA. that professors will be able (in later Knott said he would like to see more years) to assign students work on a of these types of classes, but getting computer," he said. faculty to teach interdepartmental LSA General Academic Counselor courses is difficult. "The problem is Linda Wallin says that if a student is the faculty have a lot of things their depar- least bit technically oriented, she ad- tments want them to do," he said. vises that he or she take Computer and "There's no budget to buy time away Communications 274, an introductory from the departments. computer sciences course which Harvard's new requirement that teaches students a computer language students be proficient in computers and "how a computer thinks." may be a developing trend, according Dean Knott discussed the possibility to academic counselors. Harvard's - of some day requiring students to take General Education Director Edward a course in computers. "I have a feeling Wilcox said that students will have to we may discuss the issue some time in nass unit tests to demonstrate thev have the futura "ha added Trash-tossing, book-blaze clutter U. of Connecticut STORRS, Conn. (AP) - The Univer- sity of Connecticut was cleaning up yesterday from an end-of-school student trash-throwing and book- burning spree that left dormitory yards covered with garbage, litter, and broken beer bottles. Many parents who arrived to pick up their sons and daughters as the spring semester closed were shocked by the mess at the 9,000-student campus, a university official said. At one men's dormitory all six pic- ture windows were missing, the result of a wild party 21I2 weeks ago. A MAINTENANCE worker stopped shoveling debris outside the dorm and shook his head. "I've been here 11 years and this is the worst I've seen. I think they (the students) are a bunch of pigs," he said. The damage reached its peak Mon- day and Tuesday, when students built massive bonfires to burn textbooks, and threw cinder blocks, trash, and books from dormitory windows. No estimate of the cleanup and repair cost was available Thursday. Officials said any expense would be assessed to students. THE LITTER and damage had some students and administrators at the rural campus comparing the incident to the movie "Animal House," which detailed the antics of a college frater- nity. The movie "kind of brought back the idea of going crazy on college campus," said graduate student Neil Sikand of Mansfield, Conn. But Nicholas Luchetti, a senior from Milford, Conn. who lived in the heavily damaged dormitory, said it gained an "animal house" reputation long before the movie appeared. HE SAID much of the trash-throwing was in reaction to the administration's decision to make the dormitory coed. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperative presents at mLB FRIDAY, MAY 18 $1.50 SILVER STREAK (Arthur Hiller, 1976) 7 a 9-MLB 3 GENE WILDER stars in this neat comedy-thriller about a book editor who wit- nesses a murder on the L.A.-New York suaer-train and then becomes hunted by the murderers and the cops. This film boasts RICHARD PRYOR in superb comic torm and an elegant PATRICK McGOOHAN as the suavest villain since Basil Rathbone and James Mason. Pryor giving Wilder lessons in American comedy. With JILL CLAYBURN. Free showing Tuesday, May 22nd in Aud A Bogart in IN A LONELY PLACE and REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE FRED ZINNEMAN'S 1955 OKLAHOMA From a milestone in American musical theater, the first successful integration of popular music with a story line on equal footing. Music by Rodgers and Hammerstein, choreography by Agnes Demille, cinematography by many times Oscar winner Robert Surtees. Starring GORDON MacRAE, SHIRLEY JONES, ROD STEIGER 8 EDDIE ALBERT. By the future director of "Julia." In color. Sat: Lino Wertmuller's LOVE AND ANARCHY Sun: THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD (Free) CN AGUILD TONIGHTAT OLD ARCHMAUD CINEMA GU : 4.A100.$15