oage 10-Tuesday, February 5, 1980-The Michigan Daily 6 'I Libraries overcrowded, short c (Continued from Page 1) ing textbooks-and they get angry." A female gradaute student, who declined to give her name, said from her fifth floor assigned carrel that the large number of undergraduates 'using the libarary for textbook studying" annoys her. "I'm glad I got one (a carrel). Before I did I had a hard time finding a place to study." j NEAR EASTERN Studies graduate student Kent Jackson said although he -oesn't object to undergrads using the brad, "maybe I would if I didn't have a carrel. I don't have to fight for space." He said he used to have problems, especially during exam time when the libraries were packed. "I don't care if it's undergrads, professors or what, there's a lack of study space." Starring said the problem has become chronic since the north portion of the Grad was renovated between 1974 and 1976. "It wasn't as comfortable and popular until then," Starring said, adding that the Undergraduate Library is also usually crowded. "That's why the Grad is so filled with undergrads," he said, "there's no room at the UGLI." Starring said undergraduates complain about the lack of space in the Grad as much as graduates do. He defended the undergraduates claim of Free Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results r Confidential Counseling Complete Birth Control Clinic Medicaid " Blue Cross (313) .1-1$1 Ann Arbor and Downriver area ,x'(313) 559-0590 Southfield area Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. equal access to the Grad. "We will never subscribe to the notion that undergraduates should be excluded from this building ... The complaint is that students who use the library for study hall use are dislocating those who need to use the collection," he said.. "THAT'S THE biggest gripe of library science students," said library science student Joan Upell. "You come in here to use the collection and there's nowhere to sit. There are signs all over the place and no one pays attention." She said she has even been intentionally rude and noisy to encourage people to leave. "I think a lot of undergrads come here just to visit with their friends." Upell said she studies in the Library Science Library in the afternoons now because it's less crowded than at night. "I've never been to a university where getting a seat in the library is such a problem and this is my third one," said Upell, who previously attended Michigan State and Western Michigan Universities. 5 Starring said the problem is not only a library problem, but a University problem as well. "We're very conqerned," said University President Harold Shapiro. "It's an extremely important problem and the question is what to do about it." THAT IS PRECISELY the question the newly formed Task Force on Study Environments intends to answer. E Starring, also a task force member, said the committee will survey a sample of the student population sometime this term for ideas and suggestions. Currently, thecommittee is exploring the problem and discussing possible solutions. "We won't leave one stone unturned," said geography Prof. George Kish, a committee faculty representative. But, like anything else, "some things work and some things don't," Shapiro said. "We tried opening up classrooms (4th floor Angell Hall) but that wasn't very popular, no one used them." The reason for that, Starring said, is the location and security. "It's remote and desolate. I suppose there might be some reservations for' female students." Kish blamed the unpopularity on public relations. "Not enough people know about it," he said. on study current serials room, now called Serials, Services and Records. Starring said the third floor location is poor spot for a lounge. He said socializing disturbs those in the Graduate Reserve Room across the hall and trash accurdulates throughout the area. '"It gets crowded and then overflows into the hallway. It turns into a pit," he said. The new 3,000 square foot lounge will increase the Grad's seating capacity by about 200. The library presently holds about 1,200 study spaces, not including rooms with limited hours, such as the map and rare books rooms. The map room seats about 30. Seventy-six of the 235 carrels are assigned to Ph.D. candidates and publishing faculty, thus prohibiting general use. THE UNDERGRADUATE -Library seats about 1,200 also, according to I've never been to a university where getting a seat in the library is such a problem.' -Joan Upell, who previously attended Michigan State and Western Michigan Universities. space "IF YOU TRY to get a carrel at the Grad after 6 (p.m.) you better hang it up;" said LSA freshperson Lauren Kurilchik. And "if you come after 7:30 you can't get a seat in the mai@ reference room," said Business senior Matthew Gensberg. But Gensberg said he doesn't find the crowded main libraries a problem. "There's always a place for me to study in the Business School." Sophomore Glenn Galler, while studying in a Public Health classroom, said he never has problems finding study spot, either. "There's always place: Rackham, the 1Law Library, here, Angell Hall. There's enough places to go." Like many undergraduates, Galler studies often at the Law Library. "They are allowed to study here . . . but we prefer that it's not used for a study hall," said Law Library Assistant Director Margaret Leary. "The reference room seats fewer than on quarter of our student body an sometimes they can't do their work out of the library," she said. Although many students living in dormitories take adavantage of dorm study lounges,kapparently not enough do to take some pressure off the crowded libraries. Freshperson Sharon Weber said she studies in Markley's South Pik occasionally but pressure to study sends her to the library. "There's too many distractions here. It gets noisy, the doors open and shut, after mealtimes the radio blares through the vents." Schenker said he prefers the libraries over the South Pit for psychological reasons. "Here (South Pit), I can go back to my room any time. At the libarary I can't, there's more chanceO I'll stay there.' But Starring pointed out that not all dorms provide study space. "Some people have to come to the library." e f t FOLD BACK THIS FLAP8 SEAL WITH TAP L Beefing up night security, at Angell Hall is one possible way to alleviate the crowding in the Undergraduate and Graduate Libraries, Starring said. ADDITIONAL STUDY space will open up when the University finishes renovating the'first and ground floors of the Michigan Union, possibly by next year. Union Assistant Director Jeff LeBow said "we definitely want a browsing library, music listening room," although he couldn't specify anything else. "It's in the works," he said. Study space will open, up soon at the Grad, however. Theethird floor lounge will move to ground floor room 106 sometime this month, leaving a study room, Starring said. "We're waiting for the furniture," he said. To empty the ground floor room, the library moved its serial processing staff and files to the second floor's ex- UGLI Librarian Rose-Grace Faucher. She said students place repetitive complaints in the suggestion box about noise, clutter, and crowds. The second and fourth floors are the quietest, while the basement is the worst, she said, and 7 to 9:30 p.m. is the most crowded time. "If I want to kibbitz (joke around) I go to the UGLI. If I want to get work done, I go to the Grad," said sophomore Rick Schenker. Indeed, Starring cited the increased seriousness of students these days as a reason they flock to the Grad. "There's a different environment in the Grad. It's for the more serious student .. . There's a study environment here and a social environment at the UGLI," he said. It used to be the libraries were only packed during midterms and finals. Not so anymore. "It used to be seasonal. . . now they're busy all year round," Starring said. FROM Daily Classifieds Student Publications Building 420 Maynard Street Ann Arbor, Mich. 48109 Chicago judge orders end to, week-long teacher's strike 6 E FOLD- CHICAGO (UPI)-A Cook County judge yesterday ordered teachers to end a strike which forced the closing of the nation's third-largest school system earlier in the day. Judge Richard L. Curry, after a brief hearing on suits filed by both the teachers and the school board, said, "In Illinois, the law is clear and has been enunciated numerous times. That is, there is no inherent right for municipal employees to an illegal strike." STUDENTS, MOST of whom have SKIERS * Group Accommodations (20 or more) at Camp Sea-Gull in the heart of Boyne Country - " $28 per person/per weekend includes: -2 NIGHTS LODGING -2 BREAKFASTS, DINNER 2 NIGHTLY SNACKS -LARGE SKIERS LODGE WITH T.V. LOUNGE -MINUTES TO BOYNE HIGHLANDS, BOYNE MT., NUBS NOB --MILES OF CROSS-COUNTRY SKI TRAILS CALL 313-661-0060 been out of class for a week while teachers stayed home to protest late delivery of their pay, were told to stay home again Monday. The teachers' strike centers on the board's decision to cut more than 1,600 teaching positions to help meet a legislative mandate to trim $60 million from its budget. The teachers say that decision violates their contract. The CTU membership authorized the strike Sunday night on a vote of 7,717- 2,506. THE SUIT FILED by the board charged the strike is "contrary to law and ... renders it impossible for the board to comply with its constitutionally mandated governmental duty to keep a free public school system open for the hool children." The suit filed by the Chicago Teachers Union charged the board and the Chicago School Finance Authority-its budget overseer-have overstepped their authority in dictating ways the schools can cut moe than $60 million from the budget. The teachers' suit asked for a injunction preventing the board and the authority fr6m making the budget cuts unilaterally or from -otherwise changing the teachers' contract. THE SCHOOL system has been in a financial bind since late fall when bond- rating houses cut its bond rating because of a persistent pattern of borrowing to meet operating expenses. I I r t i. for whatever jungle you're in .. . 'U' may accept either ACJ or SA T in 81 admissions (Continued from Page 1) significant differences between the two in their prediction of students' first year college grades. "Our own studies show the tests equally useful in the admissions process," said Gordus. Associate Director of Admissions Lance Ericson commented that using the ACT scores will be helpful to both '4 Introductoiy Discussions on the Bah I Faith EVERY THURS. THRU FEB. 28 8 9I enfter, 512 Packard St. 7:30 P.M. the applicant and the University. "Last year 70,000 ACT exams were taken in Michigan, as opposed to 18,000 SAT exams," he said. "The difference lies with the fact that the ACT examination is needed by the state foO its scholarship program. Many of ou in-state applicants take the SAT only because of our admissions requirements." Ericson also emphasized that the admissions office had received many complaints from high school counselors, parents, and principals because of the present policy. "Some counselors have told me that they've encouraged students not apply here because of our stance, observed Ericson. "We'd be very happy if (the University of) Michigan adopted the' policy of accepting ACT scores in place of SAT scores," said James Clark, assistant principal of Ann Arbor's Pioneer High School. "We have raised the issue a number of times with the University,, stressing that many comparable schools accept both the ACT and the SAT." These comparabig institutions not bnly include every other Big Ten school but also Chicago, Dartmouth, 'Brown, Stanford, and Berkeley. Lance added that there might be a few problems in data collection, reporting; and interpretation, but that the benefits of providing the option far outweigh the difficulties. He also said i TSt. Matthew Passion J. S. BACH I11 I/1 I11 /. I!I 1!I M I I