New lottery system splits dorm cliques The Michigan Daily-Sunday, September 12, 1982-Paqe 5 (Continued from Page 1) Kozlow and Michael acknowledged the housing advisor's argument, but stuck to their guns: The new system favors out-of-state students at a state university, they said. "I think they should give first priority to those who took the time to drive it up. "The new system just favors the minority number of students from out of state. If they're not equal to us in number, why should they be given priority," Michael said. ONE BENEFIT of the new lottery system is that it allows for more of a balance between in-stae and out-of- state students in certain dorms, Man- tyk said. Previously, the Hill dorms were mostly populated with suburban Detroit residents, she added. Some Hill dorm students said they felt the mix at Markley, Mosher Jordan, Alice Lloyd, Stockwell, and Couzens was satisfactory in the past, and needed no changing. "Maybe the new system helps the dorm be more diverse, but you'd still meet new people ... I would anyway," said one West Bloomfield freshperson, who asked not to be identified after she §poke. -UPPERCLASSMEN who had a chance to reflect on their dorm living experiences see the Hill residence halls as a very homogeneous, stagnating "Econ. move may push CRISP out (Continued from Page 1) back to work" on the ninth and tenth floors of the former hospital, nearly nine months after the fire. "It's inconvenient and far away from campus, but- it's tolerable. On the whole, we're lucky," he said. ECONOMICS Professor George Johnson said he finds the quarters somewhat less tolerable: "I would like to get out of that place as fast as possible," Johnson said. "The department hangs together," he said, "but we had a lot of losses." Stafford said visiting faculty have to share offices at the former hospital, a situation he termed "tight." With faculty forced to commute 20 minutes to- and from classes, and graduate economics students scattered across central campus, the current location is a "disaster if you want to take an economics "class," Stafford said. IN LORCH HALL though, "there cer- tainly is space if it's redesigned," he ' added. Although no bids have been taken for the job of remodeling the building, Staf- ford said it would cost in the range of $1 million to $2 million dollars. Insurance money would be used for the six month project, Stafford said, and no construction would take place until May, 1983. The building needs work on its cen- tral ventilating system to make it more energy-efficient, and some structural ork, such as partitioning a few rooms, he said. A move to Lorch Hall would plut the department in an even better position than it had had in the old economics building, according to Stafford. group. "The stigma associated with MoJo and Markley, that it is a dorm for white, middle-class Jews, whether or not the residents want to believe it, caters to that group," commented a male senior who also asked not to be named. "It doesn't matter if they're from Roslyn, New York or West Bloomfield, it's the same group of people," he ad- ded. Nate Resnick, an LSA senior who lived in MoJo, said the new lottery is a good way to avoid clinging to old high school friends. "It was an extremely safe and secure environment (living in MoJo). I think the new system is good," he said. FR A T , I INDIVIDUAL THEATRES 25t HA " fLiberty 7019700 "Irresistible "Nothing less than the be comedy about being young since Truffaut's 'Small Change'." VINCENT CANBY, N.Y. TIMES I st (PG) Girl FRI, MON-6:30, 8:20, 10:10 SAT, SUN-12:50, 2:40, 4:40 6:30, 8:20, 10:10 "IT WILL LEAVE YOU FEELING TEN FEET TALL" -REX REED l (R) RICHARD GERE DEBRA WINGER AN OFFICER ANDA GENTLEMAN AI, MON-7:40, 9:55 SAT, SUN-12:40, 3:00, 5:20, 7:40, 9:55 - - F 1 1 ,sun photo Amateur and Commercial Photofinishing PHOTOGRAPHIC GARAGE SALE 3120 Packard Road mm SEPTEMBER 18, 1982 BUY -SELL - 1-5 p.m. TRADE TO SELL-Register for table space on our lawn. Advanced registration is $3.00. Limit 1 table per participant. TO BUY--Browse among the sellers, find a treasure, make on offer, get a bargain. TO TRADE--Bring your unwanted photo paraphenalia and trade for something you've always wanted. FIND HAPPY HOMES FOR YOUR UNNEEDED PHOTO PARA- PHERNALIA. BUY THE VERY BEST IN USED EQUIPMENT. NO ITEM TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL.