I Page 16 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, September 9, 1983 Brainy freshpersons score high The Institute for i i Para legal Training works. So do. its, graduates. Four months of intensive training can add market value to your college degree. A sampling of jobs our graduates hold: LEGISLATIVE RESEARIIER, iMUNICIPA L BOND PARALEGAL, REAL ESTATE MARK ETI NG DIRECTOR, ESTATES & TRUSTS LEGAL ASSISTANT, ENERGY SPECIALIST, ANTITRUST SPECIALIST, CORPORATE BENEFITS PLANNER, ENVIRONMENTAL LAW SPECIALIST " Through our corporate contacts, our national search team and our computerized placement service, we have placed over 5,000 of our graduates in law firms, banks and corporations nationwide. " You can specialize in one of seven areas of the law. " All courses include training in computer applications to legal practice. " If we cannot secure a job for you in the city of your choice, we provide a substantial tuition refund. " Financial aid and housing are available. See our resource book on law-related careers at your placement office. By KAREN TENSA The University's succeeded this year in attracting more top-notch freshper- sons, but as a result, middle- and low-in- come students were squeezed out of the race. Incoming freshpersons, who scored an average of 20 points higher on the SATs than last year's class, also are more affluent said Cliff Sjogren, the University's director of admissions. "MORE AFFLUENT students tend to come from better-supported school districts," said Sjogren. "And better supported school districts have more accelerated and advanced placement programs, which produce higher quality students." The University attracted and enrolled these students despite receiving about 13,000 applications for admissions, approximately 650 fewer than last year. The median SAT scores this year were 620 in math and 550 in verbal, compared to 610 and 540 last year. IN PART, the higher scores can be attributed to more out-of-state students enrolling at the University, according to Sjogren. Out-of-state freshpersons traditionally have scored higher on the SATs, he said. About on-third of the incoming class are non-residents. "The out-of-state students are coming to the University with overall higher skills," Sjogren said, adding that only students from wealthy families can afford the University's sky-rocketing tuition. AS A RESULT, the number of out-of- state students might increase slightly this year, he said. Rising tuition, marked by a 9.5 per- cent increase this year, makes the University the most expensive public school in the nation. Tuition for non- resident freshmen is $3,148 per semester and $1,084 for residents. Better skills, albeit a sacrifice in diversity, are keys to maintaining the quality of the University's academic programs, said Billy Frye, the Univer- sity's vice president for academic af- fairs and provost. WHILE THE University cuts its budget under a campus-wide plan to redistribute $20 million in general fund money over five years, it risks falling behind competing schools in attracitng high-quality students, said Sue Mims, director of academic planning and analysis. But Frye said the higher SAT scores mean the University is not sacrificing quality while it cuts back. "The fact that the quality of the student body is being maintained and even increased, in a time of increasing competition for the most highly qualified students, is evidence of the University's strong commitment to in- stitutional excellence in a time of limited resources," he said. Although cutting enrollment curren- tly is not being considered by the University, if the trend of fewer ap- plicants continues, the quality of students could drop, said Mims. "If the quality of the applicants drops with fewer applications, the individual programs can decide to choose between dropping students or lowering the quality of their programs," Mims said. This story was reprinted from the summer edition of the Daily. 76 Need to talk? Call -GUIDE open all night every night-5 pm to 9 am 24 hours on the weekend 'U' close to breaking state enrollment law I To learn more, call collect: (215) 567-4811. Or, return the coupon. THE INSTITUTE FOR PARALECAL TRAINING Philadelphia Houston athis coupon to: a RUMI IThe Institute for PalglTring 1926 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA 19103 Please send a free copy of your catalogue. ' I IPhiladelphia LQ Houston ' Name. ' Address City state -- Zip 1College I (yr. ot grad.) Phone (present phone) (home phone) _1_ -- --- - -- - - - Confidential peer counseling over the phone. -Crisis intervention and referral a If you, or someone you know, needs help, or just someone to talk to, call 76-GUIDE. We're here to listen. 76-GUIDE is sponsored by Counseling Services - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- w By KAREN TENSA The University is engaged in a delicate balancing act of trying to in- crease its percentage of out-of-state students without violating state laws designed to give Michigan residents an opportunity to attend the University. By admitting more out-of-state students, the University receives far more in tuition money, but critics say it is unfair to citizens of the state, who help support the school through taxes. A STATE LAW dictates that the University must freeze its level of out- of-state students at the percentage it had in the fall of 1973 - which was 25 percent. The University has kept to that figure, but only because its Flint and Dearborn campuses are made up almost entirely of in-state commuter students. Figures for the Ann Arbor campus tell a different story. This fall's in- coming first-year class will be made up of 33 percent out-of-state students, up from 30 percent last year, according to Cliff Sjogren, the University's ad- missions director. OUT-OF-STATE first- and second- year undergraduates pay about $6,300 in tuition per year, nearly three times the price in-state students pay. That fact led a committee on ad- missions last fall to recommend that the percentage of out-of-state freshper- sons be allowed to increase to 40 per- cent. "We're letting the out-of-state per- centage creep up slowly, but I would not endorse a plan to raise it as high as 40 percent," Sjogren said. SJOGREN SAID the University decides on what percentage of out-of- state students to accept by "the need for money." "It's a financially based decision," he said. Sjogren said that the University will not simply admit out-of-state students without considering their academic qualifications. "We would never cut the academic auality of incoming students for money,"he said. "Out-of-state students have had, on the average, consistently higher overall. skills," he added. Billy Frye, vice president for academic affairs and provost, said, "The University has a number :of proposals for raising the percentage of out-of-state students, but currently has no policy or formal limits on that per- centage." "Increasing the number of out-of- state students has been proposed to of- fset costs," he said. BY FAR THE highest percentage of out-state students is found in the University's Law School, which has about a 50-50 ratio, according to Sue Mims, director of academic planning and analysis. Each out-of-state law student brings in $2,000 more in tuition money than an in-state student. But that high ratio in a state- supported university has brought about opposition from some who felt Michigan citizens shouldn't subsidize out-of-state students. STATE SENATOR Arthur Miller (D- Warren) tried to require the Law School to reduce its out-of-state enrollment to 25 percent in June. Miller proposed an amendment to the state appropriations for higher education bill calling for the Law School to reduce its out-of-state percen- tage, but the amendment failed. Although the University as a wholes4 keeping to the 25 percent out-of-state figure, discussing figures such as the Law School makes some University's officials uncomfortable. "It's not to the University's benefit'to continue to air in the press the Law School's numbers," Mims said. The University's largest unit, the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, has a 27 percent out-of-state enrollment. This story was reprinted from tA summer edition of the Daily. 'U' retires, sells old desks (Continued from Page 12) tor Alan Levy. "They have just seen better days," he said. Some of the desks need repairs to fix problems such as drawers that no longer fit in the tracks, Levy said, and many of the desks are badly scratched. "People used X-acto knives (on the desks)," remembered former South Quad resident Ron Egan. "They 'left grooves and you can't write on them anymore," he said. EVEN IF THE University decided to keep the desks, repairing them might be close to impossible, according to Levy, because many are so old it is dif- ficult to find replacement parts. The cost of refinishing and repairing the desks could be more than buying new ones, he said. Replacing the old desks will cost more than $800,000 which will come out of the housing reserve fund, made up from students' room and board money. Despite the high price' tag, Levy thinks the expense is worth it. IT'S THE FIRST not iceable im- provement in many years," he said. "The new desks probably are not made as well as the old, but it's a cost factor." The new desks have four drawers and matching bookcases that can be at- tached to the top. Earlier this summer, workmen tore out the built-in desks in South Quad, which will be replaced with the new free-standing desks. The South Quad desks which were essentially a long table with drawers and a bookcase, were sold for $1 each. South Quad Building Director Mar Antieau, said it was cheaper to sell the desks for $1 than to dispose of them. This story was reprinted from the summer edition of the Daily. Maize 1. Frank Robinson 2. Grits 4 5 b Gresham 3. Bob Uecker 4. 21Ray Nitschke 5. Ben 1 o . 2 13 4Davidson 6. Tommy Heinsohn 7. John Madden 15 1617 1e18. Billy Martin 9. Steve 22 2 24Mizerak 10. Dick Butkus 11. 20 2 0 2 -2sBoog Powell 12. Koichi Numazawa 13. Jim 0>K our 9r c E 29 $7~ & 4 0" I - , I ,~