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"":::.h ": ,,t}. ??:.... ..! f ... ........:...... ............:...:"::::.::::.:.,. . .r>? ...:xs ."s:"''fitr+. .''?:::::'. r." ....,.;;s ........+.......:.... ........" ::...............,.. ,.,:,r,.,.:.:::.....,::a...t++:::rh<:.;::a":::>,.?:.,..,.,:.;;.::"::.: ::;+,.vrr ris : :'t :%ctrr:S: ;: COVER STORY ECB: Has it helped? Page 1 Six years ago the University made a commitment to upgrade the writing skills of its liberal arts students by establishing the English Composition Board (ECB). This week's cover story looks to see if student literacy really has improved. Cover photo by Doug McMahon. DISCS FILM Too much blood Page 4 Scarface was making news long before its release, thanks toits graphic violence and the resulting near X-rating. But now Scarface makes news in the Daily. Just in time for Spring break in Miami, Scarface is the movie of a greasy, violent Cuban who makes it big. THE = LIST Happenings Pages 5-7 Your personal guide to fun times for the coming week in Ann Arbor. Film capsules, music previews, theater notes, and bar dates, all listed for you in a handy-dandy, day-by-day schedule. THEATER Gray's play Page 8 The Michigan Ensemble Theater is presenting. Butley, Simon Gray's comedy about a professor whose life is rapidly falling apart. Alumni Nicholas Pennell returns to the University to star as Ben Butley. MUSIC Music galore! Page 9 Looks like another music-filled weekend in Ann Ar- bor. On Friday night at the Union, there is a musical tribute to George Gershwin, the man who helped legitimize jazz. On Saturday, Ida Kavafian is the guest violinist with the Ann Arbor Chamber Or. chestra. Ida and the AACO will be jamming at the Michigan Theater. BOOKS Almost funny Page 12 Not Quite the TV Guide is not quite the funniest book ever published, but it has its moments. Some former National Lampooners collaborated on this parody of the TV Guide which is reviewed right in this very magazine. English 125 that require individual meetings with instructors for half an hour in each of the first seven weeks of the term-are foreign students and dialect speakers. . "We get a lot of athletes. We probably know half of the football and basketball teams," she said. "They're dialect speakers. It doesn't mean they're stupid. It' only means that they're not writers of standard English and to sur- vive at this University you've got to use standard English" To Varonis, a quote from a former student that is taped to the wall above her desk illustrates much of the problem in student writing: "You mean it's not just the form, it's the content that coun- ts?" Teaching methods at ECB focus on the content rather than the form, Varonis says. "The least important thing is pun- ctuation and spelling. "We work at the level of ideas-organizing the ideas to say what a student wants to say. Then we worry about punctuation and spelling." Their philosophy extends to the program's other offerings, including writing workshops that ire open to all students. Students also can ask ECB in- structors to review a paper or just sit down for a while to talk about writing. Cheryl Johnson, another ECB lec- turer, says the program's services are essential because students have few places to turn for help with their writing. "There are fe#' instructors at the University who are willing to spend time to help students. That's the response I've gotten." T HE UNIQUENESS of the ECB has led to other schools copying most or parts of the University's program for their own use. Robinson said that the ECB receives several calls each week from other universities that are setting up their own programs. 'At the University of Arizona, a school of about 30,000 students, a plan similar to the ECB is being established. According to Charles Davis, Director of Com- position at Arizona, the school is taking writing seriously. "When the students come in the summer for orientation, the first thing they do is meet the student body president. The second thing they do is write an essay," he said. Before Arizona established its upper- level requirements, its program resem- bled the ECB's first year component. The upper level program at Arizona now includes a writing proficiency test to be taken late in the sophomore or early in the junior year-not to fail anybody, Davis says, but to identify those students who still need extra help. A second major difference between the Arizona and Michigan programs is' that Arizona's requirements are cam- pus-wide, while the University's are restricted to liberal arts students. A second Arizona school, Arizona State University, is using the ECB as a model for a possible program there. Robert Shafer, an English professor in charge of establishing a program there cites several reasons for studying the ECB. "It was one of the first programs along those lines. There aren't many in existence," Shafer says. The idea of in- cluding faculty members from all disciplines is also attractive. "It's much 'There is no doubt in my n quality of writing has impi ECB is responsible for some of -Chemistry Prof. ' Raunchy records Page 3 Be forewarned. Both John "Cougar" Mellencamp and Billy Idol have brand new discs at out. The pride and joy of Indiana, Mellencamp once again explores life in the heartland and other equally thrilling topics in Uh-huh, his long-dreaded follow-up to the frighteningly successful American Fool album. And ex-Generation Xer, Billy Idol sells out with varying degrees of success on Rebel Yell. better to put the burden of responsibility for improving literacy on the whole faculty instead of expanding the English department." At the University of Wisconsin's Stevens Point campus, Don Pottow, the director of freshman English, says he "stole unmercifully from Michigan" in setting up a program. "I looked around the country, and the program I liked best was Michigan's. They had their heads screwed on straight," he says. ECB Chairman Robinson says his own program seems to be getting positive signals right at home, too. He says the ECB has achieved many of the goals it set out to attain six years ago. "There's a lot more writing going on around campus," the chairman says. "The students are more aware they have to work on their writing. If atten- tion is being paid to that, then they probably are better writers." With the r Litsa Varoni going to be a aren't ea; .acknowledge traditional u "After al philosophy d is improving The answe as far as stud ned. No o department never enroll the ECB is d in the colleg at one time likely to be d Says Varoi table in some everyone nee to believe we Weekend IFridoy, January 20. 1984 ,VoI ,itIssue 13 Magazine Editors... Mare Hodges Susan Makuch Sales Manager ........................ Meg Gibson Assistant Sales Manager ........... Julie Schneider Weekend is edited and managed by students on the staff of The Michigan Daily at 420 Maynard, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan, 48109. It appears in the Friday edition of the Daily every week during the University year and is available for free at many locations around the campus and city. Weekend, (313) 763-0379 and 763-0371; Michigan Daily, 764-0552; Circulation, 764-0558; Display Adver- tising, 764-0554. Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily. Miller is I I ROLEX ON DANCE FLOOR OR OCEAN FLOOR, ACTIVISTS CHOOSE ROLEX. i I Michigan Ensemble Theatre presents: SIMON GRAY'S Directed by WALTER EYSSELINCK Featuring NICHOLAS PENNELL as Ben Butley jan. 25-29, Feb. 2-5 Wed. thru Sat. at 8 pm Sun. at 2 pm LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE P.T.P. Ticket Office, Michigan League Building For ticket information, call 764-0450. You fly high, live free, and dive deep. You're an activist. An innovator. You are involved. Your wristwatch, of course, is Rolex. Like this tough, timely Submariner-Date, with its 30-jewel chronometer movement, housed in an Oyster case of surgical stainless steel or solid 18kt. gold, guaranteed pressure-proof down to 660 feet. I 2 Weekend/January 20, 1984 ECB: The symbol of a commitment 11 EV . .