NW I OPINION Page 4 Sunday, March 17, 1985 The Michigan Daily die m rd t anearity o Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan CRISP may favor juniors Vol. XCV, No. 131 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily's Editorial Board A kink in CRISP THE LSA STUDENT government proposal to grant juniors an ad- vantage in registering for classes through CRISP is an appropriate response to a potentially unfair situation. Under the LSA-SG proposal, juniors will CRISP after seniors, but before freshmen and sophomores. They currently CRISP in the same group as underclassmen. Seniors currently CRISP before all other undergraduates on the theory that they need access to specific classes in order to fulfill their graduation requirements. Juniors, although under less immediate pressure than seniors, still must begin fulfilling their requirements within their majors. Although LSA officials report that few juniors have complained about being -shut out of classes they need to fulfill their majors, the current situation makes such exclusion possible. Juniors, unlike freshmen and sophomores, have already declared their majors and in many cases have mapped out their academic plans for the next four semesters. Therefore, they often need to take particular upper level courses. Freshmen and sophomores, on the other hand, are typically unsure of the courses they will be taking in succeeding terms. Although they should be permitted to enroll for any class that is open when they CRISP, they should not be permit- ted to do so at the expense of juniors. LSA officials suggested as an alter- native proposal that all students register in order of credits that they have accumulated. That proposal, however, puts students who are slightly behind most of their classmates at an unreasonable disad- vantage, and allows others to capitalize on credits they received before entering the University. The LSA-SG proposal would correct a fault in the current CRISP arrangement, but would not touch on a larger, more important cause for juniors not being able to register for upper-level classes: an insufficient number of upper-level classes. Some critics of the LSA-SG proposal argue that because it does not touch on the nature of the courses offered, the proposal is not adequate. The question of whether LSA offers sufficient numbers and types of classes is distinct from the ordering of CRISP, although the two are both causes for Juniors being unable to register for all the courses they need. The LSA-SG proposal is an adequate response to the problem of juniors at CRISP, but it must not take attention away from the larger, more-important question. Students will be able to vote to change the priority order of 'CRISP' at registration this term. The proposal was introduced by LSA student government member, Jon Corn in response to being "blocked out of a class." Corn felt his proposal would help solve the problems that he felt some juniors faced. Corn wrote a letter to the Michigan Daily, which in turn was read and accepted by the LSA executive committee. The present system allows seniors register first, and the remaining students register in a rotating alphabetical order, with every group 'CRISPING' first once. There are two alternatives, and space on The Week in Review the survey for students to offer other alter- natives, or comments, according to Associate Registrar Doug Woolley. Woolley's office will turn the information over to Vice President for student services Henry Johnson, who will decide if CRISP will be different next year. The proposal is to have seniors then juniors, then the remaining students in four groups rotating alphabetically. The second choice, recommended by Woolley, would allow students with the highesttamount of credit hours to register fir- st and then other students in decreasing or- der. Protesters released The last five of the remaining protestors who blockaded the entrance to Williams In- The Week in Review was compiled by Daily staff writers Steven Herz, Sean Jackson, Jerry Markon, and Amy Min- dell and Daily editor Peter Williams. ternationai Corp. in Walled Lake - a firm which manufactures engines for cruise missiles - were released from prison last week, after spending 92 days in the slammer. Sentenced originally to an indefinite jail term, the protestors, who included two University students; were apparently released at the request of Williams. They vowed to continue their fight against military spending, and have already planned another protest at Williams for April 8. "I'll be out there vigilanting at Williams again. They haven't phased me. They haven't changed my views," said Carfon Foltz, a 78- year-old Pontiac resident who served 92 days in jail. "The fact that *we were released is a recognition by Williams Corp. that indefinite. sentences are quiestionable," he continued. "I think we focused attention on the injustice of holding people in jail for a few minutes in the driveway of a cruise missile factory." According to Carter Cortelyou, an LSA junior released last week: "If we change Williams' mind about the use of the legal system in actions, I believe in time we can change their minds about the actions them- selves." The price of fun The effects of college football's deregulation were felt at the University this past week. In an effort to balance the athletic budget, the Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics passed a measure Tuesday evening raising ticket prices one dollar, up to $14 per game. Student tickets prices were raised to seven dollars by the action, bringing season ticket prices up to $42 for the upcoming season. The reason for the increase in prices can be attributed to a Supreme Court ruling last year pursuant to legal action pursued by the Universities of Georgia and Oklahoma. While the litigants in the case felt a deregulation of college games would bring more; revenue to those schools, the results have not been as expected. Mark Carlson, sports programming direc- tor for CBS sports in New York pointed out, "They're all making less." With such a glut of college games on television, Carlson says, "the advertising time is being devalued." With less advertising money coming in the networks are paying less for the rights to televise, and as Carlson says, ". . . Th Universities are the only ones who are losing." Minority report The Board of Regents praised the minority recruitment and enrollment report presented Thursday by Niara Sudarkasa, associate vice-president for academic affairs. Sudarkasa's report- calls for increase communication with minorities before and during the admissions process, expanded financial aid for minorities, and deem- phasizing standarized tests for exceptional students. The questions from the board centered on the recommendation to play down stan- darized test when reviewing minority ap- plications for admissions. Regent Deane Baker (D-Ann Arbor) said the University had modified the admissio4 standards in the 1970's in hopes of improving minority enrollment, but that backfired as many such students never graduated. Regents Nellie (Varner (D-Detroit) and Sarah Power (D-Ann Arbor) both felt the idea was worth a try. "My own particular background says that to give a greater weight to grades Would be very beneficial," Varner said. "It's worth a try, a try, or another try," said Power. Sudarkasa's goal for her recommendations is 110 percent improvement of un- derrepresented minority enrollment. Curren- tly, minority enrollment is at 11.3 percent. Black enrollment, at 5.1 'percent, needs to be doubled in order to fulfill the University's stated 10 percent goal. Sudarkasa says that whether or not his is a feasible goal will be determined by 1989. If the University does not reach its goal by then Sudarkasa says she will be satisfied that it is unrealistic. Wasserman Which defense industry dog have taxpayers been asked to pay for? BMW hypocrisy ALTHOUGH the President has repeatedly said he wants to cut government spending, his top aides ap- pear more interested in cutting their own personal spending - on BMW sports cars. In a practice which can be called un- diplomatic at best, at least 15-20 senior administration members have used their positions to acquire the expensive automobiles at "diplomatic discounts" of up to several thousand dollars, ac- cording to informed White House sour- ces. Ranging as high up as chief White House aid Michael Deaver, these elitist consumers merely have to "pick up the phone and order it at the White House and send a copy of their diplomatic passports to the company,'' in the words of one White House of- ficial. Aldthough White House counsel Fred Fielding officially cleared Deaver of any illegality, the term guiltless ap- plies to him in only the strictest legal sense of the word. Morally guilty in the extreme, the BMW-buyers contrast strikingly with the image the Reagan Administration has tried to present to the public. In his attempts to "get government off the backs of the American people," Reagan has continually insisted on the need to control government waste and inefficiency. Patriotic slogans have permeated administration rhetoric, as the president has urged Americans to stand up to foreign competition, both militarily and economically - in- cluding the. challenge of foreign cars. BMW's of course, are made in West Germany. The most laughable contradiction of all is Reagan's evoking of the "American work ethic" in trying to produce a stronger economy. In the case of his '-aides, the American laziness ethic would be more ap- propriate. If Reagan truly wishes to cut federal spending, instead of working from the bottom of the socio-economic scale by cutting welfare and medicade programs, he should start from the very top of that scale - his own cabinet. AO 7@'9 13 00 Ui rll 5 Ur A' nA. S s' OD Letters Headline was ambigious, 4 misinterpreted .v:r..:....... r.:vrr: r::: w;: "".:. ....w:: :v::"vi{ii":::.v.i{w:r.. .. ........ .... ......:.. ........... ........... ... ....... \... v.w.::.:v.:::: ::::.:::::::.v::: To the Daily: In response to Ms. Smith's justifiable anger over the statement "Rape springs from loneliness," let me say that the phrase is not mine. The Daily usually titles my articles, and I don't see what they've chosen un- til the article appears in print. I agree whole-heartedly that rape does not spring from loneliness, and that there's no point in feeling sorry for rapists until af- ter they're punished and society is safe. My original title, "Date Rape and the Lonely Campus - Isolation" was probably not a for date rape. But when all these things appear together on a single campus, then I think we're entitled to say that the social en- vironment is sick, not just in- dividuals. I hope that the body of my three part article makes clear that I was exploring factors in the university climate which en- courage date rape - a crime which often escapes punishment. My point was that maybe we can lower the incidence of date rape and other symptoms of social breakdown such as loneliness or alcholoism, by reducing the pressures on students and rapists deserve to be put away for a long time. - Robert Honigman March 12 Editors' Note: We apologize . for any misunderstandings which may have resulted from . C a $ WL JUT NAE To MT the headline on Honigman's article. The phrase, "Rape springs from loneliness," ad- dressed one aspect o Honigman's argument but was a misrepresentation of his overall thesis. Letters to the Daily should be typed, triple-spaced, and signed by the individual authors. Names will be withheld only in, unusual circumstances. Letters may be edited for