State Rep. criticizes 'U' fee on computers (Continued from Page 1) crease for this fee," he said. University President Harold Shapiro, however, said last night he thought the issue was a "misunder- standing." "We announced the plan back in May and June, before the tuition issue was brought up. We only passed the formal decision in September. I'm not concerned." Naftaly said he understands the fee had been under consideration for some time and that the revenues purchase new computer equipment. He said he sees a distinction between "trying to raise something that pays for existing costs" and a fee for "an additional service or new service." "We agree computer literacy is im- portant," he said. But "I have not seen the data yet. I was concerned enough to call them and ask them to explain to me what they're doing," Naftaly added. Daily staff reporter Kery Murakami filed a report for this story. Library hi (Continued from Page 1) 1,000 researchers have made trips to the library. "I was just there yesterday," said Ed Bray, an engineering school senior. "It's on North Campus. You can't miss it. It's the building with the huge doors." The library boasts a large main- floor lobby and conference rooms. There is also an office for Ford which contains furniture from his congressional office. THE LIBRARY opened in 1982 and cost $4,289,669 - an amount paid for by 14,000 individual private con- tributors. The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 3, 1985-- Page 3 elps Ford researchers Inside the library's research vaults are over 15 million pages of materials, 275,000 still photographs, and 7,000 volumes of government and trade publications which highlight Ford's career as a public servant. The library is one of two presiden- tial libraries located on a university campus.'Former President Lyndon B. Johnson's library is located on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin. THE FORD library is different from other presidential complexes. Traditionally, a presidential library and presidential museum are located in one place, but Ford's library is located here while the Ford Museum is in Grand Rapids. The library, which is operated by the University, is open to the public. Researchers work there with an ar- chivist who helps locate information. Library Director Don Wilson estimates that 55 percent to 60 percent of the visits to the library this year have been made by students. AND THAT number is rising. "There is a 20 percent increase in the use of the library each year, and (the library staff is) trying to reach out to students and faculty and encourage them to use our resources in their research," commented Wilson. JL raised would be used exclusi Profs say group (Continued fromPage1) or defend her ideologies to an group like AIA. group such as AIA and d "I'm not concerned because I might whether any of her y be a target, but because of what it colleagues would either. might do to the academic freedom of The American Associati faculty, of students," he said. University Professors has spo against AIA. AAUP's executive "THIS IS the way McCarthyism tor Ernst Benjamin has predict started in the 1950s and it had a very if the group begins chall disruptive effect on the universities," statements made in the clas #Fusfeld added, referring to a specific professors will start writing ( incident in the economics department tures so that they get every here right, then tape record it to The University in 1955 refused to they aren't misquoted. :grant tenure to economics researcher MOREOVER, Benjamin sa Lawrence Klein because he was in- kind of monitoring will des ~vestiga ted by a federal panel for poesrsntrlrpotw Communist sympathies. Klein, who professor's natural rapport w later won a Nobel Prize, is today a class. member of the faculty of the Wharton "My own feeling is th School of Economics at the University classroom should be betwe of Pennsylvania, Fusfeld said. professor and the student, Ralph Loomis, a Univ And Fusfeld remembers that as a engineering humanities pro junior faculty member at another who sits on AAUP's national c college. he "unwittingly modified Loomis and other professor what I was doing in the classroom" students should question in gout of fear of being labeled a Marxist. professors whose lectures the He said he omitted information one-sided or inaccurate. :about the efficiency of Soviet planning SAID FIELDS: "If I can get s Z a comparative economics course, ts to debate each other, and to iving his students as a result only a me, then I think that adds to the "partial view" of the Soviet Union. in a healthy way." REMEMBERING his own ex- Davidson of College Repub perienee, Fusfeld predicted that agreed. In fact, the engineering young profesors worried about tenure said in the past he has conf will be most vulnerable to AIA's teachers who presented mate charges. what he considered a biased fa "I think it's probably true to say He recalled an incident in an int that intimidation of that kind would tory economics discussion sessi have an adverse effect on young "I'm a heavy suppl professors, if you submit to it," said economics supporter. The TA Barbara Fields, a liberal history presenting another view and I professor who received tenure a year up and said, 'Hey, wait a minut ago. "HE LET me present But Fields said she would not feel viewpoint, and that started a :called upon to explain her statements debate in class." rHPPNI NGI vely to oses threat outside But Edelmann, a medical school oubted senior, pointed out that many students ounger may be unwilling to challenge an in- structor. ion of "That person who is sitting there is ken out sacrificing his grade for arguing with e direc- the professor and may not have all the ted that facts on the tip of his tongue," he said. enging "AIA IS TRYING to provide an sroom, outlet for students who are unwilling out lec- or unable to stand up. I support those y word means." ensure Csorba said AIA has asked instruc- tors at the University of Minnesota, id that Texas A&M, and the University of troy a Maryland to address charges against rith his them. Only English Prof. Peter Porosky at Maryland's College Park at the campus has returned Csorba's phone en the calls. " said Csorba heard from a Maryland versity student Porosky had told one class ofessor that social injustice in the United council. States is far worse than oppression of rs say, Jews under Nazi Germany. Apparen- class tly, not one student questioned his y find reasoning in class. AT FIRST, Porosky defended his studen- statement and urged an AIA debate representative to sit down with him to e class discuss the lecture. Csorba respon- ded, "I told him I just didn't have the blicans time. I didn't argue with him. " senior Csorba said Porosky called ronted yesterday morning to say he made the rial in statement only to play the devil's ad- ashion.vocatenand to spur classroom roduc- discussion. on. . "It just seems the media and the y-side pressure put on him by our A was organization is making him think I stood twice about what he says," Csorba e." said of the professor's call. "I guess t my that shows we are having some suc- whole cess." AWOWOJJIG 4L, PLAYBOY'S 'U 'I College Fiction Contest w 0 T FIRST PRIZE: $3,000 and publication of the winning story in a future issue of PLAYBOY magazine. SECOND PRIZE: $500 and a one-year subscription to PLAYBOY magazine. DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES: January 1, 1986 ADDRESS ALL ENTRIES TO: PLAYBOY COLLEGE FICTION CONTEST 919 N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611 JUDGES: The editors of PLAYBOY magazine. All decisions are final. S CONTEST RULES 1. No purchase necessary. 2. Contest is open to all college students. No age limit Employees of Playboy Enterprises, Inc its agents, affiliates and families are not eligible. 3. To enter, submit your typed, double-spaced manuscript of 25 pages or less, with a 3 x 5 card, listing your name, age, college affiliation, and permanent home address and phone to: PLAYBOY COLLEGE FICTION CONTEST, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Only one entry per person. All entries must be original works of fiction. All entries must be postmarked by January 1, 1986. Mutilated or illegible entries will be disqualified. 4. Prizes awarded to those entrants whose stories meet PLAYBOY's standard for quality. PLAYBOY reserves the right to withhold prizes if the submitted entries do not meet PLAYBOY's usual standards for publication. All decisions of the judges are final 5. Winning con- testants will be notified by mail, and may be obligated to sign and return an Affidavit of Eligibility within thirty (30) days of notification. In the event of non-compliance within this time period, alternate winners may be selected. Any prize notification letter or any prize returned to Playboy Enterprises, Inc., and undeliverable may be awarded to an alternate winner. 6. PLAYBOY reserves the right to edit the First Prize winning story for publication. 7. Entry authorizes use of any prize winner's name, photograph and biographical information by Playboy Enterprises, Inc., without further compensation to the winner. 8. PLAYBOY reserves the right to publish the winning entries in the U.S. and Foreign editions of PLAYBOY magazine and to reprint the winning entries in any English language or foreign edition anthologies or com- pilations of PLAYBOY material 9. Contest is subject to all federal, state and locaJ laws and regulations Taxes on prizes are the sole responsibility of winning contestants. Void where prohibited by law. 10. All manuscripts become the property of Playboy Enterprises, Inc., and will not be returned A list of winners can be obtained by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to Playboy Enterprises, Inc, COLLEGE FICTION CONTEST, 919 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Highlight The Michigan Freshman Connection,a new organization for first year students, will meet tonight at 7 p.m. in the Kuenzel Room of the Union. MFC is designed to get students involved in university activities. Films CG - The 7th Seal, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. MED - The Mouse That Roared, 7:30 p.m.; Dr. Strangelove, 9 p.m., Natural Science. Hill St. - A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, 7 & 9:15 p.m., 1429 Hill Street. C2 - Nazarin (Spanish with subtitles), 7 p.m.; Pixote, 9 p.m., MLB 4. MTF - The Killing Fields, 8 p.m., Michigan Theater. Ethnographic Film Series - The Neur & The Cows of Dolo Ken Paye: Resolving Conflicts Among the Kpelle, 7 p.m., MLB 2. Performances Michigan Union - Music as Mid Day, Paul Harkins, percussion, 12:15 p.m., Pendleton Room, Union. English - Reading, Sharon Sheehe Stark, 4:15 p.m., Hopwood Room, Angell Hall. Speakers Business Administration - Lecture, T. Boone Pickens, Jr., "En- couraging Entrepreneurs," 4 p.m., Hale Auditorium, Assembly Hall. Meetings American Baptist Student Fellowship - Meeting, 5:30 p.m., 502 East Huron Street. Intervarsity Christian Fellowship - Meeting, 7 p.m., Anderson Room, Union. Rugby Football Club - Meeting, 7 p.m., Tartan Turf. University AA - Meeting, noon, 3200 Union. Miscellaneous Japanese Studies - Brown Bag Lecture -- Ken Ito, "Tanizaki's Sasameyuki," noon, Aud. B, Angell Hall. Program in American Culture - Colloquium, David Hollinger, "The Scientist as Moral Exemplar,"8 p.m., 414 Mason Hall. Chemistry - Seminar, S. W. Barber, "Interpenetration of Heat Capacities of Glasses & Minerals," 4 p.m., 1200 Chemistry. Natural Resources - Seminar, Charles Driscoll, "Effects of Acidic Deposition on Surface Water Chemistry in the Adirondack Region of New York," noon, 1046 Dana. Matthaei Botanical Gardens - Demonstration, Patricia Hopkinson. "Art of Bonsai," 1 p.m., 222 State Plaza (corner State & Liberty). Music Anthropology - Brown Bag Lecture, Michael Wiant, "Archaic Period Research in the Lower Illinois River Valley: Landscape Evolution & Early Archaic Adaptation," noon, 2009 Museums. Computer Center - Workshop, Bob Blue, "Visual Editing with Win- dow on Zenith Z-150," 3 p.m., 1013 NUBS. Vision Research - Seminar, Melvyn Goodale, "Visual Search Selec- tivity Enhances Target Recognition," 12:15 p.m., 2055 MHRI. His House Christian Fellowship - Bible Study, 7:30 p.m., 925 E. Ann Street. To submit items for the Happenings Column, send them in care of Happenings, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Then get in on the ground floor in our undergraduate officer commissioning program. You could start planning on a career like the men in this ad have. And also have some great advantages like:. Earning $100 a month during the school year As afreshman or sophomore, you could complete your basic train- Juniors earn more than $1900 during one ten-week summer session You can take free civilian flying lessons You're commissioned upon graduation If you're looking to move up quickly,look into the Marine Corps undergraduate officer commission- - --