cl ble Sit itoau Ninety-six years of editorial freedom IEtI I en rages Vol. XCVI - No. 93 Copyright 1986, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Tuesday, February 11, 1986 Ten Pages LSA may limit AP test credit By NANCY DRISCOLL The LSA curriculum committee may recommend that faculty limit the amount of college credit students can receive at the University for scores on AdvancedPlacement tests taken in high school. The committee has asked all depar- tments to review their policies regar- ding AP credit. IN A LETTER to department chairman, LSA Associate Dean Jack Meiland wrote, "The college curriculum committee is concerned that AP credit may be having an im- portant and perhaps deleterious effect on the quality of our liberal arts degree." Ten departments in LSA offer bet- ween two and 12 credits for scores of three, four, or five on each test. The history department only accepts scores of four or five for credit. The Educational Testing Board in Princeton, N.J. administers tests in subjects such as chemistry, calculus and English 21 to high school students across the country. 'It's called Advanced Placement, not extra college credit.' - Rudi Lindner Curriculum committee chairman MANY COLLEGES and univer- sities grant some credit for doing well on the tests, but the curriculum com- mittee said it was concerned that the University has consistently ranked number one oir two in the nation in number of AP scores received. David Shappirio, a non-voting member of the committee and direc- tor of the honors program, said a negative effect of granting so much AP credit is that "distribution requirements are met before coming to college and you don't take courses of the same nature in high school." The committee also questioned whether students who receive AP credit for a specific college course can handle the material in the next sequential course the University. LINDNER said for example, that he doubted that receiving a three on an AP history test is the equivalent of taking a University course. But Donald Swain, assistant direc- tor of Admissions disagreed, "The studies that we have done show that students who get credit for AP cour- ses do as well if not better (in the next See LSA, Page 5 Associated Press Awaiting the tallies A large crowd waits at the National Assembly in Manila yesterday for delivery of the tally sheets from Friday's presidential election. A special session of the Assembly opened yesterday to make the only legally binding vote count in the Philippine election. See In Brief, Page 2. Retailers to distribute 'U ' computers By ADAM CORT The University has struck a deal with local computer retailers which allows the - retailers to sell computers at discounts that are only available through the University. The agreement culminates eight months of strained negotiations between the University and the retailers. The controver- sy centered around whether the University was monopolizing the local market by of- .fering discounts that were not available to the retailers. IN RESPONSE to complaints from the retailers, state House of Representatives Margaret O'Conner (D-Saline) sponsored a proposal that would make it illegal for the University to sell computers. Burton Leland (D-Detroit), chairman of the committee of Colleges and Universities said he initially agreed to review the proposal in his committee, but upon reading it he decided that the wording was uncon- stitutional and vague. The problem is not so far-reaching to take it to the legislature. We don't need to pass legislation wit such a broad scope for a local problem," Leland said. O'Connor said she will try to get the bill in- troduced in the Senate. BEGINNING in February. 1984, the University has offered members of the University community Macintosh and IBM computers for up to 40 percent off the retail price. Local retailers criticized this as un- fair competition because they could not match the low prices. "It's impossible to compete... especially in the area of Macintosh," said Rick Weir, president of Complete Computer Center. Weir's company was not part of the agreement between the University and the local companies. Inacomp, Computerland, and The Lear- ning Center are the only local retailers who agreed to sell Apple and IBM computers at discounts through the University. SOME retailers who will participate in the agreement object to the University playing any part in the retail business. "This is a grave assault on the free enterprise system,"ssaid NancyReding, education manager of The Learning Center. "It's betraying public trust to use the money designated for education to run a retail store," she said. Greg Marks, the University's deputy vice provost for information technology, coun- tered by saying, "Computers are becoming an intrinsic part of the University. It is our obligation to make the cost of getting them as low as possible." Officials also said no tax dollars are used to supplement the computer discounts. Ed Sanders, director of Microcomputer Education Systems, said the University breaks even in computer deals. "We've tried to fully recover the operation costs of providing service," he said. THE AGREEMENT reached by the See 4U,' Page 5 'Woman aspires to become 'a rabbi By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN "Any person who is excited about bringing in poet Alan Ginsburg and comedian Yakov Smirnov is not likely to be a typical rabbi." Michael Brooks, director of B'nai Profile. B'rith Hillel Foundation is describing Phyllis Zarren, a young, liberal, open- minded woman who has overcome past struggles with the existence of God and the necessity of Judaism - or any religion. See WOMAN, Page 3 Planned UG.Li lounge may be finished by fall Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER Phyllis Zarren, current program coordinator of B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, will begin a five-year study program at the Reform Rabbinical School in Jerusalem this July. By PHILIP LEVY The University's Executive Officers have given preliminary approval for a lounge in the Undergraduate Library, according to Carla Stoffle, assistant director of the University library. Stoffle and Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson are currently working on the logistics of the plan. THE LOUNGE will probably be located in the lobby of the library, where the copy machines are now. Stoffle said she expects the lounge to include four to six vending machines, and that the whole area may be retiled or carpeted. The entire renovation is expected to cost between $25,000 and $27,000. In addition, annual .cleaning and security costs are projected at $17,000, Stoffle said, but vending machine revenues should cover part of that ex- pense. A lounge on the fourth floor of the UGLi was removed in 1984 to make room for a microcomputer center and to cut down the amount of food in the stacks. THE REMOVAL of the lounge was timed to coincide with the renovation of the Union's basement. Officials felt that the Union could replace the lounge as a place to take a break from studying. But this solution proved unsatisfac- tory, said Diane Melnick, the LSA Student Government representative on the LSA Library Committee, because it isn't safe for women to walk alone between the library and the Union. "Even the walk from the UGLi to Stop-n-Go involves an unsafe corner," she said. Besides, she said, "People should be able to take a break after four to six hours of studying and get something to eat." OTHER students apparently felt the same way. During the winter 1985 term a petition with approximately 500 student signatures was presented to the Executive Officers asking for the replacement of the lounge. LSA Student Government member Gregg Brauer circulatedna similar petition this year and gathered about 1,000 signatures. Michelle Tear, LSA Student Gover- nment president, said she is pleased with the University's receptiveness to reopening a lounge. "I think this is a very positive thing, a big accom- plishment. We worked together with the administration to get something' See ADMINISTRATION, Page 2 Housing considers evicting student By EVE BECKER University housing officials notified a Couzens resident last Thursday that they would terminate his lease within 24 hours because he exhibited conduct "which could jeopardize life, limb, and property." But housing officials yesterday said they have engaged in constructive talks with the student, S and may re-evaluate the conditions of terminating his lease. The student, engineering freshman Greg Brown, circulated a flyer last December issuing what some have called derogatory and offensive comments about Jerral Jackson, building director of Couzens. The flyer also included statements that Brown's friends said were perceived as threats by Jackson. "I am watching and waiting to make your life a living hell," the flyer read. SINCE THE incident, however, Brown has talked to Jackson, his resident director, and the associate director of housing. During those meetings, Brown formally apologized for distributing the flyer and offered to do community work. Brown said he wrote the flyer "because I saw ambiguities in the policies." He declined to See HOUSING, Page 2 TODAY- Canned 11 N YSTERIOUS disappearances have been Ulrich's bags, full of empty beer cans, were taken out of a "catcher" full of cans in the North Lecture Hall. Ada Kusnetz, head of the medical fraternity's Arthritis project and second year medical student, became con- cerned, and contacted campus security. She began locking the catchers up in a storage closet overnight. don't disappear," Kusnitz said. "There are just people who don't care. Maybe I'm naive. Not everyone's honest. I wish they were." Tim Shannon, investigator at Campus Security, said, "It's not likely it's someone off the street ... There's definitely some kind of pat- tern there and it is definitely getting our attention." -INSIDE- BEAUTY: Opinion looks at the stigma at- tached to black women in history. See Page 4. 1 1 I