Ninety-seven years of editorial freedom VOLUME XCVII - NO. 93 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1987 COPYRIGHT 1987 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Council Viapproves low-cost project By JERRY MARKON The Ann Arbor City Council unanimously agreed last night to donate city land to provide an affordable housing structure for low-income city residents. The proposal, passed over the objections of one local business- owner, was supported by several other speakers at a sparsly-attended public hearing. Located on the 400 block of W. Liberty, the 40-room building will be constructed with donated labor and financed by state and private funding. It will be managed by the Salvation Army. City officials have been searching for a low-cost housing site since 1985, when the city council's Affordable Housing Task Force identified a "severe need need for more housing affordable to low and moderate-income people in Ann Arbor." Patricia Pooley, who owns a nearby business on W. Liberty Street, agreed that low-cost housing is needed in Ann Arbor, but she See CITY, Page 3 Language requisites toughened By MARTIN FRANK Beginning fall 1988, LSA students who take four years of a foreign language in high school will have to take a placement test to be exempt from the University's language requirement. The decision passed unani- mously at the Literature, Science, and the Arts faculty meeting yesterday, after many faculty members said students with high school credit for a foreign language are not as proficient as those who take four semesters at the University. The current rule, which has been in effect since 1969, automatically exempts students from the LSA language requirement if they had a C plus or better in their last two years of a high school language. FACULTY members have not yet decided how to implement the placement exam, but most say that they will be on a level comparable to the level of proficiency expected after students complete their fourth semester of language study at the University. The new rule could cost the University $300,000 to implement, and LSA Dean Peter Steiner said LSA would provide the necessary funding. The cost is derived from the estimation that two-thirds of the 1500 LSA students exempted from University foreign language re- quirement each year will be unable to pass the placement test. According to LSA Associate Dean for Budget Carolyn Copeland, the extra students would force the creation of 40 new foreign language sections of the first two courses, at a cost of about $160,000, part See LSA, Page 5 Drilling Wood Not Teeth Daily Photo by SCOTT University of Michigan alumnus, David Huyser, uses the lathe in the Student Wood Shop, located in the Student Activities Building, to make two vases from a piece of Brazilian Tulip Wood. Huyser, who holds a D.D.S. and M.S., is nowworking on a research fellowship in the Department of Orthodontics. Michigan seeks to obtain 'super collider' By STEVE KNOPPER The State of Michigan may seek to build the world's largest particle accelerator here, according to University Physics Department Chairperson Lawrence Jones. Michigan has a 10 percent chance of hosting the facility if the state "moves forward aggressively and puts together, strong proposals," according to John Mogk, president of the Detroit-based Michigan Energy and Resource Research Association, who, with Jones, encouraged Gov. James Blanchard to pursue getting the $4.4 billion "super colli Michigan. Jones said the accelerator, bring its host state 3,000 jot built in either Monroe c counties, both about 30 mi Ann Arbor. The accelera constructed underground and mile-long ring-shaped trac function, said Mogk. MO G K said the acceler design was completed two and that the White House r starting the project 1 der" built in Congressional approval for the project could take several months. which could The Department of Energy will not bs, would be ask for proposals from potential host or Lenawee states until late summer. According to les south of Mogk, competition for the project has tor will be not begun, but some states are already require a 52- gearing up for it. t of land to According to Physics Prof. Gordon Kane, particle acceleration research has ator's initial been done many times before. Scientists months ago, have an incomplete understanding of how ecommended nuclear particles accelerate. The new last week, plant, according to Kane, is "guaranteed education to tell us certain information" about particle acceleration. The Fermi National Acceleration Laboratory in Chicago is currently the largest nuclear particle acceleration plant in the United States, Jones said. Although facilities in the U.S.S.R. and other parts of Europe are "building beyond Fermi," Jones said the new plant would be the next American step. THE 20 other states that will compete for the new plant include Illinois, California, Colorado, and Texas, according to Jones. Some states have already invested over $500,000 in planning for the project, Jones said, adding that "Michigan has not moved as aggressively" in this area. Illinois and California will be the toughest competitors, Mogk said, but each has its own disadvantage. The San Andreas Fault in California causes problems with geological stability, Mogk said, and Illinois already hosts the Fermi plant. Mogk said Michigan finished second in the competition for the Fermi Lab in the 60s. Bennett: Low quality prolongs college grad uation F I By STEPHEN GREGORY percent dropped out, and the remaining 14 percent According to U.S. Secretary of Education William graduated later. Bennett, many college students fail to complete their UNIVERSITY statistics for students graduating undergraduate education in four years because in four years are higher than the national figures. American public colleges lack quality. According to an administration report, 53 percent of Evidence shows many students are not getting "the University students enrolled in 1980 graduated in quality education they need," according to Dan 1984, with 19 percent graduating in 1985. Schecter, an executive assistant for the department. One University official said the total percentage of Schecter cited evidence he said verified Bennett's students gra-duating is increasing. claim: a recent nationwide servey of college students Schecter said Bennett feels students are taking that indicates students feel professors are too more time to graduate because they cannot get the inaccessible. education they need in four years due to the waning In a report to the House Appropriations quality of public institutions. Committee last Wednesday, Bennett said only 42 "Bennett is concerned about the decline in the percent of students enrolled in four and two-year quality of college education. Kids are paying a lot of institutions in 1980 graduated in 1984. Twenty-six See BENNETT, Page 5 Candidates run unopposed in 2nd 3rd Ward primaries By JERRY MARKON Although Second and Third Ward candidates from both parties will run unopposed in the city primaries next Monday, Republicans are working hard to recapture the Ann CITY Q PRIMARIES 01 Arbor City Council in the general elections this April. The Third Ward, traditionally a "swing ward" with no clear political affiliation, will feature a contest between Republican Isaac Campbell and Democratic incumbent Jeff r.,.-n don't see any reason why a person shouldn't be interested in politics. CAMPBELL, who works as a branch officer at First of America Bank, said he "doesn't consider himself a politician." "I'm a banker. I intend to stay a banker for a long time," Campbell said. "What about the political process interests me? Nothing." Yet Campbell has worked for a myriad of community organizations ranging from Ann Arbor's Sister City Task Force to the Washtenaw County United Way. He is running because he feels the council's current Democratic majority is "insensitive to anything but its own agenda." "I think my views represent the nin n r1 fth, ;ThiA rdWrA Think turn the Ann Arbor City Council into a mechanism for peace? No-I don't think a body like city council can do that." "The whole reason we have local government is because people have local concerns," he said, adding that he would attempt to improve city services like garbage pick-up, police and fire protection, and parking problems. Campbell's main focus as a councilmember, however, would be maintaining Ann Arbor's "economic magnetism." "I AM NOT ashamed to say that philosophically I am basically pro-business. We all want economic advantages. If you look at any people who came to this country, the secret of their success Daily Photo by SCOTT LITUCHY Black Art Sale Barbara Robinson, right, Black Representative at Minority Student Services, and co-worker Adoleena Gon- zales, LSA sophomore, sell prints in room 1209 in the Union. The works are reproductions of paintings by black artists in celebration of Black History Month. The sale lasts through Wednesday. Tally Hall restaurateur Hopes for liquor license INSIDE By EDWARD KLEINE Ann Arbor will have a new bar this summer if a Tally Hall merchant's application for a liquor license is approved by city and state officials. Claudio Mennicotti, owner of Pizza Plenty in Tally Hall, hopes to onen a hr this summer on the decorated in maize and blue with photos of Wolverine stars of the past and present. The-new bar will be built on 1500-2000 square feet of unoccupied space next to Pizza Plenty on the east side of the mall. The bar will be cordoned off to keep out underage drinkers, but patrons Forsyth county and Howard Beach are not isolated incidents. OPINION, PAGE 4 Star soprano Kiri Te Kanawa again graces Ann Arbor with her presence tonight at Hill. ARTS, PAGE 7 The ailing wrestling team came away with a victory against I i