Ninety-seven years of editorialfreedom VOLUME XCVII-- NO. 130 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - THURSDAY, APRIL 9,1987 COPYRIGHT 1987, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Funding formula Daily Photo by JOHN MU Protesting intolerance Members of Students Against Religious Intolerance protest the Daily's April 1st "God is dead" editoria front of the Student Publications building yesterday. See story, Page 2. Princeton considers 0 arrives By STEPHEN GREGORY their Special to The Daily propo LANSING-State Management the la and Budget Department officials or $4 yesterday presented a formula to the H4 House Subcommittee on Higher fundir Education that the state could use to are tc distribute $15 million among the consi public institutions. indivi Gov. James Blanchard set the is not y , sum aside for the legislature to comm distribute for special projects. But He subcommittee Chairman Morris the bt Hood (D-Detroit) said the formula the 1 was announced too late to be becau considered in House deliberations havet over Blanchard's proposed $51.5 there million higher education budget togeth increase. The house is expected to Ly vote on Blanchard's entire budget budge proposal at the end of the month. prese The formula groups each of the chose UNSON public institutions with peer that institutions from around the nation enro] d in and proposes they receive state curric appropriations comparable to what stude Shapiro Weber said. odel Shapiro has not announced any interest in pursuing the presidency Daily of another university, but his nian. sabbatical at the beginning of the year indicated that he may be growing restless with his current es form position. s, while In addition, when interim tudents, president James Duderstadt ann- orm the ounced several major initiatives dur- Weber, ing Shapiro's absence, speculation ian, the arose that Duderstadt is being s been groomed to inherit Shapiro's pos- han the ition. elled to Shapiro has served as University before president since 1980, working Pres previously as vice president for bum being' academic affairs and head of the Pent iversity economics department. He was ersity," unavailable for comment yesterday. peers receive. The plan ses that the University receive rgest share of the $15 million ,.3 million. OOD has criticized formula ng plans because he feels they oo inflexible. He advocates dering each university's needs idually. "To talk of formulas t acceptable to myself or any nittee member," he said. also said he is skeptical of udget department's choice of 5 colleges' peer institutions use he feels all institutions unique goals and problems and fore cannot be grouped her. ynne Schaefer, one of the et department officials who nted the plan, said peers were en statistically by computers considered such factors as [lment levels, range of ula, graduate and undergraduate nt ratios, levels of spending on too By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN University President Harold Shapiro may be under consideration as a potential candidate for the pres - idency of Princeton University. Although the selection process is secret, several Princeton faculty and administrators have speculated that Shapiro - a highly respected Princeton graduate of 1964 - is a likely successor. "We are conducting a wide-open and nationwide search for a succes- sor to our current President," said John Kenefick, head of the search process and vice-chair of Prince-, ton's executive officers. ACCORDING to the Daily Princetonian, Princeton's student newspaper, Princeton alumni who are top academic officials at other 'Shapiro is definitely being considered as the me university president for a state university.' - Thomas Weber, reporter for the I Princetor universities are prime candidates in the presidential search. In modern history, all Princeton presidents have been selected from the alumni ranks. Two presidential committees have been conducting a search since January, when Princeton President William Bowen announced that he would give the university until January, 1988 to find a successor. Bowen will assume the presidency of the Allen Mellon Foundation after he leaves Princeton. The 40 Princeton truste one of the search committee an advisory committee of s faculty, and administrators f other. According to Thomas a reporter for the Princeton advisory committee has meeting more frequently t trustees,-and may feel comp make some sort of decision summer break. "Shapiro is definitely considered as the model un president for a state univ ident Reagan holds. up a per sticker, yesterday, at the agon. late instruction, research programs, and public service. Roberta Palmer, a University official for government relations, disagrees with the choice of peer institutions. The University of California at Los Angeles, Ohio State University, The University of Iowa, and the University of Arizona are among the 20 peer institutions the computers picked. "They're generally not the institutions we regard as our peers," Palmer said. Palmer feels a better sampling of the University's peers would include such private institutions as Stanford, Harvard, and Princeton and other public schools like the University of California at Berkley. She maintains that the University competes more with these ins- titutions for students, faculty, and research projects than those chosen. Schaefer said the statistical analysis that sampled 600 colleges See HOUSE, Page 5 Professors hold class at home, By WENDY SHARP A typical classroom for some University professors does not nec- essarily include a blackboard, un- comfortable desks, and stuffy cram- ped quarters. Rather it consists of paintings hung on walls, couches and chairs, and plush carpeting. Fred Bookstein, associate prof- essor of geological sciences, teaches a seminar to first year students in his living room. Bookstein, who lives on Washtenaw near Hill, said he prefers to teach in his home because he has easy access to his library and enjoys serving cookies and coffee. In his home, he said, everyone can sit in a circle without a designated discussion leader stand- ing in front. "People see me as a family man, they see my books and sources." English Prof. Bert Hornback also teaches seminars in his house. "It's convenient for me to stay at home. It's more comfortable and less formal," he said. Hornback said that when he was in college, faculty members invited him to their homes. "I grew up that way and thought it oughta happen here." "We talked about everything under the sun, from nuclear war to Joseph Stalin to aging," Hornback said. "When we get together we get together as human beings, not just as a class. That doesn't happen enough around here." Some professors bring students into their homes not just for class, but also for social events. At the beginning of each semes- ter, Edward Stasheff, commun- ication professor emeritus, invites his classes to his house. Stasheff said he pretends that it's a formal class meeting. Each class is invol- ved in activities which Stasheff calls "the application of media, but See PERSONALIZED, Page 2 INSIDE UCAR comments on progress - or lack thereof - with re- gards to their 12 demands OPINION, PAGE 4 - 'Female Parts' is a wholly diff- erent experience ARTS, PAGE 7 The Michigan softball team cmp Anr, innhPabPr frjnm Tnl K mart plans 'to keep Ann Arbor's Kresge MVSA By STEVEN TUCH In 1899, Kresge's slogan read 'Nothing Sold over 10 Cents." Last week, K mart Corp. announced it would sell all Kresge and Jupiter stores. The five-and-dime image, it said, no longer fits into K mart's marketing strategy. The Troy-based corporation is selling 76 stores in 21 states to McCrory Corp., which will pur- chase them for about $30 million beginning in late June. But fear not. Come next year, the Kresge store on the corner of State and North University will not be sold. So why is the Ann Arbor variety store, in addition to only three other Kresges, being spared? "The problem was with the lease arrangements," said Leslie Kota, corporate spokesperson for K mart. "In some cases, the landlords did not what to transfer the lease over to McCrory Corp." "I think it's great. Kresge is an institution," said LSA junior Robert Gwizdala. "This cafeteria thing is so old it reminds me of Lava Lamps and Grape Nehi." "It's like a security blanket. It is always here when you turn the corner," said Jennifer Wells, LSA junior. But not all students were con- corned with the plight of the neighborhood five-and-dime. Staci Hymans, an LSA Senior, said, "I don't think it's the most useful store. That space can be prime for a dance bar. I don't think the Ann Arbor community relies too heavily on Kresge because they have K mart off campus." The chain of Kresge stores, which at one time numbered 783, began in 1899 with Sebastian Spering Kresge's single store on Woodward Avenue. See KRESGE, Page 2 slurveys students By MARTHA SEVETSON A "20 Questions" survey to the 8,000 University students who live in residence halls is part of the Michigan Student Assembly's cur- rent drive to improve constituent contact. According to LSA sophomore Michael Phillips, who developed the survey, it was created in res- ponse to student complaints voiced last semester about MSA access- ability. "A lot of people were saying MSA didn't know what students wanted,". Phillips said. He added that the petition circulated by Involved in Michigan Political Action Committee last term, which asked MSA to refrain from dealing with issues on the national and international level, helped prompt the survey. "We want to learn exactly what the students want us to do at MSA - whether or not they want us to lobby at the state, national, and international levels3" Phillips said. "I think more will be done from this survey than from complaining at a later date." The survey asks students how they feel about MSA, the Daily, and campus issues such as a code of non-academic conduct and classified research. Each MSA committee submitted at least one question, and committee chairs will be the responsible to act on the responses. Whether or not students returned Daily Photo by MuN LSA Junior Jenny Melluish studies yesterday at Kresge. Melluish, like several other students, utilizes the cafeteria to catch up on her homework. Ruling encourages affirmative action By GAYLE KIRSHENBAUM A recent Supreme Court decision upholding affirmative action in the workplace is a "real clear rejection of substantive goals of the Reag - an Administration," according to law school mative action plan for hiring and promoting qualified women and minorities, which the agency voluntarily adopted in 1978. Tamara Learned, a graduate student lecturer in the political science department, said the THE CASE is also significant in that it is the court's first definitive ruling involving affirmative action for women. The ruling came as a blow to the Justice