The Michigan Daily -.Thursday, September 8, 1988--Page 11 NEWS ~Regentsd BY PATRICK STAIGER The University will declare Martin Luther King's birthday this academic year a "Diversity Day" and hold alternative education programs instead of classes. But student groups who have pushed for a Univer- sity-wide King holiday have criticized points of the plan, saying it should provide for input from student minority groups and be more clear in its educational goals. "Diversity Day would not be giving students the day off," Fleming said. "In a very real sense, it's an educational day, with activities that contribute to a better understanding of ethnic races." He did not comment on the holiday's specific events. "The key is that the day will involve broad-based participation," said newly-appointed University Presi- dent James Duderstadt. The holiday will be held January 16, the first Mon- day after King's birthday and the date of the national King holiday. Faculty will not receive the day off. An additional day of classes will be held at the end of the winter term. Student groups have reacted negatively to Fleming's Leclare Jan. 16 'Diversity Day' proposal. The Black Student Union and Minority Or- ganization of Rackham both stated in letters to Univer- sity officials that, for the day to be effective, student minority groups need to be involved, and goals and objectives need to be more clearly defined. The MOR objected to the day's title. "By the Uni- versity of Michigan not recognizing the proposed "Diversity Day" as "Martin Luther King, Jr. Day," it will be actually detracting from the dream of a cultur- ally diverse America which Dr. King inspired," their letter said. The letters also said the day should be an official holiday where faculty and staff receive the day off to participate. "We know that, provided the will exists, a way can be engineered to establish a holiday which meets the moral imperative of recognizing Dr. King's birthday while satisfying the educational and financial con- straints over which opponents of such a holiday argue," the MOR letter said. In a proposal to the University's Board of Regents in May, former University President Robben Fleming said the day would be a "celebration of the diversity present on the University of Michigan campus." The Regents voted 5-0-2 in May for Fleming to investigate support for the day, and approved the proposal in Jury. Fleming's proposal followed years of pressure frbm student groups for University officials to observe the civil rights leader's birthday and to be more responsive to the needs of minorities on campus. Last January, about 1,000 students participated i4 a United Coalition Against Racism-sponsored boycott of classes on King's birthday after Fleming refused to 4sk the regents to cancel classes. UCAR held alternative educational programs in the Michigan Union. Michigan Student Assembly president Mike Phillps said the University administration did not contact M$A about the Diversity Day plan until July. "They havep't contacted us... this is the administration's plan", Phillips said. But the University's acknowledgement of King's birthday "was a long time coming, and it's about tim ," he said. -Daily staffer Veronica Woolridge contributed to this report. SCOTT LITUCHY /Dolly This year the regents will cancel class on MLK Day. Last year they didn't, and some students boy'cotted. I 'U' toughens language requirement Majoring in... BY SUSAN LONGWORTH "Parlez-vous Frangais?" "Habla Espaiol?" "Sprechen Sie Deutsch?" From now on, students will have to if they plan to graduate from this university. This fall, for the first time, all incoming LSA first-year students will have to prove their proficiency in a foreign language - regardless of how many years they've studied a language in high school. TO FULFILL the foreign lan- guage requirement students must have "certified proficiency on a Uni- versity of Michigan reading and/or listening test," according to the 1988-1989 LSA Bulletin. In past years, having four years of the same language in high school would satisfy the foreign language requirement in LSA. The new requirement grew out of suggestions from faculty and coun- selors who felt four years of a lan- guage in high school did not always meet the University's fourth term- proficiency level, said Charles Judge, director of LSA academic counsel- ing. "There is a wide variance in high school programs," said Mari Anne Grashoff, department secretary in Romance Languages, "The idea is to be fair to everyone." ROBERT KYES, director of the Germanic Languages Depart- ment, said the University eventually hopes to have students take a profi- ciency test at the end of the fourth term. Since last winter, it has also be- come more difficult to advance in a language. It is now necessary to earn at least a C- in each language course to advance to the next level. Previ- ously, a D would suffice. "The student who squeaks by with a D doesn't have a chance," Kyes said. The language departments are now preparing to accommodate the policy change by hiring more staff and opening more sections. How- ever, department heads and LSA of- ficials would not specify the amount the policy will cost the University. With an "increase in enrollment in all levels," the Romance Langu- ages Department plans to offer as many sections as necessary, Grashoff said. ROBERT WALLIN, director of the Checkpoint class counseling department, said he plans to open "at least three or four new sections" in French and Spanish 103 and 231. At press time, however, summer orien- tation had not finished, and Wallin could not predict the final amount of new class openings. New students seem to be accept- ing foreign language as just another requirement. Though statistics on orientation test results were not available, Kyes said most students were not passing out of their lan- guage, but instead being placed into intermediate levels. Joy Das Gupta, an LSA academic peer counselor, said the administra- tion, to avoid surprises, tried to make sure that all high schools were aware of the change in requirements. And the foreign language requir- ement "doesn't seem like its making as big a difference as I thought it would," Gupta said. BUT THE POLICY change caught others by surprise. "I thought I could take four years (in high school) and be done. It's awful," said first-year student Tim Vanas. Rather than "go through the hassle of the test," Vanas has opted to start Chinese in the fall. However, some students try to work the requirement to their advan- tage - electing the beginning sec- tion of the language they studied in high school to earn an easy A. Counselors try to discourage this practice, saying it only defeats the purpose of the requirement - profi- ciency in a foreign language. The requirement can be avoided entirely by pursuing a Bachelor of General Studies degree, which mere- ly requires 60 upper-level credits. The only students completely ex- empt from the foreign language re- quirement are foreign students who were taught in a language other than English. r l . :t4. F% r = f '' ,,. J%. i %:: it ., /' )) a ' k a r resume writing kits notebooks paper pens, pencils programmable calculators academic calendars organizers att ache cases portfolios art supplies and much, much more! 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