The Michigan Daily- -Thursday, May 12,1983- Page 7 OSU suffers football ti~cketble I 1 Compiled by Halle Czechowski Fewer Ohio State fans will invade Ann Arbor next November when the Buckeyes and Wolverines clash in their annual football game. Ohio State University officals say advance student ticket sales are down by 50 percent. compared to last year. "We've had bad sales before, but not like this," said Robert RiesOSU's assistant athletic director for ticket operations. THE ATHLETIC department is worried that the drop could be part of a. COLLEGES trend since student season basketball ticket sales were down by 41 percent last season. Ries offered several explanations for the drop in demand, but first on the list is the traditional decrease of advance sales when the Buckeye-Wolverine matchup is played in Ann Arbor. Economic conditions also contrubute to the slow sales. Many students have less money than usual or some aren't sure if they'll be back in the fall. OSU's athletic department is op- timistic student sales will pick up in the fall, when students are sure they'll be around to use their tickets, Ries said. "We expect a rush at the end, which is normal, but we're probably not going to sell as many as last year," he said. -The Lantern Tufts stages sit-in Morethan 200 students at Tufts University in Medford, Mass. staged a sit-in April 27 to protest the decision to deny tenure to a politically active professor. The students demanded that Tufts President Jean Mayer restore Sociology Prof. Peter Drier to his post and reconsider him for tenure in two years. DRIER, who was denied tenure last spring, has been active in controversial political issues, including tenants' rights advocacy and unionization of the university's clerical workers. The protestors spent more than 62 hours in the school's administration building, singing "We Shall Overcome" and "Give Pete a Chance." They finally le nf+-rn-li-- anupan amminn-i support, and after they noticed police clad in riot gear surrounding the building. While the university refuses to rein- state Drier, faculty members approved a plan this week to set up a tenure committee including faculty and student members. The protestors have refused to endorse this move. - WMFO radio Medford, Mass. Harvard protests tradition Officials at Harvard University's law school found out last week how hard it is to challenge tradition. More than 600 angry students protested a new policy which allows professors to consider class participation in determining grades. The students gathered May 5 to push for open discussions on the oew policy, which allows classroom participation to influence a student's final marks by half a grade. WHILE MANY SAY the new system will allow students who do poorly on tests to improve their grade, others are afraid it will increase competition among law students. Law School Dean James Vorenberg finally consented to an open discussion May 7, at which 450 students and 12 professors argued both sides of the The grading policy, which was ap- proved by Harvard Law school faculty, has not been changed because of the protest. Law students also assailed teaching methods earlier this week. The students objected to professors' traditional style of putting them on the spot in class to answer questions. The faculty, however, reaffirmed their approval of the teaching method which ;few of the school's professors actually use. Librarians revolt The University of Minnesota has set- tled out of court with 37 female librarians, who charged the university with sex discrimination because of wage discrepancies between men and women working in the same depar- tments. The women settled for a total of $750,000 in back pay and fringe benefits, as a result of the suit filed in 1981. Under the terms of the settlement, each woman will receive more than $20,000. In addition, the women will get a total of $55,000 in salary increases through 1984-85. -The Chronicle of Higher Education Colleges is a regularfeature appearing every Thursday. FRIDAY THE 13TH % BOTH ANN ARBOR ALL "C" CO E ALBUMS ALL "B" CODE ALBUMS g STORES $850 p * FOR FOR U OR 5.29 EACH OR 4.49 EACH 4 pem. FEATURING FEATURING " THE TUBES " U2 9 GENESIS o PLANET P) TO " PINK FLOYD " DURAN DURAN " THE CARS * ROBERT HAZZARD WHISPERS " GEORGE DUKE STEVIE NICKS " BRYAN ADAMS p. m MICHAEL JACKSON * DAVID BOWIE " THE CALL " THE WHO "SAVE ON ALL SINGLE *MEN AT WORK " AND MORE!! AND MORE * *ALBUMS IN THE STORE ALL REG. 8.98 LIST ALBUMS ALL REG. 6.98 LIST ALBUMS ALUM INTE TR