Niy-ordea i afren Ninety-four years of editorial freedom 0 Vol. XCIV, No. 11-S Copyrigh 1984 Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, June 1, 1984 Fifteen Cents Twenty Pages Students, grads By LILY ENG American Express, the criteria for ob- and MARIA GERMINARIO taining an American Express card are While many students and recent relaxed for graduating seniors because graduates find money hard to come by, the company "takes into consideration some are finding credit to be a quick that students are-just getting started." solution to many needs and wants. The minimum annual income required In most cases, a college student or of a graduating student is $10,000 while graduate needs only to complete a sim- others must earn at least $13,000. ple application and meet a few Several large department stores also requirements to receive credit, and offer special credit plans for students many companies and stores have special and recent graduates. The requirement programs to make credit more ac- ranges from having a bank account to cessible to students than to other maintaining a stable place of residence. customers. J.C. Penney's offers no special ACCORDING to Ann Young of See STUDENTS, Page 16 find easy credit CRISP to drop to basement of Angell I By LINDA LANE Students returning to school this fall may be surprised when they go to CRISP to change their schedules: The long drop/add lines won't be stretching out on the first floor of Lorch Hall anymore. They'll be squeezing into the basement of Angell Hall. The move of the computerized class registration office, which will occur in August during freshmen orientation, is expected to take three days, said Tom Karunas, an assistant registrar. The first day will be spent moving half of the printers and computer terminals over to the new location, setting up the equipment, and testing the system to assure that it is functional.. THE NEW OFFICE will begin operation on the next day and by the third day the old CRISP office will shut down permanently and the remaining equipment will be moved to the new site. That plan assumes that everything wil go according to schedule. "We don't expect any problems...we Omaha Who's there? Ann Arbor Mayor Louis Belcher is greeted at home by a group voicing civic concerns at 7:00 yesterday morning. See story, page 4. lall know what has to be done. We're 99 per- cent sure that the job'll be finished on schedule," said Jack Janveja, manager of Engineering Services. CONSTRUCTION WILL begin next week at a cost of $95,000. The southwest corner of Angell Hall including three classrooms, the old Computer and Communication Sciences (CCS) Library and a room which housed several computer terminals will be converted into the new CRISP. Plans include knocking out walls, shutting off some doors, removing a heater, adding new doors and a drop ceiling, and fastening bars to the floor in the hall to control lines. "Students have to realize that there is not enough room for them to come early to their registration appointments - there's just no place to line them up to wait," Karunas said. The new CRISP area will not be able to accommodate more than two appoin- tment lines at a time. Karunas said in See DROP, Page 16 Inside: * The eclipse was almost eclip- sed, but everything turned out swell in the end. See Page 7. " East Detroiters should stop whining about a new prison site there. See Opinion, Page 6. " The Met comes to Detroit. See Arts, Page 8. " Gordon "Red" Berenson prepares to take the helm of the University's hockey program. See Sports, Page 19. Outside: Mostly sunny with highs around 80 with a 20 percent chance of showers tonight. Batsmen earn By ROB POLLARD There are only eight teams left with a shot at becoming college baseball's national champion, and for the fourth time in five years Michigan is one of them. The Wolverines earned the trip to the College World Series in Omaha, Nebraska, by capturing the rain-lengthened Mideast regional. A 4-3 thriller over Central Michigan on Wednesday culminated a three-game tournament sweep for Michigan. Michigan (43-18) is ranked eighth by Collegiate Baseball magazine and will open against third-ranked Cal St. Fullerton (61-19) at 8:10 p.m. tonight. The game will be broadcast live on ESPN (cable channel J). LAST YEAR Michigan finished third in the CWS. Shortstop Barry Larkin, who had five hits in 18 at-bats in last year's tournament, feels the Wolverines are ready to take on the cream of the crop. "We're starting to peak now," said Larkin, the Big Ten's trig to most valuable player. "We're a scrappy team that can come from behind. Last year we got out on top of teams; we were more powerful. This year we rely more on execution and defense." "When we began the season nobody thought that we'd be where we are now," said head coach Bud Middaugh. "This club has done something that we couldn't do two years ago - win tournaments on the road." MIDDAUGH referred to his 1982 club which finished 44-10 and was believed by many to be his strongest club. Ironically, it was Middaugh's only Michigan team which didn't reach Omaha. That team was eliminated from the Big Ten tournament at Illinois in three games. "This is the first year since I've been here that we've had to win the regional tournament on the road," said Middaugh. "That's a real tribute to the kids. That's a feather in their cap." See 'M', Page 18