Page 16 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, June 1, 1984 Drop: Lorch Hall Add: Angell Hall (Continued from Page 1) the future students should not come any earlier than 15 minutes before their assigned registration time. The new CRISP office, 300-600 square feet smaller than the current office, will feature: " new furniture designed for com- puter terminals and operators, " a small lounge for CRISP staff, " a computerized climate control board, which regulates the humidity as well as the temperature, " new parabolic lights which cast a circle of light and create less glare on the computer screens, " "Power Poles" which carry elec- tricity wired above the ceiling to outlets on the walls and floors, and " new computer equipment, car- peting, and paint. Students will enter the new facility through the hallway at the bottom of the stairs from the main lobby of Angell Hall. "Construction is scheduled to be completed by the first of August, so CRISP should be in business by the end of August," said Janveja. The move will take a great deal of coordination and timing. "If they don't move on time, then scheduling problems (for other depar- tmental moves) start to crop up," said Bill Dergis, assistant director of the University's planning office. CRISP is vacating Lorch Hall so that construction can begin there on the new home of the Economics Department. Those renovations are expected to take up to two years, Dergis said. The Computer and Communications Science Department recently left the Angell Hall basement for a new home in East Engineering. If complications arise and the new facility for CRISP isn't ready by mid- August, Karunas said, the CRISP move will be postponed until after the fall drop/add period. "There's no way we could move in the middle of that busy period," he said. "That would be sheer chaos." 9 0 Eclipse is safely watched (ContinuedfromPage7) commented, "It just shows you how lit- tle sun it takes to make a lot of light." UM News in The Daily 764-05 52 Jim Loudon, the staff astronomer for the University's Exhibit Museum, had .suggested an interesting thing to notice during an eclipse. The spots of light in a tree's shadow are circular (on a typical day) because the spaces between the leaves cast an image of the sun onto the ground in the same way that a pinhole in cardboard does. During an eclipse, however, the light is crescent-shaped because it's an image of the eclipse. The trees on the Diag, true to Loudon's "law," had semi-circles of light in their shadows. The only other thing that seemed out of the ordinary Wednesday on the Diag was the peacefulness. Painted lady CAROL L. FRANCAVILLA/Daily Brenda Pratt solicits donations for Ozone House from passers-by on North University Street yesterday. The non-profit Ozone House offers a variety of counseling and community education programs. ° Students and grads find credit easy to obtain GET INVOLVED IN YOUR STUDENT GOVERNMENT MSA is now accepting applications for CENTRAL STUDENT, JUDICIARY ca- 10 seats interpret MSA legislation and the All-Campus Constitution Hear Students' grievance cases Learn about the law and the American Judicial System application deadline: Friday, June 1, 1984 apply at Michigan Student Assembly, 3909 Union (Continued from Page 1) breaks to students, according to spokeswoman Nancy Rumple, but Hud- son's credit supervisor Robert Kramb said his company has recently launched a plan giving special consideration to students who apply for credit. The company requires the applicant to have two bank cards and some other form of credit - such as a loan. MUSICsophomoreCarolyn Edwards has several department store cards, but she would rather use cash because she wants to have more control over her finances. "I only use my credit cards when I'm desperate," she said. Credit cards can also be helpful to students as identification for check cashing, but some students hesitate to apply for them. "The only plastic money I have is my U of M ID card," said art student Bar- bara Cotterall, who has received many applications for credit cards. "I'M SURPRISED how naive many students are when they use credit," she 764-0558 764-0558 said. "They are not aware that they pay for the use of a credit card." But students do not pose a tremen- dous credit risk, and the special credit plans available for students and recent graduates are not limited to stores and credit cards. The Ford Motor Company recently announced a two-part purchase plan for graduating seniors who want to buy a car. The new plan, which runs through July 31, includes a pre-approved credit and a $400 certificate which can be used as a down payment or asa rebate. ACCORDING TO Mark Hewitt of Community Ford, a student must meet the following qualifications to be eligible: " Verifiable employment which will pay for the car and ordinary living ex- penses; " prove that they will receive at least a bachelor's degree; and " be in good standing if they have a credit record. Carolyn Burke, public affairs manager for Ford Motor Credit Com- pany, said students are "desirable con- sumers" because they will probably get good jobs after graduation and usually do not have the burdens of children or house payments. "They are just beginning in careers and will probably continue to go up- ward in income," said Burke. Ford has offered some credit to students for over ten years, Burke said, and the most recent plan was announced last week. Contrary to Ford and the department stores, officials at local banks said students and recent graduates do not receive preferential treatment as potential loan candidates. Applicants for bank loans must have stable em- ployment, a good credit history and lit- tle or no debt load, they said., 0 W