Campuses compete in computer boom By KATIE WILCOX The competitiion is heating up among major universities over computer technology and computer accessibility for students, and the resulting boom of computers on campus is creating major changes in higher education. The changes have also sparked debate over exactly how universities should respond to the boom. "INFORMATION is the essence of what this place is all about," said Greg Marks, the University's deputy vice president for infor- mation technology. "Technology has changed a thousand fold in the last 30 years. This has had a profound effect on what the University is all about." The nationwide trend has been to increase capabilities of computer systems for research and the number of computers for student use. Both goals have created a high tech race to lead the field. The University recently lost out on a bid to be part of a super-computer center that will even- tually link more than 30 colleges and univer- sities from coast to coast. THE CENTERS, funded by a $200 million National Science Foundation grant, will be housed at Princeton, Cornell, the University of Illinois, and the University of California at San Diego. When the foundation was selecting the universities for the super-computer centers, the University of Michigan was one of the six finalists but the grant could only cover four such centers, Marks said. Although the University missed the chance at the center, it was chosen as one of the schools in the network of 30. "Even though we lost the super-computer on campus we are a part of the small portion with a high-speed satellite link to San Diego," Marks said. This will give researchers here many of the benefits, if not the prestige, of the super- See COMPUTER, Page 3 Ninety-five years of editorial freedom Vol. XCV, No. 38-S CpeMshieM n Art Fair kicks off Thursday, July 25, 1985 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages with good By JANICE PLOTNIK Visitors from cities near and far walked the streets of Ann Arbor yesterday in what many believe to be the best Art Fair yet. Along with the artwork and mer- chant sales, musicians strummed guitars on street corners and jugglers performed in the Diag to help send off the Art Fair with great reviews. By mid-morning, the quiet streets of Ann Arbor were transformed into a buyer's breeding ground as young couples with children looked for the perfect sketch for their living room wall, grandparents searched for Christmas presents, and summer students on a tight budget hunted for bargains at local stores. While some fair-goers were local Ann Arbor citizens, others drove great distances to take part in the ac- tion. Holland resident Sue Baar drove to Ann Arbor looking for a Batik - an art process where wax is dyed on a canvas and then different layers peeled off of it. "I'm on a Batik hunt," Baar said. "I response haven't found them yet, I just know that they're supposed to be here." Holding an information pamphlet with a Batik wax painting on the cover, Baar added with conviction, "I saw them in another art show and I didn't buy it then. I'm going to buy it now." With the massive throng of people moving about and the large variety of booths lining the streets, shoppers sometimes found it necessary to seek help from others to find that special item. Ypsilanti residents Tina Kangas and Anita Packard met during the fair and decided to join forces to help make finding what they wanted a lit- tle easier. Kangas said that although she comes to the fair every year, this year she is looking for weavings, while Packard came in search of jewelry. After dodging people, walking for miles, and looking for hours through art booths, many tired souls sought refuge with a cold soda and a hot dog in the shade under one of the trees in See ART FAIR, Page 6 Timothy Ivory dives over six volunteers in the Diag yesterday. Audience participation is essential for Ivory's act, which involves juggling, rope-walking, and flame-eating. By MARY CHRIS JAKLEVIC into the pigeonhole that's been carved They wear long flowery skirts, pon- for them. chos, and thick socks under their san- a w a s k dals in the summertime. They eat "PEOPLE THINK we're a bunch of J IV a m m plenty of bean sprouts and tofu. Most '60s leftovers. They think only a hippie of them come from East Quad - a non-conformist person might want to dorm that churns out more than its live in a co-op," said LSA junior Mike Sp rout-4?atL , share of non-conformists. O'Neill, a resident of Lester co-op. That's the way many students think But the stereotype endures from the of members of residential co-ops, but days when co-operative living was people who live in the cooperative new on the University's off-campus housing units say they don't always fit housing scene. "I don't really know anybody who lives in a co-op," graduate student Kevin Boyle admitted, "but the stereotype of them is that they all have a 1960s mentality - you know, the hippie ethic. "PEOPLE thing they're weirdos. I never used to tell people I lived in a co-op," said senior business student Mary Montgomery, a former Xanadu house resident, "I moved into one only because I was a new student and I needed a place to stay." Many co-op members deny a unanimous passion for granola and Grateful Dead music, many admit that some co-op residents do share some general traits. "In general, co-op residents are more liberal than your average student," said graduate Cliff Johnson, See CO-OPS, Page 2 Veto Wet art Sportsless art The governor may veto parts of the Partly sunny, hot and quite humid. What? No sports at the Art Fair? higher education budget. Scattered thundershowers late in Sports, Page 8 Opinion, Page 5 the day.