Summer Weekly Edition 4 4v Non-Profit Org. a tl U.S. POSTAGE Ann Arbor, MI PERMIT NO. 13 Ninety-six years of editorialfreedom Vol. XCVI - No. 3-S Copyyight 1986 ThMichigan Doily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday, May 23, 1986 Sixteen Pages New phones get bitter reception By MARTIN FRANK Complaints are mounting throughout campus with the Univer- sity's new $38 million phone system, currently being installed by Centel Business Systems. West Quad residents and staff, whose phones were ripped out to swit- ch over to the new system, are bitterly attacking the University's methods of installing it. THEY REPORTED security problems for female residents, and cockroaches in residents' rooms where the old phones were ripped out. Residents also criticize the swit- chover for causing them massive in- convenience. Both West Quad students and various administrators have com- plained about Centel workers, calling them rude, incompetent and lazy. The system, which should be in- stalled by late 1987, is supposed to make campus phones more efficient, University officials say. They have also supported the system because it will be operated by the University, as opposed to Michigan Bell. WEST QUAD residents, however, say they were never told they would be without phone service for most of spring term. And they strongly resent Doily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER) the switchover. Rick Jones, an LSA Sophomore, LSA sophomore Gordon Young uses a hall phone because his phone, says he was "deceived" into signing and all others in West Quad, were removed by Centel Business his lease because, "If people knew Systems. The University is currently involved in a 38 million dollar about the phones, they never would campus-wide switchover to a new telephone system. have lived here." Bullard to face new ehalenge in election By HARISH CHAND panies that do business in South When Rep. Pr ry Bullard (D-Ann Africa. In addition, he has often par- Arbor) defends his seat in the state ticipated in local issues. He has House this November against spoken at several campus rallies Republican Victor Holtz, a major against the University's policies on issue will be how well Bullard's liber- South Africa, and has debated al views correspond with the views of University Philosophy Prof. Carl students on campus. Cohen in support of making Ann Ar- Bullard, for example, is still bor nuclear free. remembered for his past par- BULLARD has also sponsored ticipation in the annual "Hash Bash" legislation that would make illegal the on the Diag--although he has stayed University administration's proposed away from the celebration of Ann Ar- code of non-academic conduct. bor's lenient pot law in recent years. Currently, he is drafting a bill placing In the legislature, he has pushed students on the governing boards of such -.gral stances as vestment by the state's public universities. ullard the state's pension fund from com& - See IiOLTZ, Page-13 ... seeks eighth term West Quad Building Director Alan and shoved a student walking the Levy agrees, saying, "A fair number halls against a wall. The student was of students would have gone nothurt. elsewhere if they knew." Levy said he ANOTHER INCONVENIENCE in was told by University officials that West Quad concerns cockroaches, the old phones would be kept in the who have been appearing en masse rooms until the workers completed ever since the switchover began. The the switchover. "Everything that I control room for the new phones lies knew about the phones for the past next to the bottom floor of food ser- year has gone contrary to what has vice. actually happened," he added. A food service official refused to STUDENTS WHO wish to make off- comment, and a worker from Centel If people knew about the phones, they never would have lived here.' -Rick Jones, West Quad resident campus or long distance calls must use one of the six payphones located on the ground floor of West Quad. There is usually a 30-minute wait for access to the phones, Jones said. Hall phones pose another major problem for West Quaddies--security. Last week a drunken man repeatedly knocked on a female student's door, residents said. With no place to go, and no one to call, the student and two friends endured the knocks for close to an hour before the man left. Upon leaving, the man reportedly smashed his bottle against the door, called the charge "far-fetched." But a resident of 4th Adams, who wished to remain anonymous, claims thatco- ckroaches forced him to change rooms. He said, "I killed three of them in one night. In my new room (next door), I killed two more, and after they sprayed, I killed two more. There were so many dead cockroaches lying around that we had a party for them one night." ALL THIS, he added, started after See TELEPHONE, Page 12 Introductory om. rogram examined By PHILIP LEVY Members of the LSA curriculum committee, disturbed about some as- pects of the introductory composition program, may solicit faculty opinions in thefall about the role of writing in LSA. Jack Meiland, a committee member and LSA Dean for Long Range Plan- ning and Curriculum, said the committee "is not satisfied with the progress made in the last few years in introductory composition." The introductory composition program at the University consists of courses in the English Department, the Honors program, the Pilot program See CURRICULUM, Page 11