Summer Weekly Edition 4v Non-Profit Org. US.POSTAGE n 4:3tttluPAID Ann Arbor, Mf PERMIT NO. 13 Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Vol. XCVI - No. 4-S oight Ann Arbor, Michigan - Friday; May 30, 1986 Sixteen Pages Panel asks for costly new classes academic year. New cour es stresng critical The courses would differ from stan- dard classes in their emphasis on thinking proposed by a special LSA critical thinking, Eagle said. This panel would cost at least $1 million to would involve not only teaching fully implement, according to LSA of- students about a topic, but also ficials. They are pursuing several teaching thenrhow to learn. avenues of raising the money. ACCORDING TO Eagle the report The Blue Ribbon Commission, proposes 20 large "planet courses" established in December of 1983 to per semester which would ac- improve undergraduate education at .comodate approximately 200 students the University, has also suggested each. A professor or team of reviews of some departmental con- professors would run each of the cour- centration programs. Another ses. Smaller sections would be taught proposal that would narrow be graduate teaching assistants. distribution requirements in-all Under the SKILL plan, students departments is already beig im- would take three planet courses and plemented. then a smaller seminar in the first or THE COMMISSION, which con- second semester of their sophomore isted of six faculty members, one year. While there are already some administrator, and one student, has college courses that stress critical submitted its final report to the LSA thinking there is no comparable Executive Committee. The report, program elsewhere, Eagle said. which has not been publicly released, The Commission did not come up- also dealt with non-curricular issues with a specific plan for implementing such as financial aid, admissions the proposal and there are differences policy, and the role of counseling. o pno ewe omsinmm Accrdig t comisionmemer ersover how it should be ap- and Slavic Languages and Literature proached Prof. Herbert Eagle, the new course Jack Meiland, commission member program - under the acrnonym and LSA associate dean for SKILL (Skill and Knowledge in Curriculum and long range planning, Lifetime Learning) -mwould ideally S lu Pa gel consist of 30 to 40 courses each See BLUE, Page 4 LSA senior Ann Machala relaxes in the Arb on her day off from Kline's department store. "The Arb is a great place to hang out and get sun," she said. Ann ArborM-ites bring Arb to life in summer By ELLEN FIEDELHOLTZ reserve which encourages both pen- while others use it as a place to party Nichols Arboretum, or the Arb as it siveness and playfulness. down," said Gil Jaeger, the curator s affectionately referred to by most "Some people leisurely stroll and superintendantof the Arb. Ann Arborites, is a 144 acre wildlife through the Arb and observe wildlife See STUDENTS, page 11 'U' Terrace may picket after losing parking By ELLEN FIEDELHOLTZ Residents of a University housing unit may picket the opening of the new University hospital to protest the loss of paking to the new medical complex. Residents of University Terrace, a housing unit for married couples, is located between the new hospital and the Arb. Residents demanded in a memo that all 123 parking spaces previously reserved for them be returned. ERIC LUSKIN, DIRECTOR OF MARRIED HOUSING, SAID "this request is unreasonable. There never was one parking space per apar- tment." While all residents are given parking permits, parking spots are not guaranteed. Residents also asked that no buildings be torn down in order to make room for more parking spaces. The University Housing Office originally suggested two 'U' Terrace buildings be demolished to accom- plish this, but realized that this was an unacceptable solution, in lightof the present housing crunch in Ann Arbor. THE RESIDENTS also asked to be consulted on any future plans for development of the 'U' Terrace area. While Luskin said this demand was unreasonable, he noted the future of the area would depend on the needs of the hospital. 'U' Terraces proximity to the new hospital makes it the ideal place for medical center expansion, Luskin said. "It seems to be U Terrace is the housing, said hundreds of people will only place left for them to expand still need parking, despite plans to whether it is in five years of twenty." build yet another parking structure IN ADDITION, housing' on Glen Street. studies indicate $1.8 million of plumbing and electrical Residents of U Terrace were also repairs will be needed in bothered by the refusal of hospital the next two years to administrators to talk to them direc- restore the forty- tly. Instead, the hispital negotiated year-old housing unit. through Luskin and Foulke of the A new Northwood unit on north cam- housing office. pus may be more economical than repairing U Terrace. Luskin said this was reasonable, 'U' TERRACE residents are not the since the family housing office serves only ones affected by the parking essentially as a landlord for U crunch. Hospital employees have Terrace residents. been told they can no longer park in Although the parking protest is the the area, and were instructed to park immediate concern of the residents, in a lot on FUller road, then take a spokesman Jerry Huntley said all the shuttle bus to work. rights of the tenants must be Dave Foulke, associate director of safeguarded. Duderstadt ...genius or autocrat? See Story, Page 3