IM.~ The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 25, 1995 - 7A LSA-SG pres. pushes to extend drop-add deadline -- --9w _,. By Jeff Lawson For the Daily If LSA Student Government Presi- dent Richard Bernstein is successful, the '"W" may become a grade of the past Bernstein is pushing to have the cur- rent three-week drop-add deadline ex- tended to nine weeks. "This would permit students to with- draw from a class up to the end of the ninth week of a full term without re- ceiving a 'W' on his or her transcript," re'said. Under the current policy, students can drop classes until the ninth week, but receive a "W" report card grade if it occurs after the three-week drop-add &eriod. Bernstein said he worries about the impact of a "W" on student tran- scripts. "It's a concern for students applying to graduate schools or other positions. ... Why should they have to explain away a 'W'?" Bernstein asked. "Some- one can receive a 'W' for being sick, near death, in the hospital or for drop- ping a class in the fourth week... there's no differentiation." Bernstein noted that LSA has the earliest drop deadline when compared to the other colleges in the University. In addition, he said he finds no "intel- lectual reason"for the three-week dead- line, claiming it was originally chosen arbitrarily for billing purposes. Bernstein is submitting his proposal to several University bodies, including the Joint CurriculumCommittee and the Joint Student Faculty Committee, two com- mittees providing guidance for LSA policy. He also will raise the issue at the next LSA faculty meeting, where the final decision will eventually be made. "It was my fit t commitment, a prom- ise I made and Iplan to fulfill it," Bernstein said. "It's something I really want." However, others don't share his en- thusiasm for the plan. "Some faculty members have raised concerns that three weeks is already too long to add classes," said Dean Schoem, Joint Faculty-Stu- dent Policy Committee chair. Schoem's committee, one of two currently looking into the proposal, will not meet until October. Comprised of both student and faculty members, the committee will discuss the issue from both points of view. "The committee will look into changes in the drop-add policy and, if it decides to do so, will bring it before the faculty," he said. Chuck Judge, director of LSA advis- ing,broughtup otherconcems. "The dead- line helps students know what classes they're in and what they're not in, espe- cially with the number of closed classes," he said. "Classes are a limited resource and we need to make sure that people taking courses are serious about it." Additionally, Judge has previously served as a graduate admissions officer at Harvard University. "I don't remem- ber noting a "W" on a transcript during that time," he recalled. "However, there are times that it does matter ... if an applicant to medical school dropped organic chemistry twice, it would raise a flag." Other universities have similar drop/ add policies, which Bernstein said he has investigated. Bernstein said that at Brown Univer- sity, a student can drop a class at any time, even after the final grade has been submitted. Many other east coast uni- versities institute "shopping periods" for students to settle into classes. "If Harvard, Yale, Stanford and Brown can do it, why can't we?" asked Bernstein. LOANS Continued from Page IA because we think this is a good pro- gram for colleges all over the country and to cap it would be a real shame," Harrison said. "The fact is that the col- lege loan program is one of the few really good programs the federal gov- ernment has for college students." Tolo said that the department will wait- to set criteria on which schools would be cut-from the program. I don't think anyone could say that any school would not be cut. I think any school would be liable to be cut,"he said. "Certainly some large schools as well as small schools would have to be cut." - ----- In the House, Republicans plan to introduce a propbsal that would elimi- nate the program altogether. Under the~direct loan program, uni- versities work directly with a servicer contracted by the Department of Edu- cation. Under the guaranteed loan pro- gram, which makes up the remainder of federal loans, the University had dealt with 1,400 lenders, guarantors and servicers in providing federal aid. All federal loans at the University now come through the direct loan pro- gram, which is strongly supported by President James J. Duderstadt. Sen. Paul Simon (D-Ill.), a member of the Labor Co pmittee and the chief congressional spdpsor ofthe direct loan program, said in a statement that the lenders of the guaranteed loan program are fighting to remove direct loans. "This would be a new entitlement program for the student loan industry, taking the choice away from colleges and ending the competition that has benefited students," Simon said. The plan also reduces funds to the Department of Education for adminis- tering the direct and guaranteed loan program by $750 million - up from a $700 million cut in the initial bill. Tolo said the cut would have a major impact on the department's ability to prevent fraud and abuse in the student loan programs. WALTER VANDYKE/IaVy Echoes Frangoise Gilot stands by a piece of her collection, which is on exhibit at the Art and Architecture Buiding until Oct. 19. Gsleak i chemical hose tigers fire, evacuation ofECSBidn .BURNHAM Continued from Page 1A though in walking distance, has now moved to the point where it is smack in the middle of a residential area." The association asked the University to investigate some of the other sites originally under consideration for the d ieational center - mainly a plot of land by the Washington Heights en- trance to the Arb. $ut University Planner Fred Mayer 0idthe Geddes Road site offered sev- eral advantages - a compatable scale for the Burnham House, a direct view into the Arb and a space on the same side of the street as the entrance. Mayer also said that moving the Burnham House would cost one-third as much as constructing an entirely new center. "In terms of a site for a historical residence, the architecture students felt (the Washington Heights site) would be the least desireable. There is no resi- dential context an4the huge University hospital would overpower the small house," Mayer said. "The future devel- opment that might take place in this area would cause a problem." Ann Arbor residents, however, said they found many weak aspects of the plan for Geddes Road. A lack of park- ing around the entrance, increased school bus traffic and the obstruction of views of the neighborhood were chief concerns. "We who daily, see the dangerous crossing on the crest of the hill on Geddes know it's not the place to en- courage people to cross," said Jane Ferguson, president-elect of the Oxbridge Neighborhood Association. "It would further impact the terrible parking situation for students and resi- dents." With residents and regents looking to work together in future discussions, talk is again turning to the construction ofa new center. "That site is a very unique site. It's one of the few places that invites you into the Arb, and I'd hate to restrict it more," said President James J. Duderstadt. "It might be possible to design a cost-effective center for this purpose and find another site for the house." By Michelle Lee Thompson Daily Staff Reporter Although fire alarms often go ig- nored at South Quad, students and fac- ulty who heard it took seriously an alarm that went off in the Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Building on North Campus on Friday. The alarm was triggered by a gas leak in a hose attached to a tank of boron trichloride housed in a cabinet in the Solid-State Electronics Laboratory at 2 p.m., Department of Public Safety offi- cials confirmed. DPS Lt. Wesley Skowron said the leak was contained immediately. "The safety officer was able to se- cure it right away," Skowron said. Although the leak presented little immediate danger to the building's occupants, a crowd of about 200 people waited outside the building for about 10 minutes before returning to classes and labs. Some in the build- ing did not hear the alarm and were not evacuated. A unit from the Ann Arbor Fire De- partment was called to the scene, but Skowron said that by the time the unit arrived, DPS and the staff of the lab had effectively capped the leak. Wayne Devezin, a solid-state lab engineer, said the building is supposed to be evacuated completely whenever fire alarms go sound, regardless of their causes. "Any time we have an alarm, we evacuate the building- anytime, even if the alarm is false," Devezin said. Solid-state lab staff walked out of the EECS Building wearing theirlab attire, which includes headgear and a full suit of protective material. One member of the solid-state re- search group said, "We're the first ones out of the building because we know what's in there," referring to the reac- tive chemicals stored in labs through- out the EECS Building. But Devezin said the leak presented little danger even to the workers in the laboratory since the ,leaky line was housed in a cabinet of the lab's "clean room." "We just shut the cylinder of one of the lines off and we're going to find out where the leak came from later," Devezin said. Workers in the lab said the leak and impending alarm did not seriously damage their experiments, but that such interruptions can cause prob- lems. "There are some experiment set-ups that if you're in the middle of doing something, you could lose what you have been doing for years," said Peter Goetz, a research assistant in the solid- state lab. i Know of news? Call 76-DAILY and ask for a news editor. RESPONSIBILITY CHALLENGE ZS ASSOCIATES IS AN INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT CONSJUTING FIRM DEDICATED TO HELPING COMPANIES ACHIEVE LONG LASTING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE IN LAVA LAMPS, CANDLES and other ex- otic gifts for a catalog write to Fountain Enterprises 548 South Highland Box 148 Dept. 54 Memphis, TN 38111. SHEAR IMPACT hair salon now has a nail technician. 548 Church St. 313/662-4232. DETROIT LIVE! Oneon-One/Voice Personals 1-313-97.6-3000 Why a morel Only 690/min. 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